Clara Hopgood - Page 18/105

Sunday morning came, and Frank, being in the country, considered

himself absolved from the duty of going to church, and went for a

long stroll. At half-past one he presented himself at Mrs Hopgood's

house.

'I have had a letter from London,' said Clara to Frank, 'telling me a

most extraordinary story, and I should like to know what you think of

it. A man, who was left a widower, had an only child, a lovely

daughter of about fourteen years old, in whose existence his own was

completely wrapped up. She was subject at times to curious fits of

self-absorption or absence of mind, and while she was under their

influence she resembled a somnambulist rather than a sane human being

awake. Her father would not take her to a physician, for he dreaded

lest he should be advised to send her away from home, and he also

feared the effect which any recognition of her disorder might have

upon her. He believed that in obscure and half-mental diseases like

hers, it was prudent to suppress all notice of them, and that if he

behaved to her as if she were perfectly well, she would stand a

chance of recovery. Moreover, the child was visibly improving, and

it was probable that the disturbance in her health would be speedily

outgrown. One hot day he went out shopping with her, and he observed

that she was tired and strange in her manner, although she was not

ill, or, at least, not so ill as he had often before seen her. The

few purchases they had to make at the draper's were completed, and

they went out into the street. He took her hand-bag, and, in doing

so, it opened and he saw to his horror a white silk pocket-

handkerchief crumpled up in it, which he instantly recognised as one

which had been shown him five minutes before, but he had not bought.

The next moment a hand was on his shoulder. It was that of an

assistant, who requested that they would both return for a few

minutes. As they walked the half dozen steps back, the father's

resolution was taken. "I am sixty," he thought to himself, "and she

is fourteen." They went into the counting-house and he confessed

that he had taken the handkerchief, but that it was taken by mistake

and that he was about to restore it when he was arrested. The poor

girl was now herself again, but her mind was an entire blank as to

what she had done, and she could not doubt her father's statement,

for it was a man's handkerchief and the bag was in his hands. The

draper was inexorable, and as he had suffered much from petty thefts

of late, had determined to make an example of the first offender whom

he could catch. The father was accordingly prosecuted, convicted and

sentenced to imprisonment. When his term had expired, his daughter,

who, I am glad to say, never for an instant lost her faith in him,

went away with him to a distant part of the country, where they lived

under an assumed name. About ten years afterwards he died and kept

his secret to the last; but he had seen the complete recovery and

happy marriage of his child. It was remarkable that it never

occurred to her that she might have been guilty, but her father's

confession, as already stated, was apparently so sincere that she

could do nothing but believe him. You will wonder how the facts were

discovered. After his death a sealed paper disclosing them was

found, with the inscription, "Not to be opened during my daughter's

life, and if she should have children or a husband who may survive

her, it is to be burnt." She had no children, and when she died as

an old woman, her husband also being dead, the seal was broken.'