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found elsewhere, and which he would never find save in her. And that he had found this and recognised it was to him reason for believing that Marion must also have perceived something worthy of love in him. Their hands, whose clasp had been severed once, would yet find one another again. Nevertheless, in more despondent moods, Philip would remind himself that love often ended in loss, and that we never reach the happiness we had imagined. It was into such a mood that he had fallen to-night.

At one time, as he lay on his bed, encompassed by darkness on which his weary mind could paint no cheerful image, he thought he heard light noises in the house, as if some one were still stirring. Had Mr. Grant returned home? No; his firm and precise step, ascending the stair, would have been unmistakable. It could not be Mrs. Lockhart, either; she was of a placid constitution, and reposed peacefully and long. Presumably, therefore, the author of the sounds was Marion, who was quite as apt to be awake at night as in the daytime, and who might have gone downstairs to get a book. A door downstairs seemed to open and shut softly, and a draught of air came up the staircase and rattled the latch of Philip's room. Could Marion have gone out? Philip was half inclined to get up and investigate. But the house was now quite still; and byand-by, as he became more drowsy, he began to think that his imagination had probably played him a trick. There were always noises in old houses, at night, that made themselves. Philip was falling asleep.

But all at once he found himself wide awake, and sitting up in bed. Had he dreamed it, or was there really a knock and a voice at his door-a voice that went further into his heart than any other? Then again

"Philip Lancaster!"

He was on his feet in a moment. "Yes, Marion. What is it?" "I want your help. Get ready and come quickly."

"Yes," he said, speaking low as she had done: and in a few minutes he had dressed himself and opened the door. She was standing there with bonnet and cloak.

"What has happened?" he asked in a whisper. "Have you your pistol? We may need it."

"It is here," he said, stepping back to the wardrobe and taking the weapon from a drawer. At the same time he nerved himself as a man of courage who is called upon to face an unknown danger. For there was something in Marion's manner and in the silent influence emanating from her presence that impressed him more

than any words could have done with the conviction of a nearness of peril, and of intense purpose on her part to meet and avert it. For a moment the suddenness of the summons and its mysterious import had sent the blood tremulously to Philip's heart. But as he crossed the threshold of his room Marion put out her hand and touched and clasped his own. Her touch was warm and firm, and immediately a great surge of energy and strength went through Philip's body, making him feel doubly himself and ready to face and conquer all the evil and wickedness of the world. The spiritual sympathy between Marion and himself, which had been in abeyance, was reawakened by that touch, and rendered deeper and more powerful than before. Their will and thought were in accord, vitalising and confirming each other. And in the midst of his suspense and of the hardening of his nerves to confront an external demand, he was conscious inwardly of a great softening and exaltation of his spirit, which, however, enhanced his external firmness instead of detracting from it. It was the secret might of love, which enters into all faculties of the mind and heart, purifying and enlarging them. Love is life, and is capable of imparting force to the sternest as well as to the tenderest thoughts and deeds.

Marion now led the way downstairs, and Philip followed her, treading lightly and wondering at what moment his strength and valour would be called upon. Marion opened the outer door, and when it closed behind them the strange blackness of the night pressed upon their eyes like a material substance. At the gate, however, appeared a small light, seemingly proceeding from a lantern, but it had very little power to disperse its rays. Nevertheless, Philip was able dimly to perceive a large white object outside the gate, which, by the aid of mother-wit, he contrived to identify as a horse. And the lantern in Marion's hand presently revealed that the horse was attached to a waggon. She hung the lantern on the side of the waggon and loosed the horse's rein.

"Get in after me," she said, "and then I'll tell you which way to drive."

"Well?" said Philip, when he had taken his place.

"When we get to the highway, keep to the right and cross the bridge. After that I'll tell you more."

"How did the horse and waggon come here?" Philip inquired. "I got them just now from Jebson, the baker. He is an obliging man, and I knew he would let me have them without asking what I wanted them for."

"Then 'twas you I heard go out a while ago?"

"Yes. I've been feeling it coming all the afternoon. At last I could bear it no longer. If it had been anything else, I would have done nothing. But to risk his life, merely for fear of being mistaken, was too much."

"Whose life, Marion?"

She made no answer at first, but, when he turned toward her and sought to read her face in the darkness, she said reluctantly :— "Mr. Grant's."

"His life in danger?" Philip exclaimed, greatly surprised. "How do you know?"

...

Again the girl was silent. But after a minute she said: "You remember Tom Bendibow's being here this afternoon . . . You told him Mr. Grant was at Twickenham. He was coming home late. The road isn't safe on a night like this, and he carried no arms."

"Oh! then all your fear is that he may be attacked by footpads?" said Philip, feeling relieved. He had apprehended something more definite.

"I fear he will be attacked," was her reply.

"But in that case," rejoined Philip, after a few moments' reflection, "we ought to turn to the left. The road from Twickenham lies through Richmond."

"We should not find him there," said Marion. "He will come through Isleworth."

"Did he tell you so?"

"No. I didn't know he was going to Twickenham until you said so."

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"Then why should you The Isleworth road is at least a mile longer."

"We shall find him there," she repeated, in a low voice. And presently she added, with a manifest effort, "I will tell you-something. You may as well know."

"You may trust me," said Philip, strangely moved. He could not conceive what secret there could be, connecting her with Grant, and indicating danger to the latter; and the thought that she should be involved in so sinister a mystery filled him with a tender poignancy of solicitude.

"You may not think it much—it is something about myself," she said, partly turning away her head as she spoke. "I've never said anything about it to any one; mother would not understand, and father-he would have understood, perhaps, but it would have troubled him. Indeed, I don't understand it myself—I only know how it happens.”

"It's something that keeps happening, then !" demanded Philip, more than ever perplexed.

As Marion was about to reply, the left side of the waggon lurched downwards, the horse having, in the darkness, taken them over the side of the road. Philip pulled his right rein violently, and it gave way, Mr. Jebson's harness being old and out of repair. Philip jumped down to investigate the damage by the aid of the lantern.

"If I can find a bit of string, I can mend it," he reported to Marion.

"I'll give you my shoe-strings," she said, stooping to unfasten them. "They are of leather and will hold. But be quick, Philip,

or we shall be too late!"

There was such urgency in her tone, that had Philip needed any stimulus, it would have been amply provided. He repaired the break with as much despatch as was consistent with security, and then resumed his seat beside Marion.

"I fear we shall be too late," she repeated; "we should have started earlier. It's my fault; I waited too long."

"Are you so certain-" began Philip; but she interrupted him. "Do you remember the time Mr. Grant came home before, when they tried to shoot him and he fell from his horse?"

"Yes; you went out and met him."

"Yes, because I knew he was coming; when we were standing there by the open window, and the flash of lightning came, I knew he was hurt. I would have gone then, only I tried to think it was my fancy; I was afraid to find I was mistaken. And when I think of it in one way-as other people would-it always seems as if it could not be true-until it happens. It has been so ever since I was a little girl.”

"Oh, a presentiment!" murmured Philip, beginning to see light. "The name makes no difference," returned Marion, seeming to shiver a little. "The day my father was killed, I saw him. I saw him, with the wound in his breast. I said to myself, if that turned out to be true, I should know always afterward that I must believe. When you came and told how you found him, you only told what I had seen. I could have corrected you, if you had made a mistake."

"You saw him?" echoed Philip.

"I saw him—something in me saw him; just as I saw Mr. Grant this evening. But it wasn't that he came to me-that he appeared before me like a ghost; but I was where he was, and saw the place as well as him. It is at the bend of the road, not far from the little brook that runs into the river,"

"I have heard of such a power, but I never knew what to think of it," Philip said. "But, Marion, if this peril to Mr. Grant has not happened yet, you must have seen not merely what was beyond your sight, but what was in the future. How could that be?"

"I don't know; it's no use trying to know. It can't be reasoned about, unless you can tell what time and space are. When such things happen to me, there seems to be no future and no past; it is all the same-all one now. And no good ever comes of my seeing; the things come to pass, and I cannot help it. It has been a curse to me; but if we could only save Mr. Grant, I would thank God!"

"We shall soon know about that," said Philip; as near as I can make out in this blackness, we must be pretty near the place you spoke of by this time."

Marion made no reply, save by a slight movement, as if she were drawing herself together, and they drove on in silence. Their conversation had been carried on in low tones, but with deep and tremulous emphasis on Marion's part; she was roused and moved in a way that Philip had never seen before; the activity of the singular power which she believed herself to possess had caused the veil which usually obscured her character to roll back; and Philip was conscious of the immediate contact, as it were, of a nature warm, deep, passionate, and intensely feminine. The heavy darkness and silence of night that enveloped him and her was made, in a sense, luminous by this revelation, and the anticipation of the adventure which lay so short a distance before them overcame the intellectual coldness which was the vice of his character, and kindled the latent energies of his soul. How incongruous sounded the regular and methodical footfall of the old white horse, duskily visible in the gloom as he plodded between the shafts.

A few minutes passed thus; and then a hard, abrupt noise rang out, ending flatly without an echo. The distance from which it came seemed not more than a hundred yards. The horse threw up his head and partly halted, but immediately resumed his jog-trot. Philip, holding the reins in his feft hand, grasped his pistol with his right, and cocked it. Marion rose to her feet, and sent forth her voice, with an astonishing volume of sound, leaping penetratingly into the night. Another shout answered hers more faintly from the blind region beyond. It was not repeated. The waggon jolted roughly over a narrow bridge that spanned a still-flowing brook. Then, like a sudden portentous birth out of sable chaos, sprang the scrambling speed of a horse's headlong gallop, and a dark mass hustled by, with fiery sparks smitten from the flinty road by iron-shod hoofs. It

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