"That is very pretty," she answered. "And now you are here, are you going to stay?"
"Until the end," he said solemnly. "You know, Helen, that I am in deadly peril. The means of averting it which I went abroad to seek, I could not use."
She thought of those letters, bought and safely burnt, and she pressed his fingers. She would tell him of them presently.
"They shall not take you from me, Bernard, now," she said softly. "Kiss me again, dear."
He stooped and took her happy upturned face with its crown of wavy golden hair between his hands, looking fondly down at her. The thought of all that he might so soon lose swept in upon him with a sickening agony, and he turned away with trembling lips and dim eyes.
"God grant that they may not!" he cried passionately. "If it were to come now, how could I bear it to the end?"
They walked on in silence. Then she who had, or thought she had, so much more reason to be hopeful than he, dashed the tears away from her eyes, and talked hopefully. They would not dare to lay a finger upon Bernard Maddison, whatever they might have done to poor Mr. Brown. His great name would protect him from suspicion. And as he listened to her he had not the heart to tell her of the men who had followed him abroad, that he was even then doubtless under surveillance. He let her talk on, and feigned to share her hopefulness.
The time came when they passed into the grounds of the Court, and then she thought of something else which she must say to him.
"We have a visitor, Bernard—only one; but I'm afraid you don't like him."
Something told him who it was. He stopped short in the path.