"Oh, Lord God of the weary and heavy-hearted, have mercy upon me! Oh,

Father of the Sorrowful, suffer now that I find rest!"

Barnabas opened his eyes and stared up at a cloudless heaven where

rode the moon, a silver sickle; and gazing thither, he remembered

that some one had predicted a fine night later, and vaguely wondered

who it might have been.

Not a sound reached him save the slumberous murmur that the River

made lapping lazily against the piles, and Barnabas sighed and

closed his eyes again.

But all at once, upon this quiet, came words spoken near by, in a

voice low and broken, and the words were these: "Oh, Lord of Pity, let now thy mercy lighten upon me, suffer that I

come to Thee this hour, for in Thee is my trust. Take back my life,

oh, Father, for, without hope, life is a weary burden, and Death, a

boon. But if I needs must live on, give me some sign that I may know.

Oh, Lord of Pity, hear me!"

The voice ceased and, once again, upon the hush stole the

everlasting whisper of the River. Then, clear and sharp, there broke

another sound, the oncoming tread of feet; soft, deliberate feet

they were, which yet drew ever nearer and nearer while Barnabas,

staring up dreamily at the moon, began to count their steps.

Suddenly they stopped altogether, and Barnabas, lying there, waited

for them to go on again; but in a while, as the silence remained

unbroken, he sighed and turning his throbbing head saw a figure

standing within a yard of him.

"Sir," said Mr. Chichester, coming nearer and smiling down at

prostrate Barnabas, "this is most thoughtful--most kind of you. I

have been hoping to meet you again, more especially since our last

interview, and now, to find you awaiting me at such an hour, in such

a place,--remote from all chances of disturbance, and--with the

River so very convenient too! Indeed, you couldn't have chosen a

fitter place, and I am duly grateful."

Saying which, Mr. Chichester seated himself upon the mouldering

remains of an ancient wherry, and slipped one hand into the bosom of

his coat.

"Sir," said he, leaning towards Barnabas, "you appear to be hurt,

but you are not--dying, of course?"

"Dying!" repeated Barnabas, lifting a hand to his aching brow,

"dying,--no."

"And yet, I fear you are," sighed Mr. Chichester, "yes, I think you

will be most thoroughly dead before morning,--I do indeed." And he

drew a pistol from his pocket, very much as though it were a

snuff-box.

"But before we write 'Finis' to your very remarkable career," he

went on, "I have a few,--a very few words to say. Sir, there have

been many women in my life, yes, a great many, but only one I ever

loved, and you, it seems must love her too. You have obtruded

yourself wantonly in my concerns from the very first moment we met.

I have always found you an obstacle, an obstruction. But latterly

you have become a menace, threatening my very existence for, should

you dispossess me of my heritage I starve, and, sir--I have no mind

to starve. Thus, since it is to be your life or mine, I, very

naturally, prefer that it shall be yours. Also you threatened to

hound me from the clubs--well, sir, had I not had the good fortune to

meet you tonight, I had planned to make you the scorn and

laughing-stock of Town, and to drive you from London like the

impostor you are. It was an excellent plan, and I am sorry to

forego it, but necessity knows no law, and so to-night I mean to rid

myself of the obstacle, and sweep it away altogether." As he ended,

Mr. Chichester smiled, sighed, and cocked his pistol. But, even as

it clicked, a figure rose up from behind the rotting wherry and, as

Mr. Chichester leaned towards Barnabas, smiling still but with eyes

of deadly menace, a hand, pale and claw-like in the half-light, fell

and clenched itself upon his shoulder.




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