A FEW WORDS BY SPENSER TAIT. When the case has been stated, when the witnesses for and against have given their evidence, when the counsel on both sides have delivered their speeches, it is then customary for the judge to sum up the entire matter for the direction of the jury. In this instance I am the judge, and here is the Larcher affair summed up for the understanding of the public. It has fallen to my share to wind up the story, so here I set down such results as happened from the confession of Mrs. Hilliston. The immediate result of her death was the marriage of the widower to Mrs. Bezel, which took place, so to speak, when the latter was on her deathbed. She lingered out another two months, and died in the arms of her husband, at peace with all the world. Denis heartily forgave her, and the only bitter drop in her cup was the absence of her child. Yet when Captain Larcher suggested that Jenny should be told the truth, and brought to say good-by to her mother, Mrs. Bezel, with a self-denial for which I hardly gave her credit, refused to permit such a thing. She thought that Jenny would be happier if she was ignorant of the truth, and moreover, Mrs. Bezel shrank from letting her child know how she had lived during these many years. At all events Jenny never learned the truth, Captain Larcher returned with Kerry to the cottage in Nightingale Lane, as he could not make up his mind to resume his own name, or tear himself away from the bookworm life of twenty-five years. No one knew the truth save Claude, Jenny, and myself, for Hilliston being absent from England does not count. The vicar was also enlightened on the subject, and expressed much astonishment at the strange series of events which had culminated in the death and confession of Mrs. Hilliston. Unwilling to lose his old crony he heartily approved of Larcher's determination to resume his usual life, and so the matter was settled. Captain Larcher will remain Mr. Ferdinand Paynton to the end of his days, and will still be a mystery to the gossips of Thorston; how great a one they can never guess. But a notable change has taken place in his habits. He is no longer a recluse, a misanthrope. When I am at the Manor House he visits me there; he is a constant guest at the vicarage, and may be seen frequently fishing beside Kerry on the banks of the Lax. Following the example of his master, Denis Bantry also renounced his name, which he superstitiously regarded as one of ill-omen, and called himself Kerry for the That Claude should call Mr. Paynton "father" is of course only regarded as natural by the village. Has he not married Jenny, and does he not stand in the relation of a son to the old man? Thorston gossips think he is a most perfect son-in-law, and never guess that any nearer relationship exists between them. Of course Jenny and Claude were married as speedily as possible, and I do not know a happier couple. Mrs. Larcher has quite converted me with regard to the fair sex, and plumes herself on her victory. She has the audacity to say that she will yet succeed in getting me married, but I think that is beyond her powers. Mr. Linton married them, and they spent their honeymoon at the Manor House, which I lent them for the occasion. Indeed, while at Thorston they invariably live with me, and I should be offended did they take up their quarters anywhere else. Not that they have any desire to do so, for Rose Cottage is rather small, and, besides, the Manor is within easy distance of it, so that Jenny can see her father—or, rather, her father-in-law—as often as she chooses. Claude still goes to different parts of the world to build bridges and construct railways. Sometimes his wife goes with him, but she does not like to be so long away from Thorston. Paynton is now an old man, and cannot live long, so Mrs. Larcher wishes to be The only person who disapproved of the marriage was Frank Linton, who accused Jenny of jilting him. This was utter nonsense, as she never had any intention of becoming his wife. However, the author considers himself badly treated, and has taken up his quarters in London, where he writes books, and poses in Chelsea circles. But I do not think he will ever write so excellent a book as "A Whim of Fate," perhaps because Mrs. Claude Larcher refuses to tell him any more plots. She has a good reason for so doing, as the troubles which arose out of her finding the murder papers in the garret of Rose Cottage have startled her in no small degree. Still, as I tell her, she must look on such troubles as a blessing in disguise, for, after all, they led to her marriage and present happiness. But Mrs. Claude does not see the matter in so amiable a light. Finally, Hilliston! It is hard to say what has become of that gentleman. After the death of his second wife, he withdrew from business and went abroad. There I believe he is still, and from what I hear of him at odd times he seems to have developed into a kind of Wandering Jew. France, Italy, Austria, Germany, Russia, he has seen all these places, and is constantly traveling about, no doubt trying to After some consideration I have come to the conclusion that we have been rather hard on Hilliston. He did not love Mrs. Larcher, in spite of his wife's insane jealousy on the point, and I believe he was sincerely attached to Mona Bantry. The blot on his character is that he did not marry her when she first came to London, and seeing that he was in love with her, I profess my inability to explain why he did not do so. Perhaps it was on account of her low birth, or the circumstances which connected her with Jeringham, but at all events he did not marry her till it was too late for the poor creature's happiness. Otherwise I do not see how he could have acted differently. Louisa Sinclair was guilty of the murder, but as she did it on his account, and was wildly in love with him, it was to his honor that he protected her as he did. Whether he would have told the truth had Mrs. Larcher been convicted I do not know, but as Louisa Sinclair did not leave for America till Mrs. Larcher was released, I think Hilliston would have persuaded her to confess openly in the event of a conviction. It is true that he married her for her money, but I think he was touched by her devotion, and gave her some love. No doubt it was Mrs. Hilliston's remorse for condemning his father to lifelong seclusion that made her so kind to Claude when he was a lad. Now it is easy to see why Hilliston was reluctant that Claude and I should investigate the case. He was afraid lest the truth should be found out, and his wife arrested. I was wrong in my surmise. Hilliston was not afraid for himself, but for the unhappy woman It was strange that Jenny, who set the ball rolling, should have been the indirect means of avenging her father's murder—or rather of solving the mystery which concealed it. Had she not discovered those papers in the garret, she would not have been able to give Frank Linton the plot of "A Whim of Fate." Had that novel not been written and published, Mrs. Bezel would not have read it, and thereby have been induced to write to Claude. Had she not done so, Hilliston would not have told Claude the truth, thence we would not have taken up the investigation and solved the mystery. It was Jenny who was responsible for the whole. After five-and-twenty years the child of the murdered man unconsciously enlightened us as to the person who had slain him. Fate works in strange ways. But I do not wish to figure further as a detective. This one experience has been quite enough for me. The thought, the anguish, the trouble is too worrying. The next criminal case in the Larcher family can look after itself. I abandon the rÔle of detective, and thus put the last word to my only criminal case. THE END. A SELECTED LIST OF Alphabetically arranged by Authors. Cobb, Jr., Sylvanus. Bion, the Wanderer$0 75$0 50 ""Gunmaker of Moscow7575 ""Karmel, the Scout7575 ""Orion, the Goldbeater7575 ""Painter of Parma7575 ""Smuggler of King's Cove7575 Daudet, Alphonse. Rose and Ninette7575 Dale, Darley. Lottie's Wooing1 001 00 Dane, Daniel. Vengeance is Mine1 001 00 Debans, Camille. Gabriel's Vocation7575 Eliot, Annie. An Hour's Promise7575 Farjeon, B. L. A Fair Jewess1 001 00 "The Last Tenant1 001 00 Fawcett, Edgar. A New York Family1 001 00 Fenn, G. Manville. Commodore Junk7575 "Nurse Elisia1 001 00 "Witness to the Deed1 001 00 Feuillet, Octave. An Artist's Honor7575 Flammarion, Camille. Lumen7575 ""Uranie7575 Floyd, Isobel Henderson. Stolen America7575 Francke, Paul M. A Blot of Ink7575 Gautier, ThÉophile. Juancho the Bull-Fighter7575 Gordon, Julien. His Letters1 001 00 "Marionettes1 001 00 Grand, Sarah. The Heavenly Twins1 001 00 GrÉville, Mme. Henri. A Mystery7575 Grigorovitch, Dimitry. The Cruel City7575 Hake, Thos. St. E. Within Sound of the Weir7575 Hale, Edward Everett. A New England Boyhood1 001 00 ""East and West1 001 00 ""Sybil Knox1 001 00 Hannan, Charles. A Swallow's Wing7575 Harben, W. N. White Marie7575 Harland, Henry. As it was Written1 001 00 "Grandison Mather1 2550 "Latin-Quarter Courtship7575 "Mrs. Peixada1 001 00 "The Two Voices5050 "Two Women or One?7575 "Yoke of the Thorah1 001 00 Harland, Marion. Mr. Wayt's Wife's Sister1 001 00 Harris, A. L. The Fatal Request7575 Harrison, Mrs. Burton. A Daughter of the South1 001 00 "Flower de Hundred1 001 00 "The Anglomaniacs1 001 00 Hatton, Joseph. Under the Great Seal1 001 00 Hawthorne, Julian. John Parmelee's Curse$0 75$0 50 Hope, Anthony. Father Stafford7575 Hornung, E. Tiny Luttrell1 001 00 Hudson, W. C. Jack Gordon, Knight-Errant7575 "On the Rack7575 "The Diamond Button7575 "The Dugdale Millions7575 "The Man with a Thumb7575 " Vivier7575 Inca-Pancha-Ozollo. The Lost Inca7575 Jokai, Maurus. Dr. DumÁny's Wife7575 "Pretty Michal7575 Keeling, Elsa D'Esterre. Orchardscroft1 001 00 Keenan, Henry F. Trajan 15050 Keith, Leslie. 'Lisbeth1 001 00 La Forest, Debut. RenÉe and Colette7575 Landon, Melville D. Thirty Years of Wit, etc 15050 Lathrop, Geo. Parsons. Two Sides of a Story7575 LemaÎtre, Jules. Prince Hermann, Regent7575 Le Queux, Wm. Strange Tales of a Nihilist7575 Loti, Pierre. The Book of Pity and of Death7575 "Jean Berny, Sailor1 001 00 Mairet, Mme. Jeanne. An Artist7575 Mallock, W. H. A Human Document7575 Marryat, Florence. Parson Jones1 001 00 Mary, Jules. The Shadow of Roger Laroque7575 McClelland, M. G. Burkett's Lock7575 McClelland, M. G. Madame Silva7575 McDougall, W. H. The Hidden City7575 Meade, L. T. Out of the Fashion1 001 00 "The Medicine Lady1 001 00 Meredith, Wm. T. Not of Her Father's Race7575 Mitford, Bertrand. 'Tween Snow and Fire7575 Molesworth, Mrs. Leona1 001 00 Montague, C. H., and C. W. Dyar. Written in Red7575 Moore, Frank F. I Forbid the Banns1 001 00 Mouriot, Mlle. V. Madame RosÉly1 001 00 Ohnet, Georges. A Debt of Hatred7575 "Nimrod & Co7575 "The Soul of Pierre7575 Page, Anna Dyer. An Artist7575 ""A Mystery7575 Parr, Mrs. The Squire1 001 00 Potapeeko, N. E. A Russian Priest7575 "The General's Daughter7575 Quiller-Couch, A. T. ("Q"). A Blot of Ink7575 ""Blue Pavilions7575 Quiller-Couch, A. T. ("Q"). Dead Man's Rock$0 75$0 50 ""I Saw Three Ships7575 ""Noughts and Crosses7575 ""The Splendid Spur7575 ""The Astonishing History of Troy Town7575 Quigg, L. E. Tin Types 15050 Rickett, J. Compton. The Quickening of Caliban1 001 00 Richebourg, Émile. Old Raclot's Million7575 Roberts, Morley. Mate of the Vancouver7575 Russell, W. Clark. List, Ye Landsmen1 001 00 "Romance of a Transport1 001 00 "The Emigrant Ship1 001 00 Sacher-Masoch, L. von. The New Job7575 Sale, Pierre. The Price of a Coronet7575 Shapcott, Reuben. Auto. of Mark Rutherford1 001 00 "Mark Rutherford's Deliverance1 001 00 "Revolution in Tanner's Lane1 001 00 Sherard, R. H. By Right, Not Law7575 Souvestre, Émile. Man and Money7575 Spencer, Mrs. G. E. A Plucky One7575 Sterne, Stuart. The Story of Two Lives7575 Stoddard, Elizabeth. Two Men7575 "Temple House7575 "The Morgesons7575 Stretton, Hesba. Half-Brothers1 001 00 Sylva, Carmen. Edleen Vaughan7575 Thomas, Annie. Utterly Mistaken1 001 00 Thompson, Maurice. At Love's Extremes7575 "A Banker of Bankersville7575 Tompkins, E. S. De G. An Honest Hypocrite7575 Valdes, A. P. Faith7575 Valentine, Jane. Time's Scythe7575 Van Zile, Edward S. Last of the Van Slacks7575 ""Don Miguel, etc.7575 Verne, Jules. CÆsar Cascabel1 001 00 "Mistress Branican1 001 00 Walworth, Mrs. J. H. Baldy's Point7575 ""Bar Sinister7575 ""New Man at Rossmere7575 ""Without Blemish7575 Weyman, S. J. Story of Francis Cludde1 001 00 "The Man in Black1 001 00 Woolf, Philip, M. D.Who is Guilty?7575 Wood, J. S. An Old Beau1 001 00 Zola, Émile. Doctor Pascal1 001 00 "The Downfall1 5050 |