“I can only tell you that there has been no quarrel with him.”

His eyes followed her as she carried the tray across the room. When she turned towards him again she perceived the strain in them, and she said: “I think your wound is paining you, my lord. Dr. Malpas left a sedative draught for you, and if you will take it you will feel more comfortable.”

“It is not that. But while I lie here, with no strength even to pull myself up, and quite shut off from the household — ”

“Tomorrow you will find yourself a good deal restored, if only you will be quiet now,” she promised. “Nothing has happened at Stanyon that you would not wish, and, you know, it is past two o’clock now, so that even if you could rise from your bed there is nothing you could do, for everyone has been in bed these many hours.”

He was obliged to acknowledge the justice of this reminder, but murmured with something of his sweet, mischievous smile: “You have always a reasonable answer, Miss Morville!”

She returned the smile, but did not answer, merely going to the door into the dressing-room to summon Turvey to relieve her watch. She stayed only until she had seen the Earl swallow his sedative draught, and then, directing Turvey to remove two of the pillows that were propping him up, bade her patient sleep well, and went away to her own bedchamber.

She had not left it when Dr. Malpas arrived, before nine o’clock, and it was Lord Ulverston who escorted the doctor to the Earl’s room. He found the patient, as Miss Morville had prophesied, very much more comfortable, though still very weak.

“Weak, my lord! Ay, no wonder!” the doctor said, taking the Earl’s pulse. “A trifle of fever, too, which was to be expected. I shall not cup you, however, for I think you will go on very well. But a bad business! I cannot conceive how it can have come about! There are poachers enough in the district, but they are not in general so careless as to fire across the roads — no, and I have never known them to go about their work in daylight before! I was speaking about it last night to Sir Geoffrey Acton, whom I was obliged to visit — just a touch of his old enemy, the gout! — and he gives it as his opinion that you might have been shot by one of these discharged soldiers we hear so much about. I daresay many of them are great rascals, and, you know, once they are turned loose upon the world, there is no saying what they will be up to.”

Lord Ulverston uttered an impatient exclamation, but the Earl engaged his silence by a look, and himself said: “Very true.”

The doctor, who had by this time laid bare the wound, seemed to be delighted with it. “Excellent! it could not be better!” he declared. “As clean a wound as you would wish for, and has not touched the lung! I can tell your lordship, though, that it was a near-run thing! Ay, you had bled so freely by the time your man got you home that if it had not been for Miss Morville’s presence of mind and resolution, you might well have died before I had reached your side. She is a very good girl, and one that has a head on her shoulders besides. None of your squeaks and swoons at the sight of blood for her!”

“By Jupiter, yes!” the Viscount said. “I don’t know what we should have been at without her, Ger, for a gorier sight I’ve seldom seen, and how to stop the bleeding was more than I knew!”

“Miss Morville is a very remarkable female,” replied Gervase. “I am sorry, though, that she should have been confronted by such a hideous spectacle as I must have presented.”

“Lord, she made nothing of that! It was her ladyship who went off into a swoon, right at the head of the stairs, when she saw you carried up!” The Viscount gave a chuckle. “There was I, clean distracted, and telling Miss Morville to come to her ladyship, and all she said was that I should call her maid, for she had something more important to attend to! I was ready to have murdered her, for, y’know, Ger, swooning females ain’t in my line, but when I saw how cleverly she set to work on you I was bound to forgive her!”

At that moment a gentle knock fell on the door. Turvey moved to open it, and ushered in Miss Morville herself. The Viscount said gaily: “Ah, here she is! Come in, ma’am! I have been telling St. Erth what a stout heart you have! And here is the doctor saying that you don’t squeak and swoon at the sight of blood!”

“I believe,” said Miss Morville prosaically, “that my sex is, in general, less squeamish than yours, my lord.” She then bade the doctor good-morning, observed with satisfaction that the Earl was looking better, and desired Dr. Malpas to visit the Dowager before he left Stanyon.

“Tell her I beg her pardon!” the Earl said, smiling, and stretching out his right hand, in an unconsciously welcoming gesture.

She looked at it, but she did not move from where she stood. In her most expressionless voice, she said: “Certainly, my lord.”

Dr. Malpas, having applied a fresh dressing to the wound, and bound up the Earl’s shoulder, had only to issue his instructions before announcing that he was ready to go to her ladyship. He made his patient grimace by prescribing thin gruel and repose; warned him that if he should try to exert himself too soon he would end in a high fever; and followed Miss Morville to the Dowager’s apartments.

The Earl, who was more exhausted by the doctor’s visit than he would own, dismissed Turvey; and, when the valet had withdrawn from the room, turned his head on the pillow to look at his friend. “Now, if you please, Lucy!”

“Dear old boy, no need to tease yourself! All’s right!”

“It teases me more to be kept in ignorance. You are hiding something from me, you and Miss Morville!”

“Fudge!” said the Viscount unconvincingly.

“Lucy, whatever may be your suspicions, don’t let anyone say that it was Martin who shot me! This story which the doctor and his gouty patient have set up will do very well! It must not be whispered all over the county that Martin tried to kill me!”

The Viscount was silent, fiddling with the bed-curtains. After a moment, Gervase said more strongly: “Lucy, I’m in earnest! Good God, only think what you would feel yourself!”

“I know that. I wouldn’t think of it, if I were you, Ger. No use!”

“What has Martin said?” Gervase demanded, watching him under knit brows. “Where is Martin?”

“That’s more than I can tell!” said the Viscount, with a short laugh.

“What do you mean?”

The Viscount hesitated, and then said: “Listen, Ger! If I know anything of the matter, it’s already all over the county that Martin tried to murder you! Martin ain’t here!” He looked up, saw the startled look in the Earl’s eyes, and said: “Hasn’t been seen since he went off yesterday, saying he would try for a shot at those kestrels. That’s why your stepmother wanted to see the doctor! True, she swooned when she saw you carried in, but it wasn’t that which upset her.”

“Oh, my God!” Gervase said sharply. “Go on! Tell me the whole!”

“Don’t think I should, dear boy!” said Ulverston regarding him in some alarm. “Ought to be quiet, y’know!”

“You’ll tell me the whole, or I’ll get up out of this bed!”

“No, no, don’t do that! It’s only this, Ger! — his gun has been found. Shot-belt, too.”

“Who? — Where?”

“Chard. Good fellow, Chard! Rode off to the place where you were hit as soon as he’d fetched the sawbones over last night. Thought he might discover some trace. Well, he did. Found Martin’s gun thrust down a rabbithole, and his shot-belt in a gorse-bush. Looks as though he had got rid of ‘em quickly, because the end of the stock wasn’t hidden well. That’s all, but everyone here knows you’ve been shot at, and your brother ain’t to be found — and if you think that news won’t spread, you’re a sapskull, Ger!”

“Martin would not take ball out for kestrels!”

“Daresay he wouldn’t. Nothing to stop him loading his piece with ball, if he went for bigger game!” said the Viscount brutally. “No wish to distress you, but he had a couple of rounds in his belt. Seen ‘em — not gammoning you!”

The Earl pressed a hand to his brow. “A couple of rounds in his belt .... Yes, and what more?”

“Nothing. No trace of him to be found. Thought he had done for you, of course! Took fright! Just the sort of hothead who would do so!”

“Very well. And then?”

“Got my own notion about that,” said Ulverston darkly.

“What is it?”

“Nearest port. If he took fright, dared not stay — only thing to do, get out of the country!”

The Earl’s hand dropped. “Yes. I think I see.”

Ulverston perceived that he was looking very pale, and said in a conscience-stricken tone: “Shouldn’t have told you! Don’t put yourself into a fret, dear boy! Only want you to tell me what you wish done!”

“Chard. Send him up to me!”

“Can’t. At least, not immediately, Ger! Told him to ride over to fetch your cousin! Seemed to me he’s the man we need.” He paused, and then, as Gervase said nothing, but only stared frowningly before him, he added: “I know you didn’t like it when Frant kept Martin under surveillance. Told him you didn’t need a watch-dog, didn’t you? Well, it’s precisely what you did need, Ger! While Frant was here, and Martin knew he was alive to his little game, he dared not pursue his damned purpose. No sooner was Frant out of the way, and Martin knew he was no longer being watched, than he seized the first chance that offered! Daresay this engagement of mine inflamed him.”

The Earl’s eyes travelled to his face. “If Martin tried to kill me, it was so that he should inherit my dignities. He could not more surely brand himself as my murderer than by running away!”

“Ay, thought of that myself!” agreed Ulverston. “Stupidest thing he could do, of course; but the more I think about it the more I think he’s just the sort of rash young fool who would do it! No head, Ger! no head at all! Might even have repented of it as soon as he’d pulled the trigger. Lord, I haven’t been staying here this while without learning a few things about your precious Martin! Done a lot of wild things in his time, because he wouldn’t stop to think before he gave way to his passions! Wouldn’t surprise me at all if he’d taken fright as soon as he realized what he’d done, and run for it. No, and I’ll tell you another thing, Ger! It won’t surprise me if he comes back, and tells us some hoaxing story to account for his having gone off like that. Just as soon as he’s had time to get over his fright and see the folly of running away!”

“I must get up!” the Earl said, in a fretting tone. “I must get up!”

Rather alarmed at the consequence of this unguarded talk, Ulverston said hastily: “No, no, what good would that do? Dash it, I wish I hadn’t told you!” He looked round quickly, as he heard the door open, and hailed Miss Morville’s entrance with a mixture of relief and guilt. “Here, ma’am, come and tell St. Erth he must stay where he is! You won’t like it, but I’ve told him his brother ain’t been seen since yesterday, and what must he do but declare he shall get up?”

“It seems to me a great pity,” said Miss Morville acidly, “that you cannot be left to bear Lord St. Erth company for a bare quarter of an hour without throwing him into a fever, my lord! I beg your pardon if I seem impolite, but I must desire you to go away!”

“Well, you do, ma’am! Devilish impolite!” said the Viscount indignantly. “Dash it, St. Erth had to know it!”

“If you do not go, my lord, I fear I shall become still more impolite!” Miss Morville warned him.

The Viscount retreated in no very good order, and Miss Morville, after a glance at her patient, went to the table and picked up a glass from it. Into this she poured a dose from an ominous bottle she had brought into the room.

Gervase said in a tired voice: “More of your sedative draughts, Miss Morville?”

“It is merely the medicine Dr. Malpas ordered me to give you at this hour,” she replied, bringing it to him.

He took it from her, but he did not at once raise the glass to his lips. “Lucy was right. I had to know.”

“To be sure, but not now.”

He again put his hand to his brow. “I wish I could think! My head feels like a block of wood!”

“Very likely. It will be better when you have recovered your strength, and that you may do by being patient, and doing as you are bid.”

He smiled wryly, but lifted the glass, and drank its contents. “Does my stepmother know what is being said?”

“She does, of course. It is painful for her, but you cannot cure that.”

“Poor woman! Assure her I shall not die! Ought I to see her?”