been
productive of such
deplorable results, that I cannot
and dare not stir any further in the case of Ferrari.
If I had not consented to let that
unfortunate man refer to me
by name, the late Lord Montbarry would never have engaged him,
and his wife would have been spared the
misery and
suspense from
which she is
suffering now. I would not even look at the report
to which you
allude if it was placed in my hands--I have heard more
than enough already of that
hideous life in the palace at Venice.
If Mrs. Ferrari chooses to address herself to Lady Barville
(with your
assistance), that is of course quite another thing.
But, even in this case, I must make it a
positive condition
that my name shall not be mentioned. Forgive me, dear Mr. Troy!
I am very
unhappy, and very unreasonable--but I am only a woman,
and you must not expect too much from me.'
Foiled in this direction, the
lawyer next
advised making the attempt
to discover the present address of Lady Montbarry's English maid.
This excellent
suggestion had one
drawback: it could only be
carried out by spending money--and there was no money to spend.
Mrs. Ferrari
shrank from the bare idea of making any use
of the thousand-pound note. It had been deposited in the safe
keeping of a bank. If it was even mentioned in her hearing,
she shuddered and referred to it, with melodramatic fervour, as 'my
husband's blood-money!'
So, under
stress of circumstances, the attempt to solve the mystery
of Ferrari's
disappearance was suspended for a while.
It was the last month of the year 1860. The
commission of
inquirywas already at work; having begun its
investigations on December 6.
On the 10th, the term for which the late Lord Montbarry had hired
the Venetian palace, expired. News by
telegram reached the insurance
offices that Lady Montbarry had been
advised by her
lawyers to leave
for London with as little delay as possible. Baron Rivar, it was believed,
would accompany her to England, but would not remain in that country,
unless his services were
absolutely required by her ladyship.
The Baron, 'well known as an
enthusiastic student of chemistry,'
had heard of certain recent discoveries in
connection with that
science in the United States, and was
anxious to investigate
them
personally.
These items of news, collected by Mr. Troy, were duly communicated
to Mrs. Ferrari, whose
anxiety about her husband made her a
frequent,
a too
frequent,
visitor at the
lawyer's office. She attempted
to
relate what she had heard to her good friend and protectress.
Agnes
steadily refused to listen, and
positively
forbade any further
conversation relating to Lord Montbarry's wife, now that Lord
Montbarry was no more. 'You have Mr. Troy to
advise you,' she said;
'and you are
welcome to what little money I can spare, if money
is wanted. All I ask in return is that you will not di
stress me.
I am
trying to separate myself from remembrances--'her voice faltered;
she paused to control herself--'from remembrances,' she resumed,
'which are sadder than ever since I have heard of Lord Montbarry's death.
Help me by your silence to recover my spirits, if I can. Let me
hear nothing more, until I can
rejoice with you that your husband
is found.'
Time
advanced to the 13th of the month; and more information of the
interesting sort reached Mr. Troy. The labours of the insurance
commissionhad come to an end--the report had been received from Venice on that day.
CHAPTER VIII
On the 14th the Directors and their legal
advisers met for the
reading of the report, with closed doors. These were the terms
in which the Commissioners
related the results of their
inquiry:
'Private and confidential.
'We have the honour to inform our Directors that we arrived in Venice
on December 6, 1860. On the same day we proceeded to the palace
inhabited by Lord Montbarry at the time of his last
illness and death.
'We were received with all possible
courtesy by Lady Montbarry's brother,
Baron Rivar. "My sister was her husband's only
attendant throughout
his
illness," the Baron informed us. "She is overwhelmed by grief
and fatigue--or she would have been here to receive you
personally.
What are your wishes, gentlemen? and what can I do for you in her
ladyship's place?"
'In
accordance with our instructions, we answered that the death
and burial of Lord Montbarry
abroad made it
desirable to
obtain more
complete information relating to his
illness, and to the circumstances
which had attended it, than could be conveyed in writing.
We explained that the law provided for the lapse of a certain
interval of time before the
payment of the sum
assured, and we
expressed our wish to conduct the
inquiry with the most respectful
consideration for her ladyship's feelings, and for the convenience
of any other members of the family inhabiting the house.
'To this the Baron replied, "I am the only member of the family
living here, and I and the palace are entirely at your disposal."
From first to last we found this gentleman
perfectly straighforward,
and most amiably
willing to
assist us.
'With the one
exception of her ladyship's room, we went over
the whole of the palace the same day. It is an
immense place
only
partially furnished. The first floor and part of the second
floor were the portions of it that had been inhabited by Lord
Montbarry and the members of the household. We saw the bedchamber,
at one
extremity of the palace, in which his
lordship died,
and the small room communicating with it, which he used as a study.
Next to this was a large
apartment or hall, the doors of which
he
habitually kept locked, his object being (as we were informed)
to
pursue his studies uninterruptedly in perfect solitude.
On the other side of the large hall were the bedchamber occupied
by her ladyship, and the dressing-room in which the maid slept
previous to her
departure for England. Beyond these were the dining
and
reception rooms,
opening into an antechamber, which gave access
to the grand
staircase of the palace.
'The only inhabited rooms on the second floor were the sitting-room
and bedroom occupied by Baron Rivar, and another room at some
distance from it, which had been the bedroom of the
courier Ferrari.
'The rooms on the third floor and on the
basement were
completely unfurnished, and in a condition of great neglect.
We inquired if there was anything to be seen below the
basement--
and we were at once informed that there were vaults beneath,
which we were at perfect liberty to visit.
'We went down, so as to leave no part of the palace unexplored.
The vaults were, it was believed, used as dungeons in the old times--
say, some centuries since. Air and light were only
partially admitted
to these
dismal places by two long shafts of winding construction,
which communicated with the back yard of the palace, and the
openings
of which, high above the ground, were protected by iron gratings.
The stone stairs leading down into the vaults could be closed at
will by a heavy trap-door in the back hall, which we found open.
The Baron himself led the way down the stairs. We remarked that it might
be
awkward if that trap-door fell down and closed the
opening behind us.
The Baron smiled at the idea. "Don't be alarmed, gentlemen," he said;
"the door is safe. I had an interest in
seeing to it myself,
when we first inhabited the palace. My favourite study is the study
of
experimental chemistry--and my
workshop, since we have been in Venice,
is down here."
'These last words explained a curious smell in the vaults,
which we noticed the moment we entered them. We can only describe
the smell by
saying that it was of a twofold sort--faintly aromatic,
as it were, in its first effect, but with some after-odour very
sickening in our nostrils. The Baron's furnaces and retorts,
and other things, were all there to speak for themselves,
together with some packages of
chemicals, having the name and address
of the person who had supplied them
plainlyvisible on their labels.
"Not a pleasant place for study," Baron Rivar observed, "but my sister
is timid. She has a
horror of
chemical smells and explosions--
and she has banished me to these lower regions, so that my experiments
may neither be smelt nor heard." He held out his hands, on which we
had noticed that he wore gloves in the house. "Accidents will
happen sometimes," he said, "no matter how careful a man may be.
I burnt my hands
severely in
trying a new
combination the other day,
and they are only recovering now."
'We mention these
otherwiseunimportant incidents, in order to show
that our
exploration of the palace was not impeded by any attempt
at
concealment. We were even admitted to her ladyship's own room--
on a
subsequent occasion, when she went out to take the air.
Our instructions recommended us to examine his
lordship's
residence,
because the
extremeprivacy of his life at Venice, and the