CONTENTS


[ CHAPTER I. ] A LEVANTER
[ CHAPTER II. ] BY THE MINE AT LA VANNA
[ CHAPTER III. ] UP AT THE MINE
[ CHAPTER IV. ] PARTING COUNSELS
[ CHAPTER V. ] ON THE ISLAND
[ CHAPTER VI. ] HOW CHANGED
[ CHAPTER VII. ] HOW TO MEET A SCANDAL
[ CHAPTER VIII. ] TWO MEN WELL MET
[ CHAPTER IX. ] A SURPRISE
[ CHAPTER X. ] THE CHIEF AND HIS FRIEND
[ CHAPTER XI. ] A LEAP IN THE DARK
[ CHAPTER XII. ] SOME OF SEWELL'S OPINIONS
[ CHAPTER XIII. ] THE VISIT TO THE JAIL
[ CHAPTER XIV. ] A GRAND DINNER AT THE PRIORY
[ CHAPTER XV. ] CHIEF SECRETARY BALFOUR
[ CHAPTER XVI. ] A STARLIT NIGHT
[ CHAPTER XVII. ] AN UNGRACIOUS ADIEU
[ CHAPTER XVIII. ] A PLEASANT MEETING
[ CHAPTER XIX. ] MAN TO MAN
[ CHAPTER XX. ] ON THE DOOR-STEPS AT NIGHT
[ CHAPTER XXI. ] GOING OUT
[ CHAPTER XXII. ] AT HOWTH
[ CHAPTER XXIII. ] TO REPORT
[ CHAPTER XXIV. ] A MOMENT OF CONFIDENCE
[ CHAPTER XXV. ] THE TELEGRAM
[ CHAPTER XXVI. ] A FAMILY PARTY
[ CHAPTER XXVII. ] PROJECTS
[ CHAPTER XXVIII. ] THE END OF ALL


VOLUME II.

[ [!-- H2 anchor --] ]

CHAPTER I. A LEVANTER.

The storm raged fearfully during the night, and the sea rose to a height that made many believe some earthquake had occurred in one of the islands near. Old trees that resisted the gales of former hurricanes were uprooted, and the swollen streams tore down amongst the fallen timber, adding to the clamor of the elements and increasing the signs of desolation and ruin that abounded.

It was, as Tom called it, a “regular Levanter,” one of those storms which in a brief twenty-four hours can do the work of years in destruction and change.

Amongst the group of fishermen who crouched under a rock on the shore, sad predictions were uttered as to the fate of such as were at sea that night, and the disasters of bygone years were recalled, and the story of a Russian liner that was lost off Spartivento, and the Spanish admiral who was wrecked on the rocks off Melissa, were told with all the details eyewitnesses could impart to them.