Kenilworth - Page 398/408

At the same instant, Varney called in at the window, in an accent and

tone which was an indescribable mixture betwixt horror and raillery, "Is

the bird caught?--is the deed done?"

"O God, forgive us!" replied Anthony Foster.

"Why, thou fool," said Varney, "thy toil is ended, and thy reward

secure. Look down into the vault--what seest thou?"

"I see only a heap of white clothes, like a snowdrift," said Foster. "O

God, she moves her arm!"

"Hurl something down on her--thy gold chest, Tony--it is an heavy one."

"Varney, thou art an incarnate fiend!" replied Foster.

"There needs nothing more--she is gone!"

"So pass our troubles," said Varney, entering the room; "I dreamed not I

could have mimicked the Earl's call so well."

"Oh, if there be judgment in heaven, thou hast deserved it," said

Foster, "and wilt meet it! Thou hast destroyed her by means of her best

affections--it is a seething of the kid in the mother's milk!"

"Thou art a fanatical ass," replied Varney; "let us now think how the

alarm should be given--the body is to remain where it is."

But their wickedness was to be permitted no longer; for even while they

were at this consultation, Tressilian and Raleigh broke in upon them,

having obtained admittance by means of Tider and Foster's servant, whom

they had secured at the village.

Anthony Foster fled on their entrance, and knowing each corner and pass

of the intricate old house, escaped all search. But Varney was taken on

the spot; and instead of expressing compunction for what he had done,

seemed to take a fiendish pleasure in pointing out to them the remains

of the murdered Countess, while at the same time he defied them to show

that he had any share in her death. The despairing grief of Tressilian,

on viewing the mangled and yet warm remains of what had lately been so

lovely and so beloved, was such that Raleigh was compelled to have him

removed from the place by force, while he himself assumed the direction

of what was to be done.

Varney, upon a second examination, made very little mystery either of

the crime or of its motives---alleging, as a reason for his frankness,

that though much of what he confessed could only have attached to him by

suspicion, yet such suspicion would have been sufficient to deprive

him of Leicester's confidence, and to destroy all his towering plans of

ambition. "I was not born," he said, "to drag on the remainder of life a

degraded outcast; nor will I so die that my fate shall make a holiday to

the vulgar herd."