CHAPTER XII. THE APPOINTED HOUR—THE SCHEMERS AND THE PLOT. “And here comes my dear brother,” exclaimed Mary Ashwoode, joyously, as she ran to welcome the young man, now entering her father’s room, in which, for more than an hour previously, she had been sitting. Throwing her arm round his neck, and looking sweetly in his face, she continued—”You will stay with us this evening, dear Harry—do, for my sake—you won’t refuse—it is so long since we have had you;” and though she spoke with a gay look and a gladsome voice, a sense of real solitariness called a tear to her dark eye. “No, Mary—not this evening,” said the young man coldly; “I must be in town again to-night, and before I go must have some conversation upon business with my father, so that I may not see you again till morning.” “Bu

