“I have judged him,” answered Margaret coldly, “and, oh! I wish that I were dead.”

Margaret rose from her seat and, stepping to the window-place in the tower which was built upon the edge of a hill, searched the giddy depth beneath with her eyes, where, two hundred feet below, the white line of a roadway showed faintly in the moonlight.

“It would be easy, would it not,” she said, with a strained laugh, “just to lean out a little too far upon this stone, and then one swift rush and darkness—or light—for ever—which, I wonder?”

“Light, I think,” said Betty, jerking her back from the window—“the light of hell fire, and plenty of it, for that would be self-murder, nothing else, and besides, what would one look like on that road? Cousin, don’t be a fool. If you are right, it isn’t you who ought to go out of that window; and if you are wrong, then you would only make a bad business worse. Time enough to die when one must, say I—which, perhaps, will be soon enough. Meanwhile, if I were you, I would try to speak to Master Peter first, if only to let him know what I thought of him.”

“Mayhap,” answered Margaret, sinking back into a chair, “but I suffer—how can you know what I suffer?”

“Why should I not know?” asked Betty. “Are you the only woman in the world who has been fool enough to fall in love? Can I not be as much in love as you are? You smile, and think to yourself that the poor relation, Betty, cannot feel like her rich cousin. But I do—I do. I know that he is a villain, but I love this marquis as much as you hate him, or as much as you love Peter, because I can’t help myself; it is my luck, that’s all. But I am not going to throw myself out of a window; I would rather throw him out and square our reckoning, and that I swear I’ll do, in this way or the other, even if it should cost me what I don’t want to lose—my life.” And Betty drew herself up beneath the silver lamp with a look upon her handsome, determined face, which was so like Margaret’s and yet so different, that, could he have seen it, might well have made Morella regret that he had chosen this woman for a tool.

While Margaret studied her wonderingly she heard a sound, and glanced up to see, standing before them, none other than the beautiful Spaniard, or Moor, for she knew not which she was, Inez, that same woman whom, from her hiding-place in the tower, she had watched with Peter in the garden.

“How did you come here?” she asked coldly.

“Through the door, Señora, that was left unlocked, which is not wise of those who wish to talk privately in such a place as this,” she answered with a humble curtsey.

“The door is still unlocked,” said Margaret, pointing towards it.