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 working on imagination? The sleep was no part of the primary thing, but only necessary for that subjugation of the opposing will wherein the imagination of the operator might have free play with the imagination of the subject. Why not the imagination without the sleep? Why not my imagination against that of Lucy? And where was the imaginative idea with which I could overcome her belief in the curse? There lay her salvation, if I could only find it.

 X.

my way to London I picked up the evening papers at Rugby. They were full of my quondam acquaintance, La Mothe. He had made a sensation by improvising a sort of private hospital for the cure of inebriates. The Society for Psychical Research had investigated certain of his cases, and their report was favorable. His success was already very great. In a country house a few miles out of London he was at full swing. The patients were chiefly ladies.

Late that night I was sitting alone in my chambers, thinking of all that had happened so strangely, when I heard footsteps on the pavement below, and voices approaching my own building.

“This is Pump Court, sir, and this is number five.” It was the porter from the lodge outside.

“Thank you, thank you,” was the answer in a cheery tone, which came to me as a ghost of some old memory.

Then there was a heavy and uncertain step on the naked wooden stairs. I knew that the stranger was coming to me, and before he had knocked at my door I had got up to open it. At the next moment my father and I stood face to face.

“Does Mr. Har——” he began, and then looking into my face he cried, “Robert!” and laid hold of me with both hands.

I had not seen him for nearly fifteen years. His hair had become white, and he was now an elderly man. But if the change in my father was great, the change in me must have been still greater.

“Let me look at you, my boy,” he said, and without releasing my hands he drew me to the lamp, held me at arm's length, threw back his head and scanned me from head to foot. I remember that I laughed during this scrutiny, and bore it with the indulgence which, in a son, comes so near to condescension.

My father was much affected, but he did all he could to conceal his emotion under a boisterous manner.

“So I've taken you by surprise, eh? Come earlier than I was expected, have I? Well, I thought I would take you on the hop, young fellow. Here I am, any way, straight from Charing Cross, with all my luggage in the hands of the customs. Couldn't wait for the examination, you see. And now you've just got to put me up, for I'm not going to budge out of these rooms tonight.”

Thus he laughed and rattled on, telling me of his journey, his vacation, the time of his return, and interrupting every other sentence with exclamations on the change in myself, which had transformed me from boy to man. By and by he stopped in the torrent of his talk, looked round at a photograph of Lucy that stood on the mantelpiece, blinked at it, picked it up, and said,

“This?”

I nodded my head, and he settled his glasses and looked into the face in the photograph with a long and earnest gaze.

“Well?” I asked.

“She's beautiful!” he answered. “Beautiful!” he said again, with a long, warm utterance of the word, and after a moment, “She's a good woman,” he said tenderly.

We sat late and talked on every subject except one subject, and that was the subject nearest to my heart. Of Lucy's illness I could tell my father nothing, and I occupied myself at every pause in devising subterfuges by which I could prevent Sir George Chute from telling him. Somewhere in the early hours of morning my father unwittingly struck at an angle the thought that was dominant in my mind. He was talking of my mother, of whom I had no memories, for she had died in my childhood.

“Poor dear mother, she had strange fancies,” he said. “The last of them came just before her death. It was an odd thought, and of course a harmless one, but I really believe it brightened and cheered the sweet soul at the last dark hour of the end.”

“What was it?” I asked.

“You'll laugh. It was nothing—nothing a man could ever mention except to his son. In fact it was about your son.”

“Mine?”

“Yes; you were only a child then, but she thought she saw you as you might be at seventy, with a son of your own by your side.”

“Well?”

“You were a judge yourself, and your son was being made lord chancellor of England!”

I laughed, we both laughed, and then we 