“There!” she cried. “It’s there again.” She stood up. “Would you like to come to my room, Mrs. Verlaine?”

“No thank you, Alice,” I said.

She nodded gravely and went to the door.

“I’m glad you saw it tonight,” she said, “because I believe you thought it was Sylvia doing it. And now you know she’s in bed…so it couldn’t be her, could it?”

I said: “It’s someone on the road somewhere.”

“But the road doesn’t…” She paused and smiled at me a little sadly. “I want to go up to see if it flashes again. I always think I may see something else.”

“Then you go,” I said; and she went.

As soon as she had gone I put on a cloak and went swiftly down the great staircase, through the hall to the gardens.

I might just be in time. It wasn’t Sylvia then, so who was it? Someone who wanted to keep the legend of the ghost alive and so the story of the unfortunate shooting accident. Someone who was hoping to drive Napier away.

The ground was a little spongy underfoot on account of the recent rain and when I reached the copse the grass was very wet My footsteps made a squelching sound which I feared would betray me. The important thing was speed. I must reach the ruin before whoever was haunting it had time to disappear.

There was no moon but the sky was clear of cloud and there was enough starlight to show me the way. I confess to a sudden panic as I caught sight of the gray bricks of the chapel.

I hurried on wishing I had changed my footwear for I was only wearing house shoes and I could already feel the damp seeping through them. I put out a hand to touch the wall and with my heart leaping uncomfortably went inside the ruin. It was a little darker than outside for some of the roof remained, but glancing up I could see a patch of starlight, which was comforting.

There was nothing there. No sign of anyone.

“Who’s there?” I whispered.

No answer. But had I heard a faint sound which could be that of feet on wet grass?

I felt a great urge to get outside, to escape from those walls, and as I stepped out and looked up at the sky I was suddenly caught from behind and held firmly in a vise-like grip.

I had not been so terrified since my adventure in the cottage and I immediately thought what a fool I had been to come. I had been warned—as both the gypsy and Sybil Stacy had pointed out to me. I could not expect to be so fortunate again.

“Well,” said a voice, “you always wanted to meet the ghost of Beaumont Stacy.”

“Napier!” I gasped, and tried to wriggle free but he would not release me.

“You came here to meet Beaumont, didn’t you?” He let me go but as I turned he caught me by the shoulders.

“What are you doing here?”

“You terrified me.”

“You haven’t by any chance been displaying lights?”

“I came to see who was.”

“Good God, haven’t you learned your lesson?”

“My lesson.”

He looked at me quizzically; and I thought of his bringing the spade into the stables, of his meeting me here in the copse when he discovered that I was looking for a grave. And shortly afterwards I had been trapped in the cottage—and he was asking me if I had not learned my lesson! And I was here in the copse with him. It was dark and no one knew I had come.

I heard myself stammer: “I…I saw the light. I was with Alice. I said I would come and investigate…”

“All alone?” His voice mocked me. “You are a very brave woman. Only recently…” His voice sounded suddenly harsh; his grip tightened on my shoulders. “You were up there…and couldn’t get down. For God’s sake, take care.”

“It is the sort of thing which happens once in a lifetime.”

“Some people are accident prone.”

“You mean without a reason?”

“Perhaps the reason is an unseen one.”

“This sounds very mysterious.” I was recovering after that terrible fear. I could not help it but when I was in his presence I could feel elation which banished all my fear. I said: “Did you come down here to discover the source of the light?”

“Yes,” he said.

“And found nothing?”

“The ‘ghost’ was too quick for me. Every time I am too late.”

“And have you a suspicion as to who it might be?”

“Only that it is someone who is trying to drive me away.”

“How could they?”

“By making things so uncomfortable here that I preferred to be elsewhere.”

“I should scarcely have thought you were the sort of man to be driven away because you were uncomfortable.”

“You’re right. All the same it revives the old story. It keeps it alive in my father’s mind. He could be the one to decide that I went away. He was before. I’m not really very popular here, Mrs. Verlaine.”

“It’s a pity.”

“Oh, don’t be sorry for me. I’m used to it. It doesn’t bother me.”

I felt a great surge of emotion then because he was lying. Of course it did bother him.

I said: “Do you think we should talk? We might frighten the ghost away.”

“Don’t you think he—or she—has done his—or her—haunting for the night?”

“I don’t know how he or she works. Let’s wait awhile…quietly.”

He took my arm and we went into the shelter of the ruined walls. An almost unbearable excitement had taken possession of me. I leaned against the cold damp wall and looked up at his profile. It appeared stern, sharply defined in the half light—tortured and sad; and my emotion was so mixed that I could not altogether understand it. I only knew that I would never forget his face as I saw it on this night and that the longing to help him was something as intense as my love for Pietro had been. Perhaps there was something of the same nature in my feelings—the longing to care for, to protect against the world.

I wanted so much for the person who was playing the tricks to come into that enclosure; I wanted us to lay hands on that person, to expose him as the ghost, to put an end to this attempt to keep open an old wound.

I wanted to see Napier settled in Lovat Stacy, doing work which was so suited to him. I wanted to see him happy.

He looked down at me suddenly and said in a whisper: “I believe you are sorry for me.”

I could not answer him because my emotion threatened to choke me.

“Why?” he whispered. “Why?”

“Hush,” I said. “The ghost will hear and keep away. Don’t forget we want to catch him.”

“I want to know why you’re sorry for me even more than to discover the ghost.”

“It was so unfair,” I said. “Everything was unfair. One accident and your life…shattered.”

“You put it too strongly,” he said.

“No,” I answered firmly. “They were so cruel to blame you…to send you away from your home.”

“Everyone is not as tenderhearted as you are.”

I laughed. I had stopped thinking of catching the ghost. It seemed to me too that it was more important that we should understand each other.

“You were so young.”

“Seventeen is not young really. I was old enough to kill…therefore old enough to be dealt with accordingly.”

“Please don’t talk of it if it upsets you.”

“Why shouldn’t I be upset? I ended his life didn’t I? There he was…magnificently alive and then…dead. And here am I alive and having had thirteen years of life which has been denied him. And you say I shouldn’t be upset.”

“It was an accident. Can’t you get that into your head? Can’t anyone?”

“How vehement you are. The counsel for the defense!”

“How flippant you are. But you don’t deceive me. It’s because you feel it so deeply now.”

“I am very happy to have you speak so vehemently in my defense. So some good comes out of evil.”

We were standing side by side and suddenly he took my hand.

“Thank you,” he said.

“I wish I could deserve your thanks.”

“I should not have given them if I had not considered them deserved.”

“I don’t see what I have done.”

His face was close to mine and he said: “You are here.”

I said uneasily: “Perhaps we should go in. The ghosts won’t come back having heard us talking.”

“It’s rarely now that I have an opportunity of talking to you.”

“Yes…it has changed since Edith…went.”

“So much. You are full of doubts. How could it be otherwise? But at least they are doubts. You do not stand in judgment. Nor will you until you have proved your suspicions to be true.”

“Don’t think that of me. I loathe people who judge others. How can they know every little detail which led up to disaster…and it is the details which are often of so much importance.”

“I think of you often,” he said. “In fact…all the time.”

I was silent and he went on: “There is so much between us. You know, don’t you, that it is believed by many people that I disposed of Edith. I’m not surprised. I soon realized how hopeless it was—and so did she. I knew of course that she was in love with the curate and I suppose I despised her for allowing herself to be forced into marriage with me—as I despised myself. But I tried to make something of our marriage—quite wrongly of course. I tried to make her into the sort of woman I could admire. Her meekness irritated me…her timidity, her fears. There is no excuse. My conduct was despicable. But you know what kind of man I am. Not very admirable, I fear. Why am I trying to explain?”

“I understand.”

“And do you understand too that I don’t want you to be involved…now?”

“How could I be?” I asked sharply.

“People tarnish with their thoughts…their evil whisperings. I have to prove to you, don’t I—and to the world—that I had nothing to do with Edith’s disappearance…at least directly.”