business on his white pony, looking right and left all down the street and nodding to everybody! Bless you, he was a popular character! -- he'd have done in London!'

`How far is it to Knowlesbury from this place?'

`A long stretch, sir,' said the clerk, with that exaggerated idea of distance, and that vivid perception of difficulties in getting from place to place, which is peculiar to all country people. `Nigh on five mile, I can tell you!'

It was still early in the forenoon. There was plenty of time for a walk to Knowlesbury and back again to Welmingham; and there was no person probably in the town who was fitter to assist my inquiries about the character and position of Sir Percival's mother before her marriage than the local solicitor. Resolving to go at once to Knowlesbury on foot, I led the way out of the vestry.

`Thank you kindly, sir,' said the clerk, as I slipped my little present into his hand. `Are you really going to walk all the way to Knowlesbury and back? Well! you're strong on your legs, too -- and what a blessing that is, isn't it? There's the road, you can't miss it. I wish I was going your way -- it's pleasant to meet with gentlemen from London in a lost corner like this. One hears the news. Wish you good morning, sir, and thank you kindly once more.'

We parted. As I left the church behind me I looked back, and there were the two men again on the road below, with a third in their company, that third person being the short man in black whom I had traced to the railway the evening before.

The three stood talking together for a little while, then separated. The man in black went away by himself towards Welmingham -- the other two remained together, evidently waiting to follow me as soon as I walked on.

I proceeded on my way without letting the fellows see that I took any special notice of them. They caused me no conscious irritation of feeling at that moment -- on the contrary, they rather revived my sinking hopes. In the surPrise of discovering the evidence of the marriage, I had forgotten the inference I had drawn on first perceiving the men in the neighbourhood of the vestry. Their reappearance reminded me that Sir Percival had anticipated my visit to Old Welmingham church as the next result of my interview with Mrs Catherick -- otherwise he would never have placed his spies there to wait for me. Smoothly and fairly as appearances looked in the vestry, there was something wrong beneath them -- there was something in the register-book, for aught I knew, that I had not discovered yet.


  By PanEris using Melati.

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