To the first class belonged Mr. Kenyon, who, as we have already seen, had committed his wife to the horrible confinement of a mad-house that he might be free to spend her fortune. Hitherto he had not injured Oliver, though he had made his life uncomfortable; but the time was coming when our hero would be himself in peril. It was because he foresaw that Oliver might need to be removed that he began to treat him with unusual indulgence.
"Should anything happen," he said to himself, "this will disarm suspicion."
The time came sooner than he anticipated. Action was precipitated by a most unlooked-for occurrence, which filled the soul of the guilty husband with terror.
One day he stopped at the post-office to enquire for letters.
"There is no letter for you, Mr. Kenyon, but here is one for Oliver. Will you take it?"
Mr. Kenyon was curious to learn with whom his step-son corresponded, and said:
"Yes, I will take it."
It was put into his hands. No sooner did he scan the handwriting and the postmark than he turned actually livid.
It was in the handwriting of his wife, whom all the world supposed to be dead, and it was postmarked Charleston.
"Good Heavens! What a narrow escape!" he ejaculated, the perspiration standing in large drops on his brow. "Suppose Oliver had received this letter, I might have been lynched. I must go home and consider what is to be done. How could Dr. Fox be so criminally—idiotically careless as to suffer such a letter to leave his establishment?"
Mr. Kenyon hurried home, much perturbed.
On the way he met Roland, who could not help observing his father\'s agitation.
"What is the matter, father?" he enquired carelessly, for he cared very little for anyone but himself.
"I have a sick headache," said his father abruptly. "I am going home to lie down."
Roland made no further enquiries, and Mr. Kenyon gained the house without any other encounter.
He went up to his own room and locked himself in. Then he took out his pocket-knife and cut open the envelope. The letter was as follows:
My Dear Oliver:
This letter is from your unhappy mother, who is languishing in a private mad-house, the victim of your step-father\'s detestable machinations. Oh, Oliver, how can I reveal to you the hypocrisy and the baseness of that man, whom in an evil hour I accepted as the successor of your dear father. It was not because I loved him, but rather because of his importunity, that I yielded my assent to his proposals. I did not know his character then. I did not know, as I do now, that he only wanted to secure my property. He professed himself to be wealthy, but I have reason to think that in this, as in other things, he deceived me.
When we came South he pretended that it was on account of his health, and I unsuspectingly fell into the snare. I need not dwell upon the details of that journey. Enough that he lured me here and placed me under the charge of a Dr. Fox, a fitting tool of his, under the plea that I was insane.
I am given to understand that on his return to the North Mr. Kenyon represented me as dead. Such is his art that I do not doubt his story has been believed. Perhaps you, my dearest son, have mourned for me as dead. If this be so, my letter will be a revelation. I have been trying for a long time to get an opportunity to write you, but this is the first time I have met with success. I do not yet know if I can get it safely to the mail, but that is my hope.
When you receive this letter consult with friends whom you can trust, and be guided by their advice. Do what you can to rescue me from this living death. Do not arouse the suspicions of Mr. Kenyon if you can avoid it. He is capable of anything.
My dear son, my paper is exhausted, and I dare not write more, at any rate, lest I should be interrupted and detected. Heaven bless you and restore you to my longing sight.
Your loving mother,
Margaret Conrad.
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CHAPTER VII. ROLAND\'S DISCOMFITURE.
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CHAPTER IX. OLIVER\'S MOTHER.
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