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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1908-11-19, Page 5• , TRE WINGIU M TIMES, NOVEMBER 19 1908 7 THE GHOST OF LOCH RAI N CASTLE ]3Y MRS. C. N. WILLIAMSON Author of "The Princess Passes," "The Lightning Conductor, Etc., Etc. Copyright, 1906, by Mrs. O. N. Williamson,, that the case is hopeless. Ever -Y. -word He took her in his arms; and as be speaks gives him agony—but he she stood with her head on his breast, .wants to speak, Lady Hilary. He's hearing the beating of his heart, she ;been saving himself for you. Go in; ' was more than paid, for all her suf- ' rn fering of the past few days would 'and send Oxford, who is watching 'Will, here." A moment later the young man •came. The dawnlight was finding its .ler room through the andputting iid the out the .stars. The three stood close together, talking in whispers, their faces pale and weary in the gray dusk. "You'll have to go and find the doc- Itor, Oxford," said Kenrith. "It won't do for us to let him die without •one, though I know well enough that , no doctor can do any good, or could, 'f we had run after him at the first moment. There's the dead woman up above, too—murdered by him, on his .own confession. That secret must be ' told. McGowan ought to know. Will you wake him, and tell him he had better come? Say that the mysteries which have been puzzling us for 24 'hours can be explained behind these walls, thanks to Miss Dean, his sec- if it were mydutyto do so, though she no longer nterinterested me as she had once, But when you and I looked into each other's eyes to -night I saw some- thing in yours akin to what was in my heart for you, Then I knew that after all I was not too old; that you and I were meant for each other; and that it would be a sin to offer my name to another woman, while you and I belonged to one another in love. Probably, if I had asked Lady Lam- bart she wouldn't have accepted me." Elspeth made no answer, but she hid an incredulous smile on his breast. Many girls in her position would at such a moment have satisfied their innate desire for revenge by telling all the wrongs they had suffered from a jealous rival; but Elspeth held her peace. Even if she had not loved Lady Lambert's daughter she would not have robbed the woman of such kindly friendship as John Kenrith could still give. She said to herself putting away a mean little tempta- tion, that she would be glad to have him help Lady Lambart in her diffi- culties. As if her thoughts had spoken to him, he went on. "I want Lady Hilary to marry Captain Oxford. They love each other, and he's a fine fellow. She could never have been Trow - bridge's wife; and now,, you and I must see what we can do for those two." "You and I !" How delicious it was to hear him speak like that, linking her future with his. "I believe," she said, "that when have paid for years of suffering far snore cruel than she had known in those dark days. "I thought you were in love with" —she began at last; then stopped, feeling she had no right to say to him what had been on her lips to say. But he answered frankly. "With Lady Lambart? No, dearest, I was never in love with her. I've never been truly in love with any wo- man until you came into my life, to show me what I had unconsciously been waiting to find through all these years. I didn't love. Lady Lambart, but I admired her, was even some- what attracted by her, especially when we first met; and I admit it's not impossible, if I had never seen you, that while we were thrown together here, I might have asked her to marry me. Even to -night I was wondering retary." "I'll do my best," said Oxford. •"But look here, Kenrith, do you real- ly think that poor wretch in there pas the fellow who tried to do for carie the other night?" "I think that he was acting for ;some one else." ! "Who? Your voice sounds strange- ly when you say that." "The man our detective has gone ito find." "Yes—bot who is that man?" "I'll keep my secret till Lady Hil- airy comes out to us again. Then we shall see if she does not say the same 'name which is in my mind. But go— to and find the doctor. It is time." CHAPTER XXL Elspeth Dean and Kenrith were alone together for the first moment since he had told the girl that he loved her. Only a few yards away, on the other side of the secret door, which was now wide open, they could hear the murmur of the dying man's voice, as he talked brokenly, painfully, to Lady Hilary Vane. But they could hear no words; and strange as was the situation, for a few minutes they forgot all its strangeness, except as it concerned. themselves. "You are the bravest girl in the world," said Kenirth. "No other girl could or would have done what you have done to -night. You saved Cap- tain Oxford's life by the risk of your ,own"— "But it was you I thought of, more than of him," confessed Elspeth. "Perhaps I shouldn't have had so .much courage if I had known that, whatever: happened, you were safe and out of reach of the fire." "I think you would have just the same courage," said Kenrith, "because it is in ou 'long before I recognized your ou. I had not ostenwn gth of character, your brave self-reliance and noble loyalty, which alone would 'be enough to place you on a pedestal far above any other woman I have ever known. And then your sweet- ness"— "Ah, you are too good to me 1" broke in the girl. "I am nothing, really; I'm not worthy of you. I never dreamed that you could even think of me, except in kindness, and as if from far off." "I have thought of very little else for a long time now,"said Kenrith. "But I was afraid that I was too old for you—that you couldn't care for me as a woman should be able to care ;for a man if she"— "Why, there's no other man in the world," Elspeth cried. the first moment I saw and fell fn love with you. I came here to kW hit, for. another; and afterward, to keep you two apart r would have been glad to do it for myself. But I failed„ and I've got the shot in my lungs that was meant for his heart. Because I want you to forgive me, and because the one thing to ease the pain I'm suffering is the thought that it's in my power to give you a happy future, I'm going to tell you a thing you would never know if it weren't for Then ,�the whole story had come out, brokenly, for each word he ut- tered was like a dagger thrust in Trowbridge's breast. He was not an American, he said, but an Austrian, who had lived in many places and done many things. Neither was he the millionaire he pretended to be. "That was a pose," he said, "and the Syndicate is re- sponsible for my expenses -the Un- derground Syndicate, as outsiders call it. No, I'm not going to give it away. The others are just as safe as ever, and it doesn't matter any more for my assistant here—Countess Rade- polskoi, as she called herself for this occasion, and for a special pur- pose. She's dead. She had to die, or she would have spoiled your life." The Countess who was no Countess, and who had become a Radepolskoi merely because John Kenrith had bought the Radepolskoi diamond, had been sent by the Syndicate to get that diamond; also the pearl which Kenrith was supposed to carry with him; and the jewels of Lady Ardcliffe, which were famous. Her own jewels, so magnificent in appearance, were almost all false, and her fortune equal- ly a pretence; money supplied by the' Syndicate that she might seem a rich woman, above suspicion. Her maid was a humbler member of the same organization, a person of little initia- tive, but skilled as an assistant. Trow- bridge did not know how the Countess had intended to prove Lady Hilary a thief, but if any jewels—one or two of the few real ones, perhaps, pos- sesses; by the Countess—were to be hidden in Lady Hilary's room, or at- tached to her dress, he had no doubt that the maid had been the person to dispose of them. He had known .for some years the woman who called herself the Coun- tess of Radepolskoi. She was half Polish, half French. Her real name was Annette Dritz. He, Trowbridge, had given her reason to think that he cared for her, and would marry her some day; and they had often "worked cases" together, though at Lochrain Castle Hydro they pretend- ed to be newly acquainted. As for himself, he had come to Loch- , { PEOPLE SAID SHE HAD CON SUIYIPTION n� • treat: Women Tn weak and siting women, there is at least one way to hep. but with that way, two treatments, roust 1,0 wahine•,, one is l esti, one is constitu• tluuttl. but both aro Important .both essential. Lr. Slruop a Night Cure is theLocal Lr Shoop's Restorative, the Constitutional, t'heformer�-Dr.hnuop'sNightCur— isatotlea' rn:enue membrane supro'i' try' remedy. It 1 ile l it sauce; s ltcatorative is wholly an iuttinal treat milt. The Restorative rutin•., throughout tin entire system. seeing the rerair of all nerve ad ...NFU +. lard all bleed Wirth 11.8. The Night Cure", as itS n'i lh i?np1les, does Its kvork whit' son sleep, .lt so, i son(ond inflate ye nervous sir•faC(S, heal• !twat 1:•,$littebst•3. 9L• diseharres, while the Restorative, e: •.e�4 nervnt, reit, n mt, gives renewed z . ,r taut alefetice,, hiPti1 up wastes] tissues, biro it r about renew atiteeth. vigor, and cues,"v tuisu Lr. Sheep., R. ao,uttve--Tabl'tiorLiquid 'n agoit:re'toni' to tae system. Ior positive local help, use us we. .. 0 3 hoe ght Wee WALLEY'S DRUG STORE. his uncle. Later, when proofs of the son's death in Canada were obtained, he became heir to the title and the estates, which would not have amounted to much had not coal late- ly been discovered on the land. "We of the Syndicate got on the track of this secret. We discovered that the young man had married the girl he loved, but that she had been made to believe her marriage illegal, and had left her husband. Afterward a boy was born to her while she was in extreme poverty, and soon after his .birth she had died. "There are no better detectives than we have in the Syndicate. We follow- ed up every trace and learned after many difficulties that the child had been taken from a provincial asylum for foundlings, and adopted by a charitable old lady, who knew no- thing of his antecedents. That child is now a man, and is known as Capt. Orford. "If we had no sure proofs that the present Lord Lochrain himself was guilty of attempting to kill his uncle, and persuading his cousin to go off and join his sweetheart the same night, without knowing what was planned to happen, we were able to frighten him by making him believe that we had them. Also, we were sure it was he who had secretly persuaded the girl that her marriage was illegal, a from and induced her to run away her young husband. Such hints were dropped by one of cur agents that Lord Lochrain felt himself complete- ly in our power, and offered the sum of a Hundred thousand pounds to the Syndicate to rid him of Captain Ox- ford, the real heir, who could claim everything, if lie but knew. "Lord Lochrain bad never seen Ox- ford, and wished to do so. He was staying with a friend at some miles distance from the Castle, in order to meet me and talk over the progress of affairs from time to time. But with the idea of seeing his cousin he de- cided to come to the Hydro as an or- dinary guest. His first sight of Oxford gave him a fright, however, for the family like- ness between them is marked. He did not think it would be wise, after all, to appear in public and have the re- eemblance commenter} on by strang- ers just at the time that Oxford was to be put out of the way. Therefore he kept to his room, and intended to leave to -morrow. So far as I know, no one stopping in the hotel had a glimpse of him, except Kenrith, and perhaps Elspeth Dean, one night when he came through the secret door into her tower room, not knowing that any one slept there. "It was he who had the secret of that strange old bed in that room. He met me just as I had made the girl prisoner, after she gave the alarm of nese, and one of the wheels of the motor oar was tampered with. That affair also had ended abortively, the only good thing accomplished being the annexation of Kenrith's jewels while he lay unconscious. Meanwhile James Grant, Mr. Mc- Gowan's secretary, had been suborn- ed. As he was known to be in love with Elspeth Dean, and Elspeth Dean was deep in the confidence of Lady Ardcliffe and John Kenrith, it had been hoped that through Grant she could be used as a tool. But Grant knew nothing of the Syndicate. He thought that Trowbridge—the man who offered him a bribe tremendous- ly tempting—was alone interested in bringing off the desired coup. Thus, always, the Underground Syn- dicate was faithfully guarded as well as served. The only good turn, Trowbridge said, which Elspeth Dean had ever done for him, was to enable him to protect Lady Hilary from the malice of the woman who would have had her arrested as a thief. If Elspeth had not ocome running to tell him what was about to happen, he would not have known in time to save the girl he loved. As it was, he had simply ordered Annette Dritz to meet him in the secret iwom without delay. She had not dared to disregard the com- mand, and had hastened to the ren- dezvous, leaving her revenge to be accomplished later. Trowbridge had soon followed, and knowing that persuasion or threats would be useless where Hilary was concerned, had come softly upon the woman and stabbed her in the back. She had staggered forward dead with- out a cry, and he had laid the body gently on the floor, lest some one should be in Elspeth Dean's room underneath. Trowbridge had been certain that the dead woman might safely be left to lie throughout the whole day, in the secret room, as nobody save him- self and that client of the Syndicate for whom he acted, knew that the hidden room had not been destroyed by a fall of the tower's roof. As a fire was planned for that same night—a fire in which it seemed cer- tain that Captain Oxford must perish —it would be easy to arrange that the flames should spread a little farther and destroy the tower also, with all the secrets hidden there. If he had not desired to spare Els- peth Dean, she would have been al- lowed to sleep as usual in the tower room. Then, she would have heard and suspected nothing; no alarm would have been given, and the scheme would have succeeded. All these things were told by Trow- bridge in a few words, and it was not until the last that he dwelt upon that part of his story which was of most importance for Hilary Vane's future. "Our Syndicate ferrets out the se- crets of rich people," he said, "or people who would be rich or titled if some one else were out of the way. Then, it offers its help in bringing about a desired object; and as it never solicits a client who has not something already to conceal, the Syndicate does not risk exposure. It has never been betrayed by a client, and has never betrayed a client. I am not betray- ing one now, because the man for whom I've acted, under orders from the Syndicate, is already betrayed. Kenrith saw his face, I know, and must have recognized it, as only a few hours ago the man had sent for him—sent for him tb keep him out of the way while the fire was started by me. Not that this man or I cared much whether Kenrith lived or died; but he's known to sit up late reading in his room, and it was thought safer for our plans that he shouldn't be there. `Kenrith saw him, as he tried to shoot Oxford, and shot me instead; and besides, he was pursued by a rain to play a much higher game than Annette's; nothing less than to get rid of a certain person for an impor- tant client of the Syndicate. That per- son was Captain Oxford. Trowbridge had learned all he could about the young man before attempting to ful- fil this engagement. Among other things he had discovered that he was in love with Lady Hilary Vane, and intended to follow her and her mother to the Hydro where they were going. Trowbridge had borne him no personal grudge until he himself had seen and fallen in love with Lady Hilary. Then he had determined to throw over An- nette , whose game he had been in - f ound out, we shall discover that Cap- tendLady Hilar to help land retire on all efromthe Syn tain Oxford is a man of importance, Oleate on the considerable private a man Lady Lambart would think twice of before refusing as a husband for her daughter." "You think that?" Kenrith echoed. "So do I, somehow; but we have no very solid foundation to go upon, I'm '.1$ \i+1 Was in Bed for Three Months. Read how Mrs. T. G. Buck, Bracehridge, Ont., was cured (and also her little boy) by the use of DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP She writes: "I thought I would write and lot you know the benefit I have re- ceived through the use of your Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. A few years ago I was so badly troubled with my lungs people said 1 had Consumption and that I would not live through the fall. I had two doc- tors alarmed attending abouti me. me Xheywas in beere ved muchthree months and when I got up I could not walk, so had to go on my hands and knees for three weeks, and my limbs seemed of no use to mo. I gave up all hopes of ever getting bettor when I happened to see in B.B.B. Almanac that Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup was good for weak lungs. thought I would try a bottle and by the time I had used it I was a lot better, so got more and it made a complete l to cure. My little boy was also troubled with weak lungs and it cured him. I keep it in the house all the time and would not bo with- out it for anything." Price 0 cents at all dealers. Beware of imitations of Dr. Woods NorwayPine Syrup. Ask for ib and insist on getting the original. Pat up in a yellow wrapper .and three pine trees the trade mark. fortune he had been able to amass in, his profession. It was he who had shot Captain Ox- ford after writing him an anonymous letter appointing a place of meeting, •and saying that he had valuable in- formation to give concerning the young man's true parentage. The dog,' Prince Charlie, had destroyed his aim by springing on him and biting his wrist, so mangling it that he had been obliged to call for aid from An- nette. He had an appointment to keep in the secret room the same night with the man who had ordered Captain Oxford's death—that important client to whose advantage it was that Ox- ford should cease to exist. They were to meet there because it was a convenient place for the client, who could come and go by means of an underground passage which led away to the ruin of 'a still older castle built by the Lochrainse and destroy- ed by fire before the newer one was begun. Annette was summoned there' to dress and bind the wound, and in the process much blood had flowed be- fore it could be staunched. Trowbridge had not learned then that the room below was newly occupied by the lit- tle typewriter who had just arrived; but afterward, when he found out that the room was in use, he had arranged for all necessary meetings to be held elsewhere. When the first attempt on Captain Oxford's life had failed, another plan was concocted. As Oxford went out eyery day in Mr. Kenrith's motor car, the chauffeur was bribed to feign ill - "I want Lady Hilary to marry Captain Oxford." afraid. There's the fact that it was worth some one's while to have him put out of the way, but" --- "Oh 1" cried Lady Hilary, corning quickly into the room. I think he's dying. Is the doctor here yet?" "Not yet," answered Kenrith. But at this instant the door opened and Oxford came back, with the doctor and Mr. McGowan. "Bring more light," said Hilary. "It's so dark there. The lantern is burning dimly. And—he has promis- ed to try and sign a statement, if I will write it out." CHAPTER XII. It was a strange confession which Trowbridge had made to the girl he had loved and hoped to marry, that night when he know that death was near. telling He had begun brokenly, by her how he had loved her, and how, for her sake. he had meant to give up a successful career of crime. "I want you to be happy," said, "so that when you think of me it won't be in hatred. I should like e , your happiness to come through m h as perhaps, it might have ve come if I had lived and could hate taught you to care for me after you were my wife. If it weren't for that wish I'd let every secret I have, of mine and of others, die with me, for I've been half mad with jealousy of oxford ever since Kidney Troubles The Itind You nava Always nought, and which lasts been. in use for over 30 years, Inas borne the signature of w,ma,,_,__aw a Rgl. Las beers n:lado under his per* sonnl supervision since its infancy. -+' Allow no ono to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just -as -good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health or Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment., hat is T 1A Pastoris is a harmless cubstituto for Caston' 011, Pare. goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE RIA ALWAYS Bears the "Signature of The Kind You Hare Always Bought Iri~ Use For Over 30 Years. 714C CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITY • FROM THE LIVER In his study of kidney disease, Dr. Chase, the famous Receipt Book author, found that 90 per cent. of the cases arose as a direct re- sult of liver and bowel disorders. and working on this idea led to the discovery of his cele -s brated Kidney -Liver Pills. the only Kidney medicine having a combined action on liver and bowels as well. Dr. A. W. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills By this unique action, cure the most compli- cated diseases of the kidneys when ordinary medicines fail. They also prevent kidney disease by curing liver complaint, biliousness and constipation. Try them when the back aches, or there are rheumatic pains, or deposits in the urine. One pill a dose, 25 cis. a box, all dealers or Edmanson, Bates & Co.,Toronto. man younger than he. The one I speak of is Lord Lochrain. "We—the Syndicate—had found out that there was a secret in Lord Loch - rain's family. The son of the old Lord, this one's predecessor, had disappear- ed, and was supposed to be dead. If he had not died, the present Lotc Lochrain would not have inherited. But that was not the secret. The se- cret was this: "Old Lord Lochrain's son used to have the tower room, where Miss Dean has been sleeping. He was in love with a girl beneath hiin in sta- tion; his father discovered the affair, and forbade the boy to see the girl. Not long after a quarrel the father and son had in consequencethere was an attempt on the old man's life. Someone stole into his room at night, and tried to murder him, but the old man shrieked for help, and help came. The murderer had eseeped, leaving only a knite known to belong to Lord Lochrain's only son. After that night the young man was never seen again, and Iris father lived oil, believing him guilty. The boy hall escaped, apparently, by the secret Mr..1.11. Gibbard, Mission City, B. C., way, from his own room in t.re raver, writes: l and next morning the ntark of blood - 'My wife was to bad with torpid liver and stained fingers was found on his pil- kidney complaint that she had to go to bed low. for three weeks at a.time, and suffered dread- "After this the present Lord Loch- fullyp, Dr. Chases Kidney -Liver Pills the:- rain who --mark this -•••-was visiting in oughly cured her. I have also used these the cradle at the time of the attempted pills with good results.° Ilis first szght of Oxford pare him a fti,; t t. (To be Continued..) OBSTINATE FACE SORES REFUND TO CLOSE FOR 4 YEARS ZAM-BUK Healed them inside Two Weeks. 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