"I forgive you," he continued. "I am willing to bury the past in silence: never to recur to it—never henceforth to allude to it, though the boy was my relative and ward, and I liked him. But I would recommend you to bear this tragical ending in mind, as a warning for the future. I will not tolerate further folly in my wife; and your own sense ought to tell you that had I been ambitious of putting somebody out of the world, it would have been Heneage, not Philip. Heneage has killed him, and upon his head be the consequences. I will never cease my endeavours to bring him to the drop. I will spare no pains, or energy, or cost, until it is accomplished. So help me Heaven!"
He rose with the last solemn word, and put the chair back in its place. On his way to the door he turned, speaking in a softer voice.
"Are you better this evening, Selina?"
"Not any. It seems to me that I grow worse with every hour."
"I'll send Lowe up to you. He is somewhere about."
"Oh, aunt, aunt!" I said, going forward with lifted hands and streaming eyes, as he left the chamber, "I was here all the time! I saw Mr. Edwin Barley coming in, and I hid behind the window-curtain. I never meant to be a listener: I was afraid to come out."
She looked at me without speaking, and her face, hot with fever, grew more flushed. She seemed to be considering; perhaps remembering what had passed.
"I—I——don't think there was anything very particular said, that you need care; or, rather, that I need," she said at length. "Was there?"
"No, Selina. Only——"
"Only what, child? Why do you hesitate?"