mind, it was almost out of my memory, when I went downstairs to the breakfast-room, and informed Miss Halcombe that I was ready to walk with her to the farm.

`Has Mr Fairlie given you a satisfactory answer?' she asked as we left the house.

`He has allowed me to go, Miss Halcombe.'

She looked up at me quickly, and then, for the first time since I had known her, took my arm of her own accord. No words could have expressed so delicately that she understood how the permission to leave my employment had been granted, and that she gave me her sympathy, not as my superior, but as my friend. I had not felt the man's insolent letter, but I felt deeply the woman's atoning kindness.

On our way to the farm we arranged that Miss Halcombe was to enter the house alone, and that I was to wait outside, within call. We adopted this mode of proceeding from an apprehension that my presence, after what had happened in the churchyard the evening before, might have the effect of renewing Anne Catherick's nervous dead, and of rendering her additionally distrustful of the advances of a lady who was a stranger to her. Miss Halcombe left me, with the intention of speaking, in the first instance, to the farmer's wife (of whose friendly readiness to help her in any way she was well assured), while I waited for her in the near neighbourhood of the house.

I had fully expected to be left alone for some time. To my surprise, however, little more than five minutes had elapsed before Miss Halcombe returned.

`Does Anne Catherick refuse to see you?' I asked in astonishment.

`Anne Catherick is gone,' replied Miss Halcombe.

`Gone?'

`Gone with Mrs Clements. They both left the farm at eight o'clock this morning.'

I could say nothing -- I could only feel that our last chance of discovery had gone with them

`All that Mrs Todd knows about her guests, I know,' Miss Halcombe went on, `and it leaves me, as it leaves her, in the dark. They both came back safe last night, after they left you, and they passed the first part- of the evening with Mr Todd's family as usual. rust before supper-time, however, Anne Catherick startled them all by being suddenly seized with faintness. She had had a similar attack, of a less alarming kind, on the day she arrived at the farm; and Mrs Todd had connected it, on that occasion, with something she was reading at the time in our local newspaper, which lay on the farm table, and which she had taken up only a minute or two before.'

`Does Mrs Todd know what particular passage in the newspaper affected her in that way?' I inquired.

`No,' replied Miss Halcombe. `She had looked it over, and had seen nothing in it to agitate any one. I asked leave, however, to look it over in my turn, ad at the very first page I opened I found that the editor had enriched his small stock of news by drawing upon our family affairs, and had published my sister's marriage engagement, among his other announcements, copied from the London papers, of Marriages in High Life. I concluded at once that this was the paragraph which had so strangely affected Anne Catherick, and I thought I saw in it, also, the origin of the letter which she sent to our house the next day.'

`There can be no doubt in either case. But what did you hear about her second attack of faintness yesterday evening?'

`Nothing. The cause of it is a complete mystery. There was no stranger in the room. The only visitor was our dairymaid, who, as I told you, is one of Mr Todd's daughters, and the only conversation was


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