Lady Bassett turned with a scared look to Mary Wells, and that young woman showed her usual readiness. She actually came to Mr. Rolfe and half whispered to him, “If you please, sir, gentlemen are blind, and my lady she is very bashful; but Sir Charles knows it now; he have known it a good while; and it was a great comfort to him; he was getting better, sir, when the villains took him—ever so much better.”
This solution silenced Mr. Rolfe, though it did not quite satisfy him. He fastened on Mary Wells's last statement. “Now tell me: between the day when those two doctors got into his apartment and the day of his capture, how long?”
“About a fortnight.”
“And in that particular fortnight was there a marked improvement?”
“La, yes, sir; was there not, my lady?”
“Indeed there was, sir. He was beginning to take walks with me in the garden, and rides in an open carriage. He was getting better every day; and oh, sir, that is what breaks my heart! I was curing my darling so fast, and now they will do all they can to destroy him. Their not letting his wife see him terrifies me.”
“I think I can explain that. Now tell me—what time do you expect—a certain event?”
Lady Bassett blushed and cast a hasty glance at the speaker; but he had a piece of paper before him, and was preparing to take down her reply, with the innocent face of a man who had asked a simple and necessary question in the way of business.
Then Lady Bassett looked at Mary Wells, and this look Mr. Rolfe surprised, because he himself looked up to see why the lady hesitated.
After an expressive glance between the mistress and maid, the lady said, almost inaudibly, “More than three months;” and then she blushed all over.