Then the voice spoke again. “He is living yet,” it said. “Oh, if he would but speak!”
This time I saw more distinctly. Two eyes were looking into mine—a woman’s eyes. Where had I seen that face before? Surely I had known it once, in some other world. Then somehow over my weary mind stole the knowledge that this was Mrs. Luttrell—or was it Claire? No, Claire was dead. “Claire—dead,” I seemed to repeat to myself; but how dead or where I could not recall. “Claire—dead;” then this must be her mother, and I, Jasper Trenoweth, was lying here with Claire’s mother bending over me. How came we so? What had happened, that—and once more the shadow of oblivion swept down and enfolded me.
She was still there, kneeling beside me, chafing my hands and every now and then speaking words of tender solicitude. How white her hair was! It used not to be so white as this. And where was I lying? In a boat? How my head was aching!
Then remembrance came back. Strange to tell, it began with Claire’s death in the theatre, and thence led downwards in broken and interrupted train until Colliver’s face suddenly started up before me, and I knew all.
I raised myself on my elbow. My brain was throbbing intolerably, and every pulsation seemed to shoot fire into my temples. Also other bands of fire were clasped about my arms and wrists. So acutely did they burn that I fell back with a low moan and looked helplessly at Mrs. Luttrell.
Although it had been snowing, her bonnet was thrust back from her face and hung by its ribbons which were tied beneath her chin. The breeze was playing with her disordered hair—hair now white as the snow-flakes upon it, though grey when last I had seen it—but it brought no colour to her face. As she bent over me to place her shawl beneath my head, I saw that her blue eyes were strangely bright and prominent.
“Thank God, you are alive! Does the bandage pain you? Can you move?”
I feebly put my hand up and felt a handkerchief bound round my head.
“I was afraid—oh, so afraid!—that I had been too late. Yet God only knows how I got down into your boat—in time—and without his seeing me. I knew what he would do—I was listening behind the partition all the time; but I was afraid he would kill you first.”
“Then—you heard?”
“I heard all. Oh, if I were only a man—but can you stand? Are you better now? For we must lose no time.”
I weakly stared at her in answer.
“Don’t you see? If you can stand and walk, as I pray you can, there is no time to be lost. Morning is already breaking, and by this evening you must catch him.”
“Catch him?”
“Yes, yes. He has gone—gone to catch the first train for Cornwall, and will be at Dead Man’s Rock to-night. Quick! see if you cannot rise.”
I sat up. The water had dripped from me, forming a great pool at our end of the boat. In it she was kneeling, and beside her lay a heavy knife and the cords with which Simon Colliver had bound me.