The servants gathered outside the door gave way, and he placed her in the carriage which had conveyed them to the house.
Mr. Parmalee went with him, and Lady Kingsland and the lawyer took possession of the fly that stood waiting for Miss Silver.
A minute later and they were flying, swift as lash and shout could urge them, toward Worrel Jail.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
"AFTER STORM, THE SUNSHINE."
Earlier in the evening, when Harriet had told her story to Mr. Bryson, that gentleman had proceeded at once to the prison to inform the prisoner and the officials that the murdered lady was alive.
There he found the warden of the prison and the clergyman, listening with very perplexed faces to a story the prisoner was narrating.
"This is a most extraordinary revelation," the clergyman was saying.
"I really don't know what to think."
"What is it?" asked Mr. Bryson.
"A story which, wildly incredible as it seems, is yet true as Holy Writ," answered the prisoner. "The real murderer is found. She has been here, and admitted her guilt."