d her friends. What might have happened if her relatives
had been what is termed 'respectable' I cannot pretend to say. As it
was, they were people who could (in the common phrase) be conveniently
treated with. The only survivor of the family at the present time is
a scoundrel calling himself Captain Wragge. When I tell you that he
privately extorted the price of his silence from Mrs. Vanstone to
the last; and when I add that his conduct presents no extraordinary
exception to the conduct, in their lifetime, of the other relatives--you
will understand what sort of people I had to deal with in my client's
interests, and how their assumed indignation was appeased.
"Having, in the first instance, left England for Ireland, Mr. Vanstone
and Miss Blake remained there afterward for some years. Girl as she was,
she faced her position and its necessities without flinching. Having
once resolved to sacrifice her life to the man she loved; having quieted
her conscience by persuading herself that his marriage was a legal
mockery, and that she was 'his wife in the sight of Heaven,' she set
herself from the first to accomplish the one foremost purpose of so
living with him, in the world's eye, as never to raise the suspicion
that she was not his lawful wife. The women are few, indeed, who cannot
resolve firmly, scheme patiently, and act promptly where the dearest
interests of their lives are concerned. Mrs. Vanstone--she has a right
now, remember, to that name--Mrs. Vanstone had more than the average
share of a woman's tenacity and a woman's tact; and she took all the
needful precautions, in those early days, which her husband's less ready
capacity had not the art to devise--precautions to which they were
largely indebted for the preservation of their secret in later times.
"Thanks to these safeguards, not a shadow of suspicion followed them
when they returned to England. They first settled in Devonshire, merely
because they were far removed there from that northern county in which
Mr. Vanstone's family and connections had been known. On the part of his
surviving relatives, they had no curious investigations to dread. He
was totally estranged from his mother and his elder brother. His married
sister had been forbidden by her husband (who was a clergyman) to hold
any communication with him, from the period when he had fallen into the
deplorable way of life which I have described as following his return
from Canada. Other relations he
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