hat I should have said a great deal to Betty which
on the morrow would have been regretted, both for her sake and my own.
Just at a point when time seemed to have halted, the driver lifted the
rug hanging behind him, and said:--
"Here is the bend, sir, and yonder is the bourne."
Presently we knew by the breaking of the ice and the splashing of the
water that we were crossing the bourne, and when we were over, George
called to the driver, directing him to allow the horses to walk until the
order came to stop.
George dropped the front curtain, and turning to Betty and me, said:--
"Now, let us count as the clock ticks to the number 847, and when
finished, we shall be at the shrine."
"We are more apt to find a bleak moor and a sharp blast of wind," I
suggested.
While under the spell of Lilly's incantations, I had almost accepted his
absurd vaporings, but cooler thought had brought contempt, and I had
begun to look upon our journey as a very wild goose chase indeed.
"We have found the sharp turn in the road and the bourne," said George,
"and I see no reason to doubt that we shall find the shrine."
"Lilly may have passed over the road and may know that the shrine is
here; but when we find it, what will it prove?" I asked.
"It will prove nothing, though I am willing to stake my life that we find
Frances in Merlin House."
"Count!" exclaimed Betty, sharply. In our discussion, George and I had
forgotten to count, but Betty had been counting under her breath as the
clock ticks, and we took her number and started with it.
We all reached the number 847 almost at the same second, when we stopped
the coach, and sure enough, there by the roadside, on a small rocky
hillock surrounded by a bleak moor, was the shrine. Even from the road we
could see the fragment of a cross projecting above the one piece of wall
left standing. One would hardly have taken it to be a shrine unless the
fact had been suggested, but with the thought in mind, the fragmentary
cross was convincing evidence. Had its sacred quality been suspected
during the time of Cromwell, not one stone would have been left upon
another, but no one knew that it was the Virgin's shrine, therefore it
was not disturbed, but stood there, black on a field of luminous white.
We all saw it at the same moment. I was content to view it from the
coach, but George went to examine it, and returned, saying:--
"It is a shrine. Part of the cross still remains surmounti
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