But Beatrix had something else to say to him, and so she said it:
"Lyon, if you should succeed in getting Sybil"s pardon, (pardon for the crime she never committed!) and should decide to take her to Europe, do you know what Clement and myself have determined to do?"
"No," said Mr. Berners, with a weary sigh.
"We have decided to go abroad with you and share your fate; whether we go for a year or two of pleasant travelling and sight-seeing, or whether we go into perpetual exile."
Lyon Berners, who had been almost rudely indifferent to the young lady"s words until this moment, now turned and looked at her with astonishment, admiration, and grat.i.tude, all blended in the expression of his fine countenance.
"Beatrix! No! I appreciate your magnanimity! And I thank you even as much as I wonder at you! But you must not make this sacrifice for us,"
he said.
Miss Pendleton burst into tears.
"Oh!" she said amid her sobs; "there can be nothing in the world so precious to us as our childhood"s friendships! Clement and I have played with Sybil and you since we were able to go alone! We have no parents, nor sisters, nor brothers, to bind us to our home. We have only our childhood"s friends that have grown up with us--you and Sybil. Clement will resign his commission in the army; he does not need it, you know, any more than his country now needs him; and we will let the old manor house, and go abroad with you!"
"But, dear Beatrix, to expatriate yourselves for us!"
"Oh, nonsense!" she said, brushing the bright tears from her blooming face. "You are trying to make this out an act of generosity on our part.
It is no such thing. It is a piece of selfishness in us. It will be a very pleasant thing, let me tell you, to go to Europe, and travel about and see all the old historic countries, for a year or so."
"A year or so! Oh, Beatrix! it will not be a year or so, of pleasant travelling! It will be the exile of a life-time!"
"I don"t believe it! I have more faith than that! I believe that
"Ever the right comes uppermost, And ever is justice done;"
sooner or later, you know! And anyhow Clement and myself have resolved to go abroad with you and Sybil! And you cannot prevent us, Mr.
Berners!"
"I am very glad that I cannot; for if I could, Beatrix, I should feel bound by conscience to do it."
"Set your conscience at rest, Mr. Berners! It has nothing to do with other people"s deeds!"
"But, dear Beatrix, you are reckoning without your host, Destiny, which now means the report of the medical examiners and the action of the governor upon it! She may not be free to go to Europe."
"I think she will," said Beatrix, cheerfully.
At that moment there was a knock from the inside of the cell.
The turnkey unlocked the door.
Dr. Hart came out alone, and the door was locked after him.
Mr. Berners left the side of Beatrix, and went to meet the physician.
"Well?" inquired Sybil"s husband.
"My dear sir, hope for the best. She has yet to be visited by my colleague, Dr. Bright, late of the State Insane Asylum. He is, of course, an expert in cases of insanity. His report will have more weight than mine in regard to her case. But I tell you this in confidence. I ought really not to give any sort of opinion to any one at this point of the investigation."
And with a friendly shaking of hands and a polite bow, Dr. Hart went below.
A few minutes pa.s.sed, and Dr. Bright, who was a stranger to Mr. Berners, came up and pa.s.sed to the door of the cell, which was opened for him by the turnkey in attendance.
The "mad doctor," as he was popularly called, remained more than an hour shut up with his patient.
At length he came out, bowed to the lady and gentleman that he saw waiting in the corridor, and went down stairs.
Mr. Berners would have given much for the privilege of questioning the "mad doctor;" but as such a privilege could not be obtained at any price, he was forced to bear his suspense as well as he could.
In a few moments Dr. Bright was succeeded by Dr. Wiseman, the least important of the three medical examiners.
He saw Mr. Berners, came right up to him and grasped his two hands with both his own, and with the tears springing to his eyes, exclaimed:
"I hope to heaven our examination of this lady may eventuate in her release from captivity."
There was something in the delicacy of the physician"s words, as well as in the earnestness of his manner, that deeply affected Sybil"s husband.
He pressed the young doctor"s hands as he replied:
"I thank you very much for your earnest sympathy; and I need not say how devoutly I join in your prayer that this investigation may terminate in the release of my dear and most innocent wife."
The physician then pa.s.sed into the cell, which was opened for his admittance, and then closed as before.
A half hour went by, and he came out again.
"I do not know what conclusion my colleagues have come to, Mr. Berners; but for myself, I do not think this lady is, or has been for some time, a responsible agent," he said, in pa.s.sing Sybil"s anxious husband.
"You hold your consultation immediately?" inquired Mr. Berners.
"Yes, immediately, in the warden"s private parlor, which Mr. Martin offered for our use," answered Dr. Wiseman, as he bowed and went down stairs.
Mr. Berners and Miss Pendleton were then permitted to return to Sybil"s cell, to remain with her while waiting the result of the physicians"
consultation.
They found Sybil so fatigued from the visits that had been made her, that she lay quite still and almost stupefied upon her bed.
Mrs. Mossop was watching by her side; but at the entrance of Mr. Berners and Miss Pendleton she arose and left the cell.
Lyon went to the bedside of his wife, and asked how she felt.
"Tired."
This was the only word she spoke, as with a heavy sigh she turned her face to the wall.
Lyon and Beatrix sat with her all the afternoon, and even until the warden came to the door with the information that the physicians had concluded their consultation, and were about to leave the prison, and that Mr. Worth was below, waiting to see Mr. Berners.