Out of his whirling confusion, his insane sense of the world suddenly gone upside down and the familiar order stood upon its head, the young man laughed dazedly. But he kept tight hold of the old one's hand, and fell to patting it with wild reassurance.
"Everything's all right—all right! Yes, indeed, sir. Of course! But I don't understand—I don't grasp—I came here looking for—Are you—you—Mr. Higginson?"
"Ah, you hadn't guessed then? And yet who could wonder, such a terrible, frightful mix-up as it all became! You see," the old gentleman hurried on, lowering his gaze, yet already recovering something of his normal composure, "you had scarcely started before I—I became strangely uneasy over the—seriousness of the matter and the possible consequences, and—and decided that I had best come on myself in—in a private manner, merely to have an eye on things. Believe me, that was all I meant. But I did not dare let you know that I was here, even in that way, having promised you that I would not interfere, and besides—I feared that you might think I had—ah—withheld the full facts about—her age."
In an access of nervous self-consciousness, the old man's voice trailed to an uncertain pause; and Varney comforted him with a burst of bewildered laughter.
"Forgive my glassy stare—no offence intended, but my head's going around, Mr. Higginson! It's all still nebulous, you know—topsy-turvy—incredible! That day of the luncheon, now—the mysterious warning—the bribe to Ferguson to smash up the yacht—"
A fine flush spread over the old man's face to the roots of his silvered hair. Yet it was obvious that the young man's unaffected cordiality had heartened him immensely.
"Well, you see, my dear boy," he began, embarrassedly, "by that time I had met her—she was so sweet to me from the start—and I began to hope that such heroic, such painful, measures might not be necessary. Yet perhaps they would be, after all, and so—ah, I did wrong, I know—wrong!—and yet—don't you see how inevitably it all came about? I did not dare communicate with you, begging you to let matters stand a few days—fearing that upon learning of my presence you would simply abandon the commission entirely, and God knows you would have been justified in doing so. Yet I longed to postpone the—the final step, holding it in reserve, in the ardent hope that it might be avoided entirely. So I—gave instructions to Ferguson. It was wrong not to trust you, and oh, I have been punished for it, suffered miserably—"
"Dear sir! I'm so sorry! But that is all past now—all past—and to-day all's right with the world!"
The old man's hands tightened their earnest clasp. Tears sprang suddenly into his fine eyes.
"But oh, I have been richly blest, too—far beyond my deserts! The night that you were hurt—I came quite unexpectedly face to face with Mrs. Carstairs at the cottage. We had a long talk that night—a wonderful talk, which gave me a totally new point of view, brought me new light and peace. And now—everything is arranged, and if you have truly forgiven me, I am happy as I never dreamed for happiness again."