Clara Hopgood - Page 50/105

Frank could not rest. He wrote again to Clara at Fenmarket; the

letter went to Mrs Cork's, and was returned to him. He saw that the

Hopgoods had left Fenmarket, and suspecting the reason, he determined

at any cost to go home. He accordingly alleged ill-health, a pretext

not altogether fictitious, and within a few days after the returned

letter reached him he was back at Stoke Newington. He went

immediately to the address in Pentonville which he found on the

envelope, but was very shortly informed by Mrs Cork that 'she knew

nothing whatever about them.' He walked round Myddelton Square,

hopeless, for he had no clue whatever.

What had happened to him would scarcely, perhaps, have caused some

young men much uneasiness, but with Frank the case was altogether

different. There was a chance of discovery, and if his crime should

come to light his whole future life would be ruined. He pictured his

excommunication, his father's agony, and it was only when it seemed

possible that the water might close over the ghastly thing thrown in

it, and no ripple reveal what lay underneath, that he was able to

breathe again. Immediately he asked himself, however, IF he could

live with his father and wear a mask, and never betray his dreadful

secret. So he wandered homeward in the most miserable of all

conditions; he was paralysed by the intricacy of the coil which

enveloped and grasped him.

That evening it happened that there was a musical party at his

father's house; and, of course, he was expected to assist. It would

have suited his mood better if he could have been in his own room, or

out in the streets, but absence would have been inconsistent with his

disguise, and might have led to betrayal. Consequently he was

present, and the gaiety of the company and the excitement of his

favourite exercise, brought about for a time forgetfulness of his

trouble. Amongst the performers was a distant cousin, Cecilia

Morland, a young woman rather tall and fully developed; not

strikingly beautiful, but with a lovely reddish-brown tint on her

face, indicative of healthy, warm, rich pulsations. She possessed a

contralto voice, of a quality like that of a blackbird, and it fell

to her and to Frank to sing. She was dressed in a fashion perhaps a

little more courtly than was usual in the gatherings at Mr Palmer's

house, and Frank, as he stood beside her at the piano, could not

restrain his eyes from straying every now and then a way from his

music to her shoulders, and once nearly lost himself, during a solo

which required a little unusual exertion, in watching the movement of

a locket and of what was for a moment revealed beneath it. He

escorted her amidst applause to a corner of the room, and the two sat

down side by side.