Chapter V. Of O'Connor's Moonlight Walk to the "Cock and Anchor," and What Befell Him by the Way
Chapter VI. The Soldier—The Night Ramble—And the Window That Let in More Than the Moonlight
Chapter IX. The "Bleeding Horse"—Hollands and Pipes for Two—Every Bullet Has Its Billet
Chapter XI. The Old Beech—Tree Walk and the IVY-Grown Gateway—The Tryste and Tue Crutch-Handled Cane
Chapter XII. The Appointed Hour—The Schemers and the Plot
Chapter XIII. The Interview—The Parchment—And the Nobleman's Coach
Chapter XIV. About a Certain Garden and a Damsel—And Also Concerning a Letter and a Red Leathern Box
Chapter XVII. Dublin Castle by Night—The Drawing-Room—Lord Wharton and His Court
Chapter XVIII. The Two Cousins—The Neglected Jewels and the Broken Seal
Chapter XIX. The Theatre—The Ruffian—The Assault, and the Rencontre
Chapter XXI. Who Appeared to Mary Ashwoode as She Sate Under the Trees—The Champion
Chapter XXIII. The Dark Room—Containing Plenty of Scars and Bruises and Plans of Vengeance
Chapter XXIV. A Critic—A Condition—And the Small-Swords
Chapter XXV. The Combat and Its Issue
Chapter XXVI. The Hell—Gordon Chancey—Luck—Frenzy and a Resolution
Chapter XXVII. The Departure of the Peer—The Billet and the Shattered Mirror
Chapter XXVIII. The Thunder-Storm—The Ebony Stick—The Unseen Visitant—Terror
Chapter XXIX. The Crones—The Corpse, and the Sharper
Chapter XXXI. The Usurer and the Oaken Box
Chapter XXXII. The Diabolic Whisper
Chapter XXXIV. The "Old St. Columbkil"—A Tête-À—Tête in the "Royal Ram"—The Tempter
Chapter XXXVI. Of Jewels, Plate, Horses, Dogs, and Family Pictures—And Concerning the Appointed Hour
Chapter XXXVII. The Reckoning—Chancey's Large Cat—And the Coach
Chapter XXXVIII. Strange Guests at the Manor
Chapter XXXIX. The Bargain, and the New Confederates
Chapter XL. Dreams—First Impressions—The Man in the Plum-Coloured Suit
Chapter XLI. Of O'Connor and a Certain Travelling Ecclesiastic—And How the Darkness Overtook Them
Chapter XLIII. The Wild Wood—The Old Mansion-House of Finiskea—Secrets, and a Surprise