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diff --git a/old/13257-8.txt b/old/13257-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2071abf --- /dev/null +++ b/old/13257-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,14032 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, The American Baron, by James De Mille, +Illustrated by William Ludwell Sheppard + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: The American Baron + + +Author: James De Mille + + + +Release Date: July 17, 2007 [eBook #13257] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AMERICAN BARON*** + + +E-text prepared by Keith M. Eckrich, Curtis Weyant, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net) and +revised by Louise Hope using page images generously made available by +Internet Archive/American Libraries +(http://www.archive.org/details/americana) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 13257-h.htm or 13257-h.zip: + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/3/2/5/13257/13257-h/13257-h.htm) + or + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/3/2/5/13257/13257-h.zip) + + + Images of the original pages are available through + Internet Archive/American Libraries. See + http://www.archive.org/details/americanbaron00demiiala + + + + + +THE AMERICAN BARON. + +A Novel. + +by + +JAMES DE MILLE, + +Author of +"The Dodge Club," "The Cryptogram," "Cord and Creese," &c. + +With Illustrations. + + + + + + + +[Illustration: +"AND AS THEY STOOD THE CLERGYMEN SLOWLY CAME OUT OF THE HOUSE" +--(SEE PAGE 132.)] + + + +NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, +FRANKLIN SQUARE. +1872. + + + * * * * * + + +By PROF. JAMES DE MILLE. + + _THE DODGE CLUB_; or, Italy in 1859. Illustrated. 8vo, + Paper, 75 cents; Cloth, $1.25. + + _CORD AND CREESE_. A Novel. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper, 75 + cents; Cloth, $1.25. + + _THE CRYPTOGRAM_. A Novel. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper, $1.50; + Cloth, $2.00. + + _THE AMERICAN BARON_. A Novel. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper. + +Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. + +_Sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on +receipt of the price._ + + * * * * * + +Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by +HARPER & BROTHERS, +In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. + + + + +THE AMERICAN BARON. + + + + +[Illustration: "PARDON, MEES."] + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +THE AVALANCHE. + + +Somewhat less than a hundred years ago a party of travelers might have +been seen crossing over the Simplon Road, _en route_ for Italy. They +had been detained at Brieg by reports that the road was impassable; +and, as it was the month of March, the prospect of snow and storms and +avalanches was sufficient to make them hesitate. At length the road +had been reopened, and they were informed that the journey might be +made on sleds. + +Unwilling to wait at Brieg, and equally unwilling to make a detour so +as to take the railroad, the party decided to go on. They were +informed that they could go on wheels as far as the line of snow, but +that afterward their accommodations would not be so comfortable as +they might desire. The road had been cleared for only a few feet; the +snow was deep; the sleds were rude; and progress would be slow. These +statements, however, did not shake the resolution of the party; +and the end of it was that they determined to go on, and cross the +mountain if it were possible. + +On leaving Brieg the road began to ascend with a very slight incline, +winding around in an intricate sort of way, sometimes crossing deep +gullies, at other times piercing the hillside in long dark tunnels; +but amidst all these windings ever ascending, so that every step took +them higher and higher above the little valley where Brieg lay. The +party saw also that every step brought them steadily nearer to the +line of snow; and at length they found the road covered with a thin +white layer. Over this they rolled, and though the snow became deeper +with every furlong of their progress, yet they encountered but little +actual difficulty until they approached the first station where the +horses were to be changed. Here they came to a deep drift. Through +this a pathway had been cleared, so that there was no difficulty about +going through; but the sight of this served to show them what might be +expected further on, and to fill them all with grave doubts as to the +practicability of a journey which was thus interrupted so early. + +On reaching the station these doubts were confirmed. They were +informed that the road had been cleared for sleds on the preceding +day, but that on the previous night fresh snow had fallen, and in such +quantities that the road would have to be cleared afresh. The worst of +it was that there was every probability of new snow-storms, which +would cover the road still deeper, and once more obliterate the track. +This led to a fresh debate about the journey; but they were all +unwilling to turn back. Only a few miles separated them from Domo +d'Ossola, and they were assured that, if no fresh snow should fall, +they would be able to start on the following morning. This last +assurance once more confirmed their wavering resolution, and they +concluded to wait at the station. + +For the remainder of that day they waited at the little way-side inn, +amusing themselves with looking out upon their surroundings. They were +environed by a scene of universal white. Above them towered vast +Alpine summits, where the wild wind blew, sweeping the snow-wreaths +into the air. In front was a deep ravine, at the bottom of which there +ran a torrent that foamed and tossed over rocks and boulders. It was +not possible to take a walk to any distance. Their boots were made for +lighter purposes than plunging through snow-drifts; and so they were +forced to remain indoors, and pass the time as best they could. + +On the following morning they found every thing in readiness for a +start. In front of the inn they saw five sleds of that kind which is +universally used in the northern part of America. Each sled was of the +rudest possible construction, and was drawn by one horse; straw was +spread over the sled, upon which fur robes and blankets were flung. +The party was distributed among these sleds, so that each one should +have as light a load as possible, while one of the rude vehicles +carried the luggage. + +Thus arranged, they all started off. And now, since they are all +fairly under way, I propose to introduce them, individually and +collectively, to my very good friend the reader. + +First of all I must mention the fact that the party consisted chiefly +of ladies and their attendants. + +Of these the most prominent was a slim, tall, elderly lady, with +large, dark, soft eyes, that spoke of a vanished youth and beauty from +her heavily wrinkled face. She was the Dowager Lady Dalrymple, and +acted toward the rest of the party in the multifarious capacity of +chaperon, general, courier, guide, philosopher, friend, and Mentor. + +Next came Mrs. Willoughby, a widow of great beauty and fascination, a +brunette, good-natured, clever, and shrewd. I might here pause, and go +into no end of raptures on the various qualities of this lady's +character; but, on the whole, I think I'd better not, as they will be +sufficiently apparent before the end of this story is reached. + +Then there was Miss Minnie Fay, sister to Mrs. Willoughby, and utterly +unlike her in every respect. Minnie was a blonde, with blue eyes, +golden hair cut short and clustering about her little head, little bit +of a mouth, with very red, plump lips, and very white teeth. Minnie +was very small, and very elegant in shape, in gesture, in dress, in +every attitude and every movement. The most striking thing about her, +however, was the expression of her eyes and her face. There was about +her brow the glory of perfect innocence. Her eyes had a glance of +unfathomable melancholy, mingled with childlike trust in the +particular person upon whom her gaze was fastened. Minnie was +considered by all her friends as a child--was treated as a +child--humored, petted, coaxed, indulged, and talked to as a child. +Minnie, on her part, thought, spoke, lived, moved, and acted as a +child. She fretted, she teased, she pouted, she cried, she did every +thing as a child does; and thus carried up to the age of eighteen the +bloom and charm of eight. + +The two sisters were nieces of the Dowager Lady Dalrymple. Another +niece also accompanied them, who was a cousin of the two sisters. This +was Miss Ethel Orne, a young lady who had flourished through a London +season, and had refused any number of brilliant offers. She was a +brunette, with most wonderful dark eyes, figure of perfect grace, and +an expression of grave self-poise that awed the butterflies of +fashion, but offered an irresistible attraction to people of sense, +intellect, intelligence, esprit, and all that sort of thing--like you +and me, my boy. + +I am taking up too much time and anticipating somewhat, I fear, by +these descriptions; so let us drop Miss Ethel. + +These ladies being thus all related formed a family party, and had +made the journey thus far on the best of terms, without any other +escort than that which was afforded by their chaperon, general, +courier, guide, philosopher, friend, and Mentor--the Dowager Lady +Dalrymple. + +The party was enlarged by the presence of four maids and a foreign +gentleman. This last-mentioned personage was small in stature, with a +very handsome face and very brilliant eyes. His frame, though slight, +was sinewy and well knit, and he looked like an Italian. He had come +on alone, and had passed the night at the station-house. + +A track about six feet wide had been cut out through the snow, and +over this they passed. The snow was soft, and the horses sank deep, so +that progress was slow. Nor was the journey without the excitement of +apparent danger. At times before them and behind them there would come +a low, rumbling sound, and they would see a mass of snow and ice +rushing down some neighboring slope. Some of these fell on the road, +and more than once they had to quit their sleds and wait for the +drivers to get them over the heaps that had been formed across their +path. Fortunately, however, none of these came near them; and Minnie +Fay, who at first had screamed at intervals of about five minutes, +gradually gained confidence, and at length changed her mood so +completely that she laughed and clapped her little hands whenever she +saw the rush of snow and ice. Thus slowly, yet in safety, they pushed +onward, and at length reached the little village of Simplon. Here they +waited an hour to warm themselves, lunch, and change horses. At the +end of that time they set out afresh, and once more they were on their +winding way. + +They had now the gratification of finding that they were descending +the slope, and of knowing that this descent took them every minute +further from the regions of snow, and nearer to the sunny plains of +Italy. Minnie in particular gave utterance to her delight: and now, +having lost every particle of fear, she begged to be allowed to drive +in the foremost sled. Ethel had been in it thus far, but she willingly +changed places with Minnie, and thus the descent was made. + +The sleds and their occupants were now arranged in the following +order: + +First, Minnie Fay alone with the driver. + +Second, Mrs. Willoughby and Ethel. + +Third, the Dowager and her maid. + +Fourth, the three other maids. + +Fifth, the luggage. + +After these five sleds, containing our party, came another with the +foreign gentleman. + +Each of these sleds had a driver to itself. + +In this order the party went, until at length they came to the Gorge +of Gondo. This is a narrow valley, the sides of which rise up very +abruptly, and in some places precipitously, to a great height. At the +bottom flows a furious torrent, which boils and foams and roars as it +forces its impetuous way onward over fallen masses of rock and trees +and boulders, at one time gathering into still pools, at other times +roaring into cataracts. Their road had been cut out on the side of the +mountain, and the path had been cleared away here many feet above the +buried road; and as they wound along the slope they could look up at +the stupendous heights above them, and down at the abyss beneath them, +whose white snow-covering was marked at the bottom by the black line +of the roaring torrent. The smooth slope of snow ran down as far as +the eye could reach at a steep angle, filling up all crevices, with +here and there a projecting rock or a dark clump of trees to break its +surface. + +The road was far beneath them. The drivers had informed them that it +was forty feet deep at the top of the pass, and that its depth here +was over thirty. Long poles which were inserted in the snow projected +above its surface, and served to mark where the road ran. + +Here, then, they drove along, feeling wearied with the length of the +way, impatient at the slowness of their progress, and eager to reach +their journey's end. But little was said. All had talked till all were +tired out. Even Minnie Fay, who at first had evinced great enthusiasm +on finding herself leading the way, and had kept turning back +constantly to address remarks to her friends, had at length subsided, +and had rolled herself up more closely in her furs, and heaped the +straw higher about her little feet. + +Suddenly, before them, and above them, and behind them, and all around +them, there arose a deep, low, dull, rushing sound, which seemed as if +all the snow on the slope was moving. Their ears had by this time +become sufficiently well acquainted with the peculiar sound of the +rushing snow-masses to know that this was the noise that heralded +their progress, and to feel sure that this was an avalanche of no +common size. Yes, this was an avalanche, and every one heard it; but +no one could tell where it was moving, or whether it was near or far, +or whether it was before or behind. They only knew that it was +somewhere along the slope which they were traversing. + +A warning cry came from the foremost driver. He looked back, and his +face was as pale as death. He waved his hands above him, and then +shouting for the others to follow, he whipped up his horse furiously. +The animal plunged into the snow, and tossed and floundered and made a +rush onward. + +But the other drivers held back, and, instead of following, shouted to +the first driver to stop, and cried to the passengers to hold on. Not +a cry of fear escaped from any one of the ladies. All did as they were +directed, and grasped the stakes of their sleds, looking up at the +slope with white lips, and expectation of horror in their eyes, +watching for the avalanche. + +And down it came, a vast mass of snow and ice--down it came, +irresistibly, tremendously, with a force that nothing could withstand. +All eyes watched its progress in the silence of utter and helpless +terror. It came. It struck. All the sleds in the rear escaped, but +Minnie's sled lay in the course of the falling mass. The driver had +madly rushed into the very midst of the danger which he sought to +avoid. A scream from Minnie and a cry of despair from the driver burst +upon the ears of the horrified listeners, and the sled that bore them, +buried in the snow, went over the edge of the slope, and downward to +the abyss. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE PERILOUS DESCENT. + + +The shriek of Minnie and the driver's cry of despair were both stopped +abruptly by the rush of snow, and were smothered in the heap under +which they were buried. The whole party stood paralyzed, gazing +stupidly downward where the avalanche was hurrying on to the abyss, +bearing with it the ill-fated Minnie. The descent was a slope of +smooth snow, which went down at an angle of forty-five degrees for at +least a thousand feet. At that point there seemed to be a precipice. +As their aching eyes watched the falling mass they saw it approach +this place, and then as it came near the whole avalanche seemed to +divide as though it had been severed by some projecting rock. It +divided thus, and went to ruin; while in the midst of the ruin they +saw the sled, looking like a helpless boat in the midst of foaming +breakers. So, like such a helpless boat, it was dashed forward, and +shot out of sight over the precipice. + +Whither had it gone? Into what abyss had it fallen? What lay beneath +that point over which it had been thrown? Was it the fierce torrent +that rolled there, or were there black rocks and sharp crags lying at +the foot of the awful precipice? Such were the questions which flashed +through every mind, and deepened the universal horror into universal +despair. + +In the midst of this general dismay Ethel was the first to speak and +to act. She started to her feet, and looking back, called in a loud +voice: + +"Go down after her! A thousand pounds to the man who saves her! +Quick!" + +At this the drivers came forward. None of them could understand +English, and so had not comprehended her offer; but they saw by her +gestures what she wanted. They, however, did not seem inclined to act. +They pointed down, and pointed up, and shook their heads, and jabbered +some strange, unintelligible patois. + +"Cowards!" cried Ethel, "to leave a young girl to die. I will go down +myself." + +And then, just as she was, she stepped from the sled, and paused for a +moment, looking down the slope as though selecting a place. Lady +Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby screamed to her to come back, and the +drivers surrounded her with wild gesticulations. To all this she paid +no attention whatever, and would certainly have gone down in another +moment had not a hand been laid on her arm, and a voice close by her +said, with a strong foreign accent, + +"Mees!" + +She turned at once. + +It was the foreign gentleman who had been driving behind the party. He +had come up and had just reached the place. He now stood before her +with his hat in one hand and the other hand on his heart. + +"Pardon, mees," he said, with a bow. "Eet is too periloss. I sall go +down eef you 'low me to mak ze attemp." + +"Oh, monsieur," cried Ethel, "save her if you can!" + +"Do not fear. Be calm. I sall go down. Nevare mine." + +The stranger now turned to the drivers, and spoke to them in their own +language. They all obeyed at once. He was giving them explicit +directions in a way that showed a perfect command of the situation. It +now appeared that each sled had a coil of rope, which was evidently +supplied from an apprehension of some such accident as this. Hastily +yet dextrously the foreign gentleman took one of these coils, and then +binding a blanket around his waist, he passed the rope around this, so +that it would press against the blanket without cutting him. Having +secured this tightly, he gave some further directions to the drivers, +and then prepared to go down. + +Hitherto the drivers had acted in sullen submission rather than with +ready acquiescence. They were evidently afraid of another avalanche; +and the frequent glances which they threw at the slope above them +plainly showed that they expected this snow to follow the example of +the other. In spite of themselves an expression of this fear escaped +them, and came to the ears of the foreign gentleman. He turned at once +on the brink of the descent, and burst into a torrent of invective +against them. The ladies could not understand him, but they could +perceive that he was uttering threats, and that the men quailed before +him. He did not waste any time, however. After reducing the men to a +state of sulky submission, he turned once more and began the descent. + +As he went down the rope was held by the men, who allowed it to pass +through their hands so as to steady his descent. The task before the +adventurer was one of no common difficulty. The snow was soft, and at +every step he sank in at least to his knees. Frequently he came to +treacherous places, where he sank down above his waist, and was only +able to scramble out with difficulty. But the rope sustained him; and +as his progress was downward, he succeeded in moving with some +rapidity toward his destination. The ladies on the height above sat in +perfect silence, watching the progress of the man who was thus +descending with his life in his hand to seek and to save their lost +companion, and in the intensity of their anxiety forgot utterly about +any danger to themselves, though from time to time there arose the +well-known sound of sliding masses, not so far away but that under +other circumstances of less anxiety it might have filled them with +alarm. But now there was no alarm for themselves. + +And now the stranger was far down, and the coil of rope was well-nigh +exhausted. But this had been prepared for, and the drivers fastened +this rope to another coil, and after a time began to let out that one +also. + +Farther and farther down the descent went on. They saw the stranger +pursuing his way still with unfaltering resolution; and they sent +after him all their hearts and all their prayers. At last he plunged +down almost out of sight, but the next moment he emerged, and then, +after a few leaps, they saw that he had gained the place where lay the +ruins of the shattered avalanche. Over this he walked, sometimes +sinking, at other times running and leaping, until at length he came +to the precipice over which the sled had been flung. + +And now the suspense of the ladies became terrible. This was the +critical moment. Already his eyes could look down upon the mystery +that lay beneath that precipice. And what lay revealed there? Did his +eyes encounter a spectacle of horror? Did they gaze down into the +inaccessible depths of some hideous abyss? Did they see those jagged +rocks, those sharp crags, those giant boulders, those roaring billows, +which, in their imaginations, had drawn down their lost companion to +destruction? Such conjectures were too terrible. Their breath failed +them, and their hearts for a time almost ceased to beat as they sat +there, overcome by such dread thoughts as these. + +Suddenly a cry of delight escaped Ethel. She was kneeling down beside +Lady Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby, with her eyes staring from her +pallid face, when she saw the stranger turn and look up. He took off +his hat, and waved it two or three times. Then he beckoned to the +drivers. Then he sat down and prepared to let himself over the +precipice. This incident inspired hope. It did more. It gave a +moment's confidence, and the certainty that all was not lost. They +looked at each other, and wept tears of joy. But soon that momentary +hope vanished, and uncertainty returned. After all, what did the +stranger's gesture mean? He might have seen her--but how? He might +reach her, but would she be safe from harm? Could such a thing be +hoped for? Would she not, rather, be all marred and mutilated? Dared +they hope for any thing better? They dared not. And now they sat once +more, as sad as before, and their short-lived gleam of hope faded +away. + +They saw the stranger go over the precipice. + +Then he disappeared. + +The rope was let out for a little distance, and then stopped. Then +more went out. Then it stopped again. + +The rope now lay quite loose. There was no tension. + +What was the meaning of this? Was he clinging to the side of the +precipice? Impossible. It looked rather as though he had reached some +place where he was free to move, and had no further need of descent. +And it seemed as though the precipice might not be so deep or so +fearful as they had supposed. + +In a short time their eyes were greeted by the appearance of the +stranger above the precipice. He waved his hat again. Then he made +some gestures, and detached the rope from his person. The drivers +understood him as if this had been preconcerted. Two of them instantly +unharnessed the horse from one of the sleds, while the others pulled +up the rope which the stranger had cast off. Then the latter +disappeared once more behind the precipice. The ladies watched now in +deep suspense; inclining to hope, yet dreading the worst. They saw the +drivers fasten the rope to the sled, and let it down the slope. It was +light, and the runners were wide. It did not sink much, but slid down +quite rapidly. Once or twice it stuck, but by jerking it back it was +detached, and went on as before. At last it reached the precipice at a +point not more than a hundred feet from where the stranger had last +appeared. + +And now as they sat there, reduced once more to the uttermost +extremity of suspense, they saw a sight which sent a thrill of rapture +through their aching hearts. They saw the stranger come slowly above +the precipice, and then stop, and stoop, and look back. Then they +saw--oh, Heavens! who was that? Was not that her red hood--and that +figure who thus slowly emerged from behind the edge of the precipice +which had so long concealed her--that figure! Was it possible? Not +dead--not mangled, but living, moving, and, yes--wonder of +wonders--scaling a precipice! Could it be! Oh joy! Oh bliss! Oh +revulsion from despair! The ladies trembled and shivered, and laughed +and sobbed convulsively, and wept in one another's arms by turns. + +As far as they could see through the tears that dimmed their eyes, +Minnie could not be much injured. She moved quite lightly over the +snow, as the stranger led her toward the sled; only sinking once or +twice, and then extricating herself even more readily than her +companion. At last she reached the sled, and the stranger, taking off +the blanket that he had worn under the rope, threw it over her +shoulders. + +Then he signaled to the men above, and they began to pull up the sled. +The stranger climbed up after it through the deep snow, walking behind +it for some distance. At last he made a despairing gesture to the men, +and sank down. + +The men looked bewildered, and stopped pulling. + +The stranger started up, and waved his hands impatiently, pointing to +Minnie. + +The drivers began to pull once more at the sled, and the stranger once +more sank exhausted in the snow. + +At this Ethel started up. + +"That noble soul!" she cried; "that generous heart! See! he is saving +Minnie, and sitting down to die in the snow!" + +She sprang toward the men, and endeavored to make them do something. +By her gestures she tried to get two of the men to pull at the sled, +and the third man to let the fourth man down with a rope to the +stranger. The men refused; but at the offer of her purse, which was +well filled with gold, they consented. Two of them then pulled at the +sled, and number four bound the rope about him, and went down, while +number three held the rope. He went down without difficulty, and +reached the stranger. By this time Minnie had been drawn to the top, +and was clasped in the arms of her friends. + +But now the strength and the sense which had been so wonderfully +maintained gave way utterly; and no sooner did she find herself safe +than she fell down unconscious. + +They drew her to a sled, and tenderly laid her on the straw, and +lovingly and gently they tried to restore her, and call her back to +consciousness. But for a long time their efforts were of no avail. + +She lay there a picture of perfect loveliness, as beautiful as a +dream--like some child-angel. Her hair, frosted with snow dust, +clustered in golden curls over her fair white brow; her little hands +were folded meekly over her breast; her sweet lips were parted, and +disclosed the pearly teeth; the gentle eyes no longer looked forth +with their piteous expression of mute appeal; and her hearing was deaf +to the words of love and pity that were lavished upon her. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +THE CHILD-ANGEL AND HER WOES. + + +Mrs. Willoughby was in her room at the hotel in Milan, when the door +opened, and Minnie came in. She looked around the room, drew a long +breath, then locked the door, and flinging herself upon a sofa, she +reclined there in silence for some time, looking hard at the ceiling. +Mrs. Willoughby looked a little surprised at first; but after waiting +a few moments for Minnie to say something, resumed her reading, which +had been interrupted. + +"Kitty," said Minnie at last. + +"What?" said her sister, looking up. + +"I think you're horrid." + +"Why, what's the matter?" + +"Why, because when you see and know that I'm dying to speak to you, +you go on reading that wretched book." + +"Why, Minnie darling," said Mrs. Willoughby, "how in the world was I +to know that you wanted to speak to me?" + +"You _might_ have known," said Minnie, with a pout--"you saw me look +all round, and lock the door; and you saw how worried I looked, and I +think it a shame, and I've a great mind not to tell you any thing +about it." + +"About it--what _it_?" and Mrs. Willoughby put down her book, and +regarded her sister with some curiosity. + +"I've a great mind not to tell you, but I can't help it. Besides, I'm +dying to ask your advice. I don't know what to do; and I wish I was +dead--there!" + +"My poor Minnie! what _is_ the matter? You're _so_ incoherent." + +"Well, Kitty, it's all my accident." + +"Your accident!" + +"Yes; on the Alps, you know." + +"What! You haven't received any serious injury, have you?" asked Mrs. +Willoughby, with some alarm. + +"Oh! I don't mean that, but I'll tell you what I mean;" and here +Minnie got up from her reclining position, and allowed her little feet +to touch the carpet, while she fastened her great, fond, pleading, +piteous eyes upon her sister. + +"It's the Count, you know," said she. + +"The Count!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, somewhat dryly. "Well?" + +"Well--don't you know what I mean? Oh, how stupid you are!" + +"I really can not imagine." + +"Well--he--he--he pro--proposed, you know." + +"Proposed!" cried the other, in a voice of dismay. + +"Now, Kitty, if you speak in that horrid way I won't say another word. +I'm worried too much already, and I don't want you to scold me. And I +won't have it." + +"Minnie darling, I wish you would tell me something. I'm not scolding. +I merely wish to know what you mean. Do you really mean that the Count +has proposed to you?" + +"Of course that's what I mean." + +"What puzzles me is, how he could have got the chance. It's more than +a week since he saved you, and we all felt deeply grateful to him. But +saving a girl's life doesn't give a man any claim over her; and we +don't altogether like him; and so we all have tried, in a quiet way, +without hurting his feelings, you know, to prevent him from having any +acquaintance with you." + +"Oh, I know, I know," said Minnie, briskly. "He told me all that. He +understands that; but he doesn't care, he says, if _I_ only consent. +He will forgive _you_, he says." + +Minnie's volubility was suddenly checked by catching her sister's eye +fixed on her in new amazement. + +"Now you're beginning to be horrid," she cried. "Don't, don't--" + +"Will you have the kindness to tell me," said Mrs. Willoughby, very +quietly, "how in the world the Count contrived to tell you all this?" + +"Why--why--several times." + +"Several times!" + +"Yes." + +"Tell me where?" + +"Why, once at the amphitheatre. You were walking ahead, and I sat down +to rest, and he came and joined me. He left before you came back." + +"He must have been following us, then." + +"Yes. And another time in the picture-gallery; and yesterday in a +shop; and this morning at the Cathedral." + +"The Cathedral!" + +"Yes, Kitty. You know we all went, and Lady Dalrymple would not go up. +So Ethel and I went up. And when we got up to the top I walked about, +and Ethel sat down to admire the view. And, you know, I found myself +off at a little distance, when suddenly I saw Count Girasole. And +then, you know, he--he--proposed." + +Mrs. Willoughby sat silent for some time. + +"And what did you say to him?" she asked at length. + +"Why, what else could I say?" + +"What else than _what_?" + +"I don't see why you should act _so_ like a grand inquisitor, Kitty. +You really make me feel quite nervous," said Minnie, who put her +little rosy-tipped fingers to one of her eyes, and attempted a sob, +which turned out a failure. + +"Oh, I only asked you what you told him, you know." + +"Well," said Minnie, gravely, "I told him, you know, that I was +awfully grateful to him, and that I'd give any thing if I could to +express my gratitude. And then, you know--oh, he speaks such darling +broken English--he called me his 'mees,' and tried to make a pretty +speech, which was so mixed with Italian that I didn't understand one +single word. By-the-way, Kitty, isn't it odd how every body here +speaks Italian, even the children?" + +"Yes, very odd; but, Minnie dear, I want to know what you told him." + +"Why, I told him that I didn't know, you know." + +"And then?" + +"And then he took my hand. Now, Kitty, you're unkind. I really _can +not_ tell you all this." + +"Yes, but I only ask so as to advise you. I want to know how the case +stands." + +"Well, you know, he was so urgent--" + +"Yes?" + +"And so handsome--" + +"Well?" + +"And then, you know, he saved my life--didn't he, now? You must +acknowledge that much, mustn't you?" + +"Oh yes." + +"Well--" + +"Well?" + +Minnie sighed. + +"So what could I say?" + +Minnie paused. + +Mrs. Willoughby looked troubled. + +"Kitty, I _wish_ you wouldn't look at me with that dreadful +expression. You really make me feel quite frightened." + +"Minnie," said the other, in a serious voice, "do you really _love_ +this man?" + +"Love this man! why no, not particularly; but I _like_ him; that is, I +think I do, or rather I thought I did; but really I'm so worried about +all my troubles that I wish he had never come down after me. I don't +see why he did, either. I didn't ask him to. I remember, now, I really +felt quite embarrassed when I saw him. I knew there would be trouble +about it. And I wish you would take me back home. I hate Italy. Do, +Kitty darling. But then--" + +Minnie paused again. + +"Well, Minnie dear, we certainly must contrive some plan to shake him +off without hurting his feelings. It can't be thought of. There are a +hundred objections. If the worst comes to the worst we can go back, as +you say, to England." + +"I know; but then," said Minnie, "that's the very thing that I can't +do--" + +"Can't do what?" + +"Go back to England." + +"Back to England! Why not? I don't know what you mean." + +"Well, you see, Kitty, that's the very thing I came to see you about. +This dreadful man--the Count, you know--has some wonderful way of +finding out where I go; and he keeps all the time appearing and +disappearing in the very strangest manner; and when I saw him on the +roof of the Cathedral it really made me feel quite giddy. He is _so_ +determined to win me that I'm afraid to look round. He takes the +commonest civility as encouragement. And then, you know--there it +is--I really can't go back to England." + +"What do you mean by that?" + +"Why there's--a--a dreadful person there," said Minnie, with an awful +look in her eyes. + +"A what?" + +"A--person," said Minnie. + +"A man?" + +Minnie nodded. "Oh yes--of course. Really when one thinks of one's +troubles it's enough to drive one distracted. This person is a man. I +don't know why it is that I should be _so_ worried and _so_ distracted +by men. I do _not_ like them, and I wish there were no such persons." + +"Another man!" said Mrs. Willoughby, in some surprise. "Well, Minnie, +you certainly--" + +"Now don't, don't--not a word; I know all you're going to say, and I +won't stand it;" and Minnie ran over to her sister and held her hand +over her mouth. + +"I won't say a word," said Mrs. Willoughby, as soon as she had removed +Minnie's hand; "so begin." + +Minnie resumed her place on the sofa, and gave a long sigh. + +"Well, you know, Kitty darling, it happened at Brighton last +September. You were in Scotland then. I was with old Lady Shrewsbury, +who is as blind as a bat--and where's the use of having a person to +look after you when they're blind! You see, my horse ran away, and I +think he must have gone ever so many miles, over railroad bridges and +hedges and stone walls. I'm certain he jumped over a small cottage. +Well, you know, when all seemed lost, suddenly there was a strong hand +laid on the reins, and my horse was stopped. I tumbled into some +strange gentleman's arms, and was carried into a house, where I was +resuscitated. I returned home in the gentleman's carriage. + +"Now the worst of it is," said Minnie, with a piteous look, "that the +person who stopped the horse called to inquire after me the next day. +Lady Shrewsbury, like an old goose, was awfully civil to him; and so +there I was! His name is Captain Kirby, and I wish there were no +captains in the world. The life he led me! He used to call, and I had +to go out riding with him, and old Lady Shrewsbury utterly neglected +me; and so, you know, Kitty darling, he at last, you know, of course, +proposed. That's what they all do, you know, when they save your life. +Always! It's awful!" + +Minnie heaved a sigh, and sat apparently meditating on the enormous +baseness of the man who saved a lady's life and then proposed; and it +was not until Mrs. Willoughby had spoken twice that she was recalled +to herself. + +"What did you tell him?" was her sister's question. + +"Why, what could I tell him?" + +"What!" cried Mrs. Willoughby; "you don't--" + +"Now, Kitty, I think it's very unkind in you, when I want all your +sympathy, to be _so_ horrid." + +"Well, tell it your own way, Minnie dearest." + +Minnie sat for a time regarding vacancy with a soft, sad, and piteous +expression in her large blue eyes; with her head also a little on one +side, and her delicate hands gently clasped in front of her. + +[Illustration: "ANOTHER MAN!"] + +"You see, Kitty darling, he took me out riding, and--he took me to the +place where I had met him, and then he proposed. Well, you know, I +didn't know what to say. He was _so_ earnest, and _so_ despairing. And +then, you know, Kitty dearest, he had saved my life, and so--" + +"And so?" + +"Well, I told him I didn't know, and was shockingly confused, and then +we got up quite a scene. He swore that he would go to Mexico, though +why I can't imagine; and I really wish he had; but I was frightened at +the time, and I cried; and then he got worse, and I told him not to; +whereupon he went into raptures, and began to call me no end of +names--spooney names, you know; and I--oh, I did _so_ want him to +stop!--I think I must have promised him all that he wanted; and when I +got home I was frightened out of my poor little wits, and cried all +night." + +"Poor dear child!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, with tender sympathy. +"What a wretch!" + +"No, he wasn't a wretch at all; he was awfully handsome, only, you +know, he--was--so--_aw_fully persevering, and kept _so_ at my heels; +but I hurried home from Brighton, and thought I had got rid of him." + +"And hadn't you?" + +"Oh dear, no," said Minnie, mournfully. "On the day after my arrival +there came a letter; and, you know, I had to answer it; and then +another; and so it went on--" + +"Oh, Minnie! why didn't you tell me before?" + +"How could I when you were off in that horrid Scotland? I _always_ +hated Scotland." + +"You might have told papa." + +"I couldn't. I think papa's cruel _too_. He doesn't care for me at +all. Why didn't he find out our correspondence and intercept it, the +way papas always do in novels? If I were _his_ papa I'd not let _him_ +be so worried." + +"And did he never call on you?" + +"Yes; he got leave of absence once, and I had a dreadful time with +him. He was in a desperate state of mind. He was ordered off to +Gibraltar. But I managed to comfort him; and, oh dear, Kitty dear, did +you _ever_ try to comfort a man, and the man a total stranger?" + +At this innocent question Mrs. Willoughby's gravity gave way a little. + +Minnie frowned, and then sighed. + +"Well, you needn't be so unkind," said she; and then her little hand +tried to wipe away a tear, but failed. + +"Did he go to Gibraltar?" asked Mrs. Willoughby at length. + +"Yes, he did," said Minnie, with a little asperity. + +"Did he write?" + +"Of course he wrote," in the same tone. + +"Well, how did it end?" + +"End! It didn't end at all. And it never will end. It'll go on getting +worse and worse every day. You see he wrote, and said a lot of rubbish +about his getting leave of absence and coming to see me. And then I +determined to run away; and you know I begged you to take me to Italy, +and this is the first time I've told you the real reason." + +"So that was the real reason?" + +"Yes." + +"Well, Minnie, my poor child," said Mrs. Willoughby, after a pause, +"you're safe from your officer, at any rate; and as to Count Girasole, +we must save you from him. Don't give way." + +"But you can't save me. They'll come after me, I know. Captain Kirby, +the moment he finds out that I am here, will come flying after me; and +then, oh dear! the other one will come, and the American, too, of +course." + +"The what? who?" cried Mrs. Willoughby, starting up with new +excitement. "Who's that? What did you say, Minnie? The American? What +American?" + +Minnie threw a look of reproach at her sister, and her eyes fell. + +"You can't possibly mean that there are any more--" + +"There--is--_one_--more," said Minnie, in a low, faint voice, stealing +a glance at her sister, and looking a little frightened. + +"One more!" repeated her sister, breathless. + +"Well, I didn't come here to be scolded," said Minnie, rising, "and +I'll go. But I hoped that you'd help me; and I think you're very +unkind; and I wouldn't treat you so." + +"No, no, Minnie," said Mrs. Willoughby, rising, and putting her arm +round her sister, and drawing her back. "I had no idea of scolding. I +never scolded any one in my life, and wouldn't speak a cross word to +you for the world. Sit down now, Minnie darling, and tell me all. What +about the American? I won't express any more astonishment, no matter +what I may feel." + +"But you mustn't _feel_ any astonishment," insisted Minnie. + +"Well, darling, I won't," said her sister. + +Minnie gave a sigh. + +"It was last year, you know, in the spring. Papa and I were going out +to Montreal, to bring you home. You remember?" + +Mrs. Willoughby nodded, while a sad expression came over her face. + +"And, you remember, the steamer was wrecked." + +"Yes." + +"But I never told you how my life was saved." + +"Why, yes, you did. Didn't papa tell all about the heroic sailor who +swam ashore with you? how he was frantic about you, having been swept +away by a wave from you? and how he fainted away with joy when you +were brought to him? How can you suppose I would forget that? And then +how papa tried to find the noble sailor to reward him." + +"Oh yes," said Minnie, in a despondent tone. "That's all very true; +but he wasn't a noble sailor at all." + +"What!" + +"You see, he wasn't going to have a scene with papa, and so he kept +out of his way. Oh dear, how I wish he'd been as considerate with me! +But that's the way always; yes, always." + +"Well, who was he?" + +"Why, he was an American gentleman, returning home from a tour in +Europe. He saved me, as you have heard. I really don't remember much +about it, only there was a terrible rush of water, and a strong arm +seized me, and I thought it was papa all the time. And I found myself +carried, I don't know how, through the waves, and then I fainted; and +I really don't know any thing about it except papa's story." + +Mrs. Willoughby looked at Minnie in silence, but said nothing. + +"And then, you know, he traveled with us, and papa thought he was one +of the passengers, and was civil; and so he used to talk to me, and at +last, at Montreal, he used to call on me." + +"Where?" + +"At your house, dearest." + +"Why, how was that?" + +"You could not leave your room, darling, so I used to go down." + +"Oh, Minnie!" + +"And he proposed to me there." + +"Where? in my parlor?" + +"Yes; in your parlor, dearest." + +"I suppose it's not necessary for me to ask what you said." + +"I suppose not," said Minnie, in a sweet voice. "He was so grand and +so strong, and he never made any allusions to the wreck; and it +was--the--the--_very first_ time that any body ever--proposed; and so, +you know, I didn't know how to take it, and I didn't want to hurt his +feelings, and I couldn't deny that he had saved my life; and I don't +know when I _ever_ was so confused. It's awful, Kitty darling. + +"And then, you know, darling," continued Minnie, "he went away, and +used to write regularly every month. He came to see me once, and I was +frightened to death almost. He is going to marry me next year. He used +an awful expression, dearest. He told me he was a struggling man. +Isn't that horrid? What is it, Kitty? Isn't it something very, very +dreadful?" + +"He writes still, I suppose?" + +"Oh dear, yes." + +Mrs. Willoughby was silent for some time. + +"Oh, Minnie," said she at last, "what a trouble all this is! How I +wish you had been with me all this time!" + +"Well, what made you go and get married?" said Minnie. + +"Hush," said Mrs. Willoughby, sadly, "never mind. I've made up my mind +to one thing, and that is, I will never leave you alone with a +gentleman, unless--" + +[Illustration: +"HE BENT HIS HEAD DOWN, AND RAN HIS HAND THROUGH HIS BUSHY HAIR."] + +"Well, I'm sure I don't want the horrid creatures," said Minnie. "And +you needn't be so unkind. I'm sure I don't see why people will come +always and save my life wherever I go. I don't want them to. I don't +want to have my life saved any more. I think it's dreadful to have men +chasing me all over the world. I'm afraid to stop in Italy, and I'm +afraid to go back to England. Then I'm always afraid of that dreadful +American. I suppose it's no use for me to go to the Holy Land, or +Egypt, or Australia; for then my life would be saved by an Arab, or a +New Zealander. And oh, Kitty, wouldn't it be dreadful to have some +Arab proposing to me, or a Hindu! Oh, what _am_ I to do?" + +"Trust to me, darling. I'll get rid of Girasole. We will go to Naples. +He has to stop at Rome; I know that. We will thus pass quietly away +from him, without giving him any pain, and he'll soon forget all about +it. As for the others, I'll stop this correspondence first, and then +deal with them as they come." + +"You'll never do it, never!" cried Minnie; "I know you won't. You +don't know them." + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +IN THE CRATER OF VESUVIUS. + + +Lord Harry Hawbury had been wandering for three months on the +Continent, and had finally found himself in Naples. It was always a +favorite place of his, and he had established himself in comfortable +quarters on the Strada Nuova, from the windows of which there was a +magnificent view of the whole bay, with Vesuvius, Capri, Baiæ, and all +the regions round about. Here an old friend had unexpectedly turned up +in the person of Scone Dacres. Their friendship had been formed some +five or six years before in South America, where they had made a +hazardous journey in company across the continent, and had thus +acquired a familiarity with one another which years of ordinary +association would have failed to give. Scone Dacres was several years +older than Lord Hawbury. + +One evening Lord Hawbury had just finished his dinner, and was +dawdling about in a listless way, when Dacres entered, quite +unceremoniously, and flung himself into a chair by one of the windows. + +"Any Bass, Hawbury?" was his only greeting, as he bent his head down, +and ran his hand through his bushy hair. + +"Lachryma Christi?" asked Hawbury, in an interrogative tone. + +"No, thanks. That wine is a humbug. I'm beastly thirsty, and as dry as +a cinder." + +Hawbury ordered the Bass, and Dacres soon was refreshing himself with +copious draughts. + +The two friends presented a singular contrast. Lord Hawbury was tall +and slim, with straight flaxen hair and flaxen whiskers, whose long, +pendent points hung down to his shoulders. His thin face, somewhat +pale, had an air of high refinement; and an ineradicable habit of +lounging, together with a drawling intonation, gave him the appearance +of being the laziest mortal alive. Dacres, on the other hand, was the +very opposite of all this. He was as tall as Lord Hawbury, but was +broad-shouldered and massive. He had a big head, a big mustache, and a +thick beard. His hair was dark, and covered his head in dense, bushy +curls. His voice was loud, his manner abrupt, and he always sat bolt +upright. + +"Any thing up, Sconey?" asked Lord Hawbury, after a pause, during +which he had been languidly gazing at his friend. + +"Well, no, nothing, except that I've been up Vesuvius." + +Lord Hawbury gave a long whistle. + +"And how did you find the mountain?" he asked; "lively?" + +"Rather so. In fact, infernally so," added Dacres, thoughtfully. "Look +here, Hawbury, do you detect any smell of sulphur about me?" + +"Sulphur! What in the name of--sulphur! Why, now that you mention it, +I _do_ notice something of a brimstone smell. Sulphur! Why, man, +you're as strong as a lighted match. What have you been doing with +yourself? Down inside, eh?" + +Dacres made no answer for some time, but sat stroking his beard with +his left hand, while his right held a cigar which he had just taken +out of a box at his elbow. His eyes were fixed upon a point in the sky +exactly half-way between Capri and Baiæ, and about ten degrees above +the horizon. + +"Hawbury," said he, solemnly, after about two minutes of portentous +silence. + +"Well, old man?" + +"I've had an adventure." + +"An adventure! Well, don't be bashful. Breathe forth the tale in this +confiding ear." + +"You see," said Dacres, "I started off this morning for a ride, and +had no more intention of going to Vesuvius than to Jericho." + +"I should hope not. What business has a fellow like you with +Vesuvius--a fellow that has scaled Cotopaxi, and all that sort of +thing? Not you." + +Dacres put the cigar thoughtfully in his mouth, struck a light, and +tried to light it, but couldn't. Then he bit the end off, which he had +forgotten to do before. Then he gave three long, solemn, and +portentous puffs. Then he took the cigar between his first and second +fingers, and stretched his hand out toward Hawbury. + +"Hawbury, my boy," said he again. + +"All right." + +"You remember the time when I got that bullet in Uruguay?" + +"Yes." + +"Well, I had a shot to-day." + +"A shot! The deuce you had. Cool, too. Any of those confounded bandits +about? I thought that was all rot." + +"It wasn't a real shot; only figurative." + +"Figurative!" + +"Yes; it was a--a girl." + +"By Jove!" cried Hawbury, starting up from an easy posture which he +had secured for himself after fifteen minutes shifting and changing. +"A girl! You, Dacres, spooney! A fellow like you, and a girl! By +Jove!" + +Hawbury fell back again, and appeared to be vainly trying to grapple +with the thought. Dacres put his cigar between his lips again, and gave +one or two puffs at it, but it had gone out. He pitched it out of the +window, and struck his hand heavily on the arm of his chair. + +"Yes, Hawbury, a girl; and spooney, too--as spooney as blazes; but +I'll swear there isn't such another girl upon the whole face of the +earth; and when you bear in mind the fact that my observation, with +extended view, has surveyed mankind from China to Peru, you'll be able +to appreciate the value of my statement." + +"All right, old man; and now for the adventure." + +"The adventure? Well, you see, I started for a ride. Had a misty idea +of going to Sorrento, and was jogging along among a million pigs or so +at Portici, when I overtook a carriage that was going slowly along. +There were three ladies in it. The backs of two of them were turned +toward me, and I afterward saw that one was old--no doubt the +chaperon--and the other was young. But the third lady, Hawbury--Well, +it's enough to say that I, who have seen all women in all lands, have +never seen any thing like her. She was on the front seat, with her +face turned toward me. She was small, a perfect blonde; hair short and +curling; a round, girlish face; dimpled cheeks, and little mouth. Her +eyes were large and blue; and, as she looked at me, I saw such a +bewitching innocence, such plaintive entreaty, such pathetic trust, +such helpless, childlike--I'll be hanged if I can find words to +express what I want to say. The English language doesn't contain +them." + +"Do it in Latin, then, or else skip the whole description. All the +same. I know the whole story by heart. Love's young dream, and all +that sort of thing, you know." + +"Well," continued Dacres, "there was something so confoundedly +bewitching in the little girl's face that I found myself keeping on at +a slow pace in the rear of the carriage, and feasting on her looks. Of +course I wasn't rude about it or demonstrative." + +"Oh, of course. No demonstration. It's nothing to ride behind a +carriage for several hours, and 'feast' one's self on a pretty girl's +looks! But go on, old man." + +"Oh, I managed it without giving offense. You see, there was such a +beastly lot of pigs, peasants, cows, dirty children, lazaroni, and all +that sort of thing, that it was simply impossible to go any faster; so +you see I was compelled to ride behind. Sometimes, indeed, I fell a +good distance back." + +"And then caught up again to resume the 'feast?'" + +"Well--yes." + +"But I don't see what this has to do with your going to Vesuvius." + +"It has every thing to do. You see, I started without any fixed +purpose, and after I saw this carriage, I kept on insensibly after +it." + +"Oh, I see--yes. By Jove!" + +"And they drove up as far as they could." + +"Yes?" + +"And I followed. You see, I had nothing else to do--and that little +girl! Besides, it was the most natural thing in the world for me to be +going up; and the fact that I was bent on the same errand as +themselves was sufficient to account for my being near the carriage, +and would prevent them from supposing that I was following them. So, +you see, I followed, and at length they stopped at the Hermitage. I +left my horse there, and strolled forward, without going very far +away; my only idea was to keep the girl in sight. I had no idea that +they would go any further. To ascend the cone seemed quite out of the +question. I thought they would rest at the Hermitage, drink some +Lachryma Christi, and go back. But to my surprise, as I was walking +about, I saw the two young ladies come out and go toward the cone. + +"I kept out of the way, as you may suppose, and watched them, +wondering what idea they had. As they passed I heard the younger +one--the child-angel, you know, _my_ girl--teasing the other to make +the ascent of the cone, and the other seemed to be quite ready to +agree to the proposal. + +"Now, as far as the mere ascent is concerned, of course you know +_that_ is not much. The guides were there with straps and chairs, and +that sort of thing, all ready, so that there was no difficulty about +that. The real difficulty was in these girls going off unattended; and +I could only account for it by supposing that the chaperon knew +nothing whatever about their proposal. No doubt the old lady was +tired, and the young ones went out, as _she_ supposed, for a stroll; +and now, as _they_ proposed, this stroll meant nothing less than an +ascent of the cone. After all, there is nothing surprising in the fact +that a couple of active and spirited girls should attempt this. From +the Hermitage it does not seem to be at all difficult, and they had no +idea of the actual nature of the task. + +"What made it worse, however, was the state of the mountain at this +particular time. I don't know whether you have taken the trouble to +raise your eyes so high as the top of Vesuvius--" + +Hawbury languidly shook his head. + +"Well, I supposed not; but if you had taken the trouble, you would +have noticed an ugly cloud which is generally regarded here as +ominous. This morning, you know, there was an unusually large canopy +of very dirty smoke overhead. I knew by the look of things that it was +not a very pleasant place to go to. But of course they could not be +supposed to know any thing of the kind, and their very ignorance made +them rash. + +"Well, I walked along after them, not knowing what might turn up, but +determined to keep them in sight. Those beggars with chairs were not +to be trusted, and the ladies had gold enough about them to tempt +violence. What a reckless old devil of a chaperon she was, to let +those young girls go! So I walked on, cursing all the time the +conventionalities of civilization that prevented me from giving them +warning. They were rushing straight on into danger, and I had to keep +silent. + +"On reaching the foot of the cone a lot of fellows came up to them, +with chairs and straps, and that sort of thing. They employed some of +them, and, mounting the chairs, they were carried up, while I walked +up by myself at a distance from which I could observe all that was +going on. The girls were quite merry, appeared to be enchanted with +their ride up the cone, enjoyed the novelty of the sensation, and I +heard their lively chatter and their loud peals of ringing laughter, +and longed more than ever to be able to speak to them. + +"Now the little girl that I had first seen--the child-angel, you +know--seemed, to my amazement, to be more adventurous than the other. +By her face you would suppose her to be as timid as a dove, and yet on +this occasion she was the one who proposed the ascent, urged on her +companion, and answered all her objections. Of course she could not +have really been so plucky as she seemed. For my part, I believe the +other one had more real pluck of the two, but it was the child-angel's +ignorance that made her so bold. She went up the cone as she would +have gone up stairs, and looked at the smoke as she would have looked +at a rolling cloud. + +"At length the bearers stopped, and signified to the girls that they +could not go any further. The girls could not speak Italian, or any +other language apparently than English, and therefore could not very +well make out what the bearers were trying to say, but by their +gestures they might have known that they were warning them against +going any further. One might have supposed that no warning would have +been needed, and that one look upward would have been enough. The top +of the cone rose for upward of a hundred feet above them, its soil +composed of lava blocks and ashes intermingled with sulphur. In this +soil there were a million cracks and crevices, from which sulphurous +smoke was issuing; and the smoke, which was but faint and thin near +where they stood, grew denser farther up, till it intermingled with +the larger volumes that rolled up from the crater. + +"Now, as I stood there, I suddenly heard a wild proposal from the +child-angel. + +"'Oh, Ethel,' she said, 'I've a great mind to go up--'" + +Here Hawbury interrupted his friend: + +"What's that? Was that her friend's name?" he asked, with some +animation. "Ethel?--odd, too. Ethel? H'm. Ethel? Brunette, was she?" + +"Yes." + +"Odd, too; infernally odd. But, pooh! what rot! Just as though there +weren't a thousand Ethels!" + +"What's that you're saying about Ethel?" asked Dacres. + +"Oh, nothing, old man. Excuse my interrupting you. Go ahead. How did +it end?" + +"Well, the child-angel said, 'Ethel, I've a great mind to go up.' + +"This proposal Ethel scouted in horror and consternation. + +"'You must not--you shall not!' she cried. + +"'Oh, it's nothing, it's nothing,' said the child-angel. 'I'm dying to +take a peep into the crater. It must be awfully funny. Do come; do, do +come, Ethel darling.' + +"'Oh, Minnie, don't,' cried the other, in great alarm. And I now +learned that the child-angel's name was Minnie. 'Minnie,' she cried, +clinging to the child-angel, 'you must not go. I would not have come +up if I had thought you would be so unreasonable.' + +"'Ethel,' said the other, 'you are really getting to be quite a scold. +How ridiculous it is in you to set yourself up in this place as a +duenna! How can I help going up? and only one peep. And I never saw a +crater in my life, and I'm dying to know what it looks like. I know +it's awfully funny; and it's horrid in you to be so unkind about it. +And I really must go. Won't you come? Do, do, dear--dearest darling, +do--do--do!' + +"Ethel was firm, however, and tried to dissuade the other, but to no +purpose; for at length, with a laugh, the child-angel burst away, and +skipped lightly up the slope toward the crater. + +"'Just one peep,' she said. 'Come, Ethel, I must, I really must, you +know.' + +"She turned for an instant as she said this, and I saw the glory of +her child-face as it was irradiated by a smile of exquisite sweetness. +The play of feature, the light of her eyes, and the expression of +innocence and ignorance unconscious of danger, filled me with profound +sadness. And there was I, standing alone, seeing that sweet child +flinging herself to ruin, and yet unable to prevent her, simply +because I was bound hand and foot by the infernal restrictions of a +miserable and a senseless conventionality. Dash it, I say!" + +As Dacres growled out this Hawbury elevated his eyebrows, and stroked +his long, pendent whiskers lazily with his left hand, while with his +right he drummed on the table near him. + +"Well," resumed Dacres, "the child-angel ran up for some distance, +leaving Ethel behind. Ethel called after her for some time, and then +began to follow her up. Meanwhile the guides, who had thus far stood +apart, suddenly caught sight of the child-angel's figure, and, with a +loud warning cry, they ran after her. They seemed to me, however, to +be a lazy lot, for they scarce got up as far as the place where Ethel +was. Now, you know, all this time I was doomed to inaction. But at +this juncture I strolled carelessly along, pretending not to see any +thing in particular; and so, taking up an easy attitude, I waited for +the dénouement. It was a terrible position too. That child-angel! I +would have laid down my life for her, but I had to stand idle, and see +her rush to fling her life away. And all because I had not happened to +have the mere formality of an introduction." + +[Illustration: "I SAW HER TURN AND WAVE HER HAND IN TRIUMPH."] + +"Well, you know, I stood there waiting for the dénouement. Now it +happened that, as the child-angel went up, a brisk breeze had started, +which blew away all the smoke, so that she went along for some +distance without any apparent inconvenience. I saw her reach the top; +I saw her turn and wave her hand in triumph. Then I saw her rush +forward quickly and nimbly straight toward the crater. She seemed to +go down into it. And then the wind changed or died away, or both, for +there came a vast cloud of rolling smoke, black, cruel, suffocating; +and the mountain crest and the child-angel were snatched from my +sight. + +"I was roused by a shriek from Ethel. I saw her rush up the slope, and +struggle in a vain endeavor to save her friend. But before she had +taken a dozen steps down came the rolling smoke, black, wrathful, and +sulphurous; and I saw her crouch down and stagger back, and finally +emerge pale as death, and gasping for breath. She saw me as I stood +there; in fact, I had moved a little nearer. + +"'Oh, Sir,' she cried, 'save her! Oh, my God, she's lost!' + +"This was very informal, you know, and all that sort of thing; but +_she_ had broken the ice, and had accosted _me_; so I waived all +ceremony, and considered the introduction sufficient. I took off my +hat, and told her to calm herself. + +"But she only wrung her hands, and implored me to save her friend. + +"And now, my boy, lucky was it for me that my experience at Cotopaxi +and Popocatepetl had been so thorough and so peculiar. My knowledge +came into play at this time. I took my felt hat and put it over my +mouth, and then tied it around my neck so that the felt rim came over +my cheeks and throat. Thus I secured a plentiful supply of air, and +the felt acted as a kind of ventilator to prevent the access to my +lungs of too much of the sulphurous vapor. Of course such a +contrivance would not be good for more than five minutes; but then, +you know, five minutes were all that I wanted. + +"So up I rushed, and, as the slope was only about a hundred feet, I +soon reached the top. Here I could see nothing whatever. The +tremendous smoke-clouds rolled all about on every side, enveloping me +in their dense folds, and shutting every thing from view. I heard the +cry of the asses of guides, who were howling where I left them below, +and were crying to me to come back--the infernal idiots! The smoke was +impenetrable; so I got down on my hands and knees and groped about. I +was on her track, and knew she could not be far away. I could not +spend more than five minutes there, for my felt hat would not assist +me any longer. About two minutes had already passed. Another minute +was taken up in creeping about on my hands and knees. A half minute +more followed. I was in despair. The child-angel I saw must have run +in much further than I had supposed, and perhaps I could not find her +at all. A sickening fear came to me that she had grown dizzy, or had +slid down over the loose sand into the terrific abyss of the crater +itself. So another half minute passed; and now only one minute was +left." + +"I don't see how you managed to be so confoundedly accurate in your +reckoning. How was it? You didn't carry your watch in one hand, and +feel about with the other, I suppose?" + +"No; but I looked at my watch at intervals. But never mind that. Four +minutes, as I said, were up, and only one minute remained, and that +was not enough to take me back. I was at the last gasp already, and on +the verge of despair, when suddenly, as I crawled on, there lay the +child-angel full before me, within my reach. + +"Yes," continued Dacres, after a pause, "there she lay, just in my +grasp, just at my own last gasp. One second more and it must have been +all up. She was senseless, of course. I caught her up; I rose and ran +back as quick as I could, bearing my precious burden. She was as light +as a feather--no weight at all. I carried her as tenderly as if she +was a little baby. As I emerged from the smoke Ethel rushed up to me +and set up a cry, but I told her to keep quiet and it would be all +right. Then I directed the guides to carry her down, and I myself then +carried down the child-angel. + +"You see I wasn't going to give her up. I had had hard work enough +getting her. Besides, the atmosphere up there was horrible. It was +necessary, first of all, to get her down to the foot of the cone, +where she could have pure air, and then resuscitate her. Therefore I +directed the guides to take down Ethel in a chair, while I carried +down the child-angel. They had to carry her down over the lava blocks, +but I went to a part of the cone where it was all loose sand, and went +down flying. I was at the bottom a full half hour before the others. + +"Then I laid her upon the loose sand; and I swear to you, Hawbury, +never in all my life have I seen such a sight. She lay there before my +eyes a picture of loveliness beyond imagination--as beautiful as a +dream--more like a child-angel than ever. Her hair clustered in golden +curls over her white brow, her little hands were folded meekly over +her breast, her lips were parted into a sweet smile, the gentle eyes +no longer looked at me with the piteous, pleading, trustful, innocent +expression which I had noticed in them before, and her hearing was +deaf to the words of love and tenderness that I lavished upon her." + +"Good!" muttered Hawbury; "you talk like a novel. Drive on, old man. +I'm really beginning to feel excited." + +"'The fact is," said Dacres, "I have a certain set of expressions +about the child-angel that will come whenever I begin to describe +her." + +"It strikes me, though, that you are getting on pretty well. You were +speaking of 'love and tenderness.' Well?" + +"Well, she lay there senseless, you know, and I gently unclasped her +hands and began to rub them. I think the motion of carrying her, and +the fresh air, had both produced a favorable effect; for I had not +rubbed her hands ten minutes when she gave a low sigh. Then I rubbed +on, and her lips moved. I bent down close so as to listen, and I heard +her say, in a low voice, + +"'Am I at home?' + +[Illustration: "I BENT DOWN CLOSE."] + +"'Yes,' said I, gently, for I thought it was best to humor her +delirious fancy. + +"Then she spoke again: + +"'Is that you, papa dear?' + +"'Yes, darling,' said I, in a low voice; and I kissed her in a kind of +paternal way, so as to reassure her, and comfort her, and soothe her, +and all that sort of thing, you know." + +At this Hawbury burst into a shout of laughter. + +"What the mischief are you making that beastly row about?" growled +Dacres. + +"Excuse me, old boy. I couldn't help it. It was at the idea of your +doing the father so gravely." + +"Well, am I not old enough to be her father? What else could I do? She +had such a pleading, piteous way. By Jove! Besides, how did she know +any thing about it? It wasn't as if she was in her senses. She really +thought I _was_ her father, you know. And I'm sure I almost felt as if +I was, too." + +"All right, old man, don't get huffy. Drive on." + +"Well, you know, she kept her eyes closed, and didn't say another word +till she heard the voice of Ethel at a distance. Then she opened her +eyes, and got up on her feet. Then there was no end of a row--kissing, +crying, congratulating, reproaching, and all that sort of thing. I +withdrew to a respectful distance and waited. After a time they both +came to me, and the child-angel gave me a look that made me long to be +a father to her again. She held out her little hand, and I took it and +pressed it, with my heart beating awfully. I was horribly embarrassed. + +"'I'm awfully grateful to you,' she said; 'I'm sure I'd do any thing +in the world to repay you. I'm sure I don't know what would have +become of me if it hadn't been for you. And I hope you'll excuse me +for putting you to so much trouble. And, oh!' she concluded, half to +herself, 'what _will_ Kitty say now?'" + +"Kitty! Who's Kitty?" + +"I don't know." + +"All right. Never mind. Drive on, old chap." + +"Well, I mumbled something or other, and then offered to go and get +their carriage. But they would not hear of it. The child-angel said +she could walk. This I strongly dissuaded her from doing, and Ethel +insisted that the men should carry her. This was done, and in a short +time we got back to the Hermitage, where the old lady was in no end of +a worry. In the midst of the row I slipped away, and waited till the +carriage drove off. Then I followed at a sufficient distance not to be +observed, and saw where their house was." + +[Illustration: THE MEETING.] + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +THE BEGINNING OF BLUNDERS. + + +Dacres paused now, and lighting a fresh cigar, smoked away at it in +silence, with long and solemn and regular puffs. Hawbury watched him +for some time, with a look of dreamy curiosity and lazy interest. Then +he rose, and dawdled about the room for a few minutes. Then he lighted +a cigar, and finally, resuming his seat, he said: + +"By Jove!" + +Dacres puffed on. + +"I'm beginning to think," said Hawbury, "that your first statement is +correct. You are shot, my boy--hit hard--and all that; and now I +should like to ask you one question." + +"Ask away." + +"What are you going to do about it? Do you intend to pursue the +acquaintance?" + +"Of course. Why not?" + +"What do you intend to do next?" + +"Next? Why, call on her, and inquire after her health." + +"Very good." + +"Well, have you any thing to say against that?" + +"Certainly not. Only it surprises me a little." + +"Why?" + +"Because I never thought of Scone Dacres as a marrying man, and can't +altogether grapple with the idea." + +"I don't see why a fellow shouldn't marry if he wants to," said +Dacres. "What's the matter with me that I shouldn't get married as +well as lots of fellows?" + +"No reason in the world, my dear boy. Marry as many wives as you +choose. My remark referred merely to my own idea of you, and not to +any thing actually innate in your character. So don't get huffy at a +fellow." + +Some further conversation followed, and Dacres finally took his +departure, full of thoughts about his new acquaintance, and racking +his brains to devise some way of securing access to her. + +On the following evening he made his appearance once more at Hawbury's +rooms. + +"Well, old man, what's up? Any thing more about the child-angel?" + +"Well, a little. I've found out her name." + +"Ah! What is it?" + +"Fay. Her name is Minnie Fay." + +"Minnie Fay. I never heard of the name before. Who are her people?" + +"She is traveling with Lady Dalrymple." + +"The Dowager, I suppose?" + +"Yes." + +"Who are the other ladies?" + +"Well, I don't exactly remember." + +"Didn't you find out?" + +"Yes; I heard all their names, but I've forgotten. I know one of them +is the child-angel's sister, and the other is her cousin. The one I +saw with her was probably the sister." + +"What, the one named Ethel?" + +"Yes." + +"Ethel--Ethel Fay. H'm," said Hawbury, in a tone of disappointment. "I +knew it would be so. There are so many Ethels about." + +"What's that?" + +"Oh, nothing. I once knew a girl named Ethel, and--Well, I had a faint +idea that it would be odd if this should be the one. But there's no +such chance." + +"Oh, the name Ethel is common enough." + +"Well, and didn't you find out any thing about her people?" + +"Whose--Ethel's?" + +"Your child-angel's people." + +"No. What do I care about her people? They might be Jews or +Patagonians for all I care." + +"Still I should think your interest in her would make you ask." + +"Oh no; my interest refers to herself, not to her relatives. Her +sister Ethel is certainly a deuced pretty girl, though." + +"Sconey, my boy, I'm afraid you're getting demoralized. Why, I +remember the time when you regarded the whole female race with a lofty +scorn and a profound indifference that was a perpetual rebuke to more +inflammable natures. But now what a change! Here you are, with a +finely developed eye for female beauty, actually reveling in dreams of +child-angels and their sisters. By Jove!" + +"Nonsense," said Dacres. + +"Well, drive on, and tell all about it. You've seen her, of course?" + +"Oh yes." + +"Did you call?" + +"Yes; she was not at home. I went away with a snubbed and subdued +feeling, and rode along near the Villa Reale, when suddenly I met the +carriage with Lady Dalrymple and the child-angel. She knew me at once, +and gave a little start. Then she looked awfully embarrassed. Then she +turned to Lady Dalrymple; and by the time I had got up the carriage +had stopped, and the ladies both looked at me and bowed. I went up, +and they both held out their hands. Lady Dalrymple then made some +remarks expressive of gratitude, while the child-angel sat and +fastened her wonderful eyes on me, and threw at me such a pleading, +touching, entreating, piteous, grateful, beseeching look, that I +fairly collapsed. + +"When Lady Dalrymple stopped, she turned to her and said: + +"'And oh, aunty darling, did you _ever_ hear of any thing like it? It +was _so_ brave. Wasn't it an awfully plucky thing to do, now? And I +was really inside the crater! I'm sure _I_ never could have done such +a thing--no, not even for my _own papa_! Oh, how I do _wish_ I could +do something to show how _awfully_ grateful I am! And, aunty darling, +I do _wish_ you'd tell me what to do.' + +"All this quite turned my head, and I couldn't say any thing; but sat +on my saddle, devouring the little thing with my eyes, and drinking in +the wonderful look which she threw at me. At last the carriage +started, and the ladies, with a pleasant smile, drove on. I think I +stood still there for about five minutes, until I was nearly run down +by one of those beastly Neapolitan calèches loaded with twenty or +thirty natives." + +"See here, old man, what a confoundedly good memory you have! You +remember no end of a lot of things, and give all her speeches +verbatim. What a capital newspaper reporter you'd make!" + +"Oh, it's only _her_ words, you know. She quickens my memory, and +makes a different man of me." + +"By Jove!" + +"Yes, old chap, a different man altogether." + +"So I say, by Jove! Head turned, eyes distorted, heart generally +upset, circulation brought up to fever point, peace of mind gone, and +a general mania in the place of the old self-reliance and content." + +"Not content, old boy; I never had much of that." + +"Well, we won't argue, will we? But as to the child-angel--what next? +You'll call again?" + +"Of course." + +"When?" + +"To-morrow." + +"Strike while the iron is hot, hey? Well, old man, I'll stand by you. +Still I wish you could find out who her people are, just to satisfy a +legitimate curiosity." + +"Well, I don't know the Fays, but Lady Dalrymple is her aunt; and I +know, too, that she is a niece of Sir Gilbert Biggs." + +"What!" cried Hawbury, starting. "Who? Sir what?" + +"Sir Gilbert Biggs." + +"Sir Gilbert Biggs?" + +"Yes." + +"Sir Gilbert Biggs! By Jove! Are you sure you are right? Come, now. +Isn't there some mistake?" + +"Not a bit of a mistake; she's a niece of Sir Gilbert. I remember +that, because the name is a familiar one." + +"Familiar!" repeated Hawbury; "I should think so. By Jove!" + +Hawbury here relapsed into silence, and sat with a frown on his face, +and a puzzled expression. At times he would mutter such words as, +"Deuced odd!" "Confounded queer!" "What a lot!" "By Jove!" while +Dacres looked at him in some surprise. + +"Look here, old fellow!" said he at last. "Will you have the kindness +to inform me what there is in the little fact I just mentioned to +upset a man of your size, age, fighting weight, and general coolness +of blood?" + +"Well, there is a deuced odd coincidence about it, that's all." + +"Coincidence with what?" + +"Well, I'll tell some other time. It's a sore subject, old fellow. +Another time, my boy. I'll only mention now that it's the cause of my +present absence from England. There's a bother that I don't care to +encounter, and Sir Gilbert Biggs's nieces are at the bottom of it." + +"You don't mean this one, I hope?" cried Dacres, in some alarm. + +"Heaven forbid! By Jove! No. I hope not." + +"No, I hope not, by Jove!" echoed the other. + +"Well, old man," said Hawbury, after a fit of silence, "I suppose +you'll push matters on now, hard and fast, and launch yourself into +matrimony?" + +"Well--I--suppose--so," said Dacres, hesitatingly. + +"You _suppose_ so. Of course you will. Don't I know you, old chap? +Impetuous, tenacious of purpose, iron will, one idea, and all that +sort of thing. Of course you will; and you'll be married in a month." + +"Well," said Dacres, in the same hesitating way, "not so soon as that, +I'm afraid." + +"Why not?" + +"Why, I have to get the lady first." + +"The lady; oh, she seems to be willing enough, judging from your +description. Her pleading look at you. Why, man, there was love at +first sight. Then tumbling down the crater of a volcano, and getting +fished out. Why, man, what woman could resist a claim like that, +especially when it is enforced by a man like Scone Dacres? And, by +Jove! Sconey, allow me to inform you that I've always considered you a +most infernally handsome man; and what's more, my opinion is worth +something, by Jove!" + +Hereupon Hawbury stretched his head and shoulders back, and pulled +away with each hand at his long yellow pendent whiskers. Then he +yawned. And then he slowly ejaculated, + +"By Jove!" + +"Well," said Dacres, thoughtfully, "there is something in what you +say; and, to tell the truth, I think there's not a bad chance for me, +so far as the lady herself is concerned; but the difficulty is not in +that quarter." + +"Not in that quarter! Why, where the mischief else could there be any +difficulty, man?" + +Dacres was silent. + +"You're eager enough?" + +Dacres nodded his head sadly. + +"Eager! why, eager isn't the word. You're mad, man--mad as a March +hare! So go in and win." + +Dacres said nothing. + +"You're rich, not over old, handsome, well born, well bred, and have +saved the lady's life by extricating her from the crater of a volcano. +She seems too young and childlike to have had any other affairs. She's +probably just out of school; not been into society; not come out; just +the girl. Confound these girls, I say, that have gone through +engagements with other fellows!" + +"Oh, as to that," said Dacres, "this little thing is just like a +child, and in her very simplicity does not know what love is. +Engagement! By Jove, I don't believe she knows the meaning of the +word! She's perfectly fresh, artless, simple, and guileless. I don't +believe she ever heard a word of sentiment or tenderness from any man +in her life." + +"Very likely; so where's the difficulty?" + +"Well, to tell the truth, the difficulty is in my own affairs." + +"Your affairs! Odd, too. What's up? I didn't know any thing had +happened. That's too infernal bad, too." + +"Oh, it's nothing of that sort; money's all right; no swindle. It's an +affair of another character altogether." + +"Oh!" + +"And one, too, that makes me think that--" + +He hesitated. + +"That what?" + +"That I'd better start for Australia." + +"Australia!" + +"Yes." + +"What's the meaning of that?" + +"Why," said Dacres, gloomily, "it means giving up the child-angel, and +trying to forget her--if I ever can." + +"Forget her! What's the meaning of all this? Why, man, five minutes +ago you were all on fire about her, and now you talk quietly about +giving her up! I'm all adrift." + +"Well, it's a mixed up matter." + +"What is?" + +"My affair." + +"Your affair; something that has happened?" + +"Yes. It's a sore matter, and I don't care to speak about it just +now." + +"Oh!" + +"And it's the real cause why I don't go back to England." + +"The mischief it is! Why, Dacres, I'll be hanged if you're not using +the very words I myself used a few minutes ago." + +"Am I?" said Dacres, gloomily. + +"You certainly are; and that makes me think that our affairs are in a +similar complication." + +"Oh no; mine is very peculiar." + +"Well, there's one thing I should like to ask, and you needn't answer +unless you like." + +"Well?" + +"Doesn't your difficulty arise from some confounded woman or other?" + +"Well--yes." + +"By Jove, I knew it! And, old fellow, I'm in the same situation." + +[Illustration: "BY JOVE, I KNEW IT!"] + +"Oh ho! So you're driven away from England by a woman?" + +"Exactly." + +Dacres sighed heavily. + +"Yours can't be as bad as mine," said he, with a dismal look. "Mine is +the worst scrape that ever you heard of. And look at me now, with the +child-angel all ready to take me, and me not able to be taken. +Confound the abominable complications of an accursed civilization, I +say!" + +"And I say, Amen!" said Hawbury. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +THE FIERY TRIAL. + + +"See here, old chap," said Hawbury, "I'm going to make a clean breast +of it." + +"Of what?" + +"Of my affair." + +"That's right," said Dacres, dolefully. "I should like of all things +to hear it." + +"You see I wouldn't tell you, only you yourself turn out to be in a +similar situation, and so what I have to say may prove of use to you. +At any rate, you may give me some useful suggestion. + +"Very well, then," continued Hawbury--"to begin. You may remember that +I told you when we met here where I had been passing the time since I +saw you last." + +Dacres nodded assent. + +"Well, about two years ago I was in Canada. I went there for sport, +and plunged at once into the wilderness. And let me tell you it's a +very pretty country for hunting. Lots of game--fish, flesh, and +fowl--from the cariboo down to the smallest trout that you would care +to hook. Glorious country; magnificent forests waiting for the +lumberman; air that acts on you like wine, or even better; rivers and +lakes in all directions; no end of sport and all that sort of thing, +you know. Have you ever been in Canada?" + +"Only traveled through." + +"Well, the next time you feel inclined for high art sport we'll go +together, and have no end of fun--that is, if you're not married and +done for, which, of course, you will be. No matter. I was saying that +I was in a fine country. I spent a couple of months there with two or +three Indians, and at length started for Ottawa on my way home. The +Indians put me on the right path, after which I dismissed them, and +set out alone with my gun and fishing-rod. + +"The first day was all very well, and I slept well enough the first +night; but on the morning of the second day I found the air full of +smoke. However, I did not give much thought to that, for there had +been a smoky look about the sky for a week, and the woods are always +burning there, I believe, in one place or another. I kept on, and shot +enough for food, and thus the second day passed. That evening the air +was quite suffocating, and it was as hot as an oven. I struggled +through the night, I don't know how; and then on the third day made +another start. This third day was abominable. The atmosphere was +beastly hot; the sky was a dull yellow, and the birds seemed to have +all disappeared. As I went on it grew worse, but I found it was not +because the fires were in front of me. On the contrary, they were +behind me, and were driving on so that they were gradually approaching +nearer. I could do my thirty miles a day even in that rough country, +but the fires could do more. At last I came into a track that was a +little wider than the first one. As I went on I met cattle which +appeared stupefied. Showers of dust were in the air; the atmosphere +was worse than ever, and I never had such difficulty in my life in +walking along. I had to throw away my rifle and fishing-rod, and was +just thinking of pitching my clothes after them, when suddenly I +turned a bend in the path, and met a young girl full in the face. + +"By Jove! I swear I never was so astounded in my life. I hurried up to +her, and just began to ask where I was, when she interrupted me with a +question of the same kind. By-the-way, I forgot to say that she was on +horseback. The poor devil of a horse seemed to have had a deuced hard +time of it too, for he was trembling from head to foot, though whether +that arose from fatigue or fright I don't know. Perhaps it was both. + +"Well, the girl was evidently very much alarmed. She was awfully pale; +she was a monstrous pretty girl too--the prettiest by all odds I ever +saw, and that's saying a good deal. By Jove! Well, it turned out that +she had been stopping in the back country for a month, at a house +somewhere up the river, with her father. Her father had gone down to +Ottawa a week before, and was expected back on this day. She had come +out to meet him, and had lost her way. She had been out for hours, and +was completely bewildered. She was also frightened at the fires, which +now seemed to be all around us. This she told me in a few words, and +asked if I knew where the river was. + +"Of course I knew no more than she did, and it needed only a few words +from me to show her that I was as much in the dark as she was. I began +to question her, however, as to this river, for it struck me that in +the present state of affairs a river would not be a bad thing to have +near one. In answer to my question she said that she had come upon +this road from the woods on the left, and therefore it was evident +that the river lay in that direction. + +"I assured her that I would do whatever lay in my power; and with that +I walked on in the direction in which I had been going, while she rode +by my side. Some further questions as to the situation of the house +where she had been staying showed me that it was on the banks of the +river about fifty miles above Ottawa. By my own calculations I was +about that distance away. It seemed to me, then, that she had got lost +in the woods, and had wandered thus over some trail to the path where +she had met me. Every thing served to show me that the river lay to +the left, and so I resolved to turn in at the first path which I +reached. + +"At length, after about two miles, we came to a path which went into +the woods. My companion was sure that this was the very one by which +she had come out, and this confirmed the impression which the sight of +it had given me. I thought it certainly must lead toward the river. So +we turned into this path. I went first, and she followed, and so we +went for about a couple of miles further. + +"All this time the heat had been getting worse and worse. The air was +more smoky than ever; my mouth was parched and dry. I breathed with +difficulty, and could scarcely drag one leg after another. The lady +was almost as much exhausted as I was, and suffered acutely, as I +could easily see, though she uttered not a word of complaint. Her +horse also suffered terribly, and did not seem able to bear her weight +much longer. The poor brute trembled and staggered, and once or twice +stopped, so that it was difficult to start him again. The road had +gone in a winding way, but was not so crooked as I expected. I +afterward found that she had gone by other paths until she had found +herself in thick woods, and then on trying to retrace her way she had +strayed into this path. If she had turned to the left on first +reaching it, instead of to the right, the fate of each of us would +have been different. Our meeting was no doubt the salvation of both. + +"There was a wooded eminence in front, which we had been steadily +approaching for some time. At last we reached the top, and here a +scene burst upon us which was rather startling. The hill was high +enough to command an extensive view, and the first thing that we saw +was a vast extent of woods and water and smoke. By-and-by we were able +to distinguish each. The water was the river, which could be seen for +miles. Up the river toward the left the smoke arose in great volumes, +covering every thing; while in front of us, and immediately between us +and the river, there was a line of smoke which showed that the fires +had penetrated there and had intercepted us. + +"We stood still in bewilderment. I looked all around. To go back was +as bad as to go forward, for there, also, a line of smoke arose which +showed the progress of the flames. To the right there was less smoke; +but in that direction there was only a wilderness, through which we +could not hope to pass for any distance. The only hope was the river. +If we could traverse the flames in that direction, so as to reach the +water, we would be safe. In a few words I communicated my decision to +my companion. She said nothing, but bowed her head in acquiescence. + +"Without delaying any longer we resumed our walk. After about a mile +we found ourselves compelled once more to halt. The view here was +worse than ever. The path was now as wide as an ordinary road, and +grew wider still as it went on. It was evidently used to haul logs +down to the river, and as it approached the bank it grew steadily +wider; but between us and the river the woods were all burning. The +first rush of the fire was over, and now we looked forward and saw a +vast array of columns--the trunks of burned trees--some blackened and +charred, others glowing red. The ground below was also glowing red, +with blackened spaces here and there. + +"Still the burned tract was but a strip, and there lay our hope. The +fire, by some strange means, had passed on a track not wider than a +hundred yards, and this was what had to be traversed by us. The +question was, whether we could pass through that or not. The same +question came to both of us, and neither of us said a word. But before +I could ask the lady about it, her horse became frightened at the +flames. I advised her to dismount, for I knew that the poor brute +could never be forced through those fires. She did so, and the horse, +with a horrible snort, turned and galloped wildly away. + +"I now looked around once more, and saw that there was no escape +except in front. The flames were encircling us, and a vast cloud of +smoke surrounded us every where, rising far up and rolling overhead. +Cinders fell in immense showers, and the fine ashes, with which the +air was filled, choked us and got into our eyes. + +"'There is only one chance,' said I; 'and that is to make a dash for +the river. Can you do it?' + +"'I'll try,' she said. + +"'We'll have to go through the fires.' + +"She nodded. + +"'Well, then,' I said, 'do as I say. Take off your sacque and wrap it +around your head and shoulders.' + +"She took off her sacque at this. It was a loose robe of merino or +alpaca, or something of that sort, and very well suited for what I +wanted. I wrapped it round her so as to protect her face, head, and +shoulders; and taking off my coat I did the same. + +"'Now,' said I, 'hold your breath as well as you can. You may keep +your eyes shut. Give me your hand--I'll lead you.' + +"Taking her hand I led her forward at a rapid pace. Once she fell, but +she quickly recovered herself, and soon we reached the edge of the +flames. + +"I tell you what it is, my boy, the heat was terrific, and the sight +was more so. The river was not more than a hundred yards away, but +between us and it there lay what seemed as bad as the burning fiery +furnace of Messrs. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. If I were now +standing there, I don't think I could face it. But then I was with the +girl; I had to save her. Fire was behind us, racing after us; water +lay in front. Once there and we were safe. It was not a time to dawdle +or hesitate, I can assure you. + +"'Now,' said I, 'run for your life!' + +"Grasping her hand more firmly, I started off with her at the full +run. The place was terrible, and grew worse at every step. The road +here was about fifty feet wide. On each side was the burning forest, +with a row of burned trees like fiery columns, and the moss and +underbrush still glowing beneath. To pass through that was a thing +that it don't do to look back upon. The air was intolerable. I wrapped +my coat tighter over my head; my arms were thus exposed, and I felt +the heat on my hands. But that was nothing to the torments that I +endured from trying to breathe. Besides this, the enormous effort of +keeping up a run made breathing all the more difficult. A feeling of +despair came over me. Already we had gone half the distance, but at +that moment the space seemed lengthened out interminably, and I looked +in horror at the rest of the way, with a feeling of the utter +impossibility of traversing it. + +[Illustration: THE FIERY TRIAL.] + +"Suddenly the lady fell headlong. I stopped and raised her up. My coat +fell off; I felt the fiery air all round my face and head. I called +and screamed to the lady as I tried to raise her up; but she said +nothing. She was as lifeless as a stone. + +"Well, my boy, I thought it was all up with me; but I, at least, could +stand, though I did not think that I could take another breath. As for +the lady, there was no help for it; so I grasped her with all my +strength, still keeping her head covered as well as I could, and slung +her over my shoulders. Then away I ran. I don't remember much after +that. I must have lost my senses then, and, what is more, I must have +accomplished the rest of the journey in that semi-unconscious state. + +"What I do remember is this--a wild plunge into the water; and the +delicious coolness that I felt all around restored me, and I at once +comprehended all. The lady was by my side; the shock and the cool +water had restored her also. She was standing up to her shoulders just +where she had fallen, and was panting and sobbing. I spoke a few words +of good cheer, and then looked around for some place of refuge. Just +where we stood there was nothing but fire and desolation, and it was +necessary to go further away. Well, some distance out, about half-way +across the river, I saw a little island, with rocky sides, and trees +on the top. It looked safe and cool and inviting. I determined to try +to get there. Some deals were in the water by the bank, which had +probably floated down from some saw-mill. I took half a dozen of +these, flung two or three more on top of them, and then told the lady +my plan. It was to float out to the island by means of this raft. I +offered to put her on it and let her float; but she refused, +preferring to be in the water. + +"The river was pretty wide here, and the water was shallow, so that we +were able to wade for a long distance, pushing the raft before us. At +length it became deep, and then the lady held on while I floated and +tried to direct the raft toward the island. I had managed while wading +to guide the raft up the stream, so that when we got into deep water +the current carried us toward the island. At length we reached it +without much difficulty, and then, utterly worn out, I fell down on +the grass, and either fainted away or fell asleep. + +"When I revived I had several very queer sensations. The first thing +that I noticed was that I hadn't any whiskers." + +"What! no whiskers?" + +"No--all gone; and my eyebrows and mustache, and every wisp of hair +from my head." + +"See here, old fellow, do you mean to say that you've only taken one +year to grow those infernally long whiskers that you have now?" + +"It's a fact, my boy!" + +"I wouldn't have believed it; but some fellows can do such +extraordinary things. But drive on." + +"Well, the next thing I noticed was that it was as smoky as ever. Then +I jumped up and looked around. I felt quite dry, though it seemed as +if I had just come from the river. As I jumped up and turned I saw my +friend. She looked much better than she had. Her clothes also were +quite dry. She greeted me with a mournful smile, and rose up from the +trunk of a tree where she had been sitting, and made inquiries after +my health with the most earnest and tender sympathy. + +"I told her I was all right, laughed about my hair, and inquired very +anxiously how she was. She assured me that she was as well as ever. +Some conversation followed; and then, to my amazement, I found that I +had slept for an immense time, or had been unconscious, whichever it +was, and that the adventure had taken place on the preceding day. It +was now about the middle of the next day. You may imagine how +confounded I was at that. + +[Illustration: +"ALL GONE; MY EYEBROWS, AND MUSTACHE, AND EVERY WISP OF +HAIR FROM MY HEAD."] + +"The air was still abominably close and smoky; so I looked about the +island, and found a huge crevice in the rocks, which was almost a +cave. It was close by the water, and was far cooler than outside. In +fact, it was rather comfortable than otherwise. Here we took refuge, +and talked over our situation. As far as we could see, the whole +country was burned up. A vast cloud of smoke hung over all. One +comfort was that the glow had ceased on the river-bank, and only a +blackened forest now remained, with giant trees arising, all blasted. +We found that our stay would be a protracted one. + +"The first thing that I thought of was food. Fortunately I had my +hooks and lines; so I cut a pole, and fastening my line to it, I +succeeded in catching a few fish. + +"We lived there for two days on fish in that manner. The lady was sad +and anxious. I tried to cheer her up. Her chief trouble was the fear +that her father was lost. In the course of our conversations I found +out that her name was Ethel Orne." + +"Ethel Orne?" + +"Yes." + +"Don't think I ever heard the name before. Orne? No, I'm sure I +haven't. It isn't Horn?" + +"No; Orne--O R N E. Oh, there's no trouble about that. + +"Well, I rather enjoyed this island life, but she was awfully +melancholy; so I hit upon a plan for getting away. I went to the shore +and collected a lot of the deals that I mentioned, and made a very +decent sort of raft. I found a pole to guide it with, cut a lot of +brush for Ethel, and then we started, and floated down the river. We +didn't have any accidents. The only bother was that she was too +confoundedly anxious about me, and wouldn't let me work. We went +ashore every evening. We caught fish enough to eat. We were afloat +three days, and, naturally enough, became very well acquainted." + +Hawbury stopped, and sighed. + +"I tell you what it is, Dacres," said he, "there never lived a nobler, +more generous, and at the same time a braver soul than Ethel Orne. She +never said a word about gratitude and all that, but there was a +certain quiet look of devotion about her that gives me a deuced queer +feeling now when I think of it all." + +"And I dare say--But no matter." + +"What?" + +"Well, I was only going to remark that, under the circumstances, there +might have been a good deal of quiet devotion about you." + +Hawbury made no reply, but sat silent for a time. + +"Well, go on, man; don't keep me in suspense." + +"Let me see--where was I? Oh! floating on the raft. Well, we floated +that way, as I said, for three days, and at the end of that time we +reached a settlement. Here we found a steamer, and went on further, +and finally reached Ottawa. Here she went to the house of a friend. I +called on her as soon as possible, and found her in fearful anxiety. +She had learned that her father had gone up with a Mr. Willoughby, and +neither had been heard from. + +"Startled at this intelligence, I instituted a search myself. I could +not find out any thing, but only that there was good reason to believe +that both of the unhappy gentlemen had perished. On returning to the +house to call on Ethel, about a week after, I found that she had +received full confirmation of this dreadful intelligence, and had gone +to Montreal. It seems that Willoughby's wife was a relative of +Ethel's, and she had gone to stay with her. I longed to see her, but +of course I could not intrude upon her in her grief; and so I wrote to +her, expressing all the condolence I could. I told her that I was +going to Europe, but would return in the following year. I couldn't +say any more than that, you know. It wasn't a time for sentiment, of +course. + +"Well, I received a short note in reply. She said she would look +forward to seeing me again with pleasure, and all that; and that she +could never forget the days we had spent together. + +"So off I went, and in the following year I returned. But on reaching +Montreal, what was my disgust, on calling at Mrs. Willoughby's, to +find that she had given up her house, sold her furniture, and left the +city. No one knew any thing about her, and they said that she had only +come to the city a few months before her bereavement, and after that +had never made any acquaintances. Some said she had gone to the United +States; others thought she had gone to Quebec; others to England; but +no one knew any thing more." + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +A STARTLING REVELATION. + + +"It seems to me, Hawbury," said Dacres, after a period of thoughtful +silence--"it seems to me that when you talk of people having their +heads turned, you yourself comprehend the full meaning of that +sensation?" + +"Somewhat." + +"You knocked under at once, of course, to your Ethel?" + +"Yes." + +"And feel the same way toward her yet?" + +"Yes." + +"Hit hard?" + +"Yes; and that's what I'm coming to. The fact is, my whole business in +life for the last year has been to find her out." + +"You haven't dawdled so much, then, as people suppose?" + +"No; that's all very well to throw people off a fellow's scent; but +you know me well enough, Dacres; and we didn't dawdle much in South +America, did we?" + +"That's true, my boy; but as to this lady, what is it that makes it so +hard for you to find her? In the first place, is she an American?" + +"Oh no." + +"Why not?" + +"Oh, accent, manner, tone, idiom, and a hundred other things. Why, of +course, you know as well as I that an American lady is as different +from an English as a French or a German lady is. They may be all +equally ladies, but each nation has its own peculiarities." + +"Is she Canadian?" + +"Possibly. It is not always easy to tell a Canadian lady from an +English. They imitate us out there a good deal. I could tell in the +majority of cases, but there are many who can not be distinguished +from us very easily. And Ethel may be one." + +"Why mayn't she be English?" + +"She may be. It's impossible to perceive any difference." + +"Have you ever made any inquiries about her in England?" + +"No; I've not been in England much, and from the way she talked to me +I concluded that her home was in Canada." + +"Was her father an Englishman?" + +"I really don't know." + +"Couldn't you find out?" + +"No. You see he had but recently moved to Montreal, like Willoughby; +and I could not find any people who were acquainted with him." + +"He may have been English all the time." + +"Yes." + +"And she too." + +"By Jove!" + +"And she may be in England now." + +Hawbury started to his feet, and stared in silence at his friend for +several minutes. + +"By Jove!" he cried; "if I thought that, I swear I'd start for home +this evening, and hunt about every where for the representatives of +the Orne family. But no--surely it can't be possible." + +"Were you in London last season?" + +"No." + +"Well, how do you know but that she was there?" + +"By Jove!" + +"And the belle of the season, too?" + +"She would be if she were there, by Jove!" + +"Yes, if there wasn't another present that I wot of." + +"Well, we won't argue about that; besides, I haven't come to the point +yet." + +"The point?" + +"Yes, the real reason why I'm here, when I'm wanted home." + +"The real reason? Why, haven't you been telling it to me all along?" + +"Well, no; I haven't got to the point yet." + +"Drive on, then, old man." + +"Well, you know," continued Hawbury, "after hunting all through Canada +I gave up in despair, and concluded that Ethel was lost to me, at +least for the present. That was only about six or seven months ago. So +I went home, and spent a month in a shooting-box on the Highlands; +then I went to Ireland to visit a friend; and then to London. While +there I got a long letter from my mother. The good soul was convinced +that I was wasting my life; she urged me to settle down, and finally +informed me that she had selected a wife for me. Now I want you to +understand, old boy, that I fully appreciated my mother's motives. She +was quite right, I dare say, about my wasting my life; quite right, +too, about the benefit of settling down; and she was also very kind to +take all the trouble of selecting a wife off my hands. Under other +circumstances I dare say I should have thought the matter over, and +perhaps I should have been induced even to go so far as to survey the +lady from a distance, and argue the point with my mother pro and con. +But the fact is, the thing was distasteful, and wouldn't bear thinking +about, much less arguing. I was too lazy to go and explain the matter, +and writing was not my forte. Besides, I didn't want to thwart my +mother in her plans, or hurt her feelings; and so the long and the +short of it is, I solved the difficulty and cut the knot by crossing +quietly over to Norway. I wrote a short note to my mother, making no +allusion to her project, and since then I've been gradually working my +way down to the bottom of the map of Europe, and here I am." + +"You didn't see the lady, then?" + +"No." + +"Who was she?" + +"I don't know." + +"Don't know the lady?" + +"No." + +"Odd, too! Haven't you any idea? Surely her name was mentioned?" + +"No; my mother wrote in a roundabout style, so as to feel her way. She +knew me, and feared that I might take a prejudice against the lady. No +doubt I should have done so. She only alluded to her in a general +way." + +"A general way?" + +"Yes; that is, you know, she mentioned the fact that the lady was a +niece of Sir Gilbert Biggs." + +"What!" cried Dacres, with a start. + +"A niece of Sir Gilbert Biggs," repeated Hawbury. + +"A niece--of--Sir Gilbert Biggs?" said Dacres, slowly. "Good Lord!" + +"Yes; and what of that?" + +"Very much. Don't you know that Minnie Fay is a niece of Sir Gilbert +Biggs?" + +"By Jove! So she is. I remember being startled when you told me that, +and for a moment an odd fancy came to me. I wondered whether your +child-angel might not be the identical being about whom my poor dear +mother went into such raptures. Good Lord! what a joke! By Jove!" + +"A joke!" growled Dacres. "I don't see any joke in it. I remember when +you said that Biggs's nieces were at the bottom of your troubles, I +asked whether it might be this one." + +"So you did, old chap; and I replied that I hoped not. So you need not +shake your gory locks at me, my boy." + +"But I don't like the looks of it." + +"Neither do I." + +"Yes, but you see it looks as though she had been already set apart +for you especially." + +"And pray, old man, what difference can that make, when I don't set +myself apart for any thing of the kind?" + +Dacres sat in silence with a gloomy frown over his brow. + +"Besides, are you aware, my boy, of the solemn fact that Biggs's +nieces are legion?" said Hawbury. "The man himself is an infernal old +bloke; and as to his nieces--heavens and earth!--old! old as +Methuselah; and as to this one, she must be a grandniece--a second +generation. She's not a true, full-blooded niece. Now the lady I refer +to was one of the original Biggs's nieces. There's no mistake whatever +about that, for I have it in black and white, under my mother's own +hand." + +"Oh, she would select the best of them for you." + +"No, she wouldn't. How do you know that?" + +"There's no doubt about that." + +"It depends upon what you mean by the best. The one _you_ call the +best might not seem so to _her_, and so on. Now I dare say she's +picked out for me a great, raw-boned, redheaded niece, with a nose +like a horse. And she expects me to marry a woman like that! with a +pace like a horse! Good Lord!" + +And Hawbury leaned back, lost in the immensity of that one +overwhelming idea. + +"Besides," said he, standing up, "I don't care if she was the angel +Gabriel. I don't want any of Biggs's nieces. I won't have them. By +Jove! And am I to be entrapped into a plan like that? I want Ethel. +And what's more, I will have her, or go without. The child-angel may +be the very identical one that my mother selected, and if you assert +that she is, I'll be hanged if I'll argue the point. I only say this, +that it doesn't alter my position in the slightest degree. I don't +want her. I won't have her. I don't want to see her. I don't care if +the whole of Biggs's nieces, in solemn conclave, with old Biggs at +their head, had formally discussed the whole matter, and finally +resolved unanimously that she should be mine. Good Lord, man! don't +you understand how it is? What the mischief do I care about any body? +Do you think I went through that fiery furnace for nothing? And what +do you suppose that life on the island meant? Is all that nothing? Did +you ever live on an island with the child-angel? Did you ever make a +raft for her and fly? Did you ever float down a river current between +banks burned black by raging fires, feeding her, soothing her, +comforting her, and all the while feeling in a general fever about +her? You hauled her out of a crater, did you? By Jove! And what of +that? Why, that furnace that I pulled Ethel out of was worse than a +hundred of your craters. And yet, after all that, you think that I +could be swayed by the miserable schemes of a lot of Biggs's nieces! +And you scowl at a fellow, and get huffy and jealous. By Jove!" + +After this speech, which was delivered with unusual animation, Hawbury +lighted a cigar, which he puffed at most energetically. + +"All right, old boy," said Dacres. "A fellow's apt to judge others by +himself, you know. Don't make any more set speeches, though. I begin +to understand your position. Besides, after all--" + +Dacres paused, and the dark frown that was on his brow grew still +darker. + +"After all what?" asked Hawbury, who now began to perceive that +another feeling besides jealousy was the cause of his friend's gloomy +melancholy. + +"Well, after all, you know, old fellow, I fear I'll have to give her +up." + +"Give her up?" + +"Yes." + +"That's what you said before, and you mentioned Australia, and that +rot." + +"The more I think of it," said Dacres, dismally, and regarding the +opposite wall with a steady yet mournful stare--"the more I think of +it, the more I see that there's no such happiness in store for me." + +"Pooh, man! what is it all about? This is the secret that you spoke +about, I suppose?" + +"Yes; and it's enough to put a barrier between me and her. Was I +jealous? Did I seem huffy? What an idiot I must have been! Why, old +man, I can't do any thing or say any thing." + +"The man's mad," said Hawbury, addressing himself to a carved +tobacco-box on the table. + +"Mad? Yes, I was mad enough in ever letting myself be overpowered by +this bright dream. Here have I been giving myself up to a phantom--an +empty illusion--and now it's all over. My eyes are open." + +"You may as well open my eyes too; for I'll be hanged if I can see my +way through this!" + +"Strange! strange! strange!" continued Dacres, in a kind of soliloquy, +not noticing Hawbury's words. "How a man will sometimes forget +realities, and give himself up to dreams! It was my dream of the +child-angel that so turned my brain. I must see her no more." + +"Very well, old boy," said Hawbury. "Now speak Chinese a little for +variety. I'll understand you quite as well. I will, by Jove!" + +"And then, for a fellow that's had an experience like mine--before and +since," continued Dacres, still speaking in the tone of one who was +meditating aloud--"to allow such an idea even for a moment to take +shape in his brain! What an utter, unmitigated, unmanageable, and +unimprovable idiot, ass, dolt, and blockhead! Confound such a man! I +say; confound him!" + +[Illustration: "CONFOUND SUCH A MAN! I SAY."] + +And as Dacres said this he brought his fist down upon the table near +him with such an energetic crash that a wine-flask was sent spinning +on the floor, where its ruby contents splashed out in a pool, +intermingled with fragments of glass. + +Dacres was startled by the crash, and looked at it for a while in +silence. Then he raised his head and looked at his friend. Hawbury +encountered his glance without any expression. He merely sat and +smoked and passed his fingers through his pendent whiskers. + +"Excuse me," said Dacres, abruptly. + +"Certainly, my dear boy, a thousand times; only I hope you will allow +me to remark that your style is altogether a new one, and during the +whole course of our acquaintance I do not remember seeing it before. +You have a melodramatic way that is overpowering. Still I don't see +why you should swear at yourself in a place like Naples, where there +are so many other things to swear at. It's a waste of human energy, +and I don't understand it. We usedn't to indulge in soliloquies in +South America, used we?" + +[Illustration: "HAWBURY SANK BACK IN HIS SEAT, OVERWHELMED."] + +"No, by Jove! And look here, old chap, you'll overlook this little +outburst, won't you? In South America I was always cool, and you did +the hard swearing, my boy. I'll be cool again; and what's more, I'll +get back to South America again as soon as I can. Once on the pampas, +and I'll be a man again. I tell you what it is, I'll start to-morrow. +What do you say? Come." + +"Oh no," said Hawbury, coolly; "I can't do that. I have business, you +know." + +"Business?" + +"Oh yes, you know--Ethel, you know." + +"By Jove! so you have. That alters the matter." + +"But in any case I wouldn't go, nor would you. I still am quite unable +to understand you. Why you should grow desperate, and swear at +yourself, and then propose South America, is quite beyond me. Above +all, I don't yet see any reason why you should give up your +child-angel. You were all raptures but a short time since. Why are you +so cold now?" + +"I'll tell you," said Dacres. + +"So you said ever so long ago." + +"It's a sore subject, and difficult to speak about." + +"Well, old man, I'm sorry for you; and don't speak about it at all if +it gives you pain." + +"Oh, I'll make a clean breast of it. You've told your affair, and I'll +tell mine. I dare say I'll feel all the better for it." + +"Drive on, then, old man." + +Dacres rose, took a couple of glasses of beer in quick succession, +then resumed his seat, then picked out a cigar from the box with +unusual fastidiousness, then drew a match, then lighted the cigar, +then sent out a dozen heavy volumes of smoke, which encircled him so +completely that he became quite concealed from Hawbury's view. But +even this cloud did not seem sufficient to correspond with the gloom +of his soul. Other clouds rolled forth, and still others, until all +their congregated folds encircled him, and in the midst there was a +dim vision of a big head, whose stiff, high, curling, crisp hair, and +massive brow, and dense beard, seemed like some living manifestation +of cloud-compelling Jove. + +For some time there was silence, and Hawbury said nothing, but waited +for his friend to speak. + +At last a voice was heard--deep, solemn, awful, portentous, ominous, +sorrow-laden, weird, mysterious, prophetic, obscure, gloomy, doleful, +dismal, and apocalyptic. + +"_Hawbury!_" + +"Well, old man?" + +"HAWBURY!" + +"All right." + +"Are you listening?" + +"Certainly." + +"_Well--I'm--married!_" + +Hawbury sprang to his feet as though he had been shot. + +"What!" he cried. + +"_I'm married!_" + +"You're what? Married? _You! married!_ Scone Dacres! not you--not +_married?_" + +"_I'm married!_" + +"Good Lord!" + +"_I'm married_!" + +Hawbury sank back in his seat, overwhelmed by the force of this sudden +and tremendous revelation. For some time there was a deep silence. +Both were smoking. The clouds rolled forth from the lips of each, and +curled over their heads, and twined in voluminous folds, and gathered +over them in dark, impenetrable masses. Even so rested the clouds of +doubt, of darkness, and of gloom over the soul of each, and those +which were visible to the eye seemed to typify, symbolize, +characterize, and body forth the darker clouds that overshadowed the +mind. + +"_I'm married_!" repeated Dacres, who now seemed to have become like +Poe's raven, and all his words one melancholy burden bore. + +"You were not married when I was last with you?" said Hawbury at last, +in the tone of one who was recovering from a fainting fit. + +"Yes, I was." + +"Not in South America?" + +"Yes, in South America." + +"Married?" + +"Yes, married." + +"By Jove!" + +"Yes; and what's more, I've been married for ten years." + +"Ten years! Good Lord!" + +"It's true." + +"Why, how old could you have been when you got married?" + +"A miserable, ignorant, inexperienced dolt, idiot, and brat of a boy." + +"By Jove!" + +"Well, the secret's out; and now, if you care to hear, I will tell you +all about it." + +"I'm dying to hear, dear boy; so go on." + +And at this Scone Dacres began his story. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +A MAD WIFE. + + +"I'll tell you all about it," said Scone Dacres; "but don't laugh, for +matters like these are not to be trifled with, and I may take +offense." + +"Oh, bother, as if I ever laugh at any thing serious! By Jove! no. You +don't know me, old chap." + +"All right, then. Well, to begin. This wife that I speak of happened +to me very suddenly. I was only a boy, just out of Oxford, and just +into my fortune. I was on my way to Paris--my first visit--and was +full of no end of projects for enjoyment. I went from Dover, and in +the steamer there was the most infernally pretty girl. Black, +mischievous eyes, with the devil's light in them; hair curly, crispy, +frisky, luxuriant, all tossing over her head and shoulders, and an +awfully enticing manner. A portly old bloke was with her--her father, +I afterward learned. Somehow my hat blew off. She laughed. I laughed. +Our eyes met. I made a merry remark. She laughed again; and there we +were, introduced. She gave me a little felt hat of her own. I fastened +it on in triumph with a bit of string, and wore it all the rest of the +way. + +"Well, you understand it all. Of course, by the time we got to Calais, +I was head over heels in love, and so was she, for that matter. The +old man was a jolly old John Bull of a man. I don't believe he had the +slightest approach to any designs on me. He didn't know any thing +about me, so how could he? He was jolly, and when we got to Calais he +was convivial. I attached myself to the two, and had a glorious time. +Before three days I had exchanged vows of eternal fidelity with the +lady, and all that, and had gained her consent to marry me on reaching +England. As to the old man there was no trouble at all. He made no +inquiries about my means, but wrung my hand heartily, and said God +bless me. Besides, there were no friends of my own to consider. My +parents were dead, and I had no relations nearer than cousins, for +whom I didn't care a pin. + +"My wife lived at Exeter, and belonged to rather common people; but, +of course, I didn't care for that. Her own manners and style were +refined enough. She had been sent by her father to a very fashionable +boarding-school, where she had been run through the same mould as that +in which her superiors had been formed, and so she might have passed +muster any where. Her father was awfully fond of her, and proud of +her. She tyrannized over him completely. I soon found out that she had +been utterly spoiled by his excessive indulgence, and that she was the +most whimsical, nonsensical, headstrong, little spoiled beauty that +ever lived. But, of course, all that, instead of deterring me, only +increased the fascination which she exercised, and made me more madly +in love than ever. + +"Her name was not a particularly attractive one; but what are names! +It was Arethusa Wiggins. Now the old man always called her "Arry," +which sounded like the vulgar pronunciation of "Harry." Of course I +couldn't call her that, and Arethusa was too infernally long, for a +fellow doesn't want to be all day in pronouncing his wife's name. +Besides, it isn't a bad name in itself, of course; it's poetic, +classic, and does to name a ship of war, but isn't quite the thing for +one's home and hearth. + +"After our marriage we spent the honeymoon in Switzerland, and then +came home. I had a very nice estate, and have it yet. You've never +heard of Dacres Grange, perhaps--well, there's where we began life, +and a devil of a life she began to lead me. It was all very well at +first. During the honey-moon there were only a few outbursts, and +after we came to the Grange she repressed herself for about a +fortnight; but finally she broke out in the most furious fashion; and +I began to find that she had a devil of a temper, and in her fits she +was but a small remove from a mad woman. You see she had been humored +and indulged and petted and coddled by her old fool of a father, until +at last she had grown to be the most whimsical, conceited, tetchy, +suspicious, imperious, domineering, selfish, cruel, hard-hearted, and +malignant young vixen that ever lived; yet this evil nature dwelt in a +form as beautiful as ever lived. She was a beautiful demon, and I soon +found it out. + +"It began out of nothing at all. I had been her adoring slave for +three weeks, until I began to be conscious of the most abominable +tyranny on her part. I began to resist this, and we were on the verge +of an outbreak when we arrived at the Grange. The sight of the old +hall appeased her for a time, but finally the novelty wore off, and +her evil passions burst out. Naturally enough, my first blind +adoration passed away, and I began to take my proper position toward +her; that is to say, I undertook to give her some advice, which she +very sorely needed. This was the signal for a most furious outbreak. +What was worse, her outbreak took place before the servants. Of course +I could do nothing under such circumstances, so I left the room. When +I saw her again she was sullen and vicious. I attempted a +reconciliation, and kneeling down I passed my arms caressingly around +her. 'Look here,' said I, 'my own poor little darling, if I've done +wrong, I'm sorry, and--' + +"Well, what do you think my lady did?" + +"I don't know." + +"She _kicked me_! that's all; she kicked me, just as I was apologizing +to her--just as I was trying to make it up. She kicked me! when I had +done nothing, and she alone had been to blame. What's more, her boots +were rather heavy, and that kick made itself felt unmistakably. + +"I at once arose, and left her without a word. I did not speak to her +then for some time. I used to pass her in the house without looking at +her. This galled her terribly. She made the house too hot for the +servants, and I used to hear her all day long scolding them in a loud +shrill voice, till the sound of that voice became horrible to me. + +"You must not suppose, however, that I became alienated all at once. +That was impossible. I loved her very dearly. After she had kicked me +away my love still lasted. It was a galling thought to a man like me +that she, a common girl, the daughter of a small tradesman, should +have kicked me; me, the descendant of Crusaders, by Jove! and of the +best blood in England; but after a while pride gave way to love, and I +tried to open the way for a reconciliation once or twice. I attempted +to address her in her calmer moods, but it was without any success. +She would not answer me at all. If servants were in the room she would +at once proceed to give orders to them, just as though I had not +spoken. She showed a horrible malignancy in trying to dismiss the +older servants, whom she knew to be favorites of mine. Of course I +would not let her do it. + +"Well, one day I found that this sort of life was intolerable, and I +made an effort to put an end to it all. My love was not all gone yet, +and I began to think that I had been to blame. She had always been +indulged, and I ought to have kept up the system a little longer, and +let her down more gradually. I thought of her as I first saw her in +the glory of her youthful beauty on the Calais boat, and softened my +heart till I began to long for a reconciliation. Really I could not +see where I had done any thing out of the way. I was awfully fond of +her at first, and would have remained so if she had let me; but, you +perceive, her style was not exactly the kind which is best adapted to +keep a man at a woman's feet. If she had shown the slightest particle +of tenderness, I would have gladly forgiven her all--yes, even the +kick, by Jove! + +"We had been married about six months or so, and had not spoken for +over four months; so on the day I refer to I went to her room. She +received me with a sulky expression, and a hard stare full of insult. + +"'My dear,' said I, 'I have come to talk seriously with you.' + +"'Kate,' said she, 'show this gentleman out.' + +"It was her maid to whom she spoke. The maid colored. I turned to her +and pointed to the door, and she went out herself. My wife stood +trembling with rage--a beautiful fury. + +"'I have determined,' said I, quietly, 'to make one last effort for +reconciliation, and I want to be heard. Hear me now, dear, dear wife. +I want your love again; I can not live this way. Can nothing be done? +Must I, must you, always live this way? Have I done any wrong? If I +have, I repent. But come, let us forget our quarrel; let us remember +the first days of our acquaintance. We loved one another, darling. And +how beautiful you were! You are still as beautiful; won't you be as +loving? Don't be hard on a fellow, dear. If I've done any wrong, tell +me, and I'll make it right. See, we are joined together for life. +Can't we make life sweeter for one another than it is now? Come, my +wife, be mine again.' + +"I went on in this strain for some time, and my own words actually +softened me more as I spoke. I felt sorry, too, for my wife, she +seemed so wretched. Besides, it was a last chance, and I determined to +humble myself. Any thing was better than perpetual hate and misery. So +at last I got so affected by my own eloquence that I became quite +spooney. Her back was turned to me; I could not see her face. I +thought by her silence that she was affected, and, in a gush of +tenderness, I put my arm around her. + +"In an instant she flung it off, and stepped back, confronting me with +a face as hard and an eye as malevolent as a demon. + +"She reached out her hand toward the bell. + +"'What are you going to do?' I asked. + +"'Ring for my maid,' said she. + +[Illustration: "VERY WELL. HERE IT IS."] + +"'Don't,' said I, getting between her and the bell. 'Think; stop, I +implore you. This is our last chance for a reconciliation.' + +"She stepped back with a cruel smile. She had a small penknife in her +hand. Her eyes glittered venomously. + +"'Reconciliation,' she said, with a sneer. '_I_ don't want it; _I_ +don't want _you. You_ came and forced yourself here. Ring for my maid, +and I will let her show you the door.' + +"'You can't mean it?' I said. + +"'I do mean it,' she replied. 'Ring the bell,' she added, imperiously. + +"I stood looking at her. + +"'Leave the room, then,' she said. + +"'I must have a satisfactory answer,' said I. + +"'Very well,' said she. 'Here it is.' + +"And saying this she took the penknife by the blade, between her thumb +and finger, and slung it at me. It struck me on the arm, and buried +itself deep in the flesh till it touched the bone. I drew it out, and +without another word left the room. As I went out I heard her +summoning the maid in a loud, stern voice. + +"Well, after that I went to the Continent, and spent about six months. +Then I returned. + +"On my return I found every thing changed. She had sent off all the +servants, and brought there a lot of ruffians whom she was unable to +manage, and who threw every thing into confusion. All the gentry +talked of her, and avoided the place. My friends greeted me with +strange, pitying looks. She had cut down most of the woods, and sold +the timber; she had sent off a number of valuable pictures and sold +them. This was to get money, for I afterward found out that avarice +was one of her strongest vices. + +"The sight of all this filled me with indignation, and I at once +turned out the whole lot of servants, leaving only two or three maids. +I obtained some of the old servants, and reinstated them. All this +made my wife quite wild. She came up to me once and began to storm, +but I said something to her which shut her up at once. + +"One day I came home and found her on the portico, in her +riding-habit. She was whipping one of the maids with the butt end of +her riding-whip. I rushed up and released the poor creature, whose +cries were really heart-rending, when my wife turned on me, like a +fury, and struck two blows over my head. One of the scars is on my +forehead still. See." + +And Dacres put aside his hair on the top of his head, just over his +right eye, and showed a long red mark, which seemed like the scar of a +dangerous wound. + +"It was an ugly blow," he continued. "I at once tore the whip from +her, and, grasping her hand, led her into the drawing-room. There I +confronted her, holding her tight. I dare say I was rather a queer +sight, for the blood was rushing down over my face, and dripping from +my beard. + +"'Look here, now,' I said; 'do you know any reason why I shouldn't lay +this whip over your shoulders? The English law allows it. Don't you +feel that you deserve it?' + +"She shrank down, pale and trembling. She was a coward, evidently, and +accessible to physical terror. + +"'If I belonged to your class,' said I, 'I would do it. But I am of a +different order. I am a gentleman. Go. After all, I'm not sorry that +you gave me this blow.' + +"I stalked out of the room, had a doctor, who bound up the wound, and +then meditated over my situation. I made up my mind at once to a +separation. Thus far she had done nothing to warrant a divorce, and +separation was the only thing. I was laid up and feverish for about a +month, but at the end of that time I had an interview with my wife. I +proposed a separation, and suggested that she should go home to her +father. This she refused. She declared herself quite willing to have a +separation, but insisted on living at Dacres Grange. + +"'And what am I to do?' I asked. + +"'Whatever you please,' she replied, calmly. + +"'Do you really propose,' said I, 'to drive me out of the home of my +ancestors, and live here yourself? Do you think I will allow this +place to be under your control after the frightful havoc that you have +made?' + +"'I shall remain here,' said she, firmly. + +"I said nothing more. I saw that she was immovable. At the same time I +could not consent. I could not live with her, and I could not go away +leaving her there. I could not give up the ancestral home to her, to +mar and mangle and destroy. Well, I waited for about two months, and +then--" + +"Well?" asked Hawbury, as Dacres hesitated. + +"Dacres Grange was burned down," said the other, in a low voice. + +"Burned down!" + +"Yes." + +"Good Lord!" + +"It caught fire in the daytime. There were but few servants. No +fire-engines were near, for the Grange was in a remote place, and so +the fire soon gained headway and swept over all. My wife was frantic. +She came to me as I stood looking at the spectacle, and charged me +with setting fire to it. I smiled at her, but made no reply. + +"So you see she was burned out, and that question was settled. It was +a terrible thing, but desperate diseases require desperate remedies; +and I felt it more tolerable to have the house in ruins than to have +her living there while I had to be a wanderer. + +"She was now at my mercy. We went to Exeter. She went to her father, +and I finally succeeded in effecting an arrangement which was +satisfactory on all sides. + +"First of all, the separation should be absolute, and neither of us +should ever hold communication with the other in any shape or way. + +"Secondly, she should take another name, so as to conceal the fact +that she was my wife, and not do any further dishonor to the name. + +"In return for this I was to give her outright twenty thousand pounds +as her own absolutely, to invest or spend just as she chose. She +insisted on this, so that she need not be dependent on any annual +allowance. In consideration of this she forfeited every other claim, +all dower right in the event of my death, and every thing else. This +was all drawn up in a formal document, and worded as carefully as +possible. I don't believe that the document would be of much use in a +court of law in case she wished to claim any of her rights, but it +served to satisfy her, and she thought it was legally sound and +actually inviolable. + +"Here we separated. I left England, and have never been there since." + +Dacres stopped, and sat silent for a long time. + +"Could she have been mad?" asked Hawbury. + +"I used to think so, but I believe not. She showed too much sense in +every thing relating to herself. She sold pictures and timber, and +kept every penny. She was acute enough in grasping all she could. +During our last interviews while making these arrangements she was +perfectly cool and lady-like." + +"Have you ever heard about her since?" + +"Never." + +"Is she alive yet?" + +"That's the bother." + +"What! don't you know?" + +"No." + +"Haven't you ever tried to find out?" + +"Yes. Two years ago I went and had inquiries made at Exeter. Nothing +could be found out. She and her father had left the place immediately +after my departure, and nothing was known about them." + +"I wonder that you didn't go yourself?" + +"What for? I didn't care about seeing her or finding her." + +"Do you think she's alive yet?" + +"I'm afraid she is. You see she always had excellent health, and +there's no reason why she should not live to be an octogenarian." + +"Yet she may be dead." + +"_May_ be! And what sort of comfort is that to me in my present +position, I should like to know? _May_ be? Is that a sufficient +foundation for me to build on? No. In a moment of thoughtlessness I +have allowed myself to forget the horrible position in which I am. But +now I recall it. I'll crush down my feelings, and be a man again. I'll +see the child-angel once more; once more feast my soul over her sweet +and exquisite loveliness; once more get a glance from her tender, +innocent, and guileless eyes, and then away to South America." + +"You said your wife took another name." + +"Yes." + +"What was it? Do you know it?" + +"Oh yes; it was _Willoughby_" + +"_Willoughby_!" cried Hawbury, with a start; "why, that's the name of +my Ethel's friend, at Montreal. Could it have been the same?" + +"Pooh, man! How is that possible? Willoughby is not an uncommon name. +It's not more likely that your Willoughby and mine are the same than +it is that your Ethel is the one I met at Vesuvius. It's only a +coincidence, and not a very wonderful one, either." + +"It seems con-foundedly odd, too," said Hawbury, thoughtfully. +"Willoughby? Ethel? Good Lord! But pooh! What rot? As though they +_could_ be the same. Preposterous! By Jove!" + +And Hawbury stroked away the preposterous idea through his long, +pendent whiskers. + +[Illustration: "SHE CAUGHT MINNIE IN HER ARMS."] + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +NEW EMBARRASSMENTS. + + +Mrs. Willoughby had been spending a few days with a friend whom she +had found in Naples, and on her return was greatly shocked to hear of +Minnie's adventure on Vesuvius. Lady Dalrymple and Ethel had a story +to tell which needed no exaggerations and amplifications to agitate +her strongly. Minnie was not present during the recital; so, after +hearing it, Mrs. Willoughby went to her room. + +Here she caught Minnie in her arms, and kissed her in a very effusive +manner. + +"Oh, Minnie, my poor darling, what is all this about Vesuvius? Is it +true? It is terrible. And now I will never dare to leave you again. +How could I think that you would be in any danger with Lady Dalrymple +and Ethel? As to Ethel, I am astonished. She is always so grave and so +sad that she is the very last person I would have supposed capable of +leading you into danger." + +"Now, Kitty dearest, that's not true," said Minnie; "she didn't lead +me at all. I led her. And how did I know there was any danger? I +remember now that dear, darling Ethel said there was, and I didn't +believe her. But it's always the way." And Minnie threw her little +head on one side, and gave a resigned sigh. + +"And did you really get into the crater?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, with +a shudder. + +"Oh, I suppose so. They all said so," said Minnie, folding her little +hands in front of her. "I only remember some smoke, and then jolting +about dreadfully on the shoulder of some great--big--awful--man." + +"Oh dear!" sighed Mrs. Willoughby. + +"What's the matter, Kitty dearest?" + +"Another man!" groaned her sister. + +"Well, and how _could_ I help it?" said Minnie. "I'm _sure_ I didn't +want him. I'm _sure_ I think he might have let me alone. I don't see +_why_ they all act so. I _wish_ they wouldn't be all the time coming +and saving my life. If people _will_ go and save my life, I can't help +it. I think it's very, very horrid of them." + +"Oh dear! oh dear!" sighed her sister again. + +"Now, Kitty, stop." + +"Another man!" sighed Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Now, Kitty, if you are so unkind, I'll cry. You're _always_ teasing +me. You _never_ do any thing to comfort me. You _know_ I want comfort, +and I'm not strong, and people all come and save my life and worry me; +and I really sometimes think I'd rather not live at all if my life +_has_ to be saved so often. I'm sure _I_ don't know why they go and do +it. I'm sure _I_ never heard of any person who is always going and +getting her life saved, and bothered, and proposed to, and written to, +and chased, and frightened to death. And I've a _great_ mind to go and +get married, just to stop it all. And I'd _just_ as soon marry this +last man as not, and make him drive all the others away from me. He's +big enough." + +Minnie ended all this with a little sob; and her sister, as usual, did +her best to soothe and quiet her. + +"Well, but, darling, how did it all happen?" + +"Oh, don't, don't." + +"But you might tell _me_" + +"Oh, I can't bear to think of it. It's too horrible." + +"Poor darling--the crater?" + +"No, the great, big man. I didn't see any crater." + +"Weren't you in the crater?" + +"No, I wasn't." + +"They said you were." + +"I wasn't. I was on the back of a big, horrid man, who gave great +jumps down the side of an awful mountain, all sand and things, and +threw me down at the bottom of it, and--and--disarranged all my hair. +And I was so frightened that I couldn't even cur--cur--cry." + +Here Minnie sobbed afresh, and Mrs. Willoughby petted her again. + +"And you shouldn't tease me so; and it's very unkind in you; and you +know I'm not well; and I can't bear to think about it all; and I know +you're going to scold me; and you're _always_ scolding me; and you +_never_ do what I want you to. And then people are _always_ coming and +saving my life, and I can't bear it any more." + +"No-o-o-o-o-o, n-n-no-o-o-o, darling!" said Mrs. Willoughby, +soothingly, in the tone of a nurse appeasing a fretful child. "You +sha'n't bear it any more." + +"I don't _want_ them to save me any more." + +"Well, they sha'n't _do_ it, then," said Mrs. Willoughby, +affectionately, in a somewhat maudlin tone. + +"And the next time I lose my life, I don't want to be saved. I want +them to let me alone, and I'll come home myself." + +"And so you shall, darling; you shall do just as you please. So, now, +cheer up; don't cry;" and Mrs. Willoughby tried to wipe Minnie's eyes. + +"But you're treating me just like a baby, and I don't want to be +talked to so," said Minnie, fretfully. + +Mrs. Willoughby retreated with a look of despair. + +"Well, then, dear, I'll do just whatever you want me to do." + +"Well, then, I want you to tell me what I am to do." + +"About what?" + +"Why, about this great, big, horrid man." + +"I thought you didn't want me to talk about this any more." + +"But I _do_ want you to talk about it. You're the only person that +I've got to talk to about it; nobody else knows how peculiarly I'm +situated; and I didn't think that you'd give me up because I had fresh +troubles." + +"Give you up, darling!" echoed her sister, in surprise. + +"You said you wouldn't talk about it any more." + +"But I thought you didn't want me to talk about it." + +"But I _do_ want you to." + +"Very well, then; and now I want you first of all, darling, to tell me +how you happened to get into such danger." + +"Well, you know," began Minnie, who now seemed calmer--"you know we +all went out for a drive. And we drove along for miles. Such a drive! +There were lazaroni, and donkeys, and calèches with as many as twenty +in each, all pulled by one poor horse, and it's a great shame; and +pigs--oh, _such_ pigs! Not a particle of hair on them, you know, and +looking like young elephants, you know; and we saw great droves of +oxen, and long lines of booths, no end; and people selling macaroni, +and other people eating it right in the open street, you know--such +fun!--and fishermen and fish-wives. Oh, how they _were_ screaming, and +oh, _such_ a hubbub as there was! and we couldn't go on fast, and +Dowdy seemed really frightened." + +"Dowdy?" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, in an interrogative tone. + +"Oh, that's a name I've just invented for Lady Dalrymple. It's better +than Rymple. She said so. It's Dowager shortened. She's a dowager, you +know. And so, you know, I was on the front seat all the time, when all +at once I saw a gentleman on horseback. He was a great big man--oh, +_so_ handsome!--and he was looking at poor little me as though he +would eat me up. And the moment I saw him I was frightened out of my +poor little wits, for I knew he was coming to save my life." + +"You poor little puss! what put such an idea as that into your +ridiculous little head?" + +"Oh, I knew it--second-sight, you know. We've got Scotch blood, Kitty +darling, you know. So, you know, I sat, and I saw that he was +pretending not to see me, and not to be following us; but all the time +he was taking good care to keep behind us, when he could easily have +passed us, and all to get a good look at poor me, you know. + +"Well," continued Minnie, drawing a long breath, "you know I was +awfully frightened; and so I sat looking at him, and I whispered all +the time to myself: 'Oh, please don't!--ple-e-e-e-e-ease don't! Don't +come and save my life! Ple-e-e-e-e-ease let me alone! I don't want to +be saved at all.' I said this, you know, all to myself, and the more I +said it the more he seemed to fix his eyes on me." + +"It was very, very rude in him, _I_ think," said Mrs. Willoughby, with +some indignation. + +"No, it wasn't," said Minnie, sharply. "He wasn't rude at all. He +tried not to look at me. He pretended to be looking at the sea, and at +the pigs, and all that sort of thing, you know; but all the time, you +know, I knew very well that he saw me out of the corner of his +eye--this way." + +And Minnie half turned her head, and threw upon her sister, out of the +corner of her eyes, a glance so languishing that the other laughed. + +"He didn't look at you that way. I hope?" + +"There was nothing to laugh at in it at all," said Minnie. "He had an +awfully solemn look--it was so earnest, so sad, and so dreadful, that +I really began to feel quite frightened. And so would _you_; wouldn't +_you_, now, Kitty darling; now _wouldn't_ you? Please say so." + +"Oh yes!" + +"Of course you would. Well, this person followed us. I could see him +very easily, though he tried to avoid notice; and so at last we got to +the Hermitage, and he came too. Well, you know, I think I was very +much excited, and I asked Dowdy to let us go and see the cone; so she +let us go. She gave no end of warnings, and we promised to do all that +she said. So Ethel and I went out, and there was the stranger. Well, I +felt more excited than ever, and a little bit frightened--just a very, +very, tiny, little bit, you know, and I teased Ethel to go to the +cone. Well, the stranger kept in sight all the time, you know, and I +_felt_ his eyes on me--I really _felt_ them. So, you know, when we got +at the foot of the cone, I was so excited that I was really quite +beside myself, and I teased and teased, till at last Ethel consented +to go up. So the men took us up on chairs, and all the time the +stranger was in sight. He walked up by himself with great, big, long, +strong strides. So we went on till we got at the top, and then I was +wilder than ever. I didn't know that there was a particle of danger. I +was dying with curiosity to look down, and see where the smoke came +from. The stranger was standing there too, and that's what made me so +excited. I wanted to show him--I don't know what. I think my idea was +to show him that I could take care of myself. So then I teased and +teased, and Ethel begged and prayed, and she cried, and I laughed; and +there stood the stranger, seeing it all, until at last I started off, +and ran up to the top, you know." + +Mrs. Willoughby shuddered, and took her sister's hand. + +"There was no end of smoke, you know, and it was awfully unpleasant, +and I got to the top I don't know how, when suddenly I fainted." + +Minnie paused for a moment, and looked at her sister with a rueful +face. + +"Well, now, dear, darling, the very--next--thing--that I remember is +this, and it's horrid: I felt awful jolts, and found myself in the +arms of a great, big, horrid man, who was running down the side of the +mountain with dreadfully long jumps, and I felt as though he was some +horrid ogre carrying poor me away to his den to eat me up. But I +didn't say one word. I wasn't much frightened. I felt provoked. I knew +it was that horrid man. And then I wondered what you'd say; and I +thought, oh, how you _would_ scold! And then I knew that this horrid +man would chase me away from Italy; and then I would have to go to +Turkey, and have my life saved by a Mohammedan. And that was horrid. + +"Well, at last he stopped and laid me down. He was very gentle, though +he was so big. I kept my eyes shut, and lay as still as a mouse, +hoping that Ethel would come. But Ethel didn't. She was coming down +with the chair, you know, and her men couldn't run like mine. And oh, +Kitty darling, you have no _idea_ what I suffered. This horrid man was +rubbing and pounding at my hands, and sighing and groaning. I stole a +little bit of a look at him--just a little bit of a bit--and saw tears +in his eyes, and a wild look of fear in his face. Then I knew that he +was going to propose to me on the spot, and kept my eyes shut tighter +than ever. + +"Well, at last he hurt my hands so that I thought I'd try to make him +stop. So I spoke as low as I could, and asked if I was home, and he +said yes." + +Minnie paused. + +"Well?" asked her sister. + +"Well," said Minnie, in a doleful tone, "I then asked, 'Is that you, +papa dear?'" + +Minnie stopped again. + +"Well?" asked Mrs. Willoughby once more. + +"Well--" + +"Well, go on." + +"Well, he said--he said, 'Yes, darling'--and--" + +"And what?" + +"And he kissed me," said Minnie, in a doleful voice. + +"Kissed you!" exclaimed her sister, with flashing eyes. + +"Ye-yes," stammered Minnie, with a sob; "and I think it's a shame; and +none of them ever did so before; and I don't want you ever to go away +again, Kitty darling." + +"The miserable wretch!" cried Mrs. Willoughby, indignantly. + +"No, he isn't--he isn't that," said Minnie. "He isn't a miserable +wretch at all." + +"How could any one be so base who pretends to the name of gentleman!" +cried Mrs. Willoughby. + +"He wasn't base--and it's very wicked of you, Kitty. He only +pretended, you know." + +"Pretended!" + +"Yes." + +"Pretended what?" + +"Why, that he was my--my father, you know." + +"Does Ethel know this?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, after a curious look at +Minnie. + +"No, of course not, nor Dowdy either; and you mustn't go and make any +disturbance." + +"Disturbance? no; but if I ever see him, I'll let him know what I +think of him," said Mrs. Willoughby, severely. + +"But he saved my life, and so you know you can't be _very_ harsh with +him. Please don't--ple-e-e-ease now, Kitty darling." + +"Oh, you little goose, what whimsical idea have you got now?" + +"Please don't, ple-e-e-ease don't," repeated Minnie. + +"Oh, never mind; go on now, darling, and tell me about the rest of +it." + +"Well, there isn't any more. I lay still, you know, and at last Ethel +came; and then we went back to Dowdy, and then we came home, you +know." + +"Well, I hope you've lost him." + +"Lost him? Oh no; I never do. They always _will_ come. Besides, this +one will, I know." + +"Why?" + +"Because he said so." + +"Said so? when?" + +"Yesterday." + +"Yesterday?" + +"Yes; we met him." + +"Who?" + +"Dowdy and I. We were out driving. We stopped and spoke to him. He was +dreadfully earnest and awfully embarrassed; and I knew he was going to +propose; so I kept whispering to myself all the time, 'Oh, please +don't--please don't;' but I know he will; and he'll be here soon too." + +"He sha'n't. I won't let him. I'll never give him the chance." + +"I think you needn't be so cruel." + +"Cruel!" + +"Yes; to the poor man." + +"Why, you don't want another man, I hope?" + +"N-no; but then I don't want to hurt his feelings. It was awfully good +of him, you know, and _aw_fully plucky." + +[Illustration: +"IF I EVER SEE HIM, I'LL LET HIM KNOW WHAT I THINK OF HIM."] + +"Well, I should think that you would prefer avoiding him, in your +peculiar situation." + +"Yes, but he may feel hurt." + +"Oh, he may see you once or twice with me." + +"But he may want to see me alone, and what _can_ I do?" + +"Really now, Minnie, you must remember that you are in a serious +position. There is that wretched Captain Kirby." + +"I know," said Minnie, with a sigh. + +"And that dreadful American. By-the-way, darling, you have never told +me his name. It isn't of any consequence, but I should like to know +the American's name." + +"It's--Rufus K. Gunn." + +"Rufus K. Gunn; what a funny name! and what in the world is 'K' for?" + +"Oh, nothing. He says it is the fashion in his country to have some +letter of the alphabet between one's names, and he chose 'K,' because +it was so awfully uncommon. Isn't it funny, Kitty darling?" + +"Oh dear!" sighed her sister; "and then there is that pertinacious +Count Girasole. Think what trouble we had in getting quietly rid of +him. I'm afraid all the time that he will not stay at Florence, as he +said, for he seems to have no fixed abode. First he was going to Rome, +and then Venice, and at last he committed himself to a statement that +he had to remain at Florence, and so enabled us to get rid of him. But +I know he'll come upon us again somewhere, and then we'll have all the +trouble over again. Oh dear! Well, Minnie darling, do you know the +name of this last one?" + +"Oh yes." + +"What is it?" + +"It's a funny name," said Minnie; "a very funny name." + +"Tell it to me." + +"It's Scone Dacres; and isn't that a funny name?" + +Mrs. Willoughby started at the mention of that name. Then she turned +away her head, and did not say a word for a long time. + +"Kitty!" + +No answer. + +"Kitty darling, what's the matter?" + +Mrs. Willoughby turned her head once more. Her face was quite calm, +and her voice had its usual tone, as she asked, + +"Say that name again." + +"Scone Dacres," said Minnie. + +"Scone Dacres!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby; "and what sort of a man is +he?" + +"Big--very big--awfully big!" said Minnie. "Great, big head and broad +shoulders. Great, big arms, that carried me as if I were a feather; +big beard too; and it tickled me so when he--he pretended that he was +my father; and very sad. And, oh! I know I should be so _aw_fully fond +of him. And, oh! Kitty darling, what do you think?" + +"What, dearest?" + +"Why, I'm--I'm afraid--I'm really beginning to--to--like him--just a +little tiny bit, you know." + +"Scone Dacres!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, who didn't seem to have +heard this last effusion. "Scone Dacres! Well, darling, don't trouble +yourself; he sha'n't trouble you." + +"But I _want_ him to," said Minnie. + +"Oh, nonsense, child!" + +[Illustration: "HALLO, OLD MAN, WHAT'S UP NOW?"] + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +A FEARFUL DISCOVERY. + + +A few days after this Hawbury was in his room, when Dacres entered. + +"Hallo, old man, what's up now? How goes the war?" said Hawbury. "But +what the mischief's the matter? You look cut up. Your brow is sad; +your eyes beneath flash like a falchion from its sheath. What's +happened? You look half snubbed, and half desperate." + +Dacres said not a word, but flung himself into a chair with a look +that suited Hawbury's description of him quite accurately. His brows +lowered into a heavy frown, his lips were compressed, and his breath +came quick and hard through his inflated nostrils. He sat thus for +some time without taking any notice whatever of his friend, and at +length lighted a cigar, which he smoked, as he often did when excited, +in great voluminous puffs. Hawbury said nothing, but after one or two +quick glances at his friend, rang a bell and ordered some "Bass." + +"Here, old fellow," said he, drawing the attention of Dacres to the +refreshing draught. "Take some--'Quaff, oh, quaff this kind nepenthe, +and forget thy lost Lenore.'" + +Dacres at this gave a heavy sigh that sounded like a groan, and +swallowed several tumblers in quick succession. + +"Hawbury!" said he at length, in a half-stifled voice. + +"Well, old man?" + +"I've had a blow to-day full on the breast that fairly staggered me." + +"By Jove!" + +"Fact. I've just come from a mad ride along the shore. I've been mad, +I think, for two or three hours. Of all the monstrous, abominable, +infernal, and unheard-of catastrophes this is the worst." + +He stopped, and puffed away desperately at his cigar. + +"Don't keep a fellow in suspense this way," said Hawbury at last. +"What's up? Out with it, man." + +"Well, you know, yesterday I called there." + +Hawbury nodded. + +"She was not at home." + +"So you said." + +"You know she really wasn't, for I told you that I met their carriage. +The whole party were in it, and on the front seat beside Minnie there +was another lady. This is the one that I had not seen before. She +makes the fourth in that party. She and Minnie had their backs turned +as they came up. The other ladies bowed as they passed, and as I held +off my hat I half turned to catch Minnie's eyes, when I caught sight +of the face of the lady. It startled me so much that I was +thunder-struck, and stood there with my hat off after they had passed +me for some time." + +"You said nothing about that, old chap. Who the deuce could she have +been?" + +"No, I said nothing about it. As I cantered off I began to think that +it was only a fancy of mine, and finally I was sure of it, and laughed +it off. For, you must know, the lady's face looked astonishingly like +a certain face that I don't particularly care to see--certainly not in +such close connection with Minnie. But, you see, I thought it might +have been my fancy, so that I finally shook off the feeling, and said +nothing to you about it." + +Dacres paused here, rubbed his hand violently over his hair at the +place where the scar was, and then, frowning heavily, resumed: + +"Well, this afternoon I called again. They were at home. On entering I +found three ladies there. One was Lady Dalrymple, and the others were +Minnie and her friend Ethel--either her friend or her sister. I think +she's her sister. Well, I sat for about five minutes, and was just +beginning to feel the full sense of my happiness, when the door opened +and another lady entered. Hawbury"--and Dacres's tones deepened into +an awful solemnity--"Hawbury, it was the lady that I saw in the +carriage yesterday. One look at her was enough. I was assured then +that my impressions yesterday were not dreams, but the damnable and +abhorrent truth!" + +"What impressions--you haven't told me yet, you know?" + +[Illustration: "I STOOD TRANSFIXED."] + +"Wait a minute. I rose as she entered, and confronted her. She looked +at me calmly, and then stood as though expecting to be introduced. +There was no emotion visible whatever. She was prepared for it: I was +not: and so she was as cool as when I saw her last, and, what is more, +just as young and beautiful." + +"The devil!" cried Hawbury. + +Dacres poured out another glass of ale and drank it. His hand trembled +slightly as he put down the glass, and he sat for some time in thought +before he went on. + +"Well, Lady Dalrymple introduced us. It was Mrs. Willoughby!" + +"By Jove!" cried Hawbury. "I saw you were coming to that." + +"Well, you know, the whole thing was so sudden, so unexpected, and so +perfectly overwhelming, that I stood transfixed. I said nothing. I +believe I bowed, and then somehow or other, I really don't know how, I +got away, and, mounting my horse, rode off like a madman. Then I came +home, and here you see me." + +There was a silence now for some time. + +"Are you sure that it was your wife?" + +"Of course I am. How could I be mistaken?" + +"Are you sure the name was Willoughby?" + +"Perfectly sure." + +"And that is the name your wife took?" + +"Yes; I told you so before, didn't I?" + +"Yes. But think now. Mightn't there be some mistake?" + +"Pooh! how could there be any mistake?" + +"Didn't you see any change in her?" + +"No, only that she looked much more quiet than she used to. Not so +active, you know. In her best days she was always excitable, and a +little demonstrative; but now she seems to have sobered down, and is +as quiet and well-bred as any of the others." + +"Was there not any change in her at all?" + +"Not so much as I would have supposed; certainly not so much as there +is in me. But then I've been knocking about all over the world, and +she's been living a life of peace and calm, with the sweet +consciousness of having triumphed over a hated husband, and possessing +a handsome competency. Now she mingles in the best society. She +associates with lords and ladies. She enjoys life in England, while I +am an exile. No doubt she passes for a fine young widow. No doubt, +too, she has lots of admirers. They aspire to her hand. They write +poetry to her. They make love to her. Confound her!" + +Dacres's voice grew more and more agitated and excited as he spoke, +and at length his tirade against his wife ended in something that was +almost a roar. + +Hawbury said nothing, but listened, with his face full of sympathy. At +last his pent-up feeling found expression in his favorite exclamation, +"By Jove!" + +"Wouldn't I be justified in wringing her neck?" asked Dacres, after a +pause. "And what's worse," he continued, without waiting for an answer +to his question--"what's worse, her presence here in this unexpected +way has given me, _me_, mind you, a sense of guilt, while she is, of +course, immaculate. _I_, mind you--_I_, the injured husband, with the +scar on my head from a wound made by _her_ hand, and all the ghosts of +my ancestors howling curses over me at night for my desolated and +ruined home--_I_ am to be conscience-stricken in her presence, as if I +were a felon, while _she_, the really guilty one--the blight and +bitter destruction of my life--_she_ is to appear before me now as +injured, and must make her appearance here, standing by the side of +that sweet child-angel, and warning me away. Confound it all, man! Do +you mean to say that such a thing is to be borne?" + +Dacres was now quite frantic; so Hawbury, with a sigh of perplexity, +lighted a fresh cigar, and thus took refuge from the helplessness of +his position. It was clearly a state of things in which advice was +utterly useless, and consolation impossible. What could he advise, or +what consolation could he offer? The child-angel was now out of his +friend's reach, and the worst fears of the lover were more than +realized. + +"I told you I was afraid of this," continued Dacres. "I had a +suspicion that she was alive, and I firmly believe she'll outlive me +forty years; but I must say I never expected to see her in this way, +under such circumstances. And then to find her so infernally +beautiful! Confound her! she don't look over twenty-five. How the +mischief does she manage it? Oh, she's a deep one! But perhaps she's +changed. She seems so calm, and came into the room so gently, and +looked at me so steadily. Not a tremor, not a shake, as I live. Calm, +Sir; cool as steel, and hard too. She looked away, and then looked +back. They were searching glances, too, as though they read me through +and through. Well, there was no occasion for that. She ought to know +Scone Dacres well enough, I swear. Cool! And there stood I, with the +blood flashing to my head, and throbbing fire underneath the scar of +her wound--hers--her own property, for she made it! That was the woman +that kicked me, that struck at me, that caused the destruction of my +ancestral house, that drove me to exile, and that now drives me back +from my love. But, by Heaven! it'll take more than her to do it; and +I'll show her again, as I showed her once before, that Scone Dacres is +her master. And, by Jove! she'll find that it'll take more than +herself to keep me away from Minnie Fay." + +"See here, old boy," said Hawbury, "you may as well throw up the +sponge." + +"I won't," said Dacres, gruffly. + +"You see it isn't your wife that you have to consider, but the girl; +and do you think the girl or her friends would have a married man +paying his attentions in that quarter? Would you have the face to do +it under your own wife's eye? By Jove!" + +The undeniable truth of this assertion was felt by Dacres even in his +rage. But the very fact that it was unanswerable, and that he was +helpless, only served to deepen and intensify his rage. Yet he said +nothing; it was only in his face and manner that his rage was +manifested. He appeared almost to suffocate under the rush of fierce, +contending passions; big distended veins swelled out in his forehead, +which was also drawn far down in a gloomy frown; his breath came thick +and fast, and his hands were clenched tight together. Hawbury watched +him in silence as before, feeling all the time the impossibility of +saying any thing that could be of any use whatever. + +"Well, old fellow," said Dacres at last, giving a long breath, in +which he seemed to throw off some of his excitement, "you're right, of +course, and I am helpless. There's no chance for me. Paying +attentions is out of the question, and the only thing for me to do is +to give up the whole thing. But that isn't to be done at once. It's +been long since I've seen any one for whom I felt any tenderness, and +this little thing, I know, is fond of me. I can't quit her at once. I +must stay on for a time, at least, and have occasional glimpses at +her. It gives me a fresh sense of almost heavenly sweetness to look at +her fair young face. Besides, I feel that I am far more to her than +any other man. No other man has stood to her in the relation in which +I have stood. Recollect how I saved her from death. That is no light +thing. She must feel toward me as she has never felt to any other. She +is not one who can forget how I snatched her from a fearful death, and +brought her back to life. Every time she looks at me she seems to +convey all that to me in her glance." + +"Oh, well, my dear fellow, really now," said Hawbury, "just think. You +can't do any thing." + +"But I don't want to do any thing." + +"It never can end in any thing, you know." + +"But I don't want it to end in any thing." + +"You'll only bother her by entangling her affections." + +"But I don't want to entangle her affections." + +"Then what the mischief _do_ you want to do?" + +"Why, very little. I'll start off soon for the uttermost ends of the +earth, but I wish to stay a little longer and see her sweet face. It's +not much, is it? It won't compromise her, will it? She need not run +any risk, need she? And I'm a man of honor, am I not? You don't +suppose me to be capable of any baseness, do you?" + +"My dear fellow, how absurd! Of course not. Only I was afraid by +giving way to this you might drift on into a worse state of mind. +She's all safe, I fancy, surrounded as she is by so many guardians. It +is you that I'm anxious about." + +"Don't be alarmed, old chap, about me. I feel calmer already. I can +face my situation firmly, and prepare for the worst. While I have been +sitting here I have thought out the future. I will stay here four or +five weeks. I will only seek solace for myself by riding about where I +may meet her. I do not intend to go to the house at all. My demon of a +wife may have the whole house to herself. I won't even give her the +pleasure of supposing that she has thwarted me. She shall never even +suspect the state of my heart. That would be bliss indeed to one like +her, for then she would find herself able to put me on the rack. No, +my boy; I've thought it all over. Scone Dacres is himself again. No +more nonsense now. Do you understand now what I mean?" + +"Yes," said Hawbury, slowly, and in his worst drawl; "but ah, really, +don't you think it's all nonsense?" + +"What?" + +"Why, this ducking and diving about to get a glimpse of her face." + +"I don't intend to duck and dive about. I merely intend to ride like +any other gentleman. What put that into your head, man?" + +"Well, I don't know; I gathered it from the way you expressed +yourself." + +"Well, I don't intend any thing of the kind. I simply wish to have +occasional looks at her--to get a bow and a smile of recognition when +I meet her, and have a few additional recollections to turn over in my +thoughts after I have left her forever. Perhaps this seems odd." + +"Oh no, it doesn't. I quite understand it. A passing smile or a +parting sigh is sometimes more precious than any other memory. I know +all about it, you know--looks, glances, smiles, sighs, and all that +sort of thing, you know." + +"Well, now, old chap, there's one thing I want you to do for me." + +"Well, what is it?" + +"It isn't much, old fellow. It isn't much. I simply wish you to visit +there." + +"_Me_?--visit _there_? What! me--and visit? Why, my dear fellow, don't +you know how I hate such bother?" + +"I know all about that; but, old boy, it's only for a few weeks I ask +it, and for my sake, as a particular favor. I put it in that light." + +"Oh, well, really, dear boy, if you put it in that light, you know, of +course, that I'll do any thing, even if it comes to letting myself be +bored to death." + +"Just a visit a day or so." + +"A visit a day!" Hawbury looked aghast. + +"It isn't much to ask, you know," continued Dacres. "You see my reason +is this: I can't go there myself, as you see, but I hunger to hear +about her. I should like to hear how she looks, and what she says, and +whether she thinks of me." + +"Oh, come now! look here, my dear fellow, you're putting it a little +too strong. You don't expect me to go there and talk to her about you, +you know. Why, man alive, that's quite out of my way. I'm not much of +a talker at any time; and besides, you know, there's something +distasteful in acting as--as--By Jove! I don't know what to call it." + +"My dear boy, you don't understand me. Do you think I'm a sneak? Do +you suppose I'd ask you to act as a go-between? Nonsense! I merely ask +you to go as a cursory visitor. I don't want you to breathe my name, +or even think of me while you are there." + +"But suppose I make myself too agreeable to the young lady. By Jove! +she might think I was paying her attentions, you know." + +"Oh no, no! believe me, you don't know her. She's too earnest; she has +too much soul to shift and change. Oh no! I feel that she is mine, and +that the image of my own miserable self is indelibly impressed upon +her heart. Oh no! you don't know her. If you had heard her thrilling +expressions of gratitude, if you had seen the beseeching and pleading +looks which she gave me, you would know that she is one of those +natures who love once, and once only." + +"Oh, by Jove, now! Come! If that's the 'state of the case, why, I'll +go." + +"Thanks, old boy." + +"As a simple visitor." + +"Yes--that's all." + +"To talk about the weather, and that rot." + +"Yes." + +"And no more." + +"No." + +"Not a word about you." + +"Not a word." + +"No leading questions, and that sort of thing." + +"Nothing of the kind." + +"No hints, no watching, but just as if I went there of my own accord." + +"That's exactly the thing." + +"Very well; and now, pray, what good is all this going to do to you, +my boy?" + +"Well, just this; I can talk to you about her every evening, and you +can tell me how she looks, and what she says, and all that sort of +thing, you know." + +"By Jove!" + +"And you'll cheer my heart, old fellow." + +"Heavens and earth! old boy, you don't seem to think that this is +going to be no end of a bore." + +"I know it, old man; but then, you know, I'm desperate just now." + +"By Jove!" + +And Hawbury, uttering this exclamation, relapsed into silence, and +wondered over his friend's infatuation. + +On the following day when Dacres came in he found that Hawbury had +kept his word. + +"Great bore, old fellow," said he; "but I did it. The old lady is an +old acquaintance, you know. I'm going there to-morrow again. Didn't +see any thing to-day of the child-angel. But it's no end of a bore, +you know." + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +FALSE AND FORGETFUL. + + +The day when Lord Hawbury called on Lady Dalrymple was a very eventful +one in his life, and had it not been for a slight peculiarity of his, +the immediate result of that visit would have been of a highly +important character. This slight peculiarity consisted in the fact +that he was short-sighted, and, therefore, on a very critical occasion +turned away from that which would have been his greatest joy, although +it was full before his gaze. + +It happened in this wise: + +On the day when Hawbury called, Ethel happened to be sitting by the +window, and saw him as he rode up. Now the last time that she had seen +him he had a very different appearance--all his hair being burned off, +from head and cheeks and chin; and the whiskers which he had when she +first met him had been of a different cut from the present appendages. +In spite of this she recognized him almost in a moment; and her heart +beat fast, and her color came and went, and her hands clutched the +window ledge convulsively. + +[Illustration: "'IT'S HE!' SHE MURMURED."] + +"It's _he_!" she murmured. + +Of course there was only one idea in her mind, and that was that he +had heard of her presence in Naples, and had come to call on her. + +She sat there without motion, with her head eagerly bent forward, and +her eyes fixed upon him. He looked up carelessly as he came along, and +with his chin in the air, in a fashion peculiar to him, which, +by-the-way, gave a quite unintentional superciliousness to his +expression. For an instant his eyes rested upon her, then they moved +away, without the slightest recognition, and wandered elsewhere. + +Ethel's heart seemed turned to stone. He had seen her. He had not +noticed her. He had fixed his eyes on her and then looked away. +Bitter, indeed, was all this to her. To think that after so long a +period of waiting--after such hope and watching as hers had been--that +this should be the end. She turned away from the window, with a +choking sensation in her throat. No one was in the room. She was alone +with her thoughts and her tears. + +Suddenly her mood changed. A thought came to her which dispelled her +gloom. The glance that he had given was too hasty; perhaps he really +had not fairly looked at her. No doubt he had come for her, and she +would shortly be summoned down. + +And now this prospect brought new hope. Light returned to her eyes, +and joy to her heart. Yes, she would be summoned. She must prepare +herself to encounter his eager gaze. Quickly she stepped to the +mirror, hastily she arranged those little details in which consists +the charm of a lady's dress, and severely she scrutinized the face and +figure reflected there. The scrutiny was a satisfactory one. Face and +figure were perfect; nor was there in the world any thing more +graceful and more lovely than the image there, though the one who +looked upon it was far too self-distrustful to entertain any such idea +as that. + +Then she seated herself and waited. The time moved slowly, indeed, as +she waited there. After a few minutes she found it impossible to sit +any longer. She walked to the door, held it open, and listened. She +heard his voice below quite plainly. They had two suits of rooms in +the house--the bedrooms up stairs and reception-rooms below. Here Lord +Hawbury was, now, within hearing of Ethel. Well she knew that voice. +She listened and frowned. The tone was too flippant. He talked like a +man without a care--like a butterfly of society--and that was a +class which she scorned. Here he was, keeping her waiting. Here he +was, keeping up a hateful clatter of small-talk, while her heart was +aching with suspense. + +Ethel stood there listening. Minute succeeded to minute. There was no +request for her. How strong was the contrast between the cool +indifference of the man below, and the feverish impatience of that +listener above! A wild impulse came to her to go down, under the +pretense of looking for something; then another to go down and out for +a walk, so that he might see her. But in either case pride held her +back. How could she? Had he not already seen her? Must he not know +perfectly well that she was there? No; if he did not call for her she +could not go. She could not make advances. + +Minute succeeded to minute, and Ethel stood burning with impatience, +racked with suspense, a prey to the bitterest feelings. Still no +message. Why did he delay? Her heart ached now worse than ever, the +choking feeling in her throat returned, and her eyes grew moist. She +steadied herself by holding to the door. Her fingers grew white at the +tightness of her grasp; eyes and ears were strained in their intent +watchfulness over the room below. + +Of course the caller below was in a perfect state of ignorance about +all this. He had not the remotest idea of that one who now stood so +near. He came as a martyr. He came to make a call. It was a thing he +detested. It bored him. To a man like him the one thing to be avoided +on earth was a bore. To be bored was to his mind the uttermost depth +of misfortune. This he had voluntarily accepted. He was being bored, +and bored to death. + +Certainly no man ever accepted a calamity more gracefully than +Hawbury. He was charming, affable, easy, chatty. Of course he was +known to Lady Dalrymple. The Dowager could make herself as agreeable +as any lady living, except young and beautiful ones. The conversation, +therefore, was easy and flowing. Hawbury excelled in this. + +Now there are several variations in the great art of expression, and +each of these is a minor art by itself. Among these may be enumerated: + +First, of course, the art of novel-writing. + +Second, the art of writing editorials. + +Third, the art of writing paragraphs. + +After these come all the arts of oratory, letter-writing, +essay-writing, and all that sort of thing, among which there is one to +which I wish particularly to call attention, and this is: + +The art of small-talk. + +Now this art Hawbury had to an extraordinary degree of perfection. He +knew how to beat out the faintest shred of an idea into an illimitable +surface of small-talk. He never took refuge in the weather. He left +that to bunglers and beginners. His resources were of a different +character, and were so skillfully managed that he never failed to +leave a very agreeable impression. Small-talk! Why, I've been in +situations sometimes where I would have given the power of writing +like Dickens (if I had it) for perfection in this last art. + +But this careless, easy, limpid, smooth, natural, pleasant, and +agreeable flow of chat was nothing but gall and wormwood to the +listener above. She ought to be there. Why was she so slighted? Could +it be possible that he would go away without seeing her? + +She was soon to know. + +She heard him rise. She heard him saunter to the door. + +"Thanks, yes. Ha, ha, you're too kind--really--yes--very happy, you +know. To-morrow, is it? Good-morning." + +And with these words he went out. + +With pale face and staring eyes Ethel darted back to the window. He +did not see her. His back was turned. He mounted his horse and gayly +cantered away. For full five minutes Ethel stood, crouched in the +shadow of the window, staring after him, with her dark eyes burning +and glowing in the intensity of their gaze. Then she turned away with +a bewildered look. Then she locked the door. Then she flung herself +upon the sofa, buried her head in her hands, and burst into a +convulsive passion of tears. Miserable, indeed, were the thoughts that +came now to that poor stricken girl as she lay there prostrate. She +had waited long, and hoped fondly, and all her waiting and all her +hope had been for this. It was for this that she had been praying--for +this that she had so fondly cherished his memory. He had come at last, +and he had gone; but for her he had certainly shown nothing save an +indifference as profound as it was inexplicable. + +Ethel's excuse for not appearing at the dinner-table was a severe +headache. Her friends insisted on seeing her and ministering to her +sufferings. Among other things, they tried to cheer her by telling her +of Hawbury. Lady Dalrymple was full of him. She told all about his +family, his income, his habits, and his mode of life. She mentioned, +with much satisfaction, that he had made inquiries after Minnie, and +that she had promised to introduce him to her the next time he called. +Upon which he had laughingly insisted on calling the next day. All of +which led Lady Dalrymple to conclude that he had seen Minnie +somewhere, and had fallen in love with her. + +This was the pleasing strain of conversation into which the ladies +were led off by Lady Dalrymple. When I say the ladies, I mean Lady +Dalrymple and Minnie. Mrs. Willoughby said nothing, except once or +twice when she endeavored to give a turn to the conversation, in which +she was signally unsuccessful. Lady Dalrymple and Minnie engaged in an +animated argument over the interesting subject of Hawbury's +intentions, Minnie taking her stand on the ground of his indifference, +the other maintaining the position that he was in love. Minnie +declared that she had never seen him. Lady Dalrymple asserted her +belief that he had seen her. The latter also asserted that Hawbury +would no doubt be a constant visitor, and gave Minnie very sound +advice as to the best mode of treating him. + +[Illustration: "THEN SHE FLUNG HERSELF UPON THE SOFA."] + +On the following day Hawbury called, and was introduced to Minnie. He +chatted with her in his usual style, and Lady Dalrymple was more than +ever confirmed in her first belief. He suggested a ride, and the +suggestion was taken up. + +If any thing had been needed to complete Ethel's despair it was this +second visit and the project of a ride. Mrs. Willoughby was introduced +to him; but he took little notice of her, treating her with a kind of +reserve that was a little unusual with him. The reason of this was his +strong sympathy with his friend, and his detestation of Mrs. +Willoughby's former history. Mrs. Willoughby, however, had to ride +with them when they went out, and thus she was thrown a little more +into Hawbury's way. + +Ethel never made her appearance. The headaches which she avouched were +not pretended. They were real, and accompanied with heartaches that +were far more painful. Hawbury never saw her, nor did he ever hear her +mentioned. In general he himself kept the conversation in motion; and +as he never asked questions, they, of course, had no opportunity to +answer. On the other hand, there was no occasion to volunteer any +remarks about the number or the character of their party. When he +talked it was usually with Lady Dalrymple and Minnie: and with these +the conversation turned always upon glittering generalities, and the +airy nothings of pleasant gossip. All this, then, will very easily +account for the fact that Hawbury, though visiting there constantly, +never once saw Ethel, never heard her name mentioned, and had not the +faintest idea that she was so near. She, on the other hand, feeling +now sure that he was utterly false and completely forgetful, proudly +and calmly held aloof, and kept out of his way with the most jealous +care, until at last she staid indoors altogether, for fear, if she +went out, that she might meet him somewhere. For such a meeting she +did not feel sufficiently strong. + +Often she thought of quitting Naples and returning to England. Yet, +after all, she found a strange comfort in being there. She was near +him. She heard his voice every day, and saw his face. That was +something. And it was better than absence. + +Minnie used always to come to her and pour forth long accounts of Lord +Hawbury--how he looked, what he said, what he did, and what he +proposed to do. Certainly there was not the faintest approach to +love-making, or even sentiment, in Hawbury's attitude toward Minnie. +His words were of the world of small-talk--a world where sentiment and +love-making have but little place. Still there was the evident fact of +his attentions, which were too frequent to be overlooked. + +Hawbury rapidly became the most prominent subject of Minnie's +conversation. She used to prattle away for hours about him. She +alluded admiringly to his long whiskers. She thought them "lovely." +She said that he was "awfully nice." She told Mrs. Willoughby that "he +was nicer than any of them; and then, Kitty darling," she added, "it's +so awfully good of him not to be coming and saving my life, and +carrying me on his back down a mountain, like an ogre, and then +pretending that he's my father, you know. + +"For you know, Kitty pet, I've always longed so awfully to see some +really nice person, you know, who wouldn't go and save my life and +bother me. Now he doesn't seem a bit like proposing. I do _hope_ he +won't. Don't you, Kitty dearest? It's so _much_ nicer not to propose. +It's so horrid when they go and propose. And then, you know, I've had +so much of that sort of thing. So, Kitty, I think he's really the +nicest person that I ever saw, and I really think I'm beginning to +like him." + +Far different from these were the conversations which Mrs. Willoughby +had with Ethel. She was perfectly familiar with Ethel's story. It had +been confided to her long ago. She alone knew why it was that Ethel +had walked untouched through crowds of admirers. The terrible story of +her rescue was memorable to her for other reasons; and the one who had +taken the prominent part in that rescue could not be without interest +for her. + +"There is no use, Kitty--no use in talking about it any more," said +Ethel one day, after Mrs. Willoughby had been urging her to show +herself. "I can not. I will not. He has forgotten me utterly." + +"Perhaps he has no idea that you are here. He has never seen you." + +"Has he not been in Naples as long as we have? He must have seen me in +the streets. He saw Minnie." + +"Do you think it likely that he would come to this house and slight +you? If he had forgotten you he would not come here." + +"Oh yes, he would. He comes to see Minnie. He knows I am here, of +course. He doesn't care one atom whether I make my appearance or not. +He doesn't even give me a thought. It's so long since _that time_ that +he has forgotten even my existence. He has been all over the world +since then, and has had a hundred adventures. I have been living +quietly, cherishing the remembrance of that one thing." + +"Ethel, is it not worth trying? Go down and try him." + +"I can not bear it. I can not look at him. I lose all self-command +when he is near. I should make a fool of myself. He would look at me +with a smile of pity. Could I endure that? No, Kitty; my weakness must +never be known to him." + +"Oh, Ethel, how I wish you could try it!" + +"Kitty, just think how utterly I am forgotten. Mark this now. He knows +I was at _your_ house. He must remember your name. He wrote to me +there, and I answered him from there. He sees you now, and your name +must be associated with mine in his memory of me, if he has any. Tell +me now, Kitty, has he ever mentioned me? has he ever asked you about +me? has he ever made the remotest allusion to me?" + +Ethel spoke rapidly and impetuously, and as she spoke she raised +herself from the sofa where she was reclining, and turned her large, +earnest eyes full upon her friend with anxious and eager watchfulness. +Mrs. Willoughby looked back at her with a face full of sadness, and +mournfully shook her head. + +"You see," said Ethel, as she sank down again--"you see how true my +impression is." + +"I must say," said Mrs. Willoughby, "that I thought of this before. I +fully expected that he would make some inquiry after you. I was so +confident in the noble character of the man, both from your story and +the description of others, that I could not believe you were right. +But you are right, my poor Ethel. I wish I could comfort you, but I +can not. Indeed, my dear, not only has he not questioned me about you, +but he evidently avoids me. It is not that he is engrossed with +Minnie, for he is not so; but he certainly has some reason of his own +for avoiding me. Whenever he speaks to me there is an evident effort +on his part, and though perfectly courteous, his manner leaves a +certain disagreeable impression. Yes, he certainly has some reason for +avoiding me." + +"The reason is plain enough," murmured Ethel. "He wishes to prevent +you from speaking about a painful subject, or at least a distasteful +one. He keeps you off at a distance by an excess of formality. He will +give you no opportunity whatever to introduce any mention of me. And +now let me also ask you this--does he ever take any notice of any +allusion that may be made to me?" + +"I really don't remember hearing any allusion to you." + +"Oh, that's scarcely possible! You and Minnie must sometimes have +alluded to 'Ethel.'" + +"Well, now that you put it in that light, I do remember hearing Minnie +allude to you on several occasions. Once she wondered why 'Ethel' did +not ride. Again she remarked how 'Ethel' would enjoy a particular +view." + +"And he heard it?" + +"Oh, of course." + +"Then there is not a shadow of a doubt left. He knows I am here. He +has forgotten me so totally, and is so completely indifferent, that he +comes here and pays attention to another who is in the very same house +with me. It is hard. Oh, Kitty, is it not? Is it not bitter? How could +I have thought this of _him_?" + +A high-hearted girl was Ethel, and a proud one; but at this final +confirmation of her worst fears there burst from her a sharp cry, and +she buried her face in her hands, and moaned and wept. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +GIRASOLE AGAIN. + + +One day Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie were out driving. Hawbury was +riding by the carriage on the side next Minnie, when suddenly their +attention was arrested by a gentleman on horseback who was approaching +them at an easy pace, and staring hard at them. Minnie's hand suddenly +grasped her sister's arm very tightly, while her color came and went +rapidly. + +"Oh dear!" sighed Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Oh, what _shall_ I do?" said Minnie, in a hasty whisper. "Can't we +pretend not to see him?" + +"Nonsense, you little goose," was the reply. "How can you think of +such rudeness?" + +By this time the gentleman had reached them, and Mrs. Willoughby +stopped the carriage, and spoke to him in a tone of gracious suavity, +in which there was a sufficient recognition of his claims upon her +attention, mingled with a slight hauteur that was intended to act as a +check upon his Italian demonstrativeness. + +For it was no other than the Count Girasole, and his eyes glowed with +excitement and delight, and his hat was off and as far away from his +head as possible, and a thousand emotions contended together for +expression upon his swarthy and handsome countenance. As soon as he +could speak he poured forth a torrent of exclamations with amazing +volubility, in the midst of which his keen black eyes scrutinized very +closely the faces of the ladies, and finally turned an interrogative +glance upon Hawbury, who sat on his horse regarding the new-comer with +a certain mild surprise not unmingled with superciliousness. Hawbury's +chin was in the air, his eyes rested languidly upon the stranger, and +his left hand toyed with his left whisker. He really meant no offense +whatever. He knew absolutely nothing about the stranger, and had not +the slightest intention of giving offense. It was simply a way he had. +It was merely the normal attitude of the English swell before he is +introduced. As it was, that first glance which Girasole threw at the +English lord inspired him with the bitterest hate, which was destined +to produce important results afterward. + +Mrs. Willoughby was too good-natured and too wise to slight the Count +in any way. After introducing the two gentlemen she spoke a few more +civil words, and then bowed him away. But Girasole did not at all take +the hint. On the contrary, as the carriage started, he turned his +horse and rode along with it on the side next Mrs. Willoughby. Hawbury +elevated his eyebrows, and stared for an instant, and then went on +talking with Minnie. And now Minnie showed much more animation than +usual. She was much agitated and excited by this sudden appearance of +one whom she hoped to have got rid of, and talked rapidly, and laughed +nervously, and was so terrified at the idea that Girasole was near +that she was afraid to look at him, but directed all her attention to +Hawbury. It was a slight, and Girasole showed that he felt it; but +Minnie could not help it. After a time Girasole mastered his feelings, +and began an animated conversation with Mrs. Willoughby in very broken +English. Girasole's excitement at Minnie's slight made him somewhat +incoherent, his idioms were Italian rather than English, and his +pronunciation was very bad; he also had a fashion of using an Italian +word when he did not know the right English one, and so the +consequence was that Mrs. Willoughby understood not much more than +one-quarter of his remarks. + +Mrs. Willoughby did not altogether enjoy this state of things, and so +she determined to put an end to it by shortening her drive. She +therefore watched for an opportunity to do this so as not to make it +seem too marked, and finally reached a place which was suitable. Here +the carriage was turned, when, just as it was half-way round, they +noticed a horseman approaching. It was Scone Dacres, who had been +following them all the time, and who had not expected that the +carriage would turn. He was therefore taken completely by surprise, +and was close to them before he could collect his thoughts so as to do +any thing. To evade them was impossible, and so he rode on. As he +approached, the ladies saw his face. It was a face that one would +remember afterward. There was on it a profound sadness and dejection, +while at the same time the prevailing expression was one of sternness. +The ladies both bowed. Scone Dacres raised his hat, and disclosed his +broad, massive brow. He did not look at Minnie. His gaze was fixed on +Mrs. Willoughby. Her veil was down, and he seemed trying to read her +face behind it. As he passed he threw a quick, vivid glance at +Girasole. It was not a pleasant glance by any means, and was full of +quick, fierce, and insolent scrutiny--a "Who-the-devil-are-you?" +glance. It was for but an instant, however, and then he glanced at +Mrs. Willoughby again, and then he had passed. + +The ladies soon reached their home, and at once retired to Mrs. +Willoughby's room. There Minnie flung herself upon the sofa, and Mrs. +Willoughby sat down, with a perplexed face. + +"What in the world _are_ we to do?" said she. + +"I'm sure _I_ don't know," said Minnie. "I _knew_ it was going to be +so. I said that he would find me again." + +"He is _so_ annoying." + +"Yes, but, Kitty dear, we can't be rude to him, you know, for he saved +my life. But it's horrid, and I really begin to feel quite desperate." + +"I certainly will not let him see you. I have made up my mind to +that." + +"And oh! how he _will_ be coming and calling, and tease, tease, +teasing. Oh dear! I do wonder what Lord Hawbury thought. He looked +_so_ amazed. And then--oh, Kitty dear, it was so awfully funny!--did +you notice that other man?" + +Mrs. Willoughby nodded her head. + +"Did you notice how awfully black he looked? He wouldn't look at me at +all. _I_ know why." + +Mrs. Willoughby said nothing. + +"He's awfully jealous. Oh, _I_ know it. I saw it in his face. He was +as black as a thunder-cloud. Oh dear! And it's all about me. Oh, Kitty +darling, what _shall_ I do? There will be something dreadful, I know. +And how shocking to have it about me. And then the newspapers. They'll +all have it. And the reporters. Oh dear! Kitty, why _don't_ you say +something?" + +"Why, Minnie dearest, I really don't know what to say." + +"But, darling, you must say something. And then that Scone Dacres. I'm +more afraid of him than any body. Oh, I know he's going to _kill_ some +one. He is so big. Oh, if _you_ had only been on his back, Kitty +darling, and had him run down a steep mountain-side, you'd be as +awfully afraid of him as I am. Oh, how I _wish_ Lord Hawbury would +drive them off, or somebody do something to save me." + +"Would you rather that Lord Hawbury would stay, or would you like him +to go too?" + +"Oh dear! I don't care. If he would only go quietly and nicely, I +should like to have him go too, and never, never see a man again +except dear papa. And I think it's a shame. And I don't see why I +should be so persecuted. And I'm tired of staying here. And I don't +want to stay here any more. And, Kitty darling, why shouldn't we all +go to Rome?" + +"To Rome?" + +"Yes." + +"Would you prefer Rome?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, thoughtfully. + +"Well, yes--for several reasons. In the first place, I must go +somewhere, and I'd rather go there than any where else. Then, you +know, that dear, delightful holy-week will soon be here, and I'm dying +to be in Rome." + +"I think it would be better for all of us," said Mrs. Willoughby, +thoughtfully--"for all of us, if we were in Rome." + +"Of course it would, Kitty sweetest, and especially me. Now if I am in +Rome, I can pop into a convent whenever I choose." + +"A convent!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, in surprise. + +"Oh yes--it's going to come to that. They're all so horrid, you know. +Besides, it's getting worse. I got a letter yesterday from Captain +Kirby, written to me in England. He didn't know I was here. He has +just arrived at London, and was leaving for our place on what he +called the wings of the wind. I expect him here at almost any time. +Isn't it dreadful, Kitty dearest, to have so many? As fast as one goes +another comes, and then they all come together; and do you know, +darling, it really makes one feel quite dizzy. I'm sure _I_ don't know +what to do. And that's why I'm thinking of a convent, you know." + +"But you're not a Catholic." + +"Oh yes, I am, you know. Papa's an Anglo-Catholic, and I don't see the +difference. Besides, they're all the time going over to Rome; and why +shouldn't I? I'll be a novice--that is, you know, I'll only go for a +time, and not take the vows. The more I think of it, the more I see +that it's the only thing there is for me to do." + +"Well, Minnie, I really think so too, and not only for you, but for +all of us. There's Ethel, too; poor dear girl, her health is very +miserable, you know. I think a change would do her good." + +"Of course it would; I've been talking to her about it. But she won't +hear of leaving Naples. I _wish_ she wouldn't be so awfully sad." + +"Oh yes; it will certainly be the best thing for dear Ethel, and for +you and me and all of us. Then we must be in Rome in holy-week. I +wouldn't miss that for any thing." + +"And then, too, you know, Kitty darling, there's another thing," said +Minnie, very confidentially, "and it's very important. In Rome, you +know, all the gentlemen are clergymen--only, you know, the clergymen +of the Roman Church can't marry; and so, you know, of course, they can +never propose, no matter if they were to save one's life over and over +again. And oh! what a relief that would be to find one's self among +those dear, darling, delightful priests, and no chance of having one's +life saved and having an instant proposal following! It would be _so_ +charming." + +Mrs. Willoughby smiled. + +"Well, Minnie dearest," said she, "I really think that we had better +decide to go to Rome, and I don't see any difficulty in the way." + +"The only difficulty that I can see," said Minnie, "is that I +shouldn't like to hurt their feelings, you know." + +"Their feelings!" repeated her sister, in a doleful voice. + +"Yes; but then, you see, some one's feelings _must_ be hurt +eventually, so that lessens one's responsibility, you know; doesn't +it, Kitty darling?" + +While saying this Minnie had risen and gone to the window, with the +intention of taking her seat by it. No sooner had she reached the +place, however, than she started back, with a low exclamation, and, +standing on one side, looked cautiously forth. + +"Come here," she said, in a whisper. + +Mrs. Willoughby went over, and Minnie directed her attention to some +one outside. It was a gentleman on horseback, who was passing at a +slow pace. His head was bent on his breast. Suddenly, as he passed, he +raised his head and threw over the house a quick, searching glance. +They could see without being seen. They marked the profound sadness +that was over his face, and saw the deep disappointment with which his +head fell. + +"Scone Dacres!" said Minnie, as he passed on. "How _aw_fully sad he +is!" + +Mrs. Willoughby said nothing. + +"But, after all, I don't believe it's _me_." + +"Why not?" + +"Because he didn't look at me a bit when he passed to-day. He looked +at you, though." + +"Nonsense!" + +"Yes, and his face had an _aw_fully hungry look. I know what makes him +sad." + +"What?" + +"He's in love with you." + +Mrs. Willoughby stared at Minnie for a moment. Then a short laugh +burst from her. + +"Child!" she exclaimed, "you have no idea of any thing in the world +but falling in love. You will find out some day that there are other +feelings than that." + +"But, Kitty dear," said Minnie, "didn't you notice something very +peculiar about him?" + +"What?" + +"I noticed it. I had a good look at him. I saw that he fixed his eyes +on you with--oh! _such_ a queer look. And he was awfully sad too. He +looked as if he would like to seize you and lift you on his horse and +carry you off, just like young Lochinvar." + +"Me!" said Mrs. Willoughby, with a strange intonation. + +"Yes, you--oh yes; really now." + +"Oh, you little goose, you always think of people rushing after one +and carrying one off." + +"Well, I'm sure I've had reason to. So many people have always been +running after me, and snatching me up as if I were a parcel, and +carrying me every where in all sorts of places. And I think it's too +bad, and I really wish they'd stop it. But, Kitty dear--" + +"What?" + +"About this Scone Dacres. Don't you really think there's something +very peculiarly sad, and very delightfully interesting and pathetic, +and all that sort of thing, in his poor dear old face?" + +"I think Scone Dacres has suffered a great deal," said Mrs. +Willoughby, in a thoughtful tone. "But come now. Let us go to Ethel. +She's lonely." + +Soon after they joined the other ladies, and talked over the project +of going to Rome. Lady Dalrymple offered no objection; indeed, so far +as she had any choice, she preferred it. She was quite willing at all +times to do whatever the rest proposed, and also was not without some +curiosity as to the proceedings during holy-week. Ethel offered no +objections either. She had fallen into a state of profound melancholy, +from which nothing now could rouse her, and so she listened listlessly +to the discussion about the subject. Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie had +the most to say on this point, and offered the chief reasons for +going; and thus it was finally decided to take their departure, and to +start as soon as possible. + +Meanwhile Girasole had his own thoughts and experiences. He had +already, some time before, been conscious that his attentions were not +wanted, but it was only on the part of the other ladies that he +noticed any repugnance to himself. On Minnie's part he had not seen +any. In spite of their graciousness and their desire not to hurt his +feelings, they had not been able to avoid showing that, while they +felt grateful for his heroism in the rescue of Minnie, they could not +think of giving her to him. They had manoeuvred well enough to get rid +of him, but Girasole had also manoeuvred on his part to find them +again. He had fallen off from them at first when he saw that they were +determined on effecting this; but after allowing a sufficient time to +elapse, he had no difficulty in tracking them, and finding them at +Naples, as we have seen. + +But here he made one or two discoveries. + +One was that Minnie already had an accepted lover in the person of +Lord Hawbury. The lofty superciliousness of the British nobleman +seemed to Girasole to be the natural result of his position, and it +seemed the attitude of the successful lover toward the rejected +suitor. + +The other discovery was that Minnie herself was more pleased with the +attentions of the English lord than with his own. This was now +evident, and he could not help perceiving that his difficulties were +far more formidable from the presence of such a rival. + +But Girasole was not easily daunted. In the first place, he had +unbounded confidence in his own fascinations; in the second place, he +believed that he had a claim on Minnie that no other could equal, in +the fact that he had saved her life; in the third place, apart from +the question of love, he believed her to be a prize of no common +value, whose English gold would be welcome indeed to his Italian need +and greed; while, finally, the bitter hate with which Lord Hawbury had +inspired him gave an additional zest to the pursuit, and made him +follow after Minnie with fresh ardor. + +Once or twice after this he called upon them. On the first occasion +only Lady Dalrymple was visible. On the second, none of the ladies +were at home. He was baffled, but not discouraged. Returning from his +call, he met Minnie and Mrs. Willoughby. Hawbury was with them, riding +beside Minnie. The ladies bowed, and Girasole, as before, coolly +turned his horse and rode by the carriage, talking with Mrs. +Willoughby, and trying to throw at Minnie what he intended to be +impassioned glances. But Minnie would not look at him. Of course she +was frightened as usual, and grew excited, and, as before, talked with +unusual animation to Hawbury. Thus she overdid it altogether, and more +than ever confirmed Girasole in the opinion that she and Hawbury were +affianced. + +Two days after this Girasole called again. + +A bitter disappointment was in store for him. + +They were not there--they had gone. + +Eagerly he inquired where. + +"To Rome," was the reply. + +[Illustration: "'TO ROME!' HE MUTTERED, BETWEEN HIS SET TEETH."] + +"To Rome!" he muttered, between his set teeth; and mounting his horse +hurriedly, he rode away. + +He was not one to be daunted. He had set a certain task before +himself, and could not easily be turned aside. He thought bitterly of +the ingratitude with which he had been treated. He brought before his +mind the "stony British stare," the supercilious smile, and the +impertinent and insulting expression of Hawbury's face as he sat on +his saddle, with his chin up, stroking his whiskers, and surveyed him +for the first time. All these things combined to stimulate the hate as +well as the love of Girasole. He felt that he himself was not one who +could be lightly dismissed, and determined that they should learn +this. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +VAIN REMONSTRANCES. + + +Hawbury had immolated himself for as much as half a dozen times to +gratify Dacres. He had sacrificed himself over and over upon the altar +of friendship, and had allowed himself to be bored to death because +Dacres so wished it. The whole number of his calls was in reality only +about five or six; but that number, to one of his taste and +temperament, seemed positively enormous, and represented an immense +amount of human suffering. + +One day, upon reaching his quarters, after one of these calls, he +found Dacres there, making himself, as usual, very much at home. + +"Well, my dear fellow," said Hawbury, cheerfully, "how waves the flag +now? Are you hauling it down, or are you standing to your guns? Toss +over the cigars, and give an account of yourself." + +"Do you know any thing about law, Hawbury?" was Dacres's answer. + +"Law?" + +"Yes." + +"No, not much. But what in the world makes you ask such a question as +that? Law! No--not I." + +"Well, there's a point that I should like to ask somebody about." + +"Why not get a lawyer?" + +"An Italian lawyer's no use." + +"Well, English lawyers are to be found. I dare say there are twenty +within five minutes' distance of this place." + +"Oh, I don't want to bother. I only wanted to ask some one's opinion +in a general way." + +"Well, what's the point?" + +"Why this," said Dacres, after a little hesitation. "You've heard of +outlawry?" + +"Should think I had--Robin Hood and his merry men, Lincoln green, +Sherwood Forest, and all that sort of thing, you know. But what the +mischief sets you thinking about Robin Hood?" + +"Oh, I don't mean that rot. I mean real outlawry--when a fellow's in +debt, you know." + +"Well?" + +"Well; if he goes out of the country, and stays away a certain number +of years, the debt's outlawed, you know." + +"The deuce it is! Is it, though? _I've_ been in debt, but I always +managed to pull through without getting so far. But that's convenient +for some fellows too." + +"I'm a little muddy about it, but I've heard something to this effect. +I think the time is seven years. If the debt is not acknowledged +during the interval, it's outlawed. And now, 'pon my life, my dear +fellow, I really don't know but that I've jumbled up some fragments of +English law with American. I felt that I was muddy, and so I thought +I'd ask you." + +"Don't know any more about it than about the antediluvians." + +"It's an important point, and I should like to have it looked up." + +"Well, get a lawyer here; half London is on the Continent. But still, +my dear fellow, I don't see what you're driving at. You're not in +debt?" + +"No--this isn't debt; but it struck me that this might possibly apply +to other kinds of contracts." + +"Oh!" + +"Yes." + +"How--such as what, for instance?" + +"Well, you see, I thought, you know, that all contracts might be +included under it; and so I thought that if seven years or so annulled +all contracts, it might have some effect, you know, upon--the--the--the +marriage contract, you know." + +At this Hawbury started up, stared at Dacres, gave a loud whistle, and +then exclaimed, + +"By Jove!" + +"I may be mistaken," said Dacres, modestly. + +"Mistaken? Why, old chap, you're mad. Marriage? Good Lord! don't you +know nothing can abrogate that? Of course, in case of crime, one can +get a divorce; but there is no other way. Seven years? By Jove! A good +idea that. Why, man, if that were so, the kingdom would be +depopulated. Husbands running off from wives, and wives from husbands, +to pass the required seven years abroad. By Jove! You see, too, +there's another thing, my boy. Marriage is a sacrament, and you've not +only got to untie the civil knot, but the clerical one, my boy. No, +no; there's no help for it. You gave your word, old chap, 'till death +do us part,' and you're in for it." + +At this Dacres said nothing; it appeared to dispel his project from +his mind. He relapsed into a sullen sort of gloom, and remained so for +some time. At last he spoke: + +"Hawbury!" + +"Well?" + +"Have you found out who that fellow is?" + +"What fellow?" + +"Why that yellow Italian that goes prowling around after my wife." + +"Oh yes; I heard something or other today." + +"What was it?" + +"Well, it seems that he saved her life, or something of that sort." + +"Saved her life!" Dacres started. "How? where? Cool, too!" + +"Oh, on the Alps somewhere." + +"On the Alps! saved her life! Come now, I like that," said Dacres, +with bitter intonation. "Aha! don't I know her? I warrant you she +contrived all that. Oh, she's deep! But how did it happen? Did you +hear?" + +"Well, I didn't hear any thing very definite. It was something about a +precipice. It was Lady Dalrymple that told me. It seems she was +knocked over a precipice by an avalanche." + +"Was what? Knocked where? Over a precipice? By a what--an avalanche? +Good Lord! I don't believe it. I swear I don't. She invented it all. +It's some of her infernal humbug. She slid off over the snow, so as to +get him to go after her. Oh, don't I know her and her ways!" + +"Well, come now, old man, you shouldn't be too hard on her. You never +said that flirtation was one of her faults." + +"Well, neither it was; but, as she is a demon, she's capable of any +thing; and now she has sobered down, and all her vices have taken this +turn. Oh yes. I know her. No more storms now--no rage, no fury--all +quiet and sly. Flirtation! Ha, ha! That's the word. And my wife! And +going about the country, tumbling over precipices, with devilish +handsome Italians going down to save her life! Ha, ha, ha! I like +that!" + +"See here, old boy, I swear you're too suspicious. Come now. You're +going too far. If she chooses, she may trump up the same charge +against you and the child-angel at Vesuvius. Come now, old boy, be +just. You can afford to. Your wife may be a fiend in human form; and +if you insist upon it, I've nothing to say. But this last notion of +yours is nothing but the most wretched absurdity. It's worse. It's +lunacy." + +"Well, well," said Dacres, in a milder tone; "perhaps she didn't +contrive it. But then, you know," he added, "it's just as good for +her. She gets the Italian. Ha, ha, ha!" + +His laugh was forced, feverish, and unnatural. Hawbury didn't like it, +and tried to change the subject. + +"Oh, by-the-way," said he, "you needn't have any further trouble about +any of them. You don't seem inclined to take any definite action, so +the action will be taken for you." + +"What do you mean?" + +"I mean that they are all going to leave Naples." + +"To leave Naples!" + +Dacres uttered this in a voice of grief and surprise which astonished +Hawbury and touched him. + +"Yes," he said. "You know they've been here long enough. They want to +see Rome. Holy-week, you know. No end of excitement. Illumination of +St. Peter's, and all that sort of thing, you know." + +Dacres relapsed into sombre silence. For more than half an hour he did +not say a word. Hawbury respected his mood, and watched him with +something approaching to anxiety. + +"Hawbury," said he at last. + +"Well, old man?" + +"I'm going to Rome." + +"You--to Rome!" + +"Yes, me, to Rome." + +"Oh, nonsense! See here, old boy. You'd really better not, you know. +Break it up. You can't do any thing." + +"I'm going to Rome," repeated Dacres, stolidly. "I've made up my +mind." + +"But, really," remonstrated Hawbury. "See here now, my dear fellow; +look here, you know. By Jove! you don't consider, really." + +"Oh yes, I do. I know every thing; I consider every thing." + +"But what good will it do?" + +"It won't do any good; but it may prevent some evil." + +"Nothing but evil can ever come of it." + +"Oh, no evil need necessarily come of it." + +"By Jove!" exclaimed Hawbury, who began to be excited. "Really, my +dear fellow, you don't think. You see you can't gain any thing. She's +surrounded by friends, you know. She never can be yours, you know. +There's a great gulf between you, and all that sort of thing, you +know." + +"Yes," repeated Dacres, catching his last words--"yes, a great gulf, +as deep as the bottomless abyss, never to be traversed, where she +stands on one side, and I on the other, and between us hate, deep and +pitiless hate, undying, eternal!" + +"Then, by Jove! my dear fellow, what's the use of trying to fight +against it? You can't do any thing. If this were Indiana, now, or even +New York, I wouldn't say any thing, you know; but you know an Indiana +divorce wouldn't do _you_ any good. Her friends wouldn't take you on +those terms--and she wouldn't. Not she, by Jove!" + +"I _must_ go. I must follow her," continued Dacres. "The sight of her +has roused a devil within me that I thought was laid. I'm a changed +man, Hawbury." + +"I should think so, by Jove!" + +"A changed man," continued Dacres. "Oh, Heavens, what power there is +in a face! What terrific influence it has over a man! Here am I; a few +days ago I was a free man; now I am a slave. But, by Heaven! I'll +follow her to the world's end. She shall not shake me off. She thinks +to be happy without me. She shall not. I will silently follow as an +avenging fate. I can not have her, and no one else shall. The same +cursed fate that severs her from me shall keep her away from others. +If I am lonely and an exile, she shall not be as happy as she expects. +I shall not be the only one to suffer." + +"See here, by Jove!" cried Hawbury. "Really. You're going too far, my +dear boy, you know. You are, really. Come now. This is just like a +Surrey theatre, you know. You're really raving. Why, my poor old boy, +you _must_ give her up. You can't do any thing. You daren't call on +her. You're tied hand and foot. You may worship her here, and rave +about your child-angel till you're black in the face, but you never +can see her; and as to all this about stopping her from marrying any +other person, that's all rot and bosh. What do you suppose any other +man would care for your nonsensical ravings? Lonely and an exile! Why, +man, she'll be married and done for in three months." + +"You don't understand me," said Dacres, dryly. + +"I'm glad that I don't; but it's no wonder, old man, for really you +were quite incoherent." + +"And so they're going to Rome," said Dacres. "Well, they'll find that +I'm not to be shaken off so easily." + +"Come now, old man, you _must_ give up that." + +"And I suppose," continued Dacres, with a sneer, "our handsome, +dark-eyed little Italian cavalier is going with us. Ha, ha, ha! He's +at the house all the time, no doubt." + +"Well, yes; he was there once." + +"Ah! of course--quite devoted." + +"Oh yes; but don't be afraid. It was not to the child-angel. She +appears to avoid him. That's really quite evident. It's an apparent +aversion on her part." + +Dacres drew a long breath. + +"Oh," said he; "and so I suppose it's not _her_ that _he_ goes after. +I did not suppose that it was. Oh no. There's another one--more +piquant, you know--ha, ha!--a devoted lover--saved her life--quite +devoted--and she sits and accepts his attentions. Yet she's seen me, +and knows that I'm watching her. Don't she know _me_? Does she want +any further proof of what I am ready to do? The ruins of Dacres Grange +should serve her for life. She tempts fate when she carries on her +gallantries and her Italian cicisbeism under the eyes of Scone Dacres. +It'll end bad. By Heaven, it will!" + +Scone Dacres breathed hard, and, raising his head, turned upon Hawbury +a pair of eyes whose glow seemed of fire. + +"Bad!" he repeated, crashing his fist on the table. "Bad, by Heaven!" + +Hawbury looked at him earnestly. + +"My dear boy," said he, "you're getting too excited. Be cool. Really, +I don't believe you know what you're saying. I don't understand what +you mean. Haven't the faintest idea what you're driving at. You're +making ferocious threats against some people, but, for my life, I +don't know who they are. Hadn't you better try to speak so that a +fellow can understand the general drift, at least, of what you say?" + +"Well, then, you understand this much--I'm going to Rome." + +"I'm sorry for it, old boy." + +"And see here, Hawbury, I want you to come with me." + +"Me? What for?" + +"Well, I want you. I may have need of you." + +As Dacres said this his face assumed so dark and gloomy an expression +that Hawbury began to think that there was something serious in all +this menace. + +"'Pon my life," said he, "my dear boy, I really don't think you're in +a fit state to be allowed to go by yourself. You look quite desperate. +I wish I could make you give up this infernal Roman notion." + +"I'm going to Rome!" repeated Dacres, resolutely. + +Hawbury looked at him. + +"You'll come, Hawbury, won't you?" + +"Why, confound it all, of course. I'm afraid you'll do something rash, +old man, and you'll have to have me to stand between you and harm." + +"Oh, don't be concerned about me," said Dacres. "I only want to watch +her, and see what her little game is. I want to look at her in the +midst of her happiness. She's most infernally beautiful, too; hasn't +added a year or a day to her face; more lovely than ever; more +beautiful than she was even when I first saw her. And there's a +softness about her that she never had before. Where the deuce did she +get that? Good idea of hers, too, to cultivate the soft style. And +there's sadness in her face, too. Can it be real? By Heavens! if I +thought it could be real I'd--but pooh! what insanity! It's her art. +There never was such cunning. She cultivates the soft, sad style so as +to attract lovers--lovers--who adore her--who save her life--who +become her obedient slaves! Oh yes; and I--what am I? Why they get +together and laugh at me; they giggle; they snicker--" + +"Confound it all, man, what are you going on at that rate for?" +interrupted Hawbury. "Are you taking leave of your senses altogether? +By Jove, old man, you'd better give up this Roman journey." + +"No, I'll keep at it." + +"What for? Confound it! I don't see your object." + +"My object? Why, I mean to follow her. I can't give her up. I won't +give her up. I'll follow her. She shall see me every where. I'll +follow her. She sha'n't go any where without seeing me on her track. +She shall see that she is mine. She shall know that she's got a +master. She shall find herself cut off from that butterfly life which +she hopes to enter. I'll be her fate, and she shall know it." + +"By Jove!" cried Hawbury. "What the deuce is all this about? Are you +mad, or what? Look here, old boy, you're utterly beyond me, you know. +What the mischief do you mean? Whom are you going to follow? Whose +fate are you going to be? Whose track are you talking about?" + +"Who?" cried Dacres. "Why, my wife!" + +As he said this he struck his fist violently on the table. + +"The deuce!" exclaimed Hawbury, staring at him; after which he added, +thoughtfully, "by Jove!" + +Not much more was said. Dacres sat in silence for a long time, +breathing hard, and puffing violently at his cigar. Hawbury said +nothing to interrupt his meditation. After an hour or so Dacres +tramped off in silence, and Hawbury was left to meditate over the +situation. + +And this was the result of his meditations. + +He saw that Dacres was greatly excited, and had changed completely +from his old self. His state of mind seemed actually dangerous. There +was an evil gleam in his eyes that looked like madness. What made it +more perplexing still was the new revulsion of feeling that now was +manifest. It was not so much love for the child-angel as bitter and +venomous hate for his wife. The gentler feeling had given place to the +sterner one. It might have been possible to attempt an argument +against the indulgence of the former; but what could words avail +against revenge? And now there was rising in the soul of Dacres an +evident thirst for vengeance, the result of those injuries which had +been carried in his heart and brooded over for years. The sight of his +wife had evidently kindled all this. If she had not come across his +path he might have forgotten all; but she had come, and all was +revived. She had come, too, in a shape which was adapted in the +highest degree to stimulate all the passion of Dacres's soul--young, +beautiful, fascinating, elegant, refined, rich, honored, courted, and +happy. Upon such a being as this the homeless wanderer, the outcast, +looked, and his soul seemed turned to fire as he gazed. Was it any +wonder? + +All this Hawbury thought, and with full sympathy for his injured +friend. He saw also that Dacres could not be trusted by himself. Some +catastrophe would be sure to occur. He determined, therefore, to +accompany his friend, so as to do what he could to avert the calamity +which he dreaded. + +And this was the reason why he went with Dacres to Rome. + +As for Dacres, he seemed to be animated by but one motive, which he +expressed over and over again: + +"She stood between me and my child-angel, and so will I stand between +her and her Italian!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +THE ZOUAVE OFFICER. + + +Whatever trouble Ethel had experienced at Naples from her conviction +that Hawbury was false was increased and, if possible, intensified by +the discovery that he had followed them to Rome. His true motives for +this could not possibly be known to her, so she, of course, concluded +that it was his infatuation for Minnie, and his determination to win +her for himself. She felt confident that he knew that she belonged to +the party, but was so utterly indifferent to her that he completely +ignored her, and had not sufficient interest in her to ask the +commonest question about her. All this, of course, only confirmed her +previous opinion, and it also deepened her melancholy. One additional +effect it also had, and that was to deprive her of any pleasure that +might be had from drives about Rome. She felt a morbid dread of +meeting him somewhere; she did not yet feel able to encounter him; she +could not trust herself; she felt sure that if she saw him she would +lose all self-control, and make an exhibition of humiliating weakness. +The dread of this was sufficient to detain her at home; and so she +remained indoors, a prisoner, refusing her liberty, brooding over her +troubles, and striving to acquire that indifference to him which she +believed he had toward her. Now going about was the very thing which +would have alleviated her woes, but this was the very thing that she +was unwilling to do; nor could any persuasion shake her resolve. + +One day Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie were out driving, and in passing +through a street they encountered a crowd in front of one of the +churches. Another crowd was inside, and, as something was going on, +they stopped the carriage and sat looking. The Swiss Guards were there +in their picturesque costume, and the cardinals in their scarlet robes +and scarlet coaches, and military officers of high rank, and carriages +of the Roman aristocracy filled with beautiful ladies. Something of +importance was going on, the nature of which they did not know. A +little knot of Englishmen stood near; and from their remarks the +ladies gathered that this was the Church of the Jesuits, and that the +Pope in person was going to perform high-mass, and afterward hold a +reception. + +Soon there arose a murmur and a bustle among the crowd, which was +succeeded by a deep stillness. The Swiss Guards drove the throng to +either side, and a passage-way was thus formed through the people to +the church. A carriage drove up in great state. In this was seated an +elderly gentleman in rich pontifical robes. He had a mild and gentle +face, upon which was a sweet and winning smile. No face is more +attractive than that of Pio Nono. + +"Oh, look!" cried Minnie; "that must be the Pope. Oh, what a darling!" + +Mrs. Willoughby, however, was looking elsewhere. + +"Minnie," said she. + +"What, Kitty dear?" + +"Are you acquainted with any Zouave officer?" + +"Zouave officer! Why, no; what put such a thing as that into your +head, you old silly?" + +"Because there's a Zouave officer over there in the crowd who has been +staring fixedly at us ever since we came up, and trying to make +signals, and it's my opinion he's signaling to you. Look at him; he's +over there on the top of the steps." + +"I won't look," said Minnie, pettishly. "How do I know who he is? I +declare I'm afraid to look at any body. He'll be coming and saving my +life." + +"I'm sure this man is an old acquaintance." + +"Nonsense! how can he be?" + +"It may be Captain Kirby." + +"How silly! Why, Captain Kirby is in the Rifles." + +"Perhaps he is dressed this way just for amusement. Look at him." + +"Now, Kitty, I think you're unkind. You _know_ I don't want to look at +him; I don't want to see him. I don't care who he is--the great, big, +ugly, old horrid! And if you say any thing more, I'll go home." + +Mrs. Willoughby was about to say something, but her attention and +Minnie's, and that of every one else, was suddenly diverted to another +quarter. + +Among the crowd they had noticed a tall man, very thin, with a lean, +cadaverous face, and long, lanky, rusty black hair. He wore a white +neck-tie, and a suit of rusty black clothes. He also held a large +umbrella in his hand, which he kept carefully up out of the way of the +crowd. This figure was a conspicuous one, even in that crowd, and the +ladies had noticed it at the very first. + +As the Pope drove up they saw this long, slim, thin, cadaverous man, +in his suit of rusty black, edging his way through the crowd, so as to +get nearer, until at length he stood immediately behind the line of +Swiss Guards, who were keeping the crowd back, and forming a +passageway for the Pope. Meanwhile his Holiness was advancing through +the crowd. He reached out his hand, and smiled and bowed and murmured +a blessing over them. At last his carriage stopped. The door was +opened, and several attendants prepared to receive the Pope and assist +him out. + +At that instant the tall, slim stranger pushed forward his sallow +head, with its long, lanky, and rusty black hair, between two Swiss +Guards, and tried to squeeze between them. The Swiss at first stood +motionless, and the stranger had actually succeeded in getting about +half-way through. He was immediately in front of his Holiness, and +staring at him with all his might. His Holiness saw this very peculiar +face, and was so surprised that he uttered an involuntary exclamation, +and stopped short in his descent. + +The stranger stopped short too, and quite involuntarily also. For the +Swiss Guards, irritated by his pertinacity, and seeing the Pope's +gesture, turned suddenly, and two of them grasped the stranger by his +coat collar. + +It was, of course, an extremely undignified attitude for the Swiss +Guards, whose position is simply an ornamental one. Nothing but the +most unparalleled outrage to their dignity could have moved them to +this. So unusual a display of energy, however, did not last long. A +few persons in citizens' clothes darted forward from among the crowd, +and secured the stranger; while the Swiss, seeing who they were, +resumed their erect, rigid, and ornamental attitude. The Pope found no +longer any obstacle, and resumed his descent. For a moment the +stranger had created a wide-spread consternation in the breasts of all +the different and very numerous classes of men who composed that +crowd. The arrest was the signal for a murmur of voices, among which +the ladies heard those of the knot of Englishmen who stood near. + +"It's some Garibaldian," said they. + +And this was the general sentiment. + +Several hours after this they were at home, and a caller was +announced. It was the Baron Atramonte. + +"Atramonte!" said Lady Dalrymple. "Who is that? We're not at home, of +course. Atramonte! Some of these Italian nobles. Really, I think we +have seen enough of them. Who is he, Kitty?" + +"I'm sure I haven't the faintest idea. I never heard of him in my +life." + +"We're not at home, of course. It's a singular way, and surely can not +be Roman fashion. It's not civilized fashion. But the Continental +nobility are _so_ odd." + +In a few minutes the servant, who had been dispatched to say, "Not at +home," returned with the statement that the Baron wished particularly +to see Miss Fay on urgent business. + +[Illustration: "TWO OF THEM GRASPED THE STRANGER BY HIS COAT COLLAR."] + +At this extraordinary message Lady Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby +looked first at one another, and then at Minnie, in amazement. + +"I'm sure _I_ don't know any thing about him," said Minnie. "They +_always_ tease me so. Oh, do go and see who he is, and send him +away--please! Oh, do, please, Dowdy dear!" + +"Well, I suppose I had better see the person," said Lady Dalrymple, +good-naturedly. "There must be some mistake. How is he dressed?" she +asked the servant. "Is he a military gentleman? Most of them seem to +belong to the army." + +"Yes, my lady. Zouave dress, my lady." + +At this Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie looked at one another. Lady +Dalrymple went away; and as no other was present, Ethel being, as +usual, in her room, Mrs. Willoughby sighed and said, + +"I thought that man must know you." + +"Well, I'm sure I don't know him," said Minnie. "I never knew a Zouave +officer in my life." + +"It may be Captain Kirby, under an assumed name and a disguise." + +"Oh no, it isn't. I don't believe he would be such a perfect--monster. +Oh dear! It's somebody, though. It must be. And he wants me. Oh, what +_shall_ I do?" + +"Nonsense! You need not go. Aunty will see him, and send him off." + +"Oh, I do so hope he'll go; but I'm afraid he won't." + +After a short time Lady Dalrymple returned. + +"Really," said she, "this is a most extraordinary person. He speaks +English, but not at all like an Englishman. I don't know who he is. He +calls himself a Baron, but he doesn't seem to be a foreigner. I'm +puzzled." + +"I hope he's gone," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"No--that's the worst of it. He won't go. He says he must see Minnie, +and he won't tell his errand. I told him that he could not see you, +but that I would tell you what he wanted, and that you were not at +home. And what do you think he said?" + +"I'm sure I don't know, Dowdy dear." + +"Why, he said he had nothing to do, and would wait till you came back. +And he took his seat in a way that showed that he meant to wait. +Really, I'm quite at a loss what to do. You'll have to see him, Kitty +dear." + +"What a strange person!" said Mrs. Willoughby. "It's _so_ rude. And +don't you know what he is? How do you know he isn't an Italian?" + +"Oh, his English, you know. He speaks it perfectly, but not like an +Englishman, you know, nor like a Scotchman either, or an Irishman. I +wonder whether he may not be an American?" + +At this Minnie started. + +"Oh dear!" she said. + +"What's the matter, darling?" + +"An American! Oh dear! what _will_ become of me!" + +"Why," said Lady Dalrymple, "do you know him, then, after all?" + +"Oh, I'm _so_ afraid that I know him!" + +"Who is it, dear?" + +"Oh, Dowdy! Oh, Kitty!" + +"What's the matter?" + +"It must be that man. Oh, was there _ever_ such a trouble--" + +"Really, Minnie dearest, you are allowing yourself to get too +agitated. Who _is_ this person?" + +"He--he's--an--American." + +"An American? Why, I just said that I thought he might be one. I +didn't know that you were acquainted with any." + +"Oh yes; I did get acquainted with some in--in Canada." + +"Oh; and is this man a Canadian?" + +"No, Dowdy darling; only an American." + +"Well, if he's a friend of yours, I suppose you know something about +him. But how singular it is that you have so completely forgotten his +name. Atramonte? Why, I'm sure it's a _very_ singular name for an +American gentleman--at least it seems so to me--but I don't know much +about them, you know. Tell me, darling, who is he?" + +"He--he saved my life." + +"What! saved your life? Why, my precious child, what _are_ you talking +about? It was the Italian that saved your life, you know, not this +one." + +"Oh, but he did too," said Minnie, despairingly. "I couldn't help it. +He would do it. Papa was washed away. I wish they all wouldn't be so +horrid." + +Lady Dalrymple looked in an equally despairing manner at Mrs. +Willoughby. + +"What is it, Kitty dear? _Is_ the child insane, or what does she mean? +How could this person have saved her life?" + +"That's just what distracts me," said Minnie. "They all do it. Every +single person comes and saves my life. And now I suppose I must go +down and see this person." + +"Well, really, since you say he saved your life, perhaps it would be +as well not to be uncivil," said Lady Dalrymple; "but, at the same +time, he seems to me to act in a very extraordinary manner. And he +calls himself a Baron. Do they have nobles in America?" + +"I'm sure I don't know, Dowdy dear. I never knew that he was a Baron. +He may have been the son of some American Baron; and--and--I'm sure I +don't know." + +"Nonsense, Minnie dear," said Mrs. Willoughby. "This man's title is a +foreign one. He probably obtained it in Italy or Spain, or perhaps +Mexico. I think they have titles in Mexico, though I really don't +know." + +"Why, of course, one isn't expected to know any thing about America," +said Lady Dalrymple. "I can mention quite a number of English +statesmen, members of the cabinet, and others, who don't know any more +about America than I do." + +"Do you really intend to go down yourself and see him, Minnie dear?" +asked Mrs. Willoughby. + +"How can I help it? What am I to do? I must go, Kitty darling. He is +so very positive, and--and he insists so. I don't want to hurt his +feelings, you know; and I really think there is nothing for me to do +but to go. What do you think about it, Dowdy dear?" and she appealed +to her aunt. + +"Well, Minnie, my child, I think it would be best not to be unkind or +uncivil, since he saved your life." + +Upon this Minnie accompanied her sister to see the visitor. + +Mrs. Willoughby entered the room first, and Minnie was close behind +her, as though she sought protection from some unknown peril. On +entering the room they saw a man dressed in Zouave uniform. His hair +was cropped short; he wore a mustache and no beard; his features were +regular and handsome; while a pair of fine dark eyes were looking +earnestly at the door, and the face and the eyes had the expression of +one who is triumphantly awaiting the result of some agreeable +surprise. Mrs. Willoughby at once recognized the stranger as the +Zouave officer who had stared at them near the Church of the Jesuits. +She advanced with lady-like grace toward him, when suddenly he stepped +hastily past her, without taking any notice of her, and catching +Minnie in his arms, he kissed her several times. + +Mrs. Willoughby started back in horror. + +Minnie did not resist, nor did she scream, or faint, or do any thing. +She only looked a little confused, and managed to extricate herself, +after which she took a seat as far away as she could, putting her +sister between her and the Zouave. But the Zouave's joy was full, and +he didn't appear to notice it. He settled himself in a chair, and +laughed loud in his happiness. + +"Only to think of it," said he. "Why, I had no more idea of your being +here, Minnie, than _Victory_. Well, here you see me. Only been here a +couple of months or so. You got my last favor, of course? And ain't +you regular knocked up to see me a Baron? Yes, a Baron--a real, live +Baron! I'll tell you all about it. You see I was here two or three +years ago--the time of Mentana--and fought on the Pope's side. Odd +thing, too, wasn't it, for an American? But so it was. Well, they +promoted me, and wanted me to stay. But I couldn't fix it. I had +business off home, and was on my way there the time of the shipwreck. +Well, I've been dodgin' all round every where since then, but never +forgettin' little Min, mind you, and at last I found myself here, all +right. I'd been speculatin' in wines and raisins, and just dropped in +here to take pot-luck with some old Zouave friends, when, darn me! if +they didn't make me stay. It seems there's squally times ahead. They +wanted a live man. They knew I was that live man. They offered me any +thing I wanted. They offered me the title of Baron Atramonte. That +knocked me, I tell you. Says I, I'm your man. So now you see me Baron +Atramonte, captain in the Papal Zouaves, ready to go where glory waits +me--but fonder than ever of little Min. Oh, I tell you what, I ain't a +bit of a brag, but I'm _some_ here. The men think I'm a little the +tallest lot in the shape of a commander they ever _did_ see. When I'm +in Rome I do as the Romans do, and so I let fly at them a speech every +now and then. Why, I've gone through nearly the whole 'National +Speaker' by this time. I've given them Marcellus's speech to the mob, +Brutus's to the Romans, and Antony's over Cæsar's dead body. I tried a +bit of Cicero against Catiline, but I couldn't remember it very well. +You know it, of course. _Quousque tandem_, you know." + +[Illustration: +"CATCHING MINNIE IN HIS ARMS, HE KISSED HER SEVERAL TIMES."] + +"Well, Min, how goes it?" he continued. "This _is_ jolly; and, what's +more, it's real good in you--darn me if it ain't! I knew you'd be +regularly struck up all of a heap when you heard of me as a Baron, but +I really didn't think you'd come all the way here to see me. And you +do look stunning! You do beat all! And this lady? You haven't +introduced me, you know." + +The Baron rose, and looked expectantly at Mrs. Willoughby, and then at +Minnie. The latter faltered forth some words, among which the Baron +caught the names Mrs. Willoughby and Rufus K. Gunn, the latter name +pronounced, with the middle initial and all, in a queer, prim way. + +"Mrs. Willoughby--ah!--Min's sister, I presume. Well, I'm pleased to +see you, ma'am. Do you know, ma'am, I have reason to remember your +name? It's associated with the brightest hours of my life. It was in +your parlor, ma'am, that I first obtained Min's promise of her hand. +Your hand, madam." + +And, stooping down, he grasped Mrs. Willoughby's hand, which was not +extended, and wrung it so hard that she actually gave a little shriek. + +"For my part, ma'am," he continued, "I'm not ashamed of my name--not a +mite. It's a good, honest name; but being as the Holy Father's gone +and made me a noble, I prefer being addressed by my title. All +Americans are above titles. They despise them. But being in Rome, you +see, we must do as the Romans do; and so you needn't know me as Rufus +K. Gunn, but as the Baron Atramonte. As for you, Min--you and I won't +stand on ceremony--you may call me 'Roof,' or any other name you +fancy. I would suggest some pet name--something a little loving, you +know." + +In the midst of all this, which was poured forth with extreme +volubility, the servant came and handed a card. + +"Count Girasole." + +[Illustration: "HAWBURY, AS I'M A LIVING SINNER!"] + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +THE AMERICAN BARON. + + +At any other time Mrs. Willoughby would perhaps have manoeuvred Minnie +out of the room; but on the present occasion the advent of the Italian +was an inexpressible relief. Mrs. Willoughby was not prepared for a +scene like this. The manners, the language, and the acts of Rufus K. +Gunn had filled her with simple horror. She was actually bewildered, +and her presence of mind was utterly gone. As for Minnie, she was +quite helpless, and sat, looking frightened. The Baron Atramonte might +have been one of the excellent of the earth--he might have been brave +and loyal and just and true and tender, but his manner was one to +which they were unaccustomed, and consequently Mrs. Willoughby was +quite overcome. + +The arrival of Girasole, therefore, was greeted by her with joy. She +at once rose to meet him, and could not help infusing into her +greeting a warmth which she had never shown him before. Girasole's +handsome eyes sparkled with delight, and when Mrs. Willoughby +pointedly made way for him to seat himself next to Minnie his cup of +joy was full. Mrs. Willoughby's only idea at that moment was to throw +some obstacle between Minnie and that "dreadful person" who claimed +her as his own, and had taken such shocking liberties. She did not +know that Girasole was in Rome, and now accepted his arrival at that +opportune moment as something little less than providential. + +And now, actuated still by the idea of throwing further obstacles +between Minnie and the Baron, she herself went over to the latter, and +began a series of polite remarks about the weather and about Rome; +while Girasole, eager to avail himself of his unexpected privilege, +conversed with Minnie in a low voice in his broken English. + +This arrangement was certainly not very agreeable to the Baron. His +flow of spirits seemed to be checked at once, and his volubility +ceased. He made only monosyllabic answers to Mrs. Willoughby's +remarks, and his eyes kept wandering, over beyond her to Minnie, and +scrutinizing the Italian who was thus monopolizing her at the very +moment when he was beginning to have a "realizing sense" of her +presence. He looked puzzled. He could not understand it at all. He +felt that some wrong was done by somebody. He fell into an ungracious +mood. He hated the Italian who had thus come between him and his +happiness, and who chatted with Minnie, in his abominable broken +English, just like an old acquaintance. He couldn't understand it. He +felt an unpleasant restraint thrown over him, and began to meditate a +departure, and a call at some more favorable time later in the +evening. But he wanted to have a few more words with "Min," and so he +tried to "sit out" the Italian. + +But the Italian was as determined as the American. It was the first +chance that he had had to get a word with Minnie since he was in +Milan, and he was eager to avail himself of it. Mrs. Willoughby, on +her part, having thus discomfited the Baron, was not unmindful of the +other danger; so she moved her seat to a position near enough to +overlook and check Girasole, and then resumed those formal, chilling, +heartless, but perfectly polite remarks which she had been +administering to the Baron since Girasole's arrival. + +At length Mrs. Willoughby began to be dreadfully bored, and groaned in +spirit over the situation in which Minnie had placed herself, and +racked her brains to find some way of retreat from these two +determined lovers, who thus set at naught the usages of society for +their own convenience. She grew indignant. She wondered if they would +_ever_ go. She wondered if it were not possible to engage the Count +and the Baron in a conversation by themselves, and, under cover of it, +withdraw. Finally she began to think whether she would not be +justified in being rude to them, since they were so inconsiderate. She +thought over this, and was rapidly coming to the decision that some +act of rudeness was her only hope, when, to her immense relief, the +servant entered and announced Lord Hawbury. + +The entrance of the welcome guest into the room where the unwelcome +ones were seated was to Mrs. Willoughby like light in a dark place. To +Minnie also it brought immense relief in her difficult position. The +ladies rose, and were about to greet the new-comer, when, to their +amazement, the Baron sprang forward, caught Lord Hawbury's hand, and +wrung it over and over again with the most astonishing vehemence. + +"Hawbury, as I'm a living sinner! Thunderation! Where did you come +from? Good again! Darn it all, Hawbury, this is real good! And how +well you look! _How_ are you? All right, and right side up? Who'd have +thought it? It ain't you, really, now, is it? Darn me if I ever was so +astonished in my life! You're the last man I'd have expected. Yes, +_Sir_. You may bet high on that." + +"Ah, really," said Hawbury, "my dear fellow! Flattered, I'm sure. And +how goes it with you? Deuced odd place to find you, old boy. And I'm +deuced glad to see you, you know, and all that sort of thing." + +And he wrung the Baron's hand quite as heartily as the other wrung +his; and the expression on his face was of as much cordiality and +pleasure as that upon the face of the other. Then Hawbury greeted the +ladies, and apologized by stating that the Baron was a very old and +tried friend, whom he had not seen for years; which intelligence +surprised Mrs. Willoughby greatly, and brought a faint ray of +something like peace to poor Minnie. + +The ladies were not imprisoned much longer. Girasole threw a black +look at Lord Hawbury, and retreated. After a few moments' chat Hawbury +also retired, and made the Baron go with him. And the Baron went +without any urging. He insisted, however, on shaking hands heartily +with both of the ladies, especially Minnie, whose poor little hand he +nearly crushed into a pulp; and to the latter he whispered the +consoling assurance that he would come to see her on the following +day. After which he followed his friend out. + +Then he took Hawbury over to his own quarters, and Hawbury made +himself very much at home in a rocking-chair, which the Baron regarded +as the pride and joy and glory of his room. + +"By Jove!" cried Hawbury. "This is deuced odd, do you know, old chap; +and I can't imagine how the mischief you got here!" + +This led to long explanations, and a long conversation, which was +protracted far into the night, to the immense enjoyment of both of the +friends. + +The Baron was, as Lord Hawbury had said, an old friend. He had become +acquainted with him many years before upon the prairies of America, +near the Rocky Mountains. The Baron had rescued him from Indians, by +whom he had been entrapped, and the two friends had wandered far over +those regions, enduring perils, fighting enemies, and roughing it in +general. This rough life had made each one's better nature visible to +the other, and had led to the formation of a friendship full of mutual +appreciation of the other's best qualities. Now it is just possible +that if they had not known one another, Hawbury might have thought the +Baron a boor, and the Baron might have called Hawbury a "thundering +snob;" but as it was, the possible boor and the possible snob each +thought the other one of the finest fellows in the world. + +"But you're not a Roman Catholic," said Hawbury, as the Baron +explained his position among the Zouaves. + +"What's the odds? All's fish that comes to their net. To get an office +in the Church may require a profession of faith, but we're not so +particular in the army. I take the oath, and they let me go. Besides, +I have Roman Catholic leanings." + +"Roman Catholic leanings?" + +"Yes; I like the Pope. He's a fine man, Sir--a fine man. I regard that +man more like a father than any thing else. There isn't one of us but +would lay down our lives for that old gentleman." + +"But you never go to confession, and you're not a member of the +Church." + +"No; but then I'm a member of the army, and I have long chats with +some of the English-speaking priests. There are some first-rate +fellows among them, too. Yes, Sir." + +"I don't see much of a leaning in all that." + +"Leaning? Why, it's all leaning. Why, look here. I remember the time +when I was a grim, true-blue Puritan. Well, I ain't that now. I used +to think the Pope was the Beast of the 'Pocalypse. Well, now I think +he's the finest old gentleman I ever saw. I didn't use to go to +Catholic chapel. Well, now I'm there often, and I rather kind o' like +it. Besides, I'm ready to argue with them all day and all night, and +what more can they expect from a fighting man? + +"You see, after our war I got my hand in, and couldn't stop fighting. +The Indians wouldn't do--too much throat-cutting and savagery. So I +came over here, took a fancy to the Pope, enlisted, was at Mentana, +fit there, got promoted, went home, couldn't stand it, and here I am, +back again; though how long I'm going to be here is more'n I can tell. +The fact is, I feel kind of onsettled." + +"Why so?" + +"Oh, it's an aggravating place, at the best." + +"How?" + +"There's such an everlasting waste of resources--such tarnation bad +management. Fact is, I've noted that it's always the case wherever you +trust ministers to do business. They're sure to make a mess of it. +I've known lots of cases. Why, that's always the way with us. Look at +our stock-companies of any kind, our religious societies, and our +publishing houses--wherever they get a ministerial committee, the +whole concern goes to blazes. I _know_ that. Yes, _Sir_. Now that's +the case here. Here's a fine country. Why, round this here city there's +a country, Sir, that, if properly managed, might beat any of our +prairies--and look at it. + +"Then, again, they complain of poverty. Why, I can tell you, from my +own observation, that they've got enough capital locked up, lying +useless, in this here city, to regenerate it all, and put it on its +feet. This capital wants to be utilized. It's been lying too long +without paying interest. It's time that it stopped. Why, I tell you +what it is, if they were to sell out what they have here lying idle, +and realize, they'd get enough money to form an endowment fund for the +Pope and his court so big that his Holiness and every official in the +place might get salaries all round out of the interest that would +enable them to live like--well, I was going to say like princes, but +there's a lot of princes in Rome that live so shabby that the +comparison ain't worth nothing. + +"Why, see here, now," continued the Baron, warming with his theme, +which seemed to be a congenial one; "just look here; see the position +of this Roman court. They can actually levy taxes on the whole world. +Voluntary contributions, Sir, are a wonderful power. Think of our +missionary societies--our Sabbath-school organizations in the States. +Think of the wealth, the activity, and the action of all our great +charitable, philanthropic, and religious bodies. What supports them +all? Voluntary contributions. Now what I mean to say is this--I mean +to say that if a proper organization was arranged here, they could get +annual receipts from the whole round globe that would make the Pope +the richest man on it. Why, in that case Rothschild wouldn't be a +circumstance. The Pope might go into banking himself, and control the +markets of the world. But no. There's a lot of ministers here, and +they haven't any head for it. I wish they'd give me a chance. I'd make +things spin. + +"Then, again, they've got other things here that's ruining them. +There's too much repression, and that don't do for the immortal mind. +My idea is that every man was created free and equal, and has a right +to do just as he darn pleases; but you can't beat that into the heads +of the governing class here. No, Sir. The fact is, what Rome wants is +a republic. It'll come, too, some day. The great mistake of his +Holiness's life is that he didn't put himself at the head of the +movement in '48. He had the chance, but he got frightened, and backed +down. Whereas if he had been a real, live Yankee, now--if he had been +like some of our Western parsons--he'd have put himself on the tiptop +of the highest wave, and gone in. Why, he could have had all Italy at +his right hand by this time, instead of having it all against him. +There's where he made his little mistake. If I were Pope I'd fight the +enemy with their own weapons. I'd accept the situation. I'd go in head +over heels for a republic. I'd have Rome the capital, myself +president, Garibaldi commander-in-chief, Mazzini secretary of state--a +man, Sir, that can lick even Bill Seward himself in a regular, +old-fashioned, tonguey, subtile, diplomatic note. And in that case, +with a few live men at the head of affairs, where would Victor Emanuel +be? Emphatically, nowhere! + +"Why, Sir," continued the Baron, "I'd engage to take this city as it +is, and the office of Pope, and run the whole Roman Catholic Church, +till it knocked out all opposition by the simple and natural process +of absorbing all opponents. We want a republic here in Rome. We want +freedom, Sir. Where is the Church making its greatest triumphs to-day? +In the States, Sir. If the Catholic Church made itself free and +liberal and go-ahead; if it kept up with the times; if it was imbued +with the spirit of progress, and pitched aside all old-fashioned +traditions--why, I tell you, Sir, it would be a little the tallest +organization on this green globe of ours. Yes, _Sir!_" + +While Hawbury and the Baron were thus engaged in high discourse, Mrs. +Willoughby and Minnie were engaged in discourses of a less elevated +but more engrossing character. + +After the ladies had escaped they went up stairs. Lady Dalrymple had +retired some time before to her own room, and they had the apartment +to themselves. Minnie flung herself into a chair and looked +bewildered; Mrs. Willoughby took another chair opposite, and said +nothing for a long time. + +"Well," said Minnie at last, "you needn't be so cross, Kitty; I didn't +bring him here." + +"Cross!" said her sister; "I'm not cross." + +"Well, you're showing temper, at any rate; and you know you are, and I +think it very unkind in you, when I have so much to trouble me." + +"Why, really, Minnie darling, I don't know what to say." + +"Well, why don't you tell me what you think of him, and all that sort +of thing? You _might_, you know." + +"Think of him!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, elevating her eyebrows. + +"Yes, think of him; and you needn't go and make faces about him, at +any rate." + +"Did I make faces? Well, dear," said Mrs. Willoughby, patiently, "I'll +tell you what I think of him. I'm afraid of him." + +"Well, then," said Minnie, in a tone of triumph, "now you know how I +feel. Suppose he saved your life, and then came in his awfully +boisterous way to see you; and got you alone, and began that way, and +really quite overwhelmed you, you know; and then, when you were really +almost stunned, suppose he went and proposed to you? Now, then!" + +And Minnie ended this question with the air of one who could not be +answered, and knew it. + +"He's awful--perfectly awful!" said Mrs. Willoughby. "And the way he +treated you! It was _so_ shocking." + +"I know; and that's just the horrid way he _always_ does," said +Minnie, in a plaintive tone. "I'm sure _I_ don't know what to do with +him. And then he's Lord Hawbury's friend. So what _are_ we to do?" + +[Illustration: "LOOK AT THE MAN!"] + +"I don't know, unless we leave Rome at once." + +"But I don't _want_ to leave Rome," said Minnie. "I hate being chased +away from places by people--and they'd be sure to follow me, you +know--and I don't know what to do. And oh, Kitty darling, I've just +thought of something. It would be so nice. What do you think of it?" + +"What is it?" + +"Why, this. You know the Pope?" + +"No, I don't." + +"Oh, well, you've seen him, you know." + +"Yes; but what has he got to do with it?" + +"Why, I'll get you to take me, and I'll go to him, and tell him all +about it, and about all these horrid men; and I'll ask him if he can't +do something or other to help me. They have dispensations and things, +you know, that the Pope gives; and I want him to let me dispense with +these awful people." + +"Nonsense!" said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"I don't see any nonsense in it at all. I'm in earnest," said Minnie; +"and I think it's a great shame." + +"Nonsense!" said her sister again; "the only thing is for you to stay +in your room." + +"But I don't want to stay in my room, and I can't." + +"Oh dear! what can I do with this child?" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, +whose patience was giving way. + +Upon this Minnie went over and kissed her, and begged to be forgiven; +and offered to do any thing that darling Kitty wanted her to do. + +After this they talked a good deal over their difficulty, but without +being able to see their way out of it more clearly. + +That evening they were walking up and down the balcony of the house. +It was a quadrangular edifice, and they had a suite of rooms on the +second and third stories. They were on the balcony of the third story, +which looked down into the court-yard below. A fountain was in the +middle of this, and the moon was shining brightly. + +The ladies were standing looking down, when Minnie gently touched her +sister's arm, and whispered, + +"Look at the man!" + +"Where?" + +"By the fountain." + +Mrs. Willoughby looked, and saw the face of a man who was standing on +the other side of the fountain. His head rose above it, and his face +was turned toward them. He evidently did not know that he was seen, +but was watching the ladies, thinking that he himself was unobserved. +The moment that Mrs. Willoughby looked at the face she recognized it. + +"Come in," said she to Minnie. And drawing her sister after her, she +went into the house. + +"I knew the face; didn't you, Kitty dear?" said Minnie. "It's so easy +to tell it. It was Scone Dacres. But what in the world does he want? +Oh dear! I hope _he_ won't bother me." + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +THE INTRUDER. + + +Judging from the Baron's own words, it will be perceived that his +comprehension of the situation was a little different from the actual +fact. His idea was that his last letter had been received by Minnie in +England, whereupon she had been seized with such an ungovernable +longing to see him that she at once set out for Rome. She had not sent +him any message, for she wished to surprise him. She had done so +effectually. He was not merely surprised; he was overwhelmed, +overjoyed, intoxicated with joy. This was indeed kind, he thought--the +true part of a fond girl, who thus cast aside all silly scruples, and +followed the dictates of her own noble and loving heart. + +Now the fact that he had made a partial failure of his first visit to +his charmer did not in the slightest degree disconcert him. He was +naturally joyous, hilarious, and sanguine. His courage never faltered, +nor could the brightness of his soul be easily dimmed. A +disappointment on one day gave him but little trouble. It was quickly +thrown off, and then his buoyant spirit looked forward for better +fortune on the next day. The little disappointment which he had did +not, therefore, prevent him from letting his reason feast and his soul +flow with Lord Hawbury; nor, when that festive season was over, did it +prevent him from indulging in the brightest anticipations for the +following day. + +On the afternoon of that day, then, the Baron directed his steps +toward the hotel where his charmer resided, his heart beating high, +and the generous blood mantling his cheek, and all that sort of thing. +But the Baron was not alone. He had a companion, and this companion +was an acquaintance whom he had made that morning. This companion was +very tall, very thin, very sallow, with long, straggling locks of +rusty black hair, white neck-tie, and a suit of rather seedy black +clothes. In fact, it was the very stranger who had been arrested +almost under his eyes as a Garibaldian. His case had come under the +notice of the Baron, who had visited him, and found him not to be a +Garibaldian at all, but a fellow-countryman in distress--in short, no +less a person than the Reverend Saul Tozer, an esteemed clergyman, who +had been traveling through Europe for the benefit of his health and +the enlargement of his knowledge. This fellow-countryman in distress +had at once been released by the Baron's influence; and, not content +with giving him his liberty, he determined to take him under his +protection, and offered to introduce him to society; all of which +generous offices were fully appreciated by the grateful clergyman. + +The Baron's steps were first directed toward the place above +mentioned, and the Reverend Saul accompanied him. On reaching it he +knocked, and asked for Miss Fay. + +"Not at home," was the reply. + +"Oh, well," said he, "I'll go in and wait till she comes home. Come +along, parson, and make yourself quite at home. Oh, never mind, young +man," he continued to the servant; "I know the way. Come along, +parson." And with these words he led the way into the reception-room, +in which he had been before. + +An elderly lady was seated there whom the Baron recognized as having +seen before. It was Lady Dalrymple, whose name was, of course, unknown +to him, since he had only exchanged a few words on his former visit. +But as he was naturally chivalrous, and as he was bent on making +friends with all in the house, and as he was also in a glorious state +of good-will to the entire human race, he at once advanced to the lady +and made a low bow. + +"How do you do, ma'am?" + +Lady Dalrymple bowed good-naturedly, for she was good-natured to a +fault. + +"I suppose you remember me, ma'am," said the Baron, in rather a loud +voice; for, as the lady was elderly, he had a vague idea that she was +deaf--which impression, I may mention, was altogether unfounded--"I +suppose you remember me, ma'am? But I haven't had the pleasure of a +regular introduction to you; so we'll waive ceremony, if you choose, +and I'll introduce myself. I'm the Baron Atramonte, and this is my +very particular friend, the Reverend Saul Tozer." + +"I'm happy to make your acquaintance," said Lady Dalrymple, with a +smile, and not taking the Baron's offered hand--not, however, from +pride, but simply from laziness--for she hated the bother, and didn't +consider it good taste. + +"I called here, ma'am," said the Baron, without noticing that Lady +Dalrymple had not introduced _herself_--"I called here, ma'am, to see +my young friend, Miss Minnie Fay. I'm very sorry that she ain't at +home; but since I _am_ here, I rather think I'll just set down and +wait for her. I s'pose you couldn't tell me, ma'am, about how long +it'll be before she comes in?" + +Lady Dalrymple hadn't any idea. + +"All right," said the Baron; "the longer she keeps me waiting, the +more welcome she'll be when she does come. That's all I've got to +say." + +So the Baron handed a chair to the Reverend Saul, and then selecting +another for himself in a convenient position, he ensconced himself in +it as snugly as possible, and sat in silence for a few minutes. Lady +Dalrymple took no notice of him whatever, but appeared to be engrossed +with some trifle of needle-work. + +After about five minutes the Baron resumed the task of making himself +agreeable. + +He cleared his throat. + +"Long in these parts, ma'am?" he asked. + +"Not very long," said Lady Dalrymple, with her usual bland +good-nature. + +"A nice place this," continued the Baron. + +"Yes." + +"And do you keep your health, ma'am?" inquired the Baron, with some +anxiety. + +"Thanks," said Lady Dalrymple; which observation set the Baron's mind +wondering what she meant by that. + +"Pray, ma'am," said he, after a pause, "might you be any relation to a +young lady friend of mine that's staying here named Minnie Fay?" + +"A little," said Lady Dalrymple; which remark set the Baron again +wondering. And he was about to return to the charge with another and +more direct question, when his attention was arrested by the sound of +footsteps on the stairs; so he sat bolt upright, and stared hard at +the door. There was the rustle of a dress. The Baron rose. So did the +Reverend Saul Tozer. The lady appeared. It was not Minnie. It was Mrs. +Willoughby. + +Now during the Baron's visit there had been some excitement up stairs. +The ladies had told the servants that they were not at home to any +callers that day. They had found with consternation how carelessly the +Baron had brushed aside their little cobweb regulation, and had heard +his voice as he strove to keep up an easy conversation with their +aunt. Whereupon an earnest debate arose. They felt that it was not +fair to leave their aunt alone with the Baron, and that one of them +should go to the rescue. To Mrs. Willoughby's amazement, Minnie was +anxious to go. To this she utterly objected. Minnie insisted, and Mrs. +Willoughby was in despair. In vain she reproached that most whimsical +of young ladies. In vain she reminded her of the Baron's rudeness on a +former occasion. Minnie simply reminded her that the Baron had saved +her life. At last Mrs. Willoughby actually had to resort to +entreaties, and thus she persuaded Minnie not to go down. So she went +down herself, but in fear and trembling, for she did not know at what +moment her voluble and utterly unreliable sister might take it into +her head to follow her. + +The Baron, who had risen, full of expectation, stood looking at her, +full of disappointment, which was very strongly marked on his face. +Then he recollected that Minnie was "not at home," and that he must +wait till she did get home. This thought, and the hope that he would +not now have long to wait, brought back his friendly glow, and his +calm and his peace and his good-will toward the whole human race, +including the ladies in the room. He therefore bowed very low, and, +advancing, he made an effort to shake hands; but Mrs. Willoughby had +already known the dread pressure which the Baron gave, and evaded him +by a polite bow. Thereupon the Baron introduced the Reverend Saul +Tozer. + +The Baron took out his watch, looked at it, frowned, coughed, put it +back, and then drummed with his fingers on the arm of the chair. + +"Will it be long, ma'am," asked the Baron, "before Minnie gets back?" + +"She is not out," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Not out?" + +"No." + +"Why, the thundering fool of a servant went and told me that she was +not at home!" + +"She is at home," said Mrs. Willoughby, sweetly. + +"What! at home!" cried the Baron. "And does she know _I'm_ here?" + +"She does." + +"Then why in thunder don't she come down?" cried the Baron, +wonderingly. + +"Because she is indisposed." + +"Indisposed?" + +"Yes." + +This was the information which Mrs. Willoughby had decided to give to +the Baron. Minnie had stipulated that his feelings should not be hurt; +and this seemed to her to be the easiest mode of dealing with him. + +"Indisposed!" cried the Baron. + +"Yes." + +"Oh dear! Oh, I hope, ma'am--I do hope, ma'am, that she ain't very +bad. Is it any thing serious--or what?" + +"Not _very_ serious; she has to keep her room, though." + +"She ain't sick abed, I hope?" + +"Oh no--not so bad as that!" + +"Oh dear! it's all _me_, I know. _I'm_ to blame. She made this +journey--the poor little pet!--just to see me; and the fatigue and the +excitement have all been too much. Oh, I might have known it! Oh, I +remember now how pale she looked yesterday! Oh dear! what'll I do if +any thing happens to her? Oh, do tell me--is she better?--did she pass +a good night?--does she suffer any pain?--can I do any thing for +her?--will you take a little message from me to her?" + +"She is quite easy now, thanks," said Mrs. Willoughby; "but we have to +keep her perfectly quiet; the slightest excitement may be dangerous." + +Meanwhile the Reverend Saul had become wearied with sitting dumb, and +began to look around for some suitable means of taking part in the +conversation. As the Baron had introduced him to society, he felt that +it was his duty to take some part so as to assert himself both as a +man, a scholar, and a clergyman. So, as he found the Baron was +monopolizing Mrs. Willoughby, he gradually edged over till he came +within ear-shot of Lady Dalrymple, and then began to work his way +toward a conversation. + +"This, ma'am," he began, "is truly an interesting spot." + +Lady Dalrymple bowed. + +"Yes, ma'am. I've been for the past few days surveying the ruins of +antiquity. It is truly a soul-stirring spectacle." + +"So I have heard," remarked Lady Dalrymple, cheerfully. + +"Every thing around us, ma'am," continued the Reverend Saul, in a +dismal voice, "is subject to dissolution, or is actually dissolving. +How forcible air the words of the Psalmist: 'Our days air as the +grass, or like the morning flower; when blasting winds sweep o'er the +vale, they wither in an hour.' Yes, ma'am, I have this week stood in +the Roman Forum. The Coliseum, also, ma'am, is a wonderful place. It +was built by the Flavian emperors, and when completed could hold +eighty thousand spectators seated, with about twenty thousand +standing. In hot weather these spectators were protected from the rays +of the sun by means of awnings. It is a mighty fabric, ma'am!" + +"I should think so," said Lady Dalrymple. + +"The arch of Titus, ma'am, is a fine ruin. It was originally built by +the emperor of that name to commemorate the conquest of Jerusalem. The +arch of Septimius Severus was built by the Emperor of that name, and +the arch of Constantine was built by the emperor of _that_ name. They +are all very remarkable structures." + +"I'm charmed to hear you say so." + +"It's true, ma'am; but let me add, ma'am, that the ruins of this +ancient city do not offer to my eyes a spectacle half so melancholy as +the great moral ruin which is presented by the modern city. For, +ma'am, when I look around, what do I see? I behold the Babylon of the +Apocalypse! Pray, ma'am, have you ever reflected much on that?" + +"Not to any great extent," said Lady Dalrymple, who now began to feel +bored, and so arose to her feet. The Reverend Saul Tozer was just +getting on a full head of conversational steam, and was just fairly +under way, when this sad and chilling occurrence took place. She rose +and bowed to the gentlemen, and began to retreat. + +All this time the Baron had been pouring forth to Mrs. Willoughby his +excited interrogatories about Minnie's health, and had asked her to +take a message. This Mrs. Willoughby refused at first. + +"Oh no!" said she; "it will really disturb her too much. What she +wants most is perfect quiet. Her health is really _very_ delicate, and +I am _excessively_ anxious about her." + +"But does she--does she--is she--can she walk about her own room?" +stammered the Baron. + +"A little," said Mrs. Willoughby. "Oh, I hope in a few weeks she may +be able to come down. But the very _greatest_ care and quiet are +needed, for she is in such a _very_ delicate state that we watch her +night and day." + +"A few weeks!" echoed the Baron, in dismay. "Watch her night and day!" + +"Oh, you know, it is the only chance for her recovery. She is _so_ +delicate." + +The Baron looked at Mrs. Willoughby with a pale face, upon which there +was real suffering and real misery. + +"Can't I do something?" he gasped. "Won't you take a message to her? +It ought to do her good. Perhaps she thinks I'm neglecting her. +Perhaps she thinks I ain't here enough. Tell her I'm ready to give up +my office, and even my title of nobility, and come and live here, if +it'll be any comfort to her." + +"Oh, really, Sir, you _quite_ mistake her," said Mrs. Willoughby. "It +has no reference to you whatever. It's a nervous affection, +accompanied with general debility and neuralgia." + +"Oh no, you don't know her," said the Baron, incredulously. "I _know_ +her. I know what it is. But she walks, don't she?" + +"Yes, a little--just across the room; still, even that is too much. +She is _very, very_ weak, and must be _quite_ kept free from +excitement. Even the excitement of your visits is bad for her. Her +pulse is--is--always--accelerated--and--she--I--Oh, dear me!" + +While Mrs. Willoughby had been making up this last sentence she was +startled by a rustling on the stairs. It was the rustle of a female's +dress. An awful thought occurred to her, which distracted her, and +confused her in the middle of her sentence, and made her scarce able +to articulate her words. And as she spoke them the rustle drew nearer, +and she heard the sound of feet descending the stairs, until at last +the footsteps approached the door, and Mrs. Willoughby, to her utter +horror, saw Minnie herself. + +Now as to the Baron, in the course of his animated conversation with +Mrs. Willoughby, and in his excited entreaties to her to carry a +message up to the invalid, he had turned round with his back to the +door. It was about the time that Lady Dalrymple had begun to beat a +retreat. As she advanced the Baron saw her, and, with his usual +politeness, moved ever so far to one side, bowing low as he did so. +Lady Dalrymple passed, the Baron raised himself, and as Mrs. +Willoughby was yet speaking, and had just reached the exclamation +which concluded her last remark, he was astounded by the sudden +appearance of Minnie herself at the door. + +The effect of this sudden appearance was overwhelming. Mrs. Willoughby +stood thunder-struck, and the Baron utterly bewildered. The latter +recovered his faculties first. It was just as Lady Dalrymple was +passing out. With a bound he sprang toward Minnie, and caught her in +his arms, uttering a series of inarticulate cries. + +"Oh, Min! and you did come down, did you? And you couldn't stay up +there, could you? I wanted to send a message to you. Poor little Min! +you're so weak. Is it any thing serious? Oh, my darling little Min! +But sit down on this here seat. Don't stand; you're too weak. Why +didn't you send, and I'd have carried you down? But tell me now, +honest, wasn't it _me_ that brought this on? Never mind, I'll never +leave you again." + +This is the style which the gallant Baron adopted to express his +sentiments concerning Minnie; and the result was that he succeeded in +giving utterance to words that were quite as incoherent as any that +Minnie herself, in her most rambling moods, had ever uttered. + +The Baron now gave himself up to joy. He took no notice of any body. +He sat by Minnie's side on a sofa, and openly held her hand. The +Reverend Saul Tozer looked on with an approving smile, and surveyed +the scene like a father. Mrs. Willoughby's soul was on fire with +indignation at Minnie's folly and the Baron's impudence. She was also +indignant that her little conventional falsehoods had been suddenly +disproved by the act of Minnie herself. Yet she did not know what to +say, and so she went to a chair, and flung herself into it in fierce +anger. + +As for Minnie herself, she had come down to the Baron, and appeared +rather to enjoy the situation. She talked about Rome and Naples, and +asked him all about himself, and the Baron explained his whole +situation down to the minutest detail. She was utterly indifferent to +her sister. Once or twice the Baron made a move to go, but did not +succeed. He finally settled himself down apparently for the rest of +the day; but Mrs. Willoughby at last interposed. She walked forward. +She took Minnie's hand, and spoke to her in a tone which she but +seldom used. + +"You shall _not_ stay here any longer!" she cried. "Come." + +And Minnie obeyed at once. + +The Baron insisted on a tender adieu. Mrs. Willoughby stood by, with +flashing eyes and heaving breast. + +Minnie followed her up stairs in silence. + +"You silly child!" she cried. "Are you mad? What made you come down? +You broke your promise!" + +"Well--well--I couldn't help it, and he is so deliciously rude; and do +you know, Kitty dearest, I really begin to feel quite fond of him." + +"Now listen, child. You shall never see him again." + +"I don't see why not," whimpered Minnie. + +"And I'm going to telegraph to papa. I wouldn't have the +responsibility of you another week for the world." + +"Now, Kitty, you're horrid." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +THE BARON'S ASSAULTS. + + +On the eventful afternoon when the Baron had effected an entrance into +the heart of the enemy's country, another caller had come there--one +equally intent and equally determined, but not quite so aggressive. +This was the Count Girasole. The same answer was given to him which +had been given to the Baron, but with far different effect. The Baron +had carelessly brushed the slight obstacle aside. To the Count it was +an impenetrable barrier. It was a bitter disappointment, too; for he +had been filled with the brightest hopes and expectations by the +reception with which he had met on his last visit. That reception had +made him believe that they had changed their sentiments and their +attitude toward him, and that for the future he would be received in +the same fashion. He had determined, therefore, to make the most of +this favorable change, and so he at once repeated his call. This time, +however, his hopes were crushed. What made it worse, he had seen the +entrance of the Baron and the Reverend Saul, and knew by this that +instead of being a favored mortal in the eyes of these ladies, he was +really, in their estimation, placed below these comparative strangers. +By the language of Lord Hawbury on his previous call, he knew that the +acquaintance of the Baron with Mrs. Willoughby was but recent. + +The disappointment of the Count filled him with rage, and revived all +his old feelings and plans and projects. The Count was not one who +could suffer in silence. He was a crafty, wily, subtle, scheming +Italian, whose fertile brain was full of plans to achieve his desires, +and who preferred to accomplish his aims by a tortuous path, rather +than by a straight one. This repulse revived old projects, and he took +his departure with several little schemes in his mind, some of which, +at least, were destined to bear fruit afterward. + +On the following day the Baron called once more. The ladies in the +mean time had talked over the situation, but were unable to see what +they were to do with a man who insisted on forcing his way into their +house. Their treatment would have been easy enough if it had not been +for Minnie. She insisted that they should not be unkind to him. He had +saved her life, she said, and she could not treat him with rudeness. +Lady Dalrymple was in despair, and Mrs. Willoughby at her wit's end, +while Ethel, to whom the circumstance was made known, was roused by it +from her sadness, and tried to remonstrate with Minnie. All her +efforts, however, were as vain as those of her friends. Minnie could +not be induced to take any decided stand. She insisted on seeing him +whenever he called, on the ground that it would be unkind not to. + +"And will you insist on seeing Girasole also?" asked Mrs. Willoughby. + +"I don't know. I'm awfully sorry for him," said Minnie. + +"Well, then, Captain Kirby will be here next. Of course you will see +him?" + +"I suppose so," said Minnie, resignedly. + +"And how long do you think this sort of thing can go on? They'll meet, +and blood will be shed." + +"Oh dear! I'm afraid so." + +"Then I'm not going to allow it. I've telegraphed to papa. He'll see +whether you are going to have your own way or not." + +"I'm sure I don't see what dear papa can do." + +"He won't let you see those horrid men." + +"He won't be cruel enough to lock me up in the house. I do wish he +would come and take me away. I don't want them. They're all horrid." + +[Illustration: "MIN, IT'S ME!"] + +"This last one--this Gunn--is the most terrible man I ever saw." + +"Oh, Kitty dearest! How _can_ you say so? Why, his rudeness and +violence are perfectly irresistible. He's charming. He bullies one so +deliciously." + +Mrs. Willoughby at this turned away in despair. + +Minnie's very peculiar situation was certainly one which required a +speedy change. The forced entrance of the Baron had thrown +consternation into the family. Ethel herself had been roused, and took +a part in the debate. She began to see Minnie in a new light, and +Hawbury's attention to her began to assume the appearance of a very +mournful joke. To her mind Minnie was now the subject of desperate +attention from five men. + +Thus: + +1. Lord Hawbury. + +2. Count Girasole. + +3. Scone Dacres. + +4. Baron Atramonte. + +5. Captain Kirby, of whom Mrs. Willoughby had just told her. + +And of these, four had saved her life, and consequently had the +strongest possible claims on her. + +And the only satisfaction which Ethel could gain out of this was the +thought that Hawbury, at least, had not saved Minnie's life. + +And now to proceed. + +The Baron called, as has been said, on the following day. This time he +did not bring the Reverend Saul with him. He wished to see Minnie +alone, and felt the presence of third persons to be rather unpleasant. + +On reaching the place he was told, as before, that the ladies were not +at home. + +Now the Baron remembered that on the preceding day the servant had +said the same, while all the time the ladies were home. He was +charitably inclined to suppose that it was a mistake, and not a +deliberate lie; and, as he was in a frame of good-will to mankind, he +adopted this first theory. + +"All right, young man," said he; "but as you lied yesterday--under a +mistake--I prefer seeing for myself to-day." + +So the Baron brushed by the servant, and went in. He entered the room. +No one was there. He waited a little while, and thought. He was too +impatient to wait long. He could not trust these lying servants. So he +determined to try for himself. Her room was up stairs, somewhere in +the story above. + +So he went out of the room, and up the stairs, until his head was on a +level with the floor of the story above. Then he called: + +"_Min!_" + +No answer. + +"MIN!" in a louder voice. + +No answer. + +"MIN! it's ME!" still louder. + +No answer. + +"_MIN!_" a perfect yell. + +At this last shout there was a response. One of the doors opened, and +a lady made her appearance, while at two other doors appeared two +maids. The lady was young and beautiful, and her face was stern, and +her dark eyes looked indignantly toward the Baron. + +"Who are you?" she asked, abruptly; "and what do you want?" + +"Me? I'm the Baron Atramonte; and I want Min. Don't you know where she +is?" + +"Who?" + +"Min." + +"Min?" asked the other, in amazement. + +"Yes. My Min--Minnie, you know. Minnie Fay." + +At this the lady looked at the Baron with utter horror. + +"I want her." + +"She's not at home," said the lady. + +"Well, really, it's too bad. I must see her. Is she out?" + +"Yes." + +"Really? Honor bright now?" + +The lady retired and shut the door. + +"Well, darn it all, you needn't be so peppery," muttered the Baron. "I +didn't say any thing. I only asked a civil question. Out, hey? Well, +she must be this time. If she'd been in, she'd have made her +appearance. Well, I'd best go out and hunt her up. They don't seem to +me altogether so cordial as I'd like to have them. They're just a +leetle too 'ristocratic." + +With these observations to himself, the Baron descended the stairs, +and made his way to the door. Here he threw an engaging smile upon the +servant, and made a remark which set the other on the broad grin for +the remainder of the day. After this the Baron took his departure. + +The Baron this time went to some stables, and reappeared in a short +time mounted upon a gallant steed, and careering down the Corso. In +due time he reached the Piazza del Popolo, and then he ascended the +Pincian Hill. Here he rode about for some time, and finally his +perseverance was rewarded. He was looking down from the summit of the +hill upon the Piazza below, when he caught sight of a barouche, in +which were three ladies. One of these sat on the front seat, and her +white face and short golden hair seemed to indicate to him the one he +sought. + +In an instant he put spurs to his horse, and rode down the hill as +quick as possible, to the great alarm of the crowds who were going up +and down. In a short time he had caught up with the carriage. He was +right. It was the right one, and Minnie was there, together with Lady +Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby. The ladies, on learning of his +approach, exhibited no emotion. They were prepared for this, and +resigned. They had determined that Minnie should have no more +interviews with him indoors; and since they could not imprison her +altogether, they would have to submit for the present to his advances. +But they were rapidly becoming desperate. + +Lord Hawbury was riding by the carriage as the Baron came up. + +"Hallo!" said he to the former. "How do? and _how_ are you all? Why, +I've been hunting all over creation. Well, Minnie, how goes it? Feel +lively? That's right. Keep out in the open air. Take all the exercise +you can, and eat as hard as you can. You live too quiet as a general +thing, and want to knock around more. But we'll fix all that, won't +we, Min, before a month of Sundays?" + +The advent of the Baron in this manner, and his familiar address to +Minnie, filled Hawbury with amazement. He had been surprised at +finding him with the ladies on the previous day, but there was nothing +in his demeanor which was at all remarkable. Now, however, he noticed +the very great familiarity of his tone and manner toward Minnie, and +was naturally amazed. The Baron had not confided to him his secret, +and he could not understand the cause of such intimacy between the +representatives of such different classes. He therefore listened with +inexpressible astonishment to the Baron's language, and to Minnie's +artless replies. + +Minnie was sitting on the front seat of the barouche, and was alone in +that seat. As the gentlemen rode on each side of the carriage her face +was turned toward them. Hawbury rode back, so that he was beside Lady +Dalrymple; but the Baron rode forward, on the other side, so as to +bring himself as near to Minnie as possible. The Baron was exceedingly +happy. His happiness showed itself in the flush of his face, in the +glow of his eyes, and in the general exuberance and all-embracing +swell of his manner. His voice was loud, his gestures demonstrative, +and his remarks were addressed by turns to each one in the company. +The others soon gave up the attempt to talk, and left it all to the +Baron. Lady Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby exchanged glances of +despair. Hawbury still looked on in surprise, while Minnie remained +perfectly calm, perfectly self-possessed, and conversed with her usual +simplicity. + +As the party thus rode on they met a horseman, who threw a rapid +glance over all of them. It was Girasole. The ladies bowed, and Mrs. +Willoughby wished that he had come a little before, so that he could +have taken the place beside the carriage where the Baron now was. But +the place was now appropriated, and there was no chance for the Count. +Girasole threw a dark look over them, which rested more particularly +on Hawbury. Hawbury nodded lightly at the Count, and didn't appear to +take any further notice of him. All this took up but a few moments, +and the Count passed on. + +Shortly after they met another horseman. He sat erect, pale, sad, with +a solemn, earnest glow in his melancholy eyes. Minnie's back was +turned toward him, so that she could not see his face, but his eyes +were fixed upon Mrs. Willoughby. She looked back at him and bowed, as +did also Lady Dalrymple. He took off his hat, and the carriage rolled +past. Then he turned and looked after it, bareheaded, and Minnie +caught sight of him, and smiled and bowed. And then in a few moments +more the crowd swallowed up Scone Dacres. + +The Baron thus enjoyed himself in a large, exuberant fashion, and +monopolized the conversation in a large, exuberant way. He outdid +himself. He confided to the ladies his plans for the regeneration of +the Roman Church and the Roman State. He told stories of his +adventures in the Rocky Mountains. He mentioned the state of his +finances, and his prospects for the future. He was as open, as free, +and as communicative as if he had been at home, with fond sisters and +admiring brothers around him. The ladies were disgusted at it all; and +by the ladies I mean only Mrs. Willoughby and Lady Dalrymple. For +Minnie was not--she actually listened in delight. It was not +conventional. Very well. Neither was the Baron. And for that matter, +neither was she. He was a child of nature. So was she. His rudeness, +his aggressiveness, his noise, his talkativeness, his egotism, his +confidences about himself--all these did not make him so very +disagreeable to her as to her sister and aunt. + +So Minnie treated the Baron with the utmost complaisance, and Hawbury +was surprised, and Mrs. Willoughby and Lady Dalrymple were disgusted; +but the Baron was delighted, and his soul was filled with perfect joy. +Too soon for him was this drive over. But the end came, and they +reached the hotel. Hawbury left them, but the Baron lingered. The spot +was too sweet, the charm too dear--he could not tear himself away. + +In fact, he actually followed the ladies into the house. + +"I think I'll just make myself comfortable in here, Min, till you come +down," said the Baron. And with these words he walked into the +reception-room, where he selected a place on a sofa, and composed +himself to wait patiently for Minnie to come down. + +So he waited, and waited, and waited--but Minnie did not come. At last +he grew impatient. He walked out, and up the stairs, and listened. + +He heard ladies' voices. + +He spoke. + +"_Min!_" + +No answer. + +"MIN!" louder. + +No answer. + +"MIN! HALLO-O-O-O!" + +No answer. + +"_MIN!_" a perfect shout. + +At this a door was opened violently, and Mrs. Willoughby walked out. +Her cheeks were flushed, and her eyes glanced fire. + +"Sir," she said, "this is intolerable! You must be intoxicated. Go +away at once, or I shall certainly have you turned out of the house." + +And saying this she went back, shut the door, and locked it. + +The Baron was thunder-struck. He had never been treated so in his +life. He was cut to the heart. His feelings were deeply wounded. + +"Darn it!" he muttered. "What's all this for? I ain't been doing any +thing." + +He walked out very thoughtfully. He couldn't understand it at all. He +was troubled for some time. But at last his buoyant spirit rose +superior to this temporary depression. To-morrow would explain all, he +thought. Yes, to-morrow would make it all right. To-morrow he would +see Min, and get her to tell him what in thunder the row was. She'd +have to tell, for he could never find out. So he made up his mind to +keep his soul in patience. + +That evening Hawbury was over at the Baron's quarters, by special +invitation, and the Baron decided to ask his advice. So in the course +of the evening, while in the full, easy, and confidential mood that +arises out of social intercourse, he told Hawbury his whole +story--beginning with the account of his first meeting with Minnie, +and his rescue of her, and her acceptance of him, down to this very +day, when he had been so terribly snubbed by Mrs. Willoughby. To all +this Hawbury listened in amazement. It was completely new to him. He +wondered particularly to find another man who had saved the life of +this quiet, timid little girl. + +The Baron asked his advice, but Hawbury declined giving any. He said +he couldn't advise any man in a love-affair. Every man must trust to +himself. No one's advice could be of any avail. Hawbury, in fact, was +puzzled, but he said the best he could. The Baron himself was fully of +Hawbury's opinion. He swore that it was truth, and declared the man +that followed another's advice in a love-affair was a "darned fool +that didn't deserve to win his gal." + +There followed a general conversation on things of a different kind. +The Baron again discoursed on church and state. He then exhibited some +curiosities. Among other things a skull. He used it to hold his +tobacco. He declared that it was the skull of an ancient Roman. On the +inside was a paper pasted there, on which he had written the +following: + + "Oh, I'm the skull of a Roman bold + That fit in the ancient war; + From East to West I bore the flag + Of S. P. Q. and R. + + "In East and West, and North and South, + We made the nations fear us-- + Both Nebuchadnezzar and Hannibal, + And Pharaoh too, and Pyrrhus. + + "We took their statutes from the Greeks, + And lots of manuscripts too; + We set adrift on his world-wide tramp + The original wandering Jew. + + "But at last the beggarly Dutchman came, + With his lager and sauerkraut; + And wherever that beggarly Dutchman went + He made a terrible rout. + + "Wo ist der Deutscher's Vaterland? + Is it near the ocean wild? + Is it where the feathery palm-trees grow? + Not there, not there, my child. + + "But it's somewhere down around the Rhine; + And now that Bismarck's come, + Down goes Napoleon to the ground, + And away goes the Pope from Rome!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +"HE SAVED MY LIFE." + + +"I can't bear this any longer!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby. "Here you +are getting into all sorts of difficulties, each one worse than the +other. I'm sure I don't see why you should. You're very quiet, Minnie +dearest, but you have more unpleasant adventures than any person I +ever heard of. You're run away with on horseback, you're shipwrecked, +you're swept down a precipice by an avalanche, and you fall into the +crater of a burning volcano. Every time there is some horrid man who +saves you, and then proposes. As for you, you accept them all with +equal readiness, one after another, and what is worse, you won't give +any of them up. I've asked you explicitly which of them you'll give +up, and you actually refuse to say. My dear child, what are you +thinking of? You can't have them all. You can't have any of them. None +of them are agreeable to your family. They're horrid. What are you +going to do? Oh, how I wish you had dear mamma to take care of you! +But she is in a better world. And here is poor dear papa who can't +come. How shocked he would be if he knew all. What is worst, here is +that dreadful American savage, who is gradually killing me. He +certainly will be my death. What _am_ I to do, dear? Can't you +possibly show a little sense yourself--only a little, dear--and have +some consideration for your poor sister? Even Ethel worries about you, +though she has troubles of her own, poor darling; and aunty is really +quite ill with anxiety. What _are_ we going to do? I know one thing. +_I'm_ not going to put up with it. My mind is made up. I'll leave Rome +at once, and go home and tell papa." + +"Well, you needn't scold so," said Minnie. "It's my trouble. I can't +help it. They would come. I'm sure _I_ don't know what to do." + +"Well, you needn't be so awfully kind to them all. That's what +encourages them so. It's no use for me to try to keep them away if you +make them all so welcome. Now there's that dreadful Italian. I'm +positive he's going to get up some unpleasant plot. These Italians are +so very revengeful. And he thinks you're so fond of him, and I'm so +opposed. And he's right, too. You always act as if you're fond of him, +and all the rest. As to that terrible American savage, I'm afraid to +think of him; I positively am." + +"Well, you needn't be so awfully unkind to him. He saved my life." + +"That's no reason why he should deprive me of mine, which he will do +if he goes on so much longer." + +"You were very, very rude to him, Kitty," said Minnie, severely, "and +very, very unkind--" + +"I intended to be so." + +"I really felt like crying, and running out and explaining things." + +"I know you did, and ran back and locked the door. Oh, you wretched +little silly goose, what _am_ I _ever_ to do with such a child as you +are! You're really not a bit better than a baby." + +This conversation took place on the day following the Baron's last +eventful call. Poor Mrs. Willoughby was driven to desperation, and lay +awake all night, trying to think of some plan to baffle the enemy, but +was unsuccessful; and so she tried once more to have some influence +over Minnie by a remonstrance as sharp as she could give. + +"He's an American savage. I believe he's an Indian." + +"I'm sure I don't see any thing savage in him. He's as gentle and as +kind as he can be. And he's so awfully fond of me." + +"Think how he burst in here, forcing his way in, and taking possession +of the house. And then poor dear aunty! Oh, how she _was_ shocked and +horrified!" + +"It's because he is so _awfully_ fond of me, and was so perfectly +_crazy_ to see me." + +"And then, just as I was beginning to persuade him to go away quietly, +to think of you coming down!" + +"Well, I couldn't bear to have him so sad, when he saved my life, and +so I just thought I'd show myself, so as to put him at ease." + +"A pretty way to show yourself--to let a great, horrid man treat you +so." + +"Well, that's what they _all_ do," said Minnie, plaintively. "I'm sure +_I_ can't help it." + +"Oh dear! was there ever such a child! Why, Minnie darling, you must +know that such things are very, very ill-bred, and very, very +indelicate and unrefined. And then, think how he came forcing himself +upon us when we were driving. Couldn't he see that he wasn't wanted? +No, he's a savage. And then, how he kept giving us all a history of +his life. Every body could hear him, and people stared so that it was +really quite shocking." + +"Oh, that's because he is so very, very frank. He has none of the +deceit of society, you know, Kitty darling." + +"Deceit of society! I should think not. Only think how he acted +yesterday--forcing his way in and rushing up stairs. Why, it's +actually quite frightful. He's like a madman. We will have to keep all +the doors locked, and send for the police. Why, do you know, Ethel +says that he was here before, running about and shouting in the same +way: 'Min!' 'Min!' 'Min!'--that's what the horrid wretch calls you +--'Min! it's me.' 'Come, Min!'" + +At this Minnie burst into a peal of merry, musical laughter, and +laughed on till the tears came to her eyes. Her sister looked more +disgusted than ever. + +"He's such a boy," said Minnie; "he's just like a boy. He's so _aw_fully +funny. If I'm a child, he's a big boy, and the awfullest, funniest boy +I ever saw. And then he's _so_ fond of me. Why, he worships me. Oh, +it's awfully nice." + +"A boy! A beast, you mean--a horrid savage. What _can_ I do? I must +send for a policeman. I'll certainly have the doors all locked. And +then we'll all be prisoners." + +"Well, then, it'll all be your own fault, for _I_ don't want to have +any doors locked." + +"Oh dear!" sighed her sister. + +"Well, I don't. And I think you're very unkind." + +"Why, you silly child, he'd come here some day, carry you off, and +make you marry him." + +"Well, I do wish he would," said Minnie, gravely. "I wish somebody +would, for then it would put a stop to all this worry, and I really +don't know what else ever will. Do _you_, now, Kitty darling?" + +Mrs. Willoughby turned away with a gesture of despair. + +An hour or two after some letters were brought in, one of which was +addressed to + + MISS FAY, + + _Poste Restante_, + + _Roma_. + +Minnie opened this, and looked over it with a troubled air. Then she +spoke to her sister, and they both went off to Minnie's room. + +"Who do you think this is from?" she asked. + +"Oh, I don't know! Of course it's some more trouble." + +"It's from Captain Kirby." + +"Oh, of course! And of course he's here in Rome?" + +"No, he isn't." + +"What! Not yet?" + +"No; but he wrote this from London. He has been to the house, and +learned that we had gone to Italy. He says he has sent off letters to +me, directed to every city in Italy, so that I may be sure to get it. +Isn't that good of him?" + +"Well?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, repressing an exclamation of vexation. + +"Well, he says that in three days he will leave, and go first to Rome, +as he thinks we will be most likely to be there this season. And so, +you see, he's coming on; and he will be here in three days, you know." + +"Minnie," said her sister, after some moments' solemn thought. + +"Well, Kitty darling?" + +"Do you ever think?" + +"I don't know." + +"Would you like one of these gentlemen of yours to blow one of the +others' brains out, or stab him, or any thing of that sort?" + +"How shocking you are, Kitty dear! What a dreadful question!" + +"Well, understand me now. One of them _will_ do that. There will be +trouble, and your name will be associated with it." + +"Well," said Minnie, "I know who _won't_ be shot." + +"Who?" + +"Why, Rufus K. Gunn," said she, in the funny, prim way in which she +always pronounced that name. "If he finds it out, he'll drive all the +others away." + +"And would you like that?" + +"Well, you know, he's awfully fond of me, and he's so like a boy: and +if I'm such a child, I could do better with a man, you know, that's +like a boy, you know, than--than--" + +"Nonsense! He's a madman, and you're a simpleton, you little goose." + +"Well, then, we must be well suited to one another," said Minnie. + +"Now, child, listen," said Mrs. Willoughby, firmly. "I intend to put a +stop to this. I have made up my mind positively to leave Rome, and +take you home to papa. I'll tell him all about it, put you under his +care, and have no more responsibility with you. I think he'd better +send you back to school. I've been too gentle. You need a firm hand. +I'll be firm for a few days, till you can go to papa. You need not +begin to cry. It's for your own good. If you're indulged any more, +you'll simply go to ruin." + +Mrs. Willoughby's tone was different from usual, and Minnie was +impressed by it. She saw that her sister was resolved. So she stole up +to her and twined her arms about her and kissed her. + +"There, there," said her sister, kissing her again, "don't look so +sad, Minnie darling. It's for your own good. We must go away, or else +you'll have another of those dreadful people. You must trust to me +now, dearest, and not interfere with me in any way." + +"Well, well, you mustn't be unkind to poor Rufus K. Gunn," said +Minnie. + +"Unkind? Why, we won't be any thing to him at all." + +"And am I never to--to--see him again?" + +"No!" said her sister, firmly. + +Minnie started, and looked at Mrs. Willoughby, and saw in her face a +fixed resolution. + +"No, never!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby. "I am going to take you back to +England. I'm afraid to take any railroad or steamboat. I'll hire a +carriage, and we'll all go in a quiet way to Florence. Then we can +take the railroad to Leghorn, and go home by the way of Marseilles. No +one will know that we've gone away. They'll think we have gone on an +excursion. Now we'll go out driving this morning, and this afternoon +we must keep the outer door locked, and not let any one in. I suppose +there is no danger of meeting him in the morning. He must be on duty +then." + +"But mayn't I see him at all before we go?" + +"No!" + +"Just once--only once?" + +"No, not once. You've seen that horrid man for the last time." + +Minnie again looked at her sister, and again read her resolution in +her face. She turned away, her head dropped, a sob escaped from her, +and then she burst into tears. + +Mrs. Willoughby left the room. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +JEALOUSY. + + +Lord Hawbury had come to Rome for the sole purpose of watching over +his friend Scone Dacres. But he had not found it so easy to do so. His +friend kept by himself more than he used to, and for several days +Hawbury had seen nothing of him. Once while with the ladies he had met +him, and noticed the sadness and the gloom of his brow. He saw by this +that he was still a prey to those feelings the exhibition of which had +alarmed him at Naples, and made him resolve to accompany him here. + +A few days afterward, while Hawbury was in his room, his friend +entered. Hawbury arose and greeted him with unfeigned joy. + +"Well, old man," he said, "you've kept yourself close, too. What have +you been doing with yourself? I've only had one glimpse of you for an +age. Doing Rome, hey? Antiquities, arts, churches, palaces, and all +that sort of thing, I suppose. Come now, old boy, sit down and give an +account of yourself. Have a weed? Here's Bass in prime order. Light +up, my dear fellow, and let me look at you as you compose your manly +form for a friendly smoke. And don't speak till you feel inclined." + +Dacres took his seat with a melancholy smile, and selecting a cigar, +lighted it, and smoked in silence for some time. + +"Who was that Zouave fellow?" he asked at length: "the fellow that I +saw riding by the carriage the other day?" + +"That--oh, an old friend of mine. He's an American named Gunn. He's +joined the Papal Zouaves from some whim, and a deuced good thing it is +for them to get hold of such a man. I happened to call one day, and +found him with the ladies." + +"The ladies--ah!" and Dacres's eyes lighted up with a bad, hard light. +"I suppose he's another of those precious cavaliers--the scum of all +lands--that dance attendance on my charming wife." + +"Oh, see here now, my dear fellow, really now," said Hawbury, "none of +that, you know. This fellow is a friend of _mine_, and one of the best +fellows I ever saw. You'd like him, old chap. He'd suit you." + +"Yes, and suit my wife better," said Dacres, bitterly. + +"Oh, come now, really, my dear boy, you're completely out. He don't +know your wife at all. It's the other one, you know. Don't be jealous, +now, if I tell you." + +"Jealous!" + +"Yes. I know your weakness, you know; but this is an old affair. I +don't want to violate confidence, but--" + +Dacres looked hard at his friend and breathed heavily. He was +evidently much excited. + +"But what?" he said, hoarsely. + +"Well, you know, it's an old affair. It's the young one, you +know--Miss Fay. He rather affects her, you know. That's about it." + +"Miss Fay?" + +"Yes; your child-angel, you know. But it's an older affair than yours; +it is, really; so don't be giving way, man. Besides, his claims on her +are as great as yours; yes, greater too. By Jove!" + +"Miss Fay! Oh, is that all?" said Dacres, who, with a sigh of infinite +relief, shook off all his late excitement, and became cool once more. + +Hawbury noted this very thoughtfully. + +"You see," said Dacres, "that terrible wife of mine is so cursedly +beautiful and fascinating, and so infernally fond of admiration, that +she keeps no end of fellows tagging at her heels. And so I didn't know +but that this was some new admirer. Oh, she's a deep one! Her new +style, which she has been cultivating for ten years, has made her look +like an angel of light. Why, there's the very light of heaven in her +eyes, and in her face there is nothing, I swear, but gentleness and +purity and peace. Oh, had she but been what she now seems! Oh, if even +now I could but believe this, I would even now fling my memories to +the winds, and I'd lie down in the dust and let her trample on me, if +she would only give me that tender and gentle love that now lurks in +her face. Good Heavens! can such a change be possible? No; it's +impossible! It can't be! Don't I know her? Can't I remember her? Is my +memory all a dream? No, it's real; and it's marked deep by this scar +that I wear. Never till that scar is obliterated can that woman +change." + +Dacres had been speaking, as he often did now, half to himself; and as +he ended he rubbed his hand over the place where the scar lay, as +though to soothe the inflammation that arose from the rush of angry +blood to his head. + +"Well, dear boy, I can only say I wish from my heart that her nature +was like her face. She's no favorite of mine, for your story has made +me look on her with your eyes, and I never have spoken to her except +in the most distant way; but I must say I think her face has in it a +good deal of that gentleness which you mention. Miss Fay treats her +quite like an elder sister, and is deuced fond of her, too. I can see +that. So she can't be very fiendish to her. Like loves like, you know, +and the one that the child-angel loves ought to be a little of an +angel herself, oughtn't she?" + +Dacres was silent for a long time. + +"There's that confounded Italian," said he, "dangling forever at her +heels--the devil that saved her life. He must be her accepted lover, +you know. He goes out riding beside the carriage." + +"Well, really, my dear fellow, she doesn't seem overjoyed by his +attentions." + +"Oh, that's her art. She's so infernally deep. Do you think she'd let +the world see her feelings? Never. Slimy, Sir, and cold and subtle and +venomous and treacherous--a beautiful serpent. Aha! isn't that the way +to hit her off? Yes, a beautiful, malignant, venomous serpent, with +fascination in her eyes, and death and anguish in her bite. But she +shall find out yet that others are not without power. Confound her!" + +"Well, now, by Jove! old boy, I think the very best thing you can do +is to go away somewhere, and get rid of these troubles." + +"Go away! Can I go away from my own thoughts? Hawbury, the trouble is +in my own heart. I must keep near her. There's that Italian devil. He +shall not have her. I'll watch them, as I have watched them, till I +find a chance for revenge." + +"You have watched them, then?" asked Hawbury, in great surprise. + +"Yes, both of them. I've seen the Italian prowling about where she +lives. I've seen her on her balcony, evidently watching for him." + +"But have you seen any thing more? This is only your fancy." + +"Fancy! Didn't I see her herself standing on the balcony looking down. +I was concealed by the shadow of a fountain, and she couldn't see me. +She turned her face, and I saw it in that soft, sweet, gentle beauty +which she has cultivated so wonderfully. I swear it seemed like the +face of an angel, and I could have worshiped it. If she could have +seen my face in that thick shadow she would have thought I was an +adorer of hers, like the Italian--ha, ha!--instead of a pursuer, and +an enemy." + +"Well, I'll be hanged if I can tell myself which you are, old boy; +but, at any rate, I'm glad to be able to state that your trouble will +soon be over." + +"How's that?" + +"She's going away." + +"Going away!" + +"Yes." + +"She! going away! where?" + +"Back to England." + +"Back to England! why, she's just come here. What's that for?" + +"I don't know. I only know they're all going home. Well, you know, +holy week's over, and there is no object for them to stay longer." + +"Going away! going away!" replied Dacres, slowly. "Who told you?" + +"Miss Fay." + +"Oh, I don't believe it." + +"There's no doubt about it, my dear boy. Miss Fay told me explicitly. +She said they were going in a carriage by the way of Civita +Castellana." + +"What are they going that way for? What nonsense! I don't believe it." + +"Oh, it's a fact. Besides, they evidently don't want it to be known." + +"What's that?" asked Dacres, eagerly. + +"I say they don't seem to want it to be known. Miss Fay told me in her +childish way, and I saw that Mrs. Willoughby looked vexed, and tried +to stop her." + +"Tried to stop her! Ah! Who were there? Were you calling?" + +"Oh no--it was yesterday morning. I was riding, and, to my surprise, +met them. They were driving--Mrs. Willoughby and Miss Fay, you +know--so I chatted with them a few moments, or rather with Miss Fay, +and hoped I would see them again soon, at some _fête_ or other, when +she told me this." + +"And my wife tried to stop her?" + +"Yes." + +"And looked vexed?" + +"Yes." + +"Then it was some secret of _hers_. _She_ has some reason for keeping +dark. The other has none. Aha! don't I understand her? She wants to +keep it from _me_. She knows you're my friend, and was vexed that you +should know. Aha! she dreads my presence. She knows I'm on her track. +She wants to get away with her Italian--away from my sight. Aha! the +tables are turned at last. Aha! my lady. Now we'll see. Now take your +Italian and fly, and see how far you can get away from me. Take him, +and see if you can hold him. Aha! my angel face, my mild, soft eyes of +love, but devil's heart--can not I understand it all? I see through +it. I've watched, you. Wait till you see Scone Dacres on your track!" + +"What's that? You don't really mean it?" cried Hawbury. + +"Yes, I do." + +"Will you follow her?" + +"Yes, I will." + +"What for? For a vague fancy of your jealous mind?" + +"It isn't a fancy; it's a certainty. I've seen the Italian dogging +her, dodging about her house, and riding with her. I've seen her +looking very much as if she were expecting him at her balcony. Is all +that nothing? She's seen me, and feels conscience-stricken, and longs +to get away where she may be free from the terror of my presence. But +I'll track her. I'll strike at her--at her heart, too; for I will +strike through the Italian." + +"By Jove!" + +"I will, I swear!" cried Dacres, gloomily. + +"You're mad, Dacres. You imagine all this. You're like a madman in a +dream." + +"It's no dream. I'll follow her. I'll track her." + +"Then, by Jove, you'll have to take me with you, old boy! I see you're +not fit to take care of yourself. I'll have to go and keep you from +harm." + +"You won't keep me from harm, old chap," said Dacres, more gently; +"but I'd be glad if you would go. So come along." + +"I will, by Jove!" + +[Illustration: "I WATCHED HIM."] + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +THE BARON'S WOES. + + +Dacres was not the only excited visitor that Hawbury had that day. +Before its close another made his appearance in the person of the +Baron. + +"Well, my noble friend," cried Hawbury--"my Baron bold--how goes it? +But, by Jove! what's the matter, my boy? Your brow deep scars of +thunder have intrenched, and care sits on your faded cheek. Pour forth +the mournful tale. I'll sympathize." + +"I swear it's too almighty bad!" cried the Baron. + +"What?" + +"The way I'm getting humbugged." + +"Humbugged! Who's been humbugging you?" + +"Darn me if I know; and that's the worst of it by a thundering sight." + +"Well, my dear fellow, if I can help you, you'd better let me know +what it's all about." + +"Why, Minnie; that's the row. There ain't another thing on this green +earth that would trouble me for five seconds." + +"Minnie? Oh! And what has happened--a lover's quarrel?" + +"Not a quarrel. _She's_ all right." + +"What is it, then?" + +"Why, she's disappeared." + +"Disappeared! What do you mean by that?" + +"Darn me if I know. I only know this, that they keep their place +bolted and barred, and they've muffled the bell, and there's no +servant to be seen, and I can't find out any thing about them. And +it's too almighty bad. Now isn't it?" + +"It's deuced odd, too--queer, by Jove! I don't understand. Are you +sure they're all locked up?" + +"Course I am." + +"And no servants?" + +"Not a darned servant." + +"Did you ask the concierge?" + +"Course I did; and crossed his palm, too. But he didn't give me any +satisfaction." + +"What did he say?" + +"Why, he said they were at home, for they had been out in the morning, +and had got back again. Well, after that I went back and nearly +knocked the door down. And that was no good; I didn't get a word. The +concierge swore they were in, and they wouldn't so much as answer me. +Now I call that too almighty hard, and I'd like to know what in +thunder they all mean by it." + +"By Jove! odd, too." + +"Well, you know, I thought after a while that it would be all +explained the next day; so I went home and waited, and came back the +next afternoon. I tried it over again. Same result. I spoke to the +concierge again, and he swore again that they were all in. They had +been out in the morning, he said, and looked well. They had come home +by noon, and had gone to their rooms. Well, I really did start the +door that time, but didn't get any answer for my pains." + +"By Jove!" + +"Well, I was pretty hard up, I tell you. But I wasn't going to give +up. So I staid there, and began a siege. I crossed the concierge's +palm again, and was in and out all night. Toward morning I took a nap +in his chair. He thought it was some government business or other, and +assisted me all he could. I didn't see any thing at all though, except +an infernal Italian--a fellow that came calling the first day I was +there, and worked himself in between me and Min. He was prowling about +there, with another fellow, and stared hard at me. I watched him, and +said nothing, for I wanted to find out his little game. He's up to +something, I swear. When he saw I was on the ground, though, he beat a +retreat. + +"Well, I staid all night, and the next morning watched again. I didn't +knock. It wasn't a bit of use--not a darned bit. + +"Well, about nine o'clock the door opened, and I saw some one looking +out very cautiously. In a minute I was standing before her, and held +out my hand to shake hers. It was the old lady. But she didn't shake +hands. She looked at me quite coolly. + +"'Good-morning, ma'am,' said I, in quite a winning voice. +'Good-morning, ma'am.' + +"'Good-morning,' she said. + +"'I come to see Minnie,' said I. + +"'To see Minnie!' said she: and then she told me she wasn't up. + +"'Ain't up?' said I; 'and it so bright and early! Why, what's got her? +Well, you just go and tell her _I'm_ here, and I'll just step inside +and wait till she comes down,' said I. + +"But the old lady didn't budge. + +"'I'm not a servant,' she said, very stiff; 'I'm her aunt, and her +guardian, and I allow no messages to pass between her and strange +gentlemen.' + +"'Strange gentlemen!' I cried. 'Why, ain't I engaged to her?' + +"'I don't know you,' says she. + +"'Wasn't I introduced to you?' says I. + +"'No,' says she; 'I don't know you.' + +[Illustration: "BUT I SAVED HER LIFE."] + +"'But I'm engaged to Minnie,' says I. + +"'I don't recognize you,' says she. 'The family know nothing about +you; and my niece is a silly girl, who is going back to her father, +who will probably send her to school.' + +"'But I saved her life,' says I. + +"'That's very possible,' says she; 'many persons have done so; yet +that gives you no right to annoy her; and you shall _not_ annoy her. +Your engagement is an absurdity. The child herself is an absurdity. +_You_ are an absurdity. Was it not you who was creating such a +frightful disturbance here yesterday? Let me inform you, Sir, that if +you repeat it, you will be handed over to the police. The police would +certainly have been called yesterday had we not wished to avoid +hurting your feelings. We now find that you have no feelings to hurt.' + +"'Very well, ma'am,' says I; 'these are your views; but as you are not +Minnie, I don't accept them. I won't retire from the field till I hear +a command to that effect from Minnie herself. I allow no relatives to +stand between me and my love. Show me Minnie, and let me hear what she +has to say. That's all I ask, and that's fair and square.' + +"'You shall not see her at all,' says the old lady, quite mild; 'not +at all. You must not come again, for you will not be admitted. Police +will be here to put you out if you attempt to force an entrance as you +did before.' + +"'Force an entrance!' I cried. + +"'Yes,' she said, 'force an entrance. You did so, and you filled the +whole house with your shouts. Is that to be borne? Not by us, Sir. And +now go, and don't disturb us any more.' + +"Well, I'll be darned if I ever felt so cut up in my life. The old +lady was perfectly calm and cool; wasn't a bit scared--though there +was no reason why she should be. She just gave it to me that way. But +when she accused me of forcing an entrance and kicking up a row, I was +struck all of a heap and couldn't say a word. _Me_ force an entrance! +_Me_ kick up a row! And in Minnie's house! Why, the old woman's mad! + +"Well, the old lady shut the door in my face, and I walked off; and +I've been ever since trying to understand it, but I'll be darned if I +can make head or tail of it. The only thing I see is that they're all +keeping Minnie locked up away from me. They don't like me, though why +they don't I can't see; for I'm as good as any body, and I've been +particular about being civil to all of them. Still they don't like me, +and they see that Minnie does, and they're trying to break up the +engagement. But by the living jingo!" and the Baron clinched a +good-sized and very sinewy fist, which he brought down hard on the +table--"by the living jingo, they'll find they can't come it over +_me_! No, _Sir_!" + +"Is she fond of you--Miss Fay, I mean?" + +"Fond! Course she is. She dotes on me." + +"Are you sure?" + +"Sure! As sure as I am of my own existence. Why, the way she looks at +me is enough! She has a look of helpless trust, an innocent +confidence, a tender, child-like faith and love, and a beseeching, +pleading, imploring way that tells me she is mine through and +through." + +Hawbury was a little surprised. He thought he had heard something like +that before. + +"Oh, well," said he, "that's the chief thing, you know. If you're sure +of the girl's affections, the battle's half won." + +"Half won! Ain't it all won?" + +"Well, not exactly. You see, with us English, there are ever so many +considerations." + +"But with us Americans there is only one consideration, and that is, +Do you love me? Still, if her relatives are particular about dollars, +I can foot up as many thousands as her old man, I dare say; and then, +if they care for rank, why, I'm a Baron!" + +"And what's more, old boy," said Hawbury, earnestly, "if they wanted a +valiant, stout, true, honest, loyal soul, they needn't go further than +Rufus K. Gunn, Baron de Atramonte." + +The Baron's face flushed. + +"Hawbury," said he, "that's good in you. We've tried one another, +haven't we? You're a brick! And I don't need _you_ to tell _me_ what +you think of me. But if you could get a word into the ear of that +cantankerous old lady, and just let her know what _you_ know about me, +it might move her. You see you're after her style, and I'm not; and +she can't see any thing but a man's manner, which, after all, varies +in all countries. Now if you could speak a word for me, Hawbury--" + +"By Jove! my dear fellow, I'd be glad to do so--I swear I would; but +you don't appear to know that I won't have the chance. They're all +going to leave Rome to-morrow morning." + +The Baron started as though he had been shot. + +"What!" he cried, hoarsely. "What's that? Leave Rome?" + +"Yes." + +"And to-morrow morning?" + +"Yes; Miss Fay told me herself--" + +"Miss Fay told you herself! By Heaven! What do they mean by that?" And +the Baron sat trembling with excitement. + +"Well, the holy week's over." + +"Darn it all, that's got nothing to do with it! It's me! They're +trying to get her from me! How are they going? Do you know?" + +"They are going in a carriage by the way of Civita Castellana." + +"In a carriage by the way of Civita Castellana! Darn that old idiot of +a woman! what's she up to now? If she's running away from me, she'll +wish herself back before she gets far on that road. Why, there's an +infernal nest of brigands there that call themselves Garibaldians; +and, by thunder, the woman's crazy! They'll be seized and held to +ransom--perhaps worse. Heavens! I'll go mad! I'll run and tell them. +But no; they won't see me. What'll I do? And Minnie! I can't give her +up. She can't give me up. She's a poor, trembling little creature; her +whole life hangs on mine. Separation from me would kill her. Poor +little girl! Separation! By thunder, they shall never separate us! +What devil makes the old woman go by that infernal road? Brigands all +the way! But I'll go after them; I'll follow them. They'll find it +almighty hard work to keep her from me! I'll see her, by thunder! and +I'll get her out of their clutches! I swear I will! I'll bring her +back here to Rome, and I'll get the Pope himself to bind her to me +with a knot that all the old women under heaven can never loosen!" + +"What! You're going? By Jove! that's odd, for I'm going with a friend +on the same road." + +"Good again! Three cheers! And you'll see the old woman, and speak a +good word for me?" + +"If I see her and get a chance, I certainly will, by Jove!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +AN EVENTFUL JOURNEY. + + +On the day following two carriages rolled out of Rome, and took the +road toward Florence by the way of Civita Castellana. One carriage +held four ladies; the other one was occupied by four lady's-maids and +the luggage of the party. + +It was early morning, and over the wide Campagna there still hung +mists, which were dissipated gradually as the sun arose. As they went +on the day advanced, and with the departing mists there opened up a +wide view. On either side extended the desolate Campagna, over which +passed lines of ruined aqueducts on their way from the hills to the +city. Here and there crumbling ruins arose above the plain--some +ancient, others medieval, none modern. Before them, in the distance, +arose the Apennines, among which were, here and there, visible the +white outlines of some villa or hamlet. + +For mile after mile they drove on; and the drive soon proved very +monotonous. It was nothing but one long and unvarying plain, with this +only change, that every mile brought them nearer to the mountains. As +the mountains were their only hope, they all looked forward eagerly to +the time when they would arrive there and wind along the road among +them. + +Formerly Mrs. Willoughby alone had been the confidante of Minnie's +secret, but the events of the past few days had disclosed most of her +troubles to the other ladies also, at least as far as the general +outlines were concerned. The consequence was, that they all knew +perfectly well the reason why they were traveling in this way, and +Minnie knew that they all knew it. Yet this unpleasant consciousness +did not in the least interfere with the sweetness of her temper and +the gentleness of her manner. She sat there, with a meek smile and a +resigned air, as though the only part now left her in life was the +patient endurance of her unmerited wrongs. She blamed no one; she made +no complaint; yet there was in her attitude something so touching, so +clinging, so pathetic, so forlorn, and in her face something so sweet, +so sad, so reproachful, and so piteous, that she enforced sympathy; +and each one began to have a half-guilty fear that Minnie had been +wronged by her. Especially did Mrs. Willoughby feel this. She feared +that she had neglected the artless and simple-minded child; she feared +that she had not been sufficiently thoughtful about her; and now +longed to do something to make amends for this imaginary neglect. So +she sought to make the journey as pleasant as possible by cheerful +remarks and lively observations. None of these things, however, +produced any effect upon the attitude of Minnie. She sat there, with +unalterable sweetness and unvarying patience, just like a holy martyr, +who freely forgave all her enemies, and was praying for those who had +despitefully used her. + +[Illustration: THE PROCESSION ACROSS THE CAMPAGNA.] + +The exciting events consequent upon the Baron's appearance, and his +sudden revelation in the role of Minnie's lover, had exercised a +strong and varied effect upon all; but upon one its result was wholly +beneficial, and this was Ethel. It was so startling and so unexpected +that it had roused her from her gloom, and given her something to +think of. The Baron's debut in their parlor had been narrated to her +over and over by each of the three who had witnessed it, and each gave +the narrative her own coloring. Lady Dalrymple's account was humorous; +Mrs. Willoughby's indignant; Minnie's sentimental. Out of all these +Ethel gained a fourth idea, compounded of these three, which again +blended with another, and an original one of her own, gained from a +personal observation of the Baron, whose appearance on the stairs and +impatient summons for "Min" were very vividly impressed on her memory. +In addition to this there was the memory of that day on which they +endeavored to fight off the enemy. + +That was, indeed, a memorable day, and was now alluded to by them all +as the day of the siege. It was not without difficulty that they had +withstood Minnie's earnest protestations, and intrenched themselves. +But Mrs. Willoughby was obdurate, and Minnie's tears, which flowed +freely, were unavailing. + +Then there came the first knock of the impatient and aggressive +visitor, followed by others in swift succession, and in +ever-increasing power. Every knock went to Minnie's heart. It excited +an unlimited amount of sympathy for the one who had saved her life, +and was now excluded from her door. But as the knocks grew violent and +imperative, and Minnie grew sad and pitiful, the other ladies grew +indignant. Lady Dalrymple was on the point of sending off for the +police, and only Minnie's frantic entreaties prevented this. At last +the door seemed almost beaten in, and their feelings underwent a +change. They were convinced that he was mad, or else intoxicated. Of +the madness of love they did not think. Once convinced that he was +mad, they became terrified. The maids all hid themselves. None of them +now would venture out even to call the police. They expected that the +concierge would interpose, but in vain. The concierge was bribed. + +After a very eventful day night came. They heard footsteps pacing up +and down, and knew that it was their tormentor. Minnie's heart again +melted with tender pity for the man whose love for her had turned his +head, and she begged to be allowed to speak to him. But this was not +permitted. So she went to bed and fell asleep. So, in process of time, +did the others, and the night passed without any trouble. Then morning +came, and there was a debate as to who should confront the enemy. +There was no noise, but they knew that he was there. At last Lady +Dalrymple summoned up her energies, and went forth to do battle. The +result has already been described in the words of the bold Baron +himself. + +But even this great victory did not reassure the ladies. Dreading +another visit, they hurried away to a hotel, leaving the maids to +follow with the luggage as soon as possible. On the following morning +they had left the city. + +Events so very exciting as these had produced a very natural effect +upon the mind of Ethel. They had thrown her thoughts out of their old +groove, and fixed them in a new one. Besides, the fact that she was +actually leaving the man who had caused her so much sorrow was already +a partial relief. She had dreaded meeting him so much that she had +been forced to keep herself a prisoner. A deep grief still remained in +her heart; but, at any rate, there was now some pleasure to be felt, +if only of a superficial kind. + +As for Mrs. Willoughby, in spite of her self-reproach about her purely +imaginary neglect of Minnie, she felt such an extraordinary relief +that it affected all her nature. The others might feel fatigue from +the journey. Not she. She was willing to continue the journey for an +indefinite period, so long as she had the sweet consciousness that she +was bearing Minnie farther and farther away from the grasp of "that +horrid man." The consequence was, that she was lively, lovely, +brilliant, cheerful, and altogether delightful. She was as tender to +Minnie as a mother could be. She was lavish in her promises of what +she would do for her. She chatted gayly with Ethel about a thousand +things, and was delighted to find that Ethel reciprocated. She rallied +Lady Dalrymple on her silence, and congratulated her over and over, in +spite of Minnie's frowns, on the success of her generalship. And so at +last the weary Campagna was traversed, and the two carriages began to +ascend among the mountains. + +Several other travelers were passing over that Campagna road, and in +the same direction. They were not near enough for their faces to be +discerned, but the ladies could look back and see the signs of their +presence. First there was a carriage with two men, and about two miles +behind another carriage with two other men; while behind these, again, +there rode a solitary horseman, who was gradually gaining on the other +travelers. + +Now, if it had been possible for Mrs. Willoughby to look back and +discern the faces of the travelers who were moving along the road +behind her, what a sudden overturn there would have been in her +feelings, and what a blight would have fallen upon her spirits! But +Mrs. Willoughby remained in the most blissful ignorance of the persons +of these travelers, and so was able to maintain the sunshine of her +soul. + +At length there came over that sunny soul the first cloud. + +The solitary horseman, who had been riding behind, had overtaken the +different carriages. + +The first carriage contained Lord Hawbury and Scone Dacres. As the +horseman passed, he recognized them with a careless nod and smile. + +Scone Dacres grasped Lord Hawbury's arm. + +"Did you see him?" he cried. "The Italian! I thought so! What do you +say now? Wasn't I right?" + +"By Jove!" cried Lord Hawbury. + +Whereupon Dacres relapsed into silence, sitting upright, glaring after +the horseman, cherishing in his gloomy soul the darkest and most +vengeful thoughts. + +The horseman rode on further, and overtook the next carriage. In this +there were two men, one in the uniform of the Papal Zouaves, the other +in rusty black. He turned toward these, and greeted them with the same +nod and smile. + +"Do you see that man, parson?" said the Baron to his companion. "Do +you recognize him?" + +"No." + +"Well, you saw him at Minnie's house. He came in." + +"No, he didn't." + +"Didn't he? No. By thunder, it wasn't that time. Well, at any rate, +that man, I believe, is at the bottom of the row. It's my belief that +he's trying to cut me out, and he'll find he's got a hard row to hoe +before he succeeds in that project." + +And with these words the Baron sat glaring after the Italian, with +something in his eye that resembled faintly the fierce glance of Scone +Dacres. + +The Italian rode on. A few miles further were the two carriages. +Minnie and her sister were sitting on the front seats, and saw the +stranger as he advanced. He soon came near enough to be distinguished, +and Mrs. Willoughby recognized Girasole. + +Her surprise was so great that she uttered an exclamation of terror, +which startled the other ladies, and made them all look in that +direction. + +"How very odd!" said Ethel, thoughtfully. + +"And now I suppose you'll all go and say that I brought _him_ too," +said Minnie. "That's _always_ the way you do. You _never_ seem to +think that I may be innocent. You _always_ blame me for every little +mite of a thing that may happen." + +No one made any remark, and there was silence in the carriage as the +stranger approached. The ladies bowed somewhat coolly, except Minnie, +who threw upon him the most imploring look that could possibly be sent +from human eyes, and the Italian's impressible nature thrilled before +those beseeching, pleading, earnest, unfathomable, tender, helpless, +innocent orbs. Removing his hat, he bowed low. + +"I haf not been awara," he said, politely, in his broken English, +"that youar ladysippa's bin intend to travalla. Ees eet not subito +intenzion?" + +Mrs. Willoughby made a polite response of a general character, the +Italian paused a moment to drink in deep draughts from Minnie's great +beseeching eyes that were fixed upon his, and then, with a low bow, he +passed on. + +"I believe I'm losing my senses," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Why, Kitty darling?" asked Minnie. + +"I don't know how it is, but I actually trembled when that man came +up, and I haven't got over it yet." + +"I'm sure I don't see why," said Minnie. "You're _always_ imagining +things, though. Now _isn't_ she, Ethel dearest?" + +"Well, really, I don't see much in the Count to make one tremble. I +suppose poor dear Kitty has been too much agitated lately, and it's +her poor nerves." + +"I have my lavender, Kitty dear," said Lady Dalrymple. "Won't you take +it? Or would you prefer valerian?" + +"Thanks, much, but I do not need it," said Mrs. Willoughby. "I suppose +it will pass off." + +"I'm sure the poor Count never did any body any harm," said Minnie, +plaintively; "so you needn't all abuse him so--unless you're all angry +at him for saving my life. I remember a time when you all thought very +differently, and all praised him up, no end." + +"Really, Minnie darling, I have nothing against the Count, only once +he was a little too intrusive; but he seems to have got over that; and +if he'll only be nice and quiet and proper, I'm sure I've nothing to +say against him." + +They drove on for some time, and at length reached Civita Castellana. +Here they drove up to the hotel, and the ladies got out and went up to +their apartments. They had three rooms up stairs, two of which looked +out into the street, while the third was in the rear. At the front +windows was a balcony. + +The ladies now disrobed themselves, and their maids assisted them to +perform the duties of a very simple toilet. Mrs. Willoughby's was +first finished. So she walked over to the window, and looked out into +the street. + +It was not a very interesting place, nor was there much to be seen; +but she took a lazy, languid interest in the sight which met her eyes. +There were the two carriages. The horses were being led to water. +Around the carriages was a motley crowd, composed of the poor, the +maimed, the halt, the blind, forming that realm of beggars which from +immemorial ages has flourished in Italy. With these was intermingled a +crowd of ducks, geese, goats, pigs, and ill-looking, mangy, snarling +curs. + +Upon these Mrs. Willoughby looked for some time, when at length her +ears were arrested by the roll of wheels down the street. A carriage +was approaching, in which there were two travelers. One hasty glance +sufficed, and she turned her attention once more to the ducks, geese, +goats, dogs, and beggars. In a few minutes the crowd was scattered by +the newly-arrived carriage. It stopped. A man jumped out. For a moment +he looked up, staring hard at the windows. That moment was enough. +Mrs. Willoughby had recognized him. + +She rushed away from the windows. Lady Dalrymple and Ethel were in +this room, and Minnie in the one beyond. All were startled by Mrs. +Willoughby's exclamation, and still more by her looks. + +"Oh!" she cried. + +"What?" cried they. "What is it?" + +"_He's_ there! _He's_ there!" + +"Who? who?" they cried, in alarm. + +"That horrid man!" + +Lady Dalrymple and Ethel looked at one another in utter horror. + +As for Minnie, she burst into the room, peeped out of the windows, saw +"that horrid man," then ran back, then sat down, then jumped up, and +then burst into a peal of the merriest laughter that ever was heard +from her. + +"Oh, I'm _so_ glad! I'm _so_ glad!" she exclaimed. "Oh, it's so +_aw_fully funny. Oh, I'm _so_ glad! Oh, Kitty darling, don't, please +don't, look so cross. Oh, ple-e-e-e-e-e-e-ase don't, Kitty darling. +You make me laugh worse. It's so _aw_fully funny!" + +But while Minnie laughed thus, the others looked at each other in +still greater consternation, and for some time there was not one of +them who knew what to say. + +But Lady Dalrymple again threw herself in the gap. + +"You need not feel at all nervous, my dears," said she, gravely. "I do +not think that this person can give us any trouble. He certainly can +not intrude upon us in these apartments, and on the highway, you know, +it will be quite as difficult for him to hold any communication with +us. So I really don't see any cause for alarm on your part, nor do I +see why dear Minnie should exhibit such delight." + +These words brought comfort to Ethel and Mrs. Willoughby. They at once +perceived their truth. To force himself into their presence in a +public hotel was, of course, impossible, even for one so reckless as +he seemed to be; and on the road he could not trouble them in any way, +since he would have to drive before them or behind them. + +At Lady Dalrymple's reference to herself, Minnie looked up with a +bright smile. + +"You're awfully cross with me, aunty darling," she said; "but I +forgive you. Only I can't help laughing, you know, to see how +frightened you all are at poor Rufus K. Gunn. And, Kitty dearest, oh +how you _did_ run away from the window! It was awfully funny, you +know." + +Not long after the arrival of the Baron and his friends another +carriage drove up. None of the ladies were at the window, and so they +did not see the easy nonchalance of Hawbury as he lounged into the +house, or the stern face of Scone Dacres as he strode before him. + +[Illustration: "AS FOR DANGAIRE--POUF! DERE IS NONE."] + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +ADVICE REJECTED. + + +During dinner the ladies conversed freely about "that horrid man," +wondering what plan he would adopt to try to effect an entrance among +them. They were convinced that some such attempt would be made, and +the servants of the inn who waited on them were strictly charged to +see that no one disturbed them. However, their dinner was not +interrupted and after it was over they began to think of retiring, so +as to leave at an early hour on the following morning. Minnie had +already taken her departure, and the others were thinking of following +her example, when a knock came at the door. + +All started. One of the maids went to the door, and found a servant +there who brought a message from the Baron Atramonte. He wished to +speak to the ladies on business of the most urgent importance. At this +confirmation of their expectations the ladies looked at one another +with a smile mingled with vexation, and Lady Dalrymple at once sent +word that they could not possibly see him. + +But the Baron was not to be put off. In a few moments the servant came +back again, and brought another message, of a still more urgent +character, in which the Baron entreated them to grant him this +interview, and assured them that it was a matter of life and death. + +"He's beginning to be more and more violent," said Lady Dalrymple. +"Well, dears," she added, resignedly, "in my opinion it will be better +to see him, and have done with him. If we do not, I'm afraid he will +pester us further. I will see him. You had better retire to your own +apartments." + +Upon this she sent down an invitation to the Baron to come up, and the +ladies retreated to their rooms. + +The Baron entered, and, as usual, offered to shake hands--an offer +which, as usual, Lady Dalrymple did not accept. He then looked +earnestly all round the room, and gave a sigh. He evidently had +expected to see Minnie, and was disappointed. Lady Dalrymple marked +the glance, and the expression which followed. + +"Well, ma'am," said he, as he seated himself near to Lady Dalrymple, +"I said that the business I wanted to speak about was important, and +that it was a matter of life and death. I assure you that it is. But +before I tell it I want to say something about the row in Rome. I have +reason to understand that I caused a little annoyance to you all. If I +did, I'm sure I didn't intend it. I'm sorry. There! Let's say no more +about it. 'Tain't often that I say I'm sorry, but I say so now. +Conditionally, though--that is, if I really _did_ annoy any body." + +"Well, Sir?" + +"Well, ma'am--about the business I came for. You have made a sudden +decision to take this journey. I want to know, ma'am, if you made any +inquiries about this road before starting?" + +"This road? No, certainly not." + +"I thought so," said the Baron. "Well, ma'am, I've reason to believe +that it's somewhat unsafe." + +"Unsafe?" + +"Yes; particularly for ladies." + +"And why?" + +"Why, ma'am, the country is in a disordered state, and near the +boundary line it swarms with brigands. They call themselves +Garibaldians, but between you and me, ma'am, they're neither more nor +less than robbers. You see, along the boundary it is convenient for +them to dodge to one side or the other, and where the road runs there +are often crowds of them. Now our papal government means well, but it +ain't got power to keep down these brigands. It would like to, but it +can't. You see, the scum of all Italy gather along the borders, +because they know we _are_ weak; and so there it is." + +"And you think there is danger on this road?" said Lady Dalrymple, +looking keenly at him. + +"I do, ma'am." + +"Pray have you heard of any recent acts of violence along the road?" + +"No, ma'am." + +"Then what reason have you for supposing that there is any particular +danger now?" + +"A friend of mine told me so, ma'am." + +"But do not people use the road? Are not carriages constantly passing +and repassing? Is it likely that if it were unsafe there would be no +acts of violence? Yet you say there have been none." + +"Not of late, ma'am." + +"But it is of late, and of the present time, that we are speaking." + +"I can only say, ma'am, that the road is considered very dangerous." + +"Who considers it so?" + +"If you had made inquiries at Rome, ma'am, you would have found this +out, and never would have thought of this road." + +"And you advise us not to travel it?" + +"I do, ma'am." + +"What would you advise us to do?" + +"I would advise you, ma'am, most earnestly, to turn and go back to +Rome, and leave by another route." + +Lady Dalrymple looked at him, and a slight smile quivered on her lips. + +"I see, ma'am, that for some reason or other you doubt my word. Would +you put confidence in it if another person were to confirm what I have +said?" + +"That depends entirely upon who the other person may be." + +"The person I mean is Lord Hawbury." + +"Lord Hawbury? Indeed!" said Lady Dalrymple, in some surprise. "But +he's in Rome." + +"No, ma'am, he's not. He's here--in this hotel." + +"In this hotel? Here?" + +"Yes, ma'am." + +"I'm sure I should like to see him very much, and hear what he says +about it." + +"I'll go and get him, then," said the Baron, and, rising briskly, he +left the room. + +In a short time he returned with Hawbury. Lady Dalrymple expressed +surprise to see him, and Hawbury explained that he was traveling with +a friend. Lady Dalrymple, of course, thought this a fresh proof of his +infatuation about Minnie, and wondered how he could be a friend to a +man whom she considered as Minnie's persecutor and tormentor. + +The Baron at once proceeded to explain how the matter stood, and to +ask Hawbury's opinion. + +"Yes," said Lady Dalrymple, "I should really like to know what you +think about it." + +"Well, really," said Hawbury, "I have no acquaintance with the thing, +you know. Never been on this road in my life. But, at the same time, I +can assure you that this gentleman is a particular friend of mine, and +one of the best fellows I know. I'd stake my life on his perfect truth +and honor. If he says any thing, you may believe it because he says +it. If he says there are brigands on the road, they must be there." + +"Oh, of course," said Lady Dalrymple. "You are right to believe your +friend, and I should trust his word also. But do you not see that +perhaps he may believe what he says, and yet be mistaken?" + +At this the Baron's face fell. Lord Hawbury's warm commendation of him +had excited his hopes, but now Lady Dalrymple's answer had destroyed +them. + +"For my part," she added, "I don't really think any of us know much +about it. I wish we could find some citizen of the town, or some +reliable person, and ask him. I wonder whether the inn-keeper is a +trust-worthy man." + +The Baron shook his head. + +"I wouldn't trust one of them. They're the greatest rascals in the +country. Every man of them is in league with the Garibaldians and +brigands. This man would advise you to take whatever course would +benefit himself and his friends most." + +"But surely we might find some one whose opinion would be reliable. +What do you say to one of my drivers? The one that drove our carriage +looks like a good, honest man." + +"Well, perhaps so; but I wouldn't trust one of them. I don't believe +there's an honest vetturino in all Italy." + +Lady Dalrymple elevated her eyebrows, and threw at Hawbury a glance of +despair. + +"He speaks English, too," said Lady Dalrymple. + +"So do some of the worst rascals in the country," said the Baron. + +"Oh, I don't think he can be a very bad rascal. We had better question +him, at any rate. Don't you think so, Lord Hawbury?" + +"Well, yes; I suppose it won't do any harm to have a look at the +beggar." + +The driver alluded to was summoned, and soon made his appearance. He +was a square-headed fellow, with a grizzled beard, and one of those +non-committal faces which may be worn by either an honest man or a +knave. Lady Dalrymple thought him the former; the Baron the latter. +The result will show which of these was in the right. + +The driver spoke very fair English. He had been two or three times +over the road. He had not been over it later than two years before. He +didn't know it was dangerous. He had never heard of brigands being +here. He didn't know. There was a signore at the hotel who might know. +He was traveling to Florence alone. He was on horseback. + +As soon as Lady Dalrymple heard this she suspected that it was Count +Girasole. She determined to have his advice about it. So she sent a +private request to that effect. + +It was Count Girasole. He entered, and threw his usual smile around. +He was charmed, in his broken English, to be of any service to miladi. + +To Lady Dalrymple's statement and question Girasole listened +attentively. As she concluded a faint smile passed over his face. The +Baron watched him attentively. + +"I know no brigand on dissa road," said he. + +Lady Dalrymple looked triumphantly at the others. + +"I have travail dissa road many time. No dangaire--alla safe." + +Another smile from Lady Dalrymple. + +The Count Girasole looked at Hawbury and then at the Baron, with a +slight dash of mockery in his face. + +"As for dangaire," he said--"pouf! dere is none. See, I go alone--no +arms, not a knife--an' yet gold in my porte-monnaie." + +And he drew forth his porte-monnaie, and opened it so as to exhibit +its contents. + +A little further conversation followed. Girasole evidently was +perfectly familiar with the road. The idea of brigands appeared to +strike him as some exquisite piece of pleasantry. He looked as though +it was only his respect for the company which prevented him from +laughing outright. They had taken the trouble to summon him for that! +And, besides, as the Count suggested, even if a brigand did appear, +there would be always travelers within hearing. + +Both Hawbury and the Baron felt humiliated, especially the latter; and +Girasole certainly had the best of it on that occasion, whatever his +lot had been at other times. + +The Count withdrew. The Baron followed, in company with Hawbury. He +was deeply dejected. First of all, he had hoped to see Minnie. Then he +hoped to frighten the party back. As to the brigands, he was in most +serious earnest. All that he said he believed. He could not understand +the driver and Count Girasole. The former he might consider a +scoundrel; but why should Girasole mislead? And yet he believed that +he was right. As for Hawbury, he didn't believe much in the brigands, +but he did believe in his friend, and he didn't think much of +Girasole. He was sorry for his friend, yet didn't know whether he +wanted the party to turn back or not. His one trouble was Dacres, who +now was watching the Italian like a blood-hound, who had seen him, no +doubt, go up to the ladies, and, of course, would suppose that Mrs. +Willoughby had sent for him. + +As for the ladies, their excitement was great. The doors were thin, +and they had heard every word of the conversation. With Mrs. +Willoughby there was but one opinion as to the Baron's motive: she +thought he had come to get a peep at Minnie, and also to frighten them +back to Rome by silly stories. His signal failure afforded her great +triumph. Minnie, as usual, sympathized with him, but said nothing. As +for Ethel, the sudden arrival of Lord Hawbury was overwhelming, and +brought a return of all her former excitement. The sound of his voice +again vibrated through her, and at first there began to arise no end +of wild hopes, which, however, were as quickly dispelled. The question +arose, What brought him there? There seemed to her but one answer, and +that was his infatuation for Minnie. Yet to her, as well as to Lady +Dalrymple, it seemed very singular that he should be so warm a friend +to Minnie's tormentor. It was a puzzling thing. Perhaps he did not +know that the Baron was Minnie's lover. Perhaps he thought that his +friend would give her up, and he could win her. Amidst these thoughts +there came a wild hope that perhaps he did not love Minnie so very +much, after all. But this hope soon was dispelled as she recalled the +events of the past, and reflected on his cool and easy indifference to +every thing connected with her. + +Such emotions as these actuated the ladies; and when the guests had +gone they joined their aunt once more, and deliberated. Minnie took no +part in the debate, but sat apart, looking like an injured being. +There was among them all the same opinion, and that was that it was +all a clumsy device of the Baron's to frighten them back to Rome. Such +being their opinion, they did not occupy much time in debating about +their course on the morrow. The idea of going back did not enter their +heads. + +This event gave a much more agreeable feeling to Mrs. Willoughby and +Lady Dalrymple than they had known since they had been aware that the +Baron had followed them. They felt that they had grappled with the +difficulty. They had met the enemy and defeated him. Besides, the +presence of Hawbury was of itself a guarantee of peace. There could be +no further danger of any unpleasant scenes while Hawbury was with him. +Girasole's presence, also, was felt to be an additional guarantee of +safety. + +It was felt by all to be a remarkable circumstance that so many men +should have followed them on what they had intended as quite a secret +journey. These gentlemen who followed them were the very ones, and the +only ones, from whom they wished to conceal it. Yet it had all been +revealed to them, and lo! here they all were. Some debate arose as to +whether it would not be better to go back to Rome now, and defy the +Baron, and leave by another route. But this debate was soon given up, +and they looked forward to the journey as one which might afford new +and peculiar enjoyment. + +On the following morning they started at an early hour. Girasole left +about half an hour after them, and passed them a few miles along the +road. The Baron and the Reverend Saul left next; and last of all came +Hawbury and Dacres. The latter was, if possible, more gloomy and +vengeful than ever. The visit of the Italian on the preceding evening +was fully believed by him to be a scheme of his wife's. Nor could any +amount of persuasion or vehement statement on Hawbury's part in any +way shake his belief. + +"No," he would say, "you don't understand. Depend upon it, she got him +up there to feast her eyes on him. Depend upon it, she managed to get +some note from him, and pass one to him in return. He had only to run +it under the leaf of a table, or stick it inside of some book: no +doubt they have it all arranged, and pass their infernal love-letters +backward and forward. But I'll soon have a chance. My time is coming. +It's near, too. I'll have my vengeance; and then for all the wrongs of +all my life that demon of a woman shall pay me dear!" + +To all of which Hawbury had nothing to say. He could say nothing; he +could do nothing. He could only stand by his friend, go with him, and +watch over him, hoping to avert the crisis which he dreaded, or, if it +did come, to lessen the danger of his friend. + +The morning was clear and beautiful. The road wound among the hills. +The party went in the order above mentioned. + +First, Girasole, on horseback. + +Next, and two miles at least behind, came the two carriages with the +ladies and their maids. + +Third, and half a mile behind these, came the Baron and the Reverend +Saul. + +Last of all, and half a mile behind the Baron, came Hawbury and Scone +Dacres. + +These last drove along at about this distance. The scenery around grew +grander, and the mountains higher. The road was smooth and well +constructed, and the carriage rolled along with an easy, comfortable +rumble. + +They were driving up a slope which wound along the side of a hill. At +the top of the hill trees appeared on each side, and the road made a +sharp turn here. + +Suddenly the report of a shot sounded ahead. + +Then a scream. + +"Good Lord! Dacres, did you hear that?" cried Hawbury. "The Baron was +right, after all." + +The driver here tried to stop his horses, but Hawbury would not let +him. + +"Have you a pistol, Dacres?" + +"No." + +"Get out!" he shouted to the driver; and, kicking him out of the seat, +he seized the reins himself, and drove the horses straight forward to +where the noise arose. + +"It's the brigands, Dacres. The ladies are there." + +"My wife! O God! my wife!" groaned Dacres. But a minute before he had +been cursing her. + +"Get a knife! Get something, man! Have a fight for it!" + +Dacres murmured something. + +Hawbury lashed the horses, and drove them straight toward the wood. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +CAUGHT IN AMBUSH. + + +The ladies had been driving on, quite unconscious of the neighborhood +of any danger, admiring the beauty of the scenery, and calling one +another's attention to the various objects of interest which from time +to time became visible. Thus engaged, they slowly ascended the incline +already spoken of, and began to enter the forest. They had not gone +far when the road took a sudden turn, and here a startling spectacle +burst upon their view. + +The road on turning descended slightly into a hollow. On the right +arose a steep acclivity, covered with the dense forest. On the other +side the ground rose more gradually, and was covered over by a forest +much less dense. Some distance in front the road took another turn, +and was lost to view among the trees. About a hundred yards in front +of them a tree had been felled, and lay across the way, barring their +progress. + +About twenty armed men stood before them close by the place where the +turn was. Among them was a man on horseback. To their amazement, it +was Girasole. + +Before the ladies could recover from their astonishment two of the +armed men advanced, and the driver at once stopped the carriage. + +Girasole then came forward. + +"Miladi," said he, "I haf de honore of to invitar you to descend." + +"Pray what is the meaning of this?" inquired Lady Dalrymple, with much +agitation. + +"It means dat I war wrong. Dere are brigand on dis road." + +Lady Dalrymple said not another word. + +The Count approached, and politely offered his hand to assist the +ladies out, but they rejected it, and got out themselves. First Mrs. +Willoughby, then Ethel, then Lady Dalrymple, then Minnie. Three of the +ladies were white with utter horror, and looked around in sickening +fear upon the armed men; but Minnie showed not even the slightest +particle of fear. + +"How horrid!" she exclaimed. "And now some one will come and save my +life again. It's _always_ the way. I'm sure _this_ isn't my fault, +Kitty darling." + +Before her sister could say any thing Girasole approached. + +"Pardon, mees," he said; "but I haf made dis recepzion for you. You +sall be well treat. Do not fear. I lay down my life." + +"Villain!" cried Lady Dalrymple. "Arrest her at your peril. Remember +who she is. She has friends powerful enough to avenge her if you dare +to injure her." + +"You arra mistake," said Girasole, politely. "Se is mine, not yours. I +am her best fren. Se is fiancée to me. I save her life--tell her my +love--make a proposezion. Se accept me. Se is my fiancée. I was oppose +by you. What else sall I do? I mus haf her. Se is mine. I am an +Italiano nobile, an' I love her. Dere is no harm for any. You mus see +dat I haf de right. But for me se would be dead." + +Lady Dalrymple was not usually excitable, but now her whole nature was +aroused; her eyes flashed with indignation; her face turned red; she +gasped for breath, and fell to the ground. Ethel rushed to assist her, +and two of the maids came up. Lady Dalrymple lay senseless. + +With Mrs. Willoughby the result was different. She burst into tears. + +"Count Girasole," she cried, "oh, spare her! If you love her, spare +her. She is only a child. If we opposed you, it was not from any +objection to you; it was because she is such a child." + +"You mistake," said the Count, shrugging his shoulders. "I love her +better than life. Se love me. It will make her happy. You come too. +You sall see se is happy. Come. Be my sistaire. It is love--" + +Mrs. Willoughby burst into fresh tears at this, and flung her arms +around Minnie, and moaned and wept. + +"Well, now, Kitty darling, I think it's horrid. You're _never_ +satisfied. You're always finding fault. I'm sure if you don't like +Rufus K. Gunn, you--" + +But Minnie's voice was interrupted by the sound of approaching wheels. +It was the carriage of the Baron and his friend. The Baron had feared +brigands, but he was certainly not expecting to come upon them so +suddenly. The brigands had been prepared, and as the carriage turned +it was suddenly stopped by the two carriages in front, and at once was +surrounded. + +The Baron gave one lightning glance, and surveyed the whole situation. +He did not move, but his form was rigid, and every nerve was braced, +and his eyes gleamed fiercely. He saw it all--the crowd of women, the +calm face of Minnie, and the uncontrollable agitation of Mrs. +Willoughby. + +"Well, by thunder!" he exclaimed. + +Girasole rode up and called out: + +"Surrender! You arra my prisoner." + +"What! it's you, is it?" said the Baron; and he glared for a moment +with a vengeful look at Girasole. + +"Descend," said Girasole. "You mus be bound." + +"Bound? All right. Here, parson, you jump down, and let them tie your +hands." + +The Baron stood up. The Reverend Saul stood up too. The Reverend Saul +began to step down very carefully. The brigands gathered around, most +of them being on the side on which the two were about to descend. The +Reverend Saul had just stepped to the ground. The Baron was just +preparing to follow. The brigands were impatient to secure them, when +suddenly, with a quick movement, the Baron gave a spring out of the +opposite side of the carriage, and leaped to the ground. The brigands +were taken completely by surprise, and before they could prepare to +follow him, he had sprung into the forest, and, with long bounds, was +rushing up the steep hill and out of sight. + +One shot was fired after him, and that was the shot that Hawbury and +Dacres heard. Two men sprang after him with the hope of catching him. + +In a few moments a loud cry was heard from the woods. + +"MIN!" + +Minnie heard it; a gleam of light flashed from her eyes, a smile of +triumph came over her lips. + +"Wha-a-a-a-t?" she called in reply. + +"Wa-a-a-a-a-a-it!" was the cry that came back--and this was the cry +that Hawbury and Dacres had heard. + +"Sacr-r-r-r-r-r-remento!" growled Girasole. + +"I'm sure _I_ don't know what he means by telling me that," said +Minnie. "How can _I_ wait if this horrid Italian won't let me? I'm +sure he might be more considerate." + +Poor Mrs. Willoughby, who had for a moment been roused to hope by the +escape of the Baron, now fell again into despair, and wept and moaned +and clung to Minnie. Lady Dalrymple still lay senseless, in spite of +the efforts of Ethel and the maids. The occurrence had been more to +her than a mere encounter with brigands. It was the thought of her own +carelessness that overwhelmed her. In an instant the thought of the +Baron's warning and his solemn entreaties flashed across her memory. +She recollected how Hawbury had commended his friend, and how she had +turned from these to put her trust in the driver and Girasole, the +very men who had betrayed her. These were the thoughts that +overwhelmed her. + +But now there arose once more the noise of rolling wheels, advancing +more swiftly than the last, accompanied by the lash of a whip and +shouts of a human voice. Girasole spoke to his men, and they moved up +nearer to the bend, and stood in readiness there. + +What Hawbury's motive was it is not difficult to tell. He was not +armed, and therefore could not hope to do much; but he had in an +instant resolved to rush thus into the midst of the danger. First of +all he thought that a struggle might be going on between the drivers, +the other travelers, and the brigands; in which event his assistance +would be of great value. Though unarmed, he thought he might snatch or +wrest a weapon from some one of the enemy. In addition to this, he +wished to strike a blow to save the ladies from captivity, even if his +blow should be unavailing. Even if he had known how matters were, he +would probably have acted in precisely the same way. As for Dacres, he +had but one idea. He was sure it was some trick concocted by his wife +and the Italian, though why they should do so he did not stop, in his +mad mood, to inquire. A vague idea that a communication had passed +between them on the preceding evening with reference to this was now +in his mind, and his vengeful feeling was stimulated by this thought +to the utmost pitch of intensity. + +Hawbury thus lashed his horses, and they flew along the road. After +the first cry and the shot that they had heard there was no further +noise. The stillness was mysterious. It showed Hawbury that the +struggle, if there had been any, was over. But the first idea still +remained both in his own mind and in that of Dacres. On they went, and +now they came to the turn in the road. Round this they whirled, and in +an instant the scene revealed itself. + +Three carriages stopped; some drivers standing and staring +indifferently; a group of women crowding around a prostrate form that +lay in the road; a pale, beautiful girl, to whom a beautiful woman was +clinging passionately; a crowd of armed brigands with leveled pieces; +and immediately before them a horseman--the Italian, Girasole. + +One glance showed all this. Hawbury could not distinguish any face +among the crowd of women that bent over Lady Dalrymple, and Ethel's +face was thus still unrevealed; but he saw Minnie and Mrs. Willoughby +and Girasole. + +"What the devil's all this about?" asked Hawbury, haughtily, as his +horses stopped at the Baron's carriage. + +"You are prisoners--" began Girasole. + +But before he could say another word he was interrupted by a cry of +fury from Dacres, who, the moment that he had recognized him, sprang +to his feet, and with a long, keen knife in his hand, leaped from the +carriage into the midst of the brigands, striking right and left, and +endeavoring to force his way toward Girasole. In an instant Hawbury +was by his side. Two men fell beneath the fierce thrusts of Dacres's +knife, and Hawbury tore the rifle from a third. With the clubbed end +of this he began dealing blows right and left. The men fell back and +leveled their pieces. Dacres sprang forward, and was within three +steps of Girasole--his face full of ferocity, his eyes flashing, and +looking not so much like an English gentleman as one of the old +vikings in a Berserker rage. One more spring brought him closer to +Girasole. The Italian retreated. One of his men flung himself before +Dacres and tried to grapple with him. The next instant he fell with a +groan, stabbed to the heart. With a yell of rage the others rushed +upon Dacres; but the latter was now suddenly seized with a new idea. +Turning for an instant he held his assailants at bay; and then, +seizing the opportunity, sprang into the woods and ran. One or two +shots were fired, and then half a dozen men gave chase. + +Meanwhile one or two shots had been fired at Hawbury, but, in the +confusion, they had not taken effect. Suddenly, as he stood with +uplifted rifle ready to strike, his enemies made a simultaneous rush +upon him. He was seized by a dozen strong arms. He struggled fiercely, +but his efforts were unavailing. The odds were too great. Before long +he was thrown to the ground on his face, and his arms bound behind +him. After this he was gagged. + +The uproar of this fierce struggle had roused all the ladies, and they +turned their eyes in horror to where the two were fighting against +such odds. Ethel raised herself on her knees from beside Lady +Dalrymple, and caught sight of Hawbury. For a moment she remained +motionless; and then she saw the escape of Dacres, and Hawbury going +down in the grasp of his assailants. She gave a loud shriek and rushed +forward. But Girasole intercepted her. + +"Go back," he said. "De milor is my prisoner. Back, or you will be +bound." + +And at a gesture from him two of the men advanced to seize Ethel. + +"Back!" he said, once more, in a stern voice. "You mus be tentif to +miladi." + +Ethel shrank back. + +The sound of that scream had struck on Hawbury's ears, but he did not +recognize it. If he thought of it at all, he supposed it was the +scream of common terror from one of the women. He was sore and bruised +and fast bound. He was held down also in such a way that he could not +see the party of ladies. The Baron's carriage intercepted the view, +for he had fallen behind this during the final struggle. After a +little time he was allowed to sit up, but still he could not see +beyond. + +There was now some delay, and Girasole gave some orders to his men. +The ladies waited with fearful apprehensions. They listened eagerly to +hear if there might not be some sounds of approaching help. But no +such sounds came to gladden their hearts. Lady Dalrymple, also, still +lay senseless; and Ethel, full of the direst anxiety about Hawbury, +had to return to renew her efforts toward reviving her aunt. + +Before long the brigands who had been in pursuit of the fugitives +returned to the road. They did not bring back either of them. A +dreadful question arose in the minds of the ladies as to the meaning +of this. Did it mean that the fugitives had escaped, or had been shot +down in the woods by their wrathful pursuers? It was impossible for +them to find out. Girasole went over to them and conversed with them +apart. The men all looked sullen; but whether that arose from +disappointed vengeance or gratified ferocity it was impossible for +them to discern. + +[Illustration: THE MÊLÉE.] + +The brigands now turned their attention to their own men. Two of these +had received bad but not dangerous wounds from the dagger of Dacres, +and the scowls of pain and rage which they threw upon Hawbury and the +other captives boded nothing but the most cruel fate to all of them. +Another, however, still lay there. It was the one who had intercepted +Dacres in his rush upon Girasole. He lay motionless in a pool of +blood. They turned him over. His white, rigid face, as it became +exposed to view, exhibited the unmistakable mark of death, and a gash +on his breast showed how his fate had met him. + +The brigands uttered loud cries, and advanced toward Hawbury. He sat +regarding them with perfect indifference. They raised their rifles, +some clubbing them, others taking aim, swearing and gesticulating all +the time like maniacs. + +Hawbury, however, did not move a muscle of his face, nor did he show +the slightest feeling of any kind. He was covered with dust, and his +clothes were torn and splashed with mud, and his hands were bound, and +his mouth was gagged; but he preserved a coolness that astonished his +enemies. Had it not been for this coolness his brains might have been +blown out--in which case this narrative would never have been written; +but there was something in his look which made the Italians pause, +gave Girasole time to interfere, and thus preserved my story from +ruin. + +Girasole then came up and made his men stand back. They obeyed +sullenly. + +Girasole removed the gag. + +Then he stood and looked at Hawbury. Hawbury sat and returned his look +with his usual nonchalance, regarding the Italian with a cold, steady +stare, which produced upon the latter its usual maddening effect. + +"Milor will be ver glad to hear," said he, with a mocking smile, "dat +de mees will be take good care to. Milor was attentif to de mees; but +de mees haf been fiancée to me, an' so I take dis occazione to mak her +mine. I sall love her, an' se sall love me. I haf save her life, an' +se haf been fiancée to me since den." + +Now Girasole had chosen to say this to Hawbury from the conviction +that Hawbury was Minnie's lover, and that the statement of this would +inflict a pang upon the heart of his supposed rival which would +destroy his coolness. Thus he chose rather to strike at Hawbury's +jealousy than at his fear or at his pride. + +But he was disappointed. Hawbury heard his statement with utter +indifference. + +"Well," said he, "all I can say is that it seems to me to be a +devilish odd way of going to work about it." + +"Aha!" said Girasole, fiercely. "You sall see. Se sall be mine. Aha!" + +Hawbury made no reply, and Girasole, after a gesture of impatience, +walked off, baffled. + +In a few minutes two men came up to Hawbury, and led him away to the +woods on the left. + +[Illustration: "THEY SAW A RUINED HOUSE."] + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +AMONG THE BRIGANDS. + + +Girasole now returned to the ladies. They were in the same position in +which he had left them. Mrs. Willoughby with Minnie, and Ethel, with +the maids, attending to Lady Dalrymple. + +"Miladi," said Girasole, "I beg your attenzion. I haf had de honore to +inform you dat dis mees is my fiancée. Se haf give me her heart an' +her hand; se love me, an' I love her. I was prevent from to see her, +an' I haf to take her in dis mannaire. I feel sad at de pain I haf +give you, an' assuir you dat it was inevitabile. You sall not be +troubled more. You are free. Mees," he continued, taking Minnie's +hand, "you haf promis me dis fair han', an' you are mine. You come to +one who loves you bettaire dan life, an' who you love. You owe youair +life to me. I sall make it so happy as nevair was." + +"I'm sure _I_ don't want to be happy," said Minnie. "I don't _want_ to +leave darling Kitty--and it's a shame--and you'll make me _hate_ you +if you do so." + +"Miladi," said Girasole to Mrs. Willoughby, "de mees says se not want +to leaf you. Eef you want to come, you may come an' be our sistaire." + +"Oh, Kitty darling, you won't leave me, will you, all alone with this +horrid man?" said Minnie. + +"My darling," moaned Mrs. Willoughby, "how can I? I'll go. Oh, my +sweet sister, what misery!" + +"Oh, now that will be really _quite_ delightful if you _will_ come, +Kitty darling. Only I'm afraid you'll find it awfully uncomfortable." + +Girasole turned once more to the other ladies. + +"I beg you will assura de miladi when she recovaire of my +considerazion de mos distingue, an' convey to her de regrettas dat I +haf. Miladi," he continued, addressing Ethel, "you are free, an' can +go. You will not be molest by me. You sall go safe. You haf not ver +far. You sall fin' houses dere--forward--before--not far." + +With these words he turned away. + +"You mus come wit me," he said to Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie. "Come. +Eet ees not ver far." + +He walked slowly into the woods on the left, and the two sisters +followed him. Of the two Minnie was far the more cool and collected. +She was as composed as usual; and, as there was no help for it, she +walked on. Mrs. Willoughby, however, was terribly agitated, and wept +and shuddered and moaned incessantly. + +"Kitty darling," said Minnie, "I _wish_ you wouldn't go on so. You +really make me feel quite nervous. I never saw you so bad in my life." + +"Poor Minnie! Poor child! Poor sweet child!" + +"Well, if I am a child, you needn't go and tell me about it all the +time. It's really quite horrid." + +Mrs. Willoughby said no more, but generously tried to repress her own +feelings, so as not to give distress to her sister. + +After the Count had entered the wood with the two sisters the drivers +removed the horses from the carriages and went away, led off by the +man who had driven the ladies. This was the man whose stolid face had +seemed likely to belong to an honest man, but who now was shown to +belong to the opposite class. These men went down the road over which +they had come, leaving the carriages there with the ladies and their +maids. + +Girasole now led the way, and Minnie and her sister followed him. The +wood was very thick, and grew more so as they advanced, but there was +not much underbrush, and progress was not difficult. Several times a +wild thought of flight came to Mrs. Willoughby, but was at once +dispelled by a helpless sense of its utter impossibility. How could +she persuade the impracticable Minnie, who seemed so free from all +concern? or, if she could persuade her, how could she accomplish her +desire? She would at once be pursued and surrounded, while, even if +she did manage to escape, how could she ever find her way to any place +of refuge? Every minute, also, drew them deeper and deeper into the +woods, and the path was a winding one, in which she soon became +bewildered, until at last all sense of her whereabouts was utterly +gone. At last even the idea of escaping ceased to suggest itself, and +there remained only a dull despair, a sense of utter helplessness and +hopelessness--the sense of one who is going to his doom. + +Girasole said nothing whatever, but led the way in silence, walking +slowly enough to accommodate the ladies, and sometimes holding an +overhanging branch to prevent it from springing back in their faces. +Minnie walked on lightly, and with an elastic step, looking around +with evident interest upon the forest. Once a passing lizard drew from +her a pretty little shriek of alarm, thus showing that while she was +so calm in the face of real and frightful danger, she could be alarmed +by even the most innocent object that affected her fancy. Mrs. +Willoughby thought that she understood Minnie before, but this little +shriek at a lizard, from one who smiled at the brigands, struck her as +a problem quite beyond her power to solve. + +The woods now began to grow thinner. The trees were larger and farther +apart, and rose all around in columnar array, so that it was possible +to see between them to a greater distance. At length there appeared +before them, through the trunks of the trees, the gleam of water. Mrs. +Willoughby noticed this, and wondered what it might be. At first she +thought it was a harbor on the coast; then she thought it was some +river; but finally, on coming nearer, she saw that it was a lake. In a +few minutes after they first caught sight of it they had reached its +banks. + +It was a most beautiful and sequestered spot. All around were high +wooded eminences, beyond whose undulating summits arose the towering +forms of the Apennine heights. Among these hills lay a little lake +about a mile in length and breadth, whose surface was as smooth as +glass, and reflected the surrounding shores. On their right, as they +descended, they saw some figures moving, and knew them to be the +brigands, while on their left they saw a ruined house. Toward this +Girasole led them. + +The house stood on the shore of the lake. It was of stone, and was two +stories in height. The roof was still good, but the windows were gone. +There was no door, but half a dozen or so of the brigands stood there, +and formed a sufficient guard to prevent the escape of any prisoner. +These men had dark, wicked eyes and sullen faces, which afforded fresh +terror to Mrs. Willoughby. She had thought, in her desperation, of +making some effort to escape by bribing the men, but the thorough-bred +rascality which was evinced in the faces of these ruffians showed her +that they were the very fellows who would take her money and cheat her +afterward. If she had been able to speak Italian, she might have +secured their services by the prospect of some future reward after +escaping; but, as it was, she could not speak a word of the language, +and thus could not enter upon even the preliminaries of an escape. + +On reaching the house the ruffians stood aside, staring hard at them. +Mrs. Willoughby shrank in terror from the baleful glances of their +eyes; but Minnie looked at them calmly and innocently, and not without +some of that curiosity which a child shows when he first sees a +Chinaman or an Arab in the streets. Girasole then led the way up +stairs to a room on the second story. + +It was an apartment of large size, extending across the house, with a +window at each end, and two on the side. On the floor there was a heap +of straw, over which some skins were thrown. There were no chairs, nor +was there any table. + +"Scusa me," said Girasole, "miladi, for dis accommodazion. It gifs me +pain, but I promise it sall not be long. Only dis day an' dis night +here. I haf to detain you dat time. Den we sall go to where I haf a +home fitter for de bride. I haf a home wharra you sall be a happy +bride, mees--" + +"But I don't want to stay here _at all_ in such a horrid place," said +Minnie, looking around in disgust. + +"Only dis day an' dis night," said Girasole, imploringly. "Aftaire you +sall have all you sall wis." + +"Well, at any rate, I think it's very horrid in you to shut me up +here. You might let me walk outside in the woods. I'm so _aw_fully +fond of the woods." + +Girasole smiled faintly. + +"And so you sall have plenty of de wood--but to-morra. You wait here +now. All safe--oh yes--secura--all aright--oh yes--slip to-night, an' +in de mornin' early you sall be mine. Dere sall come a priest, an' we +sall have de ceremony." + +"Well, I think it was very unkind in you to bring me to such a horrid +place. And how can I sit down? You _might_ have had a chair. And look +at poor, darling Kitty. You may be unkind to me, but you needn't make +_her_ sit on the floor. You never saved _her_ life, and you have no +right to be unkind to her." + +"Unkind! Oh, mees!--my heart, my life, all arra youairs, an' I lay my +life at youair foot." + +"I think it would be far more kind if you would put a chair at poor +Kitty's feet," retorted Minnie, with some show of temper. + +"But, oh, carissima, tink--de wild wood--noting here--no, noting--not +a chair--only de straw." + +"Then you had no business to bring me here. You might have known that +there were no chairs here. I can't sit down on nothing. But I suppose +you expect me to stand up. And if that isn't horrid, I don't know what +is. I'm sure I don't know what poor dear papa would say if he were to +see me now." + +[Illustration: "WHAT IS THIS FOR?"] + +"Do not grieve, carissima mia--do not, charming mees, decompose +yourself. To-morra you sall go to a bettaire place, an' I will carra +you to my castello. You sall haf every want, you sall enjoy every wis, +you sall be happy." + +"But I don't see how I can be happy without a chair," reiterated +Minnie, in whose mind this one grievance now became pre-eminent. "You +talk as though you think I am made of stone or iron, and you think I +can stand here all day or all night, and you want me to sleep on that +horrid straw and those horrid furry things. I suppose this is the +castle that you speak of; and I'm sure I wonder why you _ever_ thought +of bringing me here. I suppose it doesn't make so much difference +about a _carpet_; but you will not even let me have a _chair_; and I +think you're _very_ unkind." + +Girasole was in despair. He stood in thought for some time. He felt +that Minnie's rebuke was deserved. If she had reproached him with +waylaying her and carrying her off, he could have borne it, and could +have found a reply. But such a charge as this was unanswerable. It +certainly was very hard that she should not be able to sit down. But +then how was it possible for him to find a chair in the woods? It was +an insoluble problem. How in the world could he satisfy her? + +Minnie's expression also was most touching. The fact that she had no +chair to sit on seemed to absolutely overwhelm her. The look that she +gave Girasole was so piteous, so reproachful, so heart-rending, that +his soul actually quaked, and a thrill of remorse passed all through +his frame. He felt a cold chill running to the very marrow of his +bones. + +"I think you're _very, very_ unkind," said Minnie, "and I really don't +see how I can _ever_ speak to you again." + +This was too much. Girasole turned away. He rushed down stairs. He +wandered frantically about. He looked in all directions for a chair. +There was plenty of wood certainly--for all around he saw the vast +forest--but of what use was it? He could not transform a tree into a +chair. He communicated his difficulty to some of the men. They shook +their heads helplessly. At last he saw the stump of a tree which was +of such a shape that it looked as though it might be used as a seat. +It was his only resource, and he seized it. Calling two or three of +the men, he had the stump carried to the old house. He rushed up +stairs to acquaint Minnie with his success, and to try to console her. +She listened in coldness to his hasty words. The men who were carrying +the stump came up with a clump and a clatter, breathing hard, for the +stump was very heavy, and finally placed it on the landing in front of +Minnie's door. On reaching that spot it was found that it would not go +in. + +Minnie heard the noise and came out. She looked at the stump, then at +the men and then at Girasole. + +"What is this for?" she asked. + +"Eet--eet ees for a chair." + +"A chair!" exclaimed Minnie. "Why, it's nothing but a great big, +horrid, ugly old stump, and--" + +Her remarks ended in a scream. She turned and ran back into the room. + +"What--what is de mattaire?" cried the Count, looking into the room +with a face pale with anxiety. + +"Oh, take it away! take it away!" cried Minnie, in terror. + +"What? what?" + +"Take it away! take it away!" she repeated. + +"But eet ees for you--eet ees a seat." + +"I don't want it. I won't have it!" cried Minnie. "It's full of horrid +ants and things. And it's dreadful--and _very, very_ cruel in you to +bring them up here just to _tease_ me, when you _know_ I hate them so. +Take it away! take it away! oh, do please take it away! And oh, do +please go away yourself, and leave me with dear, darling Kitty. _She_ +never teases me. She is _always_ kind." + +Girasole turned away once more, in fresh trouble. He had the stump +carried off, and then he wandered away. He was quite at a loss what to +do. He was desperately in love, and it was a very small request for +Minnie to make, and he was in that state of mind when it would be a +happiness to grant her slightest wish; but here he found himself in a +difficulty from which he could find no possible means of escape. + +"And now, Kitty darling," said Minnie, after Girasole had gone--"now +you see how very, very wrong you were to be so opposed to that dear, +good, kind, nice Rufus K. Gunn. _He_ would never have treated me so. +_He_ would never have taken me to a place like this--a horrid old +house by a horrid damp pond, without doors and windows, just like a +beggar's house--and then put me in a room without a chair to sit on +when I'm so _aw_fully tired. He was _always_ kind to me, and that was +the reason you hated him so, because you couldn't bear to have people +kind to me. And I'm _so_ tired." + +"Come, then, poor darling. I'll make a nice seat for you out of these +skins." + +And Mrs. Willoughby began to fold some of them up and lay them one +upon the other. + +"What is that for, Kitty dear?" asked Minnie. + +"To make you a nice, soft seat, dearest." + +"But I don't want them, and I won't sit on the horrid things," said +Minnie. + +"But, darling, they are as soft as a cushion. See!" And her sister +pressed her hand on them, so as to show how soft they were. + +"I don't think they're soft _at all_," said Minnie; "and I wish you +wouldn't tease me so, when I'm _so_ tired." + +"Then come, darling; I will sit on them, and you shall sit on my +knees." + +"But I don't want to go near those horrid furry things. They belong to +cows and things. I think _every body's_ unkind to me to-day." + +"Minnie, dearest, you really wound me when you talk in that way. Be +reasonable now. See what pains I take. I do all I can for you." + +"But I'm _always_ reasonable, and it's _you_ that are unreasonable, +when you want me to sit on that horrid fur. It's very, _very_ +disagreeable in you, Kitty dear." + +Mrs. Willoughby said nothing, but went on folding some more skins. +These she placed on the straw so that a pile was formed about as high +as an ordinary chair. This pile was placed against the wall so that +the wall served as a support. + +Then she seated herself upon this. + +"Minnie, dearest," said she. + +"Well, Kitty darling." + +"It's really quite soft and comfortable. Do come and sit on it; do, +just to please me, only for five minutes. See! I'll spread my dress +over it so that you need not touch it. Come, dearest, only for five +minutes." + +"Well, I'll sit on it just for a little mite of a time, if you promise +not to tease me." + +"Tease you, dear! Why, of course not. Come." + +So Minnie went over and sat by her sister's side. + +In about an hour Girasole came back. The two sisters were seated +there. Minnie's head was resting on her sister's shoulder, and she was +fast asleep, while Mrs. Willoughby sat motionless, with her face +turned toward him, and such an expression in her dark eyes that +Girasole felt awed. He turned in silence and went away. + + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +SEEKING FOR HELP. + + +The departure of the drivers with their horses had increased the +difficulties of the party, and had added to their danger. Of that +party Ethel was now the head, and her efforts were directed more +zealously than ever to bring back Lady Dalrymple to her senses. At +last these efforts were crowned with success, and, after being +senseless for nearly an hour, she came to herself. The restoration of +her senses, however, brought with it the discovery of all that had +occurred, and thus caused a new rush of emotion, which threatened +painful consequences. But the consequences were averted, and at length +she was able to rise. She was then helped into her carriage, after +which the question arose as to their next proceeding. + +[Illustration: "ETHEL OBTAINED A PAIR OF SCISSORS."] + +The loss of the horses and drivers was a very embarrassing thing to +them, and for a time they were utterly at a loss what course to adopt. +Lady Dalrymple was too weak to walk, and they had no means of +conveying her. The maids had simply lost their wits from fright; and +Ethel could not see her way clearly out of the difficulty. At this +juncture they were roused by the approach of the Rev. Saul Tozer. + +This reverend man had been bound as he descended from his carriage, +and had remained bound ever since. In that state he had been a +spectator of the struggle and its consequences, and he now came +forward to offer his services. + +"I don't know whether you remember me, ma'am," said he to Lady +Dalrymple, "but I looked in at your place at Rome; and in any case I +am bound to offer you my assistance, since you are companions with me +in my bonds, which I'd be much obliged if one of you ladies would +untie or cut. Perhaps it would be best to untie it, as rope's +valuable." + +At this request Ethel obtained a pair of scissors from one of the +maids, and after vigorous efforts succeeded in freeing the reverend +gentleman. + +"Really, Sir, I am very much obliged for this kind offer," said Lady +Dalrymple, "and I avail myself of it gratefully. Can you advise us +what is best to do?" + +"Well, ma'am, I've been turning it over in my mind, and have made it a +subject of prayer; and it seems to me that it wouldn't be bad to go +out and see the country." + +"There are no houses for miles," said Ethel. + +"Have you ever been this road before?" said Tozer. + +"No." + +"Then how do you know?" + +"Oh, I was thinking of the part we had passed over." + +"True; but the country in front may be different. Didn't that brigand +captain say something about getting help ahead?" + +"Yes, so he did; I remember now," said Ethel. + +"Well, I wouldn't take his advice generally, but in this matter I +don't see any harm in following it; so I move that I be a committee of +one to go ahead and investigate the country and bring help." + +"Oh, thanks, thanks, very much. Really, Sir, this is very kind," said +Lady Dalrymple. + +"And I'll go too," said Ethel, as a sudden thought occurred to her. +"Would you be afraid, aunty dear, to stay here alone?" + +"Certainly not, dear. I have no more fear for myself, but I'm afraid +to trust you out of my sight." + +"Oh, you need not fear for me," said Ethel. "I shall certainly be as +safe farther on as I am here. Besides, if we can find help I will know +best what is wanted." + +"Well, dear, I suppose you may go." + +Without further delay Ethel started off, and Tozer walked by her side. +They went under the fallen tree, and then walked quickly along the +road. + +"Do you speak Italian, miss?" asked Tozer. + +"No." + +"I'm sorry for that. I don't either. I'm told it's a fine language." + +"So I believe; but how very awkward it will be not to be able to speak +to any person!" + +"Well, the Italian is a kind of offshoot of the Latin, and I can +scrape together a few Latin words--enough to make myself understood, I +do believe." + +"Can you, really? How very fortunate!" + +"It is somewhat providential, miss, and I hope I may succeed." + +They walked on in silence now for some time. Ethel was too sad to +talk, and Tozer was busily engaged in recalling all the Latin at his +command. After a while he began to grow sociable. + +"Might I ask, miss, what persuasion you are?" + +"Persuasion?" said Ethel, in surprise. + +"Yes, 'm; de-nomination--religious body, you know." + +"Oh! why, I belong to the Church." + +"Oh! and what church did you say, 'm?" + +"The Church of England." + +"H'm. The 'Piscopalian body. Well, it's a high-toned body." + +Ethel gave a faint smile at this whimsical application of a name to +her church, and then Tozer returned to the charge. + +"Are you a professor?" + +"A what?" + +"A professor." + +"A professor?" repeated Ethel. "I don't think I _quite_ understand +you." + +"Well, do you belong to the church? Are you a member?" + +"Oh yes." + +"I'm glad to hear it. It's a high and a holy and a happy perrivelege +to belong to the church and enjoy the means of grace. I trust you live +up to your perriveleges?" + +"Live what?" asked Ethel. + +"Live up to your perriveleges," repeated Tozer--"attend on all the +means of grace--be often at the assembling of yourself together." + +"The assembling of myself together? I don't think I _quite_ get your +meaning," said Ethel. + +"Meeting, you know--church-meeting." + +"Oh yes; I didn't understand. Oh yes, I always go to church." + +"That's right," said Tozer, with a sigh of relief; "and I suppose, +now, you feel an interest in the cause of missions?" + +"Missions? Oh, I don't know. The Roman Catholics practice that to some +extent, and several of my friends say they feel benefit from a mission +once a year; but for my part I have not yet any very decided leanings +to Roman Catholicism." + +"Oh, dear me, dear me!" cried Tozer, "that's not what I mean at all; I +mean Protestant missions to the heathen, you know." + +"I beg your pardon," said Ethel. "I thought you were referring to +something else." + +Tozer was silent now for a few minutes, and then asked her, abruptly, + +"What's your opinion about the Jews?" + +"The Jews?" exclaimed Ethel, looking at him in some surprise, and +thinking that her companion must be a little insane to carry on such +an extraordinary conversation with such very abrupt changes--"the +Jews?" + +"Yes, the Jews." + +"Oh, I don't like them at all." + +"But they're the chosen people." + +"I can't help that. I don't like them. But then, you know, I never +really saw much of them." + +"I refer to their future prospects," said Tozer--"to prophecy. I +should like to ask you how you regard them in that light. Do you +believe in a spiritual or a temporal Zion?" + +"Spiritual Zion? Temporal Zion?" + +"Yes, 'm." + +"Well, really, I don't know. I don't think I believe any thing at all +about it." + +"But you _must_ believe in either one or the other--you've _got_ to," +said Tozer, positively. + +"But I _don't_, you know; and how can I?" + +Tozer threw at her a look of commiseration, and began to think that +his companion was not much better than a heathen. In his own home +circle he could have put his hand on little girls of ten who were +quite at home on all these subjects. He was silent for a time, and +then began again. + +"I'd like to ask you one thing," said he, "very much." + +"What is it?" asked Ethel. + +"Do you believe," asked Tozer, solemnly, "that we're living in the +Seventh Vial?" + +"Vial? Seventh Vial?" said Ethel, in fresh amazement. + +"Yes, the Seventh Vial," said Tozer, in a sepulchral voice. + +"Living in the Seventh Vial? I really don't know how one can live in a +vial." + +"The Great Tribulation, you know." + +"Great Tribulation?" + +"Yes; for instance, now, don't you believe in the Apocalyptic Beast?" + +"I don't know," said Ethel, faintly. + +"Well, at any rate, you believe in his number--you must." + +"His number?" + +"Yes." + +"What do you mean?" + +"Why, the number six, six, six--six hundred and sixty-six." + +"I really don't understand this," said Ethel. + +"Don't you believe that the Sixth Vial is done?" + +"Sixth Vial? What, another vial?" + +"Yes; and the drying of the Euphrates." + +"The Euphrates? drying?" repeated Ethel in a trembling voice. She +began to be alarmed. She felt sure that this man was insane. She had +never heard such incoherency in her life. And she was alone with him. +She stole a timid look, and saw his long, sallow face, on which there +was now a preoccupied expression, and the look did not reassure her. + +But Tozer himself was a little puzzled, and felt sure that his +companion must have her own opinions on the subject, so he began +again: + +"Now I suppose you've read Fleming on the Papacy?" + +"No, I haven't. I never heard of it." + +"Strange, too. You've heard of Elliot's 'Horæ Apocalypticæ?', I +suppose?" + +"No," said Ethel, timidly. + +"Well, it's all in Cumming--and you've read him, of course?" + +"Cumming? I never heard of him. Who is he?" + +"What, never heard of Cumming?" + +"Never." + +"And never read his 'Great Tribulation?'" + +"No." + +"Nor his 'Great Expectation?'" + +"No." + +"What! not even his 'Apocalyptic Sketches?'" + +"I never heard of them." + +[Illustration: "TONITRUENDUM EST MALUM!"] + +Tozer looked at her in astonishment; but at this moment they came to a +turn in the road, when a sight appeared which drew from Ethel an +expression of joy. + +It was a little valley on the right, in which was a small hamlet with +a church. The houses were but small, and could not give them much +accommodation, but they hoped to find help there. + +"I wouldn't trust the people," said Ethel. "I dare say they're all +brigands; but there ought to be a priest there, and we can appeal to +him." + +This proposal pleased Tozer, who resumed his work of collecting among +the stores of his memory scraps of Latin which he had once stored away +there. + +The village was at no very great distance away from the road, and they +reached it in a short time. They went at once to the church. The door +was open, and a priest, who seemed the village priest, was standing +there. He was stout, with a good-natured expression on his hearty, +rosy face, and a fine twinkle in his eye, which lighted up pleasantly +as he saw the strangers enter. + +Tozer at once held out his hand and shook that of the priest. + +"Buon giorno," said the priest. + +Ethel shook her head. + +"Parlate Italiano?" said he. + +Ethel shook her head. + +"Salve, domine," said Tozer, who at once plunged headlong into Latin. + +"Salve bene," said the priest, in some surprise. + +"Quomodo vales?" asked Tozer. + +"Optime valeo, Dei gratia. Spero vos valere." + +Tozer found the priest's pronunciation a little difficult, but managed +to understand him. + +"Domine," said he, "sumus viatores infelices et innocentes, in quos +fures nuper impetum fecerunt. Omnia bona nostra arripuerunt--" + +"Fieri non potest!" said the priest. + +"Et omnes amicos nostros in captivitatem lachrymabilem tractaverunt--" + +"Cor dolet," said the priest; "miseret me vestrum." + +"Cujusmodi terra est hæc in qua sustenendum est tot labores?" + +The priest sighed. + +"Tonitruendum est malum!" exclaimed Tozer, excited by the recollection +of his wrongs. + +The priest stared. + +"In hostium manibus fuimus, et, bonum tonitru! omnia impedimenta +amissimus. Est nimis omnipotens malum!" + +"Quid vis dicere?" said the priest, looking puzzled. "Quid tibi vis?" + +"Est nimis sempiternum durum!" + +"In nomine omnium sanctorum apostolorumque," cried the priest, "quid +vis dicere?" + +"Potes ne juvare nos," continued Tozer, "in hoc lachrymabile tempore? +Volo unum verum vivum virum qui possit--" + +"Diabolus arripiat me si possim unum solum verbum intelligere!" cried +the priest. "Be jabers if I ondherstan' yez at all at all; an' there +ye have it." + +And with this the priest raised his head, with its puzzled look, and +scratched that organ with such a natural air, and with such a full +Irish flavor in his brogue and in his face, that both of his visitors +were perfectly astounded. + +"Good gracious!" cried Tozer; and seizing the priest's hand in both of +his, he nearly wrung it off. "Why, what a providence! Why, really, +now! And you were an Irishman all the time! And why didn't you speak +English?" + +"Sure and what made you spake Latin?" cried the priest. "And what was +it you were thryin' to say wid yer 'sempiternum durum,' and yer +'tonitruendum malum?' Sure an' ye made me fairly profeen wid yer talk, +so ye did." + +"Well, I dare say," said Tozer, candidly--"I dare say 'tain't onlikely +that I _did_ introduce one or two Americanisms in the Latin; but then, +you know, I ain't been in practice." + +The priest now brought chairs for his visitors, and, sitting thus in +the church, they told him about their adventures, and entreated him to +do something for them. To all this the priest listened with thoughtful +attention, and when they were done he at once promised to find horses +for them which would draw the carriages to this hamlet or to the next +town. Ethel did not think Lady Dalrymple could go further than this +place, and the priest offered to find some accommodations. + +He then left them, and in about half an hour he returned with two or +three peasants, each of whom had a horse. + +"They'll be able to bring the leedies," said the priest, "and haul the +impty wagons afther thim." + +"I think, miss," said Tozer, "that you'd better stay here. It's too +far for you to walk." + +"Sure an' there's no use in the wide wurruld for _you_ to be goin' +back," said the priest to Ethel. "You can't do any gud, an' you'd +betther rist till they come. Yer frind'll be enough." + +Ethel at first thought of walking back, but finally she saw that it +would be quite useless, and so she resolved to remain and wait for her +aunt. So Tozer went off with the men and the horses, and the priest +asked Ethel all about the affair once more. Whatever his opinions +were, he said nothing. + +While he was talking there came a man to the door who beckoned him +out. He went out, and was gone for some time. He came back at last, +looking very serious. + +"I've just got a missage from thim," said he. + +"A message," exclaimed Ethel, "from them? What, from Girasole?" + +"Yis. They want a praste, and they've sint for me." + +"A priest?" + +"Yis; an' they want a maid-servant to wait on the young leedies; and +they want thim immajitly; an' I'll have to start off soon. There's a +man dead among thim that wants to be put undherground to-night, for +the rist av thim are goin' off in the mornin'; an' accordin' to all I +hear, I wouldn't wondher but what I'd be wanted for somethin' else +afore mornin'." + +"Oh, my God!" cried Ethel; "they're going to kill him, then!" + +"Kill him! Kill who? Sure an' it's not killin' they want me for. It's +the other--it's marryin'." + +"Marrying?" cried Ethel. "Poor, darling Minnie! Oh, you can not--you +will not marry them?" + +"Sure an' I don't know but it's the best thing I can do--as things +are," said the priest. + +"Oh, what shall I do! what shall I do!" moaned Ethel. + +"Well, ye've got to bear up, so ye have. There's throubles for all of +us, an' lots av thim too; an' more'n some av us can bear." + +Ethel sat in the darkest and bitterest grief for some time, a prey to +thoughts and fears that were perfect agony to her. + +At last a thought came to her which made her start, and look up, and +cast at the priest a look full of wonder and entreaty. The priest +watched her with the deepest sympathy visible on his face. + +"We must save them!" she cried. + +"Sure an' it's me that made up me moind to that same," said the +priest, "only I didn't want to rise yer hopes." + +"_We_ must save them," said Ethel, with strong emphasis. + +"_We?_ What can you do?" + +Ethel got up, walked to the church door, looked out, came back, looked +anxiously all around, and then, resuming her seat, she drew close to +the priest, and began to whisper, long and anxiously. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +THE AVENGER ON THE TRACK. + + +When Dacres had sprung aside into the woods in the moment of his +fierce rush upon Girasole, he had been animated by a sudden thought +that escape for himself was possible, and that it would be more +serviceable to his friends. Thus, then, he had bounded into the woods, +and with swift steps he forced his way among the trees deeper and +deeper into the forest. Some of the brigands had given chase, but +without effect. Dacres's superior strength and agility gave him the +advantage, and his love of life was a greater stimulus than their +thirst for vengeance. In addition to this the trees gave every +assistance toward the escape of a fugitive, while they threw every +impediment in the way of a pursuer. The consequence was, therefore, +that Dacres soon put a great distance between himself and his +pursuers, and, what is more, he ran in such a circuitous route that +they soon lost all idea of their own locality, and had not the +faintest idea where he had gone. In this respect, however, Dacres +himself was not one whit wiser than they, for he soon found himself +completely bewildered in the mazes of the forest; and when at length +the deep silence around gave no further sound of pursuers, he sank +down to take breath, with no idea whatever in what direction the road +lay. + +After a brief rest he arose and plunged deeper still into the forest, +so as to put an additional distance between himself and any possible +pursuit. He at length found himself at the foot of a precipice about +fifty feet in height, which was deep in the recesses of the forest. Up +this he climbed, and found a mossy place among the trees at its top, +where he could find rest, and at the same time be in a more favorable +position either for hearing or seeing any signs of approaching +pursuers. + +Here, then, he flung himself down to rest, and soon buried himself +among thoughts of the most exciting kind. The scene which he had just +left was fresh in his mind, and amidst all the fury of that strife +there rose most prominent in his memory the form of the two ladies, +Minnie standing calm and unmoved, while Mrs. Willoughby was convulsed +with agitated feeling. What was the cause of that? Could it be +possible that his wife had indeed contrived such a plot with the +Italian? Was it possible that she had chosen this way of striking two +blows, by one of which she could win her Italian, and by the other of +which she could get rid of himself, her husband? Such had been his +conjecture during the fury of the fight, and the thought had roused +him up to his Berserker madness; but now, as it recurred again, he saw +other things to shake his full belief. Her agitation seemed too +natural. + +Yet, on the other hand, he asked himself, why should she not show +agitation? She was a consummate actress. She could show on her +beautiful face the softness and the tenderness of an angel of light +while a demon reigned in her malignant heart. Why should she not +choose this way of keeping up appearances? She had betrayed her +friends, and sought her husband's death; but would she wish to have +her crime made manifest? Not she. It was for this, then, that she wept +and clung to the child-angel. + +Such thoughts as these were not at all adapted to give comfort to his +mind, or make his rest refreshing. Soon, by such fancies, he kindled +anew his old rage, and his blood rose to fever heat, so that inaction +became no longer tolerable. He had rest enough. He started up, and +looked all around, and listened attentively. No sound arose and no +sight appeared which at all excited suspicion. He determined to set +forth once more, he scarcely knew where. He had a vague idea of +finding his way back to the road, so as to be able to assist the +ladies, together with another idea, equally ill defined, of coming +upon the brigands, finding the Italian, and watching for an +opportunity to wreak vengeance upon this assassin and his guilty +partner. + +He drew his knife once more from a leathern sheath on the inside of +the breast of his coat, into which he had thrust it some time before, +and holding this he set forth, watchfully and warily. On the left side +of the precipice the ground sloped down, and at the bottom of this +there was a narrow valley. It seemed to him that this might be the +course of some spring torrent, and that by following its descent he +might come out upon some stream. With this intention he descended to +the valley, and then walked along, following the descent of the +ground, and keeping himself as much as possible among the thickest +growths of the trees. + +The ground descended very gradually, and the narrow valley wound along +among rolling hills that were covered with trees and brush. As he +confined himself to the thicker parts of this, his progress was +necessarily slow; but at the end of that turn he saw before him +unmistakable signs of the neighborhood of some open place. Before him +he saw the sky in such a way that it showed the absence of forest +trees. He now moved on more cautiously, and, quitting the valley, he +crept up the hill-slope among the brush as carefully as possible, +until he was at a sufficient height, and then, turning toward the +open, he crept forward from cover to cover. At length he stopped. A +slight eminence was before him, beyond which all was open, yet +concealed from his view. Descending the slope a little, he once more +advanced, and finally emerged at the edge of the forest. + +He found himself upon a gentle declivity. Immediately in front of him +lay a lake, circular in shape, and about a mile in diameter, embosomed +among wooded hills. At first he saw no signs of any habitation; but as +his eyes wandered round he saw upon his right, about a quarter of a +mile away, an old stone house, and beyond this smoke curling up from +among the forest trees on the borders of the lake. + +The scene startled him. It was so quiet, so lonely, and so deserted +that it seemed a fit place for a robber's haunt. Could this be indeed +the home of his enemies, and had he thus so wonderfully come upon them +in the very midst of their retreat? He believed that it was so. A +little further observation showed figures among the trees moving to +and fro, and soon he distinguished faint traces of smoke in other +places, which he had not seen at first, as though there were more +fires than one. + +Dacres exulted with a fierce and vengeful joy over this discovery. He +felt now not like the fugitive, but rather the pursuer. He looked down +upon this as the tiger looks from his jungle upon some Indian village. +His foes were numerous, but he was concealed, and his presence +unsuspected. He grasped his dagger with a firmer clutch, and then +pondered for a few minutes on what he had better do next. + +One thing was necessary first of all, and that was to get as near as +he possibly could without discovery. A slight survey of the situation +showed him that he might venture much nearer; and his eye ran along +the border of the lake which lay between him and the old house, and he +saw that it was all covered over with a thick fringe of trees and +brush-wood. The narrow valley along which he had come ended at the +shore of the lake just below him on his right, and beyond this the +shore arose again to a height equal to where he now was. To gain that +opposite height was now his first task. + +Before starting he looked all around, so as to be sure that he was not +observed. Then he went back for some distance, after which he +descended into the valley, crouching low, and crawling stealthily +among the brush-wood. Moving thus, he at length succeeded in reaching +the opposite slope without appearing to have attracted any attention +from any pursuers. Up this slope he now moved as carefully as ever, +not relaxing his vigilance one jot, but, if possible, calling into +play even a larger caution as he found himself drawing nearer to those +whom he began to regard as his prey. + +Moving up this slope, then, in this way, he at length attained the +top, and found himself here among the forest trees and underbrush. +They were here even denser than they were on the place which he had +just left. As he moved along he saw no indications that they had been +traversed by human footsteps. Every thing gave indication of an +unbroken and undisturbed solitude. After feeling his way along here +with all the caution which he could exercise, he finally ventured +toward the shore of the lake, and found himself able to go to the very +edge without coming to any open space or crossing any path. + +On looking forth from the top of the bank he found that he had not +only drawn much nearer to the old house, but that he could see the +whole line of shore. He now saw that there were some men by the door +of the house, and began to suspect that this was nothing else than the +headquarters and citadel of the brigands. The sight of the shore now +showed him that he could approach very much nearer, and unless the +brigands, or whoever they were, kept scouts out, he would be able to +reach a point immediately overlooking the house, from which he could +survey it at his leisure. To reach this point became now his next aim. + +The wood being dense, Dacres found no more difficulty in passing +through this than in traversing what lay behind him. The caution which +he exercised here was as great as ever, and his progress was as slow, +but as sure. At length he found himself upon the desired point, and, +crawling cautiously forward to the shore, he looked down upon the very +old house which he had desired to reach. + +The house stood close by the lake, upon a sloping bank which lay +below. It did not seem to be more than fifty yards away. The doors and +windows were gone. Five or six ill-looking fellows were near the +doorway, some sprawling on the ground, others lolling and lounging +about. One glance at the men was sufficient to assure him that they +were the brigands, and also to show him that they kept no guard or +scout or outpost of any kind, at least in this direction. + +Here, then, Dacres lay and watched. He could not wish for a better +situation. With his knife in his hand, ready to defend himself in case +of need, and his whole form concealed perfectly by the thick +underbrush into the midst of which he had crawled, he peered forth +through the overhanging leaves, and watched in breathless interest. +From the point where he now was he could see the shore beyond the +house, where the smoke was rising. He could now see that there were no +less than four different columns of smoke ascending from as many +fires. He saw as many as twenty or thirty figures moving among the +trees, made conspicuous by the bright colors of their costumes. They +seemed to be busy about something which he could not make out. + +Suddenly, while his eye roved over the scene, it was struck by some +fluttering color at the open window of the old house. He had not +noticed this before. He now looked at it attentively. Before long he +saw a figure cross the window and return. It was a female figure. + +The sight of this revived all that agitation which he had felt before, +but which had been calmed during the severe efforts which he had been +putting forth. There was but one thought in his mind, and but one +desire in his heart. + +His wife. + +He crouched low, with a more feverish dread of discovery at this +supreme moment, and a fiercer thirst for some further revelation which +might disclose what he suspected. His breathing came thick and hard, +and his brow lowered gloomily over his gleaming eyes. + +He waited thus for some minutes, and the figure passed again. + +He still watched. + +Suddenly a figure appeared at the window. It was a young girl, a +blonde, with short golden curls. The face was familiar indeed to him. +Could he ever forget it? There it was full before him, turned toward +him, as though that one, by some strange spiritual sympathy, was aware +of his presence, and was thus turning toward him this mute appeal. Her +face was near enough for its expression to be visible. He could +distinguish the childish face, with its soft, sweet innocence, and he +knew that upon it there was now that piteous, pleading, beseeching +look which formerly had so thrilled his heart. And it was thus that +Dacres saw his child-angel. + +A prisoner, turning toward him this appeal! What was the cause, and +what did the Italian want of this innocent child? Such was his +thought. What could his fiend of a wife gain by the betrayal of that +angelic being? Was it possible that even her demon soul could compass +iniquity like this? He had thought that he had fathomed her capacity +for malignant wickedness; but the presence here of the child-angel in +the power of these miscreants showed him that this capacity was indeed +unfathomable. At this sudden revelation of sin so enormous his very +soul turned sick with horror. + +He watched, and still looked with an anxiety that was increasing to +positive pain. + +And now, after one brief glance, Minnie drew back into the room. There +was nothing more to be seen for some time, but at last another figure +appeared. + +He expected this; he was waiting for it; he was sure of it; yet deep +down in the bottom of his heart there was a hope that it might not be +so, that his suspicions, in this case at least, might be unfounded. +But now the proof came; it was made manifest here before his eyes, and +in the light of day. + +In spite of himself a low groan escaped him. He buried his face in his +hands and shut out the sight. Then suddenly he raised his head again +and stared, as though in this face there was an irresistible +fascination by which a spell was thrown over him. + +It was the face of Mrs. Willoughby--youthful, beautiful, and touching +in its tender grace. Tears were now in those dark, luminous eyes, but +they were unseen by him. Yet he could mark the despondency of her +attitude; he could see a certain wild way of looking up and down and +in all directions; he noted how her hands grasped the window-ledge as +if for support. + +And oh, beautiful demon angel, he thought, if you could but know how +near you are to the avenger! Why are you so anxious, my demon wife? +Are you impatient because your Italian is delaying? Can you not live +for five seconds longer without him? Are you looking in all directions +to see where he is? Don't fret; he'll soon be here. + +And now there came a confirmation of his thoughts. He was not +surprised; he knew it; he suspected it. It was all as it should be. +Was it not in the confident expectation of this that he had come here +with his dagger--on their trail? + +It was Girasole. + +He came from the place, further along the shore, where the brigands +were around their fires. He was walking quickly. He had a purpose. It +was with a renewed agony that Dacres watched his enemy--coming to +visit his wife. The intensity of that thirst for vengeance, which had +now to be checked until a better opportunity, made his whole frame +tremble. A wild desire came to him then and there to bound down upon +his enemy, and kill and be killed in the presence of his wife. But the +other brigands deterred him. These men might interpose and save the +Italian, and make him a prisoner. No; he must wait till he could meet +his enemy on something like equal terms--when he could strike a blow +that would not be in vain. Thus he overmastered himself. + +He saw Girasole enter the house. He watched breathlessly. The time +seemed long indeed. He could not hear any thing; the conversation, if +there was any, was carried on in a low tone. He could not see any +thing; those who conversed kept quiet; no one passed in front of the +window. It was all a mystery, and this made the time seem longer. At +length Dacres began to think that Girasole would not go at all. A long +time passed. Hours went away, and still Girasole did not quit the +house. + +It was now sundown. Dacres had eaten nothing since morning, but the +conflict of passion drove away all hunger or thirst. The approach of +darkness was in accordance with his own gloomy wishes. Twilight in +Italy is short. Night would soon be over all. + +The house was on the slope of the bank. At the corner nearest him the +house was sunk into the ground in such a way that it looked as though +one might climb into the upper story window. As Dacres looked he made +up his mind to attempt it. By standing here on tiptoe he could catch +the upper window-ledge with his hands. He was strong. He was tall. His +enemy was in the house. The hour was at hand. He was the man. + +Another hour passed. + +All was still. + +There was a flickering lamp in the hall, but the men seemed to be +asleep. + +Another hour passed. + +There was no noise. + +Then Dacres ventured down. He moved slowly and cautiously, crouching +low, and thus traversing the intervening space. + +He neared the house and touched it. Before him was the window of the +lower story. Above him was the window of the upper story. He lifted up +his hands. They could reach the window-ledge. + +He put his long, keen knife between his teeth, and caught at the upper +window-ledge. Exerting all his strength, he raised himself up so high +that he could fling one elbow over. For a moment he hung thus, and +waited to take breath and listen. + +There was a rush below. Half a dozen shadowy forms surrounded him. He +had been seen. He had been trapped. + +He dropped down and, seizing his knife, struck right and left. + +In vain. He was hurled to the ground and bound tight. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +FACE TO FACE. + + +Hawbury, on his capture, had been at once taken into the woods, and +led and pushed on by no gentle hands. He had thus gone on until he had +found himself by that same lake which others of the party had come +upon in the various ways which have been described. Toward this lake +he was taken, until finally his party reached the old house, which +they entered. It has already been said that it was a two-story house. +It was also of stone, and strongly built. The door was in the middle +of it, and rooms were on each side of the hall. The interior plan of +the house was peculiar, for the hall did not run through, but +consisted of a square room, and the stone steps wound spirally from +the lower hall to the upper one. There were three rooms up stairs, one +taking up one end of the house, which was occupied by Mrs. Willoughby +and Minnie; another in the rear of the house, into which a door opened +from the upper hall, close by the head of the stairs; and a third, +which was opposite the room first mentioned. + +Hawbury was taken to this house, and led up stairs into this room in +the rear of the house. At the end farthest from the door he saw a heap +of straw with a few dirty rugs upon it. In the wall a beam was set, to +which an iron ring was fastened. He was taken toward this bed, and +here his legs were bound together, and the rope that secured them was +run around the iron ring so as to allow of no more motion than a few +feet. Having thus secured the prisoner, the men left him to his own +meditations. + +The room was perfectly bare of furniture, nothing being in it but the +straw and the dirty rugs. Hawbury could not approach to the windows, +for he was bound in a way which prevented that. In fact, he could not +move in any direction, for his arms and legs were fastened in such a +way that he could scarcely raise himself from where he was sitting. He +therefore was compelled to remain in one position, and threw himself +down upon the straw on his side, with his face to the wall, for he +found that position easier than any other. In this way he lay for some +time, until at length he was roused by the sound of footsteps +ascending the stairs. Several people were passing his room. He heard +the voice of Girasole. He listened with deep attention. For some time +there was no reply. At length there was the sound of a woman's +voice--clear, plain, and unmistakable. It was a fretful voice of +complaint. Girasole was trying to answer it. After a time Girasole +left. Then all was still. Then Girasole returned. Then there was a +clattering noise on the stairs, and the bumping of some heavy weight, +and the heavy breathing of men. Then he heard Girasole say something, +after which arose Minnie's voice, close by, as though she was in the +hall, and her words were, "Oh, take it away, take it away!" followed +by long reproaches, which Hawbury did not fully understand. + +This showed him that Minnie, at least, was a prisoner, and in this +house, and in the adjoining room, along with some one whom he rightly +supposed was Mrs. Willoughby. + +After this there was a further silence for some time, which at last +was broken by fresh sounds of trampling and shuffling, together with +the confused directions of several voices all speaking at once. +Hawbury listened, and turned on his couch of straw so as to see any +thing which presented itself. The clatter and the noise approached +nearer, ascending the stairs, until at last he saw that they were +entering his room. Two of the brigands came first, carrying something +carefully. In a few moments the burden which they bore was revealed. + +It was a rude litter, hastily made from bushes fastened together. Upon +this lay the dead body of a man, his white face upturned, and his +limbs stiffened in the rigidity of death. Hawbury did not remember +very distinctly any of the particular events of his confused struggle +with the brigands; but he was not at all surprised to see that there +had been one of the ruffians sent to his account. The brigands who +carried in their dead companion looked at the captive with a sullen +ferocity and a scowling vengefulness, which showed plainly that they +would demand of him a reckoning for their comrade's blood if it were +only in their power. But they did not delay, nor did they make any +actual demonstrations to Hawbury. They placed the corpse of their +comrade upon the floor in the middle of the room, and then went out. + +The presence of the corpse only added to the gloom of Hawbury's +situation, and he once more turned his face to the wall, so as to shut +out the sight. Once more he gave himself up to his own thoughts, and +so the time passed slowly on. He heard no sounds now from the room +where Miss Fay was confined. He heard no noise from the men below, and +could not tell whether they were still guarding the door, or had gone +away. Various projects came to him, foremost among which was the idea +of escaping. Bribery seemed the only possible way. There was about +this, however, the same difficulty which Mrs. Willoughby had +found--his ignorance of the language. He thought that this would be an +effectual bar to any communication, and saw no other alternative than +to wait Girasole's pleasure. It seemed to him that a ransom would be +asked, and he felt sure, from Girasole's offensive manner, that the +ransom would be large. But there was no help for it. He felt more +troubled about Miss Fay; for Girasole's remarks about her seemed to +point to views of his own which were incompatible with her liberation. + +In the midst of these reflections another noise arose below. It was a +steady tramp of two or three men walking. The noise ascended the +stairway, and drew nearer and nearer. Hawbury turned once more, and +saw two men entering the room, carrying between them a box about six +feet long and eighteen inches or two feet wide. It was coarsely but +strongly made, and was undoubtedly intended as a coffin for the corpse +of the brigand. The men put the coffin down against the wall and +retired. After a few minutes they returned again with the coffin lid. +They then lifted the dead body into the coffin, and one of them put +the lid in its place and secured it with half a dozen screws. After +this Hawbury was once more left alone. He found this far more +tolerable, for now he had no longer before his very eyes the abhorrent +sight of the dead body. Hidden in its coffin, it no longer gave +offense to his sensibilities. Once more, therefore, Hawbury turned his +thoughts toward projects of escape, and discussed in his mind the +probabilities for and against. + +The day had been long, and longer still did it seem to the captive as +hour after hour passed slowly by. He could not look at his watch, +which his captors had spared; but from the shadows as they fell +through the windows, and from the general appearance of the sky, he +knew that the close of the day was not far off. He began to wonder +that he was left so long alone and in suspense, and to feel impatient +to know the worst as to his fate. Why did not some of them come to +tell him? Where was Girasole? Was he the chief? Were the brigands +debating about his fate, or were they thus leaving him in suspense so +as to make him despondent and submissive to their terms? From all that +he had ever heard of brigands and their ways, the latter seemed not +unlikely; and this thought made him see the necessity of guarding +himself against being too impatient for freedom, and too compliant +with any demands of theirs. + +From these thoughts he was at last roused by footsteps which ascended +the stairs. He turned and looked toward the door. A man entered. + +It was Girasole. + +He entered slowly, with folded arms, and coming about half-way, he +stood and surveyed the prisoner in silence. Hawbury, with a sudden +effort, brought himself up to a sitting posture, and calmly surveyed +the Italian. + +"Well," asked Hawbury, "I should like to know how long you intend to +keep up this sort of thing? What are you going to do about it? Name +your price, man, and we'll discuss it, and settle upon something +reasonable." + +"My price?" repeated Girasole, with peculiar emphasis. + +"Yes. Of course I understand you fellows. It's your trade, you know. +You've caught me, and, of course, you'll try to make the best of me, +and all that sort of thing. So don't keep me waiting." + +"Inglis milor," said Girasole, with a sharp, quick accent, his face +flushing up as he spoke--"Inglis milor, dere is no price as you mean, +an' no ransom. De price is one dat you will not wis to pay." + +"Oh, come, now, my good fellow, really you must remember that I'm tied +up, and not in a position to be chaffed. Bother your Italian humbug! +Don't speak in these confounded figures of speech, you know, but say +up and down--how much?" + +"De brigands haf talk you ovair, an' dey will haf no price." + +"What the devil is all that rot about?" + +"Dey will haf youair blood." + +"My blood?" + +"Yes." + +"And pray, my good fellow, what good is that going to do them?" + +"It is vengeance," said Girasole. + +"Vengeance? Pooh! Nonsense! What rot! What have I ever done?" + +"Dat--dere--his blood," said Girasole, pointing to the coffin. + +"What! that scoundrel? Why, man alive, are you crazy? That was a fair +stand-up fight. That is, it was two English against twenty Italians, +if you call that fair; but perhaps it is. His blood! By Jove! Cool, +that! Come, I like it." + +"An' more," said Girasole, who now grew more excited. "It is not de +brigand who condemn you; it is also me. I condemn you." + +"You?" said Hawbury, elevating his eyebrows in some surprise, and +fixing a cool stare upon Girasole. "And what the devil's _this_ row +about, I should like to know? I don't know _you_. What have you +against _me_?" + +"Inglis milor," cried Girasole, who was stung to the quick by a +certain indescribable yet most irritating superciliousness in +Hawbury's tone--"Inglis milor, you sall see what you sall soffair. You +sall die! Dere is no hope. You are condemn by de brigand. You also are +condemn by me, for you insult me." + +"Well, of all the beastly rot I ever heard, this is about the worst! +What do you mean by all this infernal nonsense? Insult you! What would +I insult you for? Why, man alive, you're as mad as a March hare! If I +thought you were a gentleman, I'd--by Jove, I will, too! See here, you +fellow: I'll fight you for it--pistols, or any thing. Come, now. I'll +drop all considerations of rank. I'll treat you as if you were a real +count, and not a sham one. Come, now. What do you say? Shall we have +it out? Pistols--in the woods there. You've got all your infernal crew +around you, you know. Well? What? You won't? By Jove!" + +Girasole's gesture showed that he declined the proposition. + +"Inglis milor," said he, with a venomous glitter in his eyes, "I sall +haf youair life--wis de pistol, but not in de duello. I sall blow your +brain out myself." + +"Blow and be hanged, then!" said Hawbury. + +And with these words he fell back on his straw, and took no further +notice of the Italian. + +[Illustration: "INGLIS MILOR, I SALL HAF YOUAIR LIFE."] + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +TORN ASUNDER. + + +When Dacres made his attempt upon the house he was not so unobserved +as he supposed himself to be. Minnie and Mrs. Willoughby happened at +that time to be sitting on the floor by the window, one on each side, +and they were looking out. They had chosen the seat as affording some +prospect of the outer world. There was in Mrs. Willoughby a certain +instinctive feeling that if any rescue came, it would come from the +land side; and, therefore, though the hope was faint indeed, it +nevertheless was sufficiently well defined to inspire her with an +uneasy and incessant vigilance. Thus, then, she had seated herself by +the window, and Minnie had taken her place on the opposite side, and +the two sisters, with clasped hands, sat listening to the voices of +the night. + +At length they became aware of a movement upon the bank just above +them and lying opposite. The sisters clasped one another's hands more +closely, and peered earnestly through the gloom. It was pretty dark, +and the forest threw down a heavy shadow, but still their eyes were by +this time accustomed to the dark, and they could distinguish most of +the objects there. Among these they soon distinguished a moving +figure; but what it was, whether man or beast, they could not make +out. + +This moving figure was crawling down the bank. There was no cover to +afford concealment, and it was evident that he was trusting altogether +to the concealment of the darkness. It was a hazardous experiment, and +Mrs. Willoughby trembled in suspense. + +Minnie, however, did not tremble at all, nor was the suspense at all +painful. When Mrs. Willoughby first cautiously directed her attention +to it in a whisper, Minnie thought it was some animal. + +"Why, Kitty dear," she said, speaking back in a whisper, "why, it's an +animal; I wonder if the creature is a wild beast. I'm sure I think +it's very dangerous, and no doors or windows. But it's _always_ the +way. He wouldn't give me a chair; and so I dare say I shall be eaten +up by a bear before morning." + +Minnie gave utterance to this expectation without the slightest +excitement, just as though the prospect of becoming food for a bear +was one of the very commonest incidents of her life. + +"Oh, I don't think it's a bear." + +"Well, then, it's a tiger or a lion, or perhaps a wolf. I'm sure _I_ +don't see what difference it makes what one is eaten by, when one +_has_ to be eaten." + +"It's a man!" said Mrs. Willoughby, tremulously. + +"A man!--nonsense, Kitty darling. A man walks; he doesn't go on +all-fours, except when he is very, very small." + +"Hush! it's some one coming to help us. Watch him, Minnie dear. Oh, +how dangerous!" + +"Do you really think so?" said Minnie, with evident pleasure. "Now +that is really kind. But I wonder who it _can_ be?" + +Mrs. Willoughby squeezed her hand, and made no reply. She was watching +the slow and cautious movement of the shadowy figure. + +"He's coming nearer!" said she, tremulously. + +Minnie felt her sister's hand throb at the quick movement of her +heart, and heard her short, quick breathing. + +"Who _can_ it be, I wonder?" said Minnie, full of curiosity, but +without any excitement at all. + +"Oh, Minnie!" + +"What's the matter, darling?" + +"It's so terrible." + +"What?" + +"This suspense. Oh, I'm so afraid!" + +"Afraid! Why, I'm not afraid at all." + +"Oh! he'll be caught." + +"No, he won't," said Minnie, confidently. "I _knew_ he'd come. They +_always_ do. Don't be afraid that he'll be caught, or that he'll fail. +They _never_ fail. They always _will_ save me. Wait till your life has +been saved as often as mine has, Kitty darling. Oh, I expected it all! +I was thinking a little while ago he ought to be here soon." + +"He! Who?" + +"Why, any person; the person who is going to save me this time. I +don't know, of course, who he is; some horrid man, of course. And +then--oh dear!--I'll have it all over again. He'll carry me away on +his back, and through those wretched woods, and bump me against the +trees and things. Then he'll get me to the road, and put me on a +horrid old horse, and gallop away. And by that time it will be +morning. And then he'll propose. And so there'll be another. And I +don't know what I _shall_ do about it. Oh dear!" + +Mrs. Willoughby had not heard half of this. All her soul was intent +upon the figure outside. She only pressed her sister's hand, and gave +a warning "Hus-s-s-h!" + +"I know one thing I _do_ wish," said Minnie. + +Her sister made no reply. + +"I do wish it would turn out to be that nice, dear, good, kind Rufus +K. Gunn. I don't want any more of them. And I'm sure he's nicer than +this horrid Count, who wouldn't take the trouble to get me even a +chair. And yet he pretends to be fond of me." + +"Hus-s-s-h!" said her sister. + +But Minnie was irrepressible. + +"I don't want any horrid stranger. But, oh, Kitty darling, it would be +so awfully funny if he were to be caught! and then he _couldn't_ +propose, you know." + +By this time the figure had reached the house. Minnie peeped over and +looked down. Then she drew back her head and sighed. + +"Oh dear!" she said, in a plaintive tone. + +"What, darling?" + +"Why, Kitty darling, do you know he really looks a little like that +great, big, horrid man that ran with me down the volcano, and then +pretended he was my dear papa. And here he comes to save me again. Oh, +what _shall_ I do? Won't you pretend you're me, Kitty darling, and +please go yourself? Oh, ple-e-ease do!" + +But now Minnie was interrupted by two strong hands grasping the +window-sill. A moment after a shadowy head arose above it. Mrs. +Willoughby started back, but through the gloom she was able to +recognize the strongly marked face of Scone Dacres. + +For a moment he stared through the darkness. Then he flung his elbow +over. + +There arose a noise below. There was a rush. The figure disappeared +from the window. A furious struggle followed, in the midst of which +arose fierce oaths and deep breathings, and the sound of blows. Then +the struggle subsided, and they heard footsteps tramping heavily. They +followed the sound into the house. They heard men coming up the stairs +and into the hall outside. Then they all moved into, the front-room +opposite theirs. After a few minutes they heard the steps descending +the stairs. By this they judged that the prisoner had been taken to +that room which was on the other side of the hall and in the front of +the house. + +"There dies our last hope!" said Mrs. Willoughby, and burst into +tears. + +"I'm sure I don't see what you're crying about," said Minnie. "You +certainly oughtn't to want me to be carried off again by that person. +If he had me, he'd _never_ give me up--especially after saving me +twice." + +Mrs. Willoughby made no reply, and the sisters sat in silence for +nearly an hour. They were then aroused by the approach of footsteps +which entered the house; after which voices were heard below. + +Then some one ascended the stairs, and they saw the flicker of a +light. It was Girasole. + +He came into the room with a small lamp, holding his hand in front of +the flame. This lamp he set down in a corner out of the draught, and +then turned to the ladies. + +"Miladi," said Girasole, in a gentle voice, "I am ver pained to haf to +tella you dat it is necessaire for you to separat dis night--till +to-morra." + +"To separate?" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Only till to-morra, miladi. Den you sall be togeder foravva. But it +is now necessaire. Dere haf ben an attemp to a rescue. I mus guard +again dis--an' it mus be done by a separazion. If you are togeder you +might run. Dis man was almos up here. It was only chance dat I saw him +in time." + +"Oh, Sir," cried Mrs. Willoughby, "you can not--you will not separate +us. You can not have the heart to. I promise most solemnly that we +will not escape if you only leave us together." + +Girasole shook his head. + +"I can not," said he, firmly; "de mees is too precious. I dare not. If +you are prisonaire se will not try to fly, an' so I secure her de +more; but if you are togeder you will find some help. You will bribe +de men. I can not trust dem." + +"Oh, do not separate us. Tie us. Bind us. Fasten us with chains. +Fasten me with chains, but leave me with her." + +"Chains? nonsance; dat is impossibile. Chains? no, miladi. You sall be +treat beautiful. No chain, no; notin but affection--till to-morra, an' +den de mees sall be my wife. De priest haf come, an' it sall be +allaright to-morra, an' you sall be wit her again. An' now you haf to +come away; for if you do not be pleasant, I sall not be able to 'low +you to stay to-morra wit de mees when se become my Contessa." + +Mrs. Willoughby flung her arms about her sister, and clasped her in a +convulsive embrace. + +"Well, Kitty darling," said Minnie, "don't cry, or you'll make me cry +too. It's just what we might have expected, you know. He's been as +unkind as he could be about the chair, and of course he'll do all he +can to tease me. Don't cry, dear. You must go, I suppose, since that +horrid man talks and scolds so about it; only be sure to be back +early; but how I am _ever_ to pass the night here all alone and +standing up, I'm sure _I_ don't know." + +"Alone? Oh no," said Girasole. "Charming mees, you sall not be alone; +I haf guard for dat. I haf sent for a maid." + +"But I don't want any of your horrid old maids. I want my own maid, or +none at all." + +"Se sall be your own maid. I haf sent for her." + +"What, my own maid?--Dowlas?" + +"I am ver sorry, but it is not dat one. It is anoder--an Italian." + +"Well, I think that is _very_ unkind, when you _know_ I can't speak a +word of the language. But you _always_ do all you can to tease me. I +_wish_ I had never seen you." + +Girasole looked hurt. + +"Charming mees," said he, "I will lay down my life for you." + +"But I don't want you to lay down your life. I want Dowlas." + +"And you sall haf Dowlas to-morra. An' to-night you sall haf de +Italian maid." + +"Well, I suppose I must," said Minnie, resignedly. + +"Miladi," said Girasole, turning to Mrs. Willoughby, "I am ver sorry +for dis leetle accommodazion. De room where you mus go is de one where +I haf put de man dat try to safe you. He is tied fast. You mus promis +you will not loose him. Haf you a knife?" + +"No," said Mrs. Willoughby, in a scarce audible tone. + +"Do not mourn. You sall be able to talk to de prisonaire and get +consolazion. But come." + +With these words Girasole led the way out into the hall, and into the +front-room on the opposite side. He carried the lamp in his hand. Mrs. +Willoughby saw a figure lying at the other end of the room on the +floor. His face was turned toward them, but in the darkness she could +not see it plainly. Some straw was heaped up in the corner next her. + +"Dere," said Girasole, "is your bed. I am sorra. Do not be trouble." + +With this he went away. + +Mrs. Willoughby flung herself on her knees, and bowed her head and +wept convulsively. She heard the heavy step of Girasole as he went +down stairs. Her first impulse was to rush back to her sister. But she +dreaded discovery, and felt that disobedience would only make her fate +harder. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +FOUND AT LAST. + + +In a few moments Girasole came back and entered Minnie's room. He was +followed by a woman who was dressed in the garb of an Italian peasant +girl. Over her head she wore a hood to protect her from the night air, +the limp folds of which hung over her face. Minnie looked carelessly +at this woman and then at Girasole. + +"Charming mees," said Girasole, "I haf brought you a maid for dis +night. When we leaf dis you sall haf what maid you wis." + +"That horrid old fright!" said Minnie. "I don't want her." + +"You sall only haf her for dis night," said Girasole. "You will be +taken care for." + +"I suppose nobody cares for what _I_ want," said Minnie, "and I may as +well speak to the wall, for all the good it does." + +[Illustration: "ONE ARM WENT AROUND HER NECK."] + +Girasole smiled and bowed, and put his hand on his heart, and then +called down the stairs: + +"Padre Patricio!" + +A solid, firm step now sounded on the stairs, and in a few moments the +priest came up. Girasole led the way into Hawbury's room. The prisoner +lay on his side. He was in a deep sleep. Girasole looked in wonder at +the sleeper who was spending in this way the last hours of his life, +and then pointed to the coffin. + +"Here," said he, in Italian, "is the body. When the grave is dug they +will tell you. You must stay here. You will not be afraid to be with +the dead." + +The priest smiled. + +Girasole now retreated and went down stairs. + +Soon all was still. + +The Italian woman had been standing where she had stopped ever since +she first came into the room. Minnie had not paid any attention to +her, but at last she noticed this. + +"I _wish_ you wouldn't stand there in that way. You really make me +feel quite nervous. And what with the dark, and not having any light, +and losing poor dear Kitty, and not having any chair to sit upon, +really one's life is scarce worth having. But all this is thrown away, +as you can't speak English--and how horrid it is to have no one to +talk to." + +The woman made no reply, but with a quiet, stealthy step she drew near +to Minnie. + +"What do you want? You horrid creature, keep away," said Minnie, +drawing back in some alarm. + +"Minnie dear!" said the woman. "H-s-s-s-h!" she added, in a low +whisper. + +Minnie started. + +"Who are you?" she whispered. + +One arm went around her neck, and another hand went over her mouth, +and the woman drew nearer to her. + +"Not a word. H-s-s-s-h! I've risked my life. The priest brought me." + +"Why, my darling, darling love of an Ethel!" said Minnie, who was +overwhelmed with surprise. + +"H-s-s-s-h!" + +"But how can I h-s-s-s-h when I'm so perfectly frantic with delight? +Oh, you darling pet!" + +"H-s-s-s-h! Not another word. I'll be discovered and lost." + +"Well, dear, I'll speak very, very low. But how did you come here?" + +"The priest brought me." + +"The priest?" + +"Yes. He was sent for, you know; and I thought I could help you, and +he is going to save you." + +"He! Who?" + +"The priest, you know." + +"The priest! Is he a Roman Catholic priest, Ethel darling?" + +"Yes, dear." + +"And _he_ is going to save me this time, is he?" + +"I hope so, dear." + +"Oh, how perfectly lovely that is! and it was so kind and thoughtful +in you! Now this is really quite nice, for you know I've _longed_ so +to be saved by a priest. These horrid men, you know, all go and +propose the moment they save one's life; but a priest _can't_, you +know--no, not if he saved one a thousand times over. Can he now, Ethel +darling?" + +"Oh no!" said Ethel, in a little surprise. "But stop, darling. You +really must _not_ say another word--no, not so much as a whisper--for +we certainly _will_ be heard; and don't notice what I do, or the +priest either, for it's very, very important, dear. But you keep as +still as a little mouse, and wait till we are all ready." + +"Well, Ethel dear, I will; but it's awfully funny to see you here--and +oh, _such_ a funny figure as you are!" + +"H-s-s-s-h!" + +Minnie relapsed into silence now, and Ethel withdrew near to the door, +where she stood and listened. All was still. Down stairs there was no +light and no sound. In the hall above she could see nothing, and could +not tell whether any guards were there or not. + +Hawbury's room was at the back of the house, as has been said, and the +door was just at the top of the stairs. The door where Ethel was +standing was there too, and was close by the other, so that she could +listen and hear the deep breathing of the sleeper. One or two +indistinct sounds escaped him from time to time, and this was all that +broke the deep stillness. + +She waited thus for nearly an hour, during which all was still, and +Minnie said not a word. Then a shadowy figure appeared near her at +Hawbury's door, and a hand touched her shoulder. + +Not a word was said. + +Ethel stole softly and noiselessly into Hawbury's room, where the +priest was. She could see the two windows, and the priest indicated to +her the position of the sleeper. + +Slowly and cautiously she stole over toward him. + +She reached the place. + +She knelt by his side, and bent low over him. Her lips touched his +forehead. + +The sleeper moved slightly, and murmured some words. + +"All fire," he murmured; "fire--and flame. It is a furnace before us. +She must not die." + +Then he sighed. + +Ethel's heart beat wildly. The words that he spoke told her where his +thoughts were wandering. She bent lower; tears fell from her eyes and +upon his face. + +"My darling," murmured the sleeper, "we will land here. I will cook +the fish. How pale! Don't cry, dearest." + +The house was all still. Not a sound arose. Ethel still bent down and +listened for more of these words which were so sweet to her. + +"Ethel!" murmured the sleeper, "where are you? Lost! lost!" + +A heavy sigh escaped him, which found an echo in the heart of the +listener. She touched his forehead gently with one hand, and +whispered, + +"My lord!" + +Hawbury started. + +"What's this?" he murmured. + +"A friend," said Ethel. + +At this Hawbury became wide awake. + +"Who are you?" he whispered, in a trembling voice. "For God's +sake--oh, for God's sake, speak again! tell me!" + +"Harry," said Ethel. + +Hawbury recognized the voice at once. + +A slight cry escaped him, which was instantly suppressed, and then a +torrent of whispered words followed. + +"Oh, my darling! my darling! my darling! What is this? How is this? Is +it a dream? Oh, am I awake? Is it you? Oh, my darling! my darling! Oh, +if my arms were but free!" + +Ethel bent over him, and passed her arm around him till she felt the +cords that bound him. She had a sharp knife ready, and with this she +cut the cords. Hawbury raised himself, without waiting for his feet to +be freed, and caught Ethel in his freed arms in a silent embrace, and +pressed her over and over again to his heart. + +Ethel with difficulty extricated herself. + +"There's no time to lose," said she. "I came to save you. Don't waste +another moment; it will be too late. Oh, do not! Oh, wait!" she added, +as Hawbury made another effort to clasp her in his arms. "Oh, do what +I say, for my sake!" + +She felt for his feet, and cut the rest of his bonds. + +"What am I to do?" asked Hawbury, clasping her close, as though he was +afraid that he would lose her again. + +"Escape." + +"Well, come! I'll leap with you from the window." + +"You can't. The house and all around swarms with brigands. They watch +us all closely." + +"I'll fight my way through them." + +"Then you'll be killed, and I'll die." + +"Well, I'll do whatever you say." + +"Listen, then. You must escape alone." + +"What! and leave you? Never!" + +"I'm safe. I'm disguised, and a priest is with me as my protector." + +"How can you be safe in such a place as this?" + +"I am safe. Do not argue. There is no time to lose. The priest brought +me here, and will take me away." + +"But there are others here. I can't leave them. Isn't Miss Fay a +prisoner? and another lady?" + +"Yes; but the priest and I will be able, I hope, to liberate them. We +have a plan." + +"But can't I go with you and help you?" + +"Oh no! it's impossible. You could not. We are going to take them away +in disguise. We have a dress. You couldn't be disguised." + +"And _must_ I go alone?" + +"You must." + +"I'll do it, then. Tell me what it is. But oh, my darling! how can I +leave you, and in such a place as this?" + +"I assure you I am not in the slightest danger." + +"I shall feel terribly anxious." + +"H-s-s-s-h! no more of this. Listen now." + +"Well?" + +Ethel bent lower, and whispered in his ear, in even lower tones than +ever, the plan which she had contrived. + + + + +CHAPTER XXX. + +A DESPERATE PLAN. + + +Ethel's plan was hastily revealed. The position was exceedingly +perilous; time was short, and this was the only way of escape. + +It was the priest who had concocted it, and he had thought of it as +the only plan by which Hawbury's rescue could be effected. This +ingenious Irishman had also formed another plan for the rescue of +Minnie and her sister, which was to be attempted in due course of +time. + +Now no ordinary mode of escape was possible for Hawbury. A strict +watch was kept. The priest had noticed on his approach that guards +were posted in different directions in such a way that no fugitive +from the house could elude them. He had also seen that the guard +inside the house was equally vigilant. To leap from the window and run +for it would be certain death, for that was the very thing which the +brigands anticipated. To make a sudden rush down the stairs was not +possible, for at the door below there were guards; and there, most +vigilant of all, was Girasole himself. + +The decision of the Irish priest was correct, as has been proved in +the case of Dacres, who, in spite of all his caution, was observed and +captured. Of this the priest knew nothing, but judged from what he +himself had seen on his approach to the house. + +The plan of the priest had been hastily communicated to Ethel, who +shared his convictions and adopted his conclusions. She also had +noticed the vigilance with which the guard had been kept up, and only +the fact that a woman had been sent for and was expected with the +priest had preserved her from discovery and its consequences. As it +was, however, no notice was taken of her, and her pretended character +was assumed to be her real one. Even Girasole had scarcely glanced at +her. A village peasant was of no interest in his eyes. His only +thought was of Minnie, and the woman that the priest brought was only +used as a desperate effort to show a desire for her comfort. After he +had decided to separate the sisters the woman was of more importance; +but he had nothing to say to her, and thus Ethel had effected her +entrance to Minnie's presence in safety, with the result that has been +described. + +The priest had been turning over many projects in his brain, but at +last one suggested itself which had originated in connection with the +very nature of his errand. + +One part of that errand was that a man should be conveyed out of the +house and carried away and left in a certain place. Now the man who +was thus to be carried out was a dead man, and the certain place to +which he was to be borne and where he was to be left was the grave; +but these stern facts did not at all deter the Irish priest from +trying to make use of this task that lay before him for the benefit of +Hawbury. + +Here was a problem. A prisoner anxious for escape, and a dead man +awaiting burial; how were these two things to be exchanged so that the +living man might pass out without going to the grave? + +The Irish priest puzzled and pondered and grew black in the face with +his efforts to get to the solution of this problem, and at length +succeeded--to his own satisfaction, at any rate. What is more, when he +explained his plan to Ethel, she adopted it. She started, it is true; +she shuddered, she recoiled from it at first, but finally she adopted +it. Furthermore, she took it upon herself to persuade Hawbury to fall +in with it. + +So much with regard to Hawbury. For Minnie and her sister the +indefatigable priest had already concocted a plan before leaving home. +This was the very commonplace plan of a disguise. It was to be an old +woman's apparel, and he trusted to the chapter of accidents to make +the plan a success. He noticed with pleasure that some women were at +the place, and thought that the prisoners might be confounded with +them. + +When at length Ethel had explained the plan to Hawbury he made a few +further objections, but finally declared himself ready to carry it +out. + +The priest now began to put his project into execution. He had brought +a screw-driver with him, and with this he took out the screws from the +coffin one by one, as quietly as possible. + +Then the lid was lifted off, and Hawbury arose and helped the priest +to transfer the corpse from the coffin to the straw. They then put the +corpse on its side, with the face to the wall, and bound the hands +behind it, and the feet also. The priest then took Hawbury's +handkerchief and bound it around the head of the corpse. One or two +rugs that lay near were thrown over the figure, so that it at length +looked like a sleeping man. + +Hawbury now got into the coffin and lay down on his back at full +length. The priest had brought some bits of wood with him, and these +he put on the edge of the coffin in such a way that the lid would be +kept off at a distance of about a quarter of an inch. Through this +opening Hawbury could have all the air that was requisite for +breathing. + +Then Ethel assisted the priest to lift the lid on. + +Thus far all had been quiet; but now a slight noise was heard below. +Some men were moving. Ethel was distracted with anxiety, but the +priest was as cool as a clock. He whispered to her to go back to the +room where she belonged. + +"Will you be able to finish it?" she asked. + +"Sure an' I will--only don't you be afther stayin' here any longer." + +At this Ethel stole back to Minnie's room, and stood listening with a +quick-beating heart. + +But the priest worked coolly and dextrously. He felt for the holes to +which the screws belonged, and succeeded in putting in two of them. + +Then there was a noise in the hall below. + +The priest began to put in the third screw. + +There were footsteps on the stairs. + +He screwed on. + +Nearer and nearer came the steps. + +The priest still kept to his task. + +At last a man entered the room. Ethel, who had heard all, was faint +with anxiety. She was afraid that the priest had not finished his +task. + +Her fears were groundless. + +Just as the foremost of the men entered the room the priest finished +screwing, and stood by the coffin, having slipped the screw-driver +into his pocket, as calm as though nothing had happened. Three of the +screws were in, and that was as many as were needed. + +The men brought no light with them, and this circumstance was in the +priest's favor. + +"You've been keeping me waiting long," said the priest, in Italian. + +"You may be glad it wasn't longer," said one of them, in a sullen +tone. "Where is it?" + +"Here," said the priest. + +The men gathered around the coffin, and stooped down over it, one at +each corner. Then they raised it up. Then they carried it out; and +soon the heavy steps of the men were heard as they went down the +stairs with their burden. + +Ethel still stood watching and listening. + +As she listened she heard some one ascending the stairs. New terror +arose. Something was wrong, and all would be discovered. But the man +who came up had no light, and that was one comfort. She could not see +who it was. + +The man stopped for a moment in front of Minnie's door, and stood so +close to her that she heard his breathing. It was quick and heavy, +like the breathing of a very tired or a very excited man. Then he +turned away and went to the door of the front-room opposite. Here he +also stood for a few moments. + +All was still. + +Then he came back, and entered Hawbury's room. + +Now the crisis had come--the moment when all might be discovered. And +if so, they all were lost. Ethel bent far forward and tried to peer +through the gloom. She saw the dark figure of the new-comer pass by +one of the windows, and by the outline she knew that it was Girasole. +He passed on into the shadow, and toward the place where the straw +was. She could not see him any more. + +Girasole stepped noiselessly and cautiously, as though fearful of +waking the sleeper. At every step he paused and listened. The silence +reassured him. + +He drew nearer and nearer, his left hand groping forward, and his +right hand holding a pistol. His movements were perfectly noiseless. + +His own excitement was now intense, his heart throbbed fiercely and +almost painfully as he approached his victim. + +At last he reached the spot, and knelt on one knee. He listened for a +moment. There was no noise and no movement on the part of the figure +before him. + +In the gloom he could see the outline of that figure plainly. It lay +on its side, curled up in the most comfortable attitude which could be +assumed, where arms and legs were bound. + +"How soundly he sleeps!" thought Girasole. + +He paused for a moment, and seemed to hesitate; but it was only for a +moment. Then, summing up his resolution, he held his pistol close to +the head of the figure, and fired. + +[Illustration: "HE HELD HIS PISTOL CLOSE TO THE HEAD, AND FIRED."] + +The loud report echoed through the house. A shriek came from Minnie's +room, and a cry came from Mrs. Willoughby, who sprang toward the hall. +But Girasole came out and intercepted her. + +"Eet ees notin," said he, in a tremulous voice. "Eet ees all ovair. +Eet ees only a false alarm." + +Mrs. Willoughby retreated to her room, and Minnie said nothing. As for +Ethel, the suspense with her had passed away as the report of the +pistol came to her ears. + +Meanwhile the coffin was carried out of the house, and the men, +together with the priest, walked on toward a place further up the +shore and on the outskirts of the woods. They reached a place where a +grave was dug. + +At this moment a pistol-shot sounded. The priest stopped, and the men +stopped also. They did not understand it. The priest did not know the +cause of the shot, but seeing the alarm of the men he endeavored to +excite their fears. One of the men went back, and was cursed by +Girasole for his pains. So he returned to the grave, cursing every +body. + +The coffin was now lowered into the grave, and the priest urged the +men to go away and let him finish the work; but they refused. The +fellows seemed to have some affection for their dead comrade, and +wished to show it by putting him underground, and doing the last +honors. So the efforts of the Irish priest, though very well meant, +and very urgent, and very persevering, did not meet with that success +which he anticipated. + +Suddenly he stopped in the midst of the burial service, which he was +prolonging to the utmost. + +"Hark!" he cried, in Italian. + +"What?" they asked. + +"It's a gun! It's an alarm!" + +"There's no gun, and no alarm," said they. + +All listened, but there was no repetition of the sound, and the priest +went on. + +He had to finish it. + +He stood trembling and at his wit's end. Already the men began to +throw in the earth. + +But now there came a real alarm. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI. + +DISCOVERED. + + +The report of the pistol had startled Minnie, and for a moment had +greatly agitated her. The cry of Mrs. Willoughby elicited a response +from her to the effect that all was right, and would, no doubt, have +resulted in a conversation, had it not been prevented by Girasole. + +Minnie then relapsed into silence for a time, and Ethel took a seat by +her side on the floor, for Minnie would not go near the straw, and +then the two interlocked their arms in an affectionate embrace. + +"Ethel darling," whispered Minnie, "do you know I'm beginning to get +awfully tired of this?" + +"I should think so, poor darling!" + +"If I only had some place to sit on," said Minnie, still reverting to +her original grievance, "it wouldn't be so very bad, you know. I could +put up with not having a bed, or a sofa, or that sort of thing, you +know; but really I must say not to have any kind of a seat seems to me +to be very, very inconsiderate, to say the least of it." + +"Poor darling!" said Ethel again. + +"And now do you know, Ethel dear, I'm beginning to feel as though I +should really like to run away from this place, if I thought that +horrid man wouldn't see me?" + +"Minnie darling," said Ethel, "that's the very thing I came for, you +know." + +"Oh yes, I know! And that dear, nice, good, kind, delightful priest! +Oh, it was so nice of you to think of a priest, Ethel dear! I'm so +grateful! But when is he coming?" + +"Soon, I hope. But _do_ try not to talk so." + +"But I'm only whispering." + +"Yes, but your whispers are too loud, and I'm afraid they'll hear." + +"Well, I'll try to keep still; but it's so _awfully_ hard, you know, +when one has _so_ much to say, Ethel dear." + +Minnie now remained silent for about five minutes. + +"How did you say you were going to take me away?" she asked at length. + +"In disguise," said Ethel. + +"But _what_ disguise?" + +"In an old woman's dress--but hu-s-s-s-sh!" + +"But I don't _want_ to be dressed up in an old woman's clothes; they +make me _such_ a figure. Why, I'd be a perfect fright." + +"Hu-s-s-s-sh! Dear, dear Minnie, you're talking too loud. They'll +certainly hear us," said Ethel, in a low, frightened whisper. + +"But _do_--_do_ promise you won't take me in an old woman's clothes!" + +"Oh, there--there it is again!" said Ethel. "Dear, dear Minnie, +there's some one listening." + +"Well, I don't see what harm there is in what I'm saying. I only +wanted--" + +Here there was a movement on the stairs just outside. Ethel had heard +a sound of that kind two or three times, and it had given her alarm; +but now Minnie herself heard it, and stopped speaking. + +And now a voice sounded from the stairs. Some Italian words were +spoken, and seemed to be addressed to them. Of course they could make +no reply. The words were repeated, with others, and the speaker seemed +to be impatient. Suddenly it flashed across Ethel's mind that the +speaker was Girasole, and that the words were addressed to her. + +Her impression was correct, and the speaker was Girasole. He had heard +the sibilant sounds of the whispering, and, knowing that Minnie could +not speak Italian, it had struck him as being a very singular thing +that she should be whispering. Had her sister joined her? He thought +he would go up and see. So he went up softly, and the whispering still +went on. He therefore concluded that the "Italian woman" was not doing +her duty, and that Mrs. Willoughby had joined her sister. This he +would not allow; but as he had already been sufficiently harsh he did +not wish to be more so, and therefore he called to the "Italian +woman." + +"Hallo, you woman there! didn't I tell you not to let the ladies speak +to one another?" + +Of course no answer was given, so Girasole grew more angry still, and +cried out again, more imperatively: + +"Why do you not answer me? Where are you? Is this the way you watch?" + +Still there was no answer. Ethel heard, and by this time knew what his +suspicion was; but she could neither do nor say any thing. + +"Come down here at once, you hag!" + +But the "hag" did not come down, nor did she give any answer. The +"hag" was trembling violently, and saw that all was lost. If the +priest were only here! If she could only have gone and returned with +him! What kept him? + +Girasole now came to the top of the stairs, and spoke to Minnie. + +"Charming mees, are you awake?" + +"Yes," said Minnie. + +"Ees your sistaire wit you?" + +"No. How can _she_ be with me, I should like to know, when you've gone +and put her in some horrid old room?" + +"Ah! not wit you? Who are you whisperin' to, den?" + +Minnie hesitated. + +"To my maid," said she. + +[Illustration: "WHAT DIT YOU COME FOR?"--"FOR HER."] + +"Does de maid spik Inglis?" asked Girasole. + +"Yes," said Minnie. + +"Ah! I did not know eet. I mus have a look at de contadina who spiks +Inglis. Come here, Italiana. You don't spik Italiano, I tink. Come +here." + +Ethel rose to her feet. + +Girasole ran down, and came back after a few minutes with a lamp. +Concealment was useless, and so Ethel did not cover her face with the +hood. It had fallen off when she was sitting by Minnie, and hung +loosely down her shoulders from the strings which were around her +neck. Girasole recognized her at one glance. + +"Ah!" said he; and then he stood thinking. As for Ethel, now that the +suspense was over and the worst realized, her agitation ceased. She +stood looking at him with perfect calm. + +"What dit you come for?" he asked. + +"For _her_," said Ethel, making a gesture toward Minnie. + +"What could you do wit her?" + +"I could see her and comfort her." + +"Ah! an' you hope to make her escape. Ha, ha! ver well. You mus not +complain eef you haf to soffair de consequence. Aha! an' so de priest +bring you here--ha?" + +Ethel was silent. + +"Ah! you fear to say--you fear you harma de priest--ha?" + +Minnie had thus far said nothing, but now she rose and looked at +Girasole, and then at Ethel. Then she twined one arm around Ethel's +waist, and turned her large, soft, childish eyes upon Girasole. + +"What do you mean," she said, "by _always_ coming here and teasing, +and worrying, and firing off pistols, and frightening people? I'm sure +it was horrid enough for you to make me come to this wretched place, +when you _know_ I don't like it, without annoying me so. Why did you +go and take away poor darling Kitty? And what do you mean now, pray, +by coming here? I never was treated so unkindly in my life. I did not +think that _any one_ could be so very, very rude." + +"Charming mees," said Girasole, with a deprecating air, "it pains me +to do any ting dat you do not like." + +"It don't pain you," said Minnie--"it don't pain you _at all_. You're +_always_ teasing me. You _never_ do what I want you to. You wouldn't +even give me a chair." + +"Alas, carissima mia, to-morra you sall haf all! But dis place is so +remote." + +"It is _not_ remote," said Minnie. "It's close by roads and villages +and things. Why, here is Ethel; she has been in a village where there +are houses, and people, and as many chairs as she wants." + +"Oh, mees, eef you will but wait an' be patient--eef you will but wait +an' see how tender I will be, an' how I lof you." + +"You _don't_ love me," said Minnie, "one bit. Is this love--not to +give me a chair? I have been standing up till I am nearly ready to +drop. And you have nothing better than some wretched promises. I don't +care for to-morrow; I want to be comfortable to-day. You won't let me +have a single thing. And now you come to tease me again, and frighten +poor, dear, darling Ethel." + +"Eet ees because she deceif me--she come wit a plot--she steal in +here. Eef she had wait, all would be well." + +"You mustn't _dare_ to touch her," said Minnie, vehemently. "You +_shall_ leave her here. She _shall_ stay with me." + +"I am ver pain--oh, very; but oh, my angel--sweet--charming mees--eet +ees dangaire to my lof. She plot to take you away. An' all my life is +in you. Tink what I haf to do to gain you!" + +Minnie looked upon Girasole, with her large eyes dilated with +excitement and resentment. + +"You are a horrid, horrid man," she exclaimed. "I _hate_ you." + +"Oh, my angel," pleaded Girasole, with deep agitation, "take back dat +word." + +"I'm sorry you ever saved my life," said Minnie, very calmly; "and I'm +sorry I ever saw you. I _hate_ you." + +"Ah, you gif me torment. You do not mean dis. You say once you lof +me." + +"_I_ did not say I loved _you_. It was _you_ who said you loved _me_. +_I_ never liked _you_. And I don't really see how I _could_ be engaged +to you when I was engaged to another man before. He is the only one +whom I recognize now. I don't know you at all. For I couldn't be bound +to two men; could I, Ethel dear?" + +Ethel did not reply to this strange question. + +But upon Girasole its effect was very great. The manner of Minnie had +been excessively perplexing to him all through this eventful day. If +she had stormed and gone into a fine frenzy he could have borne it. It +would have been natural. But she was perfectly unconcerned, and her +only complaint was about trifles. Such trifles too! He felt ashamed to +think that he could have subjected to such annoyances a woman whom he +so dearly loved. And now he was once more puzzled. Minnie confronted +him, looking at him fixedly, without one particle of fear, with her +large, earnest, innocent eyes fastened upon his--with the calm, cool +gaze, of some high-minded child rebuking a younger child-companion. +This was a proceeding which he was not prepared for. Besides, the +child-innocence of her face and of her words actually daunted him. She +seemed so fearless, because she was so innocent. She became a greater +puzzle than ever. He had never seen much of her before, and this day's +experience of her had actually daunted him and confounded him. And +what was the worst to him of all her words was her calm and simple +declaration, "I hate you!" + +"Yes," said Minnie, thoughtfully, "it must be so; and dear Kitty would +have said the same, only she was so awfully prejudiced. And I always +thought he was so nice. Yes, I think I really must be engaged to him. +But as for you," she said, turning full upon Girasole, "I hate you!" + +Girasole's face grew white with rage and jealousy. + +"Aha!" said he. "You lof _him_. Aha! An' you were engage to _him_. +Aha!" + +"Yes, I really think so." + +"Aha! Well, listen," cried Girasole, in a hoarse voice--"listen. +He--he--de rival--de one you say you are engage--he is dead!" + +And with this he fastened upon Minnie his eyes that now gleamed with +rage, and had an expression in them that might have made Ethel quiver +with horror, but she did not, for she knew that Girasole was mistaken +on that point. + +As for Minnie, she was not at all impressed by his fierce looks. + +"I don't think you really know what you're talking about," said she; +"and you're very, very unpleasant. At any rate, you are altogether in +the wrong when you say he is dead." + +"Dead! He is dead! I swear it!" cried Girasole, whose manner was a +little toned down by Minnie's coolness. + +"This is getting to be awfully funny, you know," said Minnie. "I +really think we don't know what one another is talking about. I'm sure +_I_ don't, and I'm sure _he_ don't, either; does he, Ethel darling?" + +"De Inglis milor," said Girasole. "He is dead." + +"Well, but I don't mean him at all," said Minnie. + +"Who--who?" gasped Girasole. "Who--who--who?" + +"Why, the person I mean," said Minnie, very placidly, "is Rufus K. +Gunn." + +Girasole uttered something like a howl, and retreated. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII. + +UNDER ARREST. + + +Girasole retreated half-way down the stairs, and then he stopped for +some time and thought. Then he came back and motioned to Ethel. + +"You must come," he said, gruffly. + +"You shall not," said Minnie. + +"No, no, darling," said Ethel; "I had better go. It will only get you +into fresh trouble. And I'll be back as soon as I can." + +"Oh, how I _hate_ you!" said Minnie to Girasole. The latter said +nothing. Ethel kissed Minnie, and descended the stairs after him. + +The Irish priest was standing over the grave bathed in a cold +perspiration, his heart throbbing violently, every new thud of the +earth, as it sounded violently against the coffin, sending a cold +chill of horror through every nerve. Already enough earth had been +thrown to cover three-quarters of the lid, and at the foot it was +heaped up some distance. He tried to frame some excuse to get the men +away. His brain whirled; his mind was confused; his thoughts refused +to be collected. + +And now, in the midst of this, the attention of all was attracted by a +loud stern voice, which sounded from some one near. The priest looked +around. The men stopped shoveling, and turned to see the cause of the +noise. + +Girasole was seen approaching, and was already near enough to be +distinguished. Behind him followed a female form. At this sight the +priest's mind misgave him. + +Girasole came up, and now the priest saw that the female was no other +than Ethel. + +"Where is this priest?" asked Girasole, angrily, speaking, of course, +in Italian. + +The priest advanced. + +"I am here," said he, with quiet dignity. + +At this change in the state of affairs the priest regained his +presence of mind. The cessation in the work gave him relief, and +enabled him to recall his scattered and confused thoughts. The men +stood looking at the speakers, and listening, leaning on their +shovels. + +"You were sent for?" + +"Yes." + +"And a maid?" + +"Yes." + +"You brought this lady?" + +"Yes." + +"You put her in disguise; you passed her off as an Italian?" + +"Yes." + +The priest made no attempt at denial or equivocation. He knew that +this would be useless. He waited for an opportunity to excuse himself, +and to explain rather than to deny. But every answer of his only +served to increase the fury of Girasole, who seemed determined to +visit upon the head of the priest and Ethel the rage that he felt at +his last interview with Minnie. + +"Then why," cried Girasole, "did you try to trick us? Don't you know +the punishment we give to spies and traitors?" + +"I have nothing to do with spies and traitors." + +"You are one yourself." + +"I am not." + +"You lie!" + +"I do not," said the priest, mildly. "Hear me, and let me tell my +story, and you will see that I am not a traitor; or, if you don't wish +to listen, then question me." + +"There is but one question. What made you bring this lady?" + +"That is simply answered," said the priest, with unfaltering calmness. +"This lady and her friends arrived at my village and claimed +hospitality. They were in distress. Some of their friends had been +taken from them. A message came from you requesting my presence, and +also a lady's-maid. There was no stipulation about the kind of one. +This lady was the intimate friend of the captive, and entreated me to +take her, so that she should see her friend, and comfort her, and +share her captivity. I saw no harm in the wish. She proposed to become +a lady's-maid. I saw no harm in that." + +"Why did she disguise herself?" + +"So as to pass without trouble. She didn't want to be delayed. She +wanted to see her friends as soon as possible. If you had questioned +her, you would no doubt have let her pass." + +"I would, no doubt, have done nothing of the kind." + +"I don't see any objection," said the priest. + +"Objection? She is a spy!" + +"A spy? Of what, pray?" + +"She came to help her friend to escape." + +"To escape? How could she possibly help her to escape? Do you think it +so easy to escape from this place?" + +Girasole was silent. + +"Do you think a young lady, who has never been out of the care of her +friends before, could do much to assist a friend like herself in an +escape?" + +"She might." + +"But how? This is not the street of a city. That house is watched, I +think. There seem to be a few men in these woods, if I am not +mistaken. Could this young lady help her friend to elude all these +guards? Why, you know very well that she could not." + +"Yes; but then there is--" + +"Who?" + +"Yourself." + +"Myself?" + +"Yes." + +"What of me?" + +"What do I know about your designs?" + +"What designs could _I_ have? Do you think _I_ could plan an escape?" + +"Why not?" + +"Why not? What! living here close beside you? _I_ be a traitor? _I_, +with my life at your mercy at all times--with my throat within such +easy reach of any assassin who might choose to revenge my treachery?" + +"We are not assassins," said Girasole, angrily. + +"And I am not a traitor," rejoined the priest, mildly. + +[Illustration: UNDER GUARD.] + +Girasole was silent, and stood in thought. The men at the grave had +heard every word of this conversation. Once they laughed in scorn when +the priest alluded to the absurdity of a young girl escaping. It was +too ridiculous. Their sympathies were evidently with the priest. The +charge against him could not be maintained. + +"Well," said Girasole at length, "I don't trust you. You may be +traitors, after all. I will have you guarded, and if I find out any +thing that looks like treason, by Heaven I will have your life, old +man, even if you should be the Holy Father himself; and as to the +lady--well, I will find plenty of ways," he added, with a sneer, "of +inflicting on her a punishment commensurable with her crime. Here, you +men, come along with me," he added, looking at the men by the grave. + +"But we want to finish poor Antonio's grave," remonstrated one of the +men. + +"Bah! he'll keep," said Girasole, with a sneer. + +"Can't one of us stay?" asked the man. + +"No, not one; I want you all. If they are traitors, they are deep +ones. They must be guarded; and, mind you, if they escape, you shall +suffer." + +With these words he led the way, and the priest and Ethel followed +him. After these came the men, who had thrown down their shovels +beside the grave. They all walked on in silence, following Girasole, +who led the way to a place beyond the grave, and within view of one of +the fires formerly alluded to. The place was about half-way between +the grave and the fire. It was a little knoll bare of trees, and from +it they could be seen by those at the nearest fire. Here Girasole +paused, and, with some final words of warning to the guards, he turned +and took his departure. + +The priest sat down upon the grass, and urged Ethel to do the same. +She followed his advice, and sat down by his side. The guards sat +around them so as to encircle them, and, mindful of Girasole's charge, +they kept their faces turned toward them, so as to prevent even the +very thought of flight. The priest addressed a few mild parental words +to the men, who gave him very civil responses, but relaxed not a +particle of their vigilance. + +In the priest's mind there was still some anxiety, but much greater +hope than he had dared to have for some time. He remembered that the +coffin was not all covered over, and hoped that the inmate might be +able to breathe. The fact that the work had been so unexpectedly +interrupted was one which filled him with joy, and gave rise to the +best hopes. The only offset to all this was his own captivity, but +that was a very serious one. Besides, he knew that his life hung upon +a thread. Before the next day Girasole would certainly discover all, +and in that case he was a doomed man. But his nature was of a kind +that could not borrow trouble, and so the fact of the immediate safety +of Hawbury was of far more importance, and attracted far more of his +thoughts, than his own certain but more remote danger. + +As for Ethel, she was now a prey to the deepest anxiety. All was +discovered except the mere fact of Hawbury's removal, and how long +that would remain concealed she could not know. Every moment she +expected to hear the cry of those who might discover the exchange. And +Hawbury, so long lost, so lately found--Hawbury, whom she had +suspected of falsity so long and so long avoided, who now had proved +himself so constant and so true--what was his fate? She had gazed with +eyes of horror at that grave wherein he lay, and had seen the men +shoveling in the earth as she came up. The recollection of this filled +her with anguish. Had they buried him?--how deep was the earth that +lay over him?--could there, indeed, be any hope? + +All depended on the priest. She hoped that he had prevented things +from going too far. She had seen him watching the grave, and +motionless. What did that inactivity mean? Was it a sign that Hawbury +was safe, or was it merely because he could not do any thing? + +She was distracted by such fearful thoughts as these. Her heart once +more throbbed with those painful pulsations which she had felt when +approaching Hawbury. For some time she sat supporting her agony as +best she could, and not daring to ask the priest, for fear their +guards might suspect the truth, or perhaps understand her words. + +But at last she could bear it no longer. + +She touched the priest's arm as he sat beside her, without looking at +him. + +The priest returned the touch. + +"Is he safe?" she asked, in a tremulous voice, which was scarce +audible from grief and anxiety. + +"He is," said the priest. + +And then, looking at the man before him, he added immediately, in an +unconcerned tone, + +"She wants to know what time it is, and I told her two o'clock. That's +right, isn't it?" + +"About right," said the man. + +Now that was a lie, but whether it was justifiable or not may be left +to others to decide. + +As for Ethel, an immense load of anxiety was lifted off her mind, and +she began to breathe more freely. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII. + +THE DEMON WIFE. + + +When Dacres was overpowered by his assailants no mercy was shown him. +His hands were bound tight behind him, and kicks and blows were +liberally bestowed during the operation. Finally, he was pushed and +dragged into the house, and up stairs to the room already mentioned. +There he was still further secured by a tight rope around his ankles, +after which he was left to his own meditations. + +Gloomy and bitter and fierce, indeed, were those meditations. His body +was covered with bruises, and though no bones were broken, yet his +pain was great. In addition to this the cords around his wrists and +ankles were very tight, and his veins seemed swollen to bursting. It +was difficult to get an easy position, and he could only lie on his +side or on his face. These bodily pains only intensified the +fierceness of his thoughts and made them turn more vindictively than +ever upon the subject of his wife. + +She was the cause of all this, he thought. She had sacrificed every +thing to her love for her accursed paramour. For this she had betrayed +him, and her friends, and the innocent girl who was her companion. All +the malignant feelings which had filled his soul through the day now +swelled within him, till he was well-nigh mad. Most intolerable of all +was his position now--the baffled enemy. He had come as the avenger, +he had come as the destroyer; but he had been entrapped before he had +struck his blow, and here he was now lying, defeated, degraded, and +humiliated! No doubt he would be kept to afford sport to his +enemy--perhaps even his wife might come to gloat over his sufferings, +and feast her soul with the sight of his ruin. Over such thoughts as +these he brooded, until at last he had wrought himself into something +like frenzy, and with the pain that he felt, and the weariness that +followed the fatigues of that day, these thoughts might finally have +brought on madness, had they gone on without any thing to disturb +them. + +But all these thoughts and ravings were destined to come to a full and +sudden stop, and to be changed to others of a far different character. +This change took place when Girasole, after visiting the ladies, came, +with Mrs. Willoughby, to his room. As Dacres lay on the floor he heard +the voice of the Italian, and the faint, mournful, pleading tones of a +woman's voice, and, finally, he saw the flash of a light, and knew +that the Italian was coming to his room, and perhaps this woman also. +He held his breath in suspense. What did it mean? The tone of Girasole +was not the tone of love. The light drew nearer, and the footsteps +too--one a heavy footfall, the tread of a man; the other lighter, the +step of a woman. He waited almost breathless. + +At last she appeared. There she was before him, and with the Italian; +but oh, how changed from that demon woman of his fancies, who was to +appear before him with his enemy and gloat over his sufferings! Was +there a trace of a fiend in that beautiful and gentle face? Was there +thought of joy or exultation over him in that noble and mournful lady, +whose melancholy grace and tearful eyes now riveted his gaze? Where +was the foul traitor who had done to death her husband and her friend? +Where was the miscreant who had sacrificed all to a guilty passion? +Not there; not with that face; not with those tears: to think that was +impossible--it was unholy. He might rave when he did not see her, but +now that his eyes beheld her those mad fancies were all dissipated. + +There was only one thing there--a woman full of loveliness and grace, +in the very bloom of her life, overwhelmed with suffering which this +Italian was inflicting on her. Why? Could he indulge the unholy +thought that the Italian had cast her off, and supplied her place with +the younger beauty? Away with such a thought! It was not jealousy of +that younger lady that Dacres perceived; it was the cry of a loving, +yearning heart that clung to that other one, from whom the Italian had +violently severed her. There was no mistake as to the source of this +sorrow. Nothing was left to the imagination. Her own words told all. + +Then the light was taken away, and the lady crouched upon the floor. +Dacres could no longer see her amidst that gloom; but he could hear +her; and every sob, and every sigh, and every moan went straight to +his heart and thrilled through every fibre of his being. He lay there +listening, and quivering thus as he listened with a very intensity of +sympathy that shut out from his mind every other thought except that +of the mourning, stricken one before him. + +Thus a long time passed, and the lady wept still, and other sounds +arose, and there were footsteps in the house, and whisperings, and +people passing to and fro; but to all these Dacres was deaf, and they +caused no more impression on his senses than if they were not. His +ears and his sense of hearing existed only for these sobs and these +sighs. + +At last a pistol-shot roused him. The lady sprang up and called in +despair. A cry came back, and the lady was about to venture to the +other room, when she was driven back by the stern voice of Girasole. +Then she stood for a moment, after which she knelt, and Dacres heard +her voice in prayer. The prayer was not audible, but now and then +words struck upon his ears which gave the key to her other words, and +he knew that it was no prayer of remorse for guilt, but a cry for help +in sore affliction. + +Had any thing more been needed to destroy the last vestige of Dacres's +former suspicions it was furnished by the words which he now heard. + +"Oh, Heaven!" he thought; "can this woman be what I have thought her? +But if not, what a villain am I! Yet now I must rather believe myself +to be a villain than her!" + +In the midst of this prayer Girasole's voice sounded, and then +Minnie's tones came clearly audible. The lady rose and listened, and a +great sigh of relief escaped her. Then Girasole descended the stairs, +and the lady again sank upon her knees. + +Thus far there seemed a spell upon Dacres; but this last incident and +the clear child-voice of Minnie seemed to break it. He could no longer +keep silence. His emotion was as intense as ever, but the bonds which +had bound his lips seemed now to be loosened. + +"Oh, Arethusa!" he moaned. + +At the sound of his voice Mrs. Willoughby started, and rose to her +feet. So great had been her anxiety and agitation that for some time +she had not thought of another being in the room, and there had been +no sound from him to suggest his existence. But now his voice startled +her. She gave no answer, however. + +"Arethusa!" repeated Dacres, gently and longingly and tenderly. + +"Poor fellow!" thought Mrs. Willoughby; "he's dreaming." + +"Arethusa! oh, Arethusa!" said Dacres once more. "Do not keep away. +Come to me. I am calm now." + +"Poor fellow!" thought Mrs. Willoughby. "He doesn't seem to be asleep. +He's talking to me. I really think he is." + +"Arethusa," said Dacres again, "will you answer me one question?" + +Mrs. Willoughby hesitated for a moment, but now perceived that Dacres +was really speaking to her. "He's in delirium," she thought. "Poor +fellow, I must humor him, I suppose. But what a funny name to give +me!" + +So, after a little preparatory cough, Mrs. Willoughby said, in a low +voice, + +"What question?" + +Dacres was silent for a few moments. He was overcome by his emotions. +He wished to ask her one question--the question of all questions in +his mind. Already her acts had answered it sufficiently; but he longed +to have the answer in her own words. Yet he hesitated to ask it. It +was dishonor to her to ask it. And thus, between longing and +hesitation, he delayed so long that Mrs. Willoughby imagined that he +had fallen back into his dreams or into his delirium, and would say no +more. + +But at last Dacres staked every thing on the issue, and asked it: + +"Arethusa! oh, Arethusa! do you--do you love--the--the Italian?" + +"The Italian!" said Mrs. Willoughby--"love the Italian! me!" and then +in a moment she thought that this was his delirium, and she must humor +it. "Poor fellow!" she sighed again; "how he fought them! and no doubt +he has had fearful blows on his head." + +"Do you? do you? Oh, answer, I implore you!" cried Dacres. + +"No!" said Mrs. Willoughby, solemnly. "I hate him as I never hated man +before." She spoke her mind this time, although she thought the other +was delirious. + +A sigh of relief and of happiness came from Dacres, so deep that it +was almost a groan. + +"And oh," he continued, "tell me this--have you ever loved him at +all?" + +"I always disliked him excessively," said Mrs. Willoughby, in the same +low and solemn tone. "I saw something bad--altogether bad--in his +face." + +"Oh, may Heaven forever bless you for that word!" exclaimed Dacres, +with such a depth of fervor that Mrs. Willoughby was surprised. She +now believed that he was intermingling dreams with realities, and +tried to lead him to sense by reminding him of the truth. + +"It was Minnie, you know, that he was fond of." + +"What! Minnie Fay?" + +"Yes; oh yes. I never saw any thing of him." + +"Oh, Heavens!" cried Dacres; "oh, Heavens, what a fool, beast, +villain, and scoundrel I have been! Oh, how I have misjudged _you_! +And can _you_ forgive me? Oh, can you? But no--you can not." + +At this appeal Mrs. Willoughby was startled, and did not know what to +say or to do. How much of this was delirium and how much real she +could not tell. One thing seemed evident to her, and that was that, +whether delirious or not, he took her for another person. But she was +so full of pity for him, and so very tender-hearted, that her only idea +was to "humor" him. + +"Oh," he cried again, "can this all be true, and have all my +suspicions been as mad as these last? And _you_--how _you_ have +changed! How beautiful you are! What tenderness there is in your +glance--what a pure and gentle and touching grace there is in your +expression! I swear to you, by Heaven! I have stood gazing at you in +places where you have not seen me, and thought I saw heaven in your +face, and worshiped you in my inmost soul. This is the reason why I +have followed you. From the time I saw you when you came into the room +at Naples till this night I could not get rid of your image. I fought +against the feeling, but I can not overcome it. Never, never were you +half so dear as you are now!" + +Now, of course, that was all very well, considered as the language of +an estranged husband seeking for reconciliation with an estranged +wife; but when one regards it simply as the language of a passionate +lover directed to a young and exceedingly pretty widow, one will +perceive that it was _not_ all very well, and that under ordinary +circumstances it might create a sensation. + +Upon Mrs. Willoughby the sensation was simply tremendous. She had +begun by "humoring" the delirious man; but now she found his delirium +taking a course which was excessively embarrassing. The worst of it +was, there was truth enough in his language to increase the +embarrassment. She remembered at once how the mournful face of this +man had appeared before her in different places. Her thoughts +instantly reverted to that evening on the balcony when his pale face +appeared behind the fountain. There was truth in his words; and her +heart beat with extraordinary agitation at the thought. Yet at the +same time there was some mistake about it all; and he was clearly +delirious. + +"Oh, Heavens!" he cried. "Can you ever forgive me? Is there a +possibility of it? Oh, can you forgive me? Can you--can you?" + +He was clearly delirious now. Her heart was full of pity for him. He +was suffering too. He was bound fast. Could she not release him? It +was terrible for this man to lie there bound thus. And perhaps he had +fallen into the hands of these ruffians while trying to save _her_ and +her sister. She must free him. + +"Would you like to be loosed?" she asked, coming nearer. "Shall I cut +your bonds?" + +She spoke in a low whisper. + +"Oh, tell me first, I implore you! Can you forgive me?" + +He spoke in such a piteous tone that her heart was touched. + +"Forgive you?" she said, in a voice full of sympathy and pity. "There +is nothing for _me_ to forgive." + +"Now may Heaven forever bless you for that sweet and gentle word!" +said Dacres, who altogether misinterpreted her words, and the emphasis +she placed on them; and in his voice there was such peace, and such a +gentle, exultant happiness, that Mrs. Willoughby again felt touched. + +"Poor fellow!" she thought; "how he _must_ have suffered!" + +"Where are you fastened?" she whispered, as she bent over him. Dacres +felt her breath upon his cheek; the hem of her garment touched his +sleeve, and a thrill passed through him. He felt as though he would +like to be forever thus, with _her_ bending over him. + +"My hands are fastened behind me," said he. + +"I have a knife," said Mrs. Willoughby. She did not stop to think of +danger. It was chiefly pity that incited her to this. She could not +bear to see him lying thus in pain, which he had perhaps, as she +supposed, encountered for her. She was impulsive, and though she +thought of his assistance toward the escape of Minnie and herself, yet +pity and compassion were her chief inspiring motives. + +Mrs. Willoughby had told Girasole that she had no knife; but this was +not quite true, for she now produced one, and cut the cords that bound +his wrists. Again a thrill flashed through him at the touch of her +little fingers; she then cut the cords that bound his ankles. + +Dacres sat up. His ankles and wrists were badly swollen, but he was no +longer conscious of pain. There was rapture in his soul, and of that +alone was he conscious. + +"Be careful!" she whispered, warningly; "guards are all around, and +listeners. Be careful! If you can think of a way of escape, do so." + +Dacres rubbed his hand over his forehead. + +"Am I dreaming?" said he; "or is it all true? A while ago I was +suffering from some hideous vision; yet now you say you forgive me!" + +Mrs. Willoughby saw in this a sign of returning delirium. "But the +poor fellow must be humored, I suppose," she thought. + +"Oh, there is nothing for _me_ to forgive," said she. + +"But if there were any thing, would you?" + +"Yes." + +"Freely?" he cried, with a strong emphasis. + +"Yes, freely." + +"Oh, could you answer me one more question? Oh, could you?" + +"No, no; not now--not now, I entreat you," said Mrs. Willoughby, in +nervous dread. She was afraid that his delirium would bring him upon +delicate ground, and she tried to hold him back. + +"But I must ask you," said Dacres, trembling fearfully--"I must--now +or never. Tell me my doom; I have suffered so much. Oh, Heavens! +Answer me. Can you? Can you feel toward me as you once did?" + +"He's utterly mad," thought Mrs. Willoughby; "but he'll get worse if I +don't soothe him. Poor fellow! I ought to answer him." + +"Yes," she said, in a low voice. + +"Oh, my darling!" murmured Dacres, in rapture inexpressible; "my +darling!" he repeated; and grasping Mrs. Willoughby's hand, he pressed +it to his lips. "And you will love me again--you will love me?" + +Mrs. Willoughby paused. The man was mad, but the ground was so +dangerous! Yes, she must humor him. She felt his hot kisses on her +hand. + +"You _will_--you _will_ love me, will you not?" he repeated. "Oh, +answer me! Answer me, or I shall die!" + +"Yes," whispered Mrs. Willoughby, faintly. + +As she said this a cold chill passed through her. But it was too late. +Dacres's arms were around her. He had drawn her to him, and pressed +her against his breast, and she felt hot tears upon her head. + +"Oh, Arethusa!" cried Dacres. + +"Well," said Mrs. Willoughby, as soon as she could extricate herself, +"there's a mistake, you know." + +"A mistake, darling?" + +"Oh dear, what _shall_ I do?" thought Mrs. Willoughby; "he's beginning +again. I must stop this, and bring him to his senses. How terrible it +is to humor a delirious man!" + +"Oh, Arethusa!" sighed Dacres once more. + +Mrs. Willoughby arose. + +"I'm not Arethusa at all," said she; "that isn't my name. If you _can_ +shake off your delirium, I wish you would. I really do." + +"What!" cried Dacres, in amazement. + +"I'm not Arethusa at all; that isn't my name." + +"Not your name?" + +"No; my name's Kitty." + +"Kitty!" cried Dacres, starting to his feet. + +At that instant the report of a gun burst upon their ears, followed by +another and another; then there were wild calls and loud shouts. Other +guns were heard. + +Yet amidst all this wild alarm there was nothing which had so +tremendous an effect upon Dacres as this last remark of Mrs. +Willoughby's. + +[Illustration: "THE PRIEST FLUNG HIMSELF FORWARD."] + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV. + +THE CRISIS OF LIFE. + + +When the Irish priest conjectured that it was about two o'clock in the +morning he was not very far astray in his calculation. The short +remarks that were exchanged between him and Ethel, and afterward +between him and the men, were followed by a profound silence. Ethel +sat by the side of the priest, with her head bent forward and her eyes +closed as though she were asleep; yet sleep was farther from her than +ever it had been, and the thrilling events of the night afforded +sufficient material to keep her awake for many a long hour yet to +come. Her mind was now filled with a thousand conflicting and most +exciting fancies, in the midst of which she might again have sunk into +despair had she not been sustained by the assurance of the priest. + +Sitting near Ethel, the priest for some time looked fixedly ahead of +him as though he were contemplating the solemn midnight scene, or +meditating upon the beauties of nature. In truth, the scene around was +one which was deserving even of the close attention which the priest +appeared to give. Immediately before him lay the lake, its shore not +far beneath, and almost at their feet. Around it arose the wooded +hills, whose dark forms, darker from the gloom of night, threw +profound shadows over the opposite shores. Near by the shore extended +on either side. On the right there were fires, now burning low, yet +occasionally sending forth flashes; on the left, and at some distance, +might be seen the dusky outline of the old stone house. Behind them +was the forest, vast, gloomy, clothed in impenetrable shade, in which +lay their only hope of safety, yet where even now there lurked the +watchful guards of the brigands. It was close behind them. Once in its +shelter, and they might gain freedom; yet between them and it was an +impassable barrier of enemies, and there also lay a still more +impassable barrier in the grave where Hawbury lay. To fly, even if +they could fly, would be to give him up to death; yet to remain, as +they must remain, would be to doom him to death none the less, and +themselves too. + +Seated there, with his eyes directed toward the water, the priest saw +nothing of the scene before him; his eyes were fixed on vacancy; his +thoughts were endeavoring to grapple with the situation and master it. +Yet so complicated was that situation, and so perplexing the dilemma +in which he found himself--a dilemma where death perched upon either +horn--that the good priest found his faculties becoming gradually more +and more unable to deal with the difficulty, and he felt himself once +more sinking down deeper and deeper into that abyss of despair from +which he had but recently extricated himself. + +And still the time passed, and the precious moments, laden with the +fate not only of Hawbury, but of all the others--the moments of the +night during which alone any escape was to be thought of--moved all +too swiftly away. + +Now in this hour of perplexity the good priest bethought him of a +friend whose fidelity had been proved through the varied events of a +life--a friend which, in his life of celibacy, had found in his heart +something of that place which a fond and faithful wife may hold in the +heart of a more fortunate man. It was a little friend, a fragrant +friend, a tawny and somewhat grimy friend; it was in the pocket of his +coat; it was of clay; in fact, it was nothing else than a dudeen. + +Where in the world had the good priest who lived in this remote corner +of Italy got that emblem of his green native isle? Perhaps he had +brought it with him in the band of his hat when he first turned his +back upon his country, or perhaps he had obtained it from the same +quarter which had supplied him with that very black plug of tobacco +which he brought forth shortly afterward. The one was the complement +of the other, and each was handled with equal love and care. Soon the +occupation of cutting up the tobacco and rubbing it gave a temporary +distraction to his thoughts, which distraction was prolonged by the +further operation of pressing the tobacco into the bowl of the dudeen. + +Here the priest paused and cast a longing look toward the fire, which +was not far away. + +"Would you have any objection to let me go and get a coal to light the +pipe?" said he to one of the men. + +The man had an objection, and a very strong one. + +"Would one of you be kind enough to go and get me a brand or a hot +coal?" + +This led to an earnest debate, and finally one of the men thought that +he might venture. Before doing so, however, a solemn promise was +extorted from the priest that he would not try to escape during his +absence. This the priest gave. + +"Escape!" he said--"it's a smoke I want. Besides, how can I escape +with three of ye watching me? And then, what would I want to escape +for? I'm safe enough here." + +The man now went off, and returned in a short time with a brand. The +priest gave him his blessing, and received the brand with a quiet +exultation that was pleasing to behold. + +"Matches," said he, "ruin the smoke. They give it a sulphur taste. +There's nothing like a hot coal." + +Saying this, he lighted his pipe. This operation was accomplished with +a series of those short, quick, hard, percussive puffs with which the +Irish race in every clime on this terrestrial ball perform the solemn +rite. + +And now the thoughts of the priest became more calm and regular and +manageable. His confusion departed, and gradually, as the smoke +ascended to the skies, there was diffused over his soul a certain +soothing and all-pervading calm. + +He now began to face the full difficulty of his position. He saw that +escape was impossible and death inevitable. He made up his mind to +die. The discovery would surely be made in the morning that Hawbury +had been substituted for the robber; he would be found and punished, +and the priest would be involved in his fate. His only care now was +for Ethel; and he turned his thoughts toward the formation of some +plan by which he might obtain mercy for her. + +He was in the midst of these thoughts--for himself resigned, for Ethel +anxious--and turning over in his mind all the various modes by which +the emotion of pity or mercy might be roused in a merciless and +pitiless nature; he was thinking of an appeal to the brigands +themselves, and had already decided that in this there lay his best +hope of success--when all of a sudden these thoughts were rudely +interrupted and dissipated and scattered to the winds by a most +startling cry. + +Ethel started to her feet. + +"Oh Heavens!" she cried, "what was that?" + +"Down! down!" cried the men, wrathfully; but before Ethel could obey +the sound was repeated, and the men themselves were arrested by it. + +The sound that thus interrupted the meditations of the priest was the +explosion of a rifle. As Ethel started up another followed. This +excited the men themselves, who now listened intently to learn the +cause. + +They did not have to wait long. + +Another rifle explosion followed, which was succeeded by a loud, long +shriek. + +"An attack!" cried one of the men, with a deep curse. They listened +still, yet did not move away from the place, for the duty to which +they had been assigned was still prominent in their minds. The priest +had already risen to his feet, still smoking his pipe, as though in +this new turn of affairs its assistance might be more than ever needed +to enable him to preserve his presence of mind, and keep his soul +serene in the midst of confusion. + +And now they saw all around them the signs of agitation. Figures in +swift motion flitted to and fro amidst the shade, and others darted +past the smouldering fires. In the midst of this another shot sounded, +and another, and still another. At the third there was a wild yell of +rage and pain, followed by the shrill cry of a woman's voice. The fact +was evident that some one of the brigands had fallen, and the women +were lamenting. + +The confusion grew greater. Loud cries arose; calls of encouragement, +of entreaty, of command, and of defiance. Over by the old house there +was the uproar of rushing men, and in the midst of it a loud, stern +voice of command. The voices and the rushing footsteps moved from the +house to the woods. Then all was still for a time. + +It was but for a short time, however. Then came shot after shot in +rapid succession. The flashes could be seen among the trees. All +around them there seemed to be a struggle going on. There was some +unseen assailant striking terrific blows from the impenetrable shadow +of the woods. The brigands were firing back, but they fired only into +thick darkness. Shrieks and yells of pain arose from time to time, the +direction of which showed that the brigands were suffering. Among the +assailants there was neither voice nor cry. But, in spite of their +losses and the disadvantage under which they labored, the brigands +fought well, and resisted stubbornly. From time to time a loud, stern +voice arose, whose commands resounded far and wide, and sustained the +courage of the men and directed their movements. + +The men who guarded the priest and Ethel were growing more and more +excited every moment, and were impatient at their enforced inaction. + +"They must be soldiers," said one. + +"Of course," said another. + +"They fight well." + +"Ay; better than the last time." + +"How did they learn to fight so well under cover?" + +"They've improved. The last time we met them we shot them like sheep, +and drove them back in five minutes." + +"They've got a leader who understands fighting in the woods. He keeps +them under cover." + +"Who is he?" + +"Diavolo! who knows? They get new captains every day." + +"Was there not a famous American Indian--" + +"True. I heard of him. An Indian warrior from the American forests. +Guiseppe saw him when he was at Rome." + +"Bah!--you all saw him." + +"Where?" + +"On the road." + +"We didn't." + +"You did. He was the Zouave who fled to the woods first." + +"He?" + +"Yes." + +"Diavolo!" + +These words were exchanged between them as they looked at the +fighting. But suddenly there came rapid flashes and rolling volleys +beyond the fires that lay before them, and the movement of the flashes +showed that a rush had been made toward the lake. Wild yells arose, +then fierce returning fires, and these showed that the brigands were +being driven back. + +The guards could endure this no longer. + +"They are beating us," cried one of the men, with a curse. "We must go +and fight." + +"What shall we do with these prisoners?" + +"Tie them and leave them." + +"Have you a rope?" + +"No. There is one by the grave." + +"Let's take the prisoners there and bind them." + +This proposition was accepted; and, seizing the priest and Ethel, the +four men hurried them back to the grave. The square hole lay there +just beside them, with the earth by its side. Ethel tried to see into +it, but was not near enough to do so. One of the men found the rope, +and began in great haste to bind the arms of the priest behind him. +Another began to bind Ethel in the same way. + +But now there came loud cries, and the rush of men near them. A loud, +stern voice was encouraging the men. + +"On! on!" he cried. "Follow me! We'll drive them back!" + +Saying this, a man hurried on, followed by a score of brigands. + +It was Girasole. + +He had been guarding the woods at this side when he had seen the rush +that had been made farther up. He had seen his men driven in, and was +now hurrying up to the place to retrieve the battle. As he was running +on he came up to the party at the grave. + +He stopped. + +"What's this?" he cried. + +"The prisoners--we were securing them." + +It was now lighter than it had been, and dawn was not far off. The +features of Girasole were plainly distinguishable. They were convulsed +with the most furious passion, which was not caused so much by the +rage of conflict as by the sight of the prisoners. He had suspected +treachery on their part, and had spared them for a time only so as to +see whether his suspicions were true or not. But now this sudden +assault by night, conducted so skillfully, and by such a powerful +force, pointed clearly to treachery, as he saw it, and the ones who to +him seemed most prominent in guilt were the priest and Ethel. + +His suspicions were quite reasonable under the circumstances. Here was +a priest whom he regarded as his natural enemy. These brigands +identified themselves with republicans and Garibaldians whenever it +suited their purposes to do so, and consequently, as such, they were +under the condemnation of the Pope; and any priest might think he was +doing the Pope good service by betraying those who were his enemies. +As to this priest, every thing was against him. He lived close by; +every step of the country was no doubt familiar to him; he had come to +the camp under very suspicious circumstances, bringing with him a +stranger in disguise. He had given plausible answers to the +cross-questioning of Girasole; but those were empty words, which went +for nothing in the presence of the living facts that now stood before +him in the presence of the enemy. + +These thoughts had all occurred to Girasole, and the sight of the two +prisoners kindled his rage to madness. It was the deadliest purpose of +vengeance that gleamed in his eyes as he looked upon them, and they +knew it. He gave one glance, and then turned to his men. + +"On! on!" he cried; "I will join you in an instant; and you," he said +to the guards, "wait a moment." + +The brigands rushed on with shouts to assist their comrades in the +fight, while the other four waited. + +All this time the fight had not ceased. The air was filled with the +reports of rifle-shots, the shouts of men, the yells of the wounded. +The flashes seemed to be gradually drawing nearer, as though the +assailants were still driving the brigands. But their progress was +slow, for the fighting was carried on among the trees, and the +brigands resisted stubbornly, retreating from cover to cover, and +stopping every moment to make a fresh stand. But the assailants had +gained much ground, and were already close by the borders of the lake, +and advancing along toward the old stone house. + +The robbers had not succeeded in binding their prisoners. The priest +and Ethel both stood where they had encountered Girasole, and the +ropes fell from the robbers' hands at the new interruption. The grave +with its mound was only a few feet away. + +Girasole had a pistol in his left hand and a sword in his right. He +sheathed his sword and drew another pistol, keeping his eyes fixed +steadily all the while upon his victims. + +"You needn't bind these prisoners," said Girasole, grimly; "I know a +better way to secure them." + +"In the name of God," cried the priest, "I implore you not to shed +innocent blood!" + +"Pooh!" said Girasole. + +"This lady is innocent; you will at least spare her!" + +"She shall die first!" said Girasole, in a fury, and reached out his +hand to grasp Ethel. The priest flung himself forward between the two. +Girasole dashed him aside. + +"Give us time to pray, for God's sake--one moment to pray!" + +"Not a moment!" cried Girasole, grasping at Ethel. + +Ethel gave a loud shriek and started away in horror. Girasole sprang +after her. The four men turned to seize her. With a wild and frantic +energy, inspired by the deadly terror that was in her heart, she +bounded away toward the grave. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV. + +BURIED ALIVE. + + +Hawbury last vanished from the scene to a place which is but seldom +resorted to by a living man. Once inside of his terrible retreat he +became a prey to feelings of the most varied and harrowing character, +in the midst of which there was a suspense, twofold, agonizing, and +intolerable. First of all, his suspense was for Ethel, and then for +himself. In that narrow and restricted retreat his senses soon became +sharpened to an unusual degree of acuteness. Every touch against it +communicated itself to his frame, as though the wood of his inclosure +had become part of himself; and every sound intensified itself to an +extraordinary degree of distinctness, as though the temporary loss of +vision had been compensated for by an exaggeration of the sense of +hearing. This was particularly the case as the priest drove in the +screws. He heard the shuffle on the stairs, the whisper to Ethel, her +retreat, and the ascending footsteps; while at the same time he was +aware of the unalterable coolness of the priest, who kept calmly at +his work until the very last moment. The screws seemed to enter his +own frame, and the slight noise which was made, inaudible as it was to +others, to him seemed loud enough to rouse all in the house. + +Then he felt himself raised and carried down stairs. Fortunately he +had got in with his feet toward the door, and as that end was carried +out first, his descent of the stairs was not attended with the +inconvenience which he might have felt had it been taken down in an +opposite direction. + +One fact gave him very great relief, for he had feared that his +breathing would be difficult. Thanks, however, to the precautions of +the priest, he felt no difficulty at all in that respect. The little +bits of wood which prevented the lid from resting close to the coffin +formed apertures which freely admitted all the air that was necessary. + +He was borne on thus from the house toward the grave, and heard the +voice of the priest from time to time, and rightly supposed that the +remarks of the priest were addressed not so much to the brigands as to +himself, so as to let him know that he was not deserted. The journey +to the grave was accomplished without any inconvenience, and the +coffin was at length put upon the ground. + +Then it was lowered into the grave. + +There was something in this which was so horrible to Hawbury that an +involuntary shudder passed through every nerve, and all the terror of +the grave and the bitterness of death in that one moment seemed to +descend upon him. He had not thought of this, and consequently was not +prepared for it. He had expected that he would be put down somewhere +on the ground, and that the priest would be able to get rid of the +men, and effect his liberation before it had gone so far. + +It required an effort to prevent himself from crying out; and longer +efforts were needed and more time before he could regain any portion +of his self-control. He now heard the priest performing the burial +rites; these seemed to him to be protracted to an amazing length; and +so, indeed, they were; but to the inmate of that grave the time seemed +longer far than it did to those who were outside. A thousand thoughts +swept through his mind, and a thousand fears swelled within his heart. +At last the suspicion came to him that the priest himself was unable +to do any better, and this suspicion was confirmed as he detected the +efforts which he made to get the men to leave the grave. This was +particularly evident when he pretended to hear an alarm, by which he +hoped to get rid of the brigands. It failed, however, and with this +failure the hopes of Hawbury sank lower than ever. + +But the climax of his horror was attained as the first clod fell upon +his narrow abode. It seemed like a death-blow. He felt it as if it had +struck himself, and for a moment it was as though he had been stunned. +The dull, heavy sound which those heard who stood above, to his ears +became transformed and enlarged, and extended to something like a +thunder-peal, with long reverberations through his now fevered and +distempered brain. Other clods fell, and still others, and the work +went on till his brain reeled, and under the mighty emotions of the +hour his reason began to give way. Then all his fortitude and courage +sank. All thought left him save the consciousness of the one horror +that had now fixed itself upon his soul. It was intolerable. In +another moment his despair would have overmastered him, and under its +impulse he would have burst through all restraint, and turned all his +energies toward forcing himself from his awful prison house. + +He turned himself over. He gathered himself up as well as he could. +Already he was bracing himself for a mighty effort to burst up the +lid, when suddenly the voice of Girasole struck upon his ear, and a +wild fear for Ethel came to his heart, and the anguish of that fear +checked at once all further thought of himself. + +He lay still and listened. He did this the more patiently as the men +also stopped from their work, and as the hideous earth-clods no longer +fell down. He listened. From the conversation he gathered pretty +accurately the state of affairs. He knew that Ethel was there; that +she had been discovered and dragged forth; that she was in danger. He +listened in the anguish of a new suspense. He heard the words of the +priest, his calm denial of treachery, his quiet appeal to Girasole's +good sense. Then he heard the decision of Girasole, and the party +walked away with their prisoners, and he was left alone. + +Alone! + +At any other time it would have been a terrible thing thus to be left +alone in such a place, but now to him who was thus imprisoned it +afforded a great relief. The work of burial, with all its hideous +accompaniments, was stayed. He could collect his senses and make up +his mind as to what he should do. + +Now, first of all, he determined to gain more air if possible. The +earth that had fallen had covered up many of the chinks, so that his +breathing had become sensibly more difficult. His confinement, with +this oppression of his breathing, was intolerable. He therefore braced +himself once more to make an effort. The coffin was large and rudely +constructed, being merely an oblong box. He had more play to his +limbs than he could have had in one of a more regular construction, +and thus he was able to bring a great effort to bear upon the lid. He +pressed. The screws gave way. He lifted it up to some distance. He +drew in a long draught of fresh air, and felt in that one draught that +he received new life and strength and hope. + +He now lay still and thought about what he should do next. If it had +only been himself, he would, of course, have escaped in that first +instant, and fled to the woods. But the thought of Ethel detained him. + +What was her position; and what could he do to save her? This was his +thought. + +He knew that she, together with the priest, was in the hands of four +of the brigands, who were commanded to keep their prisoners safe at +the peril of their lives. Where they were he did not know, nor could +he tell whether she was near or at a distance. Girasole had led them +away. + +[Illustration: +"IN AN INSTANT THE OCCUPANT OF THE GRAVE SPRANG FORTH."] + +He determined to look out and watch. He perceived that this grave, in +the heart of the brigands' camp, afforded the very safest place in +which he could be for the purpose of watching. Girasole's words had +indicated that the work of burial would not be resumed that night, and +if any passers-by should come they would avoid such a place as this. +Here, then, he could stay until dawn at least, and watch unobserved. +Perhaps he could find where Ethel was guarded; perhaps he could do +something to distract the attention of the brigands, and afford her an +opportunity for flight. + +He now arose, and, kneeling in the coffin, he raised the lid. The +earth that was upon it fell down inside. He tilted the lid up, and +holding it up thus with one hand, he put his head carefully out of the +grave, and looked out in the direction where Girasole had gone with +his prisoners. The knoll to which he had led them was a very +conspicuous place, and had probably been selected for that reason, +since it could be under his own observation, from time to time, even +at a distance. It was about half-way between the grave and the nearest +fire, which fire, though low, still gave forth some light, and the +light was in a line with the knoll to Hawbury's eyes. The party on the +knoll, therefore, appeared thrown out into relief by the faint +fire-light behind them, especially the priest and Ethel. + +And now Hawbury kept his watch, and looked and listened and waited, +ever mindful of his own immediate neighborhood, and guarding carefully +against any approach. But his own place was in gloom, and no one would +have thought of looking there, so that he was unobserved. + +But all his watching gave him no assistance toward finding out any way +of rescuing Ethel. He saw the vigilant guard around the prisoners. +Once or twice he saw a movement among them, but it was soon over, and +resulted in nothing. Now he began to despond, and to speculate in his +mind as to whether Ethel was in any danger or not. He began to +calculate the time that might be required to go for help with which to +attack the brigands. He wondered what reason Girasole might have to +injure Ethel. But whatever hope he had that mercy might be shown her +was counterbalanced by his own experience of Girasole's cruelty, and +his knowledge of his merciless character. + +Suddenly he was roused by the rifle-shot and the confusion that +followed. He saw the party on the mound start to their feet. He heard +the shots that succeeded the first one. He saw shadows darting to and +fro. Then the confusion grew worse, and all the sounds of battle +arose--the cries, the shrieks, and the stern words of command. + +All this filled him with hope. An attack was being made. They might +all be saved. He could see that the brigands were being driven back, +and that the assailants were pressing on. + +Then he saw the party moving from the knoll. It was already much +lighter. They advanced toward him. He sank down and waited. He had no +fear now that this party would complete his burial. He thought they +were flying with the prisoners. If so, the assailants would soon be +here; he could join them, and lead them on to the rescue of Ethel. + +He lay low with the lid over him. He heard them close beside him. Then +there was the noise of rushing men, and Girasole's voice arose. + +He heard all that followed. + +Then Ethel's shriek sounded out, as she sprang toward the grave. + +In an instant the occupant of the grave, seizing the lid, raised it +up, and with a wild yell sprang forth. + +The effect was tremendous. + +The brigands thought the dead Antonio had come to life. They did not +stop to look, but with a howl of awful terror, and in an anguish of +fright, they turned and ran for their lives! + +Girasole saw him too, with equal horror, if not greater. He saw +Hawbury. It was the man whom he had killed stone-dead with his own +hand. He was there before him--or was it his ghost? For an instant +horror paralyzed him; and then, with a yell like a madman's, he leaped +back and fled after the others. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI. + +FLY! FLY! + + +In the midst of that wild uproar which had roused Dacres and Mrs. +Willoughby there was nothing that startled him so much as her +declaration that she was not Arethusa. He stood bewildered. While she +was listening to the sounds, he was listening to the echo of her +words; while she was wondering at the cause of such a tumult, he was +wondering at this disclosure. In a moment a thousand little things +suggested themselves as he stood there in his confusion, which little +things all went to throw a flood of light upon her statement, and +prove that she was another person than that "demon wife" who had been +the cause of all his woes. Her soft glance, her gentle manner, her +sweet and tender expression--above all, the tone of her voice; all +these at once opened his eyes. In the course of their conversation she +had spoken in a low tone, often in a whisper, so that this fact with +regard to the difference of voice had not been perceptible; but her +last words were spoken louder, and he observed the difference. + +Now the tumult grew greater, and the reports of the rifles more +frequent. The noise was communicated to the house, and in the rooms +and the hall below there were tramplings of feet, and hurryings to and +fro, and the rattle of arms, and the voices of men, in the midst of +which rose the stern command of Girasole. + +"Forward! Follow me!" + +Then the distant reports grew nearer and yet nearer, and all the men +rushed from the house, and their tramp was heard outside as they +hurried away to the scene of conflict. + +"It's an attack! The brigands are attacked!" cried Mrs. Willoughby. + +Dacres said nothing. He was collecting his scattered thoughts. + +"Oh, may Heaven grant that we may be saved! Oh, it is the troops--it +must be! Oh, Sir, come, come; help us to escape! My darling sister is +here. Save her!" + +"Your sister?" cried Dacres. + +"Oh yes; come, save her! My sister--my darling Minnie!" + +With these words Mrs. Willoughby rushed from the room. + +"Her sister! her sister!" repeated Dacres--"Minnie Fay! _Her_ sister! +Good Lord! What a most infernal ass I've been making of myself this +last month!" + +He stood still for a few moments, overwhelmed by this thought, and +apparently endeavoring to realize the full extent and enormous size +and immense proportions, together with the infinite extent of ear, +appertaining to the ass to which he had transformed himself; but +finally he shook his head despondingly, as though he gave it up +altogether. Then he hurried after Mrs. Willoughby. + +Mrs. Willoughby rushed into Minnie's room, and clasped her sister in +her arms with frantic tears and kisses. + +"Oh, my precious darling!" she exclaimed. + +"Oh dear!" said Minnie, "isn't this really too bad? I was _so_ tired, +you know, and I was just beginning to go to sleep, when those horrid +men began firing their guns. I really do think that every body is +banded together to tease me. I do _wish_ they'd all go away and let me +have a little peace. I am so tired and sleepy!" + +While Minnie was saying this her sister was embracing her and kissing +her and crying over her. + +"Oh, come, Minnie, come!" she cried; "make haste. We must fly!" + +"Where to?" said Minnie, wonderingly. + +"Any where--any where out of this awful place: into the woods." + +"Why, I don't see the use of going into the woods. It's all wet, you +know. Can't we get a carriage?" + +"Oh no, no; we must not wait. They'll all be back soon and kill us." + +"Kill us! What for?" cried Minnie. "What do you mean? How silly you +are, Kitty darling!" + +At this moment Dacres entered. The image of the immeasurable ass was +still very prominent in his mind, and he had lost all his fever and +delirium. One thought only remained (besides that of the ass, of +course), and that was--escape. + +"Are you ready?" he asked, hurriedly. + +"Oh yes, yes; let us make haste," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"I think no one is below," said he; "but I will go first. There is a +good place close by. We will run there. If I fall, you must run on and +try to get there. It is the bank just opposite. Once there, you are in +the woods. Do you understand?" + +"Oh yes, yes!" cried Mrs. Willoughby. "Haste! Oh, haste!" + +Dacres turned, and Mrs. Willoughby had just grasped Minnie's hand to +follow, when suddenly they heard footsteps below. + +They stopped, appalled. + +The robbers had not all gone, then. Some of them must have remained on +guard. But how many? + +Dacres listened and the ladies listened, and in their suspense the +beating of each heart was audible. The footsteps below could be heard +going from room to room, and pausing in each. + +"There seems to be only one man," said Dacres, in a whisper. "If there +is only one, I'll engage to manage him. While I grapple, you run for +your lives. Remember the bank." + +"Oh yes; but oh, Sir, there may be more," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"I'll see," said Dacres, softly. + +He went cautiously to the front window and looked out. By the +increased light he could see quite plainly. No men were visible. From +afar the noise of the strife came to his ears louder than ever, and he +could see the flashes of the rifles. + +Dacres stole back again from the window and went to the door. He stood +and listened. + +And now the footsteps came across the hall to the foot of the stairs. +Dacres could see the figure of a solitary man, but it was dark in the +hall, and he could not make him out. + +He began to think that there was only one enemy to encounter. + +The man below put his foot on the lowest stair. + +Then he hesitated. + +Dacres stood in the shadow of the other doorway, which was nearer to +the head of the stairs, and prepared to spring as soon as the stranger +should come within reach. But the stranger delayed still. + +At length he spoke: + +"Hallo, up there!" + +The sound of those simple words produced an amazing effect upon the +hearers. Dacres sprang down with a cry of joy. "Come, come!" he +shouted to the ladies; "friends are here!" And running down the +stairs, he reached the bottom and grasped the stranger by both arms. + +In the dim light he could detect a tall, slim, sinewy form, with long, +black, ragged hair and white neck-tie. + +"You'd best get out of this, and quick, too," said the Rev. Saul +Tozer. "They're all off now, but they'll be back here in less than no +time. I jest thought I'd look in to see if any of you folks was +around." + +By this time the ladies were both at the bottom of the stairs. + +"Come!" said Tozer; "hurry up, folks. I'll take one lady and you take +t'other." + +"Do you know the woods?" + +"Like a book." + +"So do I," said Dacres. + +He grasped Mrs. Willoughby's hand and started. + +"But Minnie!" said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"You had better let him take her; it's safer for all of us," said +Dacres. + +Mrs. Willoughby looked back as she was dragged on after Dacres, and +saw Tozer following them, holding Minnie's hand. This reassured her. + +Dacres dragged her on to the foot of the bank. Here she tried to keep +up with him, but it was steep, and she could not. + +Whereupon Dacres stopped, and, without a word, raised her in his arms +as though she were a little child, and ran up the bank. He plunged +into the woods. Then he ran on farther. Then he turned and doubled. + +Mrs. Willoughby begged him to put her down. + +"No," said he; "they are behind us. You can not go fast enough. I +should have to wait and defend you, and then we would both be lost." + +"But, oh! we are losing Minnie." + +"No, we are not," cried Dacres; "that man is ten times stronger than I +am. He is a perfect elephant in strength. He dashed past me up the +hill." + +"I didn't see him." + +"Your face was turned the other way. He is ahead of us now somewhere." + +"Oh, I wish we _could_ catch up to him." + +[Illustration: "AT THIS DACRES RUSHED ON FASTER."] + +At this Dacres rushed on faster. The effort was tremendous. He leaped +over fallen timbers, he burst through the underbrush. + +"Oh, I'm sure you'll _kill_ yourself if you go so fast," said Mrs. +Willoughby. "We can't catch up to them." + +At this Dacres slackened his pace, and went on more carefully. She +again begged him to put her down. He again refused. Upon this she felt +perfectly helpless, and recalled, in a vague way, Minnie's ridiculous +question of "How would you like to be run away with by a great, big, +horrid man, Kitty darling?" + +Then she began to think he was insane, and felt very anxious. + +At last Dacres stopped. He was utterly exhausted. He was panting +terribly. It had been a fearful journey. He had run along the bank up +to that narrow valley which he had traversed the day before, and when +he stopped it was on the top of that precipice where he had formerly +rested, and where he had nurtured such dark purposes against Mrs. +Willoughby. + +Mrs. Willoughby looked at him, full of pity. He was utterly broken +down by this last effort. + +"Oh dear!" she thought. "Is he sane or insane? What _am_ I to do? It +is dreadful to have to go on and humor his queer fancies." + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVII. + +MINNIE'S LAST LIFE-PRESERVER. + + +When Tozer started after Dacres he led Minnie by the hand for only a +little distance. On reaching the acclivity he seized her in his arms, +thus imitating Dacres's example, and rushed up, reaching the top +before the other. Then he plunged into the woods, and soon became +separated from his companion. + +Once in the woods, he went along quite leisurely, carrying Minnie +without any difficulty, and occasionally addressing to her a soothing +remark, assuring her that she was safe. Minnie, however, made no +remark of any kind, good or bad, but remained quite silent, occupied +with her own thoughts. At length Tozer stopped and put her down. It +was a place upon the edge of a cliff on the shore of the lake, and as +much as a mile from the house. The cliff was almost fifty feet high, +and was perpendicular. All around was the thick forest, and it was +unlikely that such a place could be discovered. + +[Illustration: "'WORSE AND WORSE,' SAID TOZER."] + +"Here," said he; "we've got to stop here, and it's about the right +place. We couldn't get any where nigh to the soldiers without the +brigands seeing us; so we'll wait here till the fight's over, and the +brigands all chased off." + +"The soldiers! what soldiers?" asked Minnie. + +"Why, they're having a fight over there--the soldiers are attacking +the brigands." + +"Well, I didn't know. Nobody told me. And did you come with the +soldiers?" + +"Well, not exactly. I came with the priest and the young lady." + +"But you were not at the house?" + +"No. They wouldn't take me all the way. The priest said I couldn't be +disguised--but I don't see why not--so he left me in the woods till he +came back. And then the soldiers came, and we crept on till we came +nigh the lake. Well, then I stole away; and when they made an attack +the brigands all ran there to fight, and I watched till I saw the +coast clear; and so I came, and here we are." + +Minnie now was quite silent and preoccupied, and occasionally she +glanced sadly at Tozer with her large, pathetic, child-like eyes. It +was a very piteous look, full of the most tender entreaty. Tozer +occasionally glanced at her, and then, like her, he sat silent, +involved in his own thoughts. + +"And so," said Minnie at last, "you're not the priest himself?" + +"The priest?" + +"Yes." + +"Well, no; I don't call myself a priest. I'm a minister of the +Gospel." + +"Well, you're not a _real_ priest, then." + +"All men of my calling are real priests--yes, priests and kings. I +yield to no man in the estimate which I set upon my high and holy +calling." + +"Oh, but I mean a Roman Catholic priest," said Minnie. + +"A Roman Catholic priest! Me! Why, what a question! Me! a Roman +Catholic! Why, in our parts folks call me the Protestant Champion." + +"Oh, and so you're only a Protestant, after all," said Minnie, in a +disappointed tone. + +"Only a Protestant!" repeated Tozer, severely--"_only_ a Protestant. +Why, ain't you one yourself?" + +"Oh yes; but I hoped you were the other priest, you know. I did _so_ +want to have a Roman Catholic priest this time." + +Tozer was silent. It struck him that this young lady was in danger. +Her wish for a Roman Catholic priest boded no good. She had just come +from Rome. No doubt she had been tampered with. Some Jesuits had +caught her, and had tried to proselytize her. His soul swelled with +indignation at the thought. + +"Oh dear!" said Minnie again. + +"What's the matter?" asked Tozer, in a sympathizing voice. + +"I'm so sorry." + +"What for?" + +"Why, that you saved my life, you know." + +"Sorry? sorry? that I saved your life?" repeated Tozer, in amazement. + +"Oh, well, you know, I did so want to be saved by a Roman Catholic +priest, you know." + +"To be saved by a Roman Catholic priest!" repeated Tozer, pondering +these words in his mind as he slowly pronounced them. He could make +nothing of them at first, but finally concluded that they concealed +some half-suggested tendency to Rome. + +"I don't like this--I don't like this," he said, solemnly. + +"What don't you like?" + +"It's dangerous. It looks bad," said Tozer, with increased solemnity. + +"What's dangerous? You look so solemn that you really make me feel +quite nervous. What's dangerous?" + +"Why, your words. I see in you, I think, a kind of leaning toward +Rome." + +"It isn't Rome," said Minnie. "I don't lean to Rome. I only lean a +little toward a Roman Catholic priest." + +"Worse and worse," said Tozer. "Dear! dear! dear! worse _and_ worse. +This beats all. Young woman, beware! But perhaps I don't understand +you. You surely don't mean that your affections are engaged to any +Roman Catholic priest. You can't mean _that_. Why, they can't marry." + +"But that's just what I like them so for," said Minnie. "I like people +that don't marry; I hate people that want to marry." + +Tozer turned this over in his mind, but could make nothing of it. At +length he thought he saw in this an additional proof that she had been +tampered with by Jesuits at Rome. He thought he saw in this a +statement of her belief in the Roman Catholic doctrine of celibacy. + +He shook his head more solemnly than ever. "It's not Gospel," said he. +"It's mere human tradition. Why, for centuries there was a married +priesthood even in the Latin Church. Dunstan's chief measures +consisted in a fierce war on the married clergy. So did +Hildebrand's--Gregory the Seventh, you know. The Church at Milan, +sustained by the doctrines of the great Ambrose, always preferred a +married clergy. The worst measures of Hildebrand were against these +good pastors and their wives. And in the Eastern Church they have +always had it." + +Of course all this was quite beyond Minnie; so she gave a little sigh, +and said nothing. + +"Now as to Rome," resumed Tozer. "Have you ever given a careful study +to the Apocalypse--not a hasty reading, as people generally do, but a +serious, earnest, and careful examination?" + +"I'm sure I haven't any idea what in the world you're talking about," +said Minnie. "I _wish_ you wouldn't talk so. I don't understand one +single word of what you say." + +Tozer started and stared at this. It was a depth of ignorance that +transcended that of the other young lady with whom he had conversed. +But he attributed it all to "Roman" influences. They dreaded the +Apocalypse, and had not allowed either of these young ladies to become +acquainted with its tremendous pages. Moreover, there was something +else. There was a certain light and trifling tone which she used in +referring to these things, and it pained him. He sat involved in a +long and very serious consideration of her case, and once or twice +looked at her with so very peculiar an expression that Minnie began to +feel very uneasy indeed. + +Tozer at length cleared his throat, and fixed upon Minnie a very +affectionate and tender look. + +"My dear young friend," said he, "have you ever reflected upon the way +you are living?" + +At this Minnie gave him a frightened little look, and her head fell. + +"You are young now, but you can't be young always; youth and beauty +and loveliness all are yours, but they can't last; and now is the time +for you to make your choice--now in life's gay morn. It ain't easy +when you get old. Remember that, my dear. Make your choice now--now." + +"Oh dear!" said Minnie; "I knew it. But I can't--and I don't want +to--and I think it's _very_ unkind in you. I don't want to make _any_ +choice. I don't want any of you. It's _so_ horrid." + +This was a dreadful shock to Tozer; but he could not turn aside from +this beautiful yet erring creature. + +"Oh, I entreat you--I implore you, my dear, _dear_--" + +"I do _wish_ you wouldn't talk to me that way, and call me your +_dear_. I don't like it; no, not even if you _did_ save my life, +though really I didn't know there was any danger. But I'm not _your_ +dear." + +And Minnie tossed her head with a little air of determination, as +though she had quite made up her mind on that point. + +"Oh, well now, really now," said Tozer, "it was only a natural +expression. I _do_ take a deep interest in you, my--that is--miss; I +feel a sincere regard and affection and--" + +"But it's no use," said Minnie. "You really _can't,_ you know; and so, +why, you _mustn't_, you know." + +Tozer did not clearly understand this, so after a brief pause he +resumed: + +"But what I was saying is of far more importance. I referred to your +life. Now you're not happy as you are." + +"Oh yes, but I am," said Minnie, briskly. + +Tozer sighed. + +"I'm _very_ happy," continued Minnie, "very, very happy--that is, when +I'm with dear, darling Kitty, and dear, dear Ethel, and my darling old +Dowdy, and dear, kind papa." + +Tozer sighed again. + +"You can't be _truly_ happy thus," he said, mournfully. "You may think +you are, but you _ain't_. My heart fairly yearns over you when I see +you, so young, so lovely, and so innocent; and I know you can't be +happy as you are. You must live otherwise. And oh, I pray you--I +entreat you to set your affections elsewhere!" + +"Well, then, I think it's very, very horrid in you to press me so," +said, Minnie, with something actually like asperity in her tone; "but +it's _quite_ impossible." + +"But oh, why?" + +"Why, because I don't want to have things any different. But if I have +to be worried and teased so, and if people insist on it so, why, +there's only one that I'll _ever_ consent to." + +"And what is that?" asked Tozer, looking at her with the most +affectionate solicitude. + +"Why, it's--it's--" Minnie paused, and looked a little confused. + +"It's what?" asked Tozer, with still deeper and more anxious interest. + +"Why, it's--it's--Rufus K. Gunn." + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVIII. + +THE IMPATIENT BARON. + + +The brigands had resisted stubbornly, but finally found themselves +without a leader. Girasole had disappeared; and as his voice no longer +directed their movements, they began to fall into confusion. The +attacking party, on the other hand, was well led, and made a steady +advance, driving the enemy before them. At length the brigands lost +heart, and took to flight. With a wild cheer the assailants followed +in pursuit. But the fugitives took to the forest, and were soon beyond +the reach of their pursuers in its familiar intricacies, and the +victors were summoned back by the sound of the trumpet. + +[Illustration: "THE DISCOVERY OF A BODY ON THE SHORE OF THE LAKE."] + +It was now daylight, and as the conquering party emerged from the +forest they showed the uniform of the Papal Zouaves; while their +leader, who had shown himself so skillful in forest warfare, proved to +be no less a personage than our friend the Baron. Led by him, the +party advanced to the old stone house, and here, drawing up his men in +front, their leader rushed in, and searched every room. To his +amazement, he found the house deserted, its only inmate being that +dead brigand whom Girasole had mistaken for Hawbury. This discovery +filled the Baron with consternation. He had expected to find the +prisoners here, and his dismay and grief were excessive. At first he +could not believe in his ill luck; but another search convinced him of +it, and reduced him to a state of perfect bewilderment. + +But he was not one who could long remain inactive. Feeling confident +that the brigands were scattered every where in headlong flight, he +sent his men out in different directions, into the woods and along the +shore, to see if they could find any traces of the lost ones. He +himself remained near the house, so as to direct the search most +efficiently. After about an hour they came back, one by one, without +being able to find many traces. One had found an empty coffin in a +grave, another a woman's hood, a third had found a scarf. All of these +had endeavored to follow up these traces, but without result. Finally +a man approached who announced the discovery of a body on the shore of +the lake. After him came a party who was carrying the corpse for the +inspection of their captain. + +The Baron went to look at it. The body showed a great gap in the +skull. On questioning the men, he learned that they had found it on +the shore, at the bottom of a steep rock, about half-way between the +house and the place where they had first emerged from the woods. His +head was lying pressed against a sharp rock in such a way that it was +evident that he had fallen over the cliff, and had been instantly +killed. The Baron looked at the face, and recognized the features of +Girasole. He ordered it to be taken away and laid in the empty grave +for future burial. + +The Baron now became impatient. This was not what he had bargained for +at all. At length he thought that they might have fled, and might now +be concealed in the woods around; and together with this thought there +came to his mind an idea of an effective way to reach them. The +trumpeter could send forth a blast which could be heard far and wide. +But what might, could, would, or should the trumpeter sound forth +which should give the concealed listeners a certainty that the summons +came from friends and not from foes? This the Baron puzzled over for +some time. At length he solved this problem also, and triumphantly. + +There was one strain which the trumpeter might sound that could not be +mistaken. It would at once convey to the concealed hearers all the +truth, and gently woo them home. It would be at once a note of +victory, a song of joy, a call of love, a sound of peace, and an +invitation--"Wanderer, come home!" + +Of course there was only one tune that, to the mind of the Baron, was +capable of doing this. + +And of course that tune was "Yankee Doodle." + +Did the trumpeter know it? + +Of course he did. + +Who does not know it? + +All men know that tune. Man is born with an innate knowledge of the +strain of "Yankee Doodle." No one can remember when he first learned +it. The reason is because he never learned it at all. It was born in +him. + +So the trumpeter sounded it forth, and wild and high and clear and far +the sounds arose; and it was "Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes +flying; and answer, echoes, answer, Yankee Doodle dying." + +And while the trumpet sounded the Baron listened and listened, and +walked up and down, and fretted and fumed and chafed, and I'm afraid +he swore a little too; and at last he was going to tell the trumpeter +to stop his infernal noise, when, just at that moment, what should he +see all of a sudden emerging from the woods but three figures! + +And I'll leave you to imagine, if you can, the joy and delight which +agitated the bosom of our good Baron as he recognized among these +three figures the well-known face and form of his friend Hawbury. With +Hawbury was a lady whom the Baron remembered having seen once in the +upper hall of a certain house in Rome, on a memorable occasion, when +he stood on the stairs calling _Min_. The lady was very austere then, +but she was very gracious now, and very wonderfully sweet in the +expression of her face. And with them was a stranger in the garb of a +priest. + +Now as soon as the party met the Baron, who rushed to meet them, +Hawbury wrung his hand, and stared at him in unbounded astonishment. + +"You!" he cried; "yourself, old boy! By Jove!" + +"Yes," said the Baron. "You see, the moment we got into that ambush I +kept my eye open, and got a chance to spring into the woods. There I +was all right, and ran for it. I got into the road again a couple of +miles back, got a horse, rode to Civita Castellana, and there I was +lucky enough to find a company of Zouaves. Well, Sir, we came here +flying, mind, I tell you, and got hold of a chap that we made guide us +to the lake. Then we opened on them; and here we are, by thunder! But +where's Min?" + +"Who?" asked Hawbury. + +"Min," said the Baron, in the most natural tone in the world. + +"Oh! Why, isn't she here?" + +"No. We've hunted every where. No one's here at all." And the Baron +went on to tell about their search and its results. Hawbury was +chiefly struck by the news of Girasole. + +"He must have gone mad with terror," said Hawbury, as he told the +Baron about his adventure at the grave. "If that's so," he added, "I +don't see how the ladies could be harmed. I dare say they've run off. +Why, we started to run, and got so far off that we couldn't find our +way back, even after the trumpet began to sound. You must keep blowing +at it, you know. Play all the national tunes you can--no end. They'll +find their way back if you give them time." + +And now they all went back to the house, and the Baron in his anxiety +could not talk any more, but began his former occupation of walking up +and down, and fuming and fretting and chafing, and, I'm again afraid, +swearing--when all of a sudden, on the bank in front of him, on the +very top, just emerging from the thick underbrush which had concealed +them till that moment, to their utter amazement and indescribable +delight, they beheld Scone Dacres and Mrs. Willoughby. Scone Dacres +appeared to Hawbury to be in a totally different frame of mind from +that in which he had been when he last saw him; and what perplexed him +most, yea, and absolutely confounded him, was the sight of Scone +Dacres with his demon wife, whom he had been pursuing for the sake of +vengeance, and whose frenzy had been so violent that he himself had +been drawn with him on purpose to try and restrain him. And now what +was the injured husband doing with his demon wife? Doing! why, doing +the impassioned lover most vigorously; sustaining her steps most +tenderly; grasping her hand; pushing aside the bushes; assisting her +down the slope; overwhelming her, in short; hovering round her, +apparently unconscious that there was in all the wide world any other +being than Mrs. Willoughby. And as Hawbury looked upon all this his +eyes dilated and his lips parted involuntarily in utter wonder; and +finally, as Dacres reached the spot, the only greeting which he could +give his friend was, + +"By Jove!" + +And now, while Mrs. Willoughby and Ethel were embracing with tears of +joy, and overwhelming one another with questions, the Baron sought +information from Dacres. + +Dacres then informed him all about Tozer's advent and departure. + +"Tozer!" cried the Baron, in intense delight. "Good on his darned old +head! Hurrah for the parson! He shall marry us for this--he, and no +other, by thunder!" + +Upon which Mrs. Willoughby and Ethel exchanged glances, but said not a +word. Not they. + +But in about five minutes, when Mrs. Willoughby had Ethel apart a +little by herself, she said, + +"Oh, Ethel dear, isn't it dreadful?" + +"What?" asked Ethel. + +"Why, poor Minnie." + +"Poor Minnie?" + +"Yes. Another horrid man. And he'll be claiming her too. And, oh dear! +what shall I do?" + +"Why, you'll have to let her decide for herself. I think it will +be--this person." + +Mrs. Willoughby clasped her hands, and looked up with a pretty little +expression of horror. + +"And do you know, dear," added Ethel, "I'm beginning to think that it +wouldn't be so _very_ bad. He's Lord Hawbury's friend, you know, and +then he's very, very brave; and, above all, think what we all owe +him." + +Mrs. Willoughby gave a resigned sigh. + +And now the Baron was wilder with impatience than ever. He had +questioned Dacres, and found that he could give him no information +whatever as to Tozer's route, and consequently had no idea where to +search. But he still had boundless confidence in "Yankee Doodle." + +"That's the way," said Dacres; "we heard it ever so far, and it was +the first thing that told us it was safe to return. We didn't dare to +venture before." + +Meanwhile Hawbury had got Dacres by himself, and poured a torrent of +questions over him. Dacres told him in general terms how he was +captured. Then he informed him how Mrs. Willoughby was put in the same +room, and his discovery that it was Minnie that the Italian wanted. + +"Well, do you know, old chap," continued Dacres, "I couldn't stand it; +so I offered to make it all up with her." + +"Oh, I see you've done that, old boy. Congrat--" + +"Pooh! wait a minute," said Dacres, interrupting him. "Well, you know, +she wasn't my wife at all." + +At this Hawbury stood utterly aghast. + +"What's that?" + +"She wasn't my wife at all. She looks confoundedly like what my wife +was at her best, but she's another person. It's a most extraordinary +likeness; and yet she's isn't any relation, but a great deal prettier +woman. What made me so sure, you know, was the infernally odd +coincidence of the name; and then I only saw her off and on, you know, +and I never heard her voice. Then, you know, I was mad with jealousy; +and so I made myself worse and worse, till I was ripe for murder, +arson, assasination, and all that sort of thing, you know." + +To all this Hawbury listened in amazement, and could not utter a word, +until at last, as Dacres paused, he said, + +"By Jove!" + +"Well, old man, I was the most infernal ass that ever lived. And how I +must have bored you!" + +"By Jove!" exclaimed Hawbury again. "But drive on, old boy." + +"Well, you know, the row occurred just then, and away went the +scoundrels to the fight, and in came that parson fellow, and away we +went. I took Mrs. Willoughby to a safe place, where I kept her till I +heard the trumpet, you know. And I've got another thing to tell you. +It's deuced odd, but she knew all about me." + +"The deuce she did!" + +"Yes, the whole story. Lived somewhere in the county. But I don't +remember the Fays. At any rate, she lived there; and do you know, old +fellow, the county people used to think I beat my wife!" + +"By Jove!" + +"Yes; and afterward they raised a report that my cruelty had driven +her mad. But I had a few friends that stood up for me; and among +others these Fays, you know, had heard the truth of it, and, as it +happened, Kitty--" + +"Kitty?" + +"Well, Mrs. Willoughby, I mean--her name's Kitty--has always known the +truth about it; and when she saw me at Naples she felt interested in +me." + +"Oho!" and Hawbury opened his eyes. + +"Well, she knew all about it; and, among other things, she gave me one +piece of intelligence that has eased my mind." + +"Ah! what's that?" + +"Why, my wife _is_ dead." + +"Oh, then there's no doubt about it?" + +"Not a bit. She died eight years ago, and in an insane asylum." + +"By Jove! Then she was mad all the time." + +"Yes; that accounts for it, and turns all my curses into pity." + +Dacres was silent now for a few moments. At length he looked at +Hawbury with a very singular expression. + +"Hawbury, old boy." + +"Well, Sconey?" + +"I think we'll keep it up." + +"Who?" + +"Why, Kitty and I--that is, Mrs. Willoughby and I--her name's Kitty, +you know." + +"Keep what up?" + +"Why, the--the--the fond illusion, and all that sort of thing. You see +I've got into such an infernal habit of regarding her as my wife that +I can't look on her in any other light. I claimed her, you know, and +all that sort of thing, and she thought I was delirious, and felt +sorry, and humored me, and gave me a very favorable answer." + +"Humored you?" + +"Yes; that's what she says now, you know. But I'm holding her to it, +and I've every reason to believe, you know--in fact, I may as well say +that it is an understood thing, you know, that she'll let it go, you +know, and at some early day, you know, we'll have it all formally +settled, and all that sort of thing, you know." + +Hawbury wrung his friend's hand. + +"See here, old boy; you see Ethel there?" + +"Yes." + +"Who do you think she is?" + +"Who?" + +"_Ethel Orne_!" + +"Ethel _Orne_!" cried Dacres, as the whole truth flashed on his mind. +"What a devil of a jumble every thing has been getting into!--By +Heaven, dear boy, I congratulate you from the bottom of my soul!" + +And he wrung Hawbury's hand as though all his soul was in that grasp. + +But all this could not satisfy the impatience of the Baron. This was +all very well in its way, merely as an episode; but he was waiting for +the chief incident of the piece, and the chief incident was delaying +very unaccountably. + +So he strode up and down, and he fretted and he fumed and he chafed, +and the trumpeter kept blowing away. + +Until at last-- + +Just before his eyes-- + +Up there on the top of the bank, not far from where Dacres and Mrs. +Willoughby had made their appearance, the Baron caught sight of a +tall, lank, slim figure, clothed in rusty black, whose thin and +leathery face, rising above a white neck-tie, peered solemnly yet +interrogatively through the bushes; while just behind him the Baron +caught a glimpse of the flutter of a woman's dress. + +[Illustration: +"HE GAVE A LOUD CRY OF JOY, AND THEN SPRANG UP THE BANK."] + +He gave a loud cry of joy, and then sprang up the bank. + + * * * * * * + +But over that meeting I think we had better draw a veil. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIX. + +ASTONISHING WAY OF CONCLUDING AN ADVENTURE. + + +The meeting between the Baron and Minnie gave a new shock to poor Mrs. +Willoughby, who looked with a helpless expression, and walked away for +a little distance. Dacres and Hawbury were still eagerly conversing +and questioning one another about their adventures. Tozer also had +descended and joined himself to the priest; and each of these groups +had leisure for a prolonged conversation before they were interrupted. +At length Minnie made her appearance, and flung herself into her +sister's arms, while at the same time the Baron grasped Tozer by both +hands, and called out, in a voice loud enough to be heard by all, + +"You shall marry us, parson--and this very day, by thunder!" + +These words came to Mrs. Willoughby's ears in the midst of her first +joy at meeting her sister, and shocked her inexpressibly. + +"What's that, Minnie darling?" she asked, anxiously. "What is it? Did +you hear what that dreadful--what the--the Baron said?" + +Minnie looked sweetly conscious, but said nothing. + +"What _does_ he mean?" asked her sister again. + +"I suppose he means what he says," replied Minnie, with a timid air, +stealing a shy look at the Baron. + +"Oh dear!" said Mrs. Willoughby; "there's another dreadful trouble, I +know. It's very, very hard--" + +"Well, I'm sure," said Minnie, "I can't help it. They all do so. That +clergyman came and saved me, and he wasn't a Roman Catholic clergyman +at all, and he proposed--" + +"Proposed!" cried Mrs. Willoughby, aghast. + +"Oh yes," said Minnie, solemnly; "and I had hard work preventing him. +But, really, it was _too_ absurd, and I would not let him be too +explicit. But I didn't hurt his feelings. Well, you know, then all of +a sudden, as we were sitting there, the bugle sounded, and we came +back. Well, then, Rufus K. Gunn came--and you know how very violent he +is in his way--and he said he saved my life again, and so he +proposed." + +"_He_ proposed! Why, he had proposed before." + +"Oh yes; but that was for an engagement, and this was for our +marriage." + +"Marriage!" + +"Oh yes; and, you see, he had actually saved my life twice, and he was +very urgent, and he is so awfully affectionate, and so--" + +"Well, what?" cried Mrs. Willoughby, seeing Minnie hesitate. + +"Why, he--" + +"Well?" + +"I mean, I--" + +"You what? Really, Minnie dearest, you might tell me, and not keep me +in such dreadful suspense." + +"Why, what could I say?" + +"But what _did_ you say?" + +"Why, I think I--said--yes," said Minnie, casting down her eyes with +indescribable sweetness, shyness, meekness, and resignation. Mrs. +Willoughby actually shuddered. + +"Now, Kitty," exclaimed Minnie, who at once noticed it, "you needn't +be so horrid. I'm sure you can't say any thing against him _now_. You +needn't look so. You _always_ hated him. You _never_ would treat him +kindly." + +"But this--this marriage. It's too shocking." + +"Well, he saved my life." + +"And to-day! How utterly preposterous! It's shameful!" + +"Well, I'm sure I can't help it." + +"It's too horrid!" continued Mrs. Willoughby, in an excited tone. "It +will break poor papa's heart. And it will break poor darling aunty's +heart. And it will break my heart." + +"Now, Kitty dearest, this is too silly in you. If it hadn't been for +him, I would now be married to that wretched Count, who hadn't +sufficient affection for me to get me a chair to sit on, and who was +very, very rude to you. You didn't care, though, whether I was married +to him or not; and now when I am saved from him you have nothing but +very unpleasant things to say about Rufus K. Gunn." + +"Oh dear, what _would_ I give if you were only safe home!" + +"Well, I'm sure I don't see what _I_ can do. People are always saving +my life. And there is Captain Kirby hunting all over Italy for me. And +I _know_ I will be saved by somebody--if--if--I--I--if--I--if--you +know--that is--I'm sure--" + +"Nonsense!" said Mrs. Willoughby, as Minnie broke down in confusion. +"It is _too_ absurd. I won't talk about it. You are a silly child. Oh, +how I _do_ wish you were home!" + +At this juncture the conversation was interrupted by the Baron. + +"It is not my fashion, ma'am," said he, gravely, "to remind another of +any obligation under which he may be to me; but my claims on Minnie +have been so opposed by you and the rest of her friends that I have to +ask you to think of them. Your father knows what my first claims are. +You yourself, ma'am, know perfectly well what the last claims are +which I have won to-day." + +The Baron spoke calmly, firmly, and with dignity. Mrs. Willoughby +answered not a word. + +"If you think on your position last night, and Minnie's, ma'am," +resumed the Baron, "you'll acknowledge, I expect, that it was pretty +hard lines. What would you have given a few hours ago for a sight of +my uniform in that old house yonder? If I had come then to save Minnie +from the clutches of that _I_talian, wouldn't you have given her to me +with all your heart, and your prayers too? You would, by thunder! +Think, ma'am, on your sufferings last night, and then answer me." + +Mrs. Willoughby involuntarily thought of that night of horror, and +shuddered, and said nothing. + +"Now, ma'am, just listen to this. I find on coming here that this +Italian had a priest here all ready to marry him and Minnie. If I'd +been delayed or defeated, Minnie would have been that rascal's wife by +this time. The priest was here. They would have been married as sure +as you're born. You, ma'am, would have had to see this poor, +trembling, broken-hearted, despairing girl torn from your arms, and +bound by the marriage tie to a ruffian and a scoundrel whom she +loathed. And now, ma'am, I save her from this. I have my priest too, +ma'am. He ain't a Roman Catholic, it is true--he's an orthodox +parson--but, at the same time, I ain't particular. Now I propose to +avail myself this day of his invaluable services at the earliest hour +possible; but, at the same time, if Min prefers it, I don't object to +the priest, for I have a kind of Roman Catholic leaning myself. + +"Now you may ask, ma'am," continued the Baron, as Mrs. Willoughby +continued silent--"you may ask why I'm in such a thundering hurry. My +answer is, because you fit me off so. You tried to keep me from Min. +You locked me out of your house. You threatened to hand me over to the +police (and I'd like to see one of them try it on with me). You said I +was mad or drunk; and finally you tried to run away. Then you rejected +my advice, and plunged head-foremost into this fix. Now, in view of +all this, my position is this--that I can't trust you. I've got Min +now, and I mean to keep her. If you got hold of her again, I feel it +would be the last of her. Consequently I ain't going to let her go. +Not me. Not by a long chalk. + +"Finally, ma'am, if you'll allow me, I'll touch upon another point. +I've thought over your objections to me. It ain't my rank--I'm a +noble; it ain't money--I'm worth a hundred thousand dollars; it ain't +my name--for I call myself Atramonte. It must be something in me. I've +come to the conclusion that it's my general style--my manners and +customs. Very well. Perhaps they don't come up to your standard. They +mayn't square with your ideas. Yet, let me inform you, ma'am, there +are other standards of action and manner and speech than those to +which you are accustomed, and mine is one of them. Minnie doesn't +object to that. She knows my heart is all right, and is willing to +trust herself to me. Consequently I take her, and I mean to make her +mine this day." + +As the Baron paused Mrs. Willoughby began, first of all, to express +her gratitude, and then to beg him to postpone the marriage. She +declared that it was an unheard-of thing, that it was shameful, that +it was shocking, that it was dreadful. She grew very much excited; she +protested, she entreated. Finally she burst into tears, and appealed +to Lord Hawbury in the most moving terms. Hawbury listened very +gravely, with his eyes wandering over to where Ethel was; and Ethel +caught the expression of his face, and looked quite confused. + +"Oh, think, only think," said Mrs. Willoughby, after an eloquent and +pathetic appeal--"think how the poor child will be talked about!" + +"Well, really--ah--'pon my life," said Hawbury, with his eyes still +wandering over toward Ethel, "I'm sure I don't--ah--share your views +altogether, Mrs. Willoughby; for--ah--there _are_ times, you know, +when a fellow finds it very uncommonly desirable--runaway matches, you +know, and all that sort of thing. And, by Jove! to tell the truth, I +really admire the idea, by Jove! And really--ah--I'm sure--I wish most +confoundedly it was the universal fashion, by Jove!" + +"But she'll be so talked about. She'll make herself so shockingly +_conspicuous_." + +"Conspicuous? By Jove!" said Hawbury, who seemed struck by the idea. +At that moment Minnie began talking to her sister, and Hawbury went +off to Ethel, to whom he began talking in the most earnest manner. The +two wandered off for some distance, and did not return for a full half +hour. When they did return Ethel looked somewhat embarrassed, and +Hawbury was radiant. With this radiance on his face he went up to Mrs. +Willoughby, leaving Ethel in the background. + +"Oh, by-the-way," said he, "you were remarking that your sister would +be too conspicuous by such a hasty marriage." + +"Yes," said Mrs. Willoughby, anxiously. + +"Well, I thought I would tell you that she needn't be so _very_ +conspicuous; for, in fact--that is, you know, Ethel and I--she told +you, I suppose, about our mistake?" + +"Oh yes." + +"And I think I've persuaded her to save Minnie from being too +conspicuous." + +Mrs. Willoughby gave Hawbury a look of astonishment and reproach. + +"You!" she cried; "and Ethel!" + +"Why, I'm sure, we're the very ones you might expect it from. Think +how infernally we've been humbugged by fate." + +"Fate!" said Mrs. Willoughby. "It was all your own fault. She was +chosen for you." + +"Chosen for me? What do you mean?" + +"By your mother." + +"My mother?" + +"Yes." + +"She said one of Biggs's nieces." + +"Ethel is that niece." + +"The devil!" cried Hawbury. "I beg pardon. By Jove!" + +Hawbury, overwhelmed by this, went back to Ethel, and they wandered +off once more. The Baron had already wandered off with Minnie in +another direction. Tozer and the priest had gone to survey the house. + +Seeing Mrs. Willoughby thus left alone, Dacres drifted up to her. He +came up silently. + +"Kitty," said he, in a low voice, "you seem sad." + +By which familiar address it will be seen that Dacres had made some +progress toward intimacy with her. + +Mrs. Willoughby did not seem at all offended at this, but looked up +with one of her frankest smiles, and the clouds of perplexity passed +away. She was an exceedingly pretty woman, and she was certainly not +over twenty-four. + +"I'm so worried," she said, plaintively. + +"What's the matter?" asked Dacres, in a tone of the deepest and +tenderest sympathy. + +"Why, these horrid men; and, what's worse, Lord Hawbury is actually +encouraging Mr.--the--the Baron; and I'm _so_ worried. Oh dear!" + +"But why should you be worried?" + +"It's so horrid. It's shocking. It's not to be thought of." + +"But why not?" asked Dacres. + +"Why, it's--it's so horrid," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +Dacres stood looking at her for a long time. + +"Kitty," said he at last. + +Mrs. Willoughby looked up. + +Dacres looked all around. He then took her hand. + +"Isn't it too bad," he said, "to let Minnie--" + +"What?" + +"To let her go through this ordeal alone?" + +"Alone!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, looking in wonder at him. + +"Yes." + +"What _do_ you mean?" + +"Couldn't _we_ accompany her?" + +Mrs. Willoughby snatched away her hand. + +"Are you mad?" she cried. "I do believe the whole world's mad to-day." + +"Mad!" cried Dacres. "Yes, I'm mad--insane--raving! Won't you be +merciful again? Won't you, Kitty? Won't you 'humor' my ravings? Oh, +do. Oh, Kitty! dear Kitty--!" + +"It's positive insanity!" + +"Oh, Kitty!" + +"You're raving!" + +"Won't you 'humor' me--just this once! only this once." + +"Hush! there they come," said Mrs. Willoughby, suddenly snatching away +her hand, which Dacres had somehow got hold of again, and moving a +little further away from him. + +It was the Baron and Minnie who were coming back again, while Hawbury +and Ethel were seen a little further away. + +There they all stood--there, on the spot where they had found the +crisis of their fortunes; and as they stood there the two clergymen, +Catholic and Protestant, slowly came out of the house. + + +THE END. + + + + * * * * * + + + +Errors and anomalies noted by transcriber: + + dextrously (both occurrences); cariboo; Guiseppe; assasination + [spelling unchanged] + It seems con-foundedly odd + de-nomination + [hyphens in original] + + perfectly cool and lady-like." + [missing close quote] + "Well, he said--he said, 'Yes, darling'--and--" + [missing open quote before "Yes"] + I really wish they'd stop it. But, Kitty dear--" + [missing close quote] + "Aha! don't I know her? I warrant you... + [missing open quote] + + Potes ne juvare nos [spacing in original] + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AMERICAN BARON*** + + +******* This file should be named 13257-8.txt or 13257-8.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/3/2/5/13257 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre> +<p>Title: The American Baron</p> +<p>Author: James De Mille</p> +<p>Release Date: July 17, 2007 [eBook #13257]</p> +<p>Language: English</p> +<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p> +<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AMERICAN BARON***</p> +<p> </p> +<h5 class="pg">E-text prepared by Keith M. Eckrich, Curtis Weyant,<br /> + and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br /> + (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net/c/">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br /> + and revised by Louise Hope<br /> + using page images generously made available by<br /> + Internet Archive/American Libraries<br /> + (<a href="http://www.archive.org/details/americana">http://www.archive.org/details/americana</a>)<br /> + <br /> + HTML version prepared by Louise Hope</h5> +<p> </p> +<center> +<table border=0 bgcolor="ccccff" cellpadding=10> + <tr> + <td valign="top"> + Note: + </td> + <td> + Images of the original pages are available through + Internet Archive/American Libraries.<br> See + <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/americanbaron00demiiala"> + http://www.archive.org/details/americanbaron00demiiala</a> + </td> + </tr> +</table> +</center> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" noshade> +<p> </p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/frontis.png" width = "458" height = "545" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"AND AS THEY STOOD THE CLERGYMEN SLOWLY CAME OUT +OF THE HOUSE"—[SEE PAGE 132.]</p> + +<div class = "titlepage"> + +<h1 class = "smaller">THE</h1> + +<h1>AMERICAN BARON.</h1> + +<h1 class = "smaller"><b>A Novel.</b></h1> + +<p> </p> + +<h4>By JAMES DE MILLE,</h4> + +<h4 class = "smallest">AUTHOR OF</h4> + +<h4 class = "smaller">"THE DODGE CLUB," "THE CRYPTOGRAM," "CORD AND +CREESE," &c.</h4> + +<p> </p> + +<h5><i>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS</i>.</h5> + +<p> </p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/publogo.png" width = "106" height = "72" +alt = "publisher's device: LAMPADIA ECHONTES DIALÔSOUSIN ALLÊLOIS"> + +<p> </p> + +<h5 class = "larger">NEW YORK:</h5> +<h5>HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,</h5> +<h5 class = "smaller">FRANKLIN SQUARE.</h5> +<h5>1872.</h5> + +</div> + + +<h4 class = "smallcaps">By Prof. JAMES DE MILLE.</h4> + +<hr class = "tiny"> + +<p class = "hanging"> +<i>THE DODGE CLUB</i>; or, Italy in 1859. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper, 75 +cents; Cloth, $1 25.</p> + +<p class = "hanging"> +<i>CORD AND CREESE</i>. A Novel. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper, 75 cents; +Cloth, $1 25.</p> + +<p class = "hanging"> +<i>THE CRYPTOGRAM</i>. A Novel. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper, $1 50; +Cloth, $2 00.</p> + +<p class = "hanging"> +<i>THE AMERICAN BARON</i>. A Novel. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper.</p> + +<hr class = "tiny"> + +<h5 class = "smallcaps">Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New +York.</h5> + +<h6><img src = "images/finger20.gif" width = "17" height = "7" +alt = "(pointing finger)"> +<i>Sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on +receipt of the price.</i></h6> + +<p> <br> </p> + +<hr> + +<h5>Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by<br> +HARPER & BROTHERS,<br> +In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.</h5> + +<hr> + +<p> <br> </p> + + +<span class = "pagenum">7</span> + +<h2 class = "extended">THE AMERICAN BARON.</h2> + +<hr class = "mid"> + +<p> <br> </p> + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic007.png" width = "212" height = "332" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"PARDON, MEES."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapI" id = "chapI"> +CHAPTER I.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE AVALANCHE.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Somewhat</span> less than a hundred years +ago a party of travelers might have been seen crossing over the Simplon +Road, <i>en route</i> for Italy. They had been detained at Brieg by +reports that the road was impassable; and, as it was the month of March, +the prospect of snow and storms and avalanches was sufficient to make +them hesitate. At length the road had been reopened, and they were +informed that the journey might be made on sleds.</p> + +<p>Unwilling to wait at Brieg, and equally unwilling to make a detour so +as to take the railroad, the party decided to go on. They were informed +that they could go on wheels as far as the line of snow, but that +afterward their accommodations would not be so comfortable as they might +desire. The road had been cleared for only a few feet; the snow was +deep; the sleds were rude; and progress would be slow. +<span class = "pagenum">7b</span> +These statements, however, did not shake the resolution of the party; +and the end of it was that they determined to go on, and cross the +mountain if it were possible.</p> + +<p>On leaving Brieg the road began to ascend with a very slight incline, +winding around in an intricate sort of way, sometimes crossing deep +gullies, at other times piercing the hillside in long dark tunnels; but +amidst all these windings ever ascending, so that every step took them +higher and higher above the little valley where Brieg lay. The party saw +also that every step brought them steadily nearer to the line of snow; +and at length they found the road covered with a thin white layer. Over +this they rolled, and though the snow became deeper with every furlong +of their progress, yet they encountered but little actual difficulty +until they approached the first station where the horses were to be +changed. Here they came to a deep drift. Through this a pathway had been +cleared, so that there was no difficulty about going through; but the +sight of this served to show them what might be expected further on, and +to fill them all with grave doubts as to the practicability of a journey +which was thus interrupted so early.</p> + +<p>On reaching the station these doubts were confirmed. They were +informed that the road had been cleared for sleds on the preceding day, +but that on the previous night fresh snow had fallen, and in such +quantities that the road would have to be cleared afresh. The worst of +it was that there was every probability of new snow-storms, which would +cover the road still deeper, and once more obliterate the track. This +led to a fresh debate about the journey; but they were all unwilling to +turn back. Only a few miles separated them from Domo d'Ossola, and they +were assured that, if no fresh snow should fall, they would be able to +start on the following morning. This last assurance once more confirmed +their wavering resolution, and they concluded to wait at the +station.</p> + +<p>For the remainder of that day they waited at the little way-side inn, +amusing themselves with looking out upon their surroundings. They were +environed by a scene of universal white. Above them towered vast Alpine +summits, where the wild wind blew, sweeping the snow-wreaths into the +air. In front was a deep +<span class = "pagenum">8</span> +ravine, at the bottom of which there ran a torrent that foamed and +tossed over rocks and boulders. It was not possible to take a walk to +any distance. Their boots were made for lighter purposes than plunging +through snow-drifts; and so they were forced to remain indoors, and pass +the time as best they could.</p> + +<p>On the following morning they found every thing in readiness for a +start. In front of the inn they saw five sleds of that kind which is +universally used in the northern part of America. Each sled was of the +rudest possible construction, and was drawn by one horse; straw was +spread over the sled, upon which fur robes and blankets were flung. The +party was distributed among these sleds, so that each one should have as +light a load as possible, while one of the rude vehicles carried the +luggage.</p> + +<p>Thus arranged, they all started off. And now, since they are all +fairly under way, I propose to introduce them, individually and +collectively, to my very good friend the reader.</p> + +<p>First of all I must mention the fact that the party consisted chiefly +of ladies and their attendants.</p> + +<p>Of these the most prominent was a slim, tall, elderly lady, with +large, dark, soft eyes, that spoke of a vanished youth and beauty from +her heavily wrinkled face. She was the Dowager Lady Dalrymple, and acted +toward the rest of the party in the multifarious capacity of chaperon, +general, courier, guide, philosopher, friend, and Mentor.</p> + +<p>Next came Mrs. Willoughby, a widow of great beauty and fascination, a +brunette, good-natured, clever, and shrewd. I might here pause, and go +into no end of raptures on the various qualities of this lady's +character; but, on the whole, I think I'd better not, as they will be +sufficiently apparent before the end of this story is reached.</p> + +<p>Then there was Miss Minnie Fay, sister to Mrs. Willoughby, and +utterly unlike her in every respect. Minnie was a blonde, with blue +eyes, golden hair cut short and clustering about her little head, little +bit of a mouth, with very red, plump lips, and very white teeth. Minnie +was very small, and very elegant in shape, in gesture, in dress, in +every attitude and every movement. The most striking thing about her, +however, was the expression of her eyes and her face. There was about +her brow the glory of perfect innocence. Her eyes had a glance of +unfathomable melancholy, mingled with childlike trust in the particular +person upon whom her gaze was fastened. Minnie was considered by all her +friends as a child—was treated as a child—humored, petted, +coaxed, indulged, and talked to as a child. Minnie, on her part, +thought, spoke, lived, moved, and acted as a child. She fretted, she +teased, she pouted, she cried, she did every thing as a child does; and +thus carried up to the age of eighteen the bloom and charm of eight.</p> + +<p>The two sisters were nieces of the Dowager +<span class = "pagenum">8b</span> +Lady Dalrymple. Another niece also accompanied them, who was a cousin of +the two sisters. This was Miss Ethel Orne, a young lady who had +flourished through a London season, and had refused any number of +brilliant offers. She was a brunette, with most wonderful dark eyes, +figure of perfect grace, and an expression of grave self-poise that awed +the butterflies of fashion, but offered an irresistible attraction to +people of sense, intellect, intelligence, esprit, and all that sort of +thing—like you and me, my boy.</p> + +<p>I am taking up too much time and anticipating somewhat, I fear, by +these descriptions; so let us drop Miss Ethel.</p> + +<p>These ladies being thus all related formed a family party, and had +made the journey thus far on the best of terms, without any other escort +than that which was afforded by their chaperon, general, courier, guide, +philosopher, friend, and Mentor—the Dowager Lady Dalrymple.</p> + +<p>The party was enlarged by the presence of four maids and a foreign +gentleman. This last-mentioned personage was small in stature, with a +very handsome face and very brilliant eyes. His frame, though slight, +was sinewy and well knit, and he looked like an Italian. He had come on +alone, and had passed the night at the station-house.</p> + +<p>A track about six feet wide had been cut out through the snow, and +over this they passed. The snow was soft, and the horses sank deep, so +that progress was slow. Nor was the journey without the excitement of +apparent danger. At times before them and behind them there would come a +low, rumbling sound, and they would see a mass of snow and ice rushing +down some neighboring slope. Some of these fell on the road, and more +than once they had to quit their sleds and wait for the drivers to get +them over the heaps that had been formed across their path. Fortunately, +however, none of these came near them; and Minnie Fay, who at first had +screamed at intervals of about five minutes, gradually gained +confidence, and at length changed her mood so completely that she +laughed and clapped her little hands whenever she saw the rush of snow +and ice. Thus slowly, yet in safety, they pushed onward, and at length +reached the little village of Simplon. Here they waited an hour to warm +themselves, lunch, and change horses. At the end of that time they set +out afresh, and once more they were on their winding way.</p> + +<p>They had now the gratification of finding that they were descending +the slope, and of knowing that this descent took them every minute +further from the regions of snow, and nearer to the sunny plains of +Italy. Minnie in particular gave utterance to her delight: and now, +having lost every particle of fear, she begged to be allowed to drive in +the foremost sled. Ethel had been in it thus far, but she willingly +changed places with Minnie, and thus the descent was made.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">9</span> +<p>The sleds and their occupants were now arranged in the following +order:</p> + +<p>First, Minnie Fay alone with the driver.</p> + +<p>Second, Mrs. Willoughby and Ethel.</p> + +<p>Third, the Dowager and her maid.</p> + +<p>Fourth, the three other maids.</p> + +<p>Fifth, the luggage.</p> + +<p>After these five sleds, containing our party, came another with the +foreign gentleman.</p> + +<p>Each of these sleds had a driver to itself.</p> + +<p>In this order the party went, until at length they came to the Gorge +of Gondo. This is a narrow valley, the sides of which rise up very +abruptly, and in some places precipitously, to a great height. At the +bottom flows a furious torrent, which boils and foams and roars as it +forces its impetuous way onward over fallen masses of rock and trees and +boulders, at one time gathering into still pools, at other times roaring +into cataracts. Their road had been cut out on the side of the mountain, +and the path had been cleared away here many feet above the buried road; +and as they wound along the slope they could look up at the stupendous +heights above them, and down at the abyss beneath them, whose white +snow-covering was marked at the bottom by the black line of the roaring +torrent. The smooth slope of snow ran down as far as the eye could reach +at a steep angle, filling up all crevices, with here and there a +projecting rock or a dark clump of trees to break its surface.</p> + +<p>The road was far beneath them. The drivers had informed them that it +was forty feet deep at the top of the pass, and that its depth here was +over thirty. Long poles which were inserted in the snow projected above +its surface, and served to mark where the road ran.</p> + +<p>Here, then, they drove along, feeling wearied with the length of the +way, impatient at the slowness of their progress, and eager to reach +their journey's end. But little was said. All had talked till all were +tired out. Even Minnie Fay, who at first had evinced great enthusiasm on +finding herself leading the way, and had kept turning back constantly to +address remarks to her friends, had at length subsided, and had rolled +herself up more closely in her furs, and heaped the straw higher about +her little feet.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, before them, and above them, and behind them, and all +around them, there arose a deep, low, dull, rushing sound, which seemed +as if all the snow on the slope was moving. Their ears had by this time +become sufficiently well acquainted with the peculiar sound of the +rushing snow-masses to know that this was the noise that heralded their +progress, and to feel sure that this was an avalanche of no common size. +Yes, this was an avalanche, and every one heard it; but no one could +tell where it was moving, or whether it was near or far, or whether it +was before or behind. They only knew that it was somewhere along the +slope which they were traversing.</p> + +<p>A warning cry came from the foremost driver. +<span class = "pagenum">9b</span> +He looked back, and his face was as pale as death. He waved his hands +above him, and then shouting for the others to follow, he whipped up his +horse furiously. The animal plunged into the snow, and tossed and +floundered and made a rush onward.</p> + +<p>But the other drivers held back, and, instead of following, shouted +to the first driver to stop, and cried to the passengers to hold on. Not +a cry of fear escaped from any one of the ladies. All did as they were +directed, and grasped the stakes of their sleds, looking up at the slope +with white lips, and expectation of horror in their eyes, watching for +the avalanche.</p> + +<p>And down it came, a vast mass of snow and ice—down it came, +irresistibly, tremendously, with a force that nothing could withstand. +All eyes watched its progress in the silence of utter and helpless +terror. It came. It struck. All the sleds in the rear escaped, but +Minnie's sled lay in the course of the falling mass. The driver had +madly rushed into the very midst of the danger which he sought to avoid. +A scream from Minnie and a cry of despair from the driver burst upon the +ears of the horrified listeners, and the sled that bore them, buried in +the snow, went over the edge of the slope, and downward to the +abyss.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapII" id = "chapII"> +CHAPTER II.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE PERILOUS DESCENT.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">The</span> shriek of Minnie and the +driver's cry of despair were both stopped abruptly by the rush of snow, +and were smothered in the heap under which they were buried. The whole +party stood paralyzed, gazing stupidly downward where the avalanche was +hurrying on to the abyss, bearing with it the ill-fated Minnie. The +descent was a slope of smooth snow, which went down at an angle of +forty-five degrees for at least a thousand feet. At that point there +seemed to be a precipice. As their aching eyes watched the falling mass +they saw it approach this place, and then as it came near the whole +avalanche seemed to divide as though it had been severed by some +projecting rock. It divided thus, and went to ruin; while in the midst +of the ruin they saw the sled, looking like a helpless boat in the midst +of foaming breakers. So, like such a helpless boat, it was dashed +forward, and shot out of sight over the precipice.</p> + +<p>Whither had it gone? Into what abyss had it fallen? What lay beneath +that point over which it had been thrown? Was it the fierce torrent that +rolled there, or were there black rocks and sharp crags lying at the +foot of the awful precipice? Such were the questions which flashed +through every mind, and deepened the universal horror into universal +despair.</p> + +<p>In the midst of this general dismay Ethel was the first to speak and +to act. She started +<span class = "pagenum">10</span> +to her feet, and looking back, called in a loud voice:</p> + +<p>"Go down after her! A thousand pounds to the man who saves her! +Quick!"</p> + +<p>At this the drivers came forward. None of them could understand +English, and so had not comprehended her offer; but they saw by her +gestures what she wanted. They, however, did not seem inclined to act. +They pointed down, and pointed up, and shook their heads, and jabbered +some strange, unintelligible patois.</p> + +<p>"Cowards!" cried Ethel, "to leave a young girl to die. I will go down +myself."</p> + +<p>And then, just as she was, she stepped from the sled, and paused for +a moment, looking down the slope as though selecting a place. Lady +Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby screamed to her to come back, and the +drivers surrounded her with wild gesticulations. To all this she paid no +attention whatever, and would certainly have gone down in another moment +had not a hand been laid on her arm, and a voice close by her said, with +a strong foreign accent,</p> + +<p>"Mees!"</p> + +<p>She turned at once.</p> + +<p>It was the foreign gentleman who had been driving behind the party. +He had come up and had just reached the place. He now stood before her +with his hat in one hand and the other hand on his heart.</p> + +<p>"Pardon, mees," he said, with a bow. "Eet is too periloss. I sall go +down eef you 'low me to mak ze attemp."</p> + +<p>"Oh, monsieur," cried Ethel, "save her if you can!"</p> + +<p>"Do not fear. Be calm. I sall go down. Nevare mine."</p> + +<p>The stranger now turned to the drivers, and spoke to them in their +own language. They all obeyed at once. He was giving them explicit +directions in a way that showed a perfect command of the situation. It +now appeared that each sled had a coil of rope, which was evidently +supplied from an apprehension of some such accident as this. Hastily yet +<ins class = "correction" title = "spelling unchanged">dextrously</ins> +the foreign gentleman took one of these coils, and then binding a +blanket around his waist, he passed the rope around this, so that it +would press against the blanket without cutting him. Having secured this +tightly, he gave some further directions to the drivers, and then +prepared to go down.</p> + +<p>Hitherto the drivers had acted in sullen submission rather than with +ready acquiescence. They were evidently afraid of another avalanche; and +the frequent glances which they threw at the slope above them plainly +showed that they expected this snow to follow the example of the other. +In spite of themselves an expression of this fear escaped them, and came +to the ears of the foreign gentleman. He turned at once on the brink of +the descent, and burst into a torrent of invective against them. The +ladies could not understand him, but they could perceive that he was +uttering threats, +<span class = "pagenum">10b</span> +and that the men quailed before him. He did not waste any time, however. +After reducing the men to a state of sulky submission, he turned once +more and began the descent.</p> + +<p>As he went down the rope was held by the men, who allowed it to pass +through their hands so as to steady his descent. The task before the +adventurer was one of no common difficulty. The snow was soft, and at +every step he sank in at least to his knees. Frequently he came to +treacherous places, where he sank down above his waist, and was only +able to scramble out with difficulty. But the rope sustained him; and as +his progress was downward, he succeeded in moving with some rapidity +toward his destination. The ladies on the height above sat in perfect +silence, watching the progress of the man who was thus descending with +his life in his hand to seek and to save their lost companion, and in +the intensity of their anxiety forgot utterly about any danger to +themselves, though from time to time there arose the well-known sound of +sliding masses, not so far away but that under other circumstances of +less anxiety it might have filled them with alarm. But now there was no +alarm for themselves.</p> + +<p>And now the stranger was far down, and the coil of rope was well-nigh +exhausted. But this had been prepared for, and the drivers fastened this +rope to another coil, and after a time began to let out that one +also.</p> + +<p>Farther and farther down the descent went on. They saw the stranger +pursuing his way still with unfaltering resolution; and they sent after +him all their hearts and all their prayers. At last he plunged down +almost out of sight, but the next moment he emerged, and then, after a +few leaps, they saw that he had gained the place where lay the ruins of +the shattered avalanche. Over this he walked, sometimes sinking, at +other times running and leaping, until at length he came to the +precipice over which the sled had been flung.</p> + +<p>And now the suspense of the ladies became terrible. This was the +critical moment. Already his eyes could look down upon the mystery that +lay beneath that precipice. And what lay revealed there? Did his eyes +encounter a spectacle of horror? Did they gaze down into the +inaccessible depths of some hideous abyss? Did they see those jagged +rocks, those sharp crags, those giant boulders, those roaring billows, +which, in their imaginations, had drawn down their lost companion to +destruction? Such conjectures were too terrible. Their breath failed +them, and their hearts for a time almost ceased to beat as they sat +there, overcome by such dread thoughts as these.</p> + +<p>Suddenly a cry of delight escaped Ethel. She was kneeling down beside +Lady Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby, with her eyes staring from her +pallid face, when she saw the stranger turn and look up. He took off his +hat, and waved it two or three times. Then he beckoned to the drivers. +Then he sat down +<span class = "pagenum">11</span> +and prepared to let himself over the precipice. This incident inspired +hope. It did more. It gave a moment's confidence, and the certainty that +all was not lost. They looked at each other, and wept tears of joy. But +soon that momentary hope vanished, and uncertainty returned. After all, +what did the stranger's gesture mean? He might have seen her—but +how? He might reach her, but would she be safe from harm? Could such a +thing be hoped for? Would she not, rather, be all marred and mutilated? +Dared they hope for any thing better? They dared not. And now they sat +once more, as sad as before, and their short-lived gleam of hope faded +away.</p> + +<p>They saw the stranger go over the precipice.</p> + +<p>Then he disappeared.</p> + +<p>The rope was let out for a little distance, and then stopped. Then +more went out. Then it stopped again.</p> + +<p>The rope now lay quite loose. There was no tension.</p> + +<p>What was the meaning of this? Was he clinging to the side of the +precipice? Impossible. It looked rather as though he had reached some +place where he was free to move, and had no further need of descent. And +it seemed as though the precipice might not be so deep or so fearful as +they had supposed.</p> + +<p>In a short time their eyes were greeted by the appearance of the +stranger above the precipice. He waved his hat again. Then he made some +gestures, and detached the rope from his person. The drivers understood +him as if this had been preconcerted. Two of them instantly unharnessed +the horse from one of the sleds, while the others pulled up the rope +which the stranger had cast off. Then the latter disappeared once more +behind the precipice. The ladies watched now in deep suspense; inclining +to hope, yet dreading the worst. They saw the drivers fasten the rope to +the sled, and let it down the slope. It was light, and the runners were +wide. It did not sink much, but slid down quite rapidly. Once or twice +it stuck, but by jerking it back it was detached, and went on as before. +At last it reached the precipice at a point not more than a hundred feet +from where the stranger had last appeared.</p> + +<p>And now as they sat there, reduced once more to the uttermost +extremity of suspense, they saw a sight which sent a thrill of rapture +through their aching hearts. They saw the stranger come slowly above the +precipice, and then stop, and stoop, and look back. Then they +saw—oh, Heavens! who was that? Was not that her red hood—and +that figure who thus slowly emerged from behind the edge of the +precipice which had so long concealed her—that figure! Was it +possible? Not dead—not mangled, but living, moving, and, +yes—wonder of wonders—scaling a precipice! Could it be! Oh +joy! Oh bliss! Oh revulsion from despair! The ladies trembled and +shivered, +<span class = "pagenum">11b</span> +and laughed and sobbed convulsively, and wept in one another's arms by +turns.</p> + +<p>As far as they could see through the tears that dimmed their eyes, +Minnie could not be much injured. She moved quite lightly over the snow, +as the stranger led her toward the sled; only sinking once or twice, and +then extricating herself even more readily than her companion. At last +she reached the sled, and the stranger, taking off the blanket that he +had worn under the rope, threw it over her shoulders.</p> + +<p>Then he signaled to the men above, and they began to pull up the +sled. The stranger climbed up after it through the deep snow, walking +behind it for some distance. At last he made a despairing gesture to the +men, and sank down.</p> + +<p>The men looked bewildered, and stopped pulling.</p> + +<p>The stranger started up, and waved his hands impatiently, pointing to +Minnie.</p> + +<p>The drivers began to pull once more at the sled, and the stranger +once more sank exhausted in the snow.</p> + +<p>At this Ethel started up.</p> + +<p>"That noble soul!" she cried; "that generous heart! See! he is saving +Minnie, and sitting down to die in the snow!"</p> + +<p>She sprang toward the men, and endeavored to make them do something. +By her gestures she tried to get two of the men to pull at the sled, and +the third man to let the fourth man down with a rope to the stranger. +The men refused; but at the offer of her purse, which was well filled +with gold, they consented. Two of them then pulled at the sled, and +number four bound the rope about him, and went down, while number three +held the rope. He went down without difficulty, and reached the +stranger. By this time Minnie had been drawn to the top, and was clasped +in the arms of her friends.</p> + +<p>But now the strength and the sense which had been so wonderfully +maintained gave way utterly; and no sooner did she find herself safe +than she fell down unconscious.</p> + +<p>They drew her to a sled, and tenderly laid her on the straw, and +lovingly and gently they tried to restore her, and call her back to +consciousness. But for a long time their efforts were of no avail.</p> + +<p>She lay there a picture of perfect loveliness, as beautiful as a +dream—like some child-angel. Her hair, frosted with snow dust, +clustered in golden curls over her fair white brow; her little hands +were folded meekly over her breast; her sweet lips were parted, and +disclosed the pearly teeth; the gentle eyes no longer looked forth with +their piteous expression of mute appeal; and her hearing was deaf to the +words of love and pity that were lavished upon her.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<span class = "pagenum">12</span> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapIII" id = "chapIII"> +CHAPTER III.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE CHILD-ANGEL AND HER WOES.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Mrs. Willoughby</span> was in her room at +the hotel in Milan, when the door opened, and Minnie came in. She looked +around the room, drew a long breath, then locked the door, and flinging +herself upon a sofa, she reclined there in silence for some time, +looking hard at the ceiling. Mrs. Willoughby looked a little surprised +at first; but after waiting a few moments for Minnie to say something, +resumed her reading, which had been interrupted.</p> + +<p>"Kitty," said Minnie at last.</p> + +<p>"What?" said her sister, looking up.</p> + +<p>"I think you're horrid."</p> + +<p>"Why, what's the matter?"</p> + +<p>"Why, because when you see and know that I'm dying to speak to you, +you go on reading that wretched book."</p> + +<p>"Why, Minnie darling," said Mrs. Willoughby, "how in the world was I +to know that you wanted to speak to me?"</p> + +<p>"You <i>might</i> have known," said Minnie, with a pout—"you +saw me look all round, and lock the door; and you saw how worried I +looked, and I think it a shame, and I've a great mind not to tell you +any thing about it."</p> + +<p>"About it—what <i>it</i>?" and Mrs. Willoughby put down her +book, and regarded her sister with some curiosity.</p> + +<p>"I've a great mind not to tell you, but I can't help it. Besides, I'm +dying to ask your advice. I don't know what to do; and I wish I was +dead—there!"</p> + +<p>"My poor Minnie! what <i>is</i> the matter? You're <i>so</i> +incoherent."</p> + +<p>"Well, Kitty, it's all my accident."</p> + +<p>"Your accident!"</p> + +<p>"Yes; on the Alps, you know."</p> + +<p>"What! You haven't received any serious injury, have you?" asked Mrs. +Willoughby, with some alarm.</p> + +<p>"Oh! I don't mean that, but I'll tell you what I mean;" and here +Minnie got up from her reclining position, and allowed her little feet +to touch the carpet, while she fastened her great, fond, pleading, +piteous eyes upon her sister.</p> + +<p>"It's the Count, you know," said she.</p> + +<p>"The Count!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, somewhat dryly. "Well?"</p> + +<p>"Well—don't you know what I mean? Oh, how stupid you are!"</p> + +<p>"I really can not imagine."</p> + +<p>"Well—he—he—he pro—proposed, you know."</p> + +<p>"Proposed!" cried the other, in a voice of dismay.</p> + +<p>"Now, Kitty, if you speak in that horrid way I won't say another +word. I'm worried too much already, and I don't want you to scold me. +And I won't have it."</p> + +<p>"Minnie darling, I wish you would tell me something. I'm not +scolding. I merely wish to know what you mean. Do you really mean that +the Count has proposed to you?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">12b</span> + +<p>"Of course that's what I mean."</p> + +<p>"What puzzles me is, how he could have got the chance. It's more than +a week since he saved you, and we all felt deeply grateful to him. But +saving a girl's life doesn't give a man any claim over her; and we don't +altogether like him; and so we all have tried, in a quiet way, without +hurting his feelings, you know, to prevent him from having any +acquaintance with you."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I know, I know," said Minnie, briskly. "He told me all that. He +understands that; but he doesn't care, he says, if <i>I</i> only +consent. He will forgive <i>you</i>, he says."</p> + +<p>Minnie's volubility was suddenly checked by catching her sister's eye +fixed on her in new amazement.</p> + +<p>"Now you're beginning to be horrid," she cried. "Don't, +don't—"</p> + +<p>"Will you have the kindness to tell me," said Mrs. Willoughby, very +quietly, "how in the world the Count contrived to tell you all +this?"</p> + +<p>"Why—why—several times."</p> + +<p>"Several times!"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Tell me where?"</p> + +<p>"Why, once at the amphitheatre. You were walking ahead, and I sat +down to rest, and he came and joined me. He left before you came +back."</p> + +<p>"He must have been following us, then."</p> + +<p>"Yes. And another time in the picture-gallery; and yesterday in a +shop; and this morning at the Cathedral."</p> + +<p>"The Cathedral!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, Kitty. You know we all went, and Lady Dalrymple would not go +up. So Ethel and I went up. And when we got up to the top I walked +about, and Ethel sat down to admire the view. And, you know, I found +myself off at a little distance, when suddenly I saw Count Girasole. And +then, you know, he—he—proposed."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby sat silent for some time.</p> + +<p>"And what did you say to him?" she asked at length.</p> + +<p>"Why, what else could I say?"</p> + +<p>"What else than <i>what</i>?"</p> + +<p>"I don't see why you should act <i>so</i> like a grand inquisitor, +Kitty. You really make me feel quite nervous," said Minnie, who put her +little rosy-tipped fingers to one of her eyes, and attempted a sob, +which turned out a failure.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I only asked you what you told him, you know."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Minnie, gravely, "I told him, you know, that I was +awfully grateful to him, and that I'd give any thing if I could to +express my gratitude. And then, you know—oh, he speaks such +darling broken English—he called me his 'mees,' and tried to make +a pretty speech, which was so mixed with Italian that I didn't +understand one single word. By-the-way, Kitty, isn't it odd how every +body here speaks Italian, even the children?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">13</span> + +<p>"Yes, very odd; but, Minnie dear, I want to know what you told +him."</p> + +<p>"Why, I told him that I didn't know, you know."</p> + +<p>"And then?"</p> + +<p>"And then he took my hand. Now, Kitty, you're unkind. I really <i>can +not</i> tell you all this."</p> + +<p>"Yes, but I only ask so as to advise you. I want to know how the case +stands."</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, he was so urgent—"</p> + +<p>"Yes?"</p> + +<p>"And so handsome—"</p> + +<p>"Well?"</p> + +<p>"And then, you know, he saved my life—didn't he, now? You must +acknowledge that much, mustn't you?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes."</p> + +<p>"Well—"</p> + +<p>"Well?"</p> + +<p>Minnie sighed.</p> + +<p>"So what could I say?"</p> + +<p>Minnie paused.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby looked troubled.</p> + +<p>"Kitty, I <i>wish</i> you wouldn't look at me with that dreadful +expression. You really make me feel quite frightened."</p> + +<p>"Minnie," said the other, in a serious voice, "do you really +<i>love</i> this man?"</p> + +<p>"Love this man! why no, not particularly; but I <i>like</i> him; that +is, I think I do, or rather I thought I did; but really I'm so worried +about all my troubles that I wish he had never come down after me. I +don't see why he did, either. I didn't ask him to. I remember, now, I +really felt quite embarrassed when I saw him. I knew there would be +trouble about it. And I wish you would take me back home. I hate Italy. +Do, Kitty darling. But then—"</p> + +<p>Minnie paused again.</p> + +<p>"Well, Minnie dear, we certainly must contrive some plan to shake him +off without hurting his feelings. It can't be thought of. There are a +hundred objections. If the worst comes to the worst we can go back, as +you say, to England."</p> + +<p>"I know; but then," said Minnie, "that's the very thing that I can't +do—"</p> + +<p>"Can't do what?"</p> + +<p>"Go back to England."</p> + +<p>"Back to England! Why not? I don't know what you mean."</p> + +<p>"Well, you see, Kitty, that's the very thing I came to see you about. +This dreadful man—the Count, you know—has some wonderful way +of finding out where I go; and he keeps all the time appearing and +disappearing in the very strangest manner; and when I saw him on the +roof of the Cathedral it really made me feel quite giddy. He is +<i>so</i> determined to win me that I'm afraid to look round. He takes +the commonest civility as encouragement. And then, you know—there +it is—I really can't go back to England."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean by that?"</p> + +<p>"Why there's—a—a dreadful person there," said Minnie, +with an awful look in her eyes.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">13b</span> +<p>"A what?"</p> + +<p>"A—person," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"A man?"</p> + +<p>Minnie nodded. "Oh yes—of course. Really when one thinks of +one's troubles it's enough to drive one distracted. This person is a +man. I don't know why it is that I should be <i>so</i> worried and +<i>so</i> distracted by men. I do <i>not</i> like them, and I wish there +were no such persons."</p> + +<p>"Another man!" said Mrs. Willoughby, in some surprise. "Well, Minnie, +you certainly—"</p> + +<p>"Now don't, don't—not a word; I know all you're going to say, +and I won't stand it;" and Minnie ran over to her sister and held her +hand over her mouth.</p> + +<p>"I won't say a word," said Mrs. Willoughby, as soon as she had +removed Minnie's hand; "so begin."</p> + +<p>Minnie resumed her place on the sofa, and gave a long sigh.</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, Kitty darling, it happened at Brighton last +September. You were in Scotland then. I was with old Lady Shrewsbury, +who is as blind as a bat—and where's the use of having a person to +look after you when they're blind! You see, my horse ran away, and I +think he must have gone ever so many miles, over railroad bridges and +hedges and stone walls. I'm certain he jumped over a small cottage. +Well, you know, when all seemed lost, suddenly there was a strong hand +laid on the reins, and my horse was stopped. I tumbled into some strange +gentleman's arms, and was carried into a house, where I was +resuscitated. I returned home in the gentleman's carriage.</p> + +<p>"Now the worst of it is," said Minnie, with a piteous look, "that the +person who stopped the horse called to inquire after me the next day. +Lady Shrewsbury, like an old goose, was awfully civil to him; and so +there I was! His name is Captain Kirby, and I wish there were no +captains in the world. The life he led me! He used to call, and I had to +go out riding with him, and old Lady Shrewsbury utterly neglected me; +and so, you know, Kitty darling, he at last, you know, of course, +proposed. That's what they all do, you know, when they save your life. +Always! It's awful!"</p> + +<p>Minnie heaved a sigh, and sat apparently meditating on the enormous +baseness of the man who saved a lady's life and then proposed; and it +was not until Mrs. Willoughby had spoken twice that she was recalled to +herself.</p> + +<p>"What did you tell him?" was her sister's question.</p> + +<p>"Why, what could I tell him?"</p> + +<p>"What!" cried Mrs. Willoughby; "you don't—"</p> + +<p>"Now, Kitty, I think it's very unkind in you, when I want all your +sympathy, to be <i>so</i> horrid."</p> + +<p>"Well, tell it your own way, Minnie dearest."</p> + +<p>Minnie sat for a time regarding vacancy with a soft, sad, and piteous +expression in her large blue eyes; with her head also a little on one +<span class = "pagenum">14</span> +side, and her delicate hands gently clasped in front of her.</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic014.png" width = "452" height = "340" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"ANOTHER MAN!"</p> + +<p>"You see, Kitty darling, he took me out riding, and—he took me +to the place where I had met him, and then he proposed. Well, you know, +I didn't know what to say. He was <i>so</i> earnest, and <i>so</i> +despairing. And then, you know, Kitty dearest, he had saved my life, and +so—"</p> + +<p>"And so?"</p> + +<p>"Well, I told him I didn't know, and was shockingly confused, and +then we got up quite a scene. He swore that he would go to Mexico, +though why I can't imagine; and I really wish he had; but I was +frightened at the time, and I cried; and then he got worse, and I told +him not to; whereupon he went into raptures, and began to call me no end +of names—spooney names, you know; and I—oh, I did <i>so</i> +want him to stop!—I think I must have promised him all that he +wanted; and when I got home I was frightened out of my poor little wits, +and cried all night."</p> + +<p>"Poor dear child!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, with tender sympathy. +"What a wretch!"</p> + +<p>"No, he wasn't a wretch at all; he was awfully handsome, only, you +know, he—was—so—<i>aw</i>fully persevering, and kept +<i>so</i> at my heels; but I hurried home from Brighton, and thought I +had got rid of him."</p> + +<p>"And hadn't you?"</p> + +<p>"Oh dear, no," said Minnie, mournfully. "On the day after my arrival +there came a letter; and, you know, I had to answer it; and then +another; and so it went on—"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">14b</span> + +<p>"Oh, Minnie! why didn't you tell me before?"</p> + +<p>"How could I when you were off in that horrid Scotland? I +<i>always</i> hated Scotland."</p> + +<p>"You might have told papa."</p> + +<p>"I couldn't. I think papa's cruel <i>too</i>. He doesn't care for me +at all. Why didn't he find out our correspondence and intercept it, the +way papas always do in novels? If I were <i>his</i> papa I'd not let +<i>him</i> be so worried."</p> + +<p>"And did he never call on you?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; he got leave of absence once, and I had a dreadful time with +him. He was in a desperate state of mind. He was ordered off to +Gibraltar. But I managed to comfort him; and, oh dear, Kitty dear, did +you <i>ever</i> try to comfort a man, and the man a total stranger?"</p> + +<p>At this innocent question Mrs. Willoughby's gravity gave way a +little.</p> + +<p>Minnie frowned, and then sighed.</p> + +<p>"Well, you needn't be so unkind," said she; and then her little hand +tried to wipe away a tear, but failed.</p> + +<p>"Did he go to Gibraltar?" asked Mrs. Willoughby at length.</p> + +<p>"Yes, he did," said Minnie, with a little asperity.</p> + +<p>"Did he write?"</p> + +<p>"Of course he wrote," in the same tone.</p> + +<p>"Well, how did it end?"</p> + +<p>"End! It didn't end at all. And it never will end. It'll go on +getting worse and worse every day. You see he wrote, and said a lot of +rubbish about his getting leave of absence and coming to see me. And +then I determined to +<span class = "pagenum">15</span> +run away; and you know I begged you to take me to Italy, and this is the +first time I've told you the real reason."</p> + +<p>"So that was the real reason?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Well, Minnie, my poor child," said Mrs. Willoughby, after a pause, +"you're safe from your officer, at any rate; and as to Count Girasole, +we must save you from him. Don't give way."</p> + +<p>"But you can't save me. They'll come after me, I know. Captain Kirby, +the moment he finds out that I am here, will come flying after me; and +then, oh dear! the other one will come, and the American, too, of +course."</p> + +<p>"The what? who?" cried Mrs. Willoughby, starting up with new +excitement. "Who's that? What did you say, Minnie? The American? What +American?"</p> + +<p>Minnie threw a look of reproach at her sister, and her eyes fell.</p> + +<p>"You can't possibly mean that there are any more—"</p> + +<p>"There—is—<i>one</i>—more," said Minnie, in a low, +faint voice, stealing a glance at her sister, and looking a little +frightened.</p> + +<p>"One more!" repeated her sister, breathless.</p> + +<p>"Well, I didn't come here to be scolded," said Minnie, rising, "and +I'll go. But I hoped that you'd help me; and I think you're very unkind; +and I wouldn't treat you so."</p> + +<p>"No, no, Minnie," said Mrs. Willoughby, rising, and putting her arm +round her sister, and drawing her back. "I had no idea of scolding. I +never scolded any one in my life, and wouldn't speak a cross word to you +for the world. Sit down now, Minnie darling, and tell me all. What about +the American? I won't express any more astonishment, no matter what I +may feel."</p> + +<p>"But you mustn't <i>feel</i> any astonishment," insisted Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Well, darling, I won't," said her sister.</p> + +<p>Minnie gave a sigh.</p> + +<p>"It was last year, you know, in the spring. Papa and I were going out +to Montreal, to bring you home. You remember?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby nodded, while a sad expression came over her +face.</p> + +<p>"And, you remember, the steamer was wrecked."</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"But I never told you how my life was saved."</p> + +<p>"Why, yes, you did. Didn't papa tell all about the heroic sailor who +swam ashore with you? how he was frantic about you, having been swept +away by a wave from you? and how he fainted away with joy when you were +brought to him? How can you suppose I would forget that? And then how +papa tried to find the noble sailor to reward him."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes," said Minnie, in a despondent tone. "That's all very true; +but he wasn't a noble sailor at all."</p> + +<p>"What!"</p> + +<p>"You see, he wasn't going to have a scene with papa, and so he kept +out of his way. Oh +<span class = "pagenum">15b</span> +dear, how I wish he'd been as considerate with me! But that's the way +always; yes, always."</p> + +<p>"Well, who was he?"</p> + +<p>"Why, he was an American gentleman, returning home from a tour in +Europe. He saved me, as you have heard. I really don't remember much +about it, only there was a terrible rush of water, and a strong arm +seized me, and I thought it was papa all the time. And I found myself +carried, I don't know how, through the waves, and then I fainted; and I +really don't know any thing about it except papa's story."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby looked at Minnie in silence, but said nothing.</p> + +<p>"And then, you know, he traveled with us, and papa thought he was one +of the passengers, and was civil; and so he used to talk to me, and at +last, at Montreal, he used to call on me."</p> + +<p>"Where?"</p> + +<p>"At your house, dearest."</p> + +<p>"Why, how was that?"</p> + +<p>"You could not leave your room, darling, so I used to go down."</p> + +<p>"Oh, Minnie!"</p> + +<p>"And he proposed to me there."</p> + +<p>"Where? in my parlor?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; in your parlor, dearest."</p> + +<p>"I suppose it's not necessary for me to ask what you said."</p> + +<p>"I suppose not," said Minnie, in a sweet voice. "He was so grand and +so strong, and he never made any allusions to the wreck; and it +was—the—the—<i>very first</i> time that any body +ever—proposed; and so, you know, I didn't know how to take it, and +I didn't want to hurt his feelings, and I couldn't deny that he had +saved my life; and I don't know when I <i>ever</i> was so confused. It's +awful, Kitty darling.</p> + +<p>"And then, you know, darling," continued Minnie, "he went away, and +used to write regularly every month. He came to see me once, and I was +frightened to death almost. He is going to marry me next year. He used +an awful expression, dearest. He told me he was a struggling man. Isn't +that horrid? What is it, Kitty? Isn't it something very, very +dreadful?"</p> + +<p>"He writes still, I suppose?"</p> + +<p>"Oh dear, yes."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby was silent for some time.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Minnie," said she at last, "what a trouble all this is! How I +wish you had been with me all this time!"</p> + +<p>"Well, what made you go and get married?" said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Hush," said Mrs. Willoughby, sadly, "never mind. I've made up my +mind to one thing, and that is, I will never leave you alone with a +gentleman, unless—"</p> + +<p>"Well, I'm sure I don't want the horrid creatures," said Minnie. "And +you needn't be so unkind. I'm sure I don't see why people will come +always and save my life wherever I go. I don't want them to. I don't +want to have my life saved any more. I think it's dreadful to have men +chasing me all over the +<span class = "pagenum">16</span> +world. I'm afraid to stop in Italy, and I'm afraid to go back to +England. Then I'm always afraid of that dreadful American. I suppose +it's no use for me to go to the Holy Land, or Egypt, or Australia; for +then my life would be saved by an Arab, or a New Zealander. And oh, +Kitty, wouldn't it be dreadful to have some Arab proposing to me, or a +Hindu! Oh, what <i>am</i> I to do?"</p> + +<p>"Trust to me, darling. I'll get rid of Girasole. We will go to +Naples. He has to stop at Rome; I know that. We will thus pass quietly +away from him, without giving him any pain, and he'll soon forget all +about it. As for the others, I'll stop this correspondence first, and +then deal with them as they come."</p> + +<p>"You'll never do it, never!" cried Minnie; "I know you won't. You +don't know them."</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapIV" id = "chapIV"> +CHAPTER IV.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +IN THE CRATER OF VESUVIUS.</h6> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic016.png" width = "339" height = "449" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"HE BENT HIS HEAD DOWN, AND RAN HIS HAND THROUGH HIS BUSHY HAIR."</p> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Lord</span> Harry Hawbury had been +wandering for three months on the Continent, and had +<span class = "pagenum">16b</span> +finally found himself in Naples. It was always a favorite place of his, +and he had established himself in comfortable quarters on the Strada +Nuova, from the windows of which there was a magnificent view of the +whole bay, with Vesuvius, Capri, Baiæ, and all the regions round about. +Here an old friend had unexpectedly turned up in the person of Scone +Dacres. Their friendship had been formed some five or six years before +in South America, where they had made a hazardous journey in company +across the continent, and had thus acquired a familiarity with one +another which years of ordinary association would have failed to give. +Scone Dacres was several years older than Lord Hawbury.</p> + +<p>One evening Lord Hawbury had just finished his dinner, and was +dawdling about in a listless way, when Dacres entered, quite +unceremoniously, and flung himself into a chair by one of the +windows.</p> + +<p>"Any Bass, Hawbury?" was his only greeting, as he bent his head down, +and ran his hand through his bushy hair.</p> + +<p>"Lachryma Christi?" asked Hawbury, in an interrogative tone.</p> + +<p>"No, thanks. That wine is a humbug. I'm beastly thirsty, and as dry +as a cinder."</p> + +<p>Hawbury ordered the Bass, and Dacres soon was refreshing himself with +copious draughts.</p> + +<p>The two friends presented a singular contrast. Lord Hawbury was tall +and slim, with straight flaxen hair and flaxen whiskers, whose long, +pendent points hung down to his shoulders. His thin face, somewhat pale, +had an air of high refinement; and an ineradicable habit of lounging, +together with a drawling intonation, gave him the appearance of being +the laziest mortal alive. Dacres, on the other hand, was the very +opposite of all this. He was as tall as Lord Hawbury, but was +broad-shouldered and massive. He had a big head, a big mustache, and a +thick beard. His hair was dark, and +<span class = "pagenum">17</span> +covered his head in dense, bushy curls. His voice was loud, his manner +abrupt, and he always sat bolt upright.</p> + +<p>"Any thing up, Sconey?" asked Lord Hawbury, after a pause, during +which he had been languidly gazing at his friend.</p> + +<p>"Well, no, nothing, except that I've been up Vesuvius."</p> + +<p>Lord Hawbury gave a long whistle.</p> + +<p>"And how did you find the mountain?" he asked; "lively?"</p> + +<p>"Rather so. In fact, infernally so," added Dacres, thoughtfully. +"Look here, Hawbury, do you detect any smell of sulphur about me?"</p> + +<p>"Sulphur! What in the name of—sulphur! Why, now that you +mention it, I <i>do</i> notice something of a brimstone smell. Sulphur! +Why, man, you're as strong as a lighted match. What have you been doing +with yourself? Down inside, eh?"</p> + +<p>Dacres made no answer for some time, but sat stroking his beard with +his left hand, while his right held a cigar which he had just taken out +of a box at his elbow. His eyes were fixed upon a point in the sky +exactly half-way between Capri and Baiæ, and about ten degrees above the +horizon.</p> + +<p>"Hawbury," said he, solemnly, after about two minutes of portentous +silence.</p> + +<p>"Well, old man?"</p> + +<p>"I've had an adventure."</p> + +<p>"An adventure! Well, don't be bashful. Breathe forth the tale in this +confiding ear."</p> + +<p>"You see," said Dacres, "I started off this morning for a ride, and +had no more intention of going to Vesuvius than to Jericho."</p> + +<p>"I should hope not. What business has a fellow like you with +Vesuvius—a fellow that has scaled Cotopaxi, and all that sort of +thing? Not you."</p> + +<p>Dacres put the cigar thoughtfully in his mouth, struck a light, and +tried to light it, but couldn't. Then he bit the end off, which he had +forgotten to do before. Then he gave three long, solemn, and portentous +puffs. Then he took the cigar between his first and second fingers, and +stretched his hand out toward Hawbury.</p> + +<p>"Hawbury, my boy," said he again.</p> + +<p>"All right."</p> + +<p>"You remember the time when I got that bullet in Uruguay?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Well, I had a shot to-day."</p> + +<p>"A shot! The deuce you had. Cool, too. Any of those confounded +bandits about? I thought that was all rot."</p> + +<p>"It wasn't a real shot; only figurative."</p> + +<p>"Figurative!"</p> + +<p>"Yes; it was a—a girl."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!" cried Hawbury, starting up from an easy posture which he +had secured for himself after fifteen minutes shifting and changing. "A +girl! You, Dacres, spooney! A fellow like you, and a girl! By Jove!"</p> + +<p>Hawbury fell back again, and appeared to be vainly trying to grapple +with the thought. +<span class = "pagenum">17b</span> +Dacres put his cigar between his lips again, and gave one or two puffs +at it, but it had gone out. He pitched it out of the window, and struck +his hand heavily on the arm of his chair.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Hawbury, a girl; and spooney, too—as spooney as blazes; +but I'll swear there isn't such another girl upon the whole face of the +earth; and when you bear in mind the fact that my observation, with +extended view, has surveyed mankind from China to Peru, you'll be able +to appreciate the value of my statement."</p> + +<p>"All right, old man; and now for the adventure."</p> + +<p>"The adventure? Well, you see, I started for a ride. Had a misty idea +of going to Sorrento, and was jogging along among a million pigs or so +at Portici, when I overtook a carriage that was going slowly along. +There were three ladies in it. The backs of two of them were turned +toward me, and I afterward saw that one was old—no doubt the +chaperon—and the other was young. But the third lady, +Hawbury—Well, it's enough to say that I, who have seen all women +in all lands, have never seen any thing like her. She was on the front +seat, with her face turned toward me. She was small, a perfect blonde; +hair short and curling; a round, girlish face; dimpled cheeks, and +little mouth. Her eyes were large and blue; and, as she looked at me, I +saw such a bewitching innocence, such plaintive entreaty, such pathetic +trust, such helpless, childlike—I'll be hanged if I can find words +to express what I want to say. The English language doesn't contain +them."</p> + +<p>"Do it in Latin, then, or else skip the whole description. All the +same. I know the whole story by heart. Love's young dream, and all that +sort of thing, you know."</p> + +<p>"Well," continued Dacres, "there was something so confoundedly +bewitching in the little girl's face that I found myself keeping on at a +slow pace in the rear of the carriage, and feasting on her looks. Of +course I wasn't rude about it or demonstrative."</p> + +<p>"Oh, of course. No demonstration. It's nothing to ride behind a +carriage for several hours, and 'feast' one's self on a pretty girl's +looks! But go on, old man."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I managed it without giving offense. You see, there was such a +beastly lot of pigs, peasants, cows, dirty children, lazaroni, and all +that sort of thing, that it was simply impossible to go any faster; so +you see I was compelled to ride behind. Sometimes, indeed, I fell a good +distance back."</p> + +<p>"And then caught up again to resume the 'feast?'"</p> + +<p>"Well—yes."</p> + +<p>"But I don't see what this has to do with your going to +Vesuvius."</p> + +<p>"It has every thing to do. You see, I started without any fixed +purpose, and after I saw this carriage, I kept on insensibly after +it."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I see—yes. By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"And they drove up as far as they could."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">18</span> + +<p>"Yes?"</p> + +<p>"And I followed. You see, I had nothing else to do—and that +little girl! Besides, it was the most natural thing in the world for me +to be going up; and the fact that I was bent on the same errand as +themselves was sufficient to account for my being near the carriage, and +would prevent them from supposing that I was following them. So, you +see, I followed, and at length they stopped at the Hermitage. I left my +horse there, and strolled forward, without going very far away; my only +idea was to keep the girl in sight. I had no idea that they would go any +further. To ascend the cone seemed quite out of the question. I thought +they would rest at the Hermitage, drink some Lachryma Christi, and go +back. But to my surprise, as I was walking about, I saw the two young +ladies come out and go toward the cone.</p> + +<p>"I kept out of the way, as you may suppose, and watched them, +wondering what idea they had. As they passed I heard the younger +one—the child-angel, you know, <i>my</i> girl—teasing the +other to make the ascent of the cone, and the other seemed to be quite +ready to agree to the proposal.</p> + +<p>"Now, as far as the mere ascent is concerned, of course you know +<i>that</i> is not much. The guides were there with straps and chairs, +and that sort of thing, all ready, so that there was no difficulty about +that. The real difficulty was in these girls going off unattended; and I +could only account for it by supposing that the chaperon knew nothing +whatever about their proposal. No doubt the old lady was tired, and the +young ones went out, as <i>she</i> supposed, for a stroll; and now, as +<i>they</i> proposed, this stroll meant nothing less than an ascent of +the cone. After all, there is nothing surprising in the fact that a +couple of active and spirited girls should attempt this. From the +Hermitage it does not seem to be at all difficult, and they had no idea +of the actual nature of the task.</p> + +<p>"What made it worse, however, was the state of the mountain at this +particular time. I don't know whether you have taken the trouble to +raise your eyes so high as the top of Vesuvius—"</p> + +<p>Hawbury languidly shook his head.</p> + +<p>"Well, I supposed not; but if you had taken the trouble, you would +have noticed an ugly cloud which is generally regarded here as ominous. +This morning, you know, there was an unusually large canopy of very +dirty smoke overhead. I knew by the look of things that it was not a +very pleasant place to go to. But of course they could not be supposed +to know any thing of the kind, and their very ignorance made them +rash.</p> + +<p>"Well, I walked along after them, not knowing what might turn up, but +determined to keep them in sight. Those beggars with chairs were not to +be trusted, and the ladies had gold enough about them to tempt violence. +What a reckless old devil of a chaperon she was, to let those young +girls go! So I walked on, cursing all the time the conventionalities of +civilization +<span class = "pagenum">18b</span> +that prevented me from giving them warning. They were rushing straight +on into danger, and I had to keep silent.</p> + +<p>"On reaching the foot of the cone a lot of fellows came up to them, +with chairs and straps, and that sort of thing. They employed some of +them, and, mounting the chairs, they were carried up, while I walked up +by myself at a distance from which I could observe all that was going +on. The girls were quite merry, appeared to be enchanted with their ride +up the cone, enjoyed the novelty of the sensation, and I heard their +lively chatter and their loud peals of ringing laughter, and longed more +than ever to be able to speak to them.</p> + +<p>"Now the little girl that I had first seen—the child-angel, you +know—seemed, to my amazement, to be more adventurous than the +other. By her face you would suppose her to be as timid as a dove, and +yet on this occasion she was the one who proposed the ascent, urged on +her companion, and answered all her objections. Of course she could not +have really been so plucky as she seemed. For my part, I believe the +other one had more real pluck of the two, but it was the child-angel's +ignorance that made her so bold. She went up the cone as she would have +gone up stairs, and looked at the smoke as she would have looked at a +rolling cloud.</p> + +<p>"At length the bearers stopped, and signified to the girls that they +could not go any further. The girls could not speak Italian, or any +other language apparently than English, and therefore could not very +well make out what the bearers were trying to say, but by their gestures +they might have known that they were warning them against going any +further. One might have supposed that no warning would have been needed, +and that one look upward would have been enough. The top of the cone +rose for upward of a hundred feet above them, its soil composed of lava +blocks and ashes intermingled with sulphur. In this soil there were a +million cracks and crevices, from which sulphurous smoke was issuing; +and the smoke, which was but faint and thin near where they stood, grew +denser farther up, till it intermingled with the larger volumes that +rolled up from the crater.</p> + +<p>"Now, as I stood there, I suddenly heard a wild proposal from the +child-angel.</p> + +<p>"'Oh, Ethel,' she said, 'I've a great mind to go up—'"</p> + +<p>Here Hawbury interrupted his friend:</p> + +<p>"What's that? Was that her friend's name?" he asked, with some +animation. "Ethel?—odd, too. Ethel? H'm. Ethel? Brunette, was +she?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Odd, too; infernally odd. But, pooh! what rot! Just as though there +weren't a thousand Ethels!"</p> + +<p>"What's that you're saying about Ethel?" asked Dacres.</p> + +<p>"Oh, nothing, old man. Excuse my interrupting you. Go ahead. How did +it end?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">19</span> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic019.png" width = "331" height = "451" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"I SAW HER TURN AND WAVE HER HAND IN TRIUMPH."</p> + +<p>"Well, the child-angel said, 'Ethel, I've a great mind to go up.'</p> + +<p>"This proposal Ethel scouted in horror and consternation.</p> + +<p>"'You must not—you shall not!' she cried.</p> + +<p>"'Oh, it's nothing, it's nothing,' said the child-angel. 'I'm dying +to take a peep into the crater. It must be awfully funny. Do come; do, +do come, Ethel darling.'</p> + +<p>"'Oh, Minnie, don't,' cried the other, in great alarm. And I now +learned that the child-angel's name was Minnie. 'Minnie,' she cried, +clinging to the child-angel, 'you must not go. I would not have come up +if I had thought you would be so unreasonable.'</p> + +<p>"'Ethel,' said the other, 'you are really getting to be quite a +scold. How ridiculous it is in you to set yourself up in this place as a +duenna! How can I help going up? and only one peep. And I never saw a +crater in my life, and I'm dying to know what it looks like. I know it's +awfully funny; and it's horrid in you to be so unkind about it. And I +really must go. Won't you come? Do, do, dear—dearest darling, +do—do—do!'</p> + +<p>"Ethel was firm, however, and tried to dissuade the other, but to no +purpose; for at length, with a laugh, the child-angel burst away, and +skipped lightly up the slope toward the crater.</p> + +<p>"'Just one peep,' she said. 'Come, Ethel, I must, I really must, you +know.'</p> + +<p>"She turned for an instant as she said this, and I saw the glory of +her child-face as it was irradiated by a smile of exquisite sweetness. +The play of feature, the light of her eyes, and the expression of +innocence and ignorance unconscious of danger, filled me with profound +sadness. And there was I, standing alone, seeing that sweet child +flinging herself to ruin, and yet unable to prevent her, simply because +I was bound hand and foot by the infernal restrictions of a miserable +and a senseless conventionality. Dash it, I say!"</p> + +<p>As Dacres growled out this Hawbury elevated his eyebrows, and stroked +his long, pendent whiskers lazily with his left hand, while +<span class = "pagenum">19b</span> +with his right he drummed on the table near him.</p> + +<p>"Well," resumed Dacres, "the child-angel ran up for some distance, +leaving Ethel behind. Ethel called after her for some time, and then +began to follow her up. Meanwhile the guides, who had thus far stood +apart, suddenly caught sight of the child-angel's figure, and, with a +loud warning cry, they ran after her. They seemed to me, however, to be +a lazy lot, for they scarce got up as far as the place where Ethel was. +Now, you know, all this time I was doomed to inaction. But at this +juncture I strolled carelessly along, pretending not to see any thing in +particular; and so, taking up an easy attitude, I waited for the +dénouement. It was a terrible position too. That child-angel! I would +have laid down my life for her, but I had to stand idle, and see her +rush to fling her life away. And all because I had not happened to have +the mere formality of an introduction."</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, I stood there waiting for the dénouement. Now it +happened that, as the child-angel went up, a brisk breeze had +<span class = "pagenum">20</span> +started, which blew away all the smoke, so that she went along for some +distance without any apparent inconvenience. I saw her reach the top; I +saw her turn and wave her hand in triumph. Then I saw her rush forward +quickly and nimbly straight toward the crater. She seemed to go down +into it. And then the wind changed or died away, or both, for there came +a vast cloud of rolling smoke, black, cruel, suffocating; and the +mountain crest and the child-angel were snatched from my sight.</p> + +<p>"I was roused by a shriek from Ethel. I saw her rush up the slope, +and struggle in a vain endeavor to save her friend. But before she had +taken a dozen steps down came the rolling smoke, black, wrathful, and +sulphurous; and I saw her crouch down and stagger back, and finally +emerge pale as death, and gasping for breath. She saw me as I stood +there; in fact, I had moved a little nearer.</p> + +<p>"'Oh, Sir,' she cried, 'save her! Oh, my God, she's lost!'</p> + +<p>"This was very informal, you know, and all that sort of thing; but +<i>she</i> had broken the ice, and had accosted <i>me</i>; so I waived +all ceremony, and considered the introduction sufficient. I took off my +hat, and told her to calm herself.</p> + +<p>"But she only wrung her hands, and implored me to save her +friend.</p> + +<p>"And now, my boy, lucky was it for me that my experience at Cotopaxi +and Popocatepetl had been so thorough and so peculiar. My knowledge came +into play at this time. I took my felt hat and put it over my mouth, and +then tied it around my neck so that the felt rim came over my cheeks and +throat. Thus I secured a plentiful supply of air, and the felt acted as +a kind of ventilator to prevent the access to my lungs of too much of +the sulphurous vapor. Of course such a contrivance would not be good for +more than five minutes; but then, you know, five minutes were all that I +wanted.</p> + +<p>"So up I rushed, and, as the slope was only about a hundred feet, I +soon reached the top. Here I could see nothing whatever. The tremendous +smoke-clouds rolled all about on every side, enveloping me in their +dense folds, and shutting every thing from view. I heard the cry of the +asses of guides, who were howling where I left them below, and were +crying to me to come back—the infernal idiots! The smoke was +impenetrable; so I got down on my hands and knees and groped about. I +was on her track, and knew she could not be far away. I could not spend +more than five minutes there, for my felt hat would not assist me any +longer. About two minutes had already passed. Another minute was taken +up in creeping about on my hands and knees. A half minute more followed. +I was in despair. The child-angel I saw must have run in much further +than I had supposed, and perhaps I could not find her at all. A +sickening fear came to me that she had grown dizzy, or had slid down +over the loose sand into the terrific abyss of the crater itself. +<span class = "pagenum">20b</span> +So another half minute passed; and now only one minute was left."</p> + +<p>"I don't see how you managed to be so confoundedly accurate in your +reckoning. How was it? You didn't carry your watch in one hand, and feel +about with the other, I suppose?"</p> + +<p>"No; but I looked at my watch at intervals. But never mind that. Four +minutes, as I said, were up, and only one minute remained, and that was +not enough to take me back. I was at the last gasp already, and on the +verge of despair, when suddenly, as I crawled on, there lay the +child-angel full before me, within my reach.</p> + +<p>"Yes," continued Dacres, after a pause, "there she lay, just in my +grasp, just at my own last gasp. One second more and it must have been +all up. She was senseless, of course. I caught her up; I rose and ran +back as quick as I could, bearing my precious burden. She was as light +as a feather—no weight at all. I carried her as tenderly as if she +was a little baby. As I emerged from the smoke Ethel rushed up to me and +set up a cry, but I told her to keep quiet and it would be all right. +Then I directed the guides to carry her down, and I myself then carried +down the child-angel.</p> + +<p>"You see I wasn't going to give her up. I had had hard work enough +getting her. Besides, the atmosphere up there was horrible. It was +necessary, first of all, to get her down to the foot of the cone, where +she could have pure air, and then resuscitate her. Therefore I directed +the guides to take down Ethel in a chair, while I carried down the +child-angel. They had to carry her down over the lava blocks, but I went +to a part of the cone where it was all loose sand, and went down flying. +I was at the bottom a full half hour before the others.</p> + +<p>"Then I laid her upon the loose sand; and I swear to you, Hawbury, +never in all my life have I seen such a sight. She lay there before my +eyes a picture of loveliness beyond imagination—as beautiful as a +dream—more like a child-angel than ever. Her hair clustered in +golden curls over her white brow, her little hands were folded meekly +over her breast, her lips were parted into a sweet smile, the gentle +eyes no longer looked at me with the piteous, pleading, trustful, +innocent expression which I had noticed in them before, and her hearing +was deaf to the words of love and tenderness that I lavished upon +her."</p> + +<p>"Good!" muttered Hawbury; "you talk like a novel. Drive on, old man. +I'm really beginning to feel excited."</p> + +<p>"'The fact is," said Dacres, "I have a certain set of expressions +about the child-angel that will come whenever I begin to describe +her."</p> + +<p>"It strikes me, though, that you are getting on pretty well. You were +speaking of 'love and tenderness.' Well?"</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic021.png" width = "453" height = "455" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"I BENT DOWN CLOSE."</p> + +<p>"Well, she lay there senseless, you know, and I gently unclasped her +hands and began to +<span class = "pagenum">21</span> +rub them. I think the motion of carrying her, and the fresh air, had +both produced a favorable effect; for I had not rubbed her hands ten +minutes when she gave a low sigh. Then I rubbed on, and her lips moved. +I bent down close so as to listen, and I heard her say, in a low +voice,</p> + +<p>"'Am I at home?'</p> + +<p>"'Yes,' said I, gently, for I thought it was best to humor her +delirious fancy.</p> + +<p>"Then she spoke again:</p> + +<p>"'Is that you, papa dear?'</p> + +<p>"'Yes, darling,' said I, in a low voice; and I kissed her in a kind +of paternal way, so as to reassure her, and comfort her, and soothe her, +and all that sort of thing, you know."</p> + +<p>At this Hawbury burst into a shout of laughter.</p> + +<p>"What the mischief are you making that beastly row about?" growled +Dacres.</p> + +<p>"Excuse me, old boy. I couldn't help it. It was at the idea of your +doing the father so gravely."</p> + +<p>"Well, am I not old enough to be her father? What else could I do? +She had such a pleading, +<span class = "pagenum">21b</span> +piteous way. By Jove! Besides, how did she know any thing about it? It +wasn't as if she was in her senses. She really thought I <i>was</i> her +father, you know. And I'm sure I almost felt as if I was, too."</p> + +<p>"All right, old man, don't get huffy. Drive on."</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, she kept her eyes closed, and didn't say another +word till she heard the voice of Ethel at a distance. Then she opened +her eyes, and got up on her feet. Then there was no end of a +row—kissing, crying, congratulating, reproaching, and all that +sort of thing. I withdrew to a respectful distance and waited. After a +time they both came to me, and the child-angel gave me a look that made +me long to be a father to her again. She held out her little hand, and I +took it and pressed it, with my heart beating awfully. I was horribly +embarrassed.</p> + +<p>"'I'm awfully grateful to you,' she said; 'I'm sure I'd do any thing +in the world to repay you. I'm sure I don't know what would have become +of me if it hadn't been for you. And I hope you'll excuse me for putting +you to so much +<span class = "pagenum">22</span> +trouble. And, oh!' she concluded, half to herself, 'what <i>will</i> +Kitty say now?'"</p> + +<p>"Kitty! Who's Kitty?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know."</p> + +<p>"All right. Never mind. Drive on, old chap."</p> + +<p>"Well, I mumbled something or other, and then offered to go and get +their carriage. But they would not hear of it. The child-angel said she +could walk. This I strongly dissuaded her from doing, and Ethel insisted +that the men should carry her. This was done, and in a short time we got +back to the Hermitage, where the old lady was in no end of a worry. In +the midst of the row I slipped away, and waited till the carriage drove +off. Then I followed at a sufficient distance not to be observed, and +saw where their house was."</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic022.png" width = "210" height = "253" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +THE MEETING.</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapV" id = "chapV"> +CHAPTER V.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE BEGINNING OF BLUNDERS.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Dacres</span> paused now, and lighting a +fresh cigar, smoked away at it in silence, with long and solemn and +regular puffs. Hawbury watched him for some time, with a look of dreamy +curiosity and lazy interest. Then he rose, and dawdled about the room +for a few minutes. Then he lighted a cigar, and finally, resuming his +seat, he said:</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>Dacres puffed on.</p> + +<p>"I'm beginning to think," said Hawbury, "that your first statement is +correct. You are shot, my boy—hit hard—and all that; and now +I should like to ask you one question."</p> + +<p>"Ask away."</p> + +<p>"What are you going to do about it? Do you intend to pursue the +acquaintance?"</p> + +<p>"Of course. Why not?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">22b</span> + +<p>"What do you intend to do next?"</p> + +<p>"Next? Why, call on her, and inquire after her health."</p> + +<p>"Very good."</p> + +<p>"Well, have you any thing to say against that?"</p> + +<p>"Certainly not. Only it surprises me a little."</p> + +<p>"Why?"</p> + +<p>"Because I never thought of Scone Dacres as a marrying man, and can't +altogether grapple with the idea."</p> + +<p>"I don't see why a fellow shouldn't marry if he wants to," said +Dacres. "What's the matter with me that I shouldn't get married as well +as lots of fellows?"</p> + +<p>"No reason in the world, my dear boy. Marry as many wives as you +choose. My remark referred merely to my own idea of you, and not to any +thing actually innate in your character. So don't get huffy at a +fellow."</p> + +<p>Some further conversation followed, and Dacres finally took his +departure, full of thoughts about his new acquaintance, and racking his +brains to devise some way of securing access to her.</p> + +<p>On the following evening he made his appearance once more at +Hawbury's rooms.</p> + +<p>"Well, old man, what's up? Any thing more about the child-angel?"</p> + +<p>"Well, a little. I've found out her name."</p> + +<p>"Ah! What is it?"</p> + +<p>"Fay. Her name is Minnie Fay."</p> + +<p>"Minnie Fay. I never heard of the name before. Who are her +people?"</p> + +<p>"She is traveling with Lady Dalrymple."</p> + +<p>"The Dowager, I suppose?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Who are the other ladies?"</p> + +<p>"Well, I don't exactly remember."</p> + +<p>"Didn't you find out?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; I heard all their names, but I've forgotten. I know one of them +is the child-angel's sister, and the other is her cousin. The one I saw +with her was probably the sister."</p> + +<p>"What, the one named Ethel?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Ethel—Ethel Fay. H'm," said Hawbury, in a tone of +disappointment. "I knew it would be so. There are so many Ethels +about."</p> + +<p>"What's that?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, nothing. I once knew a girl named Ethel, and—Well, I had a +faint idea that it would be odd if this should be the one. But there's +no such chance."</p> + +<p>"Oh, the name Ethel is common enough."</p> + +<p>"Well, and didn't you find out any thing about her people?"</p> + +<p>"Whose—Ethel's?"</p> + +<p>"Your child-angel's people."</p> + +<p>"No. What do I care about her people? They might be Jews or +Patagonians for all I care."</p> + +<p>"Still I should think your interest in her would make you ask."</p> + +<p>"Oh no; my interest refers to herself, not +<span class = "pagenum">23</span> +to her relatives. Her sister Ethel is certainly a deuced pretty girl, +though."</p> + +<p>"Sconey, my boy, I'm afraid you're getting demoralized. Why, I +remember the time when you regarded the whole female race with a lofty +scorn and a profound indifference that was a perpetual rebuke to more +inflammable natures. But now what a change! Here you are, with a finely +developed eye for female beauty, actually reveling in dreams of +child-angels and their sisters. By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Nonsense," said Dacres.</p> + +<p>"Well, drive on, and tell all about it. You've seen her, of +course?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes."</p> + +<p>"Did you call?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; she was not at home. I went away with a snubbed and subdued +feeling, and rode along near the Villa Reale, when suddenly I met the +carriage with Lady Dalrymple and the child-angel. She knew me at once, +and gave a little start. Then she looked awfully embarrassed. Then she +turned to Lady Dalrymple; and by the time I had got up the carriage had +stopped, and the ladies both looked at me and bowed. I went up, and they +both held out their hands. Lady Dalrymple then made some remarks +expressive of gratitude, while the child-angel sat and fastened her +wonderful eyes on me, and threw at me such a pleading, touching, +entreating, piteous, grateful, beseeching look, that I fairly +collapsed.</p> + +<p>"When Lady Dalrymple stopped, she turned to her and said:</p> + +<p>"'And oh, aunty darling, did you <i>ever</i> hear of any thing like +it? It was <i>so</i> brave. Wasn't it an awfully plucky thing to do, +now? And I was really inside the crater! I'm sure <i>I</i> never could +have done such a thing—no, not even for my <i>own papa</i>! Oh, +how I do <i>wish</i> I could do something to show how <i>awfully</i> +grateful I am! And, aunty darling, I do <i>wish</i> you'd tell me what +to do.'</p> + +<p>"All this quite turned my head, and I couldn't say any thing; but sat +on my saddle, devouring the little thing with my eyes, and drinking in +the wonderful look which she threw at me. At last the carriage started, +and the ladies, with a pleasant smile, drove on. I think I stood still +there for about five minutes, until I was nearly run down by one of +those beastly Neapolitan calèches loaded with twenty or thirty +natives."</p> + +<p>"See here, old man, what a confoundedly good memory you have! You +remember no end of a lot of things, and give all her speeches verbatim. +What a capital newspaper reporter you'd make!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, it's only <i>her</i> words, you know. She quickens my memory, +and makes a different man of me."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, old chap, a different man altogether."</p> + +<p>"So I say, by Jove! Head turned, eyes distorted, heart generally +upset, circulation brought up to fever point, peace of mind gone, +<span class = "pagenum">23b</span> +and a general mania in the place of the old self-reliance and +content."</p> + +<p>"Not content, old boy; I never had much of that."</p> + +<p>"Well, we won't argue, will we? But as to the child-angel—what +next? You'll call again?"</p> + +<p>"Of course."</p> + +<p>"When?"</p> + +<p>"To-morrow."</p> + +<p>"Strike while the iron is hot, hey? Well, old man, I'll stand by you. +Still I wish you could find out who her people are, just to satisfy a +legitimate curiosity."</p> + +<p>"Well, I don't know the Fays, but Lady Dalrymple is her aunt; and I +know, too, that she is a niece of Sir Gilbert Biggs."</p> + +<p>"What!" cried Hawbury, starting. "Who? Sir what?"</p> + +<p>"Sir Gilbert Biggs."</p> + +<p>"Sir Gilbert Biggs?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Sir Gilbert Biggs! By Jove! Are you sure you are right? Come, now. +Isn't there some mistake?"</p> + +<p>"Not a bit of a mistake; she's a niece of Sir Gilbert. I remember +that, because the name is a familiar one."</p> + +<p>"Familiar!" repeated Hawbury; "I should think so. By Jove!"</p> + +<p>Hawbury here relapsed into silence, and sat with a frown on his face, +and a puzzled expression. At times he would mutter such words as, +"Deuced odd!" "Confounded queer!" "What a lot!" "By Jove!" while Dacres +looked at him in some surprise.</p> + +<p>"Look here, old fellow!" said he at last. "Will you have the kindness +to inform me what there is in the little fact I just mentioned to upset +a man of your size, age, fighting weight, and general coolness of +blood?"</p> + +<p>"Well, there is a deuced odd coincidence about it, that's all."</p> + +<p>"Coincidence with what?"</p> + +<p>"Well, I'll tell some other time. It's a sore subject, old fellow. +Another time, my boy. I'll only mention now that it's the cause of my +present absence from England. There's a bother that I don't care to +encounter, and Sir Gilbert Biggs's nieces are at the bottom of it."</p> + +<p>"You don't mean this one, I hope?" cried Dacres, in some alarm.</p> + +<p>"Heaven forbid! By Jove! No. I hope not."</p> + +<p>"No, I hope not, by Jove!" echoed the other.</p> + +<p>"Well, old man," said Hawbury, after a fit of silence, "I suppose +you'll push matters on now, hard and fast, and launch yourself into +matrimony?"</p> + +<p>"Well—I—suppose—so," said Dacres, hesitatingly.</p> + +<p>"You <i>suppose</i> so. Of course you will. Don't I know you, old +chap? Impetuous, tenacious of purpose, iron will, one idea, and all that +sort of thing. Of course you will; and you'll be married in a +month."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Dacres, in the same hesitating way, "not so soon as +that, I'm afraid."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">24</span> + +<p>"Why not?"</p> + +<p>"Why, I have to get the lady first."</p> + +<p>"The lady; oh, she seems to be willing enough, judging from your +description. Her pleading look at you. Why, man, there was love at first +sight. Then tumbling down the crater of a volcano, and getting fished +out. Why, man, what woman could resist a claim like that, especially +when it is enforced by a man like Scone Dacres? And, by Jove! Sconey, +allow me to inform you that I've always considered you a most infernally +handsome man; and what's more, my opinion is worth something, by +Jove!"</p> + +<p>Hereupon Hawbury stretched his head and shoulders back, and pulled +away with each hand at his long yellow pendent whiskers. Then he yawned. +And then he slowly ejaculated,</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Well," said Dacres, thoughtfully, "there is something in what you +say; and, to tell the truth, I think there's not a bad chance for me, so +far as the lady herself is concerned; but the difficulty is not in that +quarter."</p> + +<p>"Not in that quarter! Why, where the mischief else could there be any +difficulty, man?"</p> + +<p>Dacres was silent.</p> + +<p>"You're eager enough?"</p> + +<p>Dacres nodded his head sadly.</p> + +<p>"Eager! why, eager isn't the word. You're mad, man—mad as a +March hare! So go in and win."</p> + +<p>Dacres said nothing.</p> + +<p>"You're rich, not over old, handsome, well born, well bred, and have +saved the lady's life by extricating her from the crater of a volcano. +She seems too young and childlike to have had any other affairs. She's +probably just out of school; not been into society; not come out; just +the girl. Confound these girls, I say, that have gone through +engagements with other fellows!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, as to that," said Dacres, "this little thing is just like a +child, and in her very simplicity does not know what love is. +Engagement! By Jove, I don't believe she knows the meaning of the word! +She's perfectly fresh, artless, simple, and guileless. I don't believe +she ever heard a word of sentiment or tenderness from any man in her +life."</p> + +<p>"Very likely; so where's the difficulty?"</p> + +<p>"Well, to tell the truth, the difficulty is in my own affairs."</p> + +<p>"Your affairs! Odd, too. What's up? I didn't know any thing had +happened. That's too infernal bad, too."</p> + +<p>"Oh, it's nothing of that sort; money's all right; no swindle. It's +an affair of another character altogether."</p> + +<p>"Oh!"</p> + +<p>"And one, too, that makes me think that—"</p> + +<p>He hesitated.</p> + +<p>"That what?"</p> + +<p>"That I'd better start for Australia."</p> + +<p>"Australia!"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">24b</span> + +<p>"What's the meaning of that?"</p> + +<p>"Why," said Dacres, gloomily, "it means giving up the child-angel, +and trying to forget her—if I ever can."</p> + +<p>"Forget her! What's the meaning of all this? Why, man, five minutes +ago you were all on fire about her, and now you talk quietly about +giving her up! I'm all adrift."</p> + +<p>"Well, it's a mixed up matter."</p> + +<p>"What is?"</p> + +<p>"My affair."</p> + +<p>"Your affair; something that has happened?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. It's a sore matter, and I don't care to speak about it just +now."</p> + +<p>"Oh!"</p> + +<p>"And it's the real cause why I don't go back to England."</p> + +<p>"The mischief it is! Why, Dacres, I'll be hanged if you're not using +the very words I myself used a few minutes ago."</p> + +<p>"Am I?" said Dacres, gloomily.</p> + +<p>"You certainly are; and that makes me think that our affairs are in a +similar complication."</p> + +<p>"Oh no; mine is very peculiar."</p> + +<p>"Well, there's one thing I should like to ask, and you needn't answer +unless you like."</p> + +<p>"Well?"</p> + +<p>"Doesn't your difficulty arise from some confounded woman or +other?"</p> + +<p>"Well—yes."</p> + +<p>"By Jove, I knew it! And, old fellow, I'm in the same situation."</p> + +<p>"Oh ho! So you're driven away from England by a woman?"</p> + +<p>"Exactly."</p> + +<p>Dacres sighed heavily.</p> + +<p>"Yours can't be as bad as mine," said he, with a dismal look. "Mine +is the worst scrape that ever you heard of. And look at me now, with the +child-angel all ready to take me, and me not able to be taken. Confound +the abominable complications of an accursed civilization, I say!"</p> + +<p>"And I say, Amen!" said Hawbury.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<div class = "null"> +<span class = "pagenum">25</span> +</div> + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic024.png" width = "211" height = "200" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"BY JOVE, I KNEW IT!"</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapVI" id = "chapVI"> +CHAPTER VI.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE FIERY TRIAL.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">"See</span> here, old chap," said Hawbury, +"I'm going to make a clean breast of it."</p> + +<p>"Of what?"</p> + +<p>"Of my affair."</p> + +<p>"That's right," said Dacres, dolefully. "I should like of all things +to hear it."</p> + +<p>"You see I wouldn't tell you, only you yourself turn out to be in a +similar situation, and so what I have to say may prove of use to you. At +any rate, you may give me some useful suggestion.</p> + +<p>"Very well, then," continued Hawbury—"to begin. You may +remember that I told you when we met here where I had been passing the +time since I saw you last."</p> + +<p>Dacres nodded assent.</p> + +<p>"Well, about two years ago I was in Canada. I went there for sport, +and plunged at once into the wilderness. And let me tell you it's a very +pretty country for hunting. Lots of game—fish, flesh, and +fowl—from the <ins class = "correction" title = "spelling unchanged">cariboo</ins> down to the smallest trout that you would care +to hook. Glorious country; magnificent forests waiting for the +lumberman; air that acts on you like wine, or even better; rivers and +lakes in all directions; no end of sport and all that sort of thing, you +know. Have you ever been in Canada?"</p> + +<p>"Only traveled through."</p> + +<p>"Well, the next time you feel inclined for high art sport we'll go +together, and have no end of fun—that is, if you're not married +and done for, which, of course, you will be. No matter. I was saying +that I was in a fine country. I spent a couple of months there with two +or three Indians, and at length started for Ottawa on my way home. The +Indians put me on the right path, after which I dismissed them, and set +out alone with my gun and fishing-rod.</p> + +<p>"The first day was all very well, and I slept well enough the first +night; but on the morning of the second day I found the air full of +smoke. However, I did not give much thought to that, for there had been +a smoky look about the sky for a week, and the woods are always burning +there, I believe, in one place or another. I kept on, and shot enough +for food, and thus the second day passed. That evening the air was quite +suffocating, and it was as hot as an oven. I struggled through the +night, I don't know how; and then on the third day made another start. +This third day was abominable. The atmosphere was beastly hot; the sky +was a dull yellow, and the birds seemed to have all disappeared. As I +went on it grew worse, but I found it was not because the fires were in +front of me. On the contrary, they were behind me, and were driving on +so that they were gradually approaching nearer. I could do my thirty +miles a day even in that rough country, but the fires could do more. At +last I came into a track that was a little wider than the first one. As +I went on I met cattle +<span class = "pagenum">25b</span> +which appeared stupefied. Showers of dust were in the air; the +atmosphere was worse than ever, and I never had such difficulty in my +life in walking along. I had to throw away my rifle and fishing-rod, and +was just thinking of pitching my clothes after them, when suddenly I +turned a bend in the path, and met a young girl full in the face.</p> + +<p>"By Jove! I swear I never was so astounded in my life. I hurried up +to her, and just began to ask where I was, when she interrupted me with +a question of the same kind. By-the-way, I forgot to say that she was on +horseback. The poor devil of a horse seemed to have had a deuced hard +time of it too, for he was trembling from head to foot, though whether +that arose from fatigue or fright I don't know. Perhaps it was both.</p> + +<p>"Well, the girl was evidently very much alarmed. She was awfully +pale; she was a monstrous pretty girl too—the prettiest by all +odds I ever saw, and that's saying a good deal. By Jove! Well, it turned +out that she had been stopping in the back country for a month, at a +house somewhere up the river, with her father. Her father had gone down +to Ottawa a week before, and was expected back on this day. She had come +out to meet him, and had lost her way. She had been out for hours, and +was completely bewildered. She was also frightened at the fires, which +now seemed to be all around us. This she told me in a few words, and +asked if I knew where the river was.</p> + +<p>"Of course I knew no more than she did, and it needed only a few +words from me to show her that I was as much in the dark as she was. I +began to question her, however, as to this river, for it struck me that +in the present state of affairs a river would not be a bad thing to have +near one. In answer to my question she said that she had come upon this +road from the woods on the left, and therefore it was evident that the +river lay in that direction.</p> + +<p>"I assured her that I would do whatever lay in my power; and with +that I walked on in the direction in which I had been going, while she +rode by my side. Some further questions as to the situation of the house +where she had been staying showed me that it was on the banks of the +river about fifty miles above Ottawa. By my own calculations I was about +that distance away. It seemed to me, then, that she had got lost in the +woods, and had wandered thus over some trail to the path where she had +met me. Every thing served to show me that the river lay to the left, +and so I resolved to turn in at the first path which I reached.</p> + +<p>"At length, after about two miles, we came to a path which went into +the woods. My companion was sure that this was the very one by which she +had come out, and this confirmed the impression which the sight of it +had given me. I thought it certainly must lead toward the river. So we +turned into this path. I went first, and she followed, and so we went +for about a couple of miles further.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">26</span> + +<p>"All this time the heat had been getting worse and worse. The air was +more smoky than ever; my mouth was parched and dry. I breathed with +difficulty, and could scarcely drag one leg after another. The lady was +almost as much exhausted as I was, and suffered acutely, as I could +easily see, though she uttered not a word of complaint. Her horse also +suffered terribly, and did not seem able to bear her weight much longer. +The poor brute trembled and staggered, and once or twice stopped, so +that it was difficult to start him again. The road had gone in a winding +way, but was not so crooked as I expected. I afterward found that she +had gone by other paths until she had found herself in thick woods, and +then on trying to retrace her way she had strayed into this path. If she +had turned to the left on first reaching it, instead of to the right, +the fate of each of us would have been different. Our meeting was no +doubt the salvation of both.</p> + +<p>"There was a wooded eminence in front, which we had been steadily +approaching for some time. At last we reached the top, and here a scene +burst upon us which was rather startling. The hill was high enough to +command an extensive view, and the first thing that we saw was a vast +extent of woods and water and smoke. By-and-by we were able to +distinguish each. The water was the river, which could be seen for +miles. Up the river toward the left the smoke arose in great volumes, +covering every thing; while in front of us, and immediately between us +and the river, there was a line of smoke which showed that the fires had +penetrated there and had intercepted us.</p> + +<p>"We stood still in bewilderment. I looked all around. To go back was +as bad as to go forward, for there, also, a line of smoke arose which +showed the progress of the flames. To the right there was less smoke; +but in that direction there was only a wilderness, through which we +could not hope to pass for any distance. The only hope was the river. If +we could traverse the flames in that direction, so as to reach the +water, we would be safe. In a few words I communicated my decision to my +companion. She said nothing, but bowed her head in acquiescence.</p> + +<p>"Without delaying any longer we resumed our walk. After about a mile +we found ourselves compelled once more to halt. The view here was worse +than ever. The path was now as wide as an ordinary road, and grew wider +still as it went on. It was evidently used to haul logs down to the +river, and as it approached the bank it grew steadily wider; but between +us and the river the woods were all burning. The first rush of the fire +was over, and now we looked forward and saw a vast array of +columns—the trunks of burned trees—some blackened and +charred, others glowing red. The ground below was also glowing red, with +blackened spaces here and there.</p> + +<p>"Still the burned tract was but a strip, and there lay our hope. The +fire, by some strange +<span class = "pagenum">26b</span> +means, had passed on a track not wider than a hundred yards, and this +was what had to be traversed by us. The question was, whether we could +pass through that or not. The same question came to both of us, and +neither of us said a word. But before I could ask the lady about it, her +horse became frightened at the flames. I advised her to dismount, for I +knew that the poor brute could never be forced through those fires. She +did so, and the horse, with a horrible snort, turned and galloped wildly +away.</p> + +<p>"I now looked around once more, and saw that there was no escape +except in front. The flames were encircling us, and a vast cloud of +smoke surrounded us every where, rising far up and rolling overhead. +Cinders fell in immense showers, and the fine ashes, with which the air +was filled, choked us and got into our eyes.</p> + +<p>"'There is only one chance,' said I; 'and that is to make a dash for +the river. Can you do it?'</p> + +<p>"'I'll try,' she said.</p> + +<p>"'We'll have to go through the fires.'</p> + +<p>"She nodded.</p> + +<p>"'Well, then,' I said, 'do as I say. Take off your sacque and wrap it +around your head and shoulders.'</p> + +<p>"She took off her sacque at this. It was a loose robe of merino or +alpaca, or something of that sort, and very well suited for what I +wanted. I wrapped it round her so as to protect her face, head, and +shoulders; and taking off my coat I did the same.</p> + +<p>"'Now,' said I, 'hold your breath as well as you can. You may keep +your eyes shut. Give me your hand—I'll lead you.'</p> + +<p>"Taking her hand I led her forward at a rapid pace. Once she fell, +but she quickly recovered herself, and soon we reached the edge of the +flames.</p> + +<p>"I tell you what it is, my boy, the heat was terrific, and the sight +was more so. The river was not more than a hundred yards away, but +between us and it there lay what seemed as bad as the burning fiery +furnace of Messrs. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. If I were now +standing there, I don't think I could face it. But then I was with the +girl; I had to save her. Fire was behind us, racing after us; water lay +in front. Once there and we were safe. It was not a time to dawdle or +hesitate, I can assure you.</p> + +<p>"'Now,' said I, 'run for your life!'</p> + +<p>"Grasping her hand more firmly, I started off with her at the full +run. The place was terrible, and grew worse at every step. The road here +was about fifty feet wide. On each side was the burning forest, with a +row of burned trees like fiery columns, and the moss and underbrush +still glowing beneath. To pass through that was a thing that it don't do +to look back upon. The air was intolerable. I wrapped my coat tighter +over my head; my arms were thus exposed, and I felt the heat on my +hands. But that was nothing to the torments +<span class = "pagenum">27</span> +that I endured from trying to breathe. Besides this, the enormous effort +of keeping up a run made breathing all the more difficult. A feeling of +despair came over me. Already we had gone half the distance, but at that +moment the space seemed lengthened out interminably, and I looked in +horror at the rest of the way, with a feeling of the utter impossibility +of traversing it.</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic027.png" width = "447" height = "213" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +THE FIERY TRIAL.</p> + +<p>"Suddenly the lady fell headlong. I stopped and raised her up. My +coat fell off; I felt the fiery air all round my face and head. I called +and screamed to the lady as I tried to raise her up; but she said +nothing. She was as lifeless as a stone.</p> + +<p>"Well, my boy, I thought it was all up with me; but I, at least, +could stand, though I did not think that I could take another breath. As +for the lady, there was no help for it; so I grasped her with all my +strength, still keeping her head covered as well as I could, and slung +her over my shoulders. Then away I ran. I don't remember much after +that. I must have lost my senses then, and, what is more, I must have +accomplished the rest of the journey in that semi-unconscious state.</p> + +<p>"What I do remember is this—a wild plunge into the water; and +the delicious coolness that I felt all around restored me, and I at once +comprehended all. The lady was by my side; the shock and the cool water +had restored her also. She was standing up to her shoulders just where +she had fallen, and was panting and sobbing. I spoke a few words of good +cheer, and then looked around for some place of refuge. Just where we +stood there was nothing but fire and desolation, and it was necessary to +go further away. Well, some distance out, about half-way across the +river, I saw a little island, with rocky sides, and trees on the top. It +looked safe and cool and inviting. I determined to try to get there. +Some deals were in the water by the bank, which had probably floated +down from some saw-mill. I took half a dozen of these, flung two or +three more on top of them, and then told the lady my plan. It was to +float out to the +<span class = "pagenum">27b</span> +island by means of this raft. I offered to put her on it and let her +float; but she refused, preferring to be in the water.</p> + +<p>"The river was pretty wide here, and the water was shallow, so that +we were able to wade for a long distance, pushing the raft before us. At +length it became deep, and then the lady held on while I floated and +tried to direct the raft toward the island. I had managed while wading +to guide the raft up the stream, so that when we got into deep water the +current carried us toward the island. At length we reached it without +much difficulty, and then, utterly worn out, I fell down on the grass, +and either fainted away or fell asleep.</p> + +<p>"When I revived I had several very queer sensations. The first thing +that I noticed was that I hadn't any whiskers."</p> + +<p>"What! no whiskers?"</p> + +<p>"No—all gone; and my eyebrows and mustache, and every wisp of +hair from my head."</p> + +<p>"See here, old fellow, do you mean to say that you've only taken one +year to grow those infernally long whiskers that you have now?"</p> + +<p>"It's a fact, my boy!"</p> + +<p>"I wouldn't have believed it; but some fellows can do such +extraordinary things. But drive on."</p> + +<p>"Well, the next thing I noticed was that it was as smoky as ever. +Then I jumped up and looked around. I felt quite dry, though it seemed +as if I had just come from the river. As I jumped up and turned I saw my +friend. She looked much better than she had. Her clothes also were quite +dry. She greeted me with a mournful smile, and rose up from the trunk of +a tree where she had been sitting, and made inquiries after my health +with the most earnest and tender sympathy.</p> + +<p>"I told her I was all right, laughed about my hair, and inquired very +anxiously how she was. She assured me that she was as well as ever. Some +conversation followed; and then, to my amazement, I found that I had +slept for an immense time, or had been unconscious, whichever it was, +and that the adventure had +<span class = "pagenum">28</span> +taken place on the preceding day. It was now about the middle of the +next day. You may imagine how confounded I was at that.</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic028.png" width = "452" height = "456" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"ALL GONE; MY EYEBROWS, AND MUSTACHE, AND EVERY WISP OF HAIR FROM MY +HEAD."</p> + +<p>"The air was still abominably close and smoky; so I looked about the +island, and found a huge crevice in the rocks, which was almost a cave. +It was close by the water, and was far cooler than outside. In fact, it +was rather comfortable than otherwise. Here we took refuge, and talked +over our situation. As far as we could see, the whole country was burned +up. A vast cloud of smoke hung over all. One comfort was that the glow +had ceased on the river-bank, and only a blackened forest now remained, +with giant trees arising, all blasted. We found that our stay would be a +protracted one.</p> + +<p>"The first thing that I thought of was food. Fortunately I had my +hooks and lines; so I cut a pole, and fastening my line to it, I +succeeded in catching a few fish.</p> + +<p>"We lived there for two days on fish in that manner. The lady was sad +and anxious. I tried to cheer her up. Her chief trouble was the fear +that her father was lost. In the course +<span class = "pagenum">28b</span> +of our conversations I found out that her name was Ethel Orne."</p> + +<p>"Ethel Orne?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Don't think I ever heard the name before. Orne? No, I'm sure I +haven't. It isn't Horn?"</p> + +<p>"No; Orne—O R N E. Oh, there's no trouble about that.</p> + +<p>"Well, I rather enjoyed this island life, but she was awfully +melancholy; so I hit upon a plan for getting away. I went to the shore +and collected a lot of the deals that I mentioned, and made a very +decent sort of raft. I found a pole to guide it with, cut a lot of brush +for Ethel, and then we started, and floated down the river. We didn't +have any accidents. The only bother was that she was too confoundedly +anxious about me, and wouldn't let me work. We went ashore every +evening. We caught fish enough to eat. We were afloat three days, and, +naturally enough, became very well acquainted."</p> + +<p>Hawbury stopped, and sighed.</p> + +<p>"I tell you what it is, Dacres," said he, +<span class = "pagenum">29</span> +"there never lived a nobler, more generous, and at the same time a +braver soul than Ethel Orne. She never said a word about gratitude and +all that, but there was a certain quiet look of devotion about her that +gives me a deuced queer feeling now when I think of it all."</p> + +<p>"And I dare say—But no matter."</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"Well, I was only going to remark that, under the circumstances, +there might have been a good deal of quiet devotion about you."</p> + +<p>Hawbury made no reply, but sat silent for a time.</p> + +<p>"Well, go on, man; don't keep me in suspense."</p> + +<p>"Let me see—where was I? Oh! floating on the raft. Well, we +floated that way, as I said, for three days, and at the end of that time +we reached a settlement. Here we found a steamer, and went on further, +and finally reached Ottawa. Here she went to the house of a friend. I +called on her as soon as possible, and found her in fearful anxiety. She +had learned that her father had gone up with a Mr. Willoughby, and +neither had been heard from.</p> + +<p>"Startled at this intelligence, I instituted a search myself. I could +not find out any thing, but only that there was good reason to believe +that both of the unhappy gentlemen had perished. On returning to the +house to call on Ethel, about a week after, I found that she had +received full confirmation of this dreadful intelligence, and had gone +to Montreal. It seems that Willoughby's wife was a relative of Ethel's, +and she had gone to stay with her. I longed to see her, but of course I +could not intrude upon her in her grief; and so I wrote to her, +expressing all the condolence I could. I told her that I was going to +Europe, but would return in the following year. I couldn't say any more +than that, you know. It wasn't a time for sentiment, of course.</p> + +<p>"Well, I received a short note in reply. She said she would look +forward to seeing me again with pleasure, and all that; and that she +could never forget the days we had spent together.</p> + +<p>"So off I went, and in the following year I returned. But on reaching +Montreal, what was my disgust, on calling at Mrs. Willoughby's, to find +that she had given up her house, sold her furniture, and left the city. +No one knew any thing about her, and they said that she had only come to +the city a few months before her bereavement, and after that had never +made any acquaintances. Some said she had gone to the United States; +others thought she had gone to Quebec; others to England; but no one +knew any thing more."</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapVII" id = "chapVII"> +CHAPTER VII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +A STARTLING REVELATION.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">"It</span> seems to me, Hawbury," said +Dacres, after a period of thoughtful silence—"it seems to me that +when you talk of people having their +<span class = "pagenum">29b</span> +heads turned, you yourself comprehend the full meaning of that +sensation?"</p> + +<p>"Somewhat."</p> + +<p>"You knocked under at once, of course, to your Ethel?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"And feel the same way toward her yet?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Hit hard?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; and that's what I'm coming to. The fact is, my whole business +in life for the last year has been to find her out."</p> + +<p>"You haven't dawdled so much, then, as people suppose?"</p> + +<p>"No; that's all very well to throw people off a fellow's scent; but +you know me well enough, Dacres; and we didn't dawdle much in South +America, did we?"</p> + +<p>"That's true, my boy; but as to this lady, what is it that makes it +so hard for you to find her? In the first place, is she an +American?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no."</p> + +<p>"Why not?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, accent, manner, tone, idiom, and a hundred other things. Why, of +course, you know as well as I that an American lady is as different from +an English as a French or a German lady is. They may be all equally +ladies, but each nation has its own peculiarities."</p> + +<p>"Is she Canadian?"</p> + +<p>"Possibly. It is not always easy to tell a Canadian lady from an +English. They imitate us out there a good deal. I could tell in the +majority of cases, but there are many who can not be distinguished from +us very easily. And Ethel may be one."</p> + +<p>"Why mayn't she be English?"</p> + +<p>"She may be. It's impossible to perceive any difference."</p> + +<p>"Have you ever made any inquiries about her in England?"</p> + +<p>"No; I've not been in England much, and from the way she talked to me +I concluded that her home was in Canada."</p> + +<p>"Was her father an Englishman?"</p> + +<p>"I really don't know."</p> + +<p>"Couldn't you find out?"</p> + +<p>"No. You see he had but recently moved to Montreal, like Willoughby; +and I could not find any people who were acquainted with him."</p> + +<p>"He may have been English all the time."</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"And she too."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"And she may be in England now."</p> + +<p>Hawbury started to his feet, and stared in silence at his friend for +several minutes.</p> + +<p>"By Jove!" he cried; "if I thought that, I swear I'd start for home +this evening, and hunt about every where for the representatives of the +Orne family. But no—surely it can't be possible."</p> + +<p>"Were you in London last season?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Well, how do you know but that she was there?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">30</span> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"And the belle of the season, too?"</p> + +<p>"She would be if she were there, by Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, if there wasn't another present that I wot of."</p> + +<p>"Well, we won't argue about that; besides, I haven't come to the +point yet."</p> + +<p>"The point?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, the real reason why I'm here, when I'm wanted home."</p> + +<p>"The real reason? Why, haven't you been telling it to me all +along?"</p> + +<p>"Well, no; I haven't got to the point yet."</p> + +<p>"Drive on, then, old man."</p> + +<p>"Well, you know," continued Hawbury, "after hunting all through +Canada I gave up in despair, and concluded that Ethel was lost to me, at +least for the present. That was only about six or seven months ago. So I +went home, and spent a month in a shooting-box on the Highlands; then I +went to Ireland to visit a friend; and then to London. While there I got +a long letter from my mother. The good soul was convinced that I was +wasting my life; she urged me to settle down, and finally informed me +that she had selected a wife for me. Now I want you to understand, old +boy, that I fully appreciated my mother's motives. She was quite right, +I dare say, about my wasting my life; quite right, too, about the +benefit of settling down; and she was also very kind to take all the +trouble of selecting a wife off my hands. Under other circumstances I +dare say I should have thought the matter over, and perhaps I should +have been induced even to go so far as to survey the lady from a +distance, and argue the point with my mother pro and con. But the fact +is, the thing was distasteful, and wouldn't bear thinking about, much +less arguing. I was too lazy to go and explain the matter, and writing +was not my forte. Besides, I didn't want to thwart my mother in her +plans, or hurt her feelings; and so the long and the short of it is, I +solved the difficulty and cut the knot by crossing quietly over to +Norway. I wrote a short note to my mother, making no allusion to her +project, and since then I've been gradually working my way down to the +bottom of the map of Europe, and here I am."</p> + +<p>"You didn't see the lady, then?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Who was she?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know."</p> + +<p>"Don't know the lady?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Odd, too! Haven't you any idea? Surely her name was mentioned?"</p> + +<p>"No; my mother wrote in a roundabout style, so as to feel her way. +She knew me, and feared that I might take a prejudice against the lady. +No doubt I should have done so. She only alluded to her in a general +way."</p> + +<p>"A general way?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; that is, you know, she mentioned the fact that the lady was a +niece of Sir Gilbert Biggs."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">30b</span> + +<p>"What!" cried Dacres, with a start.</p> + +<p>"A niece of Sir Gilbert Biggs," repeated Hawbury.</p> + +<p>"A niece—of—Sir Gilbert Biggs?" said Dacres, slowly. +"Good Lord!"</p> + +<p>"Yes; and what of that?"</p> + +<p>"Very much. Don't you know that Minnie Fay is a niece of Sir Gilbert +Biggs?"</p> + +<p>"By Jove! So she is. I remember being startled when you told me that, +and for a moment an odd fancy came to me. I wondered whether your +child-angel might not be the identical being about whom my poor dear +mother went into such raptures. Good Lord! what a joke! By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"A joke!" growled Dacres. "I don't see any joke in it. I remember +when you said that Biggs's nieces were at the bottom of your troubles, I +asked whether it might be this one."</p> + +<p>"So you did, old chap; and I replied that I hoped not. So you need +not shake your gory locks at me, my boy."</p> + +<p>"But I don't like the looks of it."</p> + +<p>"Neither do I."</p> + +<p>"Yes, but you see it looks as though she had been already set apart +for you especially."</p> + +<p>"And pray, old man, what difference can that make, when I don't set +myself apart for any thing of the kind?"</p> + +<p>Dacres sat in silence with a gloomy frown over his brow.</p> + +<p>"Besides, are you aware, my boy, of the solemn fact that Biggs's +nieces are legion?" said Hawbury. "The man himself is an infernal old +bloke; and as to his nieces—heavens and earth!—old! old as +Methuselah; and as to this one, she must be a grandniece—a second +generation. She's not a true, full-blooded niece. Now the lady I refer +to was one of the original Biggs's nieces. There's no mistake whatever +about that, for I have it in black and white, under my mother's own +hand."</p> + +<p>"Oh, she would select the best of them for you."</p> + +<p>"No, she wouldn't. How do you know that?"</p> + +<p>"There's no doubt about that."</p> + +<p>"It depends upon what you mean by the best. The one <i>you</i> call +the best might not seem so to <i>her</i>, and so on. Now I dare say +she's picked out for me a great, raw-boned, redheaded niece, with a nose +like a horse. And she expects me to marry a woman like that! with a pace +like a horse! Good Lord!"</p> + +<p>And Hawbury leaned back, lost in the immensity of that one +overwhelming idea.</p> + +<p>"Besides," said he, standing up, "I don't care if she was the angel +Gabriel. I don't want any of Biggs's nieces. I won't have them. By Jove! +And am I to be entrapped into a plan like that? I want Ethel. And what's +more, I will have her, or go without. The child-angel may be the very +identical one that my mother selected, and if you assert that she is, +I'll be hanged if I'll argue the point. I only say this, that it doesn't +alter my position in the slightest degree. I don't want her. I won't +<span class = "pagenum">31</span> +have her. I don't want to see her. I don't care if the whole of Biggs's +nieces, in solemn conclave, with old Biggs at their head, had formally +discussed the whole matter, and finally resolved unanimously that she +should be mine. Good Lord, man! don't you understand how it is? What the +mischief do I care about any body? Do you think I went through that +fiery furnace for nothing? And what do you suppose that life on the +island meant? Is all that nothing? Did you ever live on an island with +the child-angel? Did you ever make a raft for her and fly? Did you ever +float down a river current between banks burned black by raging fires, +feeding her, soothing her, comforting her, and all the while feeling in +a general fever about her? You hauled her out of a crater, did you? By +Jove! And what of that? Why, that furnace that I pulled Ethel out of was +worse than a hundred of your craters. And yet, after all that, you think +that I could be swayed by the miserable schemes of a lot of Biggs's +nieces! And you scowl at a fellow, and get huffy and jealous. By +Jove!"</p> + +<p>After this speech, which was delivered with unusual animation, +Hawbury lighted a cigar, which he puffed at most energetically.</p> + +<p>"All right, old boy," said Dacres. "A fellow's apt to judge others by +himself, you know. Don't make any more set speeches, though. I begin to +understand your position. Besides, after all—"</p> + +<p>Dacres paused, and the dark frown that was on his brow grew still +darker.</p> + +<p>"After all what?" asked Hawbury, who now began to perceive that +another feeling besides jealousy was the cause of his friend's gloomy +melancholy.</p> + +<p>"Well, after all, you know, old fellow, I fear I'll have to give her +up."</p> + +<p>"Give her up?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"That's what you said before, and you mentioned Australia, and that +rot."</p> + +<p>"The more I think of it," said Dacres, dismally, and regarding the +opposite wall with a steady yet mournful stare—"the more I think +of it, the more I see that there's no such happiness in store for +me."</p> + +<p>"Pooh, man! what is it all about? This is the secret that you spoke +about, I suppose?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; and it's enough to put a barrier between me and her. Was I +jealous? Did I seem huffy? What an idiot I must have been! Why, old man, +I can't do any thing or say any thing."</p> + +<p>"The man's mad," said Hawbury, addressing himself to a carved +tobacco-box on the table.</p> + +<p>"Mad? Yes, I was mad enough in ever letting myself be overpowered by +this bright dream. Here have I been giving myself up to a +phantom—an empty illusion—and now it's all over. My eyes are +open."</p> + +<p>"You may as well open my eyes too; for I'll be hanged if I can see my +way through this!"</p> + +<p>"Strange! strange! strange!" continued Dacres, +<span class = "pagenum">31b</span> +in a kind of soliloquy, not noticing Hawbury's words. "How a man will +sometimes forget realities, and give himself up to dreams! It was my +dream of the child-angel that so turned my brain. I must see her no +more."</p> + +<p>"Very well, old boy," said Hawbury. "Now speak Chinese a little for +variety. I'll understand you quite as well. I will, by Jove!"</p> + +<p>"And then, for a fellow that's had an experience like +mine—before and since," continued Dacres, still speaking in the +tone of one who was meditating aloud—"to allow such an idea even +for a moment to take shape in his brain! What an utter, unmitigated, +unmanageable, and unimprovable idiot, ass, dolt, and blockhead! Confound +such a man! I say; confound him!"</p> + +<p class = "floatleft"> +<img src = "images/pic031.png" width = "208" height = "230" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"CONFOUND SUCH A MAN! I SAY."</p> + +<p>And as Dacres said this he brought his fist down upon the table near +him with such an energetic crash that a wine-flask was sent spinning on +the floor, where its ruby contents splashed out in a pool, intermingled +with fragments of glass.</p> + +<p>Dacres was startled by the crash, and looked at it for a while in +silence. Then he raised his head and looked at his friend. Hawbury +encountered his glance without any expression. He merely sat and smoked +and passed his fingers through his pendent whiskers.</p> + +<p>"Excuse me," said Dacres, abruptly.</p> + +<p>"Certainly, my dear boy, a thousand times; only I hope you will allow +me to remark that your style is altogether a new one, and during the +whole course of our acquaintance I do not remember seeing it before. You +have a melodramatic way that is overpowering. Still I don't see why you +should swear at yourself in a place like Naples, where there are so many +other things to swear at. It's a waste of human energy, and I don't +understand it. We usedn't to indulge in soliloquies in South America, +used we?"</p> + +<p>"No, by Jove! And look here, old chap, +<span class = "pagenum">32</span> +you'll overlook this little outburst, won't you? In South America I was +always cool, and you did the hard swearing, my boy. I'll be cool again; +and what's more, I'll get back to South America again as soon as I can. +Once on the pampas, and I'll be a man again. I tell you what it is, I'll +start to-morrow. What do you say? Come."</p> + +<p>"Oh no," said Hawbury, coolly; "I can't do that. I have business, you +know."</p> + +<p>"Business?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, you know—Ethel, you know."</p> + +<p>"By Jove! so you have. That alters the matter."</p> + +<p>"But in any case I wouldn't go, nor would you. I still am quite +unable to understand you. Why you should grow desperate, and swear at +yourself, and then propose South America, is quite beyond me. Above all, +I don't yet see any reason why you should give up your child-angel. You +were all raptures but a short time since. Why are you so cold now?"</p> + +<p>"I'll tell you," said Dacres.</p> + +<p>"So you said ever so long ago."</p> + +<p>"It's a sore subject, and difficult to speak about."</p> + +<p>"Well, old man, I'm sorry for you; and don't speak about it at all if +it gives you pain."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I'll make a clean breast of it. You've told your affair, and +I'll tell mine. I dare say I'll feel all the better for it."</p> + +<p>"Drive on, then, old man."</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic032.png" width = "454" height = "344" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"HAWBURY SANK BACK IN HIS SEAT, OVERWHELMED."</p> + +<p>Dacres rose, took a couple of glasses of beer in quick succession, +then resumed his seat, then +<span class = "pagenum">32b</span> +picked out a cigar from the box with unusual fastidiousness, then drew a +match, then lighted the cigar, then sent out a dozen heavy volumes of +smoke, which encircled him so completely that he became quite concealed +from Hawbury's view. But even this cloud did not seem sufficient to +correspond with the gloom of his soul. Other clouds rolled forth, and +still others, until all their congregated folds encircled him, and in +the midst there was a dim vision of a big head, whose stiff, high, +curling, crisp hair, and massive brow, and dense beard, seemed like some +living manifestation of cloud-compelling Jove.</p> + +<p>For some time there was silence, and Hawbury said nothing, but waited +for his friend to speak.</p> + +<p>At last a voice was heard—deep, solemn, awful, portentous, +ominous, sorrow-laden, weird, mysterious, prophetic, obscure, gloomy, +doleful, dismal, and apocalyptic.</p> + +<p>"<i>Hawbury!</i>"</p> + +<p>"Well, old man?"</p> + +<p>"<span class = "smallcaps">Hawbury!</span>"</p> + +<p>"All right."</p> + +<p>"Are you listening?"</p> + +<p>"Certainly."</p> + +<p>"<i>Well—I'm—married!</i>"</p> + +<p>Hawbury sprang to his feet as though he had been shot.</p> + +<p>"What!" he cried.</p> + +<p>"<i>I'm married!</i>"</p> + +<p>"You're what? Married? <i>You! married!</i> Scone Dacres! not +you—not <i>married?</i>"</p> + +<p>"<i>I'm married!</i>"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">33</span> + +<p>"Good Lord!"</p> + +<p>"<i>I'm married</i>!"</p> + +<p>Hawbury sank back in his seat, overwhelmed by the force of this +sudden and tremendous revelation. For some time there was a deep +silence. Both were smoking. The clouds rolled forth from the lips of +each, and curled over their heads, and twined in voluminous folds, and +gathered over them in dark, impenetrable masses. Even so rested the +clouds of doubt, of darkness, and of gloom over the soul of each, and +those which were visible to the eye seemed to typify, symbolize, +characterize, and body forth the darker clouds that overshadowed the +mind.</p> + +<p>"<i>I'm married</i>!" repeated Dacres, who now seemed to have become +like Poe's raven, and all his words one melancholy burden bore.</p> + +<p>"You were not married when I was last with you?" said Hawbury at +last, in the tone of one who was recovering from a fainting fit.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I was."</p> + +<p>"Not in South America?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, in South America."</p> + +<p>"Married?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, married."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Yes; and what's more, I've been married for ten years."</p> + +<p>"Ten years! Good Lord!"</p> + +<p>"It's true."</p> + +<p>"Why, how old could you have been when you got married?"</p> + +<p>"A miserable, ignorant, inexperienced dolt, idiot, and brat of a +boy."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Well, the secret's out; and now, if you care to hear, I will tell +you all about it."</p> + +<p>"I'm dying to hear, dear boy; so go on."</p> + +<p>And at this Scone Dacres began his story.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapVIII" id = "chapVIII"> +CHAPTER VIII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +A MAD WIFE.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">"I'll</span> tell you all about it," said +Scone Dacres; "but don't laugh, for matters like these are not to be +trifled with, and I may take offense."</p> + +<p>"Oh, bother, as if I ever laugh at any thing serious! By Jove! no. +You don't know me, old chap."</p> + +<p>"All right, then. Well, to begin. This wife that I speak of happened +to me very suddenly. I was only a boy, just out of Oxford, and just into +my fortune. I was on my way to Paris—my first visit—and was +full of no end of projects for enjoyment. I went from Dover, and in the +steamer there was the most infernally pretty girl. Black, mischievous +eyes, with the devil's light in them; hair curly, crispy, frisky, +luxuriant, all tossing over her head and shoulders, and an awfully +enticing manner. A portly old bloke was with her—her father, I +afterward learned. Somehow my hat blew off. She laughed. I laughed. Our +eyes met. I +<span class = "pagenum">33b</span> +made a merry remark. She laughed again; and there we were, introduced. +She gave me a little felt hat of her own. I fastened it on in triumph +with a bit of string, and wore it all the rest of the way.</p> + +<p>"Well, you understand it all. Of course, by the time we got to +Calais, I was head over heels in love, and so was she, for that matter. +The old man was a jolly old John Bull of a man. I don't believe he had +the slightest approach to any designs on me. He didn't know any thing +about me, so how could he? He was jolly, and when we got to Calais he +was convivial. I attached myself to the two, and had a glorious time. +Before three days I had exchanged vows of eternal fidelity with the +lady, and all that, and had gained her consent to marry me on reaching +England. As to the old man there was no trouble at all. He made no +inquiries about my means, but wrung my hand heartily, and said God bless +me. Besides, there were no friends of my own to consider. My parents +were dead, and I had no relations nearer than cousins, for whom I didn't +care a pin.</p> + +<p>"My wife lived at Exeter, and belonged to rather common people; but, +of course, I didn't care for that. Her own manners and style were +refined enough. She had been sent by her father to a very fashionable +boarding-school, where she had been run through the same mould as that +in which her superiors had been formed, and so she might have passed +muster any where. Her father was awfully fond of her, and proud of her. +She tyrannized over him completely. I soon found out that she had been +utterly spoiled by his excessive indulgence, and that she was the most +whimsical, nonsensical, headstrong, little spoiled beauty that ever +lived. But, of course, all that, instead of deterring me, only increased +the fascination which she exercised, and made me more madly in love than +ever.</p> + +<p>"Her name was not a particularly attractive one; but what are names! +It was Arethusa Wiggins. Now the old man always called her "Arry," which +sounded like the vulgar pronunciation of "Harry." Of course I couldn't +call her that, and Arethusa was too infernally long, for a fellow +doesn't want to be all day in pronouncing his wife's name. Besides, it +isn't a bad name in itself, of course; it's poetic, classic, and does to +name a ship of war, but isn't quite the thing for one's home and +hearth.</p> + +<p>"After our marriage we spent the honeymoon in Switzerland, and then +came home. I had a very nice estate, and have it yet. You've never heard +of Dacres Grange, perhaps—well, there's where we began life, and a +devil of a life she began to lead me. It was all very well at first. +During the honey-moon there were only a few outbursts, and after we came +to the Grange she repressed herself for about a fortnight; but finally +she broke out in the most furious fashion; and I began to find that she +had a devil of a temper, and in her fits she was +<span class = "pagenum">34</span> +but a small remove from a mad woman. You see she had been humored and +indulged and petted and coddled by her old fool of a father, until at +last she had grown to be the most whimsical, conceited, tetchy, +suspicious, imperious, domineering, selfish, cruel, hard-hearted, and +malignant young vixen that ever lived; yet this evil nature dwelt in a +form as beautiful as ever lived. She was a beautiful demon, and I soon +found it out.</p> + +<p>"It began out of nothing at all. I had been her adoring slave for +three weeks, until I began to be conscious of the most abominable +tyranny on her part. I began to resist this, and we were on the verge of +an outbreak when we arrived at the Grange. The sight of the old hall +appeased her for a time, but finally the novelty wore off, and her evil +passions burst out. Naturally enough, my first blind adoration passed +away, and I began to take my proper position toward her; that is to say, +I undertook to give her some advice, which she very sorely needed. This +was the signal for a most furious outbreak. What was worse, her outbreak +took place before the servants. Of course I could do nothing under such +circumstances, so I left the room. When I saw her again she was sullen +and vicious. I attempted a reconciliation, and kneeling down I passed my +arms caressingly around her. 'Look here,' said I, 'my own poor little +darling, if I've done wrong, I'm sorry, and—'</p> + +<p>"Well, what do you think my lady did?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know."</p> + +<p>"She <i>kicked me</i>! that's all; she kicked me, just as I was +apologizing to her—just as I was trying to make it up. She kicked +me! when I had done nothing, and she alone had been to blame. What's +more, her boots were rather heavy, and that kick made itself felt +unmistakably.</p> + +<p>"I at once arose, and left her without a word. I did not speak to her +then for some time. I used to pass her in the house without looking at +her. This galled her terribly. She made the house too hot for the +servants, and I used to hear her all day long scolding them in a loud +shrill voice, till the sound of that voice became horrible to me.</p> + +<p>"You must not suppose, however, that I became alienated all at once. +That was impossible. I loved her very dearly. After she had kicked me +away my love still lasted. It was a galling thought to a man like me +that she, a common girl, the daughter of a small tradesman, should have +kicked me; me, the descendant of Crusaders, by Jove! and of the best +blood in England; but after a while pride gave way to love, and I tried +to open the way for a reconciliation once or twice. I attempted to +address her in her calmer moods, but it was without any success. She +would not answer me at all. If servants were in the room she would at +once proceed to give orders to them, just as though I had not spoken. +She showed a horrible malignancy in trying to dismiss the older +servants, +<span class = "pagenum">34b</span> +whom she knew to be favorites of mine. Of course I would not let her do +it.</p> + +<p>"Well, one day I found that this sort of life was intolerable, and I +made an effort to put an end to it all. My love was not all gone yet, +and I began to think that I had been to blame. She had always been +indulged, and I ought to have kept up the system a little longer, and +let her down more gradually. I thought of her as I first saw her in the +glory of her youthful beauty on the Calais boat, and softened my heart +till I began to long for a reconciliation. Really I could not see where +I had done any thing out of the way. I was awfully fond of her at first, +and would have remained so if she had let me; but, you perceive, her +style was not exactly the kind which is best adapted to keep a man at a +woman's feet. If she had shown the slightest particle of tenderness, I +would have gladly forgiven her all—yes, even the kick, by +Jove!</p> + +<p>"We had been married about six months or so, and had not spoken for +over four months; so on the day I refer to I went to her room. She +received me with a sulky expression, and a hard stare full of +insult.</p> + +<p>"'My dear,' said I, 'I have come to talk seriously with you.'</p> + +<p>"'Kate,' said she, 'show this gentleman out.'</p> + +<p>"It was her maid to whom she spoke. The maid colored. I turned to her +and pointed to the door, and she went out herself. My wife stood +trembling with rage—a beautiful fury.</p> + +<p>"'I have determined,' said I, quietly, 'to make one last effort for +reconciliation, and I want to be heard. Hear me now, dear, dear wife. I +want your love again; I can not live this way. Can nothing be done? Must +I, must you, always live this way? Have I done any wrong? If I have, I +repent. But come, let us forget our quarrel; let us remember the first +days of our acquaintance. We loved one another, darling. And how +beautiful you were! You are still as beautiful; won't you be as loving? +Don't be hard on a fellow, dear. If I've done any wrong, tell me, and +I'll make it right. See, we are joined together for life. Can't we make +life sweeter for one another than it is now? Come, my wife, be mine +again.'</p> + +<p>"I went on in this strain for some time, and my own words actually +softened me more as I spoke. I felt sorry, too, for my wife, she seemed +so wretched. Besides, it was a last chance, and I determined to humble +myself. Any thing was better than perpetual hate and misery. So at last +I got so affected by my own eloquence that I became quite spooney. Her +back was turned to me; I could not see her face. I thought by her +silence that she was affected, and, in a gush of tenderness, I put my +arm around her.</p> + +<p>"In an instant she flung it off, and stepped back, confronting me +with a face as hard and an eye as malevolent as a demon.</p> + +<p>"She reached out her hand toward the bell.</p> + +<p>"'What are you going to do?' I asked.</p> + +<p>"'Ring for my maid,' said she.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">35</span> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic035.png" width = "339" height = "454" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"VERY WELL. HERE IT IS."</p> + +<p>"'Don't,' said I, getting between her and the bell. 'Think; stop, I +implore you. This is our last chance for a reconciliation.'</p> + +<p>"She stepped back with a cruel smile. She had a small penknife in her +hand. Her eyes glittered venomously.</p> + +<p>"'Reconciliation,' she said, with a sneer. '<i>I</i> don't want it; +<i>I</i> don't want <i>you. You</i> came and forced yourself here. Ring +for my maid, and I will let her show you the door.'</p> + +<p>"'You can't mean it?' I said.</p> + +<p>"'I do mean it,' she replied. 'Ring the bell,' she added, +imperiously.</p> + +<p>"I stood looking at her.</p> + +<p>"'Leave the room, then,' she said.</p> + +<p>"'I must have a satisfactory answer,' said I.</p> + +<p>"'Very well,' said she. 'Here it is.'</p> + +<p>"And saying this she took the penknife by the blade, between her +thumb and finger, and slung it at me. It struck me on the arm, and +buried itself deep in the flesh till it touched the bone. I drew it out, +and without another word left the room. As I went out I heard her +summoning the maid in a loud, stern voice.</p> + +<p>"Well, after that I went to the Continent, and spent about six +months. Then I returned.</p> + +<p>"On my return I found every thing changed. She had sent off all the +servants, and brought there a lot of ruffians whom she was unable to +manage, and who threw every thing into confusion. All the gentry talked +of her, and avoided the place. My friends greeted me with strange, +pitying looks. She had cut down most of the woods, and sold the timber; +she had sent off a number of valuable pictures and sold them. This was +to get money, for I afterward found out that avarice was one of her +strongest vices.</p> + +<p>"The sight of all this filled me with indignation, and I at once +turned out the whole lot of servants, leaving only two or three maids. I +obtained some of the old servants, and reinstated them. All this made my +wife quite wild. She came up to me once and began to storm, +<span class = "pagenum">35b</span> +but I said something to her which shut her up at once.</p> + +<p>"One day I came home and found her on the portico, in her +riding-habit. She was whipping one of the maids with the butt end of her +riding-whip. I rushed up and released the poor creature, whose cries +were really heart-rending, when my wife turned on me, like a fury, and +struck two blows over my head. One of the scars is on my forehead still. +See."</p> + +<p>And Dacres put aside his hair on the top of his head, just over his +right eye, and showed a long red mark, which seemed like the scar of a +dangerous wound.</p> + +<p>"It was an ugly blow," he continued. "I at once tore the whip from +her, and, grasping her hand, led her into the drawing-room. There I +confronted her, holding her tight. I dare say I was rather a queer +sight, for the blood was rushing down over my face, and dripping from my +beard.</p> + +<p>"'Look here, now,' I said; 'do you know any reason why I shouldn't +lay this whip over your shoulders? The English law allows it. Don't you +feel that you deserve it?'</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">36</span> + +<p>"She shrank down, pale and trembling. She was a coward, evidently, +and accessible to physical terror.</p> + +<p>"'If I belonged to your class,' said I, 'I would do it. But I am of a +different order. I am a gentleman. Go. After all, I'm not sorry that you +gave me this blow.'</p> + +<p>"I stalked out of the room, had a doctor, who bound up the wound, and +then meditated over my situation. I made up my mind at once to a +separation. Thus far she had done nothing to warrant a divorce, and +separation was the only thing. I was laid up and feverish for about a +month, but at the end of that time I had an interview with my wife. I +proposed a separation, and suggested that she should go home to her +father. This she refused. She declared herself quite willing to have a +separation, but insisted on living at Dacres Grange.</p> + +<p>"'And what am I to do?' I asked.</p> + +<p>"'Whatever you please,' she replied, calmly.</p> + +<p>"'Do you really propose,' said I, 'to drive me out of the home of my +ancestors, and live here yourself? Do you think I will allow this place +to be under your control after the frightful havoc that you have +made?'</p> + +<p>"'I shall remain here,' said she, firmly.</p> + +<p>"I said nothing more. I saw that she was immovable. At the same time +I could not consent. I could not live with her, and I could not go away +leaving her there. I could not give up the ancestral home to her, to mar +and mangle and destroy. Well, I waited for about two months, and +then—"</p> + +<p>"Well?" asked Hawbury, as Dacres hesitated.</p> + +<p>"Dacres Grange was burned down," said the other, in a low voice.</p> + +<p>"Burned down!"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Good Lord!"</p> + +<p>"It caught fire in the daytime. There were but few servants. No +fire-engines were near, for the Grange was in a remote place, and so the +fire soon gained headway and swept over all. My wife was frantic. She +came to me as I stood looking at the spectacle, and charged me with +setting fire to it. I smiled at her, but made no reply.</p> + +<p>"So you see she was burned out, and that question was settled. It was +a terrible thing, but desperate diseases require desperate remedies; and +I felt it more tolerable to have the house in ruins than to have her +living there while I had to be a wanderer.</p> + +<p>"She was now at my mercy. We went to Exeter. She went to her father, +and I finally succeeded in effecting an arrangement which was +satisfactory on all sides.</p> + +<p>"First of all, the separation should be absolute, and neither of us +should ever hold communication with the other in any shape or way.</p> + +<p>"Secondly, she should take another name, so as to conceal the fact +that she was my wife, and not do any further dishonor to the name.</p> + +<p>"In return for this I was to give her outright twenty thousand pounds +as her own absolutely, +<span class = "pagenum">36b</span> +to invest or spend just as she chose. She insisted on this, so that she +need not be dependent on any annual allowance. In consideration of this +she forfeited every other claim, all dower right in the event of my +death, and every thing else. This was all drawn up in a formal document, +and worded as carefully as possible. I don't believe that the document +would be of much use in a court of law in case she wished to claim any +of her rights, but it served to satisfy her, and she thought it was +legally sound and actually inviolable.</p> + +<p>"Here we separated. I left England, and have never been there +since."</p> + +<p>Dacres stopped, and sat silent for a long time.</p> + +<p>"Could she have been mad?" asked Hawbury.</p> + +<p>"I used to think so, but I believe not. She showed too much sense in +every thing relating to herself. She sold pictures and timber, and kept +every penny. She was acute enough in grasping all she could. During our +last interviews while making these arrangements she was perfectly cool +and lady-like<ins class = "correction" title = "close quote missing">."</ins></p> + +<p>"Have you ever heard about her since?"</p> + +<p>"Never."</p> + +<p>"Is she alive yet?"</p> + +<p>"That's the bother."</p> + +<p>"What! don't you know?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Haven't you ever tried to find out?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. Two years ago I went and had inquiries made at Exeter. Nothing +could be found out. She and her father had left the place immediately +after my departure, and nothing was known about them."</p> + +<p>"I wonder that you didn't go yourself?"</p> + +<p>"What for? I didn't care about seeing her or finding her."</p> + +<p>"Do you think she's alive yet?"</p> + +<p>"I'm afraid she is. You see she always had excellent health, and +there's no reason why she should not live to be an octogenarian."</p> + +<p>"Yet she may be dead."</p> + +<p>"<i>May</i> be! And what sort of comfort is that to me in my present +position, I should like to know? <i>May</i> be? Is that a sufficient +foundation for me to build on? No. In a moment of thoughtlessness I have +allowed myself to forget the horrible position in which I am. But now I +recall it. I'll crush down my feelings, and be a man again. I'll see the +child-angel once more; once more feast my soul over her sweet and +exquisite loveliness; once more get a glance from her tender, innocent, +and guileless eyes, and then away to South America."</p> + +<p>"You said your wife took another name."</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"What was it? Do you know it?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; it was <i>Willoughby</i>"</p> + +<p>"<i>Willoughby</i>!" cried Hawbury, with a start; "why, that's the +name of my Ethel's friend, at Montreal. Could it have been the +same?"</p> + +<p>"Pooh, man! How is that possible? Willoughby is not an uncommon name. +It's not more likely that your Willoughby and mine are the same than it +is that your Ethel is the one I +<span class = "pagenum">37</span> +met at Vesuvius. It's only a coincidence, and not a very wonderful one, +either."</p> + +<p>"It seems <ins class = "correction" title = "hyphen in original">con-foundedly</ins> odd, too," said Hawbury, thoughtfully. +"Willoughby? Ethel? Good Lord! But pooh! What rot? As though they +<i>could</i> be the same. Preposterous! By Jove!"</p> + +<p>And Hawbury stroked away the preposterous idea through his long, +pendent whiskers.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic037.png" width = "210" height = "210" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"SHE CAUGHT MINNIE IN HER ARMS."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapIX" id = "chapIX"> +CHAPTER IX.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +NEW EMBARRASSMENTS.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Mrs. Willoughby</span> had been spending a +few days with a friend whom she had found in Naples, and on her return +was greatly shocked to hear of Minnie's adventure on Vesuvius. Lady +Dalrymple and Ethel had a story to tell which needed no exaggerations +and amplifications to agitate her strongly. Minnie was not present +during the recital; so, after hearing it, Mrs. Willoughby went to her +room.</p> + +<p>Here she caught Minnie in her arms, and kissed her in a very effusive +manner.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Minnie, my poor darling, what is all this about Vesuvius? Is it +true? It is terrible. And now I will never dare to leave you again. How +could I think that you would be in any danger with Lady Dalrymple and +Ethel? As to Ethel, I am astonished. She is always so grave and so sad +that she is the very last person I would have supposed capable of +leading you into danger."</p> + +<p>"Now, Kitty dearest, that's not true," said Minnie; "she didn't lead +me at all. I led her. And how did I know there was any danger? I +remember now that dear, darling Ethel said there was, and I didn't +believe her. But it's always the way." And Minnie threw her little head +on one side, and gave a resigned sigh.</p> + +<p>"And did you really get into the crater?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, with +a shudder.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I suppose so. They all said so," said Minnie, folding her little +hands in front of her. +<span class = "pagenum">37b</span> +"I only remember some smoke, and then jolting about dreadfully on the +shoulder of some great—big—awful—man."</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" sighed Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"What's the matter, Kitty dearest?"</p> + +<p>"Another man!" groaned her sister.</p> + +<p>"Well, and how <i>could</i> I help it?" said Minnie. "I'm <i>sure</i> +I didn't want him. I'm <i>sure</i> I think he might have let me alone. I +don't see <i>why</i> they all act so. I <i>wish</i> they wouldn't be all +the time coming and saving my life. If people <i>will</i> go and save my +life, I can't help it. I think it's very, very horrid of them."</p> + +<p>"Oh dear! oh dear!" sighed her sister again.</p> + +<p>"Now, Kitty, stop."</p> + +<p>"Another man!" sighed Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"Now, Kitty, if you are so unkind, I'll cry. You're <i>always</i> +teasing me. You <i>never</i> do any thing to comfort me. You <i>know</i> +I want comfort, and I'm not strong, and people all come and save my life +and worry me; and I really sometimes think I'd rather not live at all if +my life <i>has</i> to be saved so often. I'm sure <i>I</i> don't know +why they go and do it. I'm sure <i>I</i> never heard of any person who +is always going and getting her life saved, and bothered, and proposed +to, and written to, and chased, and frightened to death. And I've a +<i>great</i> mind to go and get married, just to stop it all. And I'd +<i>just</i> as soon marry this last man as not, and make him drive all +the others away from me. He's big enough."</p> + +<p>Minnie ended all this with a little sob; and her sister, as usual, +did her best to soothe and quiet her.</p> + +<p>"Well, but, darling, how did it all happen?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, don't, don't."</p> + +<p>"But you might tell <i>me</i>"</p> + +<p>"Oh, I can't bear to think of it. It's too horrible."</p> + +<p>"Poor darling—the crater?"</p> + +<p>"No, the great, big man. I didn't see any crater."</p> + +<p>"Weren't you in the crater?"</p> + +<p>"No, I wasn't."</p> + +<p>"They said you were."</p> + +<p>"I wasn't. I was on the back of a big, horrid man, who gave great +jumps down the side of an awful mountain, all sand and things, and threw +me down at the bottom of it, and—and—disarranged all my +hair. And I was so frightened that I couldn't even +cur—cur—cry."</p> + +<p>Here Minnie sobbed afresh, and Mrs. Willoughby petted her again.</p> + +<p>"And you shouldn't tease me so; and it's very unkind in you; and you +know I'm not well; and I can't bear to think about it all; and I know +you're going to scold me; and you're <i>always</i> scolding me; and you +<i>never</i> do what I want you to. And then people are <i>always</i> +coming and saving my life, and I can't bear it any more."</p> + +<p>"No-o-o-o-o-o, n-n-no-o-o-o, darling!" said Mrs. Willoughby, +soothingly, in the tone of a nurse appeasing a fretful child. "You +sha'n't bear it any more."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">38</span> + +<p>"I don't <i>want</i> them to save me any more."</p> + +<p>"Well, they sha'n't <i>do</i> it, then," said Mrs. Willoughby, +affectionately, in a somewhat maudlin tone.</p> + +<p>"And the next time I lose my life, I don't want to be saved. I want +them to let me alone, and I'll come home myself."</p> + +<p>"And so you shall, darling; you shall do just as you please. So, now, +cheer up; don't cry;" and Mrs. Willoughby tried to wipe Minnie's +eyes.</p> + +<p>"But you're treating me just like a baby, and I don't want to be +talked to so," said Minnie, fretfully.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby retreated with a look of despair.</p> + +<p>"Well, then, dear, I'll do just whatever you want me to do."</p> + +<p>"Well, then, I want you to tell me what I am to do."</p> + +<p>"About what?"</p> + +<p>"Why, about this great, big, horrid man."</p> + +<p>"I thought you didn't want me to talk about this any more."</p> + +<p>"But I <i>do</i> want you to talk about it. You're the only person +that I've got to talk to about it; nobody else knows how peculiarly I'm +situated; and I didn't think that you'd give me up because I had fresh +troubles."</p> + +<p>"Give you up, darling!" echoed her sister, in surprise.</p> + +<p>"You said you wouldn't talk about it any more."</p> + +<p>"But I thought you didn't want me to talk about it."</p> + +<p>"But I <i>do</i> want you to."</p> + +<p>"Very well, then; and now I want you first of all, darling, to tell +me how you happened to get into such danger."</p> + +<p>"Well, you know," began Minnie, who now seemed calmer—"you know +we all went out for a drive. And we drove along for miles. Such a drive! +There were lazaroni, and donkeys, and calèches with as many as twenty in +each, all pulled by one poor horse, and it's a great shame; and +pigs—oh, <i>such</i> pigs! Not a particle of hair on them, you +know, and looking like young elephants, you know; and we saw great +droves of oxen, and long lines of booths, no end; and people selling +macaroni, and other people eating it right in the open street, you +know—such fun!—and fishermen and fish-wives. Oh, how they +<i>were</i> screaming, and oh, <i>such</i> a hubbub as there was! and we +couldn't go on fast, and Dowdy seemed really frightened."</p> + +<p>"Dowdy?" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, in an interrogative tone.</p> + +<p>"Oh, that's a name I've just invented for Lady Dalrymple. It's better +than Rymple. She said so. It's Dowager shortened. She's a dowager, you +know. And so, you know, I was on the front seat all the time, when all +at once I saw a gentleman on horseback. He was a great big man—oh, +<i>so</i> handsome!—and he was looking at poor little me as though +he +<span class = "pagenum">38b</span> +would eat me up. And the moment I saw him I was frightened out of my +poor little wits, for I knew he was coming to save my life."</p> + +<p>"You poor little puss! what put such an idea as that into your +ridiculous little head?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, I knew it—second-sight, you know. We've got Scotch blood, +Kitty darling, you know. So, you know, I sat, and I saw that he was +pretending not to see me, and not to be following us; but all the time +he was taking good care to keep behind us, when he could easily have +passed us, and all to get a good look at poor me, you know.</p> + +<p>"Well," continued Minnie, drawing a long breath, "you know I was +awfully frightened; and so I sat looking at him, and I whispered all the +time to myself: 'Oh, please don't!—ple-e-e-e-e-ease don't! Don't +come and save my life! Ple-e-e-e-e-ease let me alone! I don't want to be +saved at all.' I said this, you know, all to myself, and the more I said +it the more he seemed to fix his eyes on me."</p> + +<p>"It was very, very rude in him, <i>I</i> think," said Mrs. +Willoughby, with some indignation.</p> + +<p>"No, it wasn't," said Minnie, sharply. "He wasn't rude at all. He +tried not to look at me. He pretended to be looking at the sea, and at +the pigs, and all that sort of thing, you know; but all the time, you +know, I knew very well that he saw me out of the corner of his +eye—this way."</p> + +<p>And Minnie half turned her head, and threw upon her sister, out of +the corner of her eyes, a glance so languishing that the other +laughed.</p> + +<p>"He didn't look at you that way. I hope?"</p> + +<p>"There was nothing to laugh at in it at all," said Minnie. "He had an +awfully solemn look—it was so earnest, so sad, and so dreadful, +that I really began to feel quite frightened. And so would <i>you</i>; +wouldn't <i>you</i>, now, Kitty darling; now <i>wouldn't</i> you? Please +say so."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes!"</p> + +<p>"Of course you would. Well, this person followed us. I could see him +very easily, though he tried to avoid notice; and so at last we got to +the Hermitage, and he came too. Well, you know, I think I was very much +excited, and I asked Dowdy to let us go and see the cone; so she let us +go. She gave no end of warnings, and we promised to do all that she +said. So Ethel and I went out, and there was the stranger. Well, I felt +more excited than ever, and a little bit frightened—just a very, +very, tiny, little bit, you know, and I teased Ethel to go to the cone. +Well, the stranger kept in sight all the time, you know, and I +<i>felt</i> his eyes on me—I really <i>felt</i> them. So, you +know, when we got at the foot of the cone, I was so excited that I was +really quite beside myself, and I teased and teased, till at last Ethel +consented to go up. So the men took us up on chairs, and all the time +the stranger was in sight. He walked up by himself with great, big, +long, strong strides. So we went on till we got at the top, and then I +was wilder than ever. I didn't know that there +<span class = "pagenum">39</span> +was a particle of danger. I was dying with curiosity to look down, and +see where the smoke came from. The stranger was standing there too, and +that's what made me so excited. I wanted to show him—I don't know +what. I think my idea was to show him that I could take care of myself. +So then I teased and teased, and Ethel begged and prayed, and she cried, +and I laughed; and there stood the stranger, seeing it all, until at +last I started off, and ran up to the top, you know."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby shuddered, and took her sister's hand.</p> + +<p>"There was no end of smoke, you know, and it was awfully unpleasant, +and I got to the top I don't know how, when suddenly I fainted."</p> + +<p>Minnie paused for a moment, and looked at her sister with a rueful +face.</p> + +<p>"Well, now, dear, darling, the very—next—thing—that +I remember is this, and it's horrid: I felt awful jolts, and found +myself in the arms of a great, big, horrid man, who was running down the +side of the mountain with dreadfully long jumps, and I felt as though he +was some horrid ogre carrying poor me away to his den to eat me up. But +I didn't say one word. I wasn't much frightened. I felt provoked. I knew +it was that horrid man. And then I wondered what you'd say; and I +thought, oh, how you <i>would</i> scold! And then I knew that this +horrid man would chase me away from Italy; and then I would have to go +to Turkey, and have my life saved by a Mohammedan. And that was +horrid.</p> + +<p>"Well, at last he stopped and laid me down. He was very gentle, +though he was so big. I kept my eyes shut, and lay as still as a mouse, +hoping that Ethel would come. But Ethel didn't. She was coming down with +the chair, you know, and her men couldn't run like mine. And oh, Kitty +darling, you have no <i>idea</i> what I suffered. This horrid man was +rubbing and pounding at my hands, and sighing and groaning. I stole a +little bit of a look at him—just a little bit of a bit—and +saw tears in his eyes, and a wild look of fear in his face. Then I knew +that he was going to propose to me on the spot, and kept my eyes shut +tighter than ever.</p> + +<p>"Well, at last he hurt my hands so that I thought I'd try to make him +stop. So I spoke as low as I could, and asked if I was home, and he said +yes."</p> + +<p>Minnie paused.</p> + +<p>"Well?" asked her sister.</p> + +<p>"Well," said Minnie, in a doleful tone, "I then asked, 'Is that you, +papa dear?'"</p> + +<p>Minnie stopped again.</p> + +<p>"Well?" asked Mrs. Willoughby once more.</p> + +<p>"Well—"</p> + +<p>"Well, go on."</p> + +<p>"Well, he said—he said,<ins class = "correction" title = "open quote missing"> '</ins>Yes, darling'—and—"</p> + +<p>"And what?"</p> + +<p>"And he kissed me," said Minnie, in a doleful voice.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">39b</span> + +<p>"Kissed you!" exclaimed her sister, with flashing eyes.</p> + +<p>"Ye-yes," stammered Minnie, with a sob; "and I think it's a shame; +and none of them ever did so before; and I don't want you ever to go +away again, Kitty darling."</p> + +<p>"The miserable wretch!" cried Mrs. Willoughby, indignantly.</p> + +<p>"No, he isn't—he isn't that," said Minnie. "He isn't a +miserable wretch at all."</p> + +<p>"How could any one be so base who pretends to the name of gentleman!" +cried Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"He wasn't base—and it's very wicked of you, Kitty. He only +pretended, you know."</p> + +<p>"Pretended!"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Pretended what?"</p> + +<p>"Why, that he was my—my father, you know."</p> + +<p>"Does Ethel know this?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, after a curious look +at Minnie.</p> + +<p>"No, of course not, nor Dowdy either; and you mustn't go and make any +disturbance."</p> + +<p>"Disturbance? no; but if I ever see him, I'll let him know what I +think of him," said Mrs. Willoughby, severely.</p> + +<p>"But he saved my life, and so you know you can't be <i>very</i> harsh +with him. Please don't—ple-e-e-ease now, Kitty darling."</p> + +<p>"Oh, you little goose, what whimsical idea have you got now?"</p> + +<p>"Please don't, ple-e-e-ease don't," repeated Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Oh, never mind; go on now, darling, and tell me about the rest of +it."</p> + +<p>"Well, there isn't any more. I lay still, you know, and at last Ethel +came; and then we went back to Dowdy, and then we came home, you +know."</p> + +<p>"Well, I hope you've lost him."</p> + +<p>"Lost him? Oh no; I never do. They always <i>will</i> come. Besides, +this one will, I know."</p> + +<p>"Why?"</p> + +<p>"Because he said so."</p> + +<p>"Said so? when?"</p> + +<p>"Yesterday."</p> + +<p>"Yesterday?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; we met him."</p> + +<p>"Who?"</p> + +<p>"Dowdy and I. We were out driving. We stopped and spoke to him. He +was dreadfully earnest and awfully embarrassed; and I knew he was going +to propose; so I kept whispering to myself all the time, 'Oh, please +don't—please don't;' but I know he will; and he'll be here soon +too."</p> + +<p>"He sha'n't. I won't let him. I'll never give him the chance."</p> + +<p>"I think you needn't be so cruel."</p> + +<p>"Cruel!"</p> + +<p>"Yes; to the poor man."</p> + +<p>"Why, you don't want another man, I hope?"</p> + +<p>"N-no; but then I don't want to hurt his feelings. It was awfully +good of him, you know, and <i>aw</i>fully plucky."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">40</span> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic040.png" width = "451" height = "345" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"IF I EVER SEE HIM, I'LL LET HIM KNOW WHAT I THINK OF HIM."</p> + +<p>"Well, I should think that you would prefer avoiding him, in your +peculiar situation."</p> + +<p>"Yes, but he may feel hurt."</p> + +<p>"Oh, he may see you once or twice with me."</p> + +<p>"But he may want to see me alone, and what <i>can</i> I do?"</p> + +<p>"Really now, Minnie, you must remember that you are in a serious +position. There is that wretched Captain Kirby."</p> + +<p>"I know," said Minnie, with a sigh.</p> + +<p>"And that dreadful American. By-the-way, darling, you have never told +me his name. It isn't of any consequence, but I should like to know the +American's name."</p> + +<p>"It's—Rufus K. Gunn."</p> + +<p>"Rufus K. Gunn; what a funny name! and what in the world is 'K' +for?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, nothing. He says it is the fashion in his country to have some +letter of the alphabet between one's names, and he chose 'K,' because it +was so awfully uncommon. Isn't it funny, Kitty darling?"</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" sighed her sister; "and then there is that pertinacious +Count Girasole. Think what trouble we had in getting quietly rid of him. +I'm afraid all the time that he will not stay at Florence, as he said, +for he seems to have no fixed abode. First he was going to Rome, and +then Venice, and at last he committed himself to a statement that he had +to remain at Florence, and so enabled us to get rid of him. But I know +he'll come upon us again somewhere, and then we'll have all the trouble +over again. Oh dear! Well, Minnie +<span class = "pagenum">40b</span> +darling, do you know the name of this last one?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes."</p> + +<p>"What is it?"</p> + +<p>"It's a funny name," said Minnie; "a very funny name."</p> + +<p>"Tell it to me."</p> + +<p>"It's Scone Dacres; and isn't that a funny name?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby started at the mention of that name. Then she turned +away her head, and did not say a word for a long time.</p> + +<p>"Kitty!"</p> + +<p>No answer.</p> + +<p>"Kitty darling, what's the matter?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby turned her head once more. Her face was quite calm, +and her voice had its usual tone, as she asked,</p> + +<p>"Say that name again."</p> + +<p>"Scone Dacres," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Scone Dacres!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby; +<span class = "pagenum">41</span> +"and what sort of a man is he?"</p> + +<p>"Big—very big—awfully big!" said Minnie. "Great, big head +and broad shoulders. Great, big arms, that carried me as if I were a +feather; big beard too; and it tickled me so when he—he pretended +that he was my father; and very sad. And, oh! I know I should be so +<i>aw</i>fully fond of him. And, oh! Kitty darling, what do you +think?"</p> + +<p>"What, dearest?"</p> + +<p>"Why, I'm—I'm afraid—I'm really beginning +to—to—like him—just a little tiny bit, you know."</p> + +<p>"Scone Dacres!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, who didn't seem to have +heard this last effusion. "Scone Dacres! Well, darling, don't trouble +yourself; he sha'n't trouble you."</p> + +<p>"But I <i>want</i> him to," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Oh, nonsense, child!"</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic041.png" width = "215" height = "289" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"HALLO, OLD MAN, WHAT'S UP NOW?"</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapX" id = "chapX"> +CHAPTER X.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +A FEARFUL DISCOVERY.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">A few</span> days after this Hawbury was in +his room, when Dacres entered.</p> + +<p>"Hallo, old man, what's up now? How goes the war?" said Hawbury. "But +what the mischief's the matter? You look cut up. Your brow is sad; your +eyes beneath flash like a falchion from its sheath. What's happened? You +look half snubbed, and half desperate."</p> + +<p>Dacres said not a word, but flung himself into a chair with a look +that suited Hawbury's description of him quite accurately. His brows +lowered into a heavy frown, his lips were compressed, and his breath +came quick and hard through his inflated nostrils. He sat thus for some +time without taking any notice whatever of his friend, and at length +lighted a cigar, which he smoked, as he often did when excited, in great +voluminous puffs. Hawbury said nothing, but after one or two quick +glances at his friend, rang a bell and ordered some "Bass."</p> + +<p>"Here, old fellow," said he, drawing the attention of Dacres to the +refreshing draught. "Take some—'Quaff, oh, quaff this kind +nepenthe, and forget thy lost Lenore.'"</p> + +<p>Dacres at this gave a heavy sigh that sounded like a groan, and +swallowed several tumblers in quick succession.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">41b</span> + +<p>"Hawbury!" said he at length, in a half-stifled voice.</p> + +<p>"Well, old man?"</p> + +<p>"I've had a blow to-day full on the breast that fairly staggered +me."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Fact. I've just come from a mad ride along the shore. I've been mad, +I think, for two or three hours. Of all the monstrous, abominable, +infernal, and unheard-of catastrophes this is the worst."</p> + +<p>He stopped, and puffed away desperately at his cigar.</p> + +<p>"Don't keep a fellow in suspense this way," said Hawbury at last. +"What's up? Out with it, man."</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, yesterday I called there."</p> + +<p>Hawbury nodded.</p> + +<p>"She was not at home."</p> + +<p>"So you said."</p> + +<p>"You know she really wasn't, for I told you that I met their +carriage. The whole party were in it, and on the front seat beside +Minnie there was another lady. This is the one that I had not seen +before. She makes the fourth in that party. She and Minnie had their +backs turned as they came up. The other ladies bowed as they passed, and +as I held off my hat I half turned to catch Minnie's eyes, when I caught +sight of the face of the lady. It startled me so much that I was +thunder-struck, and stood there with my hat off after they had passed me +for some time."</p> + +<p>"You said nothing about that, old chap. Who the deuce could she have +been?"</p> + +<p>"No, I said nothing about it. As I cantered off I began to think that +it was only a fancy of mine, and finally I was sure of it, and laughed +it off. For, you must know, the lady's face looked astonishingly like a +certain face that I don't particularly care to see—certainly not +in such close connection with Minnie. But, you see, I thought it might +have been my fancy, so that I finally shook off the feeling, and said +nothing to you about it."</p> + +<p>Dacres paused here, rubbed his hand violently over his hair at the +place where the scar was, and then, frowning heavily, resumed:</p> + +<p>"Well, this afternoon I called again. They were at home. On entering +I found three ladies there. One was Lady Dalrymple, and the others were +Minnie and her friend Ethel—either her friend or her sister. I +think she's her sister. Well, I sat for about five minutes, and was just +beginning to feel the full sense of my happiness, when the door opened +and another lady entered. Hawbury"—and Dacres's tones deepened +into an awful solemnity—"Hawbury, it was the lady that I saw in +the carriage yesterday. One look at her was enough. I was assured then +that my impressions yesterday were not dreams, but the damnable and +abhorrent truth!"</p> + +<p>"What impressions—you haven't told me yet, you know?"</p> + +<p>"Wait a minute. I rose as she entered, and +<span class = "pagenum">42</span> +confronted her. She looked at me calmly, and then stood as though +expecting to be introduced. There was no emotion visible whatever. She +was prepared for it: I was not: and so she was as cool as when I saw her +last, and, what is more, just as young and beautiful."</p> + +<p>"The devil!" cried Hawbury.</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic042.png" width = "452" height = "452" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"I STOOD TRANSFIXED."</p> + +<p>Dacres poured out another glass of ale and drank it. His hand +trembled slightly as he put down the glass, and he sat for some time in +thought before he went on.</p> + +<p>"Well, Lady Dalrymple introduced us. It was Mrs. Willoughby!"</p> + +<p>"By Jove!" cried Hawbury. "I saw you were coming to that."</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, the whole thing was so sudden, so unexpected, and so +perfectly overwhelming, that I stood transfixed. I said nothing. I +believe I bowed, and then somehow or other, I really don't know how, I +got away, and, mounting my horse, rode off like a madman. Then I came +home, and here you see me."</p> + +<p>There was a silence now for some time.</p> + +<p>"Are you sure that it was your wife?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">42b</span> + +<p>"Of course I am. How could I be mistaken?"</p> + +<p>"Are you sure the name was Willoughby?"</p> + +<p>"Perfectly sure."</p> + +<p>"And that is the name your wife took?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; I told you so before, didn't I?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. But think now. Mightn't there be some mistake?"</p> + +<p>"Pooh! how could there be any mistake?"</p> + +<p>"Didn't you see any change in her?"</p> + +<p>"No, only that she looked much more quiet than she used to. Not so +active, you know. In her best days she was always excitable, and a +little demonstrative; but now she seems to have sobered down, and is as +quiet and well-bred as any of the others."</p> + +<p>"Was there not any change in her at all?"</p> + +<p>"Not so much as I would have supposed; certainly not so much as there +is in me. But then I've been knocking about all over the world, and +she's been living a life of peace and calm, with the sweet consciousness +of having triumphed over a hated husband, and possessing a handsome +competency. Now she mingles in the best society. She associates with +<span class = "pagenum">43</span> +lords and ladies. She enjoys life in England, while I am an exile. No +doubt she passes for a fine young widow. No doubt, too, she has lots of +admirers. They aspire to her hand. They write poetry to her. They make +love to her. Confound her!"</p> + +<p>Dacres's voice grew more and more agitated and excited as he spoke, +and at length his tirade against his wife ended in something that was +almost a roar.</p> + +<p>Hawbury said nothing, but listened, with his face full of sympathy. +At last his pent-up feeling found expression in his favorite +exclamation, "By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Wouldn't I be justified in wringing her neck?" asked Dacres, after a +pause. "And what's worse," he continued, without waiting for an answer +to his question—"what's worse, her presence here in this +unexpected way has given me, <i>me</i>, mind you, a sense of guilt, +while she is, of course, immaculate. <i>I</i>, mind you—<i>I</i>, +the injured husband, with the scar on my head from a wound made by +<i>her</i> hand, and all the ghosts of my ancestors howling curses over +me at night for my desolated and ruined home—<i>I</i> am to be +conscience-stricken in her presence, as if I were a felon, while +<i>she</i>, the really guilty one—the blight and bitter +destruction of my life—<i>she</i> is to appear before me now as +injured, and must make her appearance here, standing by the side of that +sweet child-angel, and warning me away. Confound it all, man! Do you +mean to say that such a thing is to be borne?"</p> + +<p>Dacres was now quite frantic; so Hawbury, with a sigh of perplexity, +lighted a fresh cigar, and thus took refuge from the helplessness of his +position. It was clearly a state of things in which advice was utterly +useless, and consolation impossible. What could he advise, or what +consolation could he offer? The child-angel was now out of his friend's +reach, and the worst fears of the lover were more than realized.</p> + +<p>"I told you I was afraid of this," continued Dacres. "I had a +suspicion that she was alive, and I firmly believe she'll outlive me +forty years; but I must say I never expected to see her in this way, +under such circumstances. And then to find her so infernally beautiful! +Confound her! she don't look over twenty-five. How the mischief does she +manage it? Oh, she's a deep one! But perhaps she's changed. She seems so +calm, and came into the room so gently, and looked at me so steadily. +Not a tremor, not a shake, as I live. Calm, Sir; cool as steel, and hard +too. She looked away, and then looked back. They were searching glances, +too, as though they read me through and through. Well, there was no +occasion for that. She ought to know Scone Dacres well enough, I swear. +Cool! And there stood I, with the blood flashing to my head, and +throbbing fire underneath the scar of her wound—hers—her own +property, for she made it! That was the woman that kicked me, that +<span class = "pagenum">43b</span> +struck at me, that caused the destruction of my ancestral house, that +drove me to exile, and that now drives me back from my love. But, by +Heaven! it'll take more than her to do it; and I'll show her again, as I +showed her once before, that Scone Dacres is her master. And, by Jove! +she'll find that it'll take more than herself to keep me away from +Minnie Fay."</p> + +<p>"See here, old boy," said Hawbury, "you may as well throw up the +sponge."</p> + +<p>"I won't," said Dacres, gruffly.</p> + +<p>"You see it isn't your wife that you have to consider, but the girl; +and do you think the girl or her friends would have a married man paying +his attentions in that quarter? Would you have the face to do it under +your own wife's eye? By Jove!"</p> + +<p>The undeniable truth of this assertion was felt by Dacres even in his +rage. But the very fact that it was unanswerable, and that he was +helpless, only served to deepen and intensify his rage. Yet he said +nothing; it was only in his face and manner that his rage was +manifested. He appeared almost to suffocate under the rush of fierce, +contending passions; big distended veins swelled out in his forehead, +which was also drawn far down in a gloomy frown; his breath came thick +and fast, and his hands were clenched tight together. Hawbury watched +him in silence as before, feeling all the time the impossibility of +saying any thing that could be of any use whatever.</p> + +<p>"Well, old fellow," said Dacres at last, giving a long breath, in +which he seemed to throw off some of his excitement, "you're right, of +course, and I am helpless. There's no chance for me. Paying attentions +is out of the question, and the only thing for me to do is to give up +the whole thing. But that isn't to be done at once. It's been long since +I've seen any one for whom I felt any tenderness, and this little thing, +I know, is fond of me. I can't quit her at once. I must stay on for a +time, at least, and have occasional glimpses at her. It gives me a fresh +sense of almost heavenly sweetness to look at her fair young face. +Besides, I feel that I am far more to her than any other man. No other +man has stood to her in the relation in which I have stood. Recollect +how I saved her from death. That is no light thing. She must feel toward +me as she has never felt to any other. She is not one who can forget how +I snatched her from a fearful death, and brought her back to life. Every +time she looks at me she seems to convey all that to me in her +glance."</p> + +<p>"Oh, well, my dear fellow, really now," said Hawbury, "just think. +You can't do any thing."</p> + +<p>"But I don't want to do any thing."</p> + +<p>"It never can end in any thing, you know."</p> + +<p>"But I don't want it to end in any thing."</p> + +<p>"You'll only bother her by entangling her affections."</p> + +<p>"But I don't want to entangle her affections."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">44</span> + +<p>"Then what the mischief <i>do</i> you want to do?"</p> + +<p>"Why, very little. I'll start off soon for the uttermost ends of the +earth, but I wish to stay a little longer and see her sweet face. It's +not much, is it? It won't compromise her, will it? She need not run any +risk, need she? And I'm a man of honor, am I not? You don't suppose me +to be capable of any baseness, do you?"</p> + +<p>"My dear fellow, how absurd! Of course not. Only I was afraid by +giving way to this you might drift on into a worse state of mind. She's +all safe, I fancy, surrounded as she is by so many guardians. It is you +that I'm anxious about."</p> + +<p>"Don't be alarmed, old chap, about me. I feel calmer already. I can +face my situation firmly, and prepare for the worst. While I have been +sitting here I have thought out the future. I will stay here four or +five weeks. I will only seek solace for myself by riding about where I +may meet her. I do not intend to go to the house at all. My demon of a +wife may have the whole house to herself. I won't even give her the +pleasure of supposing that she has thwarted me. She shall never even +suspect the state of my heart. That would be bliss indeed to one like +her, for then she would find herself able to put me on the rack. No, my +boy; I've thought it all over. Scone Dacres is himself again. No more +nonsense now. Do you understand now what I mean?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Hawbury, slowly, and in his worst drawl; "but ah, really, +don't you think it's all nonsense?"</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"Why, this ducking and diving about to get a glimpse of her +face."</p> + +<p>"I don't intend to duck and dive about. I merely intend to ride like +any other gentleman. What put that into your head, man?"</p> + +<p>"Well, I don't know; I gathered it from the way you expressed +yourself."</p> + +<p>"Well, I don't intend any thing of the kind. I simply wish to have +occasional looks at her—to get a bow and a smile of recognition +when I meet her, and have a few additional recollections to turn over in +my thoughts after I have left her forever. Perhaps this seems odd."</p> + +<p>"Oh no, it doesn't. I quite understand it. A passing smile or a +parting sigh is sometimes more precious than any other memory. I know +all about it, you know—looks, glances, smiles, sighs, and all that +sort of thing, you know."</p> + +<p>"Well, now, old chap, there's one thing I want you to do for me."</p> + +<p>"Well, what is it?"</p> + +<p>"It isn't much, old fellow. It isn't much. I simply wish you to visit +there."</p> + +<p>"<i>Me</i>?—visit <i>there</i>? What! me—and visit? Why, +my dear fellow, don't you know how I hate such bother?"</p> + +<p>"I know all about that; but, old boy, it's only for a few weeks I ask +it, and for my +<span class = "pagenum">44b</span> +sake, as a particular favor. I put it in that light."</p> + +<p>"Oh, well, really, dear boy, if you put it in that light, you know, +of course, that I'll do any thing, even if it comes to letting myself be +bored to death."</p> + +<p>"Just a visit a day or so."</p> + +<p>"A visit a day!" Hawbury looked aghast.</p> + +<p>"It isn't much to ask, you know," continued Dacres. "You see my +reason is this: I can't go there myself, as you see, but I hunger to +hear about her. I should like to hear how she looks, and what she says, +and whether she thinks of me."</p> + +<p>"Oh, come now! look here, my dear fellow, you're putting it a little +too strong. You don't expect me to go there and talk to her about you, +you know. Why, man alive, that's quite out of my way. I'm not much of a +talker at any time; and besides, you know, there's something distasteful +in acting as—as—By Jove! I don't know what to call it."</p> + +<p>"My dear boy, you don't understand me. Do you think I'm a sneak? Do +you suppose I'd ask you to act as a go-between? Nonsense! I merely ask +you to go as a cursory visitor. I don't want you to breathe my name, or +even think of me while you are there."</p> + +<p>"But suppose I make myself too agreeable to the young lady. By Jove! +she might think I was paying her attentions, you know."</p> + +<p>"Oh no, no! believe me, you don't know her. She's too earnest; she +has too much soul to shift and change. Oh no! I feel that she is mine, +and that the image of my own miserable self is indelibly impressed upon +her heart. Oh no! you don't know her. If you had heard her thrilling +expressions of gratitude, if you had seen the beseeching and pleading +looks which she gave me, you would know that she is one of those natures +who love once, and once only."</p> + +<p>"Oh, by Jove, now! Come! If that's the 'state of the case, why, I'll +go."</p> + +<p>"Thanks, old boy."</p> + +<p>"As a simple visitor."</p> + +<p>"Yes—that's all."</p> + +<p>"To talk about the weather, and that rot."</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"And no more."</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Not a word about you."</p> + +<p>"Not a word."</p> + +<p>"No leading questions, and that sort of thing."</p> + +<p>"Nothing of the kind."</p> + +<p>"No hints, no watching, but just as if I went there of my own +accord."</p> + +<p>"That's exactly the thing."</p> + +<p>"Very well; and now, pray, what good is all this going to do to you, +my boy?"</p> + +<p>"Well, just this; I can talk to you about her every evening, and you +can tell me how she looks, and what she says, and all that sort of +thing, you know."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">45</span> + +<p>"And you'll cheer my heart, old fellow."</p> + +<p>"Heavens and earth! old boy, you don't seem to think that this is +going to be no end of a bore."</p> + +<p>"I know it, old man; but then, you know, I'm desperate just now."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>And Hawbury, uttering this exclamation, relapsed into silence, and +wondered over his friend's infatuation.</p> + +<p>On the following day when Dacres came in he found that Hawbury had +kept his word.</p> + +<p>"Great bore, old fellow," said he; "but I did it. The old lady is an +old acquaintance, you know. I'm going there to-morrow again. Didn't see +any thing to-day of the child-angel. But it's no end of a bore, you +know."</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic045.png" width = "212" height = "336" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"'IT'S HE!' SHE MURMURED."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXI" id = "chapXI"> +CHAPTER XI.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +FALSE AND FORGETFUL.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">The</span> day when Lord Hawbury called on +Lady Dalrymple was a very eventful one in his life, and had it not been +for a slight peculiarity of his, the immediate result of that visit +would have been of a highly important character. This slight peculiarity +consisted in the fact that he was short-sighted, and, therefore, on a +very critical occasion turned away from that which would have been his +greatest joy, although it was full before his gaze.</p> + +<p>It happened in this wise:</p> + +<p>On the day when Hawbury called, Ethel happened to be sitting by the +window, and saw +<span class = "pagenum">45b</span> +him as he rode up. Now the last time that she had seen him he had a very +different appearance—all his hair being burned off, from head and +cheeks and chin; and the whiskers which he had when she first met him +had been of a different cut from the present appendages. In spite of +this she recognized him almost in a moment; and her heart beat fast, and +her color came and went, and her hands clutched the window ledge +convulsively.</p> + +<p>"It's <i>he</i>!" she murmured.</p> + +<p>Of course there was only one idea in her mind, and that was that he +had heard of her presence in Naples, and had come to call on her.</p> + +<p>She sat there without motion, with her head eagerly bent forward, and +her eyes fixed upon him. He looked up carelessly as he came along, and +with his chin in the air, in a fashion peculiar to him, which, +by-the-way, gave a quite unintentional superciliousness to his +expression. For an instant his eyes rested upon her, then they moved +away, without the slightest recognition, and wandered elsewhere.</p> + +<p>Ethel's heart seemed turned to stone. He had seen her. He had not +noticed her. He had fixed his eyes on her and then looked away. Bitter, +indeed, was all this to her. To think that after so long a period of +waiting—after such hope and watching as hers had been—that +this should be the end. She turned away from the window, with a choking +sensation in her throat. No one was in the room. She was alone with her +thoughts and her tears.</p> + +<p>Suddenly her mood changed. A thought came to her which dispelled her +gloom. The glance that he had given was too hasty; perhaps he really had +not fairly looked at her. No doubt he had come for her, and she would +shortly be summoned down.</p> + +<p>And now this prospect brought new hope. Light returned to her eyes, +and joy to her heart. Yes, she would be summoned. She must prepare +herself to encounter his eager gaze. Quickly she stepped to the mirror, +hastily she arranged those little details in which consists the charm of +a lady's dress, and severely she scrutinized the face and figure +reflected there. The scrutiny was a satisfactory one. Face and figure +were perfect; nor was there in the world any thing more graceful and +more lovely than the image there, though the one who looked upon it was +far too self-distrustful to entertain any such idea as that.</p> + +<p>Then she seated herself and waited. The time moved slowly, indeed, as +she waited there. After a few minutes she found it impossible to sit any +longer. She walked to the door, held it open, and listened. She heard +his voice below quite plainly. They had two suits of rooms in the +house—the bedrooms up stairs and reception-rooms below. Here Lord +Hawbury was, now, within hearing of Ethel. Well she knew that voice. She +listened and frowned. The tone was too flippant. He talked like a man +without a care—like a butterfly of society—and +<span class = "pagenum">46</span> +that was a class which she scorned. Here he was, keeping her waiting. +Here he was, keeping up a hateful clatter of small-talk, while her heart +was aching with suspense.</p> + +<p>Ethel stood there listening. Minute succeeded to minute. There was no +request for her. How strong was the contrast between the cool +indifference of the man below, and the feverish impatience of that +listener above! A wild impulse came to her to go down, under the +pretense of looking for something; then another to go down and out for a +walk, so that he might see her. But in either case pride held her back. +How could she? Had he not already seen her? Must he not know perfectly +well that she was there? No; if he did not call for her she could not +go. She could not make advances.</p> + +<p>Minute succeeded to minute, and Ethel stood burning with impatience, +racked with suspense, a prey to the bitterest feelings. Still no +message. Why did he delay? Her heart ached now worse than ever, the +choking feeling in her throat returned, and her eyes grew moist. She +steadied herself by holding to the door. Her fingers grew white at the +tightness of her grasp; eyes and ears were strained in their intent +watchfulness over the room below.</p> + +<p>Of course the caller below was in a perfect state of ignorance about +all this. He had not the remotest idea of that one who now stood so +near. He came as a martyr. He came to make a call. It was a thing he +detested. It bored him. To a man like him the one thing to be avoided on +earth was a bore. To be bored was to his mind the uttermost depth of +misfortune. This he had voluntarily accepted. He was being bored, and +bored to death.</p> + +<p>Certainly no man ever accepted a calamity more gracefully than +Hawbury. He was charming, affable, easy, chatty. Of course he was known +to Lady Dalrymple. The Dowager could make herself as agreeable as any +lady living, except young and beautiful ones. The conversation, +therefore, was easy and flowing. Hawbury excelled in this.</p> + +<p>Now there are several variations in the great art of expression, and +each of these is a minor art by itself. Among these may be +enumerated:</p> + +<p>First, of course, the art of novel-writing.</p> + +<p>Second, the art of writing editorials.</p> + +<p>Third, the art of writing paragraphs.</p> + +<p>After these come all the arts of oratory, letter-writing, +essay-writing, and all that sort of thing, among which there is one to +which I wish particularly to call attention, and this is:</p> + +<p>The art of small-talk.</p> + +<p>Now this art Hawbury had to an extraordinary degree of perfection. He +knew how to beat out the faintest shred of an idea into an illimitable +surface of small-talk. He never took refuge in the weather. He left that +to bunglers and beginners. His resources were of a different character, +and were so skillfully managed that he never failed to leave a very +agreeable impression. Small-talk! Why, I've been in situations sometimes +where I would have given +<span class = "pagenum">46b</span> +the power of writing like Dickens (if I had it) for perfection in this +last art.</p> + +<p>But this careless, easy, limpid, smooth, natural, pleasant, and +agreeable flow of chat was nothing but gall and wormwood to the listener +above. She ought to be there. Why was she so slighted? Could it be +possible that he would go away without seeing her?</p> + +<p>She was soon to know.</p> + +<p>She heard him rise. She heard him saunter to the door.</p> + +<p>"Thanks, yes. Ha, ha, you're too +kind—really—yes—very happy, you know. To-morrow, is +it? Good-morning."</p> + +<p>And with these words he went out.</p> + +<p>With pale face and staring eyes Ethel darted back to the window. He +did not see her. His back was turned. He mounted his horse and gayly +cantered away. For full five minutes Ethel stood, crouched in the shadow +of the window, staring after him, with her dark eyes burning and glowing +in the intensity of their gaze. Then she turned away with a bewildered +look. Then she locked the door. Then she flung herself upon the sofa, +buried her head in her hands, and burst into a convulsive passion of +tears. Miserable, indeed, were the thoughts that came now to that poor +stricken girl as she lay there prostrate. She had waited long, and hoped +fondly, and all her waiting and all her hope had been for this. It was +for this that she had been praying—for this that she had so fondly +cherished his memory. He had come at last, and he had gone; but for her +he had certainly shown nothing save an indifference as profound as it +was inexplicable.</p> + +<p>Ethel's excuse for not appearing at the dinner-table was a severe +headache. Her friends insisted on seeing her and ministering to her +sufferings. Among other things, they tried to cheer her by telling her +of Hawbury. Lady Dalrymple was full of him. She told all about his +family, his income, his habits, and his mode of life. She mentioned, +with much satisfaction, that he had made inquiries after Minnie, and +that she had promised to introduce him to her the next time he called. +Upon which he had laughingly insisted on calling the next day. All of +which led Lady Dalrymple to conclude that he had seen Minnie somewhere, +and had fallen in love with her.</p> + +<p>This was the pleasing strain of conversation into which the ladies +were led off by Lady Dalrymple. When I say the ladies, I mean Lady +Dalrymple and Minnie. Mrs. Willoughby said nothing, except once or twice +when she endeavored to give a turn to the conversation, in which she was +signally unsuccessful. Lady Dalrymple and Minnie engaged in an animated +argument over the interesting subject of Hawbury's intentions, Minnie +taking her stand on the ground of his indifference, the other +maintaining the position that he was in love. Minnie declared that she +had never seen him. Lady Dalrymple asserted her belief that he had seen +her. The latter also asserted that Hawbury would no +<span class = "pagenum">47</span> +doubt be a constant visitor, and gave Minnie very sound advice as to the +best mode of treating him.</p> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic047.png" width = "342" height = "455" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"THEN SHE FLUNG HERSELF UPON THE SOFA."</p> + +<p>On the following day Hawbury called, and was introduced to Minnie. He +chatted with her in his usual style, and Lady Dalrymple was more than +ever confirmed in her first belief. He suggested a ride, and the +suggestion was taken up.</p> + +<p>If any thing had been needed to complete Ethel's despair it was this +second visit and the project of a ride. Mrs. Willoughby was introduced +to him; but he took little notice of her, treating her with a kind of +reserve that was a little unusual with him. The reason of this was his +strong sympathy with his friend, and his detestation of Mrs. +Willoughby's former history. Mrs. Willoughby, however, had to ride with +them when they went out, and thus she was thrown a little more into +Hawbury's way.</p> + +<p>Ethel never made her appearance. The headaches which she avouched +were not pretended. They were real, and accompanied with heartaches that +were far more painful. Hawbury never saw her, nor did he ever hear her +mentioned. In general he himself kept the conversation in motion; and as +he never asked questions, they, of course, had no opportunity to answer. +On the other hand, there was no occasion to volunteer any remarks about +the number or the character of their party. When he talked it was +usually with Lady Dalrymple and Minnie: and with these the conversation +turned always upon glittering generalities, and the airy nothings of +pleasant gossip. All this, then, will very easily account for the fact +that Hawbury, though visiting there constantly, never once saw Ethel, +never heard her name mentioned, and had not the faintest idea that she +was so near. She, on the other hand, feeling now sure that he was +utterly false and completely forgetful, proudly and calmly held aloof, +and kept out of his way with the most jealous care, until at last she +staid indoors altogether, for fear, if she went out, that she might meet +him somewhere. +<span class = "pagenum">47b</span> +For such a meeting she did not feel sufficiently strong.</p> + +<p>Often she thought of quitting Naples and returning to England. Yet, +after all, she found a strange comfort in being there. She was near him. +She heard his voice every day, and saw his face. That was something. And +it was better than absence.</p> + +<p>Minnie used always to come to her and pour forth long accounts of +Lord Hawbury—how he looked, what he said, what he did, and what he +proposed to do. Certainly there was not the faintest approach to +love-making, or even sentiment, in Hawbury's attitude toward Minnie. His +words were of the world of small-talk—a world where sentiment and +love-making have but little place. Still there was the evident fact of +his attentions, which were too frequent to be overlooked.</p> + +<p>Hawbury rapidly became the most prominent subject of Minnie's +conversation. She used to prattle away for hours about him. She alluded +admiringly to his long whiskers. She thought them "lovely." She said +that he was "awfully nice." She told Mrs. Willoughby that "he +<span class = "pagenum">48</span> +was nicer than any of them; and then, Kitty darling," she added, "it's +so awfully good of him not to be coming and saving my life, and carrying +me on his back down a mountain, like an ogre, and then pretending that +he's my father, you know.</p> + +<p>"For you know, Kitty pet, I've always longed so awfully to see some +really nice person, you know, who wouldn't go and save my life and +bother me. Now he doesn't seem a bit like proposing. I do <i>hope</i> he +won't. Don't you, Kitty dearest? It's so <i>much</i> nicer not to +propose. It's so horrid when they go and propose. And then, you know, +I've had so much of that sort of thing. So, Kitty, I think he's really +the nicest person that I ever saw, and I really think I'm beginning to +like him."</p> + +<p>Far different from these were the conversations which Mrs. Willoughby +had with Ethel. She was perfectly familiar with Ethel's story. It had +been confided to her long ago. She alone knew why it was that Ethel had +walked untouched through crowds of admirers. The terrible story of her +rescue was memorable to her for other reasons; and the one who had taken +the prominent part in that rescue could not be without interest for +her.</p> + +<p>"There is no use, Kitty—no use in talking about it any more," +said Ethel one day, after Mrs. Willoughby had been urging her to show +herself. "I can not. I will not. He has forgotten me utterly."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps he has no idea that you are here. He has never seen +you."</p> + +<p>"Has he not been in Naples as long as we have? He must have seen me +in the streets. He saw Minnie."</p> + +<p>"Do you think it likely that he would come to this house and slight +you? If he had forgotten you he would not come here."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, he would. He comes to see Minnie. He knows I am here, of +course. He doesn't care one atom whether I make my appearance or not. He +doesn't even give me a thought. It's so long since <i>that time</i> that +he has forgotten even my existence. He has been all over the world since +then, and has had a hundred adventures. I have been living quietly, +cherishing the remembrance of that one thing."</p> + +<p>"Ethel, is it not worth trying? Go down and try him."</p> + +<p>"I can not bear it. I can not look at him. I lose all self-command +when he is near. I should make a fool of myself. He would look at me +with a smile of pity. Could I endure that? No, Kitty; my weakness must +never be known to him."</p> + +<p>"Oh, Ethel, how I wish you could try it!"</p> + +<p>"Kitty, just think how utterly I am forgotten. Mark this now. He +knows I was at <i>your</i> house. He must remember your name. He wrote +to me there, and I answered him from there. He sees you now, and your +name must be associated with mine in his memory of me, if he has any. +Tell me now, Kitty, has he ever +<span class = "pagenum">48b</span> +mentioned me? has he ever asked you about me? has he ever made the +remotest allusion to me?"</p> + +<p>Ethel spoke rapidly and impetuously, and as she spoke she raised +herself from the sofa where she was reclining, and turned her large, +earnest eyes full upon her friend with anxious and eager watchfulness. +Mrs. Willoughby looked back at her with a face full of sadness, and +mournfully shook her head.</p> + +<p>"You see," said Ethel, as she sank down again—"you see how true +my impression is."</p> + +<p>"I must say," said Mrs. Willoughby, "that I thought of this before. I +fully expected that he would make some inquiry after you. I was so +confident in the noble character of the man, both from your story and +the description of others, that I could not believe you were right. But +you are right, my poor Ethel. I wish I could comfort you, but I can not. +Indeed, my dear, not only has he not questioned me about you, but he +evidently avoids me. It is not that he is engrossed with Minnie, for he +is not so; but he certainly has some reason of his own for avoiding me. +Whenever he speaks to me there is an evident effort on his part, and +though perfectly courteous, his manner leaves a certain disagreeable +impression. Yes, he certainly has some reason for avoiding me."</p> + +<p>"The reason is plain enough," murmured Ethel. "He wishes to prevent +you from speaking about a painful subject, or at least a distasteful +one. He keeps you off at a distance by an excess of formality. He will +give you no opportunity whatever to introduce any mention of me. And now +let me also ask you this—does he ever take any notice of any +allusion that may be made to me?"</p> + +<p>"I really don't remember hearing any allusion to you."</p> + +<p>"Oh, that's scarcely possible! You and Minnie must sometimes have +alluded to 'Ethel.'"</p> + +<p>"Well, now that you put it in that light, I do remember hearing +Minnie allude to you on several occasions. Once she wondered why 'Ethel' +did not ride. Again she remarked how 'Ethel' would enjoy a particular +view."</p> + +<p>"And he heard it?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, of course."</p> + +<p>"Then there is not a shadow of a doubt left. He knows I am here. He +has forgotten me so totally, and is so completely indifferent, that he +comes here and pays attention to another who is in the very same house +with me. It is hard. Oh, Kitty, is it not? Is it not bitter? How could I +have thought this of <i>him</i>?"</p> + +<p>A high-hearted girl was Ethel, and a proud one; but at this final +confirmation of her worst fears there burst from her a sharp cry, and +she buried her face in her hands, and moaned and wept.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<span class = "pagenum">49</span> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXII" id = "chapXII"> +CHAPTER XII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +GIRASOLE AGAIN.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">One</span> day Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie +were out driving. Hawbury was riding by the carriage on the side next +Minnie, when suddenly their attention was arrested by a gentleman on +horseback who was approaching them at an easy pace, and staring hard at +them. Minnie's hand suddenly grasped her sister's arm very tightly, +while her color came and went rapidly.</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" sighed Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"Oh, what <i>shall</i> I do?" said Minnie, in a hasty whisper. "Can't +we pretend not to see him?"</p> + +<p>"Nonsense, you little goose," was the reply. "How can you think of +such rudeness?"</p> + +<p>By this time the gentleman had reached them, and Mrs. Willoughby +stopped the carriage, and spoke to him in a tone of gracious suavity, in +which there was a sufficient recognition of his claims upon her +attention, mingled with a slight hauteur that was intended to act as a +check upon his Italian demonstrativeness.</p> + +<p>For it was no other than the Count Girasole, and his eyes glowed with +excitement and delight, and his hat was off and as far away from his +head as possible, and a thousand emotions contended together for +expression upon his swarthy and handsome countenance. As soon as he +could speak he poured forth a torrent of exclamations with amazing +volubility, in the midst of which his keen black eyes scrutinized very +closely the faces of the ladies, and finally turned an interrogative +glance upon Hawbury, who sat on his horse regarding the new-comer with a +certain mild surprise not unmingled with superciliousness. Hawbury's +chin was in the air, his eyes rested languidly upon the stranger, and +his left hand toyed with his left whisker. He really meant no offense +whatever. He knew absolutely nothing about the stranger, and had not the +slightest intention of giving offense. It was simply a way he had. It +was merely the normal attitude of the English swell before he is +introduced. As it was, that first glance which Girasole threw at the +English lord inspired him with the bitterest hate, which was destined to +produce important results afterward.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby was too good-natured and too wise to slight the Count +in any way. After introducing the two gentlemen she spoke a few more +civil words, and then bowed him away. But Girasole did not at all take +the hint. On the contrary, as the carriage started, he turned his horse +and rode along with it on the side next Mrs. Willoughby. Hawbury +elevated his eyebrows, and stared for an instant, and then went on +talking with Minnie. And now Minnie showed much more animation than +usual. She was much agitated and excited by this sudden appearance of +one whom she hoped to have got rid of, and talked rapidly, and laughed +nervously, and was so terrified at the idea that Girasole was near that +she was afraid to look +<span class = "pagenum">49b</span> +at him, but directed all her attention to Hawbury. It was a slight, and +Girasole showed that he felt it; but Minnie could not help it. After a +time Girasole mastered his feelings, and began an animated conversation +with Mrs. Willoughby in very broken English. Girasole's excitement at +Minnie's slight made him somewhat incoherent, his idioms were Italian +rather than English, and his pronunciation was very bad; he also had a +fashion of using an Italian word when he did not know the right English +one, and so the consequence was that Mrs. Willoughby understood not much +more than one-quarter of his remarks.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby did not altogether enjoy this state of things, and so +she determined to put an end to it by shortening her drive. She +therefore watched for an opportunity to do this so as not to make it +seem too marked, and finally reached a place which was suitable. Here +the carriage was turned, when, just as it was half-way round, they +noticed a horseman approaching. It was Scone Dacres, who had been +following them all the time, and who had not expected that the carriage +would turn. He was therefore taken completely by surprise, and was close +to them before he could collect his thoughts so as to do any thing. To +evade them was impossible, and so he rode on. As he approached, the +ladies saw his face. It was a face that one would remember afterward. +There was on it a profound sadness and dejection, while at the same time +the prevailing expression was one of sternness. The ladies both bowed. +Scone Dacres raised his hat, and disclosed his broad, massive brow. He +did not look at Minnie. His gaze was fixed on Mrs. Willoughby. Her veil +was down, and he seemed trying to read her face behind it. As he passed +he threw a quick, vivid glance at Girasole. It was not a pleasant glance +by any means, and was full of quick, fierce, and insolent +scrutiny—a "Who-the-devil-are-you?" glance. It was for but an +instant, however, and then he glanced at Mrs. Willoughby again, and then +he had passed.</p> + +<p>The ladies soon reached their home, and at once retired to Mrs. +Willoughby's room. There Minnie flung herself upon the sofa, and Mrs. +Willoughby sat down, with a perplexed face.</p> + +<p>"What in the world <i>are</i> we to do?" said she.</p> + +<p>"I'm sure <i>I</i> don't know," said Minnie. "I <i>knew</i> it was +going to be so. I said that he would find me again."</p> + +<p>"He is <i>so</i> annoying."</p> + +<p>"Yes, but, Kitty dear, we can't be rude to him, you know, for he +saved my life. But it's horrid, and I really begin to feel quite +desperate."</p> + +<p>"I certainly will not let him see you. I have made up my mind to +that."</p> + +<p>"And oh! how he <i>will</i> be coming and calling, and tease, tease, +teasing. Oh dear! I do wonder what Lord Hawbury thought. He looked +<i>so</i> amazed. And then—oh, Kitty dear, +<span class = "pagenum">50</span> +it was so awfully funny!—did you notice that other man?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby nodded her head.</p> + +<p>"Did you notice how awfully black he looked? He wouldn't look at me +at all. <i>I</i> know why."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby said nothing.</p> + +<p>"He's awfully jealous. Oh, <i>I</i> know it. I saw it in his face. He +was as black as a thunder-cloud. Oh dear! And it's all about me. Oh, +Kitty darling, what <i>shall</i> I do? There will be something dreadful, +I know. And how shocking to have it about me. And then the newspapers. +They'll all have it. And the reporters. Oh dear! Kitty, why <i>don't</i> +you say something?"</p> + +<p>"Why, Minnie dearest, I really don't know what to say."</p> + +<p>"But, darling, you must say something. And then that Scone Dacres. +I'm more afraid of him than any body. Oh, I know he's going to +<i>kill</i> some one. He is so big. Oh, if <i>you</i> had only been on +his back, Kitty darling, and had him run down a steep mountain-side, +you'd be as awfully afraid of him as I am. Oh, how I <i>wish</i> Lord +Hawbury would drive them off, or somebody do something to save me."</p> + +<p>"Would you rather that Lord Hawbury would stay, or would you like him +to go too?"</p> + +<p>"Oh dear! I don't care. If he would only go quietly and nicely, I +should like to have him go too, and never, never see a man again except +dear papa. And I think it's a shame. And I don't see why I should be so +persecuted. And I'm tired of staying here. And I don't want to stay here +any more. And, Kitty darling, why shouldn't we all go to Rome?"</p> + +<p>"To Rome?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Would you prefer Rome?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, thoughtfully.</p> + +<p>"Well, yes—for several reasons. In the first place, I must go +somewhere, and I'd rather go there than any where else. Then, you know, +that dear, delightful holy-week will soon be here, and I'm dying to be +in Rome."</p> + +<p>"I think it would be better for all of us," said Mrs. Willoughby, +thoughtfully—"for all of us, if we were in Rome."</p> + +<p>"Of course it would, Kitty sweetest, and especially me. Now if I am +in Rome, I can pop into a convent whenever I choose."</p> + +<p>"A convent!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, in surprise.</p> + +<p>"Oh yes—it's going to come to that. They're all so horrid, you +know. Besides, it's getting worse. I got a letter yesterday from Captain +Kirby, written to me in England. He didn't know I was here. He has just +arrived at London, and was leaving for our place on what he called the +wings of the wind. I expect him here at almost any time. Isn't it +dreadful, Kitty dearest, to have so many? As fast as one goes another +comes, and then they all come together; and do you know, darling, it +really makes one feel quite dizzy. I'm sure <i>I</i> don't +<span class = "pagenum">50b</span> +know what to do. And that's why I'm thinking of a convent, you +know."</p> + +<p>"But you're not a Catholic."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, I am, you know. Papa's an Anglo-Catholic, and I don't see +the difference. Besides, they're all the time going over to Rome; and +why shouldn't I? I'll be a novice—that is, you know, I'll only go +for a time, and not take the vows. The more I think of it, the more I +see that it's the only thing there is for me to do."</p> + +<p>"Well, Minnie, I really think so too, and not only for you, but for +all of us. There's Ethel, too; poor dear girl, her health is very +miserable, you know. I think a change would do her good."</p> + +<p>"Of course it would; I've been talking to her about it. But she won't +hear of leaving Naples. I <i>wish</i> she wouldn't be so awfully +sad."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; it will certainly be the best thing for dear Ethel, and for +you and me and all of us. Then we must be in Rome in holy-week. I +wouldn't miss that for any thing."</p> + +<p>"And then, too, you know, Kitty darling, there's another thing," said +Minnie, very confidentially, "and it's very important. In Rome, you +know, all the gentlemen are clergymen—only, you know, the +clergymen of the Roman Church can't marry; and so, you know, of course, +they can never propose, no matter if they were to save one's life over +and over again. And oh! what a relief that would be to find one's self +among those dear, darling, delightful priests, and no chance of having +one's life saved and having an instant proposal following! It would be +<i>so</i> charming."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby smiled.</p> + +<p>"Well, Minnie dearest," said she, "I really think that we had better +decide to go to Rome, and I don't see any difficulty in the way."</p> + +<p>"The only difficulty that I can see," said Minnie, "is that I +shouldn't like to hurt their feelings, you know."</p> + +<p>"Their feelings!" repeated her sister, in a doleful voice.</p> + +<p>"Yes; but then, you see, some one's feelings <i>must</i> be hurt +eventually, so that lessens one's responsibility, you know; doesn't it, +Kitty darling?"</p> + +<p>While saying this Minnie had risen and gone to the window, with the +intention of taking her seat by it. No sooner had she reached the place, +however, than she started back, with a low exclamation, and, standing on +one side, looked cautiously forth.</p> + +<p>"Come here," she said, in a whisper.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby went over, and Minnie directed her attention to some +one outside. It was a gentleman on horseback, who was passing at a slow +pace. His head was bent on his breast. Suddenly, as he passed, he raised +his head and threw over the house a quick, searching glance. They could +see without being seen. They marked the profound sadness that was over +his face, and saw the deep disappointment with which his head fell.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">51</span> + +<p>"Scone Dacres!" said Minnie, as he passed on. "How <i>aw</i>fully sad +he is!"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby said nothing.</p> + +<p>"But, after all, I don't believe it's <i>me</i>."</p> + +<p>"Why not?"</p> + +<p>"Because he didn't look at me a bit when he passed to-day. He looked +at you, though."</p> + +<p>"Nonsense!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, and his face had an <i>aw</i>fully hungry look. I know what +makes him sad."</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"He's in love with you."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby stared at Minnie for a moment. Then a short laugh +burst from her.</p> + +<p>"Child!" she exclaimed, "you have no idea of any thing in the world +but falling in love. You will find out some day that there are other +feelings than that."</p> + +<p>"But, Kitty dear," said Minnie, "didn't you notice something very +peculiar about him?"</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"I noticed it. I had a good look at him. I saw that he fixed his eyes +on you with—oh! <i>such</i> a queer look. And he was awfully sad +too. He looked as if he would like to seize you and lift you on his +horse and carry you off, just like young Lochinvar."</p> + +<p>"Me!" said Mrs. Willoughby, with a strange intonation.</p> + +<p>"Yes, you—oh yes; really now."</p> + +<p>"Oh, you little goose, you always think of people rushing after one +and carrying one off."</p> + +<p>"Well, I'm sure I've had reason to. So many people have always been +running after me, and snatching me up as if I were a parcel, and +carrying me every where in all sorts of places. And I think it's too +bad, and I really wish they'd stop it. But, Kitty dear<ins class = +"correction" title = "close quote missing">—"</ins></p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"About this Scone Dacres. Don't you really think there's something +very peculiarly sad, and very delightfully interesting and pathetic, and +all that sort of thing, in his poor dear old face?"</p> + +<p>"I think Scone Dacres has suffered a great deal," said Mrs. +Willoughby, in a thoughtful tone. "But come now. Let us go to Ethel. +She's lonely."</p> + +<p>Soon after they joined the other ladies, and talked over the project +of going to Rome. Lady Dalrymple offered no objection; indeed, so far as +she had any choice, she preferred it. She was quite willing at all times +to do whatever the rest proposed, and also was not without some +curiosity as to the proceedings during holy-week. Ethel offered no +objections either. She had fallen into a state of profound melancholy, +from which nothing now could rouse her, and so she listened listlessly +to the discussion about the subject. Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie had the +most to say on this point, and offered the chief reasons for going; and +thus it was finally decided to take their departure, and to start as +soon as possible.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile Girasole had his own thoughts and experiences. He had +already, some time before, +<span class = "pagenum">51b</span> +been conscious that his attentions were not wanted, but it was only on +the part of the other ladies that he noticed any repugnance to himself. +On Minnie's part he had not seen any. In spite of their graciousness and +their desire not to hurt his feelings, they had not been able to avoid +showing that, while they felt grateful for his heroism in the rescue of +Minnie, they could not think of giving her to him. They had +manœuvred well enough to get rid of him, but Girasole had also +manœuvred on his part to find them again. He had fallen off from +them at first when he saw that they were determined on effecting this; +but after allowing a sufficient time to elapse, he had no difficulty in +tracking them, and finding them at Naples, as we have seen.</p> + +<p>But here he made one or two discoveries.</p> + +<p>One was that Minnie already had an accepted lover in the person of +Lord Hawbury. The lofty superciliousness of the British nobleman seemed +to Girasole to be the natural result of his position, and it seemed the +attitude of the successful lover toward the rejected suitor.</p> + +<p>The other discovery was that Minnie herself was more pleased with the +attentions of the English lord than with his own. This was now evident, +and he could not help perceiving that his difficulties were far more +formidable from the presence of such a rival.</p> + +<p>But Girasole was not easily daunted. In the first place, he had +unbounded confidence in his own fascinations; in the second place, he +believed that he had a claim on Minnie that no other could equal, in the +fact that he had saved her life; in the third place, apart from the +question of love, he believed her to be a prize of no common value, +whose English gold would be welcome indeed to his Italian need and +greed; while, finally, the bitter hate with which Lord Hawbury had +inspired him gave an additional zest to the pursuit, and made him follow +after Minnie with fresh ardor.</p> + +<p>Once or twice after this he called upon them. On the first occasion +only Lady Dalrymple was visible. On the second, none of the ladies were +at home. He was baffled, but not discouraged. Returning from his call, +he met Minnie and Mrs. Willoughby. Hawbury was with them, riding beside +Minnie. The ladies bowed, and Girasole, as before, coolly turned his +horse and rode by the carriage, talking with Mrs. Willoughby, and trying +to throw at Minnie what he intended to be impassioned glances. But +Minnie would not look at him. Of course she was frightened as usual, and +grew excited, and, as before, talked with unusual animation to Hawbury. +Thus she overdid it altogether, and more than ever confirmed Girasole in +the opinion that she and Hawbury were affianced.</p> + +<p>Two days after this Girasole called again.</p> + +<p>A bitter disappointment was in store for him.</p> + +<p>They were not there—they had gone.</p> + +<p>Eagerly he inquired where.</p> + +<p>"To Rome," was the reply.</p> + +<p>"To Rome!" he muttered, between his set +<span class = "pagenum">52</span> +teeth; and mounting his horse hurriedly, he rode away.</p> + +<p>He was not one to be daunted. He had set a certain task before +himself, and could not easily be turned aside. He thought bitterly of +the ingratitude with which he had been treated. He brought before his +mind the "stony British stare," the supercilious smile, and the +impertinent and insulting expression of Hawbury's face as he sat on his +saddle, with his chin up, stroking his whiskers, and surveyed him for +the first time. All these things combined to stimulate the hate as well +as the love of Girasole. He felt that he himself was not one who could +be lightly dismissed, and determined that they should learn this.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic052.png" width = "212" height = "326" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"'TO ROME!' HE MUTTERED, BETWEEN HIS SET TEETH."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXIII" id = "chapXIII"> +CHAPTER XIII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +VAIN REMONSTRANCES.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Hawbury</span> had immolated himself for as +much as half a dozen times to gratify Dacres. He had sacrificed himself +over and over upon the altar of friendship, and had allowed himself to +be bored to death because Dacres so wished it. The whole number of his +calls was in reality only about five or six; but that number, to one of +his taste and temperament, seemed positively enormous, and represented +an immense amount of human suffering.</p> + +<p>One day, upon reaching his quarters, after one of these calls, he +found Dacres there, making himself, as usual, very much at home.</p> + +<p>"Well, my dear fellow," said Hawbury, +<span class = "pagenum">52b</span> +cheerfully, "how waves the flag now? Are you hauling it down, or are you +standing to your guns? Toss over the cigars, and give an account of +yourself."</p> + +<p>"Do you know any thing about law, Hawbury?" was Dacres's answer.</p> + +<p>"Law?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"No, not much. But what in the world makes you ask such a question as +that? Law! No—not I."</p> + +<p>"Well, there's a point that I should like to ask somebody about."</p> + +<p>"Why not get a lawyer?"</p> + +<p>"An Italian lawyer's no use."</p> + +<p>"Well, English lawyers are to be found. I dare say there are twenty +within five minutes' distance of this place."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I don't want to bother. I only wanted to ask some one's opinion +in a general way."</p> + +<p>"Well, what's the point?"</p> + +<p>"Why this," said Dacres, after a little hesitation. "You've heard of +outlawry?"</p> + +<p>"Should think I had—Robin Hood and his merry men, Lincoln +green, Sherwood Forest, and all that sort of thing, you know. But what +the mischief sets you thinking about Robin Hood?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, I don't mean that rot. I mean real outlawry—when a +fellow's in debt, you know."</p> + +<p>"Well?"</p> + +<p>"Well; if he goes out of the country, and stays away a certain number +of years, the debt's outlawed, you know."</p> + +<p>"The deuce it is! Is it, though? <i>I've</i> been in debt, but I +always managed to pull through without getting so far. But that's +convenient for some fellows too."</p> + +<p>"I'm a little muddy about it, but I've heard something to this +effect. I think the time is seven years. If the debt is not acknowledged +during the interval, it's outlawed. And now, 'pon my life, my dear +fellow, I really don't know but that I've jumbled up some fragments of +English law with American. I felt that I was muddy, and so I thought I'd +ask you."</p> + +<p>"Don't know any more about it than about the antediluvians."</p> + +<p>"It's an important point, and I should like to have it looked +up."</p> + +<p>"Well, get a lawyer here; half London is on the Continent. But still, +my dear fellow, I don't see what you're driving at. You're not in +debt?"</p> + +<p>"No—this isn't debt; but it struck me that this might possibly +apply to other kinds of contracts."</p> + +<p>"Oh!"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"How—such as what, for instance?"</p> + +<p>"Well, you see, I thought, you know, that all contracts might be +included under it; and so I thought that if seven years or so annulled +all contracts, it might have some effect, you know, +upon—the—the—the marriage contract, you know."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">53</span> + +<p>At this Hawbury started up, stared at Dacres, gave a loud whistle, +and then exclaimed,</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"I may be mistaken," said Dacres, modestly.</p> + +<p>"Mistaken? Why, old chap, you're mad. Marriage? Good Lord! don't you +know nothing can abrogate that? Of course, in case of crime, one can get +a divorce; but there is no other way. Seven years? By Jove! A good idea +that. Why, man, if that were so, the kingdom would be depopulated. +Husbands running off from wives, and wives from husbands, to pass the +required seven years abroad. By Jove! You see, too, there's another +thing, my boy. Marriage is a sacrament, and you've not only got to untie +the civil knot, but the clerical one, my boy. No, no; there's no help +for it. You gave your word, old chap, 'till death do us part,' and +you're in for it."</p> + +<p>At this Dacres said nothing; it appeared to dispel his project from +his mind. He relapsed into a sullen sort of gloom, and remained so for +some time. At last he spoke:</p> + +<p>"Hawbury!"</p> + +<p>"Well?"</p> + +<p>"Have you found out who that fellow is?"</p> + +<p>"What fellow?"</p> + +<p>"Why that yellow Italian that goes prowling around after my +wife."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; I heard something or other today."</p> + +<p>"What was it?"</p> + +<p>"Well, it seems that he saved her life, or something of that +sort."</p> + +<p>"Saved her life!" Dacres started. "How? where? Cool, too!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, on the Alps somewhere."</p> + +<p>"On the Alps! saved her life! Come now, I like that," said Dacres, +with bitter intonation.<ins class = "correction" title = "open quote missing"> "</ins>Aha! don't I know her? I warrant you she contrived all +that. Oh, she's deep! But how did it happen? Did you hear?"</p> + +<p>"Well, I didn't hear any thing very definite. It was something about +a precipice. It was Lady Dalrymple that told me. It seems she was +knocked over a precipice by an avalanche."</p> + +<p>"Was what? Knocked where? Over a precipice? By a what—an +avalanche? Good Lord! I don't believe it. I swear I don't. She invented +it all. It's some of her infernal humbug. She slid off over the snow, so +as to get him to go after her. Oh, don't I know her and her ways!"</p> + +<p>"Well, come now, old man, you shouldn't be too hard on her. You never +said that flirtation was one of her faults."</p> + +<p>"Well, neither it was; but, as she is a demon, she's capable of any +thing; and now she has sobered down, and all her vices have taken this +turn. Oh yes. I know her. No more storms now—no rage, no +fury—all quiet and sly. Flirtation! Ha, ha! That's the word. And +my wife! And going about the country, tumbling over precipices, with +devilish handsome Italians going down to save her life! Ha, ha, ha! I +like that!"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">53b</span> + +<p>"See here, old boy, I swear you're too suspicious. Come now. You're +going too far. If she chooses, she may trump up the same charge against +you and the child-angel at Vesuvius. Come now, old boy, be just. You can +afford to. Your wife may be a fiend in human form; and if you insist +upon it, I've nothing to say. But this last notion of yours is nothing +but the most wretched absurdity. It's worse. It's lunacy."</p> + +<p>"Well, well," said Dacres, in a milder tone; "perhaps she didn't +contrive it. But then, you know," he added, "it's just as good for her. +She gets the Italian. Ha, ha, ha!"</p> + +<p>His laugh was forced, feverish, and unnatural. Hawbury didn't like +it, and tried to change the subject.</p> + +<p>"Oh, by-the-way," said he, "you needn't have any further trouble +about any of them. You don't seem inclined to take any definite action, +so the action will be taken for you."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean?"</p> + +<p>"I mean that they are all going to leave Naples."</p> + +<p>"To leave Naples!"</p> + +<p>Dacres uttered this in a voice of grief and surprise which astonished +Hawbury and touched him.</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said. "You know they've been here long enough. They want to +see Rome. Holy-week, you know. No end of excitement. Illumination of St. +Peter's, and all that sort of thing, you know."</p> + +<p>Dacres relapsed into sombre silence. For more than half an hour he +did not say a word. Hawbury respected his mood, and watched him with +something approaching to anxiety.</p> + +<p>"Hawbury," said he at last.</p> + +<p>"Well, old man?"</p> + +<p>"I'm going to Rome."</p> + +<p>"You—to Rome!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, me, to Rome."</p> + +<p>"Oh, nonsense! See here, old boy. You'd really better not, you know. +Break it up. You can't do any thing."</p> + +<p>"I'm going to Rome," repeated Dacres, stolidly. "I've made up my +mind."</p> + +<p>"But, really," remonstrated Hawbury. "See here now, my dear fellow; +look here, you know. By Jove! you don't consider, really."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, I do. I know every thing; I consider every thing."</p> + +<p>"But what good will it do?"</p> + +<p>"It won't do any good; but it may prevent some evil."</p> + +<p>"Nothing but evil can ever come of it."</p> + +<p>"Oh, no evil need necessarily come of it."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!" exclaimed Hawbury, who began to be excited. "Really, my +dear fellow, you don't think. You see you can't gain any thing. She's +surrounded by friends, you know. She never can be yours, you know. +There's a great gulf between you, and all that sort of thing, you +know."</p> + +<p>"Yes," repeated Dacres, catching his last words—"yes, a great +gulf, as deep as the bottomless +<span class = "pagenum">54</span> +abyss, never to be traversed, where she stands on one side, and I on the +other, and between us hate, deep and pitiless hate, undying, +eternal!"</p> + +<p>"Then, by Jove! my dear fellow, what's the use of trying to fight +against it? You can't do any thing. If this were Indiana, now, or even +New York, I wouldn't say any thing, you know; but you know an Indiana +divorce wouldn't do <i>you</i> any good. Her friends wouldn't take you +on those terms—and she wouldn't. Not she, by Jove!"</p> + +<p>"I <i>must</i> go. I must follow her," continued Dacres. "The sight +of her has roused a devil within me that I thought was laid. I'm a +changed man, Hawbury."</p> + +<p>"I should think so, by Jove!"</p> + +<p>"A changed man," continued Dacres. "Oh, Heavens, what power there is +in a face! What terrific influence it has over a man! Here am I; a few +days ago I was a free man; now I am a slave. But, by Heaven! I'll follow +her to the world's end. She shall not shake me off. She thinks to be +happy without me. She shall not. I will silently follow as an avenging +fate. I can not have her, and no one else shall. The same cursed fate +that severs her from me shall keep her away from others. If I am lonely +and an exile, she shall not be as happy as she expects. I shall not be +the only one to suffer."</p> + +<p>"See here, by Jove!" cried Hawbury. "Really. You're going too far, my +dear boy, you know. You are, really. Come now. This is just like a +Surrey theatre, you know. You're really raving. Why, my poor old boy, +you <i>must</i> give her up. You can't do any thing. You daren't call on +her. You're tied hand and foot. You may worship her here, and rave about +your child-angel till you're black in the face, but you never can see +her; and as to all this about stopping her from marrying any other +person, that's all rot and bosh. What do you suppose any other man would +care for your nonsensical ravings? Lonely and an exile! Why, man, she'll +be married and done for in three months."</p> + +<p>"You don't understand me," said Dacres, dryly.</p> + +<p>"I'm glad that I don't; but it's no wonder, old man, for really you +were quite incoherent."</p> + +<p>"And so they're going to Rome," said Dacres. "Well, they'll find that +I'm not to be shaken off so easily."</p> + +<p>"Come now, old man, you <i>must</i> give up that."</p> + +<p>"And I suppose," continued Dacres, with a sneer, "our handsome, +dark-eyed little Italian cavalier is going with us. Ha, ha, ha! He's at +the house all the time, no doubt."</p> + +<p>"Well, yes; he was there once."</p> + +<p>"Ah! of course—quite devoted."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; but don't be afraid. It was not to the child-angel. She +appears to avoid him. That's really quite evident. It's an apparent +aversion on her part."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">54b</span> + +<p>Dacres drew a long breath.</p> + +<p>"Oh," said he; "and so I suppose it's not <i>her</i> that <i>he</i> +goes after. I did not suppose that it was. Oh no. There's another +one—more piquant, you know—ha, ha!—a devoted +lover—saved her life—quite devoted—and she sits and +accepts his attentions. Yet she's seen me, and knows that I'm watching +her. Don't she know <i>me</i>? Does she want any further proof of what I +am ready to do? The ruins of Dacres Grange should serve her for life. +She tempts fate when she carries on her gallantries and her Italian +cicisbeism under the eyes of Scone Dacres. It'll end bad. By Heaven, it +will!"</p> + +<p>Scone Dacres breathed hard, and, raising his head, turned upon +Hawbury a pair of eyes whose glow seemed of fire.</p> + +<p>"Bad!" he repeated, crashing his fist on the table. "Bad, by +Heaven!"</p> + +<p>Hawbury looked at him earnestly.</p> + +<p>"My dear boy," said he, "you're getting too excited. Be cool. Really, +I don't believe you know what you're saying. I don't understand what you +mean. Haven't the faintest idea what you're driving at. You're making +ferocious threats against some people, but, for my life, I don't know +who they are. Hadn't you better try to speak so that a fellow can +understand the general drift, at least, of what you say?"</p> + +<p>"Well, then, you understand this much—I'm going to Rome."</p> + +<p>"I'm sorry for it, old boy."</p> + +<p>"And see here, Hawbury, I want you to come with me."</p> + +<p>"Me? What for?"</p> + +<p>"Well, I want you. I may have need of you."</p> + +<p>As Dacres said this his face assumed so dark and gloomy an expression +that Hawbury began to think that there was something serious in all this +menace.</p> + +<p>"'Pon my life," said he, "my dear boy, I really don't think you're in +a fit state to be allowed to go by yourself. You look quite desperate. I +wish I could make you give up this infernal Roman notion."</p> + +<p>"I'm going to Rome!" repeated Dacres, resolutely.</p> + +<p>Hawbury looked at him.</p> + +<p>"You'll come, Hawbury, won't you?"</p> + +<p>"Why, confound it all, of course. I'm afraid you'll do something +rash, old man, and you'll have to have me to stand between you and +harm."</p> + +<p>"Oh, don't be concerned about me," said Dacres. "I only want to watch +her, and see what her little game is. I want to look at her in the midst +of her happiness. She's most infernally beautiful, too; hasn't added a +year or a day to her face; more lovely than ever; more beautiful than +she was even when I first saw her. And there's a softness about her that +she never had before. Where the deuce did she get that? Good idea of +hers, too, to cultivate the +<span class = "pagenum">55</span> +soft style. And there's sadness in her face, too. Can it be real? By +Heavens! if I thought it could be real I'd—but pooh! what +insanity! It's her art. There never was such cunning. She cultivates the +soft, sad style so as to attract lovers—lovers—who adore +her—who save her life—who become her obedient slaves! Oh +yes; and I—what am I? Why they get together and laugh at me; they +giggle; they snicker—"</p> + +<p>"Confound it all, man, what are you going on at that rate for?" +interrupted Hawbury. "Are you taking leave of your senses altogether? By +Jove, old man, you'd better give up this Roman journey."</p> + +<p>"No, I'll keep at it."</p> + +<p>"What for? Confound it! I don't see your object."</p> + +<p>"My object? Why, I mean to follow her. I can't give her up. I won't +give her up. I'll follow her. She shall see me every where. I'll follow +her. She sha'n't go any where without seeing me on her track. She shall +see that she is mine. She shall know that she's got a master. She shall +find herself cut off from that butterfly life which she hopes to enter. +I'll be her fate, and she shall know it."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!" cried Hawbury. "What the deuce is all this about? Are you +mad, or what? Look here, old boy, you're utterly beyond me, you know. +What the mischief do you mean? Whom are you going to follow? Whose fate +are you going to be? Whose track are you talking about?"</p> + +<p>"Who?" cried Dacres. "Why, my wife!"</p> + +<p>As he said this he struck his fist violently on the table.</p> + +<p>"The deuce!" exclaimed Hawbury, staring at him; after which he added, +thoughtfully, "by Jove!"</p> + +<p>Not much more was said. Dacres sat in silence for a long time, +breathing hard, and puffing violently at his cigar. Hawbury said nothing +to interrupt his meditation. After an hour or so Dacres tramped off in +silence, and Hawbury was left to meditate over the situation.</p> + +<p>And this was the result of his meditations.</p> + +<p>He saw that Dacres was greatly excited, and had changed completely +from his old self. His state of mind seemed actually dangerous. There +was an evil gleam in his eyes that looked like madness. What made it +more perplexing still was the new revulsion of feeling that now was +manifest. It was not so much love for the child-angel as bitter and +venomous hate for his wife. The gentler feeling had given place to the +sterner one. It might have been possible to attempt an argument against +the indulgence of the former; but what could words avail against +revenge? And now there was rising in the soul of Dacres an evident +thirst for vengeance, the result of those injuries which had been +carried in his heart and brooded over for years. The sight of his wife +had evidently kindled all this. If she had not come across his path he +might have +<span class = "pagenum">55b</span> +forgotten all; but she had come, and all was revived. She had come, too, +in a shape which was adapted in the highest degree to stimulate all the +passion of Dacres's soul—young, beautiful, fascinating, elegant, +refined, rich, honored, courted, and happy. Upon such a being as this +the homeless wanderer, the outcast, looked, and his soul seemed turned +to fire as he gazed. Was it any wonder?</p> + +<p>All this Hawbury thought, and with full sympathy for his injured +friend. He saw also that Dacres could not be trusted by himself. Some +catastrophe would be sure to occur. He determined, therefore, to +accompany his friend, so as to do what he could to avert the calamity +which he dreaded.</p> + +<p>And this was the reason why he went with Dacres to Rome.</p> + +<p>As for Dacres, he seemed to be animated by but one motive, which he +expressed over and over again:</p> + +<p>"She stood between me and my child-angel, and so will I stand between +her and her Italian!"</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXIV" id = "chapXIV"> +CHAPTER XIV.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE ZOUAVE OFFICER.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Whatever</span> trouble Ethel had +experienced at Naples from her conviction that Hawbury was false was +increased and, if possible, intensified by the discovery that he had +followed them to Rome. His true motives for this could not possibly be +known to her, so she, of course, concluded that it was his infatuation +for Minnie, and his determination to win her for himself. She felt +confident that he knew that she belonged to the party, but was so +utterly indifferent to her that he completely ignored her, and had not +sufficient interest in her to ask the commonest question about her. All +this, of course, only confirmed her previous opinion, and it also +deepened her melancholy. One additional effect it also had, and that was +to deprive her of any pleasure that might be had from drives about Rome. +She felt a morbid dread of meeting him somewhere; she did not yet feel +able to encounter him; she could not trust herself; she felt sure that +if she saw him she would lose all self-control, and make an exhibition +of humiliating weakness. The dread of this was sufficient to detain her +at home; and so she remained indoors, a prisoner, refusing her liberty, +brooding over her troubles, and striving to acquire that indifference to +him which she believed he had toward her. Now going about was the very +thing which would have alleviated her woes, but this was the very thing +that she was unwilling to do; nor could any persuasion shake her +resolve.</p> + +<p>One day Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie were out driving, and in passing +through a street they encountered a crowd in front of one of the +churches. Another crowd was inside, and, as something was going on, they +stopped the carriage and sat looking. The Swiss Guards were +<span class = "pagenum">56</span> +there in their picturesque costume, and the cardinals in their scarlet +robes and scarlet coaches, and military officers of high rank, and +carriages of the Roman aristocracy filled with beautiful ladies. +Something of importance was going on, the nature of which they did not +know. A little knot of Englishmen stood near; and from their remarks the +ladies gathered that this was the Church of the Jesuits, and that the +Pope in person was going to perform high-mass, and afterward hold a +reception.</p> + +<p>Soon there arose a murmur and a bustle among the crowd, which was +succeeded by a deep stillness. The Swiss Guards drove the throng to +either side, and a passage-way was thus formed through the people to the +church. A carriage drove up in great state. In this was seated an +elderly gentleman in rich pontifical robes. He had a mild and gentle +face, upon which was a sweet and winning smile. No face is more +attractive than that of Pio Nono.</p> + +<p>"Oh, look!" cried Minnie; "that must be the Pope. Oh, what a +darling!"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby, however, was looking elsewhere.</p> + +<p>"Minnie," said she.</p> + +<p>"What, Kitty dear?"</p> + +<p>"Are you acquainted with any Zouave officer?"</p> + +<p>"Zouave officer! Why, no; what put such a thing as that into your +head, you old silly?"</p> + +<p>"Because there's a Zouave officer over there in the crowd who has +been staring fixedly at us ever since we came up, and trying to make +signals, and it's my opinion he's signaling to you. Look at him; he's +over there on the top of the steps."</p> + +<p>"I won't look," said Minnie, pettishly. "How do I know who he is? I +declare I'm afraid to look at any body. He'll be coming and saving my +life."</p> + +<p>"I'm sure this man is an old acquaintance."</p> + +<p>"Nonsense! how can he be?"</p> + +<p>"It may be Captain Kirby."</p> + +<p>"How silly! Why, Captain Kirby is in the Rifles."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps he is dressed this way just for amusement. Look at him."</p> + +<p>"Now, Kitty, I think you're unkind. You <i>know</i> I don't want to +look at him; I don't want to see him. I don't care who he is—the +great, big, ugly, old horrid! And if you say any thing more, I'll go +home."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby was about to say something, but her attention and +Minnie's, and that of every one else, was suddenly diverted to another +quarter.</p> + +<p>Among the crowd they had noticed a tall man, very thin, with a lean, +cadaverous face, and long, lanky, rusty black hair. He wore a white +neck-tie, and a suit of rusty black clothes. He also held a large +umbrella in his hand, which he kept carefully up out of the way of the +crowd. This figure was a conspicuous one, even in that crowd, and the +ladies had noticed it at the very first.</p> + +<p>As the Pope drove up they saw this long, +<span class = "pagenum">56b</span> +slim, thin, cadaverous man, in his suit of rusty black, edging his way +through the crowd, so as to get nearer, until at length he stood +immediately behind the line of Swiss Guards, who were keeping the crowd +back, and forming a passageway for the Pope. Meanwhile his Holiness was +advancing through the crowd. He reached out his hand, and smiled and +bowed and murmured a blessing over them. At last his carriage stopped. +The door was opened, and several attendants prepared to receive the Pope +and assist him out.</p> + +<p>At that instant the tall, slim stranger pushed forward his sallow +head, with its long, lanky, and rusty black hair, between two Swiss +Guards, and tried to squeeze between them. The Swiss at first stood +motionless, and the stranger had actually succeeded in getting about +half-way through. He was immediately in front of his Holiness, and +staring at him with all his might. His Holiness saw this very peculiar +face, and was so surprised that he uttered an involuntary exclamation, +and stopped short in his descent.</p> + +<p>The stranger stopped short too, and quite involuntarily also. For the +Swiss Guards, irritated by his pertinacity, and seeing the Pope's +gesture, turned suddenly, and two of them grasped the stranger by his +coat collar.</p> + +<p>It was, of course, an extremely undignified attitude for the Swiss +Guards, whose position is simply an ornamental one. Nothing but the most +unparalleled outrage to their dignity could have moved them to this. So +unusual a display of energy, however, did not last long. A few persons +in citizens' clothes darted forward from among the crowd, and secured +the stranger; while the Swiss, seeing who they were, resumed their +erect, rigid, and ornamental attitude. The Pope found no longer any +obstacle, and resumed his descent. For a moment the stranger had created +a wide-spread consternation in the breasts of all the different and very +numerous classes of men who composed that crowd. The arrest was the +signal for a murmur of voices, among which the ladies heard those of the +knot of Englishmen who stood near.</p> + +<p>"It's some Garibaldian," said they.</p> + +<p>And this was the general sentiment.</p> + +<p>Several hours after this they were at home, and a caller was +announced. It was the Baron Atramonte.</p> + +<p>"Atramonte!" said Lady Dalrymple. "Who is that? We're not at home, of +course. Atramonte! Some of these Italian nobles. Really, I think we have +seen enough of them. Who is he, Kitty?"</p> + +<p>"I'm sure I haven't the faintest idea. I never heard of him in my +life."</p> + +<p>"We're not at home, of course. It's a singular way, and surely can +not be Roman fashion. It's not civilized fashion. But the Continental +nobility are <i>so</i> odd."</p> + +<p>In a few minutes the servant, who had been dispatched to say, "Not at +home," returned with the statement that the Baron wished particularly to +see Miss Fay on urgent business.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">57</span> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic057.png" width = "452" height = "342" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"TWO OF THEM GRASPED THE STRANGER BY HIS COAT COLLAR."</p> + +<p>At this extraordinary message Lady Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby +looked first at one another, and then at Minnie, in amazement.</p> + +<p>"I'm sure <i>I</i> don't know any thing about him," said Minnie. +"They <i>always</i> tease me so. Oh, do go and see who he is, and send +him away—please! Oh, do, please, Dowdy dear!"</p> + +<p>"Well, I suppose I had better see the person," said Lady Dalrymple, +good-naturedly. "There must be some mistake. How is he dressed?" she +asked the servant. "Is he a military gentleman? Most of them seem to +belong to the army."</p> + +<p>"Yes, my lady. Zouave dress, my lady."</p> + +<p>At this Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie looked at one another. Lady +Dalrymple went away; and as no other was present, Ethel being, as usual, +in her room, Mrs. Willoughby sighed and said,</p> + +<p>"I thought that man must know you."</p> + +<p>"Well, I'm sure I don't know him," said Minnie. "I never knew a +Zouave officer in my life."</p> + +<p>"It may be Captain Kirby, under an assumed name and a disguise."</p> + +<p>"Oh no, it isn't. I don't believe he would be such a +perfect—monster. Oh dear! It's somebody, though. It must be. And +he wants me. Oh, what <i>shall</i> I do?"</p> + +<p>"Nonsense! You need not go. Aunty will see him, and send him +off."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I do so hope he'll go; but I'm afraid he won't."</p> + +<p>After a short time Lady Dalrymple returned.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">57b</span> + +<p>"Really," said she, "this is a most extraordinary person. He speaks +English, but not at all like an Englishman. I don't know who he is. He +calls himself a Baron, but he doesn't seem to be a foreigner. I'm +puzzled."</p> + +<p>"I hope he's gone," said Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"No—that's the worst of it. He won't go. He says he must see +Minnie, and he won't tell his errand. I told him that he could not see +you, but that I would tell you what he wanted, and that you were not at +home. And what do you think he said?"</p> + +<p>"I'm sure I don't know, Dowdy dear."</p> + +<p>"Why, he said he had nothing to do, and would wait till you came +back. And he took his seat in a way that showed that he meant to wait. +Really, I'm quite at a loss what to do. You'll have to see him, Kitty +dear."</p> + +<p>"What a strange person!" said Mrs. Willoughby. "It's <i>so</i> rude. +And don't you know what he is? How do you know he isn't an Italian?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, his English, you know. He speaks it perfectly, but not like an +Englishman, you know, nor like a Scotchman either, or an Irishman. I +wonder whether he may not be an American?"</p> + +<p>At this Minnie started.</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" she said.</p> + +<p>"What's the matter, darling?"</p> + +<p>"An American! Oh dear! what <i>will</i> become of me!"</p> + +<p>"Why," said Lady Dalrymple, "do you know him, then, after all?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, I'm <i>so</i> afraid that I know him!"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">58</span> + +<p>"Who is it, dear?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, Dowdy! Oh, Kitty!"</p> + +<p>"What's the matter?"</p> + +<p>"It must be that man. Oh, was there <i>ever</i> such a +trouble—"</p> + +<p>"Really, Minnie dearest, you are allowing yourself to get too +agitated. Who <i>is</i> this person?"</p> + +<p>"He—he's—an—American."</p> + +<p>"An American? Why, I just said that I thought he might be one. I +didn't know that you were acquainted with any."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; I did get acquainted with some in—in Canada."</p> + +<p>"Oh; and is this man a Canadian?"</p> + +<p>"No, Dowdy darling; only an American."</p> + +<p>"Well, if he's a friend of yours, I suppose you know something about +him. But how singular it is that you have so completely forgotten his +name. Atramonte? Why, I'm sure it's a <i>very</i> singular name for an +American gentleman—at least it seems so to me—but I don't +know much about them, you know. Tell me, darling, who is he?"</p> + +<p>"He—he saved my life."</p> + +<p>"What! saved your life? Why, my precious child, what <i>are</i> you +talking about? It was the Italian that saved your life, you know, not +this one."</p> + +<p>"Oh, but he did too," said Minnie, despairingly. "I couldn't help it. +He would do it. Papa was washed away. I wish they all wouldn't be so +horrid."</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple looked in an equally despairing manner at Mrs. +Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"What is it, Kitty dear? <i>Is</i> the child insane, or what does she +mean? How could this person have saved her life?"</p> + +<p>"That's just what distracts me," said Minnie. "They all do it. Every +single person comes and saves my life. And now I suppose I must go down +and see this person."</p> + +<p>"Well, really, since you say he saved your life, perhaps it would be +as well not to be uncivil," said Lady Dalrymple; "but, at the same time, +he seems to me to act in a very extraordinary manner. And he calls +himself a Baron. Do they have nobles in America?"</p> + +<p>"I'm sure I don't know, Dowdy dear. I never knew that he was a Baron. +He may have been the son of some American Baron; and—and—I'm +sure I don't know."</p> + +<p>"Nonsense, Minnie dear," said Mrs. Willoughby. "This man's title is a +foreign one. He probably obtained it in Italy or Spain, or perhaps +Mexico. I think they have titles in Mexico, though I really don't +know."</p> + +<p>"Why, of course, one isn't expected to know any thing about America," +said Lady Dalrymple. "I can mention quite a number of English statesmen, +members of the cabinet, and others, who don't know any more about +America than I do."</p> + +<p>"Do you really intend to go down yourself and see him, Minnie dear?" +asked Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">58b</span> + +<p>"How can I help it? What am I to do? I must go, Kitty darling. He is +so very positive, and—and he insists so. I don't want to hurt his +feelings, you know; and I really think there is nothing for me to do but +to go. What do you think about it, Dowdy dear?" and she appealed to her +aunt.</p> + +<p>"Well, Minnie, my child, I think it would be best not to be unkind or +uncivil, since he saved your life."</p> + +<p>Upon this Minnie accompanied her sister to see the visitor.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby entered the room first, and Minnie was close behind +her, as though she sought protection from some unknown peril. On +entering the room they saw a man dressed in Zouave uniform. His hair was +cropped short; he wore a mustache and no beard; his features were +regular and handsome; while a pair of fine dark eyes were looking +earnestly at the door, and the face and the eyes had the expression of +one who is triumphantly awaiting the result of some agreeable surprise. +Mrs. Willoughby at once recognized the stranger as the Zouave officer +who had stared at them near the Church of the Jesuits. She advanced with +lady-like grace toward him, when suddenly he stepped hastily past her, +without taking any notice of her, and catching Minnie in his arms, he +kissed her several times.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby started back in horror.</p> + +<p>Minnie did not resist, nor did she scream, or faint, or do any thing. +She only looked a little confused, and managed to extricate herself, +after which she took a seat as far away as she could, putting her sister +between her and the Zouave. But the Zouave's joy was full, and he didn't +appear to notice it. He settled himself in a chair, and laughed loud in +his happiness.</p> + +<p>"Only to think of it," said he. "Why, I had no more idea of your +being here, Minnie, than <i>Victory</i>. Well, here you see me. Only +been here a couple of months or so. You got my last favor, of course? +And ain't you regular knocked up to see me a Baron? Yes, a Baron—a +real, live Baron! I'll tell you all about it. You see I was here two or +three years ago—the time of Mentana—and fought on the Pope's +side. Odd thing, too, wasn't it, for an American? But so it was. Well, +they promoted me, and wanted me to stay. But I couldn't fix it. I had +business off home, and was on my way there the time of the shipwreck. +Well, I've been dodgin' all round every where since then, but never +forgettin' little Min, mind you, and at last I found myself here, all +right. I'd been speculatin' in wines and raisins, and just dropped in +here to take pot-luck with some old Zouave friends, when, darn me! if +they didn't make me stay. It seems there's squally times ahead. They +wanted a live man. They knew I was that live man. They offered me any +thing I wanted. They offered me the title of Baron Atramonte. That +knocked me, I tell you. Says I, I'm your man. So now you see me +<span class = "pagenum">59</span> +Baron Atramonte, captain in the Papal Zouaves, ready to go where glory +waits me—but fonder than ever of little Min. Oh, I tell you what, +I ain't a bit of a brag, but I'm <i>some</i> here. The men think I'm a +little the tallest lot in the shape of a commander they ever <i>did</i> +see. When I'm in Rome I do as the Romans do, and so I let fly at them a +speech every now and then. Why, I've gone through nearly the whole +'National Speaker' by this time. I've given them Marcellus's speech to +the mob, Brutus's to the Romans, and Antony's over Cæsar's dead body. I +tried a bit of Cicero against Catiline, but I couldn't remember it very +well. You know it, of course. <i>Quousque tandem</i>, you know."</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic059.png" width = "453" height = "454" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"CATCHING MINNIE IN HIS ARMS, HE KISSED HER SEVERAL TIMES."</p> + +<p>"Well, Min, how goes it?" he continued. "This <i>is</i> jolly; and, +what's more, it's real good in you—darn me if it ain't! I knew +you'd be regularly struck up all of a heap when you heard of me as a +Baron, but I really didn't think you'd come all the way here to see me. +And you do look stunning! You do beat all! And this lady? You haven't +introduced me, you know."</p> + +<p>The Baron rose, and looked expectantly at +<span class = "pagenum">59b</span> +Mrs. Willoughby, and then at Minnie. The latter faltered forth some +words, among which the Baron caught the names Mrs. Willoughby and Rufus +K. Gunn, the latter name pronounced, with the middle initial and all, in +a queer, prim way.</p> + +<p>"Mrs. Willoughby—ah!—Min's sister, I presume. Well, I'm +pleased to see you, ma'am. Do you know, ma'am, I have reason to remember +your name? It's associated with the brightest hours of my life. It was +in your parlor, ma'am, that I first obtained Min's promise of her hand. +Your hand, madam."</p> + +<p>And, stooping down, he grasped Mrs. Willoughby's hand, which was not +extended, and wrung it so hard that she actually gave a little +shriek.</p> + +<p>"For my part, ma'am," he continued, "I'm not ashamed of my +name—not a mite. It's a good, honest name; but being as the Holy +Father's gone and made me a noble, I prefer being addressed by my title. +All Americans are above titles. They despise them. But being in Rome, +you see, we must do as the Romans do; and so you needn't know me as +Rufus +<span class = "pagenum">60</span> +K. Gunn, but as the Baron Atramonte. As for you, Min—you and I +won't stand on ceremony—you may call me 'Roof,' or any other name +you fancy. I would suggest some pet name—something a little +loving, you know."</p> + +<p>In the midst of all this, which was poured forth with extreme +volubility, the servant came and handed a card.</p> + +<p>"Count Girasole."</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic060.png" width = "213" height = "289" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"HAWBURY, AS I'M A LIVING SINNER!"</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXV" id = "chapXV"> +CHAPTER XV.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE AMERICAN BARON.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">At</span> any other time Mrs. Willoughby +would perhaps have manœuvred Minnie out of the room; but on the +present occasion the advent of the Italian was an inexpressible relief. +Mrs. Willoughby was not prepared for a scene like this. The manners, the +language, and the acts of Rufus K. Gunn had filled her with simple +horror. She was actually bewildered, and her presence of mind was +utterly gone. As for Minnie, she was quite helpless, and sat, looking +frightened. The Baron Atramonte might have been one of the excellent of +the earth—he might have been brave and loyal and just and true and +tender, but his manner was one to which they were unaccustomed, and +consequently Mrs. Willoughby was quite overcome.</p> + +<p>The arrival of Girasole, therefore, was greeted by her with joy. She +at once rose to meet him, and could not help infusing into her greeting +a warmth which she had never shown him before. Girasole's handsome eyes +sparkled with delight, and when Mrs. Willoughby pointedly made way for +him to seat himself next to Minnie his cup of joy was full. Mrs. +Willoughby's only idea at that moment was to +<span class = "pagenum">60b</span> +throw some obstacle between Minnie and that "dreadful person" who +claimed her as his own, and had taken such shocking liberties. She did +not know that Girasole was in Rome, and now accepted his arrival at that +opportune moment as something little less than providential.</p> + +<p>And now, actuated still by the idea of throwing further obstacles +between Minnie and the Baron, she herself went over to the latter, and +began a series of polite remarks about the weather and about Rome; while +Girasole, eager to avail himself of his unexpected privilege, conversed +with Minnie in a low voice in his broken English.</p> + +<p>This arrangement was certainly not very agreeable to the Baron. His +flow of spirits seemed to be checked at once, and his volubility ceased. +He made only monosyllabic answers to Mrs. Willoughby's remarks, and his +eyes kept wandering, over beyond her to Minnie, and scrutinizing the +Italian who was thus monopolizing her at the very moment when he was +beginning to have a "realizing sense" of her presence. He looked +puzzled. He could not understand it at all. He felt that some wrong was +done by somebody. He fell into an ungracious mood. He hated the Italian +who had thus come between him and his happiness, and who chatted with +Minnie, in his abominable broken English, just like an old acquaintance. +He couldn't understand it. He felt an unpleasant restraint thrown over +him, and began to meditate a departure, and a call at some more +favorable time later in the evening. But he wanted to have a few more +words with "Min," and so he tried to "sit out" the Italian.</p> + +<p>But the Italian was as determined as the American. It was the first +chance that he had had to get a word with Minnie since he was in Milan, +and he was eager to avail himself of it. Mrs. Willoughby, on her part, +having thus discomfited the Baron, was not unmindful of the other +danger; so she moved her seat to a position near enough to overlook and +check Girasole, and then resumed those formal, chilling, heartless, but +perfectly polite remarks which she had been administering to the Baron +since Girasole's arrival.</p> + +<p>At length Mrs. Willoughby began to be dreadfully bored, and groaned +in spirit over the situation in which Minnie had placed herself, and +racked her brains to find some way of retreat from these two determined +lovers, who thus set at naught the usages of society for their own +convenience. She grew indignant. She wondered if they would <i>ever</i> +go. She wondered if it were not possible to engage the Count and the +Baron in a conversation by themselves, and, under cover of it, withdraw. +Finally she began to think whether she would not be justified in being +rude to them, since they were so inconsiderate. She thought over this, +and was rapidly coming to the decision that some act of rudeness was her +only hope, when, to her immense relief, the servant entered and +announced Lord Hawbury.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">61</span> + +<p>The entrance of the welcome guest into the room where the unwelcome +ones were seated was to Mrs. Willoughby like light in a dark place. To +Minnie also it brought immense relief in her difficult position. The +ladies rose, and were about to greet the new-comer, when, to their +amazement, the Baron sprang forward, caught Lord Hawbury's hand, and +wrung it over and over again with the most astonishing vehemence.</p> + +<p>"Hawbury, as I'm a living sinner! Thunderation! Where did you come +from? Good again! Darn it all, Hawbury, this is real good! And how well +you look! <i>How</i> are you? All right, and right side up? Who'd have +thought it? It ain't you, really, now, is it? Darn me if I ever was so +astonished in my life! You're the last man I'd have expected. Yes, +<i>Sir</i>. You may bet high on that."</p> + +<p>"Ah, really," said Hawbury, "my dear fellow! Flattered, I'm sure. And +how goes it with you? Deuced odd place to find you, old boy. And I'm +deuced glad to see you, you know, and all that sort of thing."</p> + +<p>And he wrung the Baron's hand quite as heartily as the other wrung +his; and the expression on his face was of as much cordiality and +pleasure as that upon the face of the other. Then Hawbury greeted the +ladies, and apologized by stating that the Baron was a very old and +tried friend, whom he had not seen for years; which intelligence +surprised Mrs. Willoughby greatly, and brought a faint ray of something +like peace to poor Minnie.</p> + +<p>The ladies were not imprisoned much longer. Girasole threw a black +look at Lord Hawbury, and retreated. After a few moments' chat Hawbury +also retired, and made the Baron go with him. And the Baron went without +any urging. He insisted, however, on shaking hands heartily with both of +the ladies, especially Minnie, whose poor little hand he nearly crushed +into a pulp; and to the latter he whispered the consoling assurance that +he would come to see her on the following day. After which he followed +his friend out.</p> + +<p>Then he took Hawbury over to his own quarters, and Hawbury made +himself very much at home in a rocking-chair, which the Baron regarded +as the pride and joy and glory of his room.</p> + +<p>"By Jove!" cried Hawbury. "This is deuced odd, do you know, old chap; +and I can't imagine how the mischief you got here!"</p> + +<p>This led to long explanations, and a long conversation, which was +protracted far into the night, to the immense enjoyment of both of the +friends.</p> + +<p>The Baron was, as Lord Hawbury had said, an old friend. He had become +acquainted with him many years before upon the prairies of America, near +the Rocky Mountains. The Baron had rescued him from Indians, by whom he +had been entrapped, and the two friends had wandered far over those +regions, enduring perils, fighting enemies, and roughing it in general. +<span class = "pagenum">61b</span> +This rough life had made each one's better nature visible to the other, +and had led to the formation of a friendship full of mutual appreciation +of the other's best qualities. Now it is just possible that if they had +not known one another, Hawbury might have thought the Baron a boor, and +the Baron might have called Hawbury a "thundering snob;" but as it was, +the possible boor and the possible snob each thought the other one of +the finest fellows in the world.</p> + +<p>"But you're not a Roman Catholic," said Hawbury, as the Baron +explained his position among the Zouaves.</p> + +<p>"What's the odds? All's fish that comes to their net. To get an +office in the Church may require a profession of faith, but we're not so +particular in the army. I take the oath, and they let me go. Besides, I +have Roman Catholic leanings."</p> + +<p>"Roman Catholic leanings?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; I like the Pope. He's a fine man, Sir—a fine man. I +regard that man more like a father than any thing else. There isn't one +of us but would lay down our lives for that old gentleman."</p> + +<p>"But you never go to confession, and you're not a member of the +Church."</p> + +<p>"No; but then I'm a member of the army, and I have long chats with +some of the English-speaking priests. There are some first-rate fellows +among them, too. Yes, Sir."</p> + +<p>"I don't see much of a leaning in all that."</p> + +<p>"Leaning? Why, it's all leaning. Why, look here. I remember the time +when I was a grim, true-blue Puritan. Well, I ain't that now. I used to +think the Pope was the Beast of the 'Pocalypse. Well, now I think he's +the finest old gentleman I ever saw. I didn't use to go to Catholic +chapel. Well, now I'm there often, and I rather kind o' like it. +Besides, I'm ready to argue with them all day and all night, and what +more can they expect from a fighting man?</p> + +<p>"You see, after our war I got my hand in, and couldn't stop fighting. +The Indians wouldn't do—too much throat-cutting and savagery. So I +came over here, took a fancy to the Pope, enlisted, was at Mentana, fit +there, got promoted, went home, couldn't stand it, and here I am, back +again; though how long I'm going to be here is more'n I can tell. The +fact is, I feel kind of onsettled."</p> + +<p>"Why so?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, it's an aggravating place, at the best."</p> + +<p>"How?"</p> + +<p>"There's such an everlasting waste of resources—such tarnation +bad management. Fact is, I've noted that it's always the case wherever +you trust ministers to do business. They're sure to make a mess of it. +I've known lots of cases. Why, that's always the way with us. Look at +our stock-companies of any kind, our religious societies, and our +publishing houses—wherever they get a ministerial committee, the +whole concern goes to blazes. I <i>know</i> that. +<span class = "pagenum">62</span> +Yes, <i>Sir</i>. Now that's the case here. Here's a fine country. Why, +round this here city there's a country, Sir, that, if properly managed, +might beat any of our prairies—and look at it.</p> + +<p>"Then, again, they complain of poverty. Why, I can tell you, from my +own observation, that they've got enough capital locked up, lying +useless, in this here city, to regenerate it all, and put it on its +feet. This capital wants to be utilized. It's been lying too long +without paying interest. It's time that it stopped. Why, I tell you what +it is, if they were to sell out what they have here lying idle, and +realize, they'd get enough money to form an endowment fund for the Pope +and his court so big that his Holiness and every official in the place +might get salaries all round out of the interest that would enable them +to live like—well, I was going to say like princes, but there's a +lot of princes in Rome that live so shabby that the comparison ain't +worth nothing.</p> + +<p>"Why, see here, now," continued the Baron, warming with his theme, +which seemed to be a congenial one; "just look here; see the position of +this Roman court. They can actually levy taxes on the whole world. +Voluntary contributions, Sir, are a wonderful power. Think of our +missionary societies—our Sabbath-school organizations in the +States. Think of the wealth, the activity, and the action of all our +great charitable, philanthropic, and religious bodies. What supports +them all? Voluntary contributions. Now what I mean to say is +this—I mean to say that if a proper organization was arranged +here, they could get annual receipts from the whole round globe that +would make the Pope the richest man on it. Why, in that case Rothschild +wouldn't be a circumstance. The Pope might go into banking himself, and +control the markets of the world. But no. There's a lot of ministers +here, and they haven't any head for it. I wish they'd give me a chance. +I'd make things spin.</p> + +<p>"Then, again, they've got other things here that's ruining them. +There's too much repression, and that don't do for the immortal mind. My +idea is that every man was created free and equal, and has a right to do +just as he darn pleases; but you can't beat that into the heads of the +governing class here. No, Sir. The fact is, what Rome wants is a +republic. It'll come, too, some day. The great mistake of his Holiness's +life is that he didn't put himself at the head of the movement in '48. +He had the chance, but he got frightened, and backed down. Whereas if he +had been a real, live Yankee, now—if he had been like some of our +Western parsons—he'd have put himself on the tiptop of the highest +wave, and gone in. Why, he could have had all Italy at his right hand by +this time, instead of having it all against him. There's where he made +his little mistake. If I were Pope I'd fight the enemy with their own +weapons. I'd accept the situation. I'd go in head over heels for a +republic. I'd have Rome the capital, myself president, Garibaldi +<span class = "pagenum">62b</span> +commander-in-chief, Mazzini secretary of state—a man, Sir, that +can lick even Bill Seward himself in a regular, old-fashioned, tonguey, +subtile, diplomatic note. And in that case, with a few live men at the +head of affairs, where would Victor Emanuel be? Emphatically, +nowhere!</p> + +<p>"Why, Sir," continued the Baron, "I'd engage to take this city as it +is, and the office of Pope, and run the whole Roman Catholic Church, +till it knocked out all opposition by the simple and natural process of +absorbing all opponents. We want a republic here in Rome. We want +freedom, Sir. Where is the Church making its greatest triumphs to-day? +In the States, Sir. If the Catholic Church made itself free and liberal +and go-ahead; if it kept up with the times; if it was imbued with the +spirit of progress, and pitched aside all old-fashioned +traditions—why, I tell you, Sir, it would be a little the tallest +organization on this green globe of ours. Yes, <i>Sir!</i>"</p> + +<p>While Hawbury and the Baron were thus engaged in high discourse, Mrs. +Willoughby and Minnie were engaged in discourses of a less elevated but +more engrossing character.</p> + +<p>After the ladies had escaped they went up stairs. Lady Dalrymple had +retired some time before to her own room, and they had the apartment to +themselves. Minnie flung herself into a chair and looked bewildered; +Mrs. Willoughby took another chair opposite, and said nothing for a long +time.</p> + +<p>"Well," said Minnie at last, "you needn't be so cross, Kitty; I +didn't bring him here."</p> + +<p>"Cross!" said her sister; "I'm not cross."</p> + +<p>"Well, you're showing temper, at any rate; and you know you are, and +I think it very unkind in you, when I have so much to trouble me."</p> + +<p>"Why, really, Minnie darling, I don't know what to say."</p> + +<p>"Well, why don't you tell me what you think of him, and all that sort +of thing? You <i>might</i>, you know."</p> + +<p>"Think of him!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, elevating her eyebrows.</p> + +<p>"Yes, think of him; and you needn't go and make faces about him, at +any rate."</p> + +<p>"Did I make faces? Well, dear," said Mrs. Willoughby, patiently, +"I'll tell you what I think of him. I'm afraid of him."</p> + +<p>"Well, then," said Minnie, in a tone of triumph, "now you know how I +feel. Suppose he saved your life, and then came in his awfully +boisterous way to see you; and got you alone, and began that way, and +really quite overwhelmed you, you know; and then, when you were really +almost stunned, suppose he went and proposed to you? Now, then!"</p> + +<p>And Minnie ended this question with the air of one who could not be +answered, and knew it.</p> + +<p>"He's awful—perfectly awful!" said Mrs. Willoughby. "And the +way he treated you! It was <i>so</i> shocking."</p> + +<p>"I know; and that's just the horrid way he +<span class = "pagenum">63</span> +<i>always</i> does," said Minnie, in a plaintive tone. "I'm sure +<i>I</i> don't know what to do with him. And then he's Lord Hawbury's +friend. So what <i>are</i> we to do?"</p> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic063.png" width = "342" height = "456" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"LOOK AT THE MAN!"</p> + +<p>"I don't know, unless we leave Rome at once."</p> + +<p>"But I don't <i>want</i> to leave Rome," said Minnie. "I hate being +chased away from places by people—and they'd be sure to follow me, +you know—and I don't know what to do. And oh, Kitty darling, I've +just thought of something. It would be so nice. What do you think of +it?"</p> + +<p>"What is it?"</p> + +<p>"Why, this. You know the Pope?"</p> + +<p>"No, I don't."</p> + +<p>"Oh, well, you've seen him, you know."</p> + +<p>"Yes; but what has he got to do with it?"</p> + +<p>"Why, I'll get you to take me, and I'll go to him, and tell him all +about it, and about all these horrid men; and I'll ask him if he can't +do something or other to help me. They have dispensations and things, +you know, that the Pope gives; and I want him to let me dispense with +these awful people."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">63b</span> + +<p>"Nonsense!" said Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"I don't see any nonsense in it at all. I'm in earnest," said Minnie; +"and I think it's a great shame."</p> + +<p>"Nonsense!" said her sister again; "the only thing is for you to stay +in your room."</p> + +<p>"But I don't want to stay in my room, and I can't."</p> + +<p>"Oh dear! what can I do with this child?" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, +whose patience was giving way.</p> + +<p>Upon this Minnie went over and kissed her, and begged to be forgiven; +and offered to do any thing that darling Kitty wanted her to do.</p> + +<p>After this they talked a good deal over their difficulty, but without +being able to see their way out of it more clearly.</p> + +<p>That evening they were walking up and down the balcony of the house. +It was a quadrangular edifice, and they had a suite of rooms on the +second and third stories. They were on the balcony of the third story, +which looked down into the court-yard below. A fountain was in the +middle of this, and the moon was shining brightly.</p> + +<p>The ladies were standing looking down, when Minnie gently touched her +sister's arm, and whispered,</p> + +<p>"Look at the man!"</p> + +<p>"Where?"</p> + +<p>"By the fountain."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby looked, and saw the face of a man who was standing on +the other side of the fountain. His head rose above it, and his face was +turned toward them. He evidently did not know that he was seen, but was +watching the ladies, thinking that he himself was unobserved. The moment +that Mrs. Willoughby looked at the face she recognized it.</p> + +<p>"Come in," said she to Minnie. And drawing her sister after her, she +went into the house.</p> + +<p>"I knew the face; didn't you, Kitty dear?" said Minnie. "It's so easy +to tell it. It was Scone Dacres. But what in the world does he want? Oh +dear! I hope <i>he</i> won't bother me."</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + +<span class = "pagenum">64</span> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXVI" id = "chapXVI"> +CHAPTER XVI.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE INTRUDER.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Judging</span> from the Baron's own words, +it will be perceived that his comprehension of the situation was a +little different from the actual fact. His idea was that his last letter +had been received by Minnie in England, whereupon she had been seized +with such an ungovernable longing to see him that she at once set out +for Rome. She had not sent him any message, for she wished to surprise +him. She had done so effectually. He was not merely surprised; he was +overwhelmed, overjoyed, intoxicated with joy. This was indeed kind, he +thought—the true part of a fond girl, who thus cast aside all +silly scruples, and followed the dictates of her own noble and loving +heart.</p> + +<p>Now the fact that he had made a partial failure of his first visit to +his charmer did not in the slightest degree disconcert him. He was +naturally joyous, hilarious, and sanguine. His courage never faltered, +nor could the brightness of his soul be easily dimmed. A disappointment +on one day gave him but little trouble. It was quickly thrown off, and +then his buoyant spirit looked forward for better fortune on the next +day. The little disappointment which he had did not, therefore, prevent +him from letting his reason feast and his soul flow with Lord Hawbury; +nor, when that festive season was over, did it prevent him from +indulging in the brightest anticipations for the following day.</p> + +<p>On the afternoon of that day, then, the Baron directed his steps +toward the hotel where his charmer resided, his heart beating high, and +the generous blood mantling his cheek, and all that sort of thing. But +the Baron was not alone. He had a companion, and this companion was an +acquaintance whom he had made that morning. This companion was very +tall, very thin, very sallow, with long, straggling locks of rusty black +hair, white neck-tie, and a suit of rather seedy black clothes. In fact, +it was the very stranger who had been arrested almost under his eyes as +a Garibaldian. His case had come under the notice of the Baron, who had +visited him, and found him not to be a Garibaldian at all, but a +fellow-countryman in distress—in short, no less a person than the +Reverend Saul Tozer, an esteemed clergyman, who had been traveling +through Europe for the benefit of his health and the enlargement of his +knowledge. This fellow-countryman in distress had at once been released +by the Baron's influence; and, not content with giving him his liberty, +he determined to take him under his protection, and offered to introduce +him to society; all of which generous offices were fully appreciated by +the grateful clergyman.</p> + +<p>The Baron's steps were first directed toward the place above +mentioned, and the Reverend Saul accompanied him. On reaching it he +knocked, and asked for Miss Fay.</p> + +<p>"Not at home," was the reply.</p> + +<p>"Oh, well," said he, "I'll go in and wait till +<span class = "pagenum">64b</span> +she comes home. Come along, parson, and make yourself quite at home. Oh, +never mind, young man," he continued to the servant; "I know the way. +Come along, parson." And with these words he led the way into the +reception-room, in which he had been before.</p> + +<p>An elderly lady was seated there whom the Baron recognized as having +seen before. It was Lady Dalrymple, whose name was, of course, unknown +to him, since he had only exchanged a few words on his former visit. But +as he was naturally chivalrous, and as he was bent on making friends +with all in the house, and as he was also in a glorious state of +good-will to the entire human race, he at once advanced to the lady and +made a low bow.</p> + +<p>"How do you do, ma'am?"</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple bowed good-naturedly, for she was good-natured to a +fault.</p> + +<p>"I suppose you remember me, ma'am," said the Baron, in rather a loud +voice; for, as the lady was elderly, he had a vague idea that she was +deaf—which impression, I may mention, was altogether +unfounded—"I suppose you remember me, ma'am? But I haven't had the +pleasure of a regular introduction to you; so we'll waive ceremony, if +you choose, and I'll introduce myself. I'm the Baron Atramonte, and this +is my very particular friend, the Reverend Saul Tozer."</p> + +<p>"I'm happy to make your acquaintance," said Lady Dalrymple, with a +smile, and not taking the Baron's offered hand—not, however, from +pride, but simply from laziness—for she hated the bother, and +didn't consider it good taste.</p> + +<p>"I called here, ma'am," said the Baron, without noticing that Lady +Dalrymple had not introduced <i>herself</i>—"I called here, ma'am, +to see my young friend, Miss Minnie Fay. I'm very sorry that she ain't +at home; but since I <i>am</i> here, I rather think I'll just set down +and wait for her. I s'pose you couldn't tell me, ma'am, about how long +it'll be before she comes in?"</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple hadn't any idea.</p> + +<p>"All right," said the Baron; "the longer she keeps me waiting, the +more welcome she'll be when she does come. That's all I've got to +say."</p> + +<p>So the Baron handed a chair to the Reverend Saul, and then selecting +another for himself in a convenient position, he ensconced himself in it +as snugly as possible, and sat in silence for a few minutes. Lady +Dalrymple took no notice of him whatever, but appeared to be engrossed +with some trifle of needle-work.</p> + +<p>After about five minutes the Baron resumed the task of making himself +agreeable.</p> + +<p>He cleared his throat.</p> + +<p>"Long in these parts, ma'am?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"Not very long," said Lady Dalrymple, with her usual bland +good-nature.</p> + +<p>"A nice place this," continued the Baron.</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"And do you keep your health, ma'am?" inquired the Baron, with some +anxiety.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">65</span> + +<p>"Thanks," said Lady Dalrymple; which observation set the Baron's mind +wondering what she meant by that.</p> + +<p>"Pray, ma'am," said he, after a pause, "might you be any relation to +a young lady friend of mine that's staying here named Minnie Fay?"</p> + +<p>"A little," said Lady Dalrymple; which remark set the Baron again +wondering. And he was about to return to the charge with another and +more direct question, when his attention was arrested by the sound of +footsteps on the stairs; so he sat bolt upright, and stared hard at the +door. There was the rustle of a dress. The Baron rose. So did the +Reverend Saul Tozer. The lady appeared. It was not Minnie. It was Mrs. +Willoughby.</p> + +<p>Now during the Baron's visit there had been some excitement up +stairs. The ladies had told the servants that they were not at home to +any callers that day. They had found with consternation how carelessly +the Baron had brushed aside their little cobweb regulation, and had +heard his voice as he strove to keep up an easy conversation with their +aunt. Whereupon an earnest debate arose. They felt that it was not fair +to leave their aunt alone with the Baron, and that one of them should go +to the rescue. To Mrs. Willoughby's amazement, Minnie was anxious to go. +To this she utterly objected. Minnie insisted, and Mrs. Willoughby was +in despair. In vain she reproached that most whimsical of young ladies. +In vain she reminded her of the Baron's rudeness on a former occasion. +Minnie simply reminded her that the Baron had saved her life. At last +Mrs. Willoughby actually had to resort to entreaties, and thus she +persuaded Minnie not to go down. So she went down herself, but in fear +and trembling, for she did not know at what moment her voluble and +utterly unreliable sister might take it into her head to follow her.</p> + +<p>The Baron, who had risen, full of expectation, stood looking at her, +full of disappointment, which was very strongly marked on his face. Then +he recollected that Minnie was "not at home," and that he must wait till +she did get home. This thought, and the hope that he would not now have +long to wait, brought back his friendly glow, and his calm and his peace +and his good-will toward the whole human race, including the ladies in +the room. He therefore bowed very low, and, advancing, he made an effort +to shake hands; but Mrs. Willoughby had already known the dread pressure +which the Baron gave, and evaded him by a polite bow. Thereupon the +Baron introduced the Reverend Saul Tozer.</p> + +<p>The Baron took out his watch, looked at it, frowned, coughed, put it +back, and then drummed with his fingers on the arm of the chair.</p> + +<p>"Will it be long, ma'am," asked the Baron, "before Minnie gets +back?"</p> + +<p>"She is not out," said Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"Not out?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">65b</span> + +<p>"Why, the thundering fool of a servant went and told me that she was +not at home!"</p> + +<p>"She is at home," said Mrs. Willoughby, sweetly.</p> + +<p>"What! at home!" cried the Baron. "And does she know <i>I'm</i> +here?"</p> + +<p>"She does."</p> + +<p>"Then why in thunder don't she come down?" cried the Baron, +wonderingly.</p> + +<p>"Because she is indisposed."</p> + +<p>"Indisposed?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>This was the information which Mrs. Willoughby had decided to give to +the Baron. Minnie had stipulated that his feelings should not be hurt; +and this seemed to her to be the easiest mode of dealing with him.</p> + +<p>"Indisposed!" cried the Baron.</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Oh dear! Oh, I hope, ma'am—I do hope, ma'am, that she ain't +very bad. Is it any thing serious—or what?"</p> + +<p>"Not <i>very</i> serious; she has to keep her room, though."</p> + +<p>"She ain't sick abed, I hope?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no—not so bad as that!"</p> + +<p>"Oh dear! it's all <i>me</i>, I know. <i>I'm</i> to blame. She made +this journey—the poor little pet!—just to see me; and the +fatigue and the excitement have all been too much. Oh, I might have +known it! Oh, I remember now how pale she looked yesterday! Oh dear! +what'll I do if any thing happens to her? Oh, do tell me—is she +better?—did she pass a good night?—does she suffer any +pain?—can I do any thing for her?—will you take a little +message from me to her?"</p> + +<p>"She is quite easy now, thanks," said Mrs. Willoughby; "but we have +to keep her perfectly quiet; the slightest excitement may be +dangerous."</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the Reverend Saul had become wearied with sitting dumb, and +began to look around for some suitable means of taking part in the +conversation. As the Baron had introduced him to society, he felt that +it was his duty to take some part so as to assert himself both as a man, +a scholar, and a clergyman. So, as he found the Baron was monopolizing +Mrs. Willoughby, he gradually edged over till he came within ear-shot of +Lady Dalrymple, and then began to work his way toward a +conversation.</p> + +<p>"This, ma'am," he began, "is truly an interesting spot."</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple bowed.</p> + +<p>"Yes, ma'am. I've been for the past few days surveying the ruins of +antiquity. It is truly a soul-stirring spectacle."</p> + +<p>"So I have heard," remarked Lady Dalrymple, cheerfully.</p> + +<p>"Every thing around us, ma'am," continued the Reverend Saul, in a +dismal voice, "is subject to dissolution, or is actually dissolving. How +forcible air the words of the Psalmist: 'Our days air as the grass, or +like the morning +<span class = "pagenum">66</span> +flower; when blasting winds sweep o'er the vale, they wither in an +hour.' Yes, ma'am, I have this week stood in the Roman Forum. The +Coliseum, also, ma'am, is a wonderful place. It was built by the Flavian +emperors, and when completed could hold eighty thousand spectators +seated, with about twenty thousand standing. In hot weather these +spectators were protected from the rays of the sun by means of awnings. +It is a mighty fabric, ma'am!"</p> + +<p>"I should think so," said Lady Dalrymple.</p> + +<p>"The arch of Titus, ma'am, is a fine ruin. It was originally built by +the emperor of that name to commemorate the conquest of Jerusalem. The +arch of Septimius Severus was built by the Emperor of that name, and the +arch of Constantine was built by the emperor of <i>that</i> name. They +are all very remarkable structures."</p> + +<p>"I'm charmed to hear you say so."</p> + +<p>"It's true, ma'am; but let me add, ma'am, that the ruins of this +ancient city do not offer to my eyes a spectacle half so melancholy as +the great moral ruin which is presented by the modern city. For, ma'am, +when I look around, what do I see? I behold the Babylon of the +Apocalypse! Pray, ma'am, have you ever reflected much on that?"</p> + +<p>"Not to any great extent," said Lady Dalrymple, who now began to feel +bored, and so arose to her feet. The Reverend Saul Tozer was just +getting on a full head of conversational steam, and was just fairly +under way, when this sad and chilling occurrence took place. She rose +and bowed to the gentlemen, and began to retreat.</p> + +<p>All this time the Baron had been pouring forth to Mrs. Willoughby his +excited interrogatories about Minnie's health, and had asked her to take +a message. This Mrs. Willoughby refused at first.</p> + +<p>"Oh no!" said she; "it will really disturb her too much. What she +wants most is perfect quiet. Her health is really <i>very</i> delicate, +and I am <i>excessively</i> anxious about her."</p> + +<p>"But does she—does she—is she—can she walk about +her own room?" stammered the Baron.</p> + +<p>"A little," said Mrs. Willoughby. "Oh, I hope in a few weeks she may +be able to come down. But the very <i>greatest</i> care and quiet are +needed, for she is in such a <i>very</i> delicate state that we watch +her night and day."</p> + +<p>"A few weeks!" echoed the Baron, in dismay. "Watch her night and +day!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, you know, it is the only chance for her recovery. She is +<i>so</i> delicate."</p> + +<p>The Baron looked at Mrs. Willoughby with a pale face, upon which +there was real suffering and real misery.</p> + +<p>"Can't I do something?" he gasped. "Won't you take a message to her? +It ought to do her good. Perhaps she thinks I'm neglecting her. Perhaps +she thinks I ain't here enough. Tell her I'm ready to give up my office, +and even +<span class = "pagenum">66b</span> +my title of nobility, and come and live here, if it'll be any comfort to +her."</p> + +<p>"Oh, really, Sir, you <i>quite</i> mistake her," said Mrs. +Willoughby. "It has no reference to you whatever. It's a nervous +affection, accompanied with general debility and neuralgia."</p> + +<p>"Oh no, you don't know her," said the Baron, incredulously. "I +<i>know</i> her. I know what it is. But she walks, don't she?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, a little—just across the room; still, even that is too +much. She is <i>very, very</i> weak, and must be <i>quite</i> kept free +from excitement. Even the excitement of your visits is bad for her. Her +pulse +is—is—always—accelerated—and—she—I—Oh, +dear me!"</p> + +<p>While Mrs. Willoughby had been making up this last sentence she was +startled by a rustling on the stairs. It was the rustle of a female's +dress. An awful thought occurred to her, which distracted her, and +confused her in the middle of her sentence, and made her scarce able to +articulate her words. And as she spoke them the rustle drew nearer, and +she heard the sound of feet descending the stairs, until at last the +footsteps approached the door, and Mrs. Willoughby, to her utter horror, +saw Minnie herself.</p> + +<p>Now as to the Baron, in the course of his animated conversation with +Mrs. Willoughby, and in his excited entreaties to her to carry a message +up to the invalid, he had turned round with his back to the door. It was +about the time that Lady Dalrymple had begun to beat a retreat. As she +advanced the Baron saw her, and, with his usual politeness, moved ever +so far to one side, bowing low as he did so. Lady Dalrymple passed, the +Baron raised himself, and as Mrs. Willoughby was yet speaking, and had +just reached the exclamation which concluded her last remark, he was +astounded by the sudden appearance of Minnie herself at the door.</p> + +<p>The effect of this sudden appearance was overwhelming. Mrs. +Willoughby stood thunder-struck, and the Baron utterly bewildered. The +latter recovered his faculties first. It was just as Lady Dalrymple was +passing out. With a bound he sprang toward Minnie, and caught her in his +arms, uttering a series of inarticulate cries.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Min! and you did come down, did you? And you couldn't stay up +there, could you? I wanted to send a message to you. Poor little Min! +you're so weak. Is it any thing serious? Oh, my darling little Min! But +sit down on this here seat. Don't stand; you're too weak. Why didn't you +send, and I'd have carried you down? But tell me now, honest, wasn't it +<i>me</i> that brought this on? Never mind, I'll never leave you +again."</p> + +<p>This is the style which the gallant Baron adopted to express his +sentiments concerning Minnie; and the result was that he succeeded in +giving utterance to words that were quite as incoherent as any that +Minnie herself, in her most rambling moods, had ever uttered.</p> + +<p>The Baron now gave himself up to joy. He +<span class = "pagenum">67</span> +took no notice of any body. He sat by Minnie's side on a sofa, and +openly held her hand. The Reverend Saul Tozer looked on with an +approving smile, and surveyed the scene like a father. Mrs. Willoughby's +soul was on fire with indignation at Minnie's folly and the Baron's +impudence. She was also indignant that her little conventional +falsehoods had been suddenly disproved by the act of Minnie herself. Yet +she did not know what to say, and so she went to a chair, and flung +herself into it in fierce anger.</p> + +<p>As for Minnie herself, she had come down to the Baron, and appeared +rather to enjoy the situation. She talked about Rome and Naples, and +asked him all about himself, and the Baron explained his whole situation +down to the minutest detail. She was utterly indifferent to her sister. +Once or twice the Baron made a move to go, but did not succeed. He +finally settled himself down apparently for the rest of the day; but +Mrs. Willoughby at last interposed. She walked forward. She took +Minnie's hand, and spoke to her in a tone which she but seldom used.</p> + +<p>"You shall <i>not</i> stay here any longer!" she cried. "Come."</p> + +<p>And Minnie obeyed at once.</p> + +<p>The Baron insisted on a tender adieu. Mrs. Willoughby stood by, with +flashing eyes and heaving breast.</p> + +<p>Minnie followed her up stairs in silence.</p> + +<p>"You silly child!" she cried. "Are you mad? What made you come down? +You broke your promise!"</p> + +<p>"Well—well—I couldn't help it, and he is so deliciously +rude; and do you know, Kitty dearest, I really begin to feel quite fond +of him."</p> + +<p>"Now listen, child. You shall never see him again."</p> + +<p>"I don't see why not," whimpered Minnie.</p> + +<p>"And I'm going to telegraph to papa. I wouldn't have the +responsibility of you another week for the world."</p> + +<p>"Now, Kitty, you're horrid."</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXVII" id = "chapXVII"> +CHAPTER XVII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE BARON'S ASSAULTS.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">On</span> the eventful afternoon when the +Baron had effected an entrance into the heart of the enemy's country, +another caller had come there—one equally intent and equally +determined, but not quite so aggressive. This was the Count Girasole. +The same answer was given to him which had been given to the Baron, but +with far different effect. The Baron had carelessly brushed the slight +obstacle aside. To the Count it was an impenetrable barrier. It was a +bitter disappointment, too; for he had been filled with the brightest +hopes and expectations by the reception with which he had met on his +last visit. That reception had made him believe that they had changed +their sentiments +<span class = "pagenum">67b</span> +and their attitude toward him, and that for the future he would be +received in the same fashion. He had determined, therefore, to make the +most of this favorable change, and so he at once repeated his call. This +time, however, his hopes were crushed. What made it worse, he had seen +the entrance of the Baron and the Reverend Saul, and knew by this that +instead of being a favored mortal in the eyes of these ladies, he was +really, in their estimation, placed below these comparative strangers. +By the language of Lord Hawbury on his previous call, he knew that the +acquaintance of the Baron with Mrs. Willoughby was but recent.</p> + +<p>The disappointment of the Count filled him with rage, and revived all +his old feelings and plans and projects. The Count was not one who could +suffer in silence. He was a crafty, wily, subtle, scheming Italian, +whose fertile brain was full of plans to achieve his desires, and who +preferred to accomplish his aims by a tortuous path, rather than by a +straight one. This repulse revived old projects, and he took his +departure with several little schemes in his mind, some of which, at +least, were destined to bear fruit afterward.</p> + +<p>On the following day the Baron called once more. The ladies in the +mean time had talked over the situation, but were unable to see what +they were to do with a man who insisted on forcing his way into their +house. Their treatment would have been easy enough if it had not been +for Minnie. She insisted that they should not be unkind to him. He had +saved her life, she said, and she could not treat him with rudeness. +Lady Dalrymple was in despair, and Mrs. Willoughby at her wit's end, +while Ethel, to whom the circumstance was made known, was roused by it +from her sadness, and tried to remonstrate with Minnie. All her efforts, +however, were as vain as those of her friends. Minnie could not be +induced to take any decided stand. She insisted on seeing him whenever +he called, on the ground that it would be unkind not to.</p> + +<p>"And will you insist on seeing Girasole also?" asked Mrs. +Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"I don't know. I'm awfully sorry for him," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Well, then, Captain Kirby will be here next. Of course you will see +him?"</p> + +<p>"I suppose so," said Minnie, resignedly.</p> + +<p>"And how long do you think this sort of thing can go on? They'll +meet, and blood will be shed."</p> + +<p>"Oh dear! I'm afraid so."</p> + +<p>"Then I'm not going to allow it. I've telegraphed to papa. He'll see +whether you are going to have your own way or not."</p> + +<p>"I'm sure I don't see what dear papa can do."</p> + +<p>"He won't let you see those horrid men."</p> + +<p>"He won't be cruel enough to lock me up in the house. I do wish he +would come and take me away. I don't want them. They're all horrid."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">68</span> + +<p>"This last one—this Gunn—is the most terrible man I ever +saw."</p> + +<p>"Oh, Kitty dearest! How <i>can</i> you say so? Why, his rudeness and +violence are perfectly irresistible. He's charming. He bullies one so +deliciously."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby at this turned away in despair.</p> + +<p>Minnie's very peculiar situation was certainly one which required a +speedy change. The forced entrance of the Baron had thrown consternation +into the family. Ethel herself had been roused, and took a part in the +debate. She began to see Minnie in a new light, and Hawbury's attention +to her began to assume the appearance of a very mournful joke. To her +mind Minnie was now the subject of desperate attention from five +men.</p> + +<p>Thus:</p> + +<p>1. Lord Hawbury.</p> + +<p>2. Count Girasole.</p> + +<p>3. Scone Dacres.</p> + +<p>4. Baron Atramonte.</p> + +<p>5. Captain Kirby, of whom Mrs. Willoughby had just told her.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">68b</span> + +<p>And of these, four had saved her life, and consequently had the +strongest possible claims on her.</p> + +<p>And the only satisfaction which Ethel could gain out of this was the +thought that Hawbury, at least, had not saved Minnie's life.</p> + +<p>And now to proceed.</p> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic068.png" width = "339" height = "454" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"MIN, IT'S ME!"</p> + +<p>The Baron called, as has been said, on the following day. This time +he did not bring the Reverend Saul with him. He wished to see Minnie +alone, and felt the presence of third persons to be rather +unpleasant.</p> + +<p>On reaching the place he was told, as before, that the ladies were +not at home.</p> + +<p>Now the Baron remembered that on the preceding day the servant had +said the same, while all the time the ladies were home. He was +charitably inclined to suppose that it was a mistake, and not a +deliberate lie; and, as he was in a frame of good-will to mankind, he +adopted this first theory.</p> + +<p>"All right, young man," said he; "but as you lied +yesterday—under a mistake—I prefer seeing for myself +to-day."</p> + +<p>So the Baron brushed by the servant, and went in. He entered the +room. No one was there. He waited a little while, and thought. He was +too impatient to wait long. He could not trust these lying servants. So +he determined to try for himself. Her room was up stairs, somewhere in +the story above.</p> + +<p>So he went out of the room, and up the stairs, until his head was on +a level with the floor of the story above. Then he called:</p> + +<p>"<i>Min!</i>"</p> + +<p>No answer.</p> + +<p>"<span class = "smallcaps">Min!</span>" in a louder voice.</p> + +<p>No answer.</p> + +<p>"MIN! it's ME!" still louder.</p> + +<p>No answer.</p> + +<p>"<i>MIN!</i>" a perfect yell.</p> + +<p>At this last shout there was a response. One of the doors opened, and +a lady made her appearance, while at two other doors appeared +<span class = "pagenum">69</span> +two maids. The lady was young and beautiful, and her face was stern, and +her dark eyes looked indignantly toward the Baron.</p> + +<p>"Who are you?" she asked, abruptly; "and what do you want?"</p> + +<p>"Me? I'm the Baron Atramonte; and I want Min. Don't you know where +she is?"</p> + +<p>"Who?"</p> + +<p>"Min."</p> + +<p>"Min?" asked the other, in amazement.</p> + +<p>"Yes. My Min—Minnie, you know. Minnie Fay."</p> + +<p>At this the lady looked at the Baron with utter horror.</p> + +<p>"I want her."</p> + +<p>"She's not at home," said the lady.</p> + +<p>"Well, really, it's too bad. I must see her. Is she out?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Really? Honor bright now?"</p> + +<p>The lady retired and shut the door.</p> + +<p>"Well, darn it all, you needn't be so peppery," muttered the Baron. +"I didn't say any thing. I only asked a civil question. Out, hey? Well, +she must be this time. If she'd been in, she'd have made her appearance. +Well, I'd best go out and hunt her up. They don't seem to me altogether +so cordial as I'd like to have them. They're just a leetle too +'ristocratic."</p> + +<p>With these observations to himself, the Baron descended the stairs, +and made his way to the door. Here he threw an engaging smile upon the +servant, and made a remark which set the other on the broad grin for the +remainder of the day. After this the Baron took his departure.</p> + +<p>The Baron this time went to some stables, and reappeared in a short +time mounted upon a gallant steed, and careering down the Corso. In due +time he reached the Piazza del Popolo, and then he ascended the Pincian +Hill. Here he rode about for some time, and finally his perseverance was +rewarded. He was looking down from the summit of the hill upon the +Piazza below, when he caught sight of a barouche, in which were three +ladies. One of these sat on the front seat, and her white face and short +golden hair seemed to indicate to him the one he sought.</p> + +<p>In an instant he put spurs to his horse, and rode down the hill as +quick as possible, to the great alarm of the crowds who were going up +and down. In a short time he had caught up with the carriage. He was +right. It was the right one, and Minnie was there, together with Lady +Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby. The ladies, on learning of his approach, +exhibited no emotion. They were prepared for this, and resigned. They +had determined that Minnie should have no more interviews with him +indoors; and since they could not imprison her altogether, they would +have to submit for the present to his advances. But they were rapidly +becoming desperate.</p> + +<p>Lord Hawbury was riding by the carriage as the Baron came up.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">69b</span> + +<p>"Hallo!" said he to the former. "How do? and <i>how</i> are you all? +Why, I've been hunting all over creation. Well, Minnie, how goes it? +Feel lively? That's right. Keep out in the open air. Take all the +exercise you can, and eat as hard as you can. You live too quiet as a +general thing, and want to knock around more. But we'll fix all that, +won't we, Min, before a month of Sundays?"</p> + +<p>The advent of the Baron in this manner, and his familiar address to +Minnie, filled Hawbury with amazement. He had been surprised at finding +him with the ladies on the previous day, but there was nothing in his +demeanor which was at all remarkable. Now, however, he noticed the very +great familiarity of his tone and manner toward Minnie, and was +naturally amazed. The Baron had not confided to him his secret, and he +could not understand the cause of such intimacy between the +representatives of such different classes. He therefore listened with +inexpressible astonishment to the Baron's language, and to Minnie's +artless replies.</p> + +<p>Minnie was sitting on the front seat of the barouche, and was alone +in that seat. As the gentlemen rode on each side of the carriage her +face was turned toward them. Hawbury rode back, so that he was beside +Lady Dalrymple; but the Baron rode forward, on the other side, so as to +bring himself as near to Minnie as possible. The Baron was exceedingly +happy. His happiness showed itself in the flush of his face, in the glow +of his eyes, and in the general exuberance and all-embracing swell of +his manner. His voice was loud, his gestures demonstrative, and his +remarks were addressed by turns to each one in the company. The others +soon gave up the attempt to talk, and left it all to the Baron. Lady +Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby exchanged glances of despair. Hawbury +still looked on in surprise, while Minnie remained perfectly calm, +perfectly self-possessed, and conversed with her usual simplicity.</p> + +<p>As the party thus rode on they met a horseman, who threw a rapid +glance over all of them. It was Girasole. The ladies bowed, and Mrs. +Willoughby wished that he had come a little before, so that he could +have taken the place beside the carriage where the Baron now was. But +the place was now appropriated, and there was no chance for the Count. +Girasole threw a dark look over them, which rested more particularly on +Hawbury. Hawbury nodded lightly at the Count, and didn't appear to take +any further notice of him. All this took up but a few moments, and the +Count passed on.</p> + +<p>Shortly after they met another horseman. He sat erect, pale, sad, +with a solemn, earnest glow in his melancholy eyes. Minnie's back was +turned toward him, so that she could not see his face, but his eyes were +fixed upon Mrs. Willoughby. She looked back at him and bowed, as did +also Lady Dalrymple. He took off his hat, and the carriage rolled past. +Then he turned and looked after it, bareheaded, and Minnie caught sight +of him, and smiled and +<span class = "pagenum">70</span> +bowed. And then in a few moments more the crowd swallowed up Scone +Dacres.</p> + +<p>The Baron thus enjoyed himself in a large, exuberant fashion, and +monopolized the conversation in a large, exuberant way. He outdid +himself. He confided to the ladies his plans for the regeneration of the +Roman Church and the Roman State. He told stories of his adventures in +the Rocky Mountains. He mentioned the state of his finances, and his +prospects for the future. He was as open, as free, and as communicative +as if he had been at home, with fond sisters and admiring brothers +around him. The ladies were disgusted at it all; and by the ladies I +mean only Mrs. Willoughby and Lady Dalrymple. For Minnie was +not—she actually listened in delight. It was not conventional. +Very well. Neither was the Baron. And for that matter, neither was she. +He was a child of nature. So was she. His rudeness, his aggressiveness, +his noise, his talkativeness, his egotism, his confidences about +himself—all these did not make him so very disagreeable to her as +to her sister and aunt.</p> + +<p>So Minnie treated the Baron with the utmost complaisance, and Hawbury +was surprised, and Mrs. Willoughby and Lady Dalrymple were disgusted; +but the Baron was delighted, and his soul was filled with perfect joy. +Too soon for him was this drive over. But the end came, and they reached +the hotel. Hawbury left them, but the Baron lingered. The spot was too +sweet, the charm too dear—he could not tear himself away.</p> + +<p>In fact, he actually followed the ladies into the house.</p> + +<p>"I think I'll just make myself comfortable in here, Min, till you +come down," said the Baron. And with these words he walked into the +reception-room, where he selected a place on a sofa, and composed +himself to wait patiently for Minnie to come down.</p> + +<p>So he waited, and waited, and waited—but Minnie did not come. +At last he grew impatient. He walked out, and up the stairs, and +listened.</p> + +<p>He heard ladies' voices.</p> + +<p>He spoke.</p> + +<p>"<i>Min!</i>"</p> + +<p>No answer.</p> + +<p>"<span class = "smallcaps">Min!</span>" louder.</p> + +<p>No answer.</p> + +<p>"MIN! HALLO-O-O-O!"</p> + +<p>No answer.</p> + +<p>"<i>MIN!</i>" a perfect shout.</p> + +<p>At this a door was opened violently, and Mrs. Willoughby walked out. +Her cheeks were flushed, and her eyes glanced fire.</p> + +<p>"Sir," she said, "this is intolerable! You must be intoxicated. Go +away at once, or I shall certainly have you turned out of the +house."</p> + +<p>And saying this she went back, shut the door, and locked it.</p> + +<p>The Baron was thunder-struck. He had never been treated so in his +life. He was cut to the heart. His feelings were deeply wounded.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">70b</span> + +<p>"Darn it!" he muttered. "What's all this for? I ain't been doing any +thing."</p> + +<p>He walked out very thoughtfully. He couldn't understand it at all. He +was troubled for some time. But at last his buoyant spirit rose superior +to this temporary depression. To-morrow would explain all, he thought. +Yes, to-morrow would make it all right. To-morrow he would see Min, and +get her to tell him what in thunder the row was. She'd have to tell, for +he could never find out. So he made up his mind to keep his soul in +patience.</p> + +<p>That evening Hawbury was over at the Baron's quarters, by special +invitation, and the Baron decided to ask his advice. So in the course of +the evening, while in the full, easy, and confidential mood that arises +out of social intercourse, he told Hawbury his whole +story—beginning with the account of his first meeting with Minnie, +and his rescue of her, and her acceptance of him, down to this very day, +when he had been so terribly snubbed by Mrs. Willoughby. To all this +Hawbury listened in amazement. It was completely new to him. He wondered +particularly to find another man who had saved the life of this quiet, +timid little girl.</p> + +<p>The Baron asked his advice, but Hawbury declined giving any. He said +he couldn't advise any man in a love-affair. Every man must trust to +himself. No one's advice could be of any avail. Hawbury, in fact, was +puzzled, but he said the best he could. The Baron himself was fully of +Hawbury's opinion. He swore that it was truth, and declared the man that +followed another's advice in a love-affair was a "darned fool that +didn't deserve to win his gal."</p> + +<p>There followed a general conversation on things of a different kind. +The Baron again discoursed on church and state. He then exhibited some +curiosities. Among other things a skull. He used it to hold his tobacco. +He declared that it was the skull of an ancient Roman. On the inside was +a paper pasted there, on which he had written the following:</p> + +<div class = "song"> <!-- pairs of lines --> + +<p class = "stanza"> +"Oh, I'm the skull of a Roman bold<br> +That fit in the ancient war;</p> +<p>From East to West I bore the flag<br> +Of S. P. Q. and R.</p> + +<p class = "stanza"> +"In East and West, and North and South,<br> +We made the nations fear us—</p> +<p>Both Nebuchadnezzar and Hannibal,<br> +And Pharaoh too, and Pyrrhus.</p> + +<p class = "stanza"> +"We took their statutes from the Greeks,<br> +And lots of manuscripts too;</p> +<p>We set adrift on his world-wide tramp<br> +The original wandering Jew.</p> + +<p class = "stanza"> +"But at last the beggarly Dutchman came,<br> +With his lager and sauerkraut;</p> +<p>And wherever that beggarly Dutchman went<br> +He made a terrible rout.</p> + +<p class = "stanza"> +"Wo ist der Deutscher's Vaterland?<br> +Is it near the ocean wild?</p> +<p>Is it where the feathery palm-trees grow?<br> +Not there, not there, my child.</p> + +<p class = "stanza"> +"But it's somewhere down around the Rhine;<br> +And now that Bismarck's come,</p> +<p>Down goes Napoleon to the ground,<br> +And away goes the Pope from Rome!"</p> +</div> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + + +<span class = "pagenum">71</span> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXVIII" id = "chapXVIII"> +CHAPTER XVIII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +"HE SAVED MY LIFE."</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">"I can't</span> bear this any longer!" +exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby. "Here you are getting into all sorts of +difficulties, each one worse than the other. I'm sure I don't see why +you should. You're very quiet, Minnie dearest, but you have more +unpleasant adventures than any person I ever heard of. You're run away +with on horseback, you're shipwrecked, you're swept down a precipice by +an avalanche, and you fall into the crater of a burning volcano. Every +time there is some horrid man who saves you, and then proposes. As for +you, you accept them all with equal readiness, one after another, and +what is worse, you won't give any of them up. I've asked you explicitly +which of them you'll give up, and you actually refuse to say. My dear +child, what are you thinking of? You can't have them all. You can't have +any of them. None of them are agreeable to your family. They're horrid. +What are you going to do? Oh, how I wish you had dear mamma to take care +of you! But she is in a better world. And here is poor dear papa who +can't come. How shocked he would be if he knew all. What is worst, here +is that dreadful American savage, who is gradually killing me. He +certainly will be my death. What <i>am</i> I to do, dear? Can't you +possibly show a little sense yourself—only a little, +dear—and have some consideration for your poor sister? Even Ethel +worries about you, though she has troubles of her own, poor darling; and +aunty is really quite ill with anxiety. What <i>are</i> we going to do? +I know one thing. <i>I'm</i> not going to put up with it. My mind is +made up. I'll leave Rome at once, and go home and tell papa."</p> + +<p>"Well, you needn't scold so," said Minnie. "It's my trouble. I can't +help it. They would come. I'm sure <i>I</i> don't know what to do."</p> + +<p>"Well, you needn't be so awfully kind to them all. That's what +encourages them so. It's no use for me to try to keep them away if you +make them all so welcome. Now there's that dreadful Italian. I'm +positive he's going to get up some unpleasant plot. These Italians are +so very revengeful. And he thinks you're so fond of him, and I'm so +opposed. And he's right, too. You always act as if you're fond of him, +and all the rest. As to that terrible American savage, I'm afraid to +think of him; I positively am."</p> + +<p>"Well, you needn't be so awfully unkind to him. He saved my +life."</p> + +<p>"That's no reason why he should deprive me of mine, which he will do +if he goes on so much longer."</p> + +<p>"You were very, very rude to him, Kitty," said Minnie, severely, "and +very, very unkind—"</p> + +<p>"I intended to be so."</p> + +<p>"I really felt like crying, and running out and explaining +things."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">71b</span> + +<p>"I know you did, and ran back and locked the door. Oh, you wretched +little silly goose, what <i>am</i> I <i>ever</i> to do with such a child +as you are! You're really not a bit better than a baby."</p> + +<p>This conversation took place on the day following the Baron's last +eventful call. Poor Mrs. Willoughby was driven to desperation, and lay +awake all night, trying to think of some plan to baffle the enemy, but +was unsuccessful; and so she tried once more to have some influence over +Minnie by a remonstrance as sharp as she could give.</p> + +<p>"He's an American savage. I believe he's an Indian."</p> + +<p>"I'm sure I don't see any thing savage in him. He's as gentle and as +kind as he can be. And he's so awfully fond of me."</p> + +<p>"Think how he burst in here, forcing his way in, and taking +possession of the house. And then poor dear aunty! Oh, how she +<i>was</i> shocked and horrified!"</p> + +<p>"It's because he is so <i>awfully</i> fond of me, and was so +perfectly <i>crazy</i> to see me."</p> + +<p>"And then, just as I was beginning to persuade him to go away +quietly, to think of you coming down!"</p> + +<p>"Well, I couldn't bear to have him so sad, when he saved my life, and +so I just thought I'd show myself, so as to put him at ease."</p> + +<p>"A pretty way to show yourself—to let a great, horrid man treat +you so."</p> + +<p>"Well, that's what they <i>all</i> do," said Minnie, plaintively. +"I'm sure <i>I</i> can't help it."</p> + +<p>"Oh dear! was there ever such a child! Why, Minnie darling, you must +know that such things are very, very ill-bred, and very, very indelicate +and unrefined. And then, think how he came forcing himself upon us when +we were driving. Couldn't he see that he wasn't wanted? No, he's a +savage. And then, how he kept giving us all a history of his life. Every +body could hear him, and people stared so that it was really quite +shocking."</p> + +<p>"Oh, that's because he is so very, very frank. He has none of the +deceit of society, you know, Kitty darling."</p> + +<p>"Deceit of society! I should think not. Only think how he acted +yesterday—forcing his way in and rushing up stairs. Why, it's +actually quite frightful. He's like a madman. We will have to keep all +the doors locked, and send for the police. Why, do you know, Ethel says +that he was here before, running about and shouting in the same way: +'Min!' 'Min!' 'Min!'—that's what the horrid wretch calls you +—'Min! it's me.' 'Come, Min!'"</p> + +<p>At this Minnie burst into a peal of merry, musical laughter, and +laughed on till the tears came to her eyes. Her sister looked more +disgusted than ever.</p> + +<p>"He's such a boy," said Minnie; "he's just like a boy. He's so +<i>aw</i>fully funny. If I'm a child, he's a big boy, and the awfullest, +funniest boy I ever saw. And then he's <i>so</i> fond of me. Why, he +worships me. Oh, it's awfully nice."</p> + +<p>"A boy! A beast, you mean—a horrid savage. +<span class = "pagenum">72</span> +What <i>can</i> I do? I must send for a policeman. I'll certainly have +the doors all locked. And then we'll all be prisoners."</p> + +<p>"Well, then, it'll all be your own fault, for <i>I</i> don't want to +have any doors locked."</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" sighed her sister.</p> + +<p>"Well, I don't. And I think you're very unkind."</p> + +<p>"Why, you silly child, he'd come here some day, carry you off, and +make you marry him."</p> + +<p>"Well, I do wish he would," said Minnie, gravely. "I wish somebody +would, for then it would put a stop to all this worry, and I really +don't know what else ever will. Do <i>you</i>, now, Kitty darling?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby turned away with a gesture of despair.</p> + +<p>An hour or two after some letters were brought in, one of which was +addressed to</p> + +<p><span class = "pad"> </span><span class = "smallcaps">Miss +Fay</span>,<br> +<span class = "pad"> </span><i>Poste Restante</i>,<br> +<span class = "pad"> </span><i>Roma</i>.</p> + +<p>Minnie opened this, and looked over it with a troubled air. Then she +spoke to her sister, and they both went off to Minnie's room.</p> + +<p>"Who do you think this is from?" she asked.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I don't know! Of course it's some more trouble."</p> + +<p>"It's from Captain Kirby."</p> + +<p>"Oh, of course! And of course he's here in Rome?"</p> + +<p>"No, he isn't."</p> + +<p>"What! Not yet?"</p> + +<p>"No; but he wrote this from London. He has been to the house, and +learned that we had gone to Italy. He says he has sent off letters to +me, directed to every city in Italy, so that I may be sure to get it. +Isn't that good of him?"</p> + +<p>"Well?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, repressing an exclamation of +vexation.</p> + +<p>"Well, he says that in three days he will leave, and go first to +Rome, as he thinks we will be most likely to be there this season. And +so, you see, he's coming on; and he will be here in three days, you +know."</p> + +<p>"Minnie," said her sister, after some moments' solemn thought.</p> + +<p>"Well, Kitty darling?"</p> + +<p>"Do you ever think?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know."</p> + +<p>"Would you like one of these gentlemen of yours to blow one of the +others' brains out, or stab him, or any thing of that sort?"</p> + +<p>"How shocking you are, Kitty dear! What a dreadful question!"</p> + +<p>"Well, understand me now. One of them <i>will</i> do that. There will +be trouble, and your name will be associated with it."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Minnie, "I know who <i>won't</i> be shot."</p> + +<p>"Who?"</p> + +<p>"Why, Rufus K. Gunn," said she, in the funny, prim way in which she +always pronounced that name. "If he finds it out, he'll drive all the +others away."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">72b</span> + +<p>"And would you like that?"</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, he's awfully fond of me, and he's so like a boy: and +if I'm such a child, I could do better with a man, you know, that's like +a boy, you know, than—than—"</p> + +<p>"Nonsense! He's a madman, and you're a simpleton, you little +goose."</p> + +<p>"Well, then, we must be well suited to one another," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Now, child, listen," said Mrs. Willoughby, firmly. "I intend to put +a stop to this. I have made up my mind positively to leave Rome, and +take you home to papa. I'll tell him all about it, put you under his +care, and have no more responsibility with you. I think he'd better send +you back to school. I've been too gentle. You need a firm hand. I'll be +firm for a few days, till you can go to papa. You need not begin to cry. +It's for your own good. If you're indulged any more, you'll simply go to +ruin."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby's tone was different from usual, and Minnie was +impressed by it. She saw that her sister was resolved. So she stole up +to her and twined her arms about her and kissed her.</p> + +<p>"There, there," said her sister, kissing her again, "don't look so +sad, Minnie darling. It's for your own good. We must go away, or else +you'll have another of those dreadful people. You must trust to me now, +dearest, and not interfere with me in any way."</p> + +<p>"Well, well, you mustn't be unkind to poor Rufus K. Gunn," said +Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Unkind? Why, we won't be any thing to him at all."</p> + +<p>"And am I never to—to—see him again?"</p> + +<p>"No!" said her sister, firmly.</p> + +<p>Minnie started, and looked at Mrs. Willoughby, and saw in her face a +fixed resolution.</p> + +<p>"No, never!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby. "I am going to take you back +to England. I'm afraid to take any railroad or steamboat. I'll hire a +carriage, and we'll all go in a quiet way to Florence. Then we can take +the railroad to Leghorn, and go home by the way of Marseilles. No one +will know that we've gone away. They'll think we have gone on an +excursion. Now we'll go out driving this morning, and this afternoon we +must keep the outer door locked, and not let any one in. I suppose there +is no danger of meeting him in the morning. He must be on duty +then."</p> + +<p>"But mayn't I see him at all before we go?"</p> + +<p>"No!"</p> + +<p>"Just once—only once?"</p> + +<p>"No, not once. You've seen that horrid man for the last time."</p> + +<p>Minnie again looked at her sister, and again read her resolution in +her face. She turned away, her head dropped, a sob escaped from her, and +then she burst into tears.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby left the room.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<span class = "pagenum">73</span> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXIX" id = "chapXIX"> +CHAPTER XIX.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +JEALOUSY.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Lord</span> Hawbury had come to Rome for +the sole purpose of watching over his friend Scone Dacres. But he had +not found it so easy to do so. His friend kept by himself more than he +used to, and for several days Hawbury had seen nothing of him. Once +while with the ladies he had met him, and noticed the sadness and the +gloom of his brow. He saw by this that he was still a prey to those +feelings the exhibition of which had alarmed him at Naples, and made him +resolve to accompany him here.</p> + +<p>A few days afterward, while Hawbury was in his room, his friend +entered. Hawbury arose and greeted him with unfeigned joy.</p> + +<p>"Well, old man," he said, "you've kept yourself close, too. What have +you been doing with yourself? I've only had one glimpse of you for an +age. Doing Rome, hey? Antiquities, arts, churches, palaces, and all that +sort of thing, I suppose. Come now, old boy, sit down and give an +account of yourself. Have a weed? Here's Bass in prime order. Light up, +my dear fellow, and let me look at you as you compose your manly form +for a friendly smoke. And don't speak till you feel inclined."</p> + +<p>Dacres took his seat with a melancholy smile, and selecting a cigar, +lighted it, and smoked in silence for some time.</p> + +<p>"Who was that Zouave fellow?" he asked at length: "the fellow that I +saw riding by the carriage the other day?"</p> + +<p>"That—oh, an old friend of mine. He's an American named Gunn. +He's joined the Papal Zouaves from some whim, and a deuced good thing it +is for them to get hold of such a man. I happened to call one day, and +found him with the ladies."</p> + +<p>"The ladies—ah!" and Dacres's eyes lighted up with a bad, hard +light. "I suppose he's another of those precious cavaliers—the +scum of all lands—that dance attendance on my charming wife."</p> + +<p>"Oh, see here now, my dear fellow, really now," said Hawbury, "none +of that, you know. This fellow is a friend of <i>mine</i>, and one of +the best fellows I ever saw. You'd like him, old chap. He'd suit +you."</p> + +<p>"Yes, and suit my wife better," said Dacres, bitterly.</p> + +<p>"Oh, come now, really, my dear boy, you're completely out. He don't +know your wife at all. It's the other one, you know. Don't be jealous, +now, if I tell you."</p> + +<p>"Jealous!"</p> + +<p>"Yes. I know your weakness, you know; but this is an old affair. I +don't want to violate confidence, but—"</p> + +<p>Dacres looked hard at his friend and breathed heavily. He was +evidently much excited.</p> + +<p>"But what?" he said, hoarsely.</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, it's an old affair. It's the young one, you +know—Miss Fay. He rather affects her, you know. That's about +it."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">73b</span> + +<p>"Miss Fay?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; your child-angel, you know. But it's an older affair than +yours; it is, really; so don't be giving way, man. Besides, his claims +on her are as great as yours; yes, greater too. By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Miss Fay! Oh, is that all?" said Dacres, who, with a sigh of +infinite relief, shook off all his late excitement, and became cool once +more.</p> + +<p>Hawbury noted this very thoughtfully.</p> + +<p>"You see," said Dacres, "that terrible wife of mine is so cursedly +beautiful and fascinating, and so infernally fond of admiration, that +she keeps no end of fellows tagging at her heels. And so I didn't know +but that this was some new admirer. Oh, she's a deep one! Her new style, +which she has been cultivating for ten years, has made her look like an +angel of light. Why, there's the very light of heaven in her eyes, and +in her face there is nothing, I swear, but gentleness and purity and +peace. Oh, had she but been what she now seems! Oh, if even now I could +but believe this, I would even now fling my memories to the winds, and +I'd lie down in the dust and let her trample on me, if she would only +give me that tender and gentle love that now lurks in her face. Good +Heavens! can such a change be possible? No; it's impossible! It can't +be! Don't I know her? Can't I remember her? Is my memory all a dream? +No, it's real; and it's marked deep by this scar that I wear. Never till +that scar is obliterated can that woman change."</p> + +<p>Dacres had been speaking, as he often did now, half to himself; and +as he ended he rubbed his hand over the place where the scar lay, as +though to soothe the inflammation that arose from the rush of angry +blood to his head.</p> + +<p>"Well, dear boy, I can only say I wish from my heart that her nature +was like her face. She's no favorite of mine, for your story has made me +look on her with your eyes, and I never have spoken to her except in the +most distant way; but I must say I think her face has in it a good deal +of that gentleness which you mention. Miss Fay treats her quite like an +elder sister, and is deuced fond of her, too. I can see that. So she +can't be very fiendish to her. Like loves like, you know, and the one +that the child-angel loves ought to be a little of an angel herself, +oughtn't she?"</p> + +<p>Dacres was silent for a long time.</p> + +<p>"There's that confounded Italian," said he, "dangling forever at her +heels—the devil that saved her life. He must be her accepted +lover, you know. He goes out riding beside the carriage."</p> + +<p>"Well, really, my dear fellow, she doesn't seem overjoyed by his +attentions."</p> + +<p>"Oh, that's her art. She's so infernally deep. Do you think she'd let +the world see her feelings? Never. Slimy, Sir, and cold and subtle and +venomous and treacherous—a beautiful serpent. Aha! isn't that the +way to hit her off? Yes, a beautiful, malignant, venomous +<span class = "pagenum">74</span> +serpent, with fascination in her eyes, and death and anguish in her +bite. But she shall find out yet that others are not without power. +Confound her!"</p> + +<p>"Well, now, by Jove! old boy, I think the very best thing you can do +is to go away somewhere, and get rid of these troubles."</p> + +<p>"Go away! Can I go away from my own thoughts? Hawbury, the trouble is +in my own heart. I must keep near her. There's that Italian devil. He +shall not have her. I'll watch them, as I have watched them, till I find +a chance for revenge."</p> + +<p>"You have watched them, then?" asked Hawbury, in great surprise.</p> + +<p>"Yes, both of them. I've seen the Italian prowling about where she +lives. I've seen her on her balcony, evidently watching for him."</p> + +<p>"But have you seen any thing more? This is only your fancy."</p> + +<p>"Fancy! Didn't I see her herself standing on the balcony looking +down. I was concealed by the shadow of a fountain, and she couldn't see +me. She turned her face, and I saw it in that soft, sweet, gentle beauty +which she has cultivated so wonderfully. I swear it seemed like the face +of an angel, and I could have worshiped it. If she could have seen my +face in that thick shadow she would have thought I was an adorer of +hers, like the Italian—ha, ha!—instead of a pursuer, and an +enemy."</p> + +<p>"Well, I'll be hanged if I can tell myself which you are, old boy; +but, at any rate, I'm glad to be able to state that your trouble will +soon be over."</p> + +<p>"How's that?"</p> + +<p>"She's going away."</p> + +<p>"Going away!"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"She! going away! where?"</p> + +<p>"Back to England."</p> + +<p>"Back to England! why, she's just come here. What's that for?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know. I only know they're all going home. Well, you know, +holy week's over, and there is no object for them to stay longer."</p> + +<p>"Going away! going away!" replied Dacres, slowly. "Who told you?"</p> + +<p>"Miss Fay."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I don't believe it."</p> + +<p>"There's no doubt about it, my dear boy. Miss Fay told me explicitly. +She said they were going in a carriage by the way of Civita +Castellana."</p> + +<p>"What are they going that way for? What nonsense! I don't believe +it."</p> + +<p>"Oh, it's a fact. Besides, they evidently don't want it to be +known."</p> + +<p>"What's that?" asked Dacres, eagerly.</p> + +<p>"I say they don't seem to want it to be known. Miss Fay told me in +her childish way, and I saw that Mrs. Willoughby looked vexed, and tried +to stop her."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">74b</span> + +<p>"Tried to stop her! Ah! Who were there? Were you calling?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no—it was yesterday morning. I was riding, and, to my +surprise, met them. They were driving—Mrs. Willoughby and Miss +Fay, you know—so I chatted with them a few moments, or rather with +Miss Fay, and hoped I would see them again soon, at some <i>fête</i> or +other, when she told me this."</p> + +<p>"And my wife tried to stop her?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"And looked vexed?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Then it was some secret of <i>hers</i>. <i>She</i> has some reason +for keeping dark. The other has none. Aha! don't I understand her? She +wants to keep it from <i>me</i>. She knows you're my friend, and was +vexed that you should know. Aha! she dreads my presence. She knows I'm +on her track. She wants to get away with her Italian—away from my +sight. Aha! the tables are turned at last. Aha! my lady. Now we'll see. +Now take your Italian and fly, and see how far you can get away from me. +Take him, and see if you can hold him. Aha! my angel face, my mild, soft +eyes of love, but devil's heart—can not I understand it all? I see +through it. I've watched, you. Wait till you see Scone Dacres on your +track!"</p> + +<p>"What's that? You don't really mean it?" cried Hawbury.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I do."</p> + +<p>"Will you follow her?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, I will."</p> + +<p>"What for? For a vague fancy of your jealous mind?"</p> + +<p>"It isn't a fancy; it's a certainty. I've seen the Italian dogging +her, dodging about her house, and riding with her. I've seen her looking +very much as if she were expecting him at her balcony. Is all that +nothing? She's seen me, and feels conscience-stricken, and longs to get +away where she may be free from the terror of my presence. But I'll +track her. I'll strike at her—at her heart, too; for I will strike +through the Italian."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"I will, I swear!" cried Dacres, gloomily.</p> + +<p>"You're mad, Dacres. You imagine all this. You're like a madman in a +dream."</p> + +<p>"It's no dream. I'll follow her. I'll track her."</p> + +<p>"Then, by Jove, you'll have to take me with you, old boy! I see +you're not fit to take care of yourself. I'll have to go and keep you +from harm."</p> + +<p>"You won't keep me from harm, old chap," said Dacres, more gently; +"but I'd be glad if you would go. So come along."</p> + +<p>"I will, by Jove!"</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + +<div class = "null"> +<span class = "pagenum">75</span> +</div> + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic075.png" width = "214" height = "285" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"I WATCHED HIM."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXX" id = "chapXX"> +CHAPTER XX.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE BARON'S WOES.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Dacres</span> was not the only excited +visitor that Hawbury had that day. Before its close another made his +appearance in the person of the Baron.</p> + +<p>"Well, my noble friend," cried Hawbury—"my Baron bold—how +goes it? But, by Jove! what's the matter, my boy? Your brow deep scars +of thunder have intrenched, and care sits on your faded cheek. Pour +forth the mournful tale. I'll sympathize."</p> + +<p>"I swear it's too almighty bad!" cried the Baron.</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"The way I'm getting humbugged."</p> + +<p>"Humbugged! Who's been humbugging you?"</p> + +<p>"Darn me if I know; and that's the worst of it by a thundering +sight."</p> + +<p>"Well, my dear fellow, if I can help you, you'd better let me know +what it's all about."</p> + +<p>"Why, Minnie; that's the row. There ain't another thing on this green +earth that would trouble me for five seconds."</p> + +<p>"Minnie? Oh! And what has happened—a lover's quarrel?"</p> + +<p>"Not a quarrel. <i>She's</i> all right."</p> + +<p>"What is it, then?"</p> + +<p>"Why, she's disappeared."</p> + +<p>"Disappeared! What do you mean by that?"</p> + +<p>"Darn me if I know. I only know this, that they keep their place +bolted and barred, and they've muffled the bell, and there's no servant +to be seen, and I can't find out any thing about them. And it's too +almighty bad. Now isn't it?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">75b</span> + +<p>"It's deuced odd, too—queer, by Jove! I don't understand. Are +you sure they're all locked up?"</p> + +<p>"Course I am."</p> + +<p>"And no servants?"</p> + +<p>"Not a darned servant."</p> + +<p>"Did you ask the concierge?"</p> + +<p>"Course I did; and crossed his palm, too. But he didn't give me any +satisfaction."</p> + +<p>"What did he say?"</p> + +<p>"Why, he said they were at home, for they had been out in the +morning, and had got back again. Well, after that I went back and nearly +knocked the door down. And that was no good; I didn't get a word. The +concierge swore they were in, and they wouldn't so much as answer me. +Now I call that too almighty hard, and I'd like to know what in thunder +they all mean by it."</p> + +<p>"By Jove! odd, too."</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, I thought after a while that it would be all +explained the next day; so I went home and waited, and came back the +next afternoon. I tried it over again. Same result. I spoke to the +concierge again, and he swore again that they were all in. They had been +out in the morning, he said, and looked well. They had come home by +noon, and had gone to their rooms. Well, I really did start the door +that time, but didn't get any answer for my pains."</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Well, I was pretty hard up, I tell you. But I wasn't going to give +up. So I staid there, and began a siege. I crossed the concierge's palm +again, and was in and out all night. Toward morning I took a nap in his +chair. He thought it was some government business or other, and assisted +me all he could. I didn't see any thing at all though, except an +infernal Italian—a fellow that came calling the first day I was +there, and worked himself in between me and Min. He was prowling about +there, with another fellow, and stared hard at me. I watched him, and +said nothing, for I wanted to find out his little game. He's up to +something, I swear. When he saw I was on the ground, though, he beat a +retreat.</p> + +<p>"Well, I staid all night, and the next morning watched again. I +didn't knock. It wasn't a bit of use—not a darned bit.</p> + +<p>"Well, about nine o'clock the door opened, and I saw some one looking +out very cautiously. In a minute I was standing before her, and held out +my hand to shake hers. It was the old lady. But she didn't shake hands. +She looked at me quite coolly.</p> + +<p>"'Good-morning, ma'am,' said I, in quite a winning voice. +'Good-morning, ma'am.'</p> + +<p>"'Good-morning,' she said.</p> + +<p>"'I come to see Minnie,' said I.</p> + +<p>"'To see Minnie!' said she: and then she told me she wasn't up.</p> + +<p>"'Ain't up?' said I; 'and it so bright and early! Why, what's got +her? Well, you just +<span class = "pagenum">76</span> +go and tell her <i>I'm</i> here, and I'll just step inside and wait till +she comes down,' said I.</p> + +<p>"But the old lady didn't budge.</p> + +<p>"'I'm not a servant,' she said, very stiff; 'I'm her aunt, and her +guardian, and I allow no messages to pass between her and strange +gentlemen.'</p> + +<p>"'Strange gentlemen!' I cried. 'Why, ain't I engaged to her?'</p> + +<p>"'I don't know you,' says she.</p> + +<p>"'Wasn't I introduced to you?' says I.</p> + +<p>"'No,' says she; 'I don't know you.'</p> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic076.png" width = "346" height = "458" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"BUT I SAVED HER LIFE."</p> + +<p>"'But I'm engaged to Minnie,' says I.</p> + +<p>"'I don't recognize you,' says she. 'The family know nothing about +you; and my niece is a silly girl, who is going back to her father, who +will probably send her to school.'</p> + +<p>"'But I saved her life,' says I.</p> + +<p>"'That's very possible,' says she; 'many persons have done so; yet +that gives you no right to annoy her; and you shall <i>not</i> annoy +her. Your engagement is an absurdity. The child herself is an absurdity. +<i>You</i> are an absurdity. Was it not you who was creating such a +frightful disturbance here yesterday? +<span class = "pagenum">76b</span> +Let me inform you, Sir, that if you repeat it, you will be handed over +to the police. The police would certainly have been called yesterday had +we not wished to avoid hurting your feelings. We now find that you have +no feelings to hurt.'</p> + +<p>"'Very well, ma'am,' says I; 'these are your views; but as you are +not Minnie, I don't accept them. I won't retire from the field till I +hear a command to that effect from Minnie herself. I allow no relatives +to stand between me and my love. Show me Minnie, and let me hear what +she has to say. That's all I ask, and that's fair and square.'</p> + +<p>"'You shall not see her at all,' says the old lady, quite mild; 'not +at all. You must not come again, for you will not be admitted. Police +will be here to put you out if you attempt to force an entrance as you +did before.'</p> + +<p>"'Force an entrance!' I cried.</p> + +<p>"'Yes,' she said, 'force an entrance. You did so, and you filled the +whole house with your shouts. Is that to be borne? Not by us, Sir. And +now go, and don't disturb us any more.'</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">77</span> + +<p>"Well, I'll be darned if I ever felt so cut up in my life. The old +lady was perfectly calm and cool; wasn't a bit scared—though there +was no reason why she should be. She just gave it to me that way. But +when she accused me of forcing an entrance and kicking up a row, I was +struck all of a heap and couldn't say a word. <i>Me</i> force an +entrance! <i>Me</i> kick up a row! And in Minnie's house! Why, the old +woman's mad!</p> + +<p>"Well, the old lady shut the door in my face, and I walked off; and +I've been ever since trying to understand it, but I'll be darned if I +can make head or tail of it. The only thing I see is that they're all +keeping Minnie locked up away from me. They don't like me, though why +they don't I can't see; for I'm as good as any body, and I've been +particular about being civil to all of them. Still they don't like me, +and they see that Minnie does, and they're trying to break up the +engagement. But by the living jingo!" and the Baron clinched a +good-sized and very sinewy fist, which he brought down hard on the +table—"by the living jingo, they'll find they can't come it over +<i>me</i>! No, <i>Sir</i>!"</p> + +<p>"Is she fond of you—Miss Fay, I mean?"</p> + +<p>"Fond! Course she is. She dotes on me."</p> + +<p>"Are you sure?"</p> + +<p>"Sure! As sure as I am of my own existence. Why, the way she looks at +me is enough! She has a look of helpless trust, an innocent confidence, +a tender, child-like faith and love, and a beseeching, pleading, +imploring way that tells me she is mine through and through."</p> + +<p>Hawbury was a little surprised. He thought he had heard something +like that before.</p> + +<p>"Oh, well," said he, "that's the chief thing, you know. If you're +sure of the girl's affections, the battle's half won."</p> + +<p>"Half won! Ain't it all won?"</p> + +<p>"Well, not exactly. You see, with us English, there are ever so many +considerations."</p> + +<p>"But with us Americans there is only one consideration, and that is, +Do you love me? Still, if her relatives are particular about dollars, I +can foot up as many thousands as her old man, I dare say; and then, if +they care for rank, why, I'm a Baron!"</p> + +<p>"And what's more, old boy," said Hawbury, earnestly, "if they wanted +a valiant, stout, true, honest, loyal soul, they needn't go further than +Rufus K. Gunn, Baron de Atramonte."</p> + +<p>The Baron's face flushed.</p> + +<p>"Hawbury," said he, "that's good in you. We've tried one another, +haven't we? You're a brick! And I don't need <i>you</i> to tell +<i>me</i> what you think of me. But if you could get a word into the ear +of that cantankerous old lady, and just let her know what <i>you</i> +know about me, it might move her. You see you're after her style, and +I'm not; and she can't see any thing but a man's manner, which, after +all, varies in all countries. Now if you could speak a word for me, +Hawbury—"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">77b</span> + +<p>"By Jove! my dear fellow, I'd be glad to do so—I swear I would; +but you don't appear to know that I won't have the chance. They're all +going to leave Rome to-morrow morning."</p> + +<p>The Baron started as though he had been shot.</p> + +<p>"What!" he cried, hoarsely. "What's that? Leave Rome?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"And to-morrow morning?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; Miss Fay told me herself—"</p> + +<p>"Miss Fay told you herself! By Heaven! What do they mean by that?" +And the Baron sat trembling with excitement.</p> + +<p>"Well, the holy week's over."</p> + +<p>"Darn it all, that's got nothing to do with it! It's me! They're +trying to get her from me! How are they going? Do you know?"</p> + +<p>"They are going in a carriage by the way of Civita Castellana."</p> + +<p>"In a carriage by the way of Civita Castellana! Darn that old idiot +of a woman! what's she up to now? If she's running away from me, she'll +wish herself back before she gets far on that road. Why, there's an +infernal nest of brigands there that call themselves Garibaldians; and, +by thunder, the woman's crazy! They'll be seized and held to +ransom—perhaps worse. Heavens! I'll go mad! I'll run and tell +them. But no; they won't see me. What'll I do? And Minnie! I can't give +her up. She can't give me up. She's a poor, trembling little creature; +her whole life hangs on mine. Separation from me would kill her. Poor +little girl! Separation! By thunder, they shall never separate us! What +devil makes the old woman go by that infernal road? Brigands all the +way! But I'll go after them; I'll follow them. They'll find it almighty +hard work to keep her from me! I'll see her, by thunder! and I'll get +her out of their clutches! I swear I will! I'll bring her back here to +Rome, and I'll get the Pope himself to bind her to me with a knot that +all the old women under heaven can never loosen!"</p> + +<p>"What! You're going? By Jove! that's odd, for I'm going with a friend +on the same road."</p> + +<p>"Good again! Three cheers! And you'll see the old woman, and speak a +good word for me?"</p> + +<p>"If I see her and get a chance, I certainly will, by Jove!"</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXI" id = "chapXXI"> +CHAPTER XXI.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +AN EVENTFUL JOURNEY.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">On</span> the day following two carriages +rolled out of Rome, and took the road toward Florence by the way of +Civita Castellana. One carriage held four ladies; the other one was +occupied by four lady's-maids and the luggage of the party.</p> + +<p>It was early morning, and over the wide Campagna there still hung +mists, which were dissipated gradually as the sun arose. As they +<span class = "pagenum">78</span> +went on the day advanced, and with the departing mists there opened up a +wide view. On either side extended the desolate Campagna, over which +passed lines of ruined aqueducts on their way from the hills to the +city. Here and there crumbling ruins arose above the plain—some +ancient, others medieval, none modern. Before them, in the distance, +arose the Apennines, among which were, here and there, visible the white +outlines of some villa or hamlet.</p> + +<p>For mile after mile they drove on; and the drive soon proved very +monotonous. It was nothing but one long and unvarying plain, with this +only change, that every mile brought them nearer to the mountains. As +the mountains were their only hope, they all looked forward eagerly to +the time when they would arrive there and wind along the road among +them.</p> + +<p>Formerly Mrs. Willoughby alone had been the confidante of Minnie's +secret, but the events of the past few days had disclosed most of her +troubles to the other ladies also, at least as far as the general +outlines were concerned. The consequence was, that they all knew +perfectly well the reason why they were traveling in this way, and +Minnie knew that they all knew it. Yet this unpleasant consciousness did +not in the least interfere with the sweetness of her temper and the +gentleness of her manner. She sat there, with a meek smile and a +resigned air, as though the only part now left her in life was the +patient endurance of her unmerited wrongs. She blamed no one; she made +no complaint; yet there was in her attitude something so touching, so +clinging, so pathetic, so forlorn, and in her face something so sweet, +so sad, so reproachful, and so piteous, that she enforced sympathy; and +each one began to have a half-guilty fear that Minnie had been wronged +by her. Especially did Mrs. Willoughby feel this. She feared that she +had neglected the artless and simple-minded child; she feared that she +had not been sufficiently thoughtful about her; and now longed to do +something to make amends +<span class = "pagenum">78b</span> +for this imaginary neglect. So she sought to make the journey as +pleasant as possible by cheerful remarks and lively observations. None +of these things, however, produced any effect upon the attitude of +Minnie. She sat there, with unalterable sweetness and unvarying +patience, just like a holy martyr, who freely forgave all her enemies, +and was praying for those who had despitefully used her.</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic078.png" width = "447" height = "217" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +THE PROCESSION ACROSS THE CAMPAGNA.</p> + +<p>The exciting events consequent upon the Baron's appearance, and his +sudden revelation in the role of Minnie's lover, had exercised a strong +and varied effect upon all; but upon one its result was wholly +beneficial, and this was Ethel. It was so startling and so unexpected +that it had roused her from her gloom, and given her something to think +of. The Baron's debut in their parlor had been narrated to her over and +over by each of the three who had witnessed it, and each gave the +narrative her own coloring. Lady Dalrymple's account was humorous; Mrs. +Willoughby's indignant; Minnie's sentimental. Out of all these Ethel +gained a fourth idea, compounded of these three, which again blended +with another, and an original one of her own, gained from a personal +observation of the Baron, whose appearance on the stairs and impatient +summons for "Min" were very vividly impressed on her memory. In addition +to this there was the memory of that day on which they endeavored to +fight off the enemy.</p> + +<p>That was, indeed, a memorable day, and was now alluded to by them all +as the day of the siege. It was not without difficulty that they had +withstood Minnie's earnest protestations, and intrenched themselves. But +Mrs. Willoughby was obdurate, and Minnie's tears, which flowed freely, +were unavailing.</p> + +<p>Then there came the first knock of the impatient and aggressive +visitor, followed by others in swift succession, and in ever-increasing +power. Every knock went to Minnie's heart. It excited an unlimited +amount of sympathy for the one who had saved her life, and was now +excluded from her door. But as the knocks +<span class = "pagenum">79</span> +grew violent and imperative, and Minnie grew sad and pitiful, the other +ladies grew indignant. Lady Dalrymple was on the point of sending off +for the police, and only Minnie's frantic entreaties prevented this. At +last the door seemed almost beaten in, and their feelings underwent a +change. They were convinced that he was mad, or else intoxicated. Of the +madness of love they did not think. Once convinced that he was mad, they +became terrified. The maids all hid themselves. None of them now would +venture out even to call the police. They expected that the concierge +would interpose, but in vain. The concierge was bribed.</p> + +<p>After a very eventful day night came. They heard footsteps pacing up +and down, and knew that it was their tormentor. Minnie's heart again +melted with tender pity for the man whose love for her had turned his +head, and she begged to be allowed to speak to him. But this was not +permitted. So she went to bed and fell asleep. So, in process of time, +did the others, and the night passed without any trouble. Then morning +came, and there was a debate as to who should confront the enemy. There +was no noise, but they knew that he was there. At last Lady Dalrymple +summoned up her energies, and went forth to do battle. The result has +already been described in the words of the bold Baron himself.</p> + +<p>But even this great victory did not reassure the ladies. Dreading +another visit, they hurried away to a hotel, leaving the maids to follow +with the luggage as soon as possible. On the following morning they had +left the city.</p> + +<p>Events so very exciting as these had produced a very natural effect +upon the mind of Ethel. They had thrown her thoughts out of their old +groove, and fixed them in a new one. Besides, the fact that she was +actually leaving the man who had caused her so much sorrow was already a +partial relief. She had dreaded meeting him so much that she had been +forced to keep herself a prisoner. A deep grief still remained in her +heart; but, at any rate, there was now some pleasure to be felt, if only +of a superficial kind.</p> + +<p>As for Mrs. Willoughby, in spite of her self-reproach about her +purely imaginary neglect of Minnie, she felt such an extraordinary +relief that it affected all her nature. The others might feel fatigue +from the journey. Not she. She was willing to continue the journey for +an indefinite period, so long as she had the sweet consciousness that +she was bearing Minnie farther and farther away from the grasp of "that +horrid man." The consequence was, that she was lively, lovely, +brilliant, cheerful, and altogether delightful. She was as tender to +Minnie as a mother could be. She was lavish in her promises of what she +would do for her. She chatted gayly with Ethel about a thousand things, +and was delighted to find that Ethel reciprocated. She rallied Lady +Dalrymple on her silence, and congratulated her over and over, in spite +of Minnie's frowns, on the success +<span class = "pagenum">79b</span> +of her generalship. And so at last the weary Campagna was traversed, and +the two carriages began to ascend among the mountains.</p> + +<p>Several other travelers were passing over that Campagna road, and in +the same direction. They were not near enough for their faces to be +discerned, but the ladies could look back and see the signs of their +presence. First there was a carriage with two men, and about two miles +behind another carriage with two other men; while behind these, again, +there rode a solitary horseman, who was gradually gaining on the other +travelers.</p> + +<p>Now, if it had been possible for Mrs. Willoughby to look back and +discern the faces of the travelers who were moving along the road behind +her, what a sudden overturn there would have been in her feelings, and +what a blight would have fallen upon her spirits! But Mrs. Willoughby +remained in the most blissful ignorance of the persons of these +travelers, and so was able to maintain the sunshine of her soul.</p> + +<p>At length there came over that sunny soul the first cloud.</p> + +<p>The solitary horseman, who had been riding behind, had overtaken the +different carriages.</p> + +<p>The first carriage contained Lord Hawbury and Scone Dacres. As the +horseman passed, he recognized them with a careless nod and smile.</p> + +<p>Scone Dacres grasped Lord Hawbury's arm.</p> + +<p>"Did you see him?" he cried. "The Italian! I thought so! What do you +say now? Wasn't I right?"</p> + +<p>"By Jove!" cried Lord Hawbury.</p> + +<p>Whereupon Dacres relapsed into silence, sitting upright, glaring +after the horseman, cherishing in his gloomy soul the darkest and most +vengeful thoughts.</p> + +<p>The horseman rode on further, and overtook the next carriage. In this +there were two men, one in the uniform of the Papal Zouaves, the other +in rusty black. He turned toward these, and greeted them with the same +nod and smile.</p> + +<p>"Do you see that man, parson?" said the Baron to his companion. "Do +you recognize him?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Well, you saw him at Minnie's house. He came in."</p> + +<p>"No, he didn't."</p> + +<p>"Didn't he? No. By thunder, it wasn't that time. Well, at any rate, +that man, I believe, is at the bottom of the row. It's my belief that +he's trying to cut me out, and he'll find he's got a hard row to hoe +before he succeeds in that project."</p> + +<p>And with these words the Baron sat glaring after the Italian, with +something in his eye that resembled faintly the fierce glance of Scone +Dacres.</p> + +<p>The Italian rode on. A few miles further were the two carriages. +Minnie and her sister were sitting on the front seats, and saw the +<span class = "pagenum">80</span> +stranger as he advanced. He soon came near enough to be distinguished, +and Mrs. Willoughby recognized Girasole.</p> + +<p>Her surprise was so great that she uttered an exclamation of terror, +which startled the other ladies, and made them all look in that +direction.</p> + +<p>"How very odd!" said Ethel, thoughtfully.</p> + +<p>"And now I suppose you'll all go and say that I brought <i>him</i> +too," said Minnie. "That's <i>always</i> the way you do. You +<i>never</i> seem to think that I may be innocent. You <i>always</i> +blame me for every little mite of a thing that may happen."</p> + +<p>No one made any remark, and there was silence in the carriage as the +stranger approached. The ladies bowed somewhat coolly, except Minnie, +who threw upon him the most imploring look that could possibly be sent +from human eyes, and the Italian's impressible nature thrilled before +those beseeching, pleading, earnest, unfathomable, tender, helpless, +innocent orbs. Removing his hat, he bowed low.</p> + +<p>"I haf not been awara," he said, politely, in his broken English, +"that youar ladysippa's bin intend to travalla. Ees eet not subito +intenzion?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby made a polite response of a general character, the +Italian paused a moment to drink in deep draughts from Minnie's great +beseeching eyes that were fixed upon his, and then, with a low bow, he +passed on.</p> + +<p>"I believe I'm losing my senses," said Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"Why, Kitty darling?" asked Minnie.</p> + +<p>"I don't know how it is, but I actually trembled when that man came +up, and I haven't got over it yet."</p> + +<p>"I'm sure I don't see why," said Minnie. "You're <i>always</i> +imagining things, though. Now <i>isn't</i> she, Ethel dearest?"</p> + +<p>"Well, really, I don't see much in the Count to make one tremble. I +suppose poor dear Kitty has been too much agitated lately, and it's her +poor nerves."</p> + +<p>"I have my lavender, Kitty dear," said Lady Dalrymple. "Won't you +take it? Or would you prefer valerian?"</p> + +<p>"Thanks, much, but I do not need it," said Mrs. Willoughby. "I +suppose it will pass off."</p> + +<p>"I'm sure the poor Count never did any body any harm," said Minnie, +plaintively; "so you needn't all abuse him so—unless you're all +angry at him for saving my life. I remember a time when you all thought +very differently, and all praised him up, no end."</p> + +<p>"Really, Minnie darling, I have nothing against the Count, only once +he was a little too intrusive; but he seems to have got over that; and +if he'll only be nice and quiet and proper, I'm sure I've nothing to say +against him."</p> + +<p>They drove on for some time, and at length reached Civita Castellana. +Here they drove up to the hotel, and the ladies got out and went up to +their apartments. They had three rooms up stairs, two of which looked +out into the street, +<span class = "pagenum">80b</span> +while the third was in the rear. At the front windows was a balcony.</p> + +<p>The ladies now disrobed themselves, and their maids assisted them to +perform the duties of a very simple toilet. Mrs. Willoughby's was first +finished. So she walked over to the window, and looked out into the +street.</p> + +<p>It was not a very interesting place, nor was there much to be seen; +but she took a lazy, languid interest in the sight which met her eyes. +There were the two carriages. The horses were being led to water. Around +the carriages was a motley crowd, composed of the poor, the maimed, the +halt, the blind, forming that realm of beggars which from immemorial +ages has flourished in Italy. With these was intermingled a crowd of +ducks, geese, goats, pigs, and ill-looking, mangy, snarling curs.</p> + +<p>Upon these Mrs. Willoughby looked for some time, when at length her +ears were arrested by the roll of wheels down the street. A carriage was +approaching, in which there were two travelers. One hasty glance +sufficed, and she turned her attention once more to the ducks, geese, +goats, dogs, and beggars. In a few minutes the crowd was scattered by +the newly-arrived carriage. It stopped. A man jumped out. For a moment +he looked up, staring hard at the windows. That moment was enough. Mrs. +Willoughby had recognized him.</p> + +<p>She rushed away from the windows. Lady Dalrymple and Ethel were in +this room, and Minnie in the one beyond. All were startled by Mrs. +Willoughby's exclamation, and still more by her looks.</p> + +<p>"Oh!" she cried.</p> + +<p>"What?" cried they. "What is it?"</p> + +<p>"<i>He's</i> there! <i>He's</i> there!"</p> + +<p>"Who? who?" they cried, in alarm.</p> + +<p>"That horrid man!"</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple and Ethel looked at one another in utter horror.</p> + +<p>As for Minnie, she burst into the room, peeped out of the windows, +saw "that horrid man," then ran back, then sat down, then jumped up, and +then burst into a peal of the merriest laughter that ever was heard from +her.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I'm <i>so</i> glad! I'm <i>so</i> glad!" she exclaimed. "Oh, +it's so <i>aw</i>fully funny. Oh, I'm <i>so</i> glad! Oh, Kitty darling, +don't, please don't, look so cross. Oh, ple-e-e-e-e-e-e-ase don't, Kitty +darling. You make me laugh worse. It's so <i>aw</i>fully funny!"</p> + +<p>But while Minnie laughed thus, the others looked at each other in +still greater consternation, and for some time there was not one of them +who knew what to say.</p> + +<p>But Lady Dalrymple again threw herself in the gap.</p> + +<p>"You need not feel at all nervous, my dears," said she, gravely. "I +do not think that this person can give us any trouble. He certainly can +not intrude upon us in these apartments, and on the highway, you know, +it will be quite as difficult for him to hold any communication +<span class = "pagenum">81</span> +with us. So I really don't see any cause for alarm on your part, nor do +I see why dear Minnie should exhibit such delight."</p> + +<p>These words brought comfort to Ethel and Mrs. Willoughby. They at +once perceived their truth. To force himself into their presence in a +public hotel was, of course, impossible, even for one so reckless as he +seemed to be; and on the road he could not trouble them in any way, +since he would have to drive before them or behind them.</p> + +<p>At Lady Dalrymple's reference to herself, Minnie looked up with a +bright smile.</p> + +<p>"You're awfully cross with me, aunty darling," she said; "but I +forgive you. Only I can't help laughing, you know, to see how frightened +you all are at poor Rufus K. Gunn. And, Kitty dearest, oh how you +<i>did</i> run away from the window! It was awfully funny, you +know."</p> + +<p>Not long after the arrival of the Baron and his friends another +carriage drove up. None of the ladies were at the window, and so they +did not see the easy nonchalance of Hawbury as he lounged into the +house, or the stern face of Scone Dacres as he strode before him.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic081.png" width = "214" height = "282" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"AS FOR DANGAIRE—POUF! DERE IS NONE."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXII" id = "chapXXII"> +CHAPTER XXII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +ADVICE REJECTED.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">During</span> dinner the ladies conversed +freely about "that horrid man," wondering what plan he would adopt to +try to effect an entrance among them. They were convinced that some such +attempt would be made, and the servants of the inn who waited on them +were strictly charged to see that no one disturbed them. However, their +dinner was not interrupted and +<span class = "pagenum">81b</span> +after it was over they began to think of retiring, so as to leave at an +early hour on the following morning. Minnie had already taken her +departure, and the others were thinking of following her example, when a +knock came at the door.</p> + +<p>All started. One of the maids went to the door, and found a servant +there who brought a message from the Baron Atramonte. He wished to speak +to the ladies on business of the most urgent importance. At this +confirmation of their expectations the ladies looked at one another with +a smile mingled with vexation, and Lady Dalrymple at once sent word that +they could not possibly see him.</p> + +<p>But the Baron was not to be put off. In a few moments the servant +came back again, and brought another message, of a still more urgent +character, in which the Baron entreated them to grant him this +interview, and assured them that it was a matter of life and death.</p> + +<p>"He's beginning to be more and more violent," said Lady Dalrymple. +"Well, dears," she added, resignedly, "in my opinion it will be better +to see him, and have done with him. If we do not, I'm afraid he will +pester us further. I will see him. You had better retire to your own +apartments."</p> + +<p>Upon this she sent down an invitation to the Baron to come up, and +the ladies retreated to their rooms.</p> + +<p>The Baron entered, and, as usual, offered to shake hands—an +offer which, as usual, Lady Dalrymple did not accept. He then looked +earnestly all round the room, and gave a sigh. He evidently had expected +to see Minnie, and was disappointed. Lady Dalrymple marked the glance, +and the expression which followed.</p> + +<p>"Well, ma'am," said he, as he seated himself near to Lady Dalrymple, +"I said that the business I wanted to speak about was important, and +that it was a matter of life and death. I assure you that it is. But +before I tell it I want to say something about the row in Rome. I have +reason to understand that I caused a little annoyance to you all. If I +did, I'm sure I didn't intend it. I'm sorry. There! Let's say no more +about it. 'Tain't often that I say I'm sorry, but I say so now. +Conditionally, though—that is, if I really <i>did</i> annoy any +body."</p> + +<p>"Well, Sir?"</p> + +<p>"Well, ma'am—about the business I came for. You have made a +sudden decision to take this journey. I want to know, ma'am, if you made +any inquiries about this road before starting?"</p> + +<p>"This road? No, certainly not."</p> + +<p>"I thought so," said the Baron. "Well, ma'am, I've reason to believe +that it's somewhat unsafe."</p> + +<p>"Unsafe?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; particularly for ladies."</p> + +<p>"And why?"</p> + +<p>"Why, ma'am, the country is in a disordered state, and near the +boundary line it swarms with brigands. They call themselves +Garibaldians, but between you and me, ma'am, they're +<span class = "pagenum">82</span> +neither more nor less than robbers. You see, along the boundary it is +convenient for them to dodge to one side or the other, and where the +road runs there are often crowds of them. Now our papal government means +well, but it ain't got power to keep down these brigands. It would like +to, but it can't. You see, the scum of all Italy gather along the +borders, because they know we <i>are</i> weak; and so there it is."</p> + +<p>"And you think there is danger on this road?" said Lady Dalrymple, +looking keenly at him.</p> + +<p>"I do, ma'am."</p> + +<p>"Pray have you heard of any recent acts of violence along the +road?"</p> + +<p>"No, ma'am."</p> + +<p>"Then what reason have you for supposing that there is any particular +danger now?"</p> + +<p>"A friend of mine told me so, ma'am."</p> + +<p>"But do not people use the road? Are not carriages constantly passing +and repassing? Is it likely that if it were unsafe there would be no +acts of violence? Yet you say there have been none."</p> + +<p>"Not of late, ma'am."</p> + +<p>"But it is of late, and of the present time, that we are +speaking."</p> + +<p>"I can only say, ma'am, that the road is considered very +dangerous."</p> + +<p>"Who considers it so?"</p> + +<p>"If you had made inquiries at Rome, ma'am, you would have found this +out, and never would have thought of this road."</p> + +<p>"And you advise us not to travel it?"</p> + +<p>"I do, ma'am."</p> + +<p>"What would you advise us to do?"</p> + +<p>"I would advise you, ma'am, most earnestly, to turn and go back to +Rome, and leave by another route."</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple looked at him, and a slight smile quivered on her +lips.</p> + +<p>"I see, ma'am, that for some reason or other you doubt my word. Would +you put confidence in it if another person were to confirm what I have +said?"</p> + +<p>"That depends entirely upon who the other person may be."</p> + +<p>"The person I mean is Lord Hawbury."</p> + +<p>"Lord Hawbury? Indeed!" said Lady Dalrymple, in some surprise. "But +he's in Rome."</p> + +<p>"No, ma'am, he's not. He's here—in this hotel."</p> + +<p>"In this hotel? Here?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, ma'am."</p> + +<p>"I'm sure I should like to see him very much, and hear what he says +about it."</p> + +<p>"I'll go and get him, then," said the Baron, and, rising briskly, he +left the room.</p> + +<p>In a short time he returned with Hawbury. Lady Dalrymple expressed +surprise to see him, and Hawbury explained that he was traveling with a +friend. Lady Dalrymple, of course, thought this a fresh proof of his +infatuation about Minnie, and wondered how he could be a friend to a man +whom she considered as Minnie's persecutor and tormentor.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">82b</span> + +<p>The Baron at once proceeded to explain how the matter stood, and to +ask Hawbury's opinion.</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Lady Dalrymple, "I should really like to know what you +think about it."</p> + +<p>"Well, really," said Hawbury, "I have no acquaintance with the thing, +you know. Never been on this road in my life. But, at the same time, I +can assure you that this gentleman is a particular friend of mine, and +one of the best fellows I know. I'd stake my life on his perfect truth +and honor. If he says any thing, you may believe it because he says it. +If he says there are brigands on the road, they must be there."</p> + +<p>"Oh, of course," said Lady Dalrymple. "You are right to believe your +friend, and I should trust his word also. But do you not see that +perhaps he may believe what he says, and yet be mistaken?"</p> + +<p>At this the Baron's face fell. Lord Hawbury's warm commendation of +him had excited his hopes, but now Lady Dalrymple's answer had destroyed +them.</p> + +<p>"For my part," she added, "I don't really think any of us know much +about it. I wish we could find some citizen of the town, or some +reliable person, and ask him. I wonder whether the inn-keeper is a +trust-worthy man."</p> + +<p>The Baron shook his head.</p> + +<p>"I wouldn't trust one of them. They're the greatest rascals in the +country. Every man of them is in league with the Garibaldians and +brigands. This man would advise you to take whatever course would +benefit himself and his friends most."</p> + +<p>"But surely we might find some one whose opinion would be reliable. +What do you say to one of my drivers? The one that drove our carriage +looks like a good, honest man."</p> + +<p>"Well, perhaps so; but I wouldn't trust one of them. I don't believe +there's an honest vetturino in all Italy."</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple elevated her eyebrows, and threw at Hawbury a glance +of despair.</p> + +<p>"He speaks English, too," said Lady Dalrymple.</p> + +<p>"So do some of the worst rascals in the country," said the Baron.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I don't think he can be a very bad rascal. We had better +question him, at any rate. Don't you think so, Lord Hawbury?"</p> + +<p>"Well, yes; I suppose it won't do any harm to have a look at the +beggar."</p> + +<p>The driver alluded to was summoned, and soon made his appearance. He +was a square-headed fellow, with a grizzled beard, and one of those +non-committal faces which may be worn by either an honest man or a +knave. Lady Dalrymple thought him the former; the Baron the latter. The +result will show which of these was in the right.</p> + +<p>The driver spoke very fair English. He had been two or three times +over the road. He had not been over it later than two years before. He +didn't know it was dangerous. He had +<span class = "pagenum">83</span> +never heard of brigands being here. He didn't know. There was a signore +at the hotel who might know. He was traveling to Florence alone. He was +on horseback.</p> + +<p>As soon as Lady Dalrymple heard this she suspected that it was Count +Girasole. She determined to have his advice about it. So she sent a +private request to that effect.</p> + +<p>It was Count Girasole. He entered, and threw his usual smile around. +He was charmed, in his broken English, to be of any service to +miladi.</p> + +<p>To Lady Dalrymple's statement and question Girasole listened +attentively. As she concluded a faint smile passed over his face. The +Baron watched him attentively.</p> + +<p>"I know no brigand on dissa road," said he.</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple looked triumphantly at the others.</p> + +<p>"I have travail dissa road many time. No dangaire—alla +safe."</p> + +<p>Another smile from Lady Dalrymple.</p> + +<p>The Count Girasole looked at Hawbury and then at the Baron, with a +slight dash of mockery in his face.</p> + +<p>"As for dangaire," he said—"pouf! dere is none. See, I go +alone—no arms, not a knife—an' yet gold in my +porte-monnaie."</p> + +<p>And he drew forth his porte-monnaie, and opened it so as to exhibit +its contents.</p> + +<p>A little further conversation followed. Girasole evidently was +perfectly familiar with the road. The idea of brigands appeared to +strike him as some exquisite piece of pleasantry. He looked as though it +was only his respect for the company which prevented him from laughing +outright. They had taken the trouble to summon him for that! And, +besides, as the Count suggested, even if a brigand did appear, there +would be always travelers within hearing.</p> + +<p>Both Hawbury and the Baron felt humiliated, especially the latter; +and Girasole certainly had the best of it on that occasion, whatever his +lot had been at other times.</p> + +<p>The Count withdrew. The Baron followed, in company with Hawbury. He +was deeply dejected. First of all, he had hoped to see Minnie. Then he +hoped to frighten the party back. As to the brigands, he was in most +serious earnest. All that he said he believed. He could not understand +the driver and Count Girasole. The former he might consider a scoundrel; +but why should Girasole mislead? And yet he believed that he was right. +As for Hawbury, he didn't believe much in the brigands, but he did +believe in his friend, and he didn't think much of Girasole. He was +sorry for his friend, yet didn't know whether he wanted the party to +turn back or not. His one trouble was Dacres, who now was watching the +Italian like a blood-hound, who had seen him, no doubt, go up to the +ladies, and, of course, would suppose that Mrs. Willoughby had sent for +him.</p> + +<p>As for the ladies, their excitement was great. The doors were thin, +and they had heard every word of the conversation. With Mrs. Willoughby +<span class = "pagenum">83b</span> +there was but one opinion as to the Baron's motive: she thought he had +come to get a peep at Minnie, and also to frighten them back to Rome by +silly stories. His signal failure afforded her great triumph. Minnie, as +usual, sympathized with him, but said nothing. As for Ethel, the sudden +arrival of Lord Hawbury was overwhelming, and brought a return of all +her former excitement. The sound of his voice again vibrated through +her, and at first there began to arise no end of wild hopes, which, +however, were as quickly dispelled. The question arose, What brought him +there? There seemed to her but one answer, and that was his infatuation +for Minnie. Yet to her, as well as to Lady Dalrymple, it seemed very +singular that he should be so warm a friend to Minnie's tormentor. It +was a puzzling thing. Perhaps he did not know that the Baron was +Minnie's lover. Perhaps he thought that his friend would give her up, +and he could win her. Amidst these thoughts there came a wild hope that +perhaps he did not love Minnie so very much, after all. But this hope +soon was dispelled as she recalled the events of the past, and reflected +on his cool and easy indifference to every thing connected with her.</p> + +<p>Such emotions as these actuated the ladies; and when the guests had +gone they joined their aunt once more, and deliberated. Minnie took no +part in the debate, but sat apart, looking like an injured being. There +was among them all the same opinion, and that was that it was all a +clumsy device of the Baron's to frighten them back to Rome. Such being +their opinion, they did not occupy much time in debating about their +course on the morrow. The idea of going back did not enter their +heads.</p> + +<p>This event gave a much more agreeable feeling to Mrs. Willoughby and +Lady Dalrymple than they had known since they had been aware that the +Baron had followed them. They felt that they had grappled with the +difficulty. They had met the enemy and defeated him. Besides, the +presence of Hawbury was of itself a guarantee of peace. There could be +no further danger of any unpleasant scenes while Hawbury was with him. +Girasole's presence, also, was felt to be an additional guarantee of +safety.</p> + +<p>It was felt by all to be a remarkable circumstance that so many men +should have followed them on what they had intended as quite a secret +journey. These gentlemen who followed them were the very ones, and the +only ones, from whom they wished to conceal it. Yet it had all been +revealed to them, and lo! here they all were. Some debate arose as to +whether it would not be better to go back to Rome now, and defy the +Baron, and leave by another route. But this debate was soon given up, +and they looked forward to the journey as one which might afford new and +peculiar enjoyment.</p> + +<p>On the following morning they started at an early hour. Girasole left +about half an hour after them, and passed them a few miles along +<span class = "pagenum">84</span> +the road. The Baron and the Reverend Saul left next; and last of all +came Hawbury and Dacres. The latter was, if possible, more gloomy and +vengeful than ever. The visit of the Italian on the preceding evening +was fully believed by him to be a scheme of his wife's. Nor could any +amount of persuasion or vehement statement on Hawbury's part in any way +shake his belief.</p> + +<p>"No," he would say, "you don't understand. Depend upon it, she got +him up there to feast her eyes on him. Depend upon it, she managed to +get some note from him, and pass one to him in return. He had only to +run it under the leaf of a table, or stick it inside of some book: no +doubt they have it all arranged, and pass their infernal love-letters +backward and forward. But I'll soon have a chance. My time is coming. +It's near, too. I'll have my vengeance; and then for all the wrongs of +all my life that demon of a woman shall pay me dear!"</p> + +<p>To all of which Hawbury had nothing to say. He could say nothing; he +could do nothing. He could only stand by his friend, go with him, and +watch over him, hoping to avert the crisis which he dreaded, or, if it +did come, to lessen the danger of his friend.</p> + +<p>The morning was clear and beautiful. The road wound among the hills. +The party went in the order above mentioned.</p> + +<p>First, Girasole, on horseback.</p> + +<p>Next, and two miles at least behind, came the two carriages with the +ladies and their maids.</p> + +<p>Third, and half a mile behind these, came the Baron and the Reverend +Saul.</p> + +<p>Last of all, and half a mile behind the Baron, came Hawbury and Scone +Dacres.</p> + +<p>These last drove along at about this distance. The scenery around +grew grander, and the mountains higher. The road was smooth and well +constructed, and the carriage rolled along with an easy, comfortable +rumble.</p> + +<p>They were driving up a slope which wound along the side of a hill. At +the top of the hill trees appeared on each side, and the road made a +sharp turn here.</p> + +<p>Suddenly the report of a shot sounded ahead.</p> + +<p>Then a scream.</p> + +<p>"Good Lord! Dacres, did you hear that?" cried Hawbury. "The Baron was +right, after all."</p> + +<p>The driver here tried to stop his horses, but Hawbury would not let +him.</p> + +<p>"Have you a pistol, Dacres?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Get out!" he shouted to the driver; and, kicking him out of the +seat, he seized the reins himself, and drove the horses straight forward +to where the noise arose.</p> + +<p>"It's the brigands, Dacres. The ladies are there."</p> + +<p>"My wife! O God! my wife!" groaned Dacres. But a minute before he had +been cursing her.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">84b</span> + +<p>"Get a knife! Get something, man! Have a fight for it!"</p> + +<p>Dacres murmured something.</p> + +<p>Hawbury lashed the horses, and drove them straight toward the +wood.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXIII" id = "chapXXIII"> +CHAPTER XXIII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +CAUGHT IN AMBUSH.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">The</span> ladies had been driving on, +quite unconscious of the neighborhood of any danger, admiring the beauty +of the scenery, and calling one another's attention to the various +objects of interest which from time to time became visible. Thus +engaged, they slowly ascended the incline already spoken of, and began +to enter the forest. They had not gone far when the road took a sudden +turn, and here a startling spectacle burst upon their view.</p> + +<p>The road on turning descended slightly into a hollow. On the right +arose a steep acclivity, covered with the dense forest. On the other +side the ground rose more gradually, and was covered over by a forest +much less dense. Some distance in front the road took another turn, and +was lost to view among the trees. About a hundred yards in front of them +a tree had been felled, and lay across the way, barring their +progress.</p> + +<p>About twenty armed men stood before them close by the place where the +turn was. Among them was a man on horseback. To their amazement, it was +Girasole.</p> + +<p>Before the ladies could recover from their astonishment two of the +armed men advanced, and the driver at once stopped the carriage.</p> + +<p>Girasole then came forward.</p> + +<p>"Miladi," said he, "I haf de honore of to invitar you to +descend."</p> + +<p>"Pray what is the meaning of this?" inquired Lady Dalrymple, with +much agitation.</p> + +<p>"It means dat I war wrong. Dere are brigand on dis road."</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple said not another word.</p> + +<p>The Count approached, and politely offered his hand to assist the +ladies out, but they rejected it, and got out themselves. First Mrs. +Willoughby, then Ethel, then Lady Dalrymple, then Minnie. Three of the +ladies were white with utter horror, and looked around in sickening fear +upon the armed men; but Minnie showed not even the slightest particle of +fear.</p> + +<p>"How horrid!" she exclaimed. "And now some one will come and save my +life again. It's <i>always</i> the way. I'm sure <i>this</i> isn't my +fault, Kitty darling."</p> + +<p>Before her sister could say any thing Girasole approached.</p> + +<p>"Pardon, mees," he said; "but I haf made dis recepzion for you. You +sall be well treat. Do not fear. I lay down my life."</p> + +<p>"Villain!" cried Lady Dalrymple. "Arrest her at your peril. Remember +who she is. She has friends powerful enough to avenge her if you dare to +injure her."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">85</span> + +<p>"You arra mistake," said Girasole, politely. "Se is mine, not yours. +I am her best fren. Se is fiancée to me. I save her life—tell her +my love—make a proposezion. Se accept me. Se is my fiancée. I was +oppose by you. What else sall I do? I mus haf her. Se is mine. I am an +Italiano nobile, an' I love her. Dere is no harm for any. You mus see +dat I haf de right. But for me se would be dead."</p> + +<p>Lady Dalrymple was not usually excitable, but now her whole nature +was aroused; her eyes flashed with indignation; her face turned red; she +gasped for breath, and fell to the ground. Ethel rushed to assist her, +and two of the maids came up. Lady Dalrymple lay senseless.</p> + +<p>With Mrs. Willoughby the result was different. She burst into +tears.</p> + +<p>"Count Girasole," she cried, "oh, spare her! If you love her, spare +her. She is only a child. If we opposed you, it was not from any +objection to you; it was because she is such a child."</p> + +<p>"You mistake," said the Count, shrugging his shoulders. "I love her +better than life. Se love me. It will make her happy. You come too. You +sall see se is happy. Come. Be my sistaire. It is love—"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby burst into fresh tears at this, and flung her arms +around Minnie, and moaned and wept.</p> + +<p>"Well, now, Kitty darling, I think it's horrid. You're <i>never</i> +satisfied. You're always finding fault. I'm sure if you don't like Rufus +K. Gunn, you—"</p> + +<p>But Minnie's voice was interrupted by the sound of approaching +wheels. It was the carriage of the Baron and his friend. The Baron had +feared brigands, but he was certainly not expecting to come upon them so +suddenly. The brigands had been prepared, and as the carriage turned it +was suddenly stopped by the two carriages in front, and at once was +surrounded.</p> + +<p>The Baron gave one lightning glance, and surveyed the whole +situation. He did not move, but his form was rigid, and every nerve was +braced, and his eyes gleamed fiercely. He saw it all—the crowd of +women, the calm face of Minnie, and the uncontrollable agitation of Mrs. +Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"Well, by thunder!" he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>Girasole rode up and called out:</p> + +<p>"Surrender! You arra my prisoner."</p> + +<p>"What! it's you, is it?" said the Baron; and he glared for a moment +with a vengeful look at Girasole.</p> + +<p>"Descend," said Girasole. "You mus be bound."</p> + +<p>"Bound? All right. Here, parson, you jump down, and let them tie your +hands."</p> + +<p>The Baron stood up. The Reverend Saul stood up too. The Reverend Saul +began to step down very carefully. The brigands gathered around, most of +them being on the side on which the two were about to descend. The +Reverend Saul had just stepped to the ground. +<span class = "pagenum">85b</span> +The Baron was just preparing to follow. The brigands were impatient to +secure them, when suddenly, with a quick movement, the Baron gave a +spring out of the opposite side of the carriage, and leaped to the +ground. The brigands were taken completely by surprise, and before they +could prepare to follow him, he had sprung into the forest, and, with +long bounds, was rushing up the steep hill and out of sight.</p> + +<p>One shot was fired after him, and that was the shot that Hawbury and +Dacres heard. Two men sprang after him with the hope of catching +him.</p> + +<p>In a few moments a loud cry was heard from the woods.</p> + +<p>"MIN!"</p> + +<p>Minnie heard it; a gleam of light flashed from her eyes, a smile of +triumph came over her lips.</p> + +<p>"Wha-a-a-a-t?" she called in reply.</p> + +<p>"Wa-a-a-a-a-a-it!" was the cry that came back—and this was the +cry that Hawbury and Dacres had heard.</p> + +<p>"Sacr-r-r-r-r-r-remento!" growled Girasole.</p> + +<p>"I'm sure <i>I</i> don't know what he means by telling me that," said +Minnie. "How can <i>I</i> wait if this horrid Italian won't let me? I'm +sure he might be more considerate."</p> + +<p>Poor Mrs. Willoughby, who had for a moment been roused to hope by the +escape of the Baron, now fell again into despair, and wept and moaned +and clung to Minnie. Lady Dalrymple still lay senseless, in spite of the +efforts of Ethel and the maids. The occurrence had been more to her than +a mere encounter with brigands. It was the thought of her own +carelessness that overwhelmed her. In an instant the thought of the +Baron's warning and his solemn entreaties flashed across her memory. She +recollected how Hawbury had commended his friend, and how she had turned +from these to put her trust in the driver and Girasole, the very men who +had betrayed her. These were the thoughts that overwhelmed her.</p> + +<p>But now there arose once more the noise of rolling wheels, advancing +more swiftly than the last, accompanied by the lash of a whip and shouts +of a human voice. Girasole spoke to his men, and they moved up nearer to +the bend, and stood in readiness there.</p> + +<p>What Hawbury's motive was it is not difficult to tell. He was not +armed, and therefore could not hope to do much; but he had in an instant +resolved to rush thus into the midst of the danger. First of all he +thought that a struggle might be going on between the drivers, the other +travelers, and the brigands; in which event his assistance would be of +great value. Though unarmed, he thought he might snatch or wrest a +weapon from some one of the enemy. In addition to this, he wished to +strike a blow to save the ladies from captivity, even if his blow should +be unavailing. Even if he had known how matters were, he would probably +have acted in precisely the same way. As for Dacres, he had but one +idea. He was sure it +<span class = "pagenum">85</span> +was some trick concocted by his wife and the Italian, though why they +should do so he did not stop, in his mad mood, to inquire. A vague idea +that a communication had passed between them on the preceding evening +with reference to this was now in his mind, and his vengeful feeling was +stimulated by this thought to the utmost pitch of intensity.</p> + +<p>Hawbury thus lashed his horses, and they flew along the road. After +the first cry and the shot that they had heard there was no further +noise. The stillness was mysterious. It showed Hawbury that the +struggle, if there had been any, was over. But the first idea still +remained both in his own mind and in that of Dacres. On they went, and +now they came to the turn in the road. Round this they whirled, and in +an instant the scene revealed itself.</p> + +<p>Three carriages stopped; some drivers standing and staring +indifferently; a group of women crowding around a prostrate form that +lay in the road; a pale, beautiful girl, to whom a beautiful woman was +clinging passionately; a crowd of armed brigands with leveled pieces; +and immediately before them a horseman—the Italian, Girasole.</p> + +<p>One glance showed all this. Hawbury could not distinguish any face +among the crowd of women that bent over Lady Dalrymple, and Ethel's face +was thus still unrevealed; but he saw Minnie and Mrs. Willoughby and +Girasole.</p> + +<p>"What the devil's all this about?" asked Hawbury, haughtily, as his +horses stopped at the Baron's carriage.</p> + +<p>"You are prisoners—" began Girasole.</p> + +<p>But before he could say another word he was interrupted by a cry of +fury from Dacres, who, the moment that he had recognized him, sprang to +his feet, and with a long, keen knife in his hand, leaped from the +carriage into the midst of the brigands, striking right and left, and +endeavoring to force his way toward Girasole. In an instant Hawbury was +by his side. Two men fell beneath the fierce thrusts of Dacres's knife, +and Hawbury tore the rifle from a third. With the clubbed end of this he +began dealing blows right and left. The men fell back and leveled their +pieces. Dacres sprang forward, and was within three steps of +Girasole—his face full of ferocity, his eyes flashing, and looking +not so much like an English gentleman as one of the old vikings in a +Berserker rage. One more spring brought him closer to Girasole. The +Italian retreated. One of his men flung himself before Dacres and tried +to grapple with him. The next instant he fell with a groan, stabbed to +the heart. With a yell of rage the others rushed upon Dacres; but the +latter was now suddenly seized with a new idea. Turning for an instant +he held his assailants at bay; and then, seizing the opportunity, sprang +into the woods and ran. One or two shots were fired, and then half a +dozen men gave chase.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile one or two shots had been fired at Hawbury, but, in the +confusion, they had not taken effect. Suddenly, as he stood with +uplifted +<span class = "pagenum">86b</span> +rifle ready to strike, his enemies made a simultaneous rush upon him. He +was seized by a dozen strong arms. He struggled fiercely, but his +efforts were unavailing. The odds were too great. Before long he was +thrown to the ground on his face, and his arms bound behind him. After +this he was gagged.</p> + +<p>The uproar of this fierce struggle had roused all the ladies, and +they turned their eyes in horror to where the two were fighting against +such odds. Ethel raised herself on her knees from beside Lady Dalrymple, +and caught sight of Hawbury. For a moment she remained motionless; and +then she saw the escape of Dacres, and Hawbury going down in the grasp +of his assailants. She gave a loud shriek and rushed forward. But +Girasole intercepted her.</p> + +<p>"Go back," he said. "De milor is my prisoner. Back, or you will be +bound."</p> + +<p>And at a gesture from him two of the men advanced to seize Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Back!" he said, once more, in a stern voice. "You mus be tentif to +miladi."</p> + +<p>Ethel shrank back.</p> + +<p>The sound of that scream had struck on Hawbury's ears, but he did not +recognize it. If he thought of it at all, he supposed it was the scream +of common terror from one of the women. He was sore and bruised and fast +bound. He was held down also in such a way that he could not see the +party of ladies. The Baron's carriage intercepted the view, for he had +fallen behind this during the final struggle. After a little time he was +allowed to sit up, but still he could not see beyond.</p> + +<p>There was now some delay, and Girasole gave some orders to his men. +The ladies waited with fearful apprehensions. They listened eagerly to +hear if there might not be some sounds of approaching help. But no such +sounds came to gladden their hearts. Lady Dalrymple, also, still lay +senseless; and Ethel, full of the direst anxiety about Hawbury, had to +return to renew her efforts toward reviving her aunt.</p> + +<p>Before long the brigands who had been in pursuit of the fugitives +returned to the road. They did not bring back either of them. A dreadful +question arose in the minds of the ladies as to the meaning of this. Did +it mean that the fugitives had escaped, or had been shot down in the +woods by their wrathful pursuers? It was impossible for them to find +out. Girasole went over to them and conversed with them apart. The men +all looked sullen; but whether that arose from disappointed vengeance or +gratified ferocity it was impossible for them to discern.</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic087.png" width = "452" height = "455" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +THE MÊLÉE.</p> + +<p>The brigands now turned their attention to their own men. Two of +these had received bad but not dangerous wounds from the dagger of +Dacres, and the scowls of pain and rage which they threw upon Hawbury +and the other captives boded nothing but the most cruel fate to all of +them. Another, however, still lay there. It was the one who had +intercepted +<span class = "pagenum">87</span> +Dacres in his rush upon Girasole. He lay motionless in a pool of blood. +They turned him over. His white, rigid face, as it became exposed to +view, exhibited the unmistakable mark of death, and a gash on his breast +showed how his fate had met him.</p> + +<p>The brigands uttered loud cries, and advanced toward Hawbury. He sat +regarding them with perfect indifference. They raised their rifles, some +clubbing them, others taking aim, swearing and gesticulating all the +time like maniacs.</p> + +<p>Hawbury, however, did not move a muscle of his face, nor did he show +the slightest feeling of any kind. He was covered with dust, and his +clothes were torn and splashed with mud, and his hands were bound, and +his mouth was gagged; but he preserved a coolness that astonished his +enemies. Had it not been for this coolness his brains might have been +blown out—in which case this narrative would never have been +written; but there was something in his look which made the Italians +pause, gave Girasole time to interfere, and thus preserved my story from +ruin.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">87b</span> + +<p>Girasole then came up and made his men stand back. They obeyed +sullenly.</p> + +<p>Girasole removed the gag.</p> + +<p>Then he stood and looked at Hawbury. Hawbury sat and returned his +look with his usual nonchalance, regarding the Italian with a cold, +steady stare, which produced upon the latter its usual maddening +effect.</p> + +<p>"Milor will be ver glad to hear," said he, with a mocking smile, "dat +de mees will be take good care to. Milor was attentif to de mees; but de +mees haf been fiancée to me, an' so I take dis occazione to mak her +mine. I sall love her, an' se sall love me. I haf save her life, an' se +haf been fiancée to me since den."</p> + +<p>Now Girasole had chosen to say this to Hawbury from the conviction +that Hawbury was Minnie's lover, and that the statement of this would +inflict a pang upon the heart of his supposed rival which would destroy +his coolness. Thus he chose rather to strike at Hawbury's jealousy than +at his fear or at his pride.</p> + +<p>But he was disappointed. Hawbury heard his statement with utter +indifference.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">88</span> + +<p>"Well," said he, "all I can say is that it seems to me to be a +devilish odd way of going to work about it."</p> + +<p>"Aha!" said Girasole, fiercely. "You sall see. Se sall be mine. +Aha!"</p> + +<p>Hawbury made no reply, and Girasole, after a gesture of impatience, +walked off, baffled.</p> + +<p>In a few minutes two men came up to Hawbury, and led him away to the +woods on the left.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "illustration floatleft"> +<img src = "images/pic088.png" width = "212" height = "339" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"THEY SAW A RUINED HOUSE."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXIV" id = "chapXXIV"> +CHAPTER XXIV.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +AMONG THE BRIGANDS.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Girasole</span> now returned to the ladies. +They were in the same position in which he had left them. Mrs. +Willoughby with Minnie, and Ethel, with the maids, attending to Lady +Dalrymple.</p> + +<p>"Miladi," said Girasole, "I beg your attenzion. I haf had de honore +to inform you dat dis mees is my fiancée. Se haf give me her heart an' +her hand; se love me, an' I love her. I was prevent from to see her, an' +I haf to take her in dis mannaire. I feel sad at de pain I haf give you, +an' assuir you dat it was inevitabile. You sall not be troubled more. +You are free. Mees," he continued, taking Minnie's hand, "you haf promis +me dis fair han', an' you are mine. You come to one who loves you +bettaire dan life, an' who you love. You owe youair life to me. I sall +make it so happy as nevair was."</p> + +<p>"I'm sure <i>I</i> don't want to be happy," said Minnie. "I don't +<i>want</i> to leave darling Kitty—and it's a shame—and +you'll make me <i>hate</i> you if you do so."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">88b</span> + +<p>"Miladi," said Girasole to Mrs. Willoughby, "de mees says se not want +to leaf you. Eef you want to come, you may come an' be our +sistaire."</p> + +<p>"Oh, Kitty darling, you won't leave me, will you, all alone with this +horrid man?" said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"My darling," moaned Mrs. Willoughby, "how can I? I'll go. Oh, my +sweet sister, what misery!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, now that will be really <i>quite</i> delightful if you +<i>will</i> come, Kitty darling. Only I'm afraid you'll find it awfully +uncomfortable."</p> + +<p>Girasole turned once more to the other ladies.</p> + +<p>"I beg you will assura de miladi when she recovaire of my +considerazion de mos distingue, an' convey to her de regrettas dat I +haf. Miladi," he continued, addressing Ethel, "you are free, an' can go. +You will not be molest by me. You sall go safe. You haf not ver far. You +sall fin' houses dere—forward—before—not far."</p> + +<p>With these words he turned away.</p> + +<p>"You mus come wit me," he said to Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie. "Come. +Eet ees not ver far."</p> + +<p>He walked slowly into the woods on the left, and the two sisters +followed him. Of the two Minnie was far the more cool and collected. She +was as composed as usual; and, as there was no help for it, she walked +on. Mrs. Willoughby, however, was terribly agitated, and wept and +shuddered and moaned incessantly.</p> + +<p>"Kitty darling," said Minnie, "I <i>wish</i> you wouldn't go on so. +You really make me feel quite nervous. I never saw you so bad in my +life."</p> + +<p>"Poor Minnie! Poor child! Poor sweet child!"</p> + +<p>"Well, if I am a child, you needn't go and tell me about it all the +time. It's really quite horrid."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby said no more, but generously tried to repress her own +feelings, so as not to give distress to her sister.</p> + +<p>After the Count had entered the wood with the two sisters the drivers +removed the horses from the carriages and went away, led off by the man +who had driven the ladies. This was the man whose stolid face had seemed +likely to belong to an honest man, but who now was shown to belong to +the opposite class. These men went down the road over which they had +come, leaving the carriages there with the ladies and their maids.</p> + +<p>Girasole now led the way, and Minnie and her sister followed him. The +wood was very thick, and grew more so as they advanced, but there was +not much underbrush, and progress was not difficult. Several times a +wild thought of flight came to Mrs. Willoughby, but was at once +dispelled by a helpless sense of its utter impossibility. How could she +persuade the impracticable Minnie, who seemed so free from all concern? +or, if she could persuade her, how could she accomplish her desire? She +would +<span class = "pagenum">89</span> +at once be pursued and surrounded, while, even if she did manage to +escape, how could she ever find her way to any place of refuge? Every +minute, also, drew them deeper and deeper into the woods, and the path +was a winding one, in which she soon became bewildered, until at last +all sense of her whereabouts was utterly gone. At last even the idea of +escaping ceased to suggest itself, and there remained only a dull +despair, a sense of utter helplessness and hopelessness—the sense +of one who is going to his doom.</p> + +<p>Girasole said nothing whatever, but led the way in silence, walking +slowly enough to accommodate the ladies, and sometimes holding an +overhanging branch to prevent it from springing back in their faces. +Minnie walked on lightly, and with an elastic step, looking around with +evident interest upon the forest. Once a passing lizard drew from her a +pretty little shriek of alarm, thus showing that while she was so calm +in the face of real and frightful danger, she could be alarmed by even +the most innocent object that affected her fancy. Mrs. Willoughby +thought that she understood Minnie before, but this little shriek at a +lizard, from one who smiled at the brigands, struck her as a problem +quite beyond her power to solve.</p> + +<p>The woods now began to grow thinner. The trees were larger and +farther apart, and rose all around in columnar array, so that it was +possible to see between them to a greater distance. At length there +appeared before them, through the trunks of the trees, the gleam of +water. Mrs. Willoughby noticed this, and wondered what it might be. At +first she thought it was a harbor on the coast; then she thought it was +some river; but finally, on coming nearer, she saw that it was a lake. +In a few minutes after they first caught sight of it they had reached +its banks.</p> + +<p>It was a most beautiful and sequestered spot. All around were high +wooded eminences, beyond whose undulating summits arose the towering +forms of the Apennine heights. Among these hills lay a little lake about +a mile in length and breadth, whose surface was as smooth as glass, and +reflected the surrounding shores. On their right, as they descended, +they saw some figures moving, and knew them to be the brigands, while on +their left they saw a ruined house. Toward this Girasole led them.</p> + +<p>The house stood on the shore of the lake. It was of stone, and was +two stories in height. The roof was still good, but the windows were +gone. There was no door, but half a dozen or so of the brigands stood +there, and formed a sufficient guard to prevent the escape of any +prisoner. These men had dark, wicked eyes and sullen faces, which +afforded fresh terror to Mrs. Willoughby. She had thought, in her +desperation, of making some effort to escape by bribing the men, but the +thorough-bred rascality which was evinced in the faces of these ruffians +showed her that they were the very fellows who would take her money and +cheat her afterward. If she had been able to speak Italian, +<span class = "pagenum">89b</span> +she might have secured their services by the prospect of some future +reward after escaping; but, as it was, she could not speak a word of the +language, and thus could not enter upon even the preliminaries of an +escape.</p> + +<p>On reaching the house the ruffians stood aside, staring hard at them. +Mrs. Willoughby shrank in terror from the baleful glances of their eyes; +but Minnie looked at them calmly and innocently, and not without some of +that curiosity which a child shows when he first sees a Chinaman or an +Arab in the streets. Girasole then led the way up stairs to a room on +the second story.</p> + +<p>It was an apartment of large size, extending across the house, with a +window at each end, and two on the side. On the floor there was a heap +of straw, over which some skins were thrown. There were no chairs, nor +was there any table.</p> + +<p>"Scusa me," said Girasole, "miladi, for dis accommodazion. It gifs me +pain, but I promise it sall not be long. Only dis day an' dis night +here. I haf to detain you dat time. Den we sall go to where I haf a home +fitter for de bride. I haf a home wharra you sall be a happy bride, +mees—"</p> + +<p>"But I don't want to stay here <i>at all</i> in such a horrid place," +said Minnie, looking around in disgust.</p> + +<p>"Only dis day an' dis night," said Girasole, imploringly. "Aftaire +you sall have all you sall wis."</p> + +<p>"Well, at any rate, I think it's very horrid in you to shut me up +here. You might let me walk outside in the woods. I'm so <i>aw</i>fully +fond of the woods."</p> + +<p>Girasole smiled faintly.</p> + +<p>"And so you sall have plenty of de wood—but to-morra. You wait +here now. All safe—oh yes—secura—all aright—oh +yes—slip to-night, an' in de mornin' early you sall be mine. Dere +sall come a priest, an' we sall have de ceremony."</p> + +<p>"Well, I think it was very unkind in you to bring me to such a horrid +place. And how can I sit down? You <i>might</i> have had a chair. And +look at poor, darling Kitty. You may be unkind to me, but you needn't +make <i>her</i> sit on the floor. You never saved <i>her</i> life, and +you have no right to be unkind to her."</p> + +<p>"Unkind! Oh, mees!—my heart, my life, all arra youairs, an' I +lay my life at youair foot."</p> + +<p>"I think it would be far more kind if you would put a chair at poor +Kitty's feet," retorted Minnie, with some show of temper.</p> + +<p>"But, oh, carissima, tink—de wild wood—noting +here—no, noting—not a chair—only de straw."</p> + +<p>"Then you had no business to bring me here. You might have known that +there were no chairs here. I can't sit down on nothing. But I suppose +you expect me to stand up. And if that isn't horrid, I don't know what +is. I'm sure I don't know what poor dear papa would say if he were to +see me now."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">90</span> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic090.png" width = "343" height = "450" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"WHAT IS THIS FOR?"</p> + +<p>"Do not grieve, carissima mia—do not, charming mees, decompose +yourself. To-morra you sall go to a bettaire place, an' I will carra you +to my castello. You sall haf every want, you sall enjoy every wis, you +sall be happy."</p> + +<p>"But I don't see how I can be happy without a chair," reiterated +Minnie, in whose mind this one grievance now became pre-eminent. "You +talk as though you think I am made of stone or iron, and you think I can +stand here all day or all night, and you want me to sleep on that horrid +straw and those horrid furry things. I suppose this is the castle that +you speak of; and I'm sure I wonder why you <i>ever</i> thought of +bringing me here. I suppose it doesn't make so much difference about a +<i>carpet</i>; but you will not even let me have a <i>chair</i>; and I +think you're <i>very</i> unkind."</p> + +<p>Girasole was in despair. He stood in thought for some time. He felt +that Minnie's rebuke was deserved. If she had reproached him with +waylaying her and carrying her off, he could have borne it, and could +have found a reply. But such a charge as this was unanswerable. +<span class = "pagenum">90b</span> +It certainly was very hard that she should not be able to sit down. But +then how was it possible for him to find a chair in the woods? It was an +insoluble problem. How in the world could he satisfy her?</p> + +<p>Minnie's expression also was most touching. The fact that she had no +chair to sit on seemed to absolutely overwhelm her. The look that she +gave Girasole was so piteous, so reproachful, so heart-rending, that his +soul actually quaked, and a thrill of remorse passed all through his +frame. He felt a cold chill running to the very marrow of his bones.</p> + +<p>"I think you're <i>very, very</i> unkind," said Minnie, "and I really +don't see how I can <i>ever</i> speak to you again."</p> + +<p>This was too much. Girasole turned away. He rushed down stairs. He +wandered frantically about. He looked in all directions for a chair. +There was plenty of wood certainly—for all around he saw the vast +forest—but of what use was it? He could not transform a tree into +a chair. He communicated his difficulty to some of the men. They shook +their heads helplessly. At last he saw the stump of +<span class = "pagenum">91</span> +a tree which was of such a shape that it looked as though it might be +used as a seat. It was his only resource, and he seized it. Calling two +or three of the men, he had the stump carried to the old house. He +rushed up stairs to acquaint Minnie with his success, and to try to +console her. She listened in coldness to his hasty words. The men who +were carrying the stump came up with a clump and a clatter, breathing +hard, for the stump was very heavy, and finally placed it on the landing +in front of Minnie's door. On reaching that spot it was found that it +would not go in.</p> + +<p>Minnie heard the noise and came out. She looked at the stump, then at +the men and then at Girasole.</p> + +<p>"What is this for?" she asked.</p> + +<p>"Eet—eet ees for a chair."</p> + +<p>"A chair!" exclaimed Minnie. "Why, it's nothing but a great big, +horrid, ugly old stump, and—"</p> + +<p>Her remarks ended in a scream. She turned and ran back into the +room.</p> + +<p>"What—what is de mattaire?" cried the Count, looking into the +room with a face pale with anxiety.</p> + +<p>"Oh, take it away! take it away!" cried Minnie, in terror.</p> + +<p>"What? what?"</p> + +<p>"Take it away! take it away!" she repeated.</p> + +<p>"But eet ees for you—eet ees a seat."</p> + +<p>"I don't want it. I won't have it!" cried Minnie. "It's full of +horrid ants and things. And it's dreadful—and <i>very, very</i> +cruel in you to bring them up here just to <i>tease</i> me, when you +<i>know</i> I hate them so. Take it away! take it away! oh, do please +take it away! And oh, do please go away yourself, and leave me with +dear, darling Kitty. <i>She</i> never teases me. She is <i>always</i> +kind."</p> + +<p>Girasole turned away once more, in fresh trouble. He had the stump +carried off, and then he wandered away. He was quite at a loss what to +do. He was desperately in love, and it was a very small request for +Minnie to make, and he was in that state of mind when it would be a +happiness to grant her slightest wish; but here he found himself in a +difficulty from which he could find no possible means of escape.</p> + +<p>"And now, Kitty darling," said Minnie, after Girasole had +gone—"now you see how very, very wrong you were to be so opposed +to that dear, good, kind, nice Rufus K. Gunn. <i>He</i> would never have +treated me so. <i>He</i> would never have taken me to a place like +this—a horrid old house by a horrid damp pond, without doors and +windows, just like a beggar's house—and then put me in a room +without a chair to sit on when I'm so <i>aw</i>fully tired. He was +<i>always</i> kind to me, and that was the reason you hated him so, +because you couldn't bear to have people kind to me. And I'm <i>so</i> +tired."</p> + +<p>"Come, then, poor darling. I'll make a nice seat for you out of these +skins."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">91b</span> + +<p>And Mrs. Willoughby began to fold some of them up and lay them one +upon the other.</p> + +<p>"What is that for, Kitty dear?" asked Minnie.</p> + +<p>"To make you a nice, soft seat, dearest."</p> + +<p>"But I don't want them, and I won't sit on the horrid things," said +Minnie.</p> + +<p>"But, darling, they are as soft as a cushion. See!" And her sister +pressed her hand on them, so as to show how soft they were.</p> + +<p>"I don't think they're soft <i>at all</i>," said Minnie; "and I wish +you wouldn't tease me so, when I'm <i>so</i> tired."</p> + +<p>"Then come, darling; I will sit on them, and you shall sit on my +knees."</p> + +<p>"But I don't want to go near those horrid furry things. They belong +to cows and things. I think <i>every body's</i> unkind to me +to-day."</p> + +<p>"Minnie, dearest, you really wound me when you talk in that way. Be +reasonable now. See what pains I take. I do all I can for you."</p> + +<p>"But I'm <i>always</i> reasonable, and it's <i>you</i> that are +unreasonable, when you want me to sit on that horrid fur. It's very, +<i>very</i> disagreeable in you, Kitty dear."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby said nothing, but went on folding some more skins. +These she placed on the straw so that a pile was formed about as high as +an ordinary chair. This pile was placed against the wall so that the +wall served as a support.</p> + +<p>Then she seated herself upon this.</p> + +<p>"Minnie, dearest," said she.</p> + +<p>"Well, Kitty darling."</p> + +<p>"It's really quite soft and comfortable. Do come and sit on it; do, +just to please me, only for five minutes. See! I'll spread my dress over +it so that you need not touch it. Come, dearest, only for five +minutes."</p> + +<p>"Well, I'll sit on it just for a little mite of a time, if you +promise not to tease me."</p> + +<p>"Tease you, dear! Why, of course not. Come."</p> + +<p>So Minnie went over and sat by her sister's side.</p> + +<p>In about an hour Girasole came back. The two sisters were seated +there. Minnie's head was resting on her sister's shoulder, and she was +fast asleep, while Mrs. Willoughby sat motionless, with her face turned +toward him, and such an expression in her dark eyes that Girasole felt +awed. He turned in silence and went away.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic092.png" width = "214" height = "332" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"ETHEL OBTAINED A PAIR OF SCISSORS."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXV" id = "chapXXV"> +CHAPTER XXV.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +SEEKING FOR HELP.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">The</span> departure of the drivers with +their horses had increased the difficulties of the party, and had added +to their danger. Of that party Ethel was now the head, and her efforts +were directed more zealously than ever to bring back Lady Dalrymple to +her senses. At last these efforts were crowned with success, and, after +being senseless for nearly an hour, she +<span class = "pagenum">92</span> +came to herself. The restoration of her senses, however, brought with it +the discovery of all that had occurred, and thus caused a new rush of +emotion, which threatened painful consequences. But the consequences +were averted, and at length she was able to rise. She was then helped +into her carriage, after which the question arose as to their next +proceeding.</p> + +<p>The loss of the horses and drivers was a very embarrassing thing to +them, and for a time they were utterly at a loss what course to adopt. +Lady Dalrymple was too weak to walk, and they had no means of conveying +her. The maids had simply lost their wits from fright; and Ethel could +not see her way clearly out of the difficulty. At this juncture they +were roused by the approach of the Rev. Saul Tozer.</p> + +<p>This reverend man had been bound as he descended from his carriage, +and had remained bound ever since. In that state he had been a spectator +of the struggle and its consequences, and he now came forward to offer +his services.</p> + +<p>"I don't know whether you remember me, ma'am," said he to Lady +Dalrymple, "but I looked in at your place at Rome; and in any case I am +bound to offer you my assistance, since you are companions with me in my +bonds, which I'd be much obliged if one of you ladies would untie or +cut. Perhaps it would be best to untie it, as rope's valuable."</p> + +<p>At this request Ethel obtained a pair of scissors from one of the +maids, and after vigorous efforts succeeded in freeing the reverend +gentleman.</p> + +<p>"Really, Sir, I am very much obliged for this +<span class = "pagenum">92b</span> +kind offer," said Lady Dalrymple, "and I avail myself of it gratefully. +Can you advise us what is best to do?"</p> + +<p>"Well, ma'am, I've been turning it over in my mind, and have made it +a subject of prayer; and it seems to me that it wouldn't be bad to go +out and see the country."</p> + +<p>"There are no houses for miles," said Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Have you ever been this road before?" said Tozer.</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Then how do you know?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, I was thinking of the part we had passed over."</p> + +<p>"True; but the country in front may be different. Didn't that brigand +captain say something about getting help ahead?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, so he did; I remember now," said Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Well, I wouldn't take his advice generally, but in this matter I +don't see any harm in following it; so I move that I be a committee of +one to go ahead and investigate the country and bring help."</p> + +<p>"Oh, thanks, thanks, very much. Really, Sir, this is very kind," said +Lady Dalrymple.</p> + +<p>"And I'll go too," said Ethel, as a sudden thought occurred to her. +"Would you be afraid, aunty dear, to stay here alone?"</p> + +<p>"Certainly not, dear. I have no more fear for myself, but I'm afraid +to trust you out of my sight."</p> + +<p>"Oh, you need not fear for me," said Ethel. "I shall certainly be as +safe farther on as I am here. Besides, if we can find help I will know +best what is wanted."</p> + +<p>"Well, dear, I suppose you may go."</p> + +<p>Without further delay Ethel started off, and Tozer walked by her +side. They went under the fallen tree, and then walked quickly along the +road.</p> + +<p>"Do you speak Italian, miss?" asked Tozer.</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"I'm sorry for that. I don't either. I'm told it's a fine +language."</p> + +<p>"So I believe; but how very awkward it will be not to be able to +speak to any person!"</p> + +<p>"Well, the Italian is a kind of offshoot of the Latin, and I can +scrape together a few Latin words—enough to make myself +understood, I do believe."</p> + +<p>"Can you, really? How very fortunate!"</p> + +<p>"It is somewhat providential, miss, and I hope I may succeed."</p> + +<p>They walked on in silence now for some time. Ethel was too sad to +talk, and Tozer was busily engaged in recalling all the Latin at his +command. After a while he began to grow sociable.</p> + +<p>"Might I ask, miss, what persuasion you are?"</p> + +<p>"Persuasion?" said Ethel, in surprise.</p> + +<p>"Yes, 'm; <ins class = "correction" title = "hyphen in original">de-nomination</ins>—religious body, you know."</p> + +<p>"Oh! why, I belong to the Church."</p> + +<p>"Oh! and what church did you say, 'm?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">93</span> + +<p>"The Church of England."</p> + +<p>"H'm. The 'Piscopalian body. Well, it's a high-toned body."</p> + +<p>Ethel gave a faint smile at this whimsical application of a name to +her church, and then Tozer returned to the charge.</p> + +<p>"Are you a professor?"</p> + +<p>"A what?"</p> + +<p>"A professor."</p> + +<p>"A professor?" repeated Ethel. "I don't think I <i>quite</i> +understand you."</p> + +<p>"Well, do you belong to the church? Are you a member?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes."</p> + +<p>"I'm glad to hear it. It's a high and a holy and a happy perrivelege +to belong to the church and enjoy the means of grace. I trust you live +up to your perriveleges?"</p> + +<p>"Live what?" asked Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Live up to your perriveleges," repeated Tozer—"attend on all +the means of grace—be often at the assembling of yourself +together."</p> + +<p>"The assembling of myself together? I don't think I <i>quite</i> get +your meaning," said Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Meeting, you know—church-meeting."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; I didn't understand. Oh yes, I always go to church."</p> + +<p>"That's right," said Tozer, with a sigh of relief; "and I suppose, +now, you feel an interest in the cause of missions?"</p> + +<p>"Missions? Oh, I don't know. The Roman Catholics practice that to +some extent, and several of my friends say they feel benefit from a +mission once a year; but for my part I have not yet any very decided +leanings to Roman Catholicism."</p> + +<p>"Oh, dear me, dear me!" cried Tozer, "that's not what I mean at all; +I mean Protestant missions to the heathen, you know."</p> + +<p>"I beg your pardon," said Ethel. "I thought you were referring to +something else."</p> + +<p>Tozer was silent now for a few minutes, and then asked her, +abruptly,</p> + +<p>"What's your opinion about the Jews?"</p> + +<p>"The Jews?" exclaimed Ethel, looking at him in some surprise, and +thinking that her companion must be a little insane to carry on such an +extraordinary conversation with such very abrupt changes—"the +Jews?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, the Jews."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I don't like them at all."</p> + +<p>"But they're the chosen people."</p> + +<p>"I can't help that. I don't like them. But then, you know, I never +really saw much of them."</p> + +<p>"I refer to their future prospects," said Tozer—"to prophecy. I +should like to ask you how you regard them in that light. Do you believe +in a spiritual or a temporal Zion?"</p> + +<p>"Spiritual Zion? Temporal Zion?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, 'm."</p> + +<p>"Well, really, I don't know. I don't think I believe any thing at all +about it."</p> + +<p>"But you <i>must</i> believe in either one or the other—you've +<i>got</i> to," said Tozer, positively.</p> + +<p>"But I <i>don't</i>, you know; and how can I?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">93b</span> + +<p>Tozer threw at her a look of commiseration, and began to think that +his companion was not much better than a heathen. In his own home circle +he could have put his hand on little girls of ten who were quite at home +on all these subjects. He was silent for a time, and then began +again.</p> + +<p>"I'd like to ask you one thing," said he, "very much."</p> + +<p>"What is it?" asked Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Do you believe," asked Tozer, solemnly, "that we're living in the +Seventh Vial?"</p> + +<p>"Vial? Seventh Vial?" said Ethel, in fresh amazement.</p> + +<p>"Yes, the Seventh Vial," said Tozer, in a sepulchral voice.</p> + +<p>"Living in the Seventh Vial? I really don't know how one can live in +a vial."</p> + +<p>"The Great Tribulation, you know."</p> + +<p>"Great Tribulation?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; for instance, now, don't you believe in the Apocalyptic +Beast?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know," said Ethel, faintly.</p> + +<p>"Well, at any rate, you believe in his number—you must."</p> + +<p>"His number?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean?"</p> + +<p>"Why, the number six, six, six—six hundred and sixty-six."</p> + +<p>"I really don't understand this," said Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Don't you believe that the Sixth Vial is done?"</p> + +<p>"Sixth Vial? What, another vial?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; and the drying of the Euphrates."</p> + +<p>"The Euphrates? drying?" repeated Ethel in a trembling voice. She +began to be alarmed. She felt sure that this man was insane. She had +never heard such incoherency in her life. And she was alone with him. +She stole a timid look, and saw his long, sallow face, on which there +was now a preoccupied expression, and the look did not reassure her.</p> + +<p>But Tozer himself was a little puzzled, and felt sure that his +companion must have her own opinions on the subject, so he began +again:</p> + +<p>"Now I suppose you've read Fleming on the Papacy?"</p> + +<p>"No, I haven't. I never heard of it."</p> + +<p>"Strange, too. You've heard of Elliot's 'Horæ Apocalypticæ?', I +suppose?"</p> + +<p>"No," said Ethel, timidly.</p> + +<p>"Well, it's all in Cumming—and you've read him, of course?"</p> + +<p>"Cumming? I never heard of him. Who is he?"</p> + +<p>"What, never heard of Cumming?"</p> + +<p>"Never."</p> + +<p>"And never read his 'Great Tribulation?'"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Nor his 'Great Expectation?'"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"What! not even his 'Apocalyptic Sketches?'"</p> + +<p>"I never heard of them."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">94</span> + +<p>Tozer looked at her in astonishment; but at this moment they came to +a turn in the road, when a sight appeared which drew from Ethel an +expression of joy.</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic094.png" width = "457" height = "457" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"TONITRUENDUM EST MALUM!"</p> + +<p>It was a little valley on the right, in which was a small hamlet with +a church. The houses were but small, and could not give them much +accommodation, but they hoped to find help there.</p> + +<p>"I wouldn't trust the people," said Ethel. "I dare say they're all +brigands; but there ought to be a priest there, and we can appeal to +him."</p> + +<p>This proposal pleased Tozer, who resumed his work of collecting among +the stores of his memory scraps of Latin which he had once stored away +there.</p> + +<p>The village was at no very great distance away from the road, and +they reached it in a short time. They went at once to the church. The +door was open, and a priest, who seemed the village priest, was standing +there. He was stout, with a good-natured expression on his hearty, rosy +face, and a fine twinkle in his eye, which lighted up pleasantly as he +saw the strangers enter.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">94b</span> + +<p>Tozer at once held out his hand and shook that of the priest.</p> + +<p>"Buon giorno," said the priest.</p> + +<p>Ethel shook her head.</p> + +<p>"Parlate Italiano?" said he.</p> + +<p>Ethel shook her head.</p> + +<p>"Salve, domine," said Tozer, who at once plunged headlong into +Latin.</p> + +<p>"Salve bene," said the priest, in some surprise.</p> + +<p>"Quomodo vales?" asked Tozer.</p> + +<p>"Optime valeo, Dei gratia. Spero vos valere."</p> + +<p>Tozer found the priest's pronunciation a little difficult, but +managed to understand him.</p> + +<p>"Domine," said he, "sumus viatores infelices et innocentes, in quos +fures nuper impetum fecerunt. Omnia bona nostra arripuerunt—"</p> + +<p>"Fieri non potest!" said the priest.</p> + +<p>"Et omnes amicos nostros in captivitatem lachrymabilem +tractaverunt—"</p> + +<p>"Cor dolet," said the priest; "miseret me vestrum."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">95</span> + +<p>"Cujusmodi terra est hæc in qua sustenendum est tot labores?"</p> + +<p>The priest sighed.</p> + +<p>"Tonitruendum est malum!" exclaimed Tozer, excited by the +recollection of his wrongs.</p> + +<p>The priest stared.</p> + +<p>"In hostium manibus fuimus, et, bonum tonitru! omnia impedimenta +amissimus. Est nimis omnipotens malum!"</p> + +<p>"Quid vis dicere?" said the priest, looking puzzled. "Quid tibi +vis?"</p> + +<p>"Est nimis sempiternum durum!"</p> + +<p>"In nomine omnium sanctorum apostolorumque," cried the priest, "quid +vis dicere?"</p> + +<p>"<ins class = "correction" title = "space in original">Potes ne</ins> +juvare nos," continued Tozer, "in hoc lachrymabile tempore? Volo unum +verum vivum virum qui possit—"</p> + +<p>"Diabolus arripiat me si possim unum solum verbum intelligere!" cried +the priest. "Be jabers if I ondherstan' yez at all at all; an' there ye +have it."</p> + +<p>And with this the priest raised his head, with its puzzled look, and +scratched that organ with such a natural air, and with such a full Irish +flavor in his brogue and in his face, that both of his visitors were +perfectly astounded.</p> + +<p>"Good gracious!" cried Tozer; and seizing the priest's hand in both +of his, he nearly wrung it off. "Why, what a providence! Why, really, +now! And you were an Irishman all the time! And why didn't you speak +English?"</p> + +<p>"Sure and what made you spake Latin?" cried the priest. "And what was +it you were thryin' to say wid yer 'sempiternum durum,' and yer +'tonitruendum malum?' Sure an' ye made me fairly profeen wid yer talk, +so ye did."</p> + +<p>"Well, I dare say," said Tozer, candidly—"I dare say 'tain't +onlikely that I <i>did</i> introduce one or two Americanisms in the +Latin; but then, you know, I ain't been in practice."</p> + +<p>The priest now brought chairs for his visitors, and, sitting thus in +the church, they told him about their adventures, and entreated him to +do something for them. To all this the priest listened with thoughtful +attention, and when they were done he at once promised to find horses +for them which would draw the carriages to this hamlet or to the next +town. Ethel did not think Lady Dalrymple could go further than this +place, and the priest offered to find some accommodations.</p> + +<p>He then left them, and in about half an hour he returned with two or +three peasants, each of whom had a horse.</p> + +<p>"They'll be able to bring the leedies," said the priest, "and haul +the impty wagons afther thim."</p> + +<p>"I think, miss," said Tozer, "that you'd better stay here. It's too +far for you to walk."</p> + +<p>"Sure an' there's no use in the wide wurruld for <i>you</i> to be +goin' back," said the priest to Ethel. "You can't do any gud, an' you'd +betther rist till they come. Yer frind'll be enough."</p> + +<p>Ethel at first thought of walking back, but finally she saw that it +would be quite useless, and so she resolved to remain and wait for her +aunt. So Tozer went off with the men and +<span class = "pagenum">95b</span> +the horses, and the priest asked Ethel all about the affair once more. +Whatever his opinions were, he said nothing.</p> + +<p>While he was talking there came a man to the door who beckoned him +out. He went out, and was gone for some time. He came back at last, +looking very serious.</p> + +<p>"I've just got a missage from thim," said he.</p> + +<p>"A message," exclaimed Ethel, "from them? What, from Girasole?"</p> + +<p>"Yis. They want a praste, and they've sint for me."</p> + +<p>"A priest?"</p> + +<p>"Yis; an' they want a maid-servant to wait on the young leedies; and +they want thim immajitly; an' I'll have to start off soon. There's a man +dead among thim that wants to be put undherground to-night, for the rist +av thim are goin' off in the mornin'; an' accordin' to all I hear, I +wouldn't wondher but what I'd be wanted for somethin' else afore +mornin'."</p> + +<p>"Oh, my God!" cried Ethel; "they're going to kill him, then!"</p> + +<p>"Kill him! Kill who? Sure an' it's not killin' they want me for. It's +the other—it's marryin'."</p> + +<p>"Marrying?" cried Ethel. "Poor, darling Minnie! Oh, you can +not—you will not marry them?"</p> + +<p>"Sure an' I don't know but it's the best thing I can do—as +things are," said the priest.</p> + +<p>"Oh, what shall I do! what shall I do!" moaned Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Well, ye've got to bear up, so ye have. There's throubles for all of +us, an' lots av thim too; an' more'n some av us can bear."</p> + +<p>Ethel sat in the darkest and bitterest grief for some time, a prey to +thoughts and fears that were perfect agony to her.</p> + +<p>At last a thought came to her which made her start, and look up, and +cast at the priest a look full of wonder and entreaty. The priest +watched her with the deepest sympathy visible on his face.</p> + +<p>"We must save them!" she cried.</p> + +<p>"Sure an' it's me that made up me moind to that same," said the +priest, "only I didn't want to rise yer hopes."</p> + +<p>"<i>We</i> must save them," said Ethel, with strong emphasis.</p> + +<p>"<i>We?</i> What can you do?"</p> + +<p>Ethel got up, walked to the church door, looked out, came back, +looked anxiously all around, and then, resuming her seat, she drew close +to the priest, and began to whisper, long and anxiously.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXVI" id = "chapXXVI"> +CHAPTER XXVI.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE AVENGER ON THE TRACK.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">When</span> Dacres had sprung aside into +the woods in the moment of his fierce rush upon Girasole, he had been +animated by a sudden thought that escape for himself was possible, and +that it would be more serviceable to his friends. +<span class = "pagenum">96</span> +Thus, then, he had bounded into the woods, and with swift steps he +forced his way among the trees deeper and deeper into the forest. Some +of the brigands had given chase, but without effect. Dacres's superior +strength and agility gave him the advantage, and his love of life was a +greater stimulus than their thirst for vengeance. In addition to this +the trees gave every assistance toward the escape of a fugitive, while +they threw every impediment in the way of a pursuer. The consequence +was, therefore, that Dacres soon put a great distance between himself +and his pursuers, and, what is more, he ran in such a circuitous route +that they soon lost all idea of their own locality, and had not the +faintest idea where he had gone. In this respect, however, Dacres +himself was not one whit wiser than they, for he soon found himself +completely bewildered in the mazes of the forest; and when at length the +deep silence around gave no further sound of pursuers, he sank down to +take breath, with no idea whatever in what direction the road lay.</p> + +<p>After a brief rest he arose and plunged deeper still into the forest, +so as to put an additional distance between himself and any possible +pursuit. He at length found himself at the foot of a precipice about +fifty feet in height, which was deep in the recesses of the forest. Up +this he climbed, and found a mossy place among the trees at its top, +where he could find rest, and at the same time be in a more favorable +position either for hearing or seeing any signs of approaching +pursuers.</p> + +<p>Here, then, he flung himself down to rest, and soon buried himself +among thoughts of the most exciting kind. The scene which he had just +left was fresh in his mind, and amidst all the fury of that strife there +rose most prominent in his memory the form of the two ladies, Minnie +standing calm and unmoved, while Mrs. Willoughby was convulsed with +agitated feeling. What was the cause of that? Could it be possible that +his wife had indeed contrived such a plot with the Italian? Was it +possible that she had chosen this way of striking two blows, by one of +which she could win her Italian, and by the other of which she could get +rid of himself, her husband? Such had been his conjecture during the +fury of the fight, and the thought had roused him up to his Berserker +madness; but now, as it recurred again, he saw other things to shake his +full belief. Her agitation seemed too natural.</p> + +<p>Yet, on the other hand, he asked himself, why should she not show +agitation? She was a consummate actress. She could show on her beautiful +face the softness and the tenderness of an angel of light while a demon +reigned in her malignant heart. Why should she not choose this way of +keeping up appearances? She had betrayed her friends, and sought her +husband's death; but would she wish to have her crime made manifest? Not +she. It was for this, then, that she wept and clung to the +child-angel.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">96b</span> + +<p>Such thoughts as these were not at all adapted to give comfort to his +mind, or make his rest refreshing. Soon, by such fancies, he kindled +anew his old rage, and his blood rose to fever heat, so that inaction +became no longer tolerable. He had rest enough. He started up, and +looked all around, and listened attentively. No sound arose and no sight +appeared which at all excited suspicion. He determined to set forth once +more, he scarcely knew where. He had a vague idea of finding his way +back to the road, so as to be able to assist the ladies, together with +another idea, equally ill defined, of coming upon the brigands, finding +the Italian, and watching for an opportunity to wreak vengeance upon +this assassin and his guilty partner.</p> + +<p>He drew his knife once more from a leathern sheath on the inside of +the breast of his coat, into which he had thrust it some time before, +and holding this he set forth, watchfully and warily. On the left side +of the precipice the ground sloped down, and at the bottom of this there +was a narrow valley. It seemed to him that this might be the course of +some spring torrent, and that by following its descent he might come out +upon some stream. With this intention he descended to the valley, and +then walked along, following the descent of the ground, and keeping +himself as much as possible among the thickest growths of the trees.</p> + +<p>The ground descended very gradually, and the narrow valley wound +along among rolling hills that were covered with trees and brush. As he +confined himself to the thicker parts of this, his progress was +necessarily slow; but at the end of that turn he saw before him +unmistakable signs of the neighborhood of some open place. Before him he +saw the sky in such a way that it showed the absence of forest trees. He +now moved on more cautiously, and, quitting the valley, he crept up the +hill-slope among the brush as carefully as possible, until he was at a +sufficient height, and then, turning toward the open, he crept forward +from cover to cover. At length he stopped. A slight eminence was before +him, beyond which all was open, yet concealed from his view. Descending +the slope a little, he once more advanced, and finally emerged at the +edge of the forest.</p> + +<p>He found himself upon a gentle declivity. Immediately in front of him +lay a lake, circular in shape, and about a mile in diameter, embosomed +among wooded hills. At first he saw no signs of any habitation; but as +his eyes wandered round he saw upon his right, about a quarter of a mile +away, an old stone house, and beyond this smoke curling up from among +the forest trees on the borders of the lake.</p> + +<p>The scene startled him. It was so quiet, so lonely, and so deserted +that it seemed a fit place for a robber's haunt. Could this be indeed +the home of his enemies, and had he thus so wonderfully come upon them +in the very midst of their retreat? He believed that it was so. A little +further observation showed +<span class = "pagenum">97</span> +figures among the trees moving to and fro, and soon he distinguished +faint traces of smoke in other places, which he had not seen at first, +as though there were more fires than one.</p> + +<p>Dacres exulted with a fierce and vengeful joy over this discovery. He +felt now not like the fugitive, but rather the pursuer. He looked down +upon this as the tiger looks from his jungle upon some Indian village. +His foes were numerous, but he was concealed, and his presence +unsuspected. He grasped his dagger with a firmer clutch, and then +pondered for a few minutes on what he had better do next.</p> + +<p>One thing was necessary first of all, and that was to get as near as +he possibly could without discovery. A slight survey of the situation +showed him that he might venture much nearer; and his eye ran along the +border of the lake which lay between him and the old house, and he saw +that it was all covered over with a thick fringe of trees and +brush-wood. The narrow valley along which he had come ended at the shore +of the lake just below him on his right, and beyond this the shore arose +again to a height equal to where he now was. To gain that opposite +height was now his first task.</p> + +<p>Before starting he looked all around, so as to be sure that he was +not observed. Then he went back for some distance, after which he +descended into the valley, crouching low, and crawling stealthily among +the brush-wood. Moving thus, he at length succeeded in reaching the +opposite slope without appearing to have attracted any attention from +any pursuers. Up this slope he now moved as carefully as ever, not +relaxing his vigilance one jot, but, if possible, calling into play even +a larger caution as he found himself drawing nearer to those whom he +began to regard as his prey.</p> + +<p>Moving up this slope, then, in this way, he at length attained the +top, and found himself here among the forest trees and underbrush. They +were here even denser than they were on the place which he had just +left. As he moved along he saw no indications that they had been +traversed by human footsteps. Every thing gave indication of an unbroken +and undisturbed solitude. After feeling his way along here with all the +caution which he could exercise, he finally ventured toward the shore of +the lake, and found himself able to go to the very edge without coming +to any open space or crossing any path.</p> + +<p>On looking forth from the top of the bank he found that he had not +only drawn much nearer to the old house, but that he could see the whole +line of shore. He now saw that there were some men by the door of the +house, and began to suspect that this was nothing else than the +headquarters and citadel of the brigands. The sight of the shore now +showed him that he could approach very much nearer, and unless the +brigands, or whoever they were, kept scouts out, he would be able to +reach a point immediately overlooking the house, from which he could +<span class = "pagenum">97b</span> +survey it at his leisure. To reach this point became now his next +aim.</p> + +<p>The wood being dense, Dacres found no more difficulty in passing +through this than in traversing what lay behind him. The caution which +he exercised here was as great as ever, and his progress was as slow, +but as sure. At length he found himself upon the desired point, and, +crawling cautiously forward to the shore, he looked down upon the very +old house which he had desired to reach.</p> + +<p>The house stood close by the lake, upon a sloping bank which lay +below. It did not seem to be more than fifty yards away. The doors and +windows were gone. Five or six ill-looking fellows were near the +doorway, some sprawling on the ground, others lolling and lounging +about. One glance at the men was sufficient to assure him that they were +the brigands, and also to show him that they kept no guard or scout or +outpost of any kind, at least in this direction.</p> + +<p>Here, then, Dacres lay and watched. He could not wish for a better +situation. With his knife in his hand, ready to defend himself in case +of need, and his whole form concealed perfectly by the thick underbrush +into the midst of which he had crawled, he peered forth through the +overhanging leaves, and watched in breathless interest. From the point +where he now was he could see the shore beyond the house, where the +smoke was rising. He could now see that there were no less than four +different columns of smoke ascending from as many fires. He saw as many +as twenty or thirty figures moving among the trees, made conspicuous by +the bright colors of their costumes. They seemed to be busy about +something which he could not make out.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, while his eye roved over the scene, it was struck by some +fluttering color at the open window of the old house. He had not noticed +this before. He now looked at it attentively. Before long he saw a +figure cross the window and return. It was a female figure.</p> + +<p>The sight of this revived all that agitation which he had felt +before, but which had been calmed during the severe efforts which he had +been putting forth. There was but one thought in his mind, and but one +desire in his heart.</p> + +<p>His wife.</p> + +<p>He crouched low, with a more feverish dread of discovery at this +supreme moment, and a fiercer thirst for some further revelation which +might disclose what he suspected. His breathing came thick and hard, and +his brow lowered gloomily over his gleaming eyes.</p> + +<p>He waited thus for some minutes, and the figure passed again.</p> + +<p>He still watched.</p> + +<p>Suddenly a figure appeared at the window. It was a young girl, a +blonde, with short golden curls. The face was familiar indeed to him. +Could he ever forget it? There it was full before him, turned toward +him, as though that one, by some strange spiritual sympathy, +<span class = "pagenum">98</span> +was aware of his presence, and was thus turning toward him this mute +appeal. Her face was near enough for its expression to be visible. He +could distinguish the childish face, with its soft, sweet innocence, and +he knew that upon it there was now that piteous, pleading, beseeching +look which formerly had so thrilled his heart. And it was thus that +Dacres saw his child-angel.</p> + +<p>A prisoner, turning toward him this appeal! What was the cause, and +what did the Italian want of this innocent child? Such was his thought. +What could his fiend of a wife gain by the betrayal of that angelic +being? Was it possible that even her demon soul could compass iniquity +like this? He had thought that he had fathomed her capacity for +malignant wickedness; but the presence here of the child-angel in the +power of these miscreants showed him that this capacity was indeed +unfathomable. At this sudden revelation of sin so enormous his very soul +turned sick with horror.</p> + +<p>He watched, and still looked with an anxiety that was increasing to +positive pain.</p> + +<p>And now, after one brief glance, Minnie drew back into the room. +There was nothing more to be seen for some time, but at last another +figure appeared.</p> + +<p>He expected this; he was waiting for it; he was sure of it; yet deep +down in the bottom of his heart there was a hope that it might not be +so, that his suspicions, in this case at least, might be unfounded. But +now the proof came; it was made manifest here before his eyes, and in +the light of day.</p> + +<p>In spite of himself a low groan escaped him. He buried his face in +his hands and shut out the sight. Then suddenly he raised his head again +and stared, as though in this face there was an irresistible fascination +by which a spell was thrown over him.</p> + +<p>It was the face of Mrs. Willoughby—youthful, beautiful, and +touching in its tender grace. Tears were now in those dark, luminous +eyes, but they were unseen by him. Yet he could mark the despondency of +her attitude; he could see a certain wild way of looking up and down and +in all directions; he noted how her hands grasped the window-ledge as if +for support.</p> + +<p>And oh, beautiful demon angel, he thought, if you could but know how +near you are to the avenger! Why are you so anxious, my demon wife? Are +you impatient because your Italian is delaying? Can you not live for +five seconds longer without him? Are you looking in all directions to +see where he is? Don't fret; he'll soon be here.</p> + +<p>And now there came a confirmation of his thoughts. He was not +surprised; he knew it; he suspected it. It was all as it should be. Was +it not in the confident expectation of this that he had come here with +his dagger—on their trail?</p> + +<p>It was Girasole.</p> + +<p>He came from the place, further along the shore, where the brigands +were around their +<span class = "pagenum">98b</span> +fires. He was walking quickly. He had a purpose. It was with a renewed +agony that Dacres watched his enemy—coming to visit his wife. The +intensity of that thirst for vengeance, which had now to be checked +until a better opportunity, made his whole frame tremble. A wild desire +came to him then and there to bound down upon his enemy, and kill and be +killed in the presence of his wife. But the other brigands deterred him. +These men might interpose and save the Italian, and make him a prisoner. +No; he must wait till he could meet his enemy on something like equal +terms—when he could strike a blow that would not be in vain. Thus +he overmastered himself.</p> + +<p>He saw Girasole enter the house. He watched breathlessly. The time +seemed long indeed. He could not hear any thing; the conversation, if +there was any, was carried on in a low tone. He could not see any thing; +those who conversed kept quiet; no one passed in front of the window. It +was all a mystery, and this made the time seem longer. At length Dacres +began to think that Girasole would not go at all. A long time passed. +Hours went away, and still Girasole did not quit the house.</p> + +<p>It was now sundown. Dacres had eaten nothing since morning, but the +conflict of passion drove away all hunger or thirst. The approach of +darkness was in accordance with his own gloomy wishes. Twilight in Italy +is short. Night would soon be over all.</p> + +<p>The house was on the slope of the bank. At the corner nearest him the +house was sunk into the ground in such a way that it looked as though +one might climb into the upper story window. As Dacres looked he made up +his mind to attempt it. By standing here on tiptoe he could catch the +upper window-ledge with his hands. He was strong. He was tall. His enemy +was in the house. The hour was at hand. He was the man.</p> + +<p>Another hour passed.</p> + +<p>All was still.</p> + +<p>There was a flickering lamp in the hall, but the men seemed to be +asleep.</p> + +<p>Another hour passed.</p> + +<p>There was no noise.</p> + +<p>Then Dacres ventured down. He moved slowly and cautiously, crouching +low, and thus traversing the intervening space.</p> + +<p>He neared the house and touched it. Before him was the window of the +lower story. Above him was the window of the upper story. He lifted up +his hands. They could reach the window-ledge.</p> + +<p>He put his long, keen knife between his teeth, and caught at the +upper window-ledge. Exerting all his strength, he raised himself up so +high that he could fling one elbow over. For a moment he hung thus, and +waited to take breath and listen.</p> + +<p>There was a rush below. Half a dozen shadowy forms surrounded him. He +had been seen. He had been trapped.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">99</span> + +<p>He dropped down and, seizing his knife, struck right and left.</p> + +<p>In vain. He was hurled to the ground and bound tight.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXVII" id = "chapXXVII"> +CHAPTER XXVII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +FACE TO FACE.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Hawbury</span>, on his capture, had been at +once taken into the woods, and led and pushed on by no gentle hands. He +had thus gone on until he had found himself by that same lake which +others of the party had come upon in the various ways which have been +described. Toward this lake he was taken, until finally his party +reached the old house, which they entered. It has already been said that +it was a two-story house. It was also of stone, and strongly built. The +door was in the middle of it, and rooms were on each side of the hall. +The interior plan of the house was peculiar, for the hall did not run +through, but consisted of a square room, and the stone steps wound +spirally from the lower hall to the upper one. There were three rooms up +stairs, one taking up one end of the house, which was occupied by Mrs. +Willoughby and Minnie; another in the rear of the house, into which a +door opened from the upper hall, close by the head of the stairs; and a +third, which was opposite the room first mentioned.</p> + +<p>Hawbury was taken to this house, and led up stairs into this room in +the rear of the house. At the end farthest from the door he saw a heap +of straw with a few dirty rugs upon it. In the wall a beam was set, to +which an iron ring was fastened. He was taken toward this bed, and here +his legs were bound together, and the rope that secured them was run +around the iron ring so as to allow of no more motion than a few feet. +Having thus secured the prisoner, the men left him to his own +meditations.</p> + +<p>The room was perfectly bare of furniture, nothing being in it but the +straw and the dirty rugs. Hawbury could not approach to the windows, for +he was bound in a way which prevented that. In fact, he could not move +in any direction, for his arms and legs were fastened in such a way that +he could scarcely raise himself from where he was sitting. He therefore +was compelled to remain in one position, and threw himself down upon the +straw on his side, with his face to the wall, for he found that position +easier than any other. In this way he lay for some time, until at length +he was roused by the sound of footsteps ascending the stairs. Several +people were passing his room. He heard the voice of Girasole. He +listened with deep attention. For some time there was no reply. At +length there was the sound of a woman's voice—clear, plain, and +unmistakable. It was a fretful voice of complaint. Girasole was trying +to answer it. After a time Girasole left. Then all was still. Then +Girasole returned. Then there was a clattering +<span class = "pagenum">99b</span> +noise on the stairs, and the bumping of some heavy weight, and the heavy +breathing of men. Then he heard Girasole say something, after which +arose Minnie's voice, close by, as though she was in the hall, and her +words were, "Oh, take it away, take it away!" followed by long +reproaches, which Hawbury did not fully understand.</p> + +<p>This showed him that Minnie, at least, was a prisoner, and in this +house, and in the adjoining room, along with some one whom he rightly +supposed was Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>After this there was a further silence for some time, which at last +was broken by fresh sounds of trampling and shuffling, together with the +confused directions of several voices all speaking at once. Hawbury +listened, and turned on his couch of straw so as to see any thing which +presented itself. The clatter and the noise approached nearer, ascending +the stairs, until at last he saw that they were entering his room. Two +of the brigands came first, carrying something carefully. In a few +moments the burden which they bore was revealed.</p> + +<p>It was a rude litter, hastily made from bushes fastened together. +Upon this lay the dead body of a man, his white face upturned, and his +limbs stiffened in the rigidity of death. Hawbury did not remember very +distinctly any of the particular events of his confused struggle with +the brigands; but he was not at all surprised to see that there had been +one of the ruffians sent to his account. The brigands who carried in +their dead companion looked at the captive with a sullen ferocity and a +scowling vengefulness, which showed plainly that they would demand of +him a reckoning for their comrade's blood if it were only in their +power. But they did not delay, nor did they make any actual +demonstrations to Hawbury. They placed the corpse of their comrade upon +the floor in the middle of the room, and then went out.</p> + +<p>The presence of the corpse only added to the gloom of Hawbury's +situation, and he once more turned his face to the wall, so as to shut +out the sight. Once more he gave himself up to his own thoughts, and so +the time passed slowly on. He heard no sounds now from the room where +Miss Fay was confined. He heard no noise from the men below, and could +not tell whether they were still guarding the door, or had gone away. +Various projects came to him, foremost among which was the idea of +escaping. Bribery seemed the only possible way. There was about this, +however, the same difficulty which Mrs. Willoughby had found—his +ignorance of the language. He thought that this would be an effectual +bar to any communication, and saw no other alternative than to wait +Girasole's pleasure. It seemed to him that a ransom would be asked, and +he felt sure, from Girasole's offensive manner, that the ransom would be +large. But there was no help for it. He felt more troubled about Miss +Fay; for Girasole's remarks about her seemed to +<span class = "pagenum">100</span> +point to views of his own which were incompatible with her +liberation.</p> + +<p>In the midst of these reflections another noise arose below. It was a +steady tramp of two or three men walking. The noise ascended the +stairway, and drew nearer and nearer. Hawbury turned once more, and saw +two men entering the room, carrying between them a box about six feet +long and eighteen inches or two feet wide. It was coarsely but strongly +made, and was undoubtedly intended as a coffin for the corpse of the +brigand. The men put the coffin down against the wall and retired. After +a few minutes they returned again with the coffin lid. They then lifted +the dead body into the coffin, and one of them put the lid in its place +and secured it with half a dozen screws. After this Hawbury was once +more left alone. He found this far more tolerable, for now he had no +longer before his very eyes the abhorrent sight of the dead body. Hidden +in its coffin, it no longer gave offense to his sensibilities. Once +more, therefore, Hawbury turned his thoughts toward projects of escape, +and discussed in his mind the probabilities for and against.</p> + +<p>The day had been long, and longer still did it seem to the captive as +hour after hour passed slowly by. He could not look at his watch, which +his captors had spared; but from the shadows as they fell through the +windows, and from the general appearance of the sky, he knew that the +close of the day was not far off. He began to wonder that he was left so +long alone and in suspense, and to feel impatient to know the worst as +to his fate. Why did not some of them come to tell him? Where was +Girasole? Was he the chief? Were the brigands debating about his fate, +or were they thus leaving him in suspense so as to make him despondent +and submissive to their terms? From all that he had ever heard of +brigands and their ways, the latter seemed not unlikely; and this +thought made him see the necessity of guarding himself against being too +impatient for freedom, and too compliant with any demands of theirs.</p> + +<p>From these thoughts he was at last roused by footsteps which ascended +the stairs. He turned and looked toward the door. A man entered.</p> + +<p>It was Girasole.</p> + +<p>He entered slowly, with folded arms, and coming about half-way, he +stood and surveyed the prisoner in silence. Hawbury, with a sudden +effort, brought himself up to a sitting posture, and calmly surveyed the +Italian.</p> + +<p>"Well," asked Hawbury, "I should like to know how long you intend to +keep up this sort of thing? What are you going to do about it? Name your +price, man, and we'll discuss it, and settle upon something +reasonable."</p> + +<p>"My price?" repeated Girasole, with peculiar emphasis.</p> + +<p>"Yes. Of course I understand you fellows. It's your trade, you know. +You've caught me, +<span class = "pagenum">100b</span> +and, of course, you'll try to make the best of me, and all that sort of +thing. So don't keep me waiting."</p> + +<p>"Inglis milor," said Girasole, with a sharp, quick accent, his face +flushing up as he spoke—"Inglis milor, dere is no price as you +mean, an' no ransom. De price is one dat you will not wis to pay."</p> + +<p>"Oh, come, now, my good fellow, really you must remember that I'm +tied up, and not in a position to be chaffed. Bother your Italian +humbug! Don't speak in these confounded figures of speech, you know, but +say up and down—how much?"</p> + +<p>"De brigands haf talk you ovair, an' dey will haf no price."</p> + +<p>"What the devil is all that rot about?"</p> + +<p>"Dey will haf youair blood."</p> + +<p>"My blood?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"And pray, my good fellow, what good is that going to do them?"</p> + +<p>"It is vengeance," said Girasole.</p> + +<p>"Vengeance? Pooh! Nonsense! What rot! What have I ever done?"</p> + +<p>"Dat—dere—his blood," said Girasole, pointing to the +coffin.</p> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic101.png" width = "345" height = "457" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"INGLIS MILOR, I SALL HAF YOUAIR LIFE."</p> + +<p>"What! that scoundrel? Why, man alive, are you crazy? That was a fair +stand-up fight. That is, it was two English against twenty Italians, if +you call that fair; but perhaps it is. His blood! By Jove! Cool, that! +Come, I like it."</p> + +<p>"An' more," said Girasole, who now grew more excited. "It is not de +brigand who condemn you; it is also me. I condemn you."</p> + +<p>"You?" said Hawbury, elevating his eyebrows in some surprise, and +fixing a cool stare upon Girasole. "And what the devil's <i>this</i> row +about, I should like to know? I don't know <i>you</i>. What have you +against <i>me</i>?"</p> + +<p>"Inglis milor," cried Girasole, who was stung to the quick by a +certain indescribable yet most irritating superciliousness in Hawbury's +tone—"Inglis milor, you sall see what you sall soffair. You sall +die! Dere is no hope. You are condemn by de brigand. You also are +condemn by me, for you insult me."</p> + +<p>"Well, of all the beastly rot I ever heard, this is about the worst! +What do you mean by all this infernal nonsense? Insult you! What would I +insult you for? Why, man alive, you're as mad as a March hare! If I +thought you were a gentleman, I'd—by Jove, I will, too! See here, +you fellow: I'll fight you for it—pistols, or any thing. Come, +now. I'll drop all considerations of rank. I'll treat you as if you were +a real count, and not a sham one. Come, now. What do you say? Shall we +have it out? Pistols—in the woods there. You've got all your +infernal crew around you, you know. Well? What? You won't? By Jove!"</p> + +<p>Girasole's gesture showed that he declined the proposition.</p> + +<p>"Inglis milor," said he, with a venomous +<span class = "pagenum">101</span> +glitter in his eyes, "I sall haf youair life—wis de pistol, but +not in de duello. I sall blow your brain out myself."</p> + +<p>"Blow and be hanged, then!" said Hawbury.</p> + +<p>And with these words he fell back on his straw, and took no further +notice of the Italian.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXVIII" id = "chapXXVIII"> +CHAPTER XXVIII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +TORN ASUNDER.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">When</span> Dacres made his attempt upon +the house he was not so unobserved as he supposed himself to be. Minnie +and Mrs. Willoughby happened at that time to be sitting on the floor by +the window, one on each side, and they were looking out. They had chosen +the seat as affording some prospect of the outer world. There was in +Mrs. Willoughby a certain instinctive feeling that if any rescue came, +it would come from the land side; and, therefore, though the hope was +faint indeed, it nevertheless +<span class = "pagenum">101b</span> +was sufficiently well defined to inspire her with an uneasy and +incessant vigilance. Thus, then, she had seated herself by the window, +and Minnie had taken her place on the opposite side, and the two +sisters, with clasped hands, sat listening to the voices of the +night.</p> + +<p>At length they became aware of a movement upon the bank just above +them and lying opposite. The sisters clasped one another's hands more +closely, and peered earnestly through the gloom. It was pretty dark, and +the forest threw down a heavy shadow, but still their eyes were by this +time accustomed to the dark, and they could distinguish most of the +objects there. Among these they soon distinguished a moving figure; but +what it was, whether man or beast, they could not make out.</p> + +<p>This moving figure was crawling down the bank. There was no cover to +afford concealment, and it was evident that he was trusting altogether +to the concealment of the darkness. It was a hazardous experiment, and +Mrs. Willoughby trembled in suspense.</p> + +<p>Minnie, however, did not tremble at all, nor +<span class = "pagenum">102</span> +was the suspense at all painful. When Mrs. Willoughby first cautiously +directed her attention to it in a whisper, Minnie thought it was some +animal.</p> + +<p>"Why, Kitty dear," she said, speaking back in a whisper, "why, it's +an animal; I wonder if the creature is a wild beast. I'm sure I think +it's very dangerous, and no doors or windows. But it's <i>always</i> the +way. He wouldn't give me a chair; and so I dare say I shall be eaten up +by a bear before morning."</p> + +<p>Minnie gave utterance to this expectation without the slightest +excitement, just as though the prospect of becoming food for a bear was +one of the very commonest incidents of her life.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I don't think it's a bear."</p> + +<p>"Well, then, it's a tiger or a lion, or perhaps a wolf. I'm sure +<i>I</i> don't see what difference it makes what one is eaten by, when +one <i>has</i> to be eaten."</p> + +<p>"It's a man!" said Mrs. Willoughby, tremulously.</p> + +<p>"A man!—nonsense, Kitty darling. A man walks; he doesn't go on +all-fours, except when he is very, very small."</p> + +<p>"Hush! it's some one coming to help us. Watch him, Minnie dear. Oh, +how dangerous!"</p> + +<p>"Do you really think so?" said Minnie, with evident pleasure. "Now +that is really kind. But I wonder who it <i>can</i> be?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby squeezed her hand, and made no reply. She was +watching the slow and cautious movement of the shadowy figure.</p> + +<p>"He's coming nearer!" said she, tremulously.</p> + +<p>Minnie felt her sister's hand throb at the quick movement of her +heart, and heard her short, quick breathing.</p> + +<p>"Who <i>can</i> it be, I wonder?" said Minnie, full of curiosity, but +without any excitement at all.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Minnie!"</p> + +<p>"What's the matter, darling?"</p> + +<p>"It's so terrible."</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"This suspense. Oh, I'm so afraid!"</p> + +<p>"Afraid! Why, I'm not afraid at all."</p> + +<p>"Oh! he'll be caught."</p> + +<p>"No, he won't," said Minnie, confidently. "I <i>knew</i> he'd come. +They <i>always</i> do. Don't be afraid that he'll be caught, or that +he'll fail. They <i>never</i> fail. They always <i>will</i> save me. +Wait till your life has been saved as often as mine has, Kitty darling. +Oh, I expected it all! I was thinking a little while ago he ought to be +here soon."</p> + +<p>"He! Who?"</p> + +<p>"Why, any person; the person who is going to save me this time. I +don't know, of course, who he is; some horrid man, of course. And +then—oh dear!—I'll have it all over again. He'll carry me +away on his back, and through those wretched woods, and bump me against +the trees and things. Then he'll get me to the road, and put me on a +horrid old horse, and +<span class = "pagenum">102b</span> +gallop away. And by that time it will be morning. And then he'll +propose. And so there'll be another. And I don't know what I +<i>shall</i> do about it. Oh dear!"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby had not heard half of this. All her soul was intent +upon the figure outside. She only pressed her sister's hand, and gave a +warning "Hus-s-s-h!"</p> + +<p>"I know one thing I <i>do</i> wish," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>Her sister made no reply.</p> + +<p>"I do wish it would turn out to be that nice, dear, good, kind Rufus +K. Gunn. I don't want any more of them. And I'm sure he's nicer than +this horrid Count, who wouldn't take the trouble to get me even a chair. +And yet he pretends to be fond of me."</p> + +<p>"Hus-s-s-h!" said her sister.</p> + +<p>But Minnie was irrepressible.</p> + +<p>"I don't want any horrid stranger. But, oh, Kitty darling, it would +be so awfully funny if he were to be caught! and then he <i>couldn't</i> +propose, you know."</p> + +<p>By this time the figure had reached the house. Minnie peeped over and +looked down. Then she drew back her head and sighed.</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" she said, in a plaintive tone.</p> + +<p>"What, darling?"</p> + +<p>"Why, Kitty darling, do you know he really looks a little like that +great, big, horrid man that ran with me down the volcano, and then +pretended he was my dear papa. And here he comes to save me again. Oh, +what <i>shall</i> I do? Won't you pretend you're me, Kitty darling, and +please go yourself? Oh, ple-e-ease do!"</p> + +<p>But now Minnie was interrupted by two strong hands grasping the +window-sill. A moment after a shadowy head arose above it. Mrs. +Willoughby started back, but through the gloom she was able to recognize +the strongly marked face of Scone Dacres.</p> + +<p>For a moment he stared through the darkness. Then he flung his elbow +over.</p> + +<p>There arose a noise below. There was a rush. The figure disappeared +from the window. A furious struggle followed, in the midst of which +arose fierce oaths and deep breathings, and the sound of blows. Then the +struggle subsided, and they heard footsteps tramping heavily. They +followed the sound into the house. They heard men coming up the stairs +and into the hall outside. Then they all moved into, the front-room +opposite theirs. After a few minutes they heard the steps descending the +stairs. By this they judged that the prisoner had been taken to that +room which was on the other side of the hall and in the front of the +house.</p> + +<p>"There dies our last hope!" said Mrs. Willoughby, and burst into +tears.</p> + +<p>"I'm sure I don't see what you're crying about," said Minnie. "You +certainly oughtn't to want me to be carried off again by that person. If +he had me, he'd <i>never</i> give me up—especially after saving me +twice."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby made no reply, and the sisters sat in silence for +nearly an hour. They +<span class = "pagenum">103</span> +were then aroused by the approach of footsteps which entered the house; +after which voices were heard below.</p> + +<p>Then some one ascended the stairs, and they saw the flicker of a +light. It was Girasole.</p> + +<p>He came into the room with a small lamp, holding his hand in front of +the flame. This lamp he set down in a corner out of the draught, and +then turned to the ladies.</p> + +<p>"Miladi," said Girasole, in a gentle voice, "I am ver pained to haf +to tella you dat it is necessaire for you to separat dis +night—till to-morra."</p> + +<p>"To separate?" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"Only till to-morra, miladi. Den you sall be togeder foravva. But it +is now necessaire. Dere haf ben an attemp to a rescue. I mus guard again +dis—an' it mus be done by a separazion. If you are togeder you +might run. Dis man was almos up here. It was only chance dat I saw him +in time."</p> + +<p>"Oh, Sir," cried Mrs. Willoughby, "you can not—you will not +separate us. You can not have the heart to. I promise most solemnly that +we will not escape if you only leave us together."</p> + +<p>Girasole shook his head.</p> + +<p>"I can not," said he, firmly; "de mees is too precious. I dare not. +If you are prisonaire se will not try to fly, an' so I secure her de +more; but if you are togeder you will find some help. You will bribe de +men. I can not trust dem."</p> + +<p>"Oh, do not separate us. Tie us. Bind us. Fasten us with chains. +Fasten me with chains, but leave me with her."</p> + +<p>"Chains? nonsance; dat is impossibile. Chains? no, miladi. You sall +be treat beautiful. No chain, no; notin but affection—till +to-morra, an' den de mees sall be my wife. De priest haf come, an' it +sall be allaright to-morra, an' you sall be wit her again. An' now you +haf to come away; for if you do not be pleasant, I sall not be able to +'low you to stay to-morra wit de mees when se become my Contessa."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby flung her arms about her sister, and clasped her in a +convulsive embrace.</p> + +<p>"Well, Kitty darling," said Minnie, "don't cry, or you'll make me cry +too. It's just what we might have expected, you know. He's been as +unkind as he could be about the chair, and of course he'll do all he can +to tease me. Don't cry, dear. You must go, I suppose, since that horrid +man talks and scolds so about it; only be sure to be back early; but how +I am <i>ever</i> to pass the night here all alone and standing up, I'm +sure <i>I</i> don't know."</p> + +<p>"Alone? Oh no," said Girasole. "Charming mees, you sall not be alone; +I haf guard for dat. I haf sent for a maid."</p> + +<p>"But I don't want any of your horrid old maids. I want my own maid, +or none at all."</p> + +<p>"Se sall be your own maid. I haf sent for her."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">103b</span> + +<p>"What, my own maid?—Dowlas?"</p> + +<p>"I am ver sorry, but it is not dat one. It is anoder—an +Italian."</p> + +<p>"Well, I think that is <i>very</i> unkind, when you <i>know</i> I +can't speak a word of the language. But you <i>always</i> do all you can +to tease me. I <i>wish</i> I had never seen you."</p> + +<p>Girasole looked hurt.</p> + +<p>"Charming mees," said he, "I will lay down my life for you."</p> + +<p>"But I don't want you to lay down your life. I want Dowlas."</p> + +<p>"And you sall haf Dowlas to-morra. An' to-night you sall haf de +Italian maid."</p> + +<p>"Well, I suppose I must," said Minnie, resignedly.</p> + +<p>"Miladi," said Girasole, turning to Mrs. Willoughby, "I am ver sorry +for dis leetle accommodazion. De room where you mus go is de one where I +haf put de man dat try to safe you. He is tied fast. You mus promis you +will not loose him. Haf you a knife?"</p> + +<p>"No," said Mrs. Willoughby, in a scarce audible tone.</p> + +<p>"Do not mourn. You sall be able to talk to de prisonaire and get +consolazion. But come."</p> + +<p>With these words Girasole led the way out into the hall, and into the +front-room on the opposite side. He carried the lamp in his hand. Mrs. +Willoughby saw a figure lying at the other end of the room on the floor. +His face was turned toward them, but in the darkness she could not see +it plainly. Some straw was heaped up in the corner next her.</p> + +<p>"Dere," said Girasole, "is your bed. I am sorra. Do not be +trouble."</p> + +<p>With this he went away.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby flung herself on her knees, and bowed her head and +wept convulsively. She heard the heavy step of Girasole as he went down +stairs. Her first impulse was to rush back to her sister. But she +dreaded discovery, and felt that disobedience would only make her fate +harder.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic104.png" width = "219" height = "319" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"ONE ARM WENT AROUND HER NECK."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXIX" id = "chapXXIX"> +CHAPTER XXIX.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +FOUND AT LAST.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">In</span> a few moments Girasole came back +and entered Minnie's room. He was followed by a woman who was dressed in +the garb of an Italian peasant girl. Over her head she wore a hood to +protect her from the night air, the limp folds of which hung over her +face. Minnie looked carelessly at this woman and then at Girasole.</p> + +<p>"Charming mees," said Girasole, "I haf brought you a maid for dis +night. When we leaf dis you sall haf what maid you wis."</p> + +<p>"That horrid old fright!" said Minnie. "I don't want her."</p> + +<p>"You sall only haf her for dis night," said Girasole. "You will be +taken care for."</p> + +<p>"I suppose nobody cares for what <i>I</i> want," +<span class = "pagenum">104</span> +said Minnie, "and I may as well speak to the wall, for all the good it +does."</p> + +<p>Girasole smiled and bowed, and put his hand on his heart, and then +called down the stairs:</p> + +<p>"Padre Patricio!"</p> + +<p>A solid, firm step now sounded on the stairs, and in a few moments +the priest came up. Girasole led the way into Hawbury's room. The +prisoner lay on his side. He was in a deep sleep. Girasole looked in +wonder at the sleeper who was spending in this way the last hours of his +life, and then pointed to the coffin.</p> + +<p>"Here," said he, in Italian, "is the body. When the grave is dug they +will tell you. You must stay here. You will not be afraid to be with the +dead."</p> + +<p>The priest smiled.</p> + +<p>Girasole now retreated and went down stairs.</p> + +<p>Soon all was still.</p> + +<p>The Italian woman had been standing where she had stopped ever since +she first came into the room. Minnie had not paid any attention to her, +but at last she noticed this.</p> + +<p>"I <i>wish</i> you wouldn't stand there in that way. You really make +me feel quite nervous. And what with the dark, and not having any light, +and losing poor dear Kitty, and not having any chair to sit upon, really +one's life is scarce worth having. But all this is thrown away, as you +can't speak English—and how horrid it is to have no one to talk +to."</p> + +<p>The woman made no reply, but with a quiet, stealthy step she drew +near to Minnie.</p> + +<p>"What do you want? You horrid creature, keep away," said Minnie, +drawing back in some alarm.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">104b</span> + +<p>"Minnie dear!" said the woman. "H-s-s-s-h!" she added, in a low +whisper.</p> + +<p>Minnie started.</p> + +<p>"Who are you?" she whispered.</p> + +<p>One arm went around her neck, and another hand went over her mouth, +and the woman drew nearer to her.</p> + +<p>"Not a word. H-s-s-s-h! I've risked my life. The priest brought +me."</p> + +<p>"Why, my darling, darling love of an Ethel!" said Minnie, who was +overwhelmed with surprise.</p> + +<p>"H-s-s-s-h!"</p> + +<p>"But how can I h-s-s-s-h when I'm so perfectly frantic with delight? +Oh, you darling pet!"</p> + +<p>"H-s-s-s-h! Not another word. I'll be discovered and lost."</p> + +<p>"Well, dear, I'll speak very, very low. But how did you come +here?"</p> + +<p>"The priest brought me."</p> + +<p>"The priest?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. He was sent for, you know; and I thought I could help you, and +he is going to save you."</p> + +<p>"He! Who?"</p> + +<p>"The priest, you know."</p> + +<p>"The priest! Is he a Roman Catholic priest, Ethel darling?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, dear."</p> + +<p>"And <i>he</i> is going to save me this time, is he?"</p> + +<p>"I hope so, dear."</p> + +<p>"Oh, how perfectly lovely that is! and it was so kind and thoughtful +in you! Now this is really quite nice, for you know I've <i>longed</i> +so to be saved by a priest. These horrid men, you know, all go and +propose the moment they save one's life; but a priest <i>can't</i>, you +know—no, not if he saved one a thousand times over. Can he now, +Ethel darling?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no!" said Ethel, in a little surprise. "But stop, darling. You +really must <i>not</i> say another word—no, not so much as a +whisper—for we certainly <i>will</i> be heard; and don't notice +what I do, or the priest either, for it's very, very important, dear. +But you keep as still as a little mouse, and wait till we are all +ready."</p> + +<p>"Well, Ethel dear, I will; but it's awfully funny to see you +here—and oh, <i>such</i> a funny figure as you are!"</p> + +<p>"H-s-s-s-h!"</p> + +<p>Minnie relapsed into silence now, and Ethel withdrew near to the +door, where she stood and listened. All was still. Down stairs there was +no light and no sound. In the hall above she could see nothing, and +could not tell whether any guards were there or not.</p> + +<p>Hawbury's room was at the back of the house, as has been said, and +the door was just at the top of the stairs. The door where Ethel was +standing was there too, and was close by the other, so that she could +listen and hear the deep breathing of the sleeper. One or two indistinct +sounds escaped him from time to +<span class = "pagenum">105</span> +time, and this was all that broke the deep stillness.</p> + +<p>She waited thus for nearly an hour, during which all was still, and +Minnie said not a word. Then a shadowy figure appeared near her at +Hawbury's door, and a hand touched her shoulder.</p> + +<p>Not a word was said.</p> + +<p>Ethel stole softly and noiselessly into Hawbury's room, where the +priest was. She could see the two windows, and the priest indicated to +her the position of the sleeper.</p> + +<p>Slowly and cautiously she stole over toward him.</p> + +<p>She reached the place.</p> + +<p>She knelt by his side, and bent low over him. Her lips touched his +forehead.</p> + +<p>The sleeper moved slightly, and murmured some words.</p> + +<p>"All fire," he murmured; "fire—and flame. It is a furnace +before us. She must not die."</p> + +<p>Then he sighed.</p> + +<p>Ethel's heart beat wildly. The words that he spoke told her where his +thoughts were wandering. She bent lower; tears fell from her eyes and +upon his face.</p> + +<p>"My darling," murmured the sleeper, "we will land here. I will cook +the fish. How pale! Don't cry, dearest."</p> + +<p>The house was all still. Not a sound arose. Ethel still bent down and +listened for more of these words which were so sweet to her.</p> + +<p>"Ethel!" murmured the sleeper, "where are you? Lost! lost!"</p> + +<p>A heavy sigh escaped him, which found an echo in the heart of the +listener. She touched his forehead gently with one hand, and +whispered,</p> + +<p>"My lord!"</p> + +<p>Hawbury started.</p> + +<p>"What's this?" he murmured.</p> + +<p>"A friend," said Ethel.</p> + +<p>At this Hawbury became wide awake.</p> + +<p>"Who are you?" he whispered, in a trembling voice. "For God's +sake—oh, for God's sake, speak again! tell me!"</p> + +<p>"Harry," said Ethel.</p> + +<p>Hawbury recognized the voice at once.</p> + +<p>A slight cry escaped him, which was instantly suppressed, and then a +torrent of whispered words followed.</p> + +<p>"Oh, my darling! my darling! my darling! What is this? How is this? +Is it a dream? Oh, am I awake? Is it you? Oh, my darling! my darling! +Oh, if my arms were but free!"</p> + +<p>Ethel bent over him, and passed her arm around him till she felt the +cords that bound him. She had a sharp knife ready, and with this she cut +the cords. Hawbury raised himself, without waiting for his feet to be +freed, and caught Ethel in his freed arms in a silent embrace, and +pressed her over and over again to his heart.</p> + +<p>Ethel with difficulty extricated herself.</p> + +<p>"There's no time to lose," said she. "I came to save you. Don't waste +another moment; +<span class = "pagenum">105b</span> +it will be too late. Oh, do not! Oh, wait!" she added, as Hawbury made +another effort to clasp her in his arms. "Oh, do what I say, for my +sake!"</p> + +<p>She felt for his feet, and cut the rest of his bonds.</p> + +<p>"What am I to do?" asked Hawbury, clasping her close, as though he +was afraid that he would lose her again.</p> + +<p>"Escape."</p> + +<p>"Well, come! I'll leap with you from the window."</p> + +<p>"You can't. The house and all around swarms with brigands. They watch +us all closely."</p> + +<p>"I'll fight my way through them."</p> + +<p>"Then you'll be killed, and I'll die."</p> + +<p>"Well, I'll do whatever you say."</p> + +<p>"Listen, then. You must escape alone."</p> + +<p>"What! and leave you? Never!"</p> + +<p>"I'm safe. I'm disguised, and a priest is with me as my +protector."</p> + +<p>"How can you be safe in such a place as this?"</p> + +<p>"I am safe. Do not argue. There is no time to lose. The priest +brought me here, and will take me away."</p> + +<p>"But there are others here. I can't leave them. Isn't Miss Fay a +prisoner? and another lady?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; but the priest and I will be able, I hope, to liberate them. We +have a plan."</p> + +<p>"But can't I go with you and help you?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no! it's impossible. You could not. We are going to take them +away in disguise. We have a dress. You couldn't be disguised."</p> + +<p>"And <i>must</i> I go alone?"</p> + +<p>"You must."</p> + +<p>"I'll do it, then. Tell me what it is. But oh, my darling! how can I +leave you, and in such a place as this?"</p> + +<p>"I assure you I am not in the slightest danger."</p> + +<p>"I shall feel terribly anxious."</p> + +<p>"H-s-s-s-h! no more of this. Listen now."</p> + +<p>"Well?"</p> + +<p>Ethel bent lower, and whispered in his ear, in even lower tones than +ever, the plan which she had contrived.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXX" id = "chapXXX"> +CHAPTER XXX.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +A DESPERATE PLAN.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Ethel</span>'s plan was hastily revealed. +The position was exceedingly perilous; time was short, and this was the +only way of escape.</p> + +<p>It was the priest who had concocted it, and he had thought of it as +the only plan by which Hawbury's rescue could be effected. This +ingenious Irishman had also formed another plan for the rescue of Minnie +and her sister, which was to be attempted in due course of time.</p> + +<p>Now no ordinary mode of escape was possible for Hawbury. A strict +watch was kept. +<span class = "pagenum">106</span> +The priest had noticed on his approach that guards were posted in +different directions in such a way that no fugitive from the house could +elude them. He had also seen that the guard inside the house was equally +vigilant. To leap from the window and run for it would be certain death, +for that was the very thing which the brigands anticipated. To make a +sudden rush down the stairs was not possible, for at the door below +there were guards; and there, most vigilant of all, was Girasole +himself.</p> + +<p>The decision of the Irish priest was correct, as has been proved in +the case of Dacres, who, in spite of all his caution, was observed and +captured. Of this the priest knew nothing, but judged from what he +himself had seen on his approach to the house.</p> + +<p>The plan of the priest had been hastily communicated to Ethel, who +shared his convictions and adopted his conclusions. She also had noticed +the vigilance with which the guard had been kept up, and only the fact +that a woman had been sent for and was expected with the priest had +preserved her from discovery and its consequences. As it was, however, +no notice was taken of her, and her pretended character was assumed to +be her real one. Even Girasole had scarcely glanced at her. A village +peasant was of no interest in his eyes. His only thought was of Minnie, +and the woman that the priest brought was only used as a desperate +effort to show a desire for her comfort. After he had decided to +separate the sisters the woman was of more importance; but he had +nothing to say to her, and thus Ethel had effected her entrance to +Minnie's presence in safety, with the result that has been +described.</p> + +<p>The priest had been turning over many projects in his brain, but at +last one suggested itself which had originated in connection with the +very nature of his errand.</p> + +<p>One part of that errand was that a man should be conveyed out of the +house and carried away and left in a certain place. Now the man who was +thus to be carried out was a dead man, and the certain place to which he +was to be borne and where he was to be left was the grave; but these +stern facts did not at all deter the Irish priest from trying to make +use of this task that lay before him for the benefit of Hawbury.</p> + +<p>Here was a problem. A prisoner anxious for escape, and a dead man +awaiting burial; how were these two things to be exchanged so that the +living man might pass out without going to the grave?</p> + +<p>The Irish priest puzzled and pondered and grew black in the face with +his efforts to get to the solution of this problem, and at length +succeeded—to his own satisfaction, at any rate. What is more, when +he explained his plan to Ethel, she adopted it. She started, it is true; +she shuddered, she recoiled from it at first, but finally she adopted +it. Furthermore, she took it upon herself to persuade Hawbury to fall in +with it.</p> + +<p>So much with regard to Hawbury. For +<span class = "pagenum">106b</span> +Minnie and her sister the indefatigable priest had already concocted a +plan before leaving home. This was the very commonplace plan of a +disguise. It was to be an old woman's apparel, and he trusted to the +chapter of accidents to make the plan a success. He noticed with +pleasure that some women were at the place, and thought that the +prisoners might be confounded with them.</p> + +<p>When at length Ethel had explained the plan to Hawbury he made a few +further objections, but finally declared himself ready to carry it +out.</p> + +<p>The priest now began to put his project into execution. He had +brought a screw-driver with him, and with this he took out the screws +from the coffin one by one, as quietly as possible.</p> + +<p>Then the lid was lifted off, and Hawbury arose and helped the priest +to transfer the corpse from the coffin to the straw. They then put the +corpse on its side, with the face to the wall, and bound the hands +behind it, and the feet also. The priest then took Hawbury's +handkerchief and bound it around the head of the corpse. One or two rugs +that lay near were thrown over the figure, so that it at length looked +like a sleeping man.</p> + +<p>Hawbury now got into the coffin and lay down on his back at full +length. The priest had brought some bits of wood with him, and these he +put on the edge of the coffin in such a way that the lid would be kept +off at a distance of about a quarter of an inch. Through this opening +Hawbury could have all the air that was requisite for breathing.</p> + +<p>Then Ethel assisted the priest to lift the lid on.</p> + +<p>Thus far all had been quiet; but now a slight noise was heard below. +Some men were moving. Ethel was distracted with anxiety, but the priest +was as cool as a clock. He whispered to her to go back to the room where +she belonged.</p> + +<p>"Will you be able to finish it?" she asked.</p> + +<p>"Sure an' I will—only don't you be afther stayin' here any +longer."</p> + +<p>At this Ethel stole back to Minnie's room, and stood listening with a +quick-beating heart.</p> + +<p>But the priest worked coolly and <ins class = "correction" title = +"spelling unchanged">dextrously</ins>. He felt for the holes to which +the screws belonged, and succeeded in putting in two of them.</p> + +<p>Then there was a noise in the hall below.</p> + +<p>The priest began to put in the third screw.</p> + +<p>There were footsteps on the stairs.</p> + +<p>He screwed on.</p> + +<p>Nearer and nearer came the steps.</p> + +<p>The priest still kept to his task.</p> + +<p>At last a man entered the room. Ethel, who had heard all, was faint +with anxiety. She was afraid that the priest had not finished his +task.</p> + +<p>Her fears were groundless.</p> + +<p>Just as the foremost of the men entered the room the priest finished +screwing, and stood by +<span class = "pagenum">107</span> +the coffin, having slipped the screw-driver into his pocket, as calm as +though nothing had happened. Three of the screws were in, and that was +as many as were needed.</p> + +<p>The men brought no light with them, and this circumstance was in the +priest's favor.</p> + +<p>"You've been keeping me waiting long," said the priest, in +Italian.</p> + +<p>"You may be glad it wasn't longer," said one of them, in a sullen +tone. "Where is it?"</p> + +<p>"Here," said the priest.</p> + +<p>The men gathered around the coffin, and stooped down over it, one at +each corner. Then they raised it up. Then they carried it out; and soon +the heavy steps of the men were heard as they went down the stairs with +their burden.</p> + +<p>Ethel still stood watching and listening.</p> + +<p>As she listened she heard some one ascending the stairs. New terror +arose. Something was wrong, and all would be discovered. But the man who +came up had no light, and that was one comfort. She could not see who it +was.</p> + +<p>The man stopped for a moment in front of Minnie's door, and stood so +close to her that she heard his breathing. It was quick and heavy, like +the breathing of a very tired or a very excited man. Then he turned away +and went to the door of the front-room opposite. Here he also stood for +a few moments.</p> + +<p>All was still.</p> + +<p>Then he came back, and entered Hawbury's room.</p> + +<p>Now the crisis had come—the moment when all might be +discovered. And if so, they all were lost. Ethel bent far forward and +tried to peer through the gloom. She saw the dark figure of the +new-comer pass by one of the windows, and by the outline she knew that +it was Girasole. He passed on into the shadow, and toward the place +where the straw was. She could not see him any more.</p> + +<p>Girasole stepped noiselessly and cautiously, as though fearful of +waking the sleeper. At every step he paused and listened. The silence +reassured him.</p> + +<p>He drew nearer and nearer, his left hand groping forward, and his +right hand holding a pistol. His movements were perfectly noiseless.</p> + +<p>His own excitement was now intense, his heart throbbed fiercely and +almost painfully as he approached his victim.</p> + +<p>At last he reached the spot, and knelt on one knee. He listened for a +moment. There was no noise and no movement on the part of the figure +before him.</p> + +<p>In the gloom he could see the outline of that figure plainly. It lay +on its side, curled up in the most comfortable attitude which could be +assumed, where arms and legs were bound.</p> + +<p>"How soundly he sleeps!" thought Girasole.</p> + +<p>He paused for a moment, and seemed to hesitate; but it was only for a +moment. Then, summing up his resolution, he held his pistol close to the +head of the figure, and fired.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">107b</span> + +<p class = "floatleft"> +<img src = "images/pic107.png" width = "215" height = "293" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"HE HELD HIS PISTOL CLOSE TO THE HEAD, AND FIRED."</p> + +<p>The loud report echoed through the house. A shriek came from Minnie's +room, and a cry came from Mrs. Willoughby, who sprang toward the hall. +But Girasole came out and intercepted her.</p> + +<p>"Eet ees notin," said he, in a tremulous voice. "Eet ees all ovair. +Eet ees only a false alarm."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby retreated to her room, and Minnie said nothing. As +for Ethel, the suspense with her had passed away as the report of the +pistol came to her ears.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the coffin was carried out of the house, and the men, +together with the priest, walked on toward a place further up the shore +and on the outskirts of the woods. They reached a place where a grave +was dug.</p> + +<p>At this moment a pistol-shot sounded. The priest stopped, and the men +stopped also. They did not understand it. The priest did not know the +cause of the shot, but seeing the alarm of the men he endeavored to +excite their fears. One of the men went back, and was cursed by Girasole +for his pains. So he returned to the grave, cursing every body.</p> + +<p>The coffin was now lowered into the grave, and the priest urged the +men to go away and let him finish the work; but they refused. The +fellows seemed to have some affection for their dead comrade, and wished +to show it by putting him underground, and doing the last honors. So the +efforts of the Irish priest, though very well meant, and very urgent, +and very persevering, did not meet with that success which he +anticipated.</p> + +<p>Suddenly he stopped in the midst of the burial service, which he was +prolonging to the utmost.</p> + +<p>"Hark!" he cried, in Italian.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">108</span> + +<p>"What?" they asked.</p> + +<p>"It's a gun! It's an alarm!"</p> + +<p>"There's no gun, and no alarm," said they.</p> + +<p>All listened, but there was no repetition of the sound, and the +priest went on.</p> + +<p>He had to finish it.</p> + +<p>He stood trembling and at his wit's end. Already the men began to +throw in the earth.</p> + +<p>But now there came a real alarm.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXXI" id = "chapXXXI"> +CHAPTER XXXI.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +DISCOVERED.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">The</span> report of the pistol had +startled Minnie, and for a moment had greatly agitated her. The cry of +Mrs. Willoughby elicited a response from her to the effect that all was +right, and would, no doubt, have resulted in a conversation, had it not +been prevented by Girasole.</p> + +<p>Minnie then relapsed into silence for a time, and Ethel took a seat +by her side on the floor, for Minnie would not go near the straw, and +then the two interlocked their arms in an affectionate embrace.</p> + +<p>"Ethel darling," whispered Minnie, "do you know I'm beginning to get +awfully tired of this?"</p> + +<p>"I should think so, poor darling!"</p> + +<p>"If I only had some place to sit on," said Minnie, still reverting to +her original grievance, "it wouldn't be so very bad, you know. I could +put up with not having a bed, or a sofa, or that sort of thing, you +know; but really I must say not to have any kind of a seat seems to me +to be very, very inconsiderate, to say the least of it."</p> + +<p>"Poor darling!" said Ethel again.</p> + +<p>"And now do you know, Ethel dear, I'm beginning to feel as though I +should really like to run away from this place, if I thought that horrid +man wouldn't see me?"</p> + +<p>"Minnie darling," said Ethel, "that's the very thing I came for, you +know."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, I know! And that dear, nice, good, kind, delightful priest! +Oh, it was so nice of you to think of a priest, Ethel dear! I'm so +grateful! But when is he coming?"</p> + +<p>"Soon, I hope. But <i>do</i> try not to talk so."</p> + +<p>"But I'm only whispering."</p> + +<p>"Yes, but your whispers are too loud, and I'm afraid they'll +hear."</p> + +<p>"Well, I'll try to keep still; but it's so <i>awfully</i> hard, you +know, when one has <i>so</i> much to say, Ethel dear."</p> + +<p>Minnie now remained silent for about five minutes.</p> + +<p>"How did you say you were going to take me away?" she asked at +length.</p> + +<p>"In disguise," said Ethel.</p> + +<p>"But <i>what</i> disguise?"</p> + +<p>"In an old woman's dress—but hu-s-s-s-sh!"</p> + +<p>"But I don't <i>want</i> to be dressed up in an old woman's clothes; +they make me <i>such</i> a figure. Why, I'd be a perfect fright."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">108b</span> + +<p>"Hu-s-s-s-sh! Dear, dear Minnie, you're talking too loud. They'll +certainly hear us," said Ethel, in a low, frightened whisper.</p> + +<p>"But <i>do</i>—<i>do</i> promise you won't take me in an old +woman's clothes!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, there—there it is again!" said Ethel. "Dear, dear Minnie, +there's some one listening."</p> + +<p>"Well, I don't see what harm there is in what I'm saying. I only +wanted—"</p> + +<p>Here there was a movement on the stairs just outside. Ethel had heard +a sound of that kind two or three times, and it had given her alarm; but +now Minnie herself heard it, and stopped speaking.</p> + +<p>And now a voice sounded from the stairs. Some Italian words were +spoken, and seemed to be addressed to them. Of course they could make no +reply. The words were repeated, with others, and the speaker seemed to +be impatient. Suddenly it flashed across Ethel's mind that the speaker +was Girasole, and that the words were addressed to her.</p> + +<p>Her impression was correct, and the speaker was Girasole. He had +heard the sibilant sounds of the whispering, and, knowing that Minnie +could not speak Italian, it had struck him as being a very singular +thing that she should be whispering. Had her sister joined her? He +thought he would go up and see. So he went up softly, and the whispering +still went on. He therefore concluded that the "Italian woman" was not +doing her duty, and that Mrs. Willoughby had joined her sister. This he +would not allow; but as he had already been sufficiently harsh he did +not wish to be more so, and therefore he called to the "Italian +woman."</p> + +<p>"Hallo, you woman there! didn't I tell you not to let the ladies +speak to one another?"</p> + +<p>Of course no answer was given, so Girasole grew more angry still, and +cried out again, more imperatively:</p> + +<p>"Why do you not answer me? Where are you? Is this the way you +watch?"</p> + +<p>Still there was no answer. Ethel heard, and by this time knew what +his suspicion was; but she could neither do nor say any thing.</p> + +<p>"Come down here at once, you hag!"</p> + +<p>But the "hag" did not come down, nor did she give any answer. The +"hag" was trembling violently, and saw that all was lost. If the priest +were only here! If she could only have gone and returned with him! What +kept him?</p> + +<p>Girasole now came to the top of the stairs, and spoke to Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Charming mees, are you awake?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Ees your sistaire wit you?"</p> + +<p>"No. How can <i>she</i> be with me, I should like to know, when +you've gone and put her in some horrid old room?"</p> + +<p>"Ah! not wit you? Who are you whisperin' to, den?"</p> + +<p>Minnie hesitated.</p> + +<p>"To my maid," said she.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">109</span> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic109.png" width = "346" height = "459" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"WHAT DIT YOU COME FOR?"—"FOR HER."</p> + +<p>"Does de maid spik Inglis?" asked Girasole.</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Ah! I did not know eet. I mus have a look at de contadina who spiks +Inglis. Come here, Italiana. You don't spik Italiano, I tink. Come +here."</p> + +<p>Ethel rose to her feet.</p> + +<p>Girasole ran down, and came back after a few minutes with a lamp. +Concealment was useless, and so Ethel did not cover her face with the +hood. It had fallen off when she was sitting by Minnie, and hung loosely +down her shoulders from the strings which were around her neck. Girasole +recognized her at one glance.</p> + +<p>"Ah!" said he; and then he stood thinking. As for Ethel, now that the +suspense was over and the worst realized, her agitation ceased. She +stood looking at him with perfect calm.</p> + +<p>"What dit you come for?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"For <i>her</i>," said Ethel, making a gesture toward Minnie.</p> + +<p>"What could you do wit her?"</p> + +<p>"I could see her and comfort her."</p> + +<p>"Ah! an' you hope to make her escape. Ha, +<span class = "pagenum">109b</span> +ha! ver well. You mus not complain eef you haf to soffair de +consequence. Aha! an' so de priest bring you here—ha?"</p> + +<p>Ethel was silent.</p> + +<p>"Ah! you fear to say—you fear you harma de +priest—ha?"</p> + +<p>Minnie had thus far said nothing, but now she rose and looked at +Girasole, and then at Ethel. Then she twined one arm around Ethel's +waist, and turned her large, soft, childish eyes upon Girasole.</p> + +<p>"What do you mean," she said, "by <i>always</i> coming here and +teasing, and worrying, and firing off pistols, and frightening people? +I'm sure it was horrid enough for you to make me come to this wretched +place, when you <i>know</i> I don't like it, without annoying me so. Why +did you go and take away poor darling Kitty? And what do you mean now, +pray, by coming here? I never was treated so unkindly in my life. I did +not think that <i>any one</i> could be so very, very rude."</p> + +<p>"Charming mees," said Girasole, with a deprecating air, "it pains me +to do any ting dat you do not like."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">110</span> + +<p>"It don't pain you," said Minnie—"it don't pain you <i>at +all</i>. You're <i>always</i> teasing me. You <i>never</i> do what I +want you to. You wouldn't even give me a chair."</p> + +<p>"Alas, carissima mia, to-morra you sall haf all! But dis place is so +remote."</p> + +<p>"It is <i>not</i> remote," said Minnie. "It's close by roads and +villages and things. Why, here is Ethel; she has been in a village where +there are houses, and people, and as many chairs as she wants."</p> + +<p>"Oh, mees, eef you will but wait an' be patient—eef you will +but wait an' see how tender I will be, an' how I lof you."</p> + +<p>"You <i>don't</i> love me," said Minnie, "one bit. Is this +love—not to give me a chair? I have been standing up till I am +nearly ready to drop. And you have nothing better than some wretched +promises. I don't care for to-morrow; I want to be comfortable to-day. +You won't let me have a single thing. And now you come to tease me +again, and frighten poor, dear, darling Ethel."</p> + +<p>"Eet ees because she deceif me—she come wit a plot—she +steal in here. Eef she had wait, all would be well."</p> + +<p>"You mustn't <i>dare</i> to touch her," said Minnie, vehemently. "You +<i>shall</i> leave her here. She <i>shall</i> stay with me."</p> + +<p>"I am ver pain—oh, very; but oh, my +angel—sweet—charming mees—eet ees dangaire to my lof. +She plot to take you away. An' all my life is in you. Tink what I haf to +do to gain you!"</p> + +<p>Minnie looked upon Girasole, with her large eyes dilated with +excitement and resentment.</p> + +<p>"You are a horrid, horrid man," she exclaimed. "I <i>hate</i> +you."</p> + +<p>"Oh, my angel," pleaded Girasole, with deep agitation, "take back dat +word."</p> + +<p>"I'm sorry you ever saved my life," said Minnie, very calmly; "and +I'm sorry I ever saw you. I <i>hate</i> you."</p> + +<p>"Ah, you gif me torment. You do not mean dis. You say once you lof +me."</p> + +<p>"<i>I</i> did not say I loved <i>you</i>. It was <i>you</i> who said +you loved <i>me</i>. <i>I</i> never liked <i>you</i>. And I don't really +see how I <i>could</i> be engaged to you when I was engaged to another +man before. He is the only one whom I recognize now. I don't know you at +all. For I couldn't be bound to two men; could I, Ethel dear?"</p> + +<p>Ethel did not reply to this strange question.</p> + +<p>But upon Girasole its effect was very great. The manner of Minnie had +been excessively perplexing to him all through this eventful day. If she +had stormed and gone into a fine frenzy he could have borne it. It would +have been natural. But she was perfectly unconcerned, and her only +complaint was about trifles. Such trifles too! He felt ashamed to think +that he could have subjected to such annoyances a woman whom he so +dearly loved. And now he was once more puzzled. Minnie confronted him, +looking at him fixedly, without +<span class = "pagenum">110b</span> +one particle of fear, with her large, earnest, innocent eyes fastened +upon his—with the calm, cool gaze, of some high-minded child +rebuking a younger child-companion. This was a proceeding which he was +not prepared for. Besides, the child-innocence of her face and of her +words actually daunted him. She seemed so fearless, because she was so +innocent. She became a greater puzzle than ever. He had never seen much +of her before, and this day's experience of her had actually daunted him +and confounded him. And what was the worst to him of all her words was +her calm and simple declaration, "I hate you!"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Minnie, thoughtfully, "it must be so; and dear Kitty +would have said the same, only she was so awfully prejudiced. And I +always thought he was so nice. Yes, I think I really must be engaged to +him. But as for you," she said, turning full upon Girasole, "I hate +you!"</p> + +<p>Girasole's face grew white with rage and jealousy.</p> + +<p>"Aha!" said he. "You lof <i>him</i>. Aha! An' you were engage to +<i>him</i>. Aha!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, I really think so."</p> + +<p>"Aha! Well, listen," cried Girasole, in a hoarse voice—"listen. +He—he—de rival—de one you say you are engage—he +is dead!"</p> + +<p>And with this he fastened upon Minnie his eyes that now gleamed with +rage, and had an expression in them that might have made Ethel quiver +with horror, but she did not, for she knew that Girasole was mistaken on +that point.</p> + +<p>As for Minnie, she was not at all impressed by his fierce looks.</p> + +<p>"I don't think you really know what you're talking about," said she; +"and you're very, very unpleasant. At any rate, you are altogether in +the wrong when you say he is dead."</p> + +<p>"Dead! He is dead! I swear it!" cried Girasole, whose manner was a +little toned down by Minnie's coolness.</p> + +<p>"This is getting to be awfully funny, you know," said Minnie. "I +really think we don't know what one another is talking about. I'm sure +<i>I</i> don't, and I'm sure <i>he</i> don't, either; does he, Ethel +darling?"</p> + +<p>"De Inglis milor," said Girasole. "He is dead."</p> + +<p>"Well, but I don't mean him at all," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Who—who?" gasped Girasole. "Who—who—who?"</p> + +<p>"Why, the person I mean," said Minnie, very placidly, "is Rufus K. +Gunn."</p> + +<p>Girasole uttered something like a howl, and retreated.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXXII" id = "chapXXXII"> +CHAPTER XXXII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +UNDER ARREST.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Girasole</span> retreated half-way down the +stairs, and then he stopped for some time and thought. Then he came back +and motioned to Ethel.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">111</span> + +<p>"You must come," he said, gruffly.</p> + +<p>"You shall not," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"No, no, darling," said Ethel; "I had better go. It will only get you +into fresh trouble. And I'll be back as soon as I can."</p> + +<p>"Oh, how I <i>hate</i> you!" said Minnie to Girasole. The latter said +nothing. Ethel kissed Minnie, and descended the stairs after him.</p> + +<p>The Irish priest was standing over the grave bathed in a cold +perspiration, his heart throbbing violently, every new thud of the +earth, as it sounded violently against the coffin, sending a cold chill +of horror through every nerve. Already enough earth had been thrown to +cover three-quarters of the lid, and at the foot it was heaped up some +distance. He tried to frame some excuse to get the men away. His brain +whirled; his mind was confused; his thoughts refused to be +collected.</p> + +<p>And now, in the midst of this, the attention of all was attracted by +a loud stern voice, which sounded from some one near. The priest looked +around. The men stopped shoveling, and turned to see the cause of the +noise.</p> + +<p>Girasole was seen approaching, and was already near enough to be +distinguished. Behind him followed a female form. At this sight the +priest's mind misgave him.</p> + +<p>Girasole came up, and now the priest saw that the female was no other +than Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Where is this priest?" asked Girasole, angrily, speaking, of course, +in Italian.</p> + +<p>The priest advanced.</p> + +<p>"I am here," said he, with quiet dignity.</p> + +<p>At this change in the state of affairs the priest regained his +presence of mind. The cessation in the work gave him relief, and enabled +him to recall his scattered and confused thoughts. The men stood looking +at the speakers, and listening, leaning on their shovels.</p> + +<p>"You were sent for?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"And a maid?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"You brought this lady?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"You put her in disguise; you passed her off as an Italian?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>The priest made no attempt at denial or equivocation. He knew that +this would be useless. He waited for an opportunity to excuse himself, +and to explain rather than to deny. But every answer of his only served +to increase the fury of Girasole, who seemed determined to visit upon +the head of the priest and Ethel the rage that he felt at his last +interview with Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Then why," cried Girasole, "did you try to trick us? Don't you know +the punishment we give to spies and traitors?"</p> + +<p>"I have nothing to do with spies and traitors."</p> + +<p>"You are one yourself."</p> + +<p>"I am not."</p> + +<p>"You lie!"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">111b</span> + +<p>"I do not," said the priest, mildly. "Hear me, and let me tell my +story, and you will see that I am not a traitor; or, if you don't wish +to listen, then question me."</p> + +<p>"There is but one question. What made you bring this lady?"</p> + +<p>"That is simply answered," said the priest, with unfaltering +calmness. "This lady and her friends arrived at my village and claimed +hospitality. They were in distress. Some of their friends had been taken +from them. A message came from you requesting my presence, and also a +lady's-maid. There was no stipulation about the kind of one. This lady +was the intimate friend of the captive, and entreated me to take her, so +that she should see her friend, and comfort her, and share her +captivity. I saw no harm in the wish. She proposed to become a +lady's-maid. I saw no harm in that."</p> + +<p>"Why did she disguise herself?"</p> + +<p>"So as to pass without trouble. She didn't want to be delayed. She +wanted to see her friends as soon as possible. If you had questioned +her, you would no doubt have let her pass."</p> + +<p>"I would, no doubt, have done nothing of the kind."</p> + +<p>"I don't see any objection," said the priest.</p> + +<p>"Objection? She is a spy!"</p> + +<p>"A spy? Of what, pray?"</p> + +<p>"She came to help her friend to escape."</p> + +<p>"To escape? How could she possibly help her to escape? Do you think +it so easy to escape from this place?"</p> + +<p>Girasole was silent.</p> + +<p>"Do you think a young lady, who has never been out of the care of her +friends before, could do much to assist a friend like herself in an +escape?"</p> + +<p>"She might."</p> + +<p>"But how? This is not the street of a city. That house is watched, I +think. There seem to be a few men in these woods, if I am not mistaken. +Could this young lady help her friend to elude all these guards? Why, +you know very well that she could not."</p> + +<p>"Yes; but then there is—"</p> + +<p>"Who?"</p> + +<p>"Yourself."</p> + +<p>"Myself?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"What of me?"</p> + +<p>"What do I know about your designs?"</p> + +<p>"What designs could <i>I</i> have? Do you think <i>I</i> could plan +an escape?"</p> + +<p>"Why not?"</p> + +<p>"Why not? What! living here close beside you? <i>I</i> be a traitor? +<i>I</i>, with my life at your mercy at all times—with my throat +within such easy reach of any assassin who might choose to revenge my +treachery?"</p> + +<p>"We are not assassins," said Girasole, angrily.</p> + +<p>"And I am not a traitor," rejoined the priest, mildly.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">112</span> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic112.png" width = "458" height = "463" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +UNDER GUARD.</p> + +<p>Girasole was silent, and stood in thought. The men at the grave had +heard every word of this conversation. Once they laughed in scorn when +the priest alluded to the absurdity of a young girl escaping. It was too +ridiculous. Their sympathies were evidently with the priest. The charge +against him could not be maintained.</p> + +<p>"Well," said Girasole at length, "I don't trust you. You may be +traitors, after all. I will have you guarded, and if I find out any +thing that looks like treason, by Heaven I will have your life, old man, +even if you should be the Holy Father himself; and as to the +lady—well, I will find plenty of ways," he added, with a sneer, +"of inflicting on her a punishment commensurable with her crime. Here, +you men, come along with me," he added, looking at the men by the +grave.</p> + +<p>"But we want to finish poor Antonio's grave," remonstrated one of the +men.</p> + +<p>"Bah! he'll keep," said Girasole, with a sneer.</p> + +<p>"Can't one of us stay?" asked the man.</p> + +<p>"No, not one; I want you all. If they are traitors, they are deep +ones. They must be +<span class = "pagenum">112b</span> +guarded; and, mind you, if they escape, you shall suffer."</p> + +<p>With these words he led the way, and the priest and Ethel followed +him. After these came the men, who had thrown down their shovels beside +the grave. They all walked on in silence, following Girasole, who led +the way to a place beyond the grave, and within view of one of the fires +formerly alluded to. The place was about half-way between the grave and +the fire. It was a little knoll bare of trees, and from it they could be +seen by those at the nearest fire. Here Girasole paused, and, with some +final words of warning to the guards, he turned and took his +departure.</p> + +<p>The priest sat down upon the grass, and urged Ethel to do the same. +She followed his advice, and sat down by his side. The guards sat around +them so as to encircle them, and, mindful of Girasole's charge, they +kept their faces turned toward them, so as to prevent even the very +thought of flight. The priest addressed a few mild parental words to the +men, who gave him very civil responses, but relaxed not a particle of +their vigilance.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">113</span> + +<p>In the priest's mind there was still some anxiety, but much greater +hope than he had dared to have for some time. He remembered that the +coffin was not all covered over, and hoped that the inmate might be able +to breathe. The fact that the work had been so unexpectedly interrupted +was one which filled him with joy, and gave rise to the best hopes. The +only offset to all this was his own captivity, but that was a very +serious one. Besides, he knew that his life hung upon a thread. Before +the next day Girasole would certainly discover all, and in that case he +was a doomed man. But his nature was of a kind that could not borrow +trouble, and so the fact of the immediate safety of Hawbury was of far +more importance, and attracted far more of his thoughts, than his own +certain but more remote danger.</p> + +<p>As for Ethel, she was now a prey to the deepest anxiety. All was +discovered except the mere fact of Hawbury's removal, and how long that +would remain concealed she could not know. Every moment she expected to +hear the cry of those who might discover the exchange. And Hawbury, so +long lost, so lately found—Hawbury, whom she had suspected of +falsity so long and so long avoided, who now had proved himself so +constant and so true—what was his fate? She had gazed with eyes of +horror at that grave wherein he lay, and had seen the men shoveling in +the earth as she came up. The recollection of this filled her with +anguish. Had they buried him?—how deep was the earth that lay over +him?—could there, indeed, be any hope?</p> + +<p>All depended on the priest. She hoped that he had prevented things +from going too far. She had seen him watching the grave, and motionless. +What did that inactivity mean? Was it a sign that Hawbury was safe, or +was it merely because he could not do any thing?</p> + +<p>She was distracted by such fearful thoughts as these. Her heart once +more throbbed with those painful pulsations which she had felt when +approaching Hawbury. For some time she sat supporting her agony as best +she could, and not daring to ask the priest, for fear their guards might +suspect the truth, or perhaps understand her words.</p> + +<p>But at last she could bear it no longer.</p> + +<p>She touched the priest's arm as he sat beside her, without looking at +him.</p> + +<p>The priest returned the touch.</p> + +<p>"Is he safe?" she asked, in a tremulous voice, which was scarce +audible from grief and anxiety.</p> + +<p>"He is," said the priest.</p> + +<p>And then, looking at the man before him, he added immediately, in an +unconcerned tone,</p> + +<p>"She wants to know what time it is, and I told her two o'clock. +That's right, isn't it?"</p> + +<p>"About right," said the man.</p> + +<p>Now that was a lie, but whether it was justifiable or not may be left +to others to decide.</p> + +<p>As for Ethel, an immense load of anxiety was lifted off her mind, and +she began to breathe more freely.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<span class = "pagenum">113b</span> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXXIII" id = "chapXXXIII"> +CHAPTER XXXIII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE DEMON WIFE.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">When</span> Dacres was overpowered by his +assailants no mercy was shown him. His hands were bound tight behind +him, and kicks and blows were liberally bestowed during the operation. +Finally, he was pushed and dragged into the house, and up stairs to the +room already mentioned. There he was still further secured by a tight +rope around his ankles, after which he was left to his own +meditations.</p> + +<p>Gloomy and bitter and fierce, indeed, were those meditations. His +body was covered with bruises, and though no bones were broken, yet his +pain was great. In addition to this the cords around his wrists and +ankles were very tight, and his veins seemed swollen to bursting. It was +difficult to get an easy position, and he could only lie on his side or +on his face. These bodily pains only intensified the fierceness of his +thoughts and made them turn more vindictively than ever upon the subject +of his wife.</p> + +<p>She was the cause of all this, he thought. She had sacrificed every +thing to her love for her accursed paramour. For this she had betrayed +him, and her friends, and the innocent girl who was her companion. All +the malignant feelings which had filled his soul through the day now +swelled within him, till he was well-nigh mad. Most intolerable of all +was his position now—the baffled enemy. He had come as the +avenger, he had come as the destroyer; but he had been entrapped before +he had struck his blow, and here he was now lying, defeated, degraded, +and humiliated! No doubt he would be kept to afford sport to his +enemy—perhaps even his wife might come to gloat over his +sufferings, and feast her soul with the sight of his ruin. Over such +thoughts as these he brooded, until at last he had wrought himself into +something like frenzy, and with the pain that he felt, and the weariness +that followed the fatigues of that day, these thoughts might finally +have brought on madness, had they gone on without any thing to disturb +them.</p> + +<p>But all these thoughts and ravings were destined to come to a full +and sudden stop, and to be changed to others of a far different +character. This change took place when Girasole, after visiting the +ladies, came, with Mrs. Willoughby, to his room. As Dacres lay on the +floor he heard the voice of the Italian, and the faint, mournful, +pleading tones of a woman's voice, and, finally, he saw the flash of a +light, and knew that the Italian was coming to his room, and perhaps +this woman also. He held his breath in suspense. What did it mean? The +tone of Girasole was not the tone of love. The light drew nearer, and +the footsteps too—one a heavy footfall, the tread of a man; the +other lighter, the step of a woman. He waited almost breathless.</p> + +<p>At last she appeared. There she was before him, and with the Italian; +but oh, how changed from that demon woman of his fancies, who +<span class = "pagenum">114</span> +was to appear before him with his enemy and gloat over his sufferings! +Was there a trace of a fiend in that beautiful and gentle face? Was +there thought of joy or exultation over him in that noble and mournful +lady, whose melancholy grace and tearful eyes now riveted his gaze? +Where was the foul traitor who had done to death her husband and her +friend? Where was the miscreant who had sacrificed all to a guilty +passion? Not there; not with that face; not with those tears: to think +that was impossible—it was unholy. He might rave when he did not +see her, but now that his eyes beheld her those mad fancies were all +dissipated.</p> + +<p>There was only one thing there—a woman full of loveliness and +grace, in the very bloom of her life, overwhelmed with suffering which +this Italian was inflicting on her. Why? Could he indulge the unholy +thought that the Italian had cast her off, and supplied her place with +the younger beauty? Away with such a thought! It was not jealousy of +that younger lady that Dacres perceived; it was the cry of a loving, +yearning heart that clung to that other one, from whom the Italian had +violently severed her. There was no mistake as to the source of this +sorrow. Nothing was left to the imagination. Her own words told all.</p> + +<p>Then the light was taken away, and the lady crouched upon the floor. +Dacres could no longer see her amidst that gloom; but he could hear her; +and every sob, and every sigh, and every moan went straight to his heart +and thrilled through every fibre of his being. He lay there listening, +and quivering thus as he listened with a very intensity of sympathy that +shut out from his mind every other thought except that of the mourning, +stricken one before him.</p> + +<p>Thus a long time passed, and the lady wept still, and other sounds +arose, and there were footsteps in the house, and whisperings, and +people passing to and fro; but to all these Dacres was deaf, and they +caused no more impression on his senses than if they were not. His ears +and his sense of hearing existed only for these sobs and these +sighs.</p> + +<p>At last a pistol-shot roused him. The lady sprang up and called in +despair. A cry came back, and the lady was about to venture to the other +room, when she was driven back by the stern voice of Girasole. Then she +stood for a moment, after which she knelt, and Dacres heard her voice in +prayer. The prayer was not audible, but now and then words struck upon +his ears which gave the key to her other words, and he knew that it was +no prayer of remorse for guilt, but a cry for help in sore +affliction.</p> + +<p>Had any thing more been needed to destroy the last vestige of +Dacres's former suspicions it was furnished by the words which he now +heard.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Heaven!" he thought; "can this woman be what I have thought her? +But if not, what a villain am I! Yet now I must rather believe myself to +be a villain than her!"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">114b</span> + +<p>In the midst of this prayer Girasole's voice sounded, and then +Minnie's tones came clearly audible. The lady rose and listened, and a +great sigh of relief escaped her. Then Girasole descended the stairs, +and the lady again sank upon her knees.</p> + +<p>Thus far there seemed a spell upon Dacres; but this last incident and +the clear child-voice of Minnie seemed to break it. He could no longer +keep silence. His emotion was as intense as ever, but the bonds which +had bound his lips seemed now to be loosened.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Arethusa!" he moaned.</p> + +<p>At the sound of his voice Mrs. Willoughby started, and rose to her +feet. So great had been her anxiety and agitation that for some time she +had not thought of another being in the room, and there had been no +sound from him to suggest his existence. But now his voice startled her. +She gave no answer, however.</p> + +<p>"Arethusa!" repeated Dacres, gently and longingly and tenderly.</p> + +<p>"Poor fellow!" thought Mrs. Willoughby; "he's dreaming."</p> + +<p>"Arethusa! oh, Arethusa!" said Dacres once more. "Do not keep away. +Come to me. I am calm now."</p> + +<p>"Poor fellow!" thought Mrs. Willoughby. "He doesn't seem to be +asleep. He's talking to me. I really think he is."</p> + +<p>"Arethusa," said Dacres again, "will you answer me one question?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby hesitated for a moment, but now perceived that Dacres +was really speaking to her. "He's in delirium," she thought. "Poor +fellow, I must humor him, I suppose. But what a funny name to give +me!"</p> + +<p>So, after a little preparatory cough, Mrs. Willoughby said, in a low +voice,</p> + +<p>"What question?"</p> + +<p>Dacres was silent for a few moments. He was overcome by his emotions. +He wished to ask her one question—the question of all questions in +his mind. Already her acts had answered it sufficiently; but he longed +to have the answer in her own words. Yet he hesitated to ask it. It was +dishonor to her to ask it. And thus, between longing and hesitation, he +delayed so long that Mrs. Willoughby imagined that he had fallen back +into his dreams or into his delirium, and would say no more.</p> + +<p>But at last Dacres staked every thing on the issue, and asked it:</p> + +<p>"Arethusa! oh, Arethusa! do you—do you love—the—the +Italian?"</p> + +<p>"The Italian!" said Mrs. Willoughby—"love the Italian! me!" and +then in a moment she thought that this was his delirium, and she must +humor it. "Poor fellow!" she sighed again; "how he fought them! and no +doubt he has had fearful blows on his head."</p> + +<p>"Do you? do you? Oh, answer, I implore you!" cried Dacres.</p> + +<p>"No!" said Mrs. Willoughby, solemnly. "I hate him as I never hated +man before." She +<span class = "pagenum">115</span> +spoke her mind this time, although she thought the other was +delirious.</p> + +<p>A sigh of relief and of happiness came from Dacres, so deep that it +was almost a groan.</p> + +<p>"And oh," he continued, "tell me this—have you ever loved him +at all?"</p> + +<p>"I always disliked him excessively," said Mrs. Willoughby, in the +same low and solemn tone. "I saw something bad—altogether +bad—in his face."</p> + +<p>"Oh, may Heaven forever bless you for that word!" exclaimed Dacres, +with such a depth of fervor that Mrs. Willoughby was surprised. She now +believed that he was intermingling dreams with realities, and tried to +lead him to sense by reminding him of the truth.</p> + +<p>"It was Minnie, you know, that he was fond of."</p> + +<p>"What! Minnie Fay?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; oh yes. I never saw any thing of him."</p> + +<p>"Oh, Heavens!" cried Dacres; "oh, Heavens, what a fool, beast, +villain, and scoundrel I have been! Oh, how I have misjudged <i>you</i>! +And can <i>you</i> forgive me? Oh, can you? But no—you can +not."</p> + +<p>At this appeal Mrs. Willoughby was startled, and did not know what to +say or to do. How much of this was delirium and how much real she could +not tell. One thing seemed evident to her, and that was that, whether +delirious or not, he took her for another person. But she was so full of +pity for him, and so very tender-hearted, that her only idea was to +"humor" him.</p> + +<p>"Oh," he cried again, "can this all be true, and have all my +suspicions been as mad as these last? And <i>you</i>—how +<i>you</i> have changed! How beautiful you are! What tenderness there is +in your glance—what a pure and gentle and touching grace there is +in your expression! I swear to you, by Heaven! I have stood gazing at +you in places where you have not seen me, and thought I saw heaven in +your face, and worshiped you in my inmost soul. This is the reason why I +have followed you. From the time I saw you when you came into the room +at Naples till this night I could not get rid of your image. I fought +against the feeling, but I can not overcome it. Never, never were you +half so dear as you are now!"</p> + +<p>Now, of course, that was all very well, considered as the language of +an estranged husband seeking for reconciliation with an estranged wife; +but when one regards it simply as the language of a passionate lover +directed to a young and exceedingly pretty widow, one will perceive that +it was <i>not</i> all very well, and that under ordinary circumstances +it might create a sensation.</p> + +<p>Upon Mrs. Willoughby the sensation was simply tremendous. She had +begun by "humoring" the delirious man; but now she found his delirium +taking a course which was excessively embarrassing. The worst of it was, +there was truth enough in his language to increase +<span class = "pagenum">115b</span> +the embarrassment. She remembered at once how the mournful face of this +man had appeared before her in different places. Her thoughts instantly +reverted to that evening on the balcony when his pale face appeared +behind the fountain. There was truth in his words; and her heart beat +with extraordinary agitation at the thought. Yet at the same time there +was some mistake about it all; and he was clearly delirious.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Heavens!" he cried. "Can you ever forgive me? Is there a +possibility of it? Oh, can you forgive me? Can you—can you?"</p> + +<p>He was clearly delirious now. Her heart was full of pity for him. He +was suffering too. He was bound fast. Could she not release him? It was +terrible for this man to lie there bound thus. And perhaps he had fallen +into the hands of these ruffians while trying to save <i>her</i> and her +sister. She must free him.</p> + +<p>"Would you like to be loosed?" she asked, coming nearer. "Shall I cut +your bonds?"</p> + +<p>She spoke in a low whisper.</p> + +<p>"Oh, tell me first, I implore you! Can you forgive me?"</p> + +<p>He spoke in such a piteous tone that her heart was touched.</p> + +<p>"Forgive you?" she said, in a voice full of sympathy and pity. "There +is nothing for <i>me</i> to forgive."</p> + +<p>"Now may Heaven forever bless you for that sweet and gentle word!" +said Dacres, who altogether misinterpreted her words, and the emphasis +she placed on them; and in his voice there was such peace, and such a +gentle, exultant happiness, that Mrs. Willoughby again felt touched.</p> + +<p>"Poor fellow!" she thought; "how he <i>must</i> have suffered!"</p> + +<p>"Where are you fastened?" she whispered, as she bent over him. Dacres +felt her breath upon his cheek; the hem of her garment touched his +sleeve, and a thrill passed through him. He felt as though he would like +to be forever thus, with <i>her</i> bending over him.</p> + +<p>"My hands are fastened behind me," said he.</p> + +<p>"I have a knife," said Mrs. Willoughby. She did not stop to think of +danger. It was chiefly pity that incited her to this. She could not bear +to see him lying thus in pain, which he had perhaps, as she supposed, +encountered for her. She was impulsive, and though she thought of his +assistance toward the escape of Minnie and herself, yet pity and +compassion were her chief inspiring motives.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby had told Girasole that she had no knife; but this was +not quite true, for she now produced one, and cut the cords that bound +his wrists. Again a thrill flashed through him at the touch of her +little fingers; she then cut the cords that bound his ankles.</p> + +<p>Dacres sat up. His ankles and wrists were badly swollen, but he was +no longer conscious of pain. There was rapture in his soul, and of that +alone was he conscious.</p> + +<p>"Be careful!" she whispered, warningly; +<span class = "pagenum">116</span> +"guards are all around, and listeners. Be careful! If you can think of a +way of escape, do so."</p> + +<p>Dacres rubbed his hand over his forehead.</p> + +<p>"Am I dreaming?" said he; "or is it all true? A while ago I was +suffering from some hideous vision; yet now you say you forgive me!"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby saw in this a sign of returning delirium. "But the +poor fellow must be humored, I suppose," she thought.</p> + +<p>"Oh, there is nothing for <i>me</i> to forgive," said she.</p> + +<p>"But if there were any thing, would you?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Freely?" he cried, with a strong emphasis.</p> + +<p>"Yes, freely."</p> + +<p>"Oh, could you answer me one more question? Oh, could you?"</p> + +<p>"No, no; not now—not now, I entreat you," said Mrs. Willoughby, +in nervous dread. She was afraid that his delirium would bring him upon +delicate ground, and she tried to hold him back.</p> + +<p>"But I must ask you," said Dacres, trembling fearfully—"I +must—now or never. Tell me my doom; I have suffered so much. Oh, +Heavens! Answer me. Can you? Can you feel toward me as you once +did?"</p> + +<p>"He's utterly mad," thought Mrs. Willoughby; "but he'll get worse if +I don't soothe him. Poor fellow! I ought to answer him."</p> + +<p>"Yes," she said, in a low voice.</p> + +<p>"Oh, my darling!" murmured Dacres, in rapture inexpressible; "my +darling!" he repeated; and grasping Mrs. Willoughby's hand, he pressed +it to his lips. "And you will love me again—you will love me?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby paused. The man was mad, but the ground was so +dangerous! Yes, she must humor him. She felt his hot kisses on her +hand.</p> + +<p>"You <i>will</i>—you <i>will</i> love me, will you not?" he +repeated. "Oh, answer me! Answer me, or I shall die!"</p> + +<p>"Yes," whispered Mrs. Willoughby, faintly.</p> + +<p>As she said this a cold chill passed through her. But it was too +late. Dacres's arms were around her. He had drawn her to him, and +pressed her against his breast, and she felt hot tears upon her +head.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Arethusa!" cried Dacres.</p> + +<p>"Well," said Mrs. Willoughby, as soon as she could extricate herself, +"there's a mistake, you know."</p> + +<p>"A mistake, darling?"</p> + +<p>"Oh dear, what <i>shall</i> I do?" thought Mrs. Willoughby; "he's +beginning again. I must stop this, and bring him to his senses. How +terrible it is to humor a delirious man!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, Arethusa!" sighed Dacres once more.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby arose.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">116b</span> +<p>"I'm not Arethusa at all," said she; "that isn't my name. If you +<i>can</i> shake off your delirium, I wish you would. I really do."</p> + +<p>"What!" cried Dacres, in amazement.</p> + +<p>"I'm not Arethusa at all; that isn't my name."</p> + +<p>"Not your name?"</p> + +<p>"No; my name's Kitty."</p> + +<p>"Kitty!" cried Dacres, starting to his feet.</p> + +<p>At that instant the report of a gun burst upon their ears, followed +by another and another; then there were wild calls and loud shouts. +Other guns were heard.</p> + +<p>Yet amidst all this wild alarm there was nothing which had so +tremendous an effect upon Dacres as this last remark of Mrs. +Willoughby's.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic116.png" width = "216" height = "335" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"THE PRIEST FLUNG HIMSELF FORWARD."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXXIV" id = "chapXXXIV"> +CHAPTER XXXIV.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE CRISIS OF LIFE.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">When</span> the Irish priest conjectured +that it was about two o'clock in the morning he was not very far astray +in his calculation. The short remarks that were exchanged between him +and Ethel, and afterward between him and the men, were followed by a +profound silence. Ethel sat by the side of the priest, with her head +bent forward and her eyes closed as though she were asleep; yet sleep +was farther from her than ever it had been, and the thrilling events of +the night afforded sufficient material to keep her awake for many a long +hour yet to come. Her mind was now filled with a thousand conflicting +and most exciting fancies, in the midst of which she might again have +sunk into despair had she not been sustained by the assurance of the +priest.</p> + +<p>Sitting near Ethel, the priest for some time +<span class = "pagenum">117</span> +looked fixedly ahead of him as though he were contemplating the solemn +midnight scene, or meditating upon the beauties of nature. In truth, the +scene around was one which was deserving even of the close attention +which the priest appeared to give. Immediately before him lay the lake, +its shore not far beneath, and almost at their feet. Around it arose the +wooded hills, whose dark forms, darker from the gloom of night, threw +profound shadows over the opposite shores. Near by the shore extended on +either side. On the right there were fires, now burning low, yet +occasionally sending forth flashes; on the left, and at some distance, +might be seen the dusky outline of the old stone house. Behind them was +the forest, vast, gloomy, clothed in impenetrable shade, in which lay +their only hope of safety, yet where even now there lurked the watchful +guards of the brigands. It was close behind them. Once in its shelter, +and they might gain freedom; yet between them and it was an impassable +barrier of enemies, and there also lay a still more impassable barrier +in the grave where Hawbury lay. To fly, even if they could fly, would be +to give him up to death; yet to remain, as they must remain, would be to +doom him to death none the less, and themselves too.</p> + +<p>Seated there, with his eyes directed toward the water, the priest saw +nothing of the scene before him; his eyes were fixed on vacancy; his +thoughts were endeavoring to grapple with the situation and master it. +Yet so complicated was that situation, and so perplexing the dilemma in +which he found himself—a dilemma where death perched upon either +horn—that the good priest found his faculties becoming gradually +more and more unable to deal with the difficulty, and he felt himself +once more sinking down deeper and deeper into that abyss of despair from +which he had but recently extricated himself.</p> + +<p>And still the time passed, and the precious moments, laden with the +fate not only of Hawbury, but of all the others—the moments of the +night during which alone any escape was to be thought of—moved all +too swiftly away.</p> + +<p>Now in this hour of perplexity the good priest bethought him of a +friend whose fidelity had been proved through the varied events of a +life—a friend which, in his life of celibacy, had found in his +heart something of that place which a fond and faithful wife may hold in +the heart of a more fortunate man. It was a little friend, a fragrant +friend, a tawny and somewhat grimy friend; it was in the pocket of his +coat; it was of clay; in fact, it was nothing else than a dudeen.</p> + +<p>Where in the world had the good priest who lived in this remote +corner of Italy got that emblem of his green native isle? Perhaps he had +brought it with him in the band of his hat when he first turned his back +upon his country, or perhaps he had obtained it from the same quarter +which had supplied him with that very +<span class = "pagenum">117b</span> +black plug of tobacco which he brought forth shortly afterward. The one +was the complement of the other, and each was handled with equal love +and care. Soon the occupation of cutting up the tobacco and rubbing it +gave a temporary distraction to his thoughts, which distraction was +prolonged by the further operation of pressing the tobacco into the bowl +of the dudeen.</p> + +<p>Here the priest paused and cast a longing look toward the fire, which +was not far away.</p> + +<p>"Would you have any objection to let me go and get a coal to light +the pipe?" said he to one of the men.</p> + +<p>The man had an objection, and a very strong one.</p> + +<p>"Would one of you be kind enough to go and get me a brand or a hot +coal?"</p> + +<p>This led to an earnest debate, and finally one of the men thought +that he might venture. Before doing so, however, a solemn promise was +extorted from the priest that he would not try to escape during his +absence. This the priest gave.</p> + +<p>"Escape!" he said—"it's a smoke I want. Besides, how can I +escape with three of ye watching me? And then, what would I want to +escape for? I'm safe enough here."</p> + +<p>The man now went off, and returned in a short time with a brand. The +priest gave him his blessing, and received the brand with a quiet +exultation that was pleasing to behold.</p> + +<p>"Matches," said he, "ruin the smoke. They give it a sulphur taste. +There's nothing like a hot coal."</p> + +<p>Saying this, he lighted his pipe. This operation was accomplished +with a series of those short, quick, hard, percussive puffs with which +the Irish race in every clime on this terrestrial ball perform the +solemn rite.</p> + +<p>And now the thoughts of the priest became more calm and regular and +manageable. His confusion departed, and gradually, as the smoke ascended +to the skies, there was diffused over his soul a certain soothing and +all-pervading calm.</p> + +<p>He now began to face the full difficulty of his position. He saw that +escape was impossible and death inevitable. He made up his mind to die. +The discovery would surely be made in the morning that Hawbury had been +substituted for the robber; he would be found and punished, and the +priest would be involved in his fate. His only care now was for Ethel; +and he turned his thoughts toward the formation of some plan by which he +might obtain mercy for her.</p> + +<p>He was in the midst of these thoughts—for himself resigned, for +Ethel anxious—and turning over in his mind all the various modes +by which the emotion of pity or mercy might be roused in a merciless and +pitiless nature; he was thinking of an appeal to the brigands +themselves, and had already decided that in this there lay his best hope +of success—when all of a sudden these thoughts were rudely +interrupted and +<span class = "pagenum">118</span> +dissipated and scattered to the winds by a most startling cry.</p> + +<p>Ethel started to her feet.</p> + +<p>"Oh Heavens!" she cried, "what was that?"</p> + +<p>"Down! down!" cried the men, wrathfully; but before Ethel could obey +the sound was repeated, and the men themselves were arrested by it.</p> + +<p>The sound that thus interrupted the meditations of the priest was the +explosion of a rifle. As Ethel started up another followed. This excited +the men themselves, who now listened intently to learn the cause.</p> + +<p>They did not have to wait long.</p> + +<p>Another rifle explosion followed, which was succeeded by a loud, long +shriek.</p> + +<p>"An attack!" cried one of the men, with a deep curse. They listened +still, yet did not move away from the place, for the duty to which they +had been assigned was still prominent in their minds. The priest had +already risen to his feet, still smoking his pipe, as though in this new +turn of affairs its assistance might be more than ever needed to enable +him to preserve his presence of mind, and keep his soul serene in the +midst of confusion.</p> + +<p>And now they saw all around them the signs of agitation. Figures in +swift motion flitted to and fro amidst the shade, and others darted past +the smouldering fires. In the midst of this another shot sounded, and +another, and still another. At the third there was a wild yell of rage +and pain, followed by the shrill cry of a woman's voice. The fact was +evident that some one of the brigands had fallen, and the women were +lamenting.</p> + +<p>The confusion grew greater. Loud cries arose; calls of encouragement, +of entreaty, of command, and of defiance. Over by the old house there +was the uproar of rushing men, and in the midst of it a loud, stern +voice of command. The voices and the rushing footsteps moved from the +house to the woods. Then all was still for a time.</p> + +<p>It was but for a short time, however. Then came shot after shot in +rapid succession. The flashes could be seen among the trees. All around +them there seemed to be a struggle going on. There was some unseen +assailant striking terrific blows from the impenetrable shadow of the +woods. The brigands were firing back, but they fired only into thick +darkness. Shrieks and yells of pain arose from time to time, the +direction of which showed that the brigands were suffering. Among the +assailants there was neither voice nor cry. But, in spite of their +losses and the disadvantage under which they labored, the brigands +fought well, and resisted stubbornly. From time to time a loud, stern +voice arose, whose commands resounded far and wide, and sustained the +courage of the men and directed their movements.</p> + +<p>The men who guarded the priest and Ethel were growing more and more +excited every +<span class = "pagenum">118b</span> +moment, and were impatient at their enforced inaction.</p> + +<p>"They must be soldiers," said one.</p> + +<p>"Of course," said another.</p> + +<p>"They fight well."</p> + +<p>"Ay; better than the last time."</p> + +<p>"How did they learn to fight so well under cover?"</p> + +<p>"They've improved. The last time we met them we shot them like sheep, +and drove them back in five minutes."</p> + +<p>"They've got a leader who understands fighting in the woods. He keeps +them under cover."</p> + +<p>"Who is he?"</p> + +<p>"Diavolo! who knows? They get new captains every day."</p> + +<p>"Was there not a famous American Indian—"</p> + +<p>"True. I heard of him. An Indian warrior from the American forests. +<ins class = "correction" title = "spelling unchanged">Guiseppe</ins> +saw him when he was at Rome."</p> + +<p>"Bah!—you all saw him."</p> + +<p>"Where?"</p> + +<p>"On the road."</p> + +<p>"We didn't."</p> + +<p>"You did. He was the Zouave who fled to the woods first."</p> + +<p>"He?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Diavolo!"</p> + +<p>These words were exchanged between them as they looked at the +fighting. But suddenly there came rapid flashes and rolling volleys +beyond the fires that lay before them, and the movement of the flashes +showed that a rush had been made toward the lake. Wild yells arose, then +fierce returning fires, and these showed that the brigands were being +driven back.</p> + +<p>The guards could endure this no longer.</p> + +<p>"They are beating us," cried one of the men, with a curse. "We must +go and fight."</p> + +<p>"What shall we do with these prisoners?"</p> + +<p>"Tie them and leave them."</p> + +<p>"Have you a rope?"</p> + +<p>"No. There is one by the grave."</p> + +<p>"Let's take the prisoners there and bind them."</p> + +<p>This proposition was accepted; and, seizing the priest and Ethel, the +four men hurried them back to the grave. The square hole lay there just +beside them, with the earth by its side. Ethel tried to see into it, but +was not near enough to do so. One of the men found the rope, and began +in great haste to bind the arms of the priest behind him. Another began +to bind Ethel in the same way.</p> + +<p>But now there came loud cries, and the rush of men near them. A loud, +stern voice was encouraging the men.</p> + +<p>"On! on!" he cried. "Follow me! We'll drive them back!"</p> + +<p>Saying this, a man hurried on, followed by a score of brigands.</p> + +<p>It was Girasole.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">119</span> + +<p>He had been guarding the woods at this side when he had seen the rush +that had been made farther up. He had seen his men driven in, and was +now hurrying up to the place to retrieve the battle. As he was running +on he came up to the party at the grave.</p> + +<p>He stopped.</p> + +<p>"What's this?" he cried.</p> + +<p>"The prisoners—we were securing them."</p> + +<p>It was now lighter than it had been, and dawn was not far off. The +features of Girasole were plainly distinguishable. They were convulsed +with the most furious passion, which was not caused so much by the rage +of conflict as by the sight of the prisoners. He had suspected treachery +on their part, and had spared them for a time only so as to see whether +his suspicions were true or not. But now this sudden assault by night, +conducted so skillfully, and by such a powerful force, pointed clearly +to treachery, as he saw it, and the ones who to him seemed most +prominent in guilt were the priest and Ethel.</p> + +<p>His suspicions were quite reasonable under the circumstances. Here +was a priest whom he regarded as his natural enemy. These brigands +identified themselves with republicans and Garibaldians whenever it +suited their purposes to do so, and consequently, as such, they were +under the condemnation of the Pope; and any priest might think he was +doing the Pope good service by betraying those who were his enemies. As +to this priest, every thing was against him. He lived close by; every +step of the country was no doubt familiar to him; he had come to the +camp under very suspicious circumstances, bringing with him a stranger +in disguise. He had given plausible answers to the cross-questioning of +Girasole; but those were empty words, which went for nothing in the +presence of the living facts that now stood before him in the presence +of the enemy.</p> + +<p>These thoughts had all occurred to Girasole, and the sight of the two +prisoners kindled his rage to madness. It was the deadliest purpose of +vengeance that gleamed in his eyes as he looked upon them, and they knew +it. He gave one glance, and then turned to his men.</p> + +<p>"On! on!" he cried; "I will join you in an instant; and you," he said +to the guards, "wait a moment."</p> + +<p>The brigands rushed on with shouts to assist their comrades in the +fight, while the other four waited.</p> + +<p>All this time the fight had not ceased. The air was filled with the +reports of rifle-shots, the shouts of men, the yells of the wounded. The +flashes seemed to be gradually drawing nearer, as though the assailants +were still driving the brigands. But their progress was slow, for the +fighting was carried on among the trees, and the brigands resisted +stubbornly, retreating from cover to cover, and stopping every moment to +make a fresh stand. But the assailants had gained much ground, and were +already +<span class = "pagenum">119b</span> +close by the borders of the lake, and advancing along toward the old +stone house.</p> + +<p>The robbers had not succeeded in binding their prisoners. The priest +and Ethel both stood where they had encountered Girasole, and the ropes +fell from the robbers' hands at the new interruption. The grave with its +mound was only a few feet away.</p> + +<p>Girasole had a pistol in his left hand and a sword in his right. He +sheathed his sword and drew another pistol, keeping his eyes fixed +steadily all the while upon his victims.</p> + +<p>"You needn't bind these prisoners," said Girasole, grimly; "I know a +better way to secure them."</p> + +<p>"In the name of God," cried the priest, "I implore you not to shed +innocent blood!"</p> + +<p>"Pooh!" said Girasole.</p> + +<p>"This lady is innocent; you will at least spare her!"</p> + +<p>"She shall die first!" said Girasole, in a fury, and reached out his +hand to grasp Ethel. The priest flung himself forward between the two. +Girasole dashed him aside.</p> + +<p>"Give us time to pray, for God's sake—one moment to pray!"</p> + +<p>"Not a moment!" cried Girasole, grasping at Ethel.</p> + +<p>Ethel gave a loud shriek and started away in horror. Girasole sprang +after her. The four men turned to seize her. With a wild and frantic +energy, inspired by the deadly terror that was in her heart, she bounded +away toward the grave.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXXV" id = "chapXXXV"> +CHAPTER XXXV.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +BURIED ALIVE.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">Hawbury</span> last vanished from the scene +to a place which is but seldom resorted to by a living man. Once inside +of his terrible retreat he became a prey to feelings of the most varied +and harrowing character, in the midst of which there was a suspense, +twofold, agonizing, and intolerable. First of all, his suspense was for +Ethel, and then for himself. In that narrow and restricted retreat his +senses soon became sharpened to an unusual degree of acuteness. Every +touch against it communicated itself to his frame, as though the wood of +his inclosure had become part of himself; and every sound intensified +itself to an extraordinary degree of distinctness, as though the +temporary loss of vision had been compensated for by an exaggeration of +the sense of hearing. This was particularly the case as the priest drove +in the screws. He heard the shuffle on the stairs, the whisper to Ethel, +her retreat, and the ascending footsteps; while at the same time he was +aware of the unalterable coolness of the priest, who kept calmly at his +work until the very last moment. The screws seemed to enter his own +frame, and the slight noise which was made, inaudible as it was to +others, to him seemed loud enough to rouse all in the house.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">120</span> + +<p>Then he felt himself raised and carried down stairs. Fortunately he +had got in with his feet toward the door, and as that end was carried +out first, his descent of the stairs was not attended with the +inconvenience which he might have felt had it been taken down in an +opposite direction.</p> + +<p>One fact gave him very great relief, for he had feared that his +breathing would be difficult. Thanks, however, to the precautions of the +priest, he felt no difficulty at all in that respect. The little bits of +wood which prevented the lid from resting close to the coffin formed +apertures which freely admitted all the air that was necessary.</p> + +<p>He was borne on thus from the house toward the grave, and heard the +voice of the priest from time to time, and rightly supposed that the +remarks of the priest were addressed not so much to the brigands as to +himself, so as to let him know that he was not deserted. The journey to +the grave was accomplished without any inconvenience, and the coffin was +at length put upon the ground.</p> + +<p>Then it was lowered into the grave.</p> + +<p>There was something in this which was so horrible to Hawbury that an +involuntary shudder passed through every nerve, and all the terror of +the grave and the bitterness of death in that one moment seemed to +descend upon him. He had not thought of this, and consequently was not +prepared for it. He had expected that he would be put down somewhere on +the ground, and that the priest would be able to get rid of the men, and +effect his liberation before it had gone so far.</p> + +<p>It required an effort to prevent himself from crying out; and longer +efforts were needed and more time before he could regain any portion of +his self-control. He now heard the priest performing the burial rites; +these seemed to him to be protracted to an amazing length; and so, +indeed, they were; but to the inmate of that grave the time seemed +longer far than it did to those who were outside. A thousand thoughts +swept through his mind, and a thousand fears swelled within his heart. +At last the suspicion came to him that the priest himself was unable to +do any better, and this suspicion was confirmed as he detected the +efforts which he made to get the men to leave the grave. This was +particularly evident when he pretended to hear an alarm, by which he +hoped to get rid of the brigands. It failed, however, and with this +failure the hopes of Hawbury sank lower than ever.</p> + +<p>But the climax of his horror was attained as the first clod fell upon +his narrow abode. It seemed like a death-blow. He felt it as if it had +struck himself, and for a moment it was as though he had been stunned. +The dull, heavy sound which those heard who stood above, to his ears +became transformed and enlarged, and extended to something like a +thunder-peal, with long reverberations through his now fevered and +distempered brain. Other +<span class = "pagenum">120b</span> +clods fell, and still others, and the work went on till his brain +reeled, and under the mighty emotions of the hour his reason began to +give way. Then all his fortitude and courage sank. All thought left him +save the consciousness of the one horror that had now fixed itself upon +his soul. It was intolerable. In another moment his despair would have +overmastered him, and under its impulse he would have burst through all +restraint, and turned all his energies toward forcing himself from his +awful prison house.</p> + +<p>He turned himself over. He gathered himself up as well as he could. +Already he was bracing himself for a mighty effort to burst up the lid, +when suddenly the voice of Girasole struck upon his ear, and a wild fear +for Ethel came to his heart, and the anguish of that fear checked at +once all further thought of himself.</p> + +<p>He lay still and listened. He did this the more patiently as the men +also stopped from their work, and as the hideous earth-clods no longer +fell down. He listened. From the conversation he gathered pretty +accurately the state of affairs. He knew that Ethel was there; that she +had been discovered and dragged forth; that she was in danger. He +listened in the anguish of a new suspense. He heard the words of the +priest, his calm denial of treachery, his quiet appeal to Girasole's +good sense. Then he heard the decision of Girasole, and the party walked +away with their prisoners, and he was left alone.</p> + +<p>Alone!</p> + +<p>At any other time it would have been a terrible thing thus to be left +alone in such a place, but now to him who was thus imprisoned it +afforded a great relief. The work of burial, with all its hideous +accompaniments, was stayed. He could collect his senses and make up his +mind as to what he should do.</p> + +<p>Now, first of all, he determined to gain more air if possible. The +earth that had fallen had covered up many of the chinks, so that his +breathing had become sensibly more difficult. His confinement, with this +oppression of his breathing, was intolerable. He therefore braced +himself once more to make an effort. The coffin was large and rudely +constructed, being merely an oblong box. He had more play to his limbs +than he could have had in one of a more regular construction, and thus +he was able to bring a great effort to bear upon the lid. He pressed. +The screws gave way. He lifted it up to some distance. He drew in a long +draught of fresh air, and felt in that one draught that he received new +life and strength and hope.</p> + +<p>He now lay still and thought about what he should do next. If it had +only been himself, he would, of course, have escaped in that first +instant, and fled to the woods. But the thought of Ethel detained +him.</p> + +<p>What was her position; and what could he do to save her? This was his +thought.</p> + +<p>He knew that she, together with the priest, +<span class = "pagenum">121</span> +was in the hands of four of the brigands, who were commanded to keep +their prisoners safe at the peril of their lives. Where they were he did +not know, nor could he tell whether she was near or at a distance. +Girasole had led them away.</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/pic121.png" width = "456" height = "460" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption wide"> +"IN AN INSTANT THE OCCUPANT OF THE GRAVE SPRANG FORTH."</p> + +<p>He determined to look out and watch. He perceived that this grave, in +the heart of the brigands' camp, afforded the very safest place in which +he could be for the purpose of watching. Girasole's words had indicated +that the work of burial would not be resumed that night, and if any +passers-by should come they would avoid such a place as this. Here, +then, he could stay until dawn at least, and watch unobserved. Perhaps +he could find where Ethel was guarded; perhaps he could do something to +distract the attention of the brigands, and afford her an opportunity +for flight.</p> + +<p>He now arose, and, kneeling in the coffin, he raised the lid. The +earth that was upon it fell down inside. He tilted the lid up, and +holding it up thus with one hand, he put his head carefully out of the +grave, and looked out +<span class = "pagenum">121b</span> +in the direction where Girasole had gone with his prisoners. The knoll +to which he had led them was a very conspicuous place, and had probably +been selected for that reason, since it could be under his own +observation, from time to time, even at a distance. It was about +half-way between the grave and the nearest fire, which fire, though low, +still gave forth some light, and the light was in a line with the knoll +to Hawbury's eyes. The party on the knoll, therefore, appeared thrown +out into relief by the faint fire-light behind them, especially the +priest and Ethel.</p> + +<p>And now Hawbury kept his watch, and looked and listened and waited, +ever mindful of his own immediate neighborhood, and guarding carefully +against any approach. But his own place was in gloom, and no one would +have thought of looking there, so that he was unobserved.</p> + +<p>But all his watching gave him no assistance toward finding out any +way of rescuing Ethel. He saw the vigilant guard around the prisoners. +Once or twice he saw a movement among +<span class = "pagenum">122</span> +them, but it was soon over, and resulted in nothing. Now he began to +despond, and to speculate in his mind as to whether Ethel was in any +danger or not. He began to calculate the time that might be required to +go for help with which to attack the brigands. He wondered what reason +Girasole might have to injure Ethel. But whatever hope he had that mercy +might be shown her was counterbalanced by his own experience of +Girasole's cruelty, and his knowledge of his merciless character.</p> + +<p>Suddenly he was roused by the rifle-shot and the confusion that +followed. He saw the party on the mound start to their feet. He heard +the shots that succeeded the first one. He saw shadows darting to and +fro. Then the confusion grew worse, and all the sounds of battle +arose—the cries, the shrieks, and the stern words of command.</p> + +<p>All this filled him with hope. An attack was being made. They might +all be saved. He could see that the brigands were being driven back, and +that the assailants were pressing on.</p> + +<p>Then he saw the party moving from the knoll. It was already much +lighter. They advanced toward him. He sank down and waited. He had no +fear now that this party would complete his burial. He thought they were +flying with the prisoners. If so, the assailants would soon be here; he +could join them, and lead them on to the rescue of Ethel.</p> + +<p>He lay low with the lid over him. He heard them close beside him. +Then there was the noise of rushing men, and Girasole's voice arose.</p> + +<p>He heard all that followed.</p> + +<p>Then Ethel's shriek sounded out, as she sprang toward the grave.</p> + +<p>In an instant the occupant of the grave, seizing the lid, raised it +up, and with a wild yell sprang forth.</p> + +<p>The effect was tremendous.</p> + +<p>The brigands thought the dead Antonio had come to life. They did not +stop to look, but with a howl of awful terror, and in an anguish of +fright, they turned and ran for their lives!</p> + +<p>Girasole saw him too, with equal horror, if not greater. He saw +Hawbury. It was the man whom he had killed stone-dead with his own hand. +He was there before him—or was it his ghost? For an instant horror +paralyzed him; and then, with a yell like a madman's, he leaped back and +fled after the others.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXXVI" id = "chapXXXVI"> +CHAPTER XXXVI.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +FLY! FLY!</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">In</span> the midst of that wild uproar +which had roused Dacres and Mrs. Willoughby there was nothing that +startled him so much as her declaration that she was not Arethusa. He +stood +<span class = "pagenum">122b</span> +bewildered. While she was listening to the sounds, he was listening to +the echo of her words; while she was wondering at the cause of such a +tumult, he was wondering at this disclosure. In a moment a thousand +little things suggested themselves as he stood there in his confusion, +which little things all went to throw a flood of light upon her +statement, and prove that she was another person than that "demon wife" +who had been the cause of all his woes. Her soft glance, her gentle +manner, her sweet and tender expression—above all, the tone of her +voice; all these at once opened his eyes. In the course of their +conversation she had spoken in a low tone, often in a whisper, so that +this fact with regard to the difference of voice had not been +perceptible; but her last words were spoken louder, and he observed the +difference.</p> + +<p>Now the tumult grew greater, and the reports of the rifles more +frequent. The noise was communicated to the house, and in the rooms and +the hall below there were tramplings of feet, and hurryings to and fro, +and the rattle of arms, and the voices of men, in the midst of which +rose the stern command of Girasole.</p> + +<p>"Forward! Follow me!"</p> + +<p>Then the distant reports grew nearer and yet nearer, and all the men +rushed from the house, and their tramp was heard outside as they hurried +away to the scene of conflict.</p> + +<p>"It's an attack! The brigands are attacked!" cried Mrs. +Willoughby.</p> + +<p>Dacres said nothing. He was collecting his scattered thoughts.</p> + +<p>"Oh, may Heaven grant that we may be saved! Oh, it is the +troops—it must be! Oh, Sir, come, come; help us to escape! My +darling sister is here. Save her!"</p> + +<p>"Your sister?" cried Dacres.</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; come, save her! My sister—my darling Minnie!"</p> + +<p>With these words Mrs. Willoughby rushed from the room.</p> + +<p>"Her sister! her sister!" repeated Dacres—"Minnie Fay! +<i>Her</i> sister! Good Lord! What a most infernal ass I've been making +of myself this last month!"</p> + +<p>He stood still for a few moments, overwhelmed by this thought, and +apparently endeavoring to realize the full extent and enormous size and +immense proportions, together with the infinite extent of ear, +appertaining to the ass to which he had transformed himself; but finally +he shook his head despondingly, as though he gave it up altogether. Then +he hurried after Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby rushed into Minnie's room, and clasped her sister in +her arms with frantic tears and kisses.</p> + +<p>"Oh, my precious darling!" she exclaimed.</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" said Minnie, "isn't this really too bad? I was <i>so</i> +tired, you know, and I was just beginning to go to sleep, when those +horrid men began firing their guns. I really do think that every body is +banded together to tease me. +<span class = "pagenum">123</span> +I do <i>wish</i> they'd all go away and let me have a little peace. I am +so tired and sleepy!"</p> + +<p>While Minnie was saying this her sister was embracing her and kissing +her and crying over her.</p> + +<p>"Oh, come, Minnie, come!" she cried; "make haste. We must fly!"</p> + +<p>"Where to?" said Minnie, wonderingly.</p> + +<p>"Any where—any where out of this awful place: into the +woods."</p> + +<p>"Why, I don't see the use of going into the woods. It's all wet, you +know. Can't we get a carriage?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no, no; we must not wait. They'll all be back soon and kill +us."</p> + +<p>"Kill us! What for?" cried Minnie. "What do you mean? How silly you +are, Kitty darling!"</p> + +<p>At this moment Dacres entered. The image of the immeasurable ass was +still very prominent in his mind, and he had lost all his fever and +delirium. One thought only remained (besides that of the ass, of +course), and that was—escape.</p> + +<p>"Are you ready?" he asked, hurriedly.</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, yes; let us make haste," said Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"I think no one is below," said he; "but I will go first. There is a +good place close by. We will run there. If I fall, you must run on and +try to get there. It is the bank just opposite. Once there, you are in +the woods. Do you understand?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, yes!" cried Mrs. Willoughby. "Haste! Oh, haste!"</p> + +<p>Dacres turned, and Mrs. Willoughby had just grasped Minnie's hand to +follow, when suddenly they heard footsteps below.</p> + +<p>They stopped, appalled.</p> + +<p>The robbers had not all gone, then. Some of them must have remained +on guard. But how many?</p> + +<p>Dacres listened and the ladies listened, and in their suspense the +beating of each heart was audible. The footsteps below could be heard +going from room to room, and pausing in each.</p> + +<p>"There seems to be only one man," said Dacres, in a whisper. "If +there is only one, I'll engage to manage him. While I grapple, you run +for your lives. Remember the bank."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; but oh, Sir, there may be more," said Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"I'll see," said Dacres, softly.</p> + +<p>He went cautiously to the front window and looked out. By the +increased light he could see quite plainly. No men were visible. From +afar the noise of the strife came to his ears louder than ever, and he +could see the flashes of the rifles.</p> + +<p>Dacres stole back again from the window and went to the door. He +stood and listened.</p> + +<p>And now the footsteps came across the hall to the foot of the stairs. +Dacres could see the figure of a solitary man, but it was dark in the +hall, and he could not make him out.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">123b</span> + +<p>He began to think that there was only one enemy to encounter.</p> + +<p>The man below put his foot on the lowest stair.</p> + +<p>Then he hesitated.</p> + +<p>Dacres stood in the shadow of the other doorway, which was nearer to +the head of the stairs, and prepared to spring as soon as the stranger +should come within reach. But the stranger delayed still.</p> + +<p>At length he spoke:</p> + +<p>"Hallo, up there!"</p> + +<p>The sound of those simple words produced an amazing effect upon the +hearers. Dacres sprang down with a cry of joy. "Come, come!" he shouted +to the ladies; "friends are here!" And running down the stairs, he +reached the bottom and grasped the stranger by both arms.</p> + +<p>In the dim light he could detect a tall, slim, sinewy form, with +long, black, ragged hair and white neck-tie.</p> + +<p>"You'd best get out of this, and quick, too," said the Rev. Saul +Tozer. "They're all off now, but they'll be back here in less than no +time. I jest thought I'd look in to see if any of you folks was +around."</p> + +<p>By this time the ladies were both at the bottom of the stairs.</p> + +<p>"Come!" said Tozer; "hurry up, folks. I'll take one lady and you take +t'other."</p> + +<p>"Do you know the woods?"</p> + +<p>"Like a book."</p> + +<p>"So do I," said Dacres.</p> + +<p>He grasped Mrs. Willoughby's hand and started.</p> + +<p>"But Minnie!" said Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>"You had better let him take her; it's safer for all of us," said +Dacres.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby looked back as she was dragged on after Dacres, and +saw Tozer following them, holding Minnie's hand. This reassured her.</p> + +<p>Dacres dragged her on to the foot of the bank. Here she tried to keep +up with him, but it was steep, and she could not.</p> + +<p>Whereupon Dacres stopped, and, without a word, raised her in his arms +as though she were a little child, and ran up the bank. He plunged into +the woods. Then he ran on farther. Then he turned and doubled.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby begged him to put her down.</p> + +<p>"No," said he; "they are behind us. You can not go fast enough. I +should have to wait and defend you, and then we would both be lost."</p> + +<p>"But, oh! we are losing Minnie."</p> + +<p>"No, we are not," cried Dacres; "that man is ten times stronger than +I am. He is a perfect elephant in strength. He dashed past me up the +hill."</p> + +<p>"I didn't see him."</p> + +<p>"Your face was turned the other way. He is ahead of us now +somewhere."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I wish we <i>could</i> catch up to him."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">124</span> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic124.png" width = "344" height = "458" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"AT THIS DACRES RUSHED ON FASTER."</p> + +<p>At this Dacres rushed on faster. The effort was tremendous. He leaped +over fallen timbers, he burst through the underbrush.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I'm sure you'll <i>kill</i> yourself if you go so fast," said +Mrs. Willoughby. "We can't catch up to them."</p> + +<p>At this Dacres slackened his pace, and went on more carefully. She +again begged him to put her down. He again refused. Upon this she felt +perfectly helpless, and recalled, in a vague way, Minnie's ridiculous +question of "How would you like to be run away with by a great, big, +horrid man, Kitty darling?"</p> + +<p>Then she began to think he was insane, and felt very anxious.</p> + +<p>At last Dacres stopped. He was utterly exhausted. He was panting +terribly. It had been a fearful journey. He had run along the bank up to +that narrow valley which he had traversed the day before, and when he +stopped it was on the top of that precipice where he had formerly +rested, and where he had nurtured such dark purposes against Mrs. +Willoughby.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby looked at him, full of pity. He was utterly broken +down by this last effort.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">124b</span> + +<p>"Oh dear!" she thought. "Is he sane or insane? What <i>am</i> I to +do? It is dreadful to have to go on and humor his queer fancies."</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXXVII" id = "chapXXXVII"> +CHAPTER XXXVII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +MINNIE'S LAST LIFE-PRESERVER.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">When</span> Tozer started after Dacres he +led Minnie by the hand for only a little distance. On reaching the +acclivity he seized her in his arms, thus imitating Dacres's example, +and rushed up, reaching the top before the other. Then he plunged into +the woods, and soon became separated from his companion.</p> + +<p>Once in the woods, he went along quite leisurely, carrying Minnie +without any difficulty, and occasionally addressing to her a soothing +remark, assuring her that she was safe. Minnie, however, made no remark +of any kind, good or bad, but remained quite silent, occupied with her +own thoughts. At length Tozer stopped and put her down. It was a place +upon the edge of a cliff on the shore of the lake, and as +<span class = "pagenum">125</span> +much as a mile from the house. The cliff was almost fifty feet high, and +was perpendicular. All around was the thick forest, and it was unlikely +that such a place could be discovered.</p> + +<p class = "floatleft"> +<img src = "images/pic125.png" width = "216" height = "289" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"'WORSE AND WORSE,' SAID TOZER."</p> + +<p>"Here," said he; "we've got to stop here, and it's about the right +place. We couldn't get any where nigh to the soldiers without the +brigands seeing us; so we'll wait here till the fight's over, and the +brigands all chased off."</p> + +<p>"The soldiers! what soldiers?" asked Minnie.</p> + +<p>"Why, they're having a fight over there—the soldiers are +attacking the brigands."</p> + +<p>"Well, I didn't know. Nobody told me. And did you come with the +soldiers?"</p> + +<p>"Well, not exactly. I came with the priest and the young lady."</p> + +<p>"But you were not at the house?"</p> + +<p>"No. They wouldn't take me all the way. The priest said I couldn't be +disguised—but I don't see why not—so he left me in the woods +till he came back. And then the soldiers came, and we crept on till we +came nigh the lake. Well, then I stole away; and when they made an +attack the brigands all ran there to fight, and I watched till I saw the +coast clear; and so I came, and here we are."</p> + +<p>Minnie now was quite silent and preoccupied, and occasionally she +glanced sadly at Tozer with her large, pathetic, child-like eyes. It was +a very piteous look, full of the most tender entreaty. Tozer +occasionally glanced at her, and then, like her, he sat silent, involved +in his own thoughts.</p> + +<p>"And so," said Minnie at last, "you're not the priest himself?"</p> + +<p>"The priest?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Well, no; I don't call myself a priest. I'm a minister of the +Gospel."</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">125b</span> + +<p>"Well, you're not a <i>real</i> priest, then."</p> + +<p>"All men of my calling are real priests—yes, priests and kings. +I yield to no man in the estimate which I set upon my high and holy +calling."</p> + +<p>"Oh, but I mean a Roman Catholic priest," said Minnie.</p> + +<p>"A Roman Catholic priest! Me! Why, what a question! Me! a Roman +Catholic! Why, in our parts folks call me the Protestant Champion."</p> + +<p>"Oh, and so you're only a Protestant, after all," said Minnie, in a +disappointed tone.</p> + +<p>"Only a Protestant!" repeated Tozer, severely—"<i>only</i> a +Protestant. Why, ain't you one yourself?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; but I hoped you were the other priest, you know. I did +<i>so</i> want to have a Roman Catholic priest this time."</p> + +<p>Tozer was silent. It struck him that this young lady was in danger. +Her wish for a Roman Catholic priest boded no good. She had just come +from Rome. No doubt she had been tampered with. Some Jesuits had caught +her, and had tried to proselytize her. His soul swelled with indignation +at the thought.</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" said Minnie again.</p> + +<p>"What's the matter?" asked Tozer, in a sympathizing voice.</p> + +<p>"I'm so sorry."</p> + +<p>"What for?"</p> + +<p>"Why, that you saved my life, you know."</p> + +<p>"Sorry? sorry? that I saved your life?" repeated Tozer, in +amazement.</p> + +<p>"Oh, well, you know, I did so want to be saved by a Roman Catholic +priest, you know."</p> + +<p>"To be saved by a Roman Catholic priest!" repeated Tozer, pondering +these words in his mind as he slowly pronounced them. He could make +nothing of them at first, but finally concluded that they concealed some +half-suggested tendency to Rome.</p> + +<p>"I don't like this—I don't like this," he said, solemnly.</p> + +<p>"What don't you like?"</p> + +<p>"It's dangerous. It looks bad," said Tozer, with increased +solemnity.</p> + +<p>"What's dangerous? You look so solemn that you really make me feel +quite nervous. What's dangerous?"</p> + +<p>"Why, your words. I see in you, I think, a kind of leaning toward +Rome."</p> + +<p>"It isn't Rome," said Minnie. "I don't lean to Rome. I only lean a +little toward a Roman Catholic priest."</p> + +<p>"Worse and worse," said Tozer. "Dear! dear! dear! worse <i>and</i> +worse. This beats all. Young woman, beware! But perhaps I don't +understand you. You surely don't mean that your affections are engaged +to any Roman Catholic priest. You can't mean <i>that</i>. Why, they +can't marry."</p> + +<p>"But that's just what I like them so for," said Minnie. "I like +people that don't marry; I hate people that want to marry."</p> + +<p>Tozer turned this over in his mind, but could +<span class = "pagenum">126</span> +make nothing of it. At length he thought he saw in this an additional +proof that she had been tampered with by Jesuits at Rome. He thought he +saw in this a statement of her belief in the Roman Catholic doctrine of +celibacy.</p> + +<p>He shook his head more solemnly than ever. "It's not Gospel," said +he. "It's mere human tradition. Why, for centuries there was a married +priesthood even in the Latin Church. Dunstan's chief measures consisted +in a fierce war on the married clergy. So did Hildebrand's—Gregory +the Seventh, you know. The Church at Milan, sustained by the doctrines +of the great Ambrose, always preferred a married clergy. The worst +measures of Hildebrand were against these good pastors and their wives. +And in the Eastern Church they have always had it."</p> + +<p>Of course all this was quite beyond Minnie; so she gave a little +sigh, and said nothing.</p> + +<p>"Now as to Rome," resumed Tozer. "Have you ever given a careful study +to the Apocalypse—not a hasty reading, as people generally do, but +a serious, earnest, and careful examination?"</p> + +<p>"I'm sure I haven't any idea what in the world you're talking about," +said Minnie. "I <i>wish</i> you wouldn't talk so. I don't understand one +single word of what you say."</p> + +<p>Tozer started and stared at this. It was a depth of ignorance that +transcended that of the other young lady with whom he had conversed. But +he attributed it all to "Roman" influences. They dreaded the Apocalypse, +and had not allowed either of these young ladies to become acquainted +with its tremendous pages. Moreover, there was something else. There was +a certain light and trifling tone which she used in referring to these +things, and it pained him. He sat involved in a long and very serious +consideration of her case, and once or twice looked at her with so very +peculiar an expression that Minnie began to feel very uneasy indeed.</p> + +<p>Tozer at length cleared his throat, and fixed upon Minnie a very +affectionate and tender look.</p> + +<p>"My dear young friend," said he, "have you ever reflected upon the +way you are living?"</p> + +<p>At this Minnie gave him a frightened little look, and her head +fell.</p> + +<p>"You are young now, but you can't be young always; youth and beauty +and loveliness all are yours, but they can't last; and now is the time +for you to make your choice—now in life's gay morn. It ain't easy +when you get old. Remember that, my dear. Make your choice +now—now."</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" said Minnie; "I knew it. But I can't—and I don't +want to—and I think it's <i>very</i> unkind in you. I don't want +to make <i>any</i> choice. I don't want any of you. It's <i>so</i> +horrid."</p> + +<p>This was a dreadful shock to Tozer; but he could not turn aside from +this beautiful yet erring creature.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">126b</span> + +<p>"Oh, I entreat you—I implore you, my dear, +<i>dear</i>—"</p> + +<p>"I do <i>wish</i> you wouldn't talk to me that way, and call me your +<i>dear</i>. I don't like it; no, not even if you <i>did</i> save my +life, though really I didn't know there was any danger. But I'm not +<i>your</i> dear."</p> + +<p>And Minnie tossed her head with a little air of determination, as +though she had quite made up her mind on that point.</p> + +<p>"Oh, well now, really now," said Tozer, "it was only a natural +expression. I <i>do</i> take a deep interest in you, my—that +is—miss; I feel a sincere regard and affection and—"</p> + +<p>"But it's no use," said Minnie. "You really <i>can't,</i> you know; +and so, why, you <i>mustn't</i>, you know."</p> + +<p>Tozer did not clearly understand this, so after a brief pause he +resumed:</p> + +<p>"But what I was saying is of far more importance. I referred to your +life. Now you're not happy as you are."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, but I am," said Minnie, briskly.</p> + +<p>Tozer sighed.</p> + +<p>"I'm <i>very</i> happy," continued Minnie, "very, very +happy—that is, when I'm with dear, darling Kitty, and dear, dear +Ethel, and my darling old Dowdy, and dear, kind papa."</p> + +<p>Tozer sighed again.</p> + +<p>"You can't be <i>truly</i> happy thus," he said, mournfully. "You may +think you are, but you <i>ain't</i>. My heart fairly yearns over you +when I see you, so young, so lovely, and so innocent; and I know you +can't be happy as you are. You must live otherwise. And oh, I pray +you—I entreat you to set your affections elsewhere!"</p> + +<p>"Well, then, I think it's very, very horrid in you to press me so," +said, Minnie, with something actually like asperity in her tone; "but +it's <i>quite</i> impossible."</p> + +<p>"But oh, why?"</p> + +<p>"Why, because I don't want to have things any different. But if I +have to be worried and teased so, and if people insist on it so, why, +there's only one that I'll <i>ever</i> consent to."</p> + +<p>"And what is that?" asked Tozer, looking at her with the most +affectionate solicitude.</p> + +<p>"Why, it's—it's—" Minnie paused, and looked a little +confused.</p> + +<p>"It's what?" asked Tozer, with still deeper and more anxious +interest.</p> + +<p>"Why, it's—it's—Rufus K. Gunn."</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<p class = "floatleft chapter"> +<img src = "images/pic127.png" width = "208" height = "291" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption narrow"> +"THE DISCOVERY OF A BODY ON THE SHORE OF THE LAKE."</p> + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXXVIII" id = "chapXXXVIII"> +CHAPTER XXXVIII.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +THE IMPATIENT BARON.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">The</span> brigands had resisted +stubbornly, but finally found themselves without a leader. Girasole had +disappeared; and as his voice no longer directed their movements, they +began to fall into confusion. The attacking party, on the other hand, +was well led, and made a steady advance, driving the enemy before them. +At +<span class = "pagenum">127</span> +length the brigands lost heart, and took to flight. With a wild cheer +the assailants followed in pursuit. But the fugitives took to the +forest, and were soon beyond the reach of their pursuers in its familiar +intricacies, and the victors were summoned back by the sound of the +trumpet.</p> + +<p>It was now daylight, and as the conquering party emerged from the +forest they showed the uniform of the Papal Zouaves; while their leader, +who had shown himself so skillful in forest warfare, proved to be no +less a personage than our friend the Baron. Led by him, the party +advanced to the old stone house, and here, drawing up his men in front, +their leader rushed in, and searched every room. To his amazement, he +found the house deserted, its only inmate being that dead brigand whom +Girasole had mistaken for Hawbury. This discovery filled the Baron with +consternation. He had expected to find the prisoners here, and his +dismay and grief were excessive. At first he could not believe in his +ill luck; but another search convinced him of it, and reduced him to a +state of perfect bewilderment.</p> + +<p>But he was not one who could long remain inactive. Feeling confident +that the brigands were scattered every where in headlong flight, he sent +his men out in different directions, into the woods and along the shore, +to see if they could find any traces of the lost ones. He himself +remained near the house, so as to direct the search most efficiently. +After about an hour they came back, one by one, without being able to +find many traces. One had found an empty coffin in a grave, another a +woman's hood, a third had found a scarf. All of these had endeavored to +follow up these traces, but +<span class = "pagenum">127b</span> +without result. Finally a man approached who announced the discovery of +a body on the shore of the lake. After him came a party who was carrying +the corpse for the inspection of their captain.</p> + +<p>The Baron went to look at it. The body showed a great gap in the +skull. On questioning the men, he learned that they had found it on the +shore, at the bottom of a steep rock, about half-way between the house +and the place where they had first emerged from the woods. His head was +lying pressed against a sharp rock in such a way that it was evident +that he had fallen over the cliff, and had been instantly killed. The +Baron looked at the face, and recognized the features of Girasole. He +ordered it to be taken away and laid in the empty grave for future +burial.</p> + +<p>The Baron now became impatient. This was not what he had bargained +for at all. At length he thought that they might have fled, and might +now be concealed in the woods around; and together with this thought +there came to his mind an idea of an effective way to reach them. The +trumpeter could send forth a blast which could be heard far and wide. +But what might, could, would, or should the trumpeter sound forth which +should give the concealed listeners a certainty that the summons came +from friends and not from foes? This the Baron puzzled over for some +time. At length he solved this problem also, and triumphantly.</p> + +<p>There was one strain which the trumpeter might sound that could not +be mistaken. It would at once convey to the concealed hearers all the +truth, and gently woo them home. It would be at once a note of victory, +a song of joy, a call of love, a sound of peace, and an +invitation—"Wanderer, come home!"</p> + +<p>Of course there was only one tune that, to the mind of the Baron, was +capable of doing this.</p> + +<p>And of course that tune was "Yankee Doodle."</p> + +<p>Did the trumpeter know it?</p> + +<p>Of course he did.</p> + +<p>Who does not know it?</p> + +<p>All men know that tune. Man is born with an innate knowledge of the +strain of "Yankee Doodle." No one can remember when he first learned it. +The reason is because he never learned it at all. It was born in +him.</p> + +<p>So the trumpeter sounded it forth, and wild and high and clear and +far the sounds arose; and it was "Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes +flying; and answer, echoes, answer, Yankee Doodle dying."</p> + +<p>And while the trumpet sounded the Baron listened and listened, and +walked up and down, and fretted and fumed and chafed, and I'm afraid he +swore a little too; and at last he was going to tell the trumpeter to +stop his infernal noise, when, just at that moment, what should he see +all of a sudden emerging from the woods but three figures!</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">128</span> + +<p>And I'll leave you to imagine, if you can, the joy and delight which +agitated the bosom of our good Baron as he recognized among these three +figures the well-known face and form of his friend Hawbury. With Hawbury +was a lady whom the Baron remembered having seen once in the upper hall +of a certain house in Rome, on a memorable occasion, when he stood on +the stairs calling <i>Min</i>. The lady was very austere then, but she +was very gracious now, and very wonderfully sweet in the expression of +her face. And with them was a stranger in the garb of a priest.</p> + +<p>Now as soon as the party met the Baron, who rushed to meet them, +Hawbury wrung his hand, and stared at him in unbounded astonishment.</p> + +<p>"You!" he cried; "yourself, old boy! By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said the Baron. "You see, the moment we got into that ambush I +kept my eye open, and got a chance to spring into the woods. There I was +all right, and ran for it. I got into the road again a couple of miles +back, got a horse, rode to Civita Castellana, and there I was lucky +enough to find a company of Zouaves. Well, Sir, we came here flying, +mind, I tell you, and got hold of a chap that we made guide us to the +lake. Then we opened on them; and here we are, by thunder! But where's +Min?"</p> + +<p>"Who?" asked Hawbury.</p> + +<p>"Min," said the Baron, in the most natural tone in the world.</p> + +<p>"Oh! Why, isn't she here?"</p> + +<p>"No. We've hunted every where. No one's here at all." And the Baron +went on to tell about their search and its results. Hawbury was chiefly +struck by the news of Girasole.</p> + +<p>"He must have gone mad with terror," said Hawbury, as he told the +Baron about his adventure at the grave. "If that's so," he added, "I +don't see how the ladies could be harmed. I dare say they've run off. +Why, we started to run, and got so far off that we couldn't find our way +back, even after the trumpet began to sound. You must keep blowing at +it, you know. Play all the national tunes you can—no end. They'll +find their way back if you give them time."</p> + +<p>And now they all went back to the house, and the Baron in his anxiety +could not talk any more, but began his former occupation of walking up +and down, and fuming and fretting and chafing, and, I'm again afraid, +swearing—when all of a sudden, on the bank in front of him, on the +very top, just emerging from the thick underbrush which had concealed +them till that moment, to their utter amazement and indescribable +delight, they beheld Scone Dacres and Mrs. Willoughby. Scone Dacres +appeared to Hawbury to be in a totally different frame of mind from that +in which he had been when he last saw him; and what perplexed him most, +yea, and absolutely confounded him, was the sight of Scone Dacres with +his demon wife, whom he had been pursuing for the sake of vengeance, and +whose frenzy had been +<span class = "pagenum">128b</span> +so violent that he himself had been drawn with him on purpose to try and +restrain him. And now what was the injured husband doing with his demon +wife? Doing! why, doing the impassioned lover most vigorously; +sustaining her steps most tenderly; grasping her hand; pushing aside the +bushes; assisting her down the slope; overwhelming her, in short; +hovering round her, apparently unconscious that there was in all the +wide world any other being than Mrs. Willoughby. And as Hawbury looked +upon all this his eyes dilated and his lips parted involuntarily in +utter wonder; and finally, as Dacres reached the spot, the only greeting +which he could give his friend was,</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>And now, while Mrs. Willoughby and Ethel were embracing with tears of +joy, and overwhelming one another with questions, the Baron sought +information from Dacres.</p> + +<p>Dacres then informed him all about Tozer's advent and departure.</p> + +<p>"Tozer!" cried the Baron, in intense delight. "Good on his darned old +head! Hurrah for the parson! He shall marry us for this—he, and no +other, by thunder!"</p> + +<p>Upon which Mrs. Willoughby and Ethel exchanged glances, but said not +a word. Not they.</p> + +<p>But in about five minutes, when Mrs. Willoughby had Ethel apart a +little by herself, she said,</p> + +<p>"Oh, Ethel dear, isn't it dreadful?"</p> + +<p>"What?" asked Ethel.</p> + +<p>"Why, poor Minnie."</p> + +<p>"Poor Minnie?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. Another horrid man. And he'll be claiming her too. And, oh +dear! what shall I do?"</p> + +<p>"Why, you'll have to let her decide for herself. I think it will +be—this person."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby clasped her hands, and looked up with a pretty little +expression of horror.</p> + +<p>"And do you know, dear," added Ethel, "I'm beginning to think that it +wouldn't be so <i>very</i> bad. He's Lord Hawbury's friend, you know, +and then he's very, very brave; and, above all, think what we all owe +him."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby gave a resigned sigh.</p> + +<p>And now the Baron was wilder with impatience than ever. He had +questioned Dacres, and found that he could give him no information +whatever as to Tozer's route, and consequently had no idea where to +search. But he still had boundless confidence in "Yankee Doodle."</p> + +<p>"That's the way," said Dacres; "we heard it ever so far, and it was +the first thing that told us it was safe to return. We didn't dare to +venture before."</p> + +<p>Meanwhile Hawbury had got Dacres by himself, and poured a torrent of +questions over him. Dacres told him in general terms how he was +captured. Then he informed him how Mrs. Willoughby was put in the same +room, and his +<span class = "pagenum">129</span> +discovery that it was Minnie that the Italian wanted.</p> + +<p>"Well, do you know, old chap," continued Dacres, "I couldn't stand +it; so I offered to make it all up with her."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I see you've done that, old boy. Congrat—"</p> + +<p>"Pooh! wait a minute," said Dacres, interrupting him. "Well, you +know, she wasn't my wife at all."</p> + +<p>At this Hawbury stood utterly aghast.</p> + +<p>"What's that?"</p> + +<p>"She wasn't my wife at all. She looks confoundedly like what my wife +was at her best, but she's another person. It's a most extraordinary +likeness; and yet she's isn't any relation, but a great deal prettier +woman. What made me so sure, you know, was the infernally odd +coincidence of the name; and then I only saw her off and on, you know, +and I never heard her voice. Then, you know, I was mad with jealousy; +and so I made myself worse and worse, till I was ripe for murder, arson, +<ins class = "correction" title = "spelling unchanged">assasination</ins>, +and all that sort of thing, you know."</p> + +<p>To all this Hawbury listened in amazement, and could not utter a +word, until at last, as Dacres paused, he said,</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Well, old man, I was the most infernal ass that ever lived. And how +I must have bored you!"</p> + +<p>"By Jove!" exclaimed Hawbury again. "But drive on, old boy."</p> + +<p>"Well, you know, the row occurred just then, and away went the +scoundrels to the fight, and in came that parson fellow, and away we +went. I took Mrs. Willoughby to a safe place, where I kept her till I +heard the trumpet, you know. And I've got another thing to tell you. +It's deuced odd, but she knew all about me."</p> + +<p>"The deuce she did!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, the whole story. Lived somewhere in the county. But I don't +remember the Fays. At any rate, she lived there; and do you know, old +fellow, the county people used to think I beat my wife!"</p> + +<p>"By Jove!"</p> + +<p>"Yes; and afterward they raised a report that my cruelty had driven +her mad. But I had a few friends that stood up for me; and among others +these Fays, you know, had heard the truth of it, and, as it happened, +Kitty—"</p> + +<p>"Kitty?"</p> + +<p>"Well, Mrs. Willoughby, I mean—her name's Kitty—has +always known the truth about it; and when she saw me at Naples she felt +interested in me."</p> + +<p>"Oho!" and Hawbury opened his eyes.</p> + +<p>"Well, she knew all about it; and, among other things, she gave me +one piece of intelligence that has eased my mind."</p> + +<p>"Ah! what's that?"</p> + +<p>"Why, my wife <i>is</i> dead."</p> + +<p>"Oh, then there's no doubt about it?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">129b</span> + +<p>"Not a bit. She died eight years ago, and in an insane asylum."</p> + +<p>"By Jove! Then she was mad all the time."</p> + +<p>"Yes; that accounts for it, and turns all my curses into pity."</p> + +<p>Dacres was silent now for a few moments. At length he looked at +Hawbury with a very singular expression.</p> + +<p>"Hawbury, old boy."</p> + +<p>"Well, Sconey?"</p> + +<p>"I think we'll keep it up."</p> + +<p>"Who?"</p> + +<p>"Why, Kitty and I—that is, Mrs. Willoughby and I—her +name's Kitty, you know."</p> + +<p>"Keep what up?"</p> + +<p>"Why, the—the—the fond illusion, and all that sort of +thing. You see I've got into such an infernal habit of regarding her as +my wife that I can't look on her in any other light. I claimed her, you +know, and all that sort of thing, and she thought I was delirious, and +felt sorry, and humored me, and gave me a very favorable answer."</p> + +<p class = "floatright"> +<img src = "images/pic130.png" width = "343" height = "455" +alt = "(see caption)"> +</p> + +<p class = "caption half"> +"HE GAVE A LOUD CRY OF JOY, AND THEN SPRANG UP THE BANK."</p> + +<p>"Humored you?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; that's what she says now, you know. But I'm holding her to it, +and I've every reason to believe, you know—in fact, I may as well +say that it is an understood thing, you know, that she'll let it go, you +know, and at some early day, you know, we'll have it all formally +settled, and all that sort of thing, you know."</p> + +<p>Hawbury wrung his friend's hand.</p> + +<p>"See here, old boy; you see Ethel there?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Who do you think she is?"</p> + +<p>"Who?"</p> + +<p>"<i>Ethel Orne</i>!"</p> + +<p>"Ethel <i>Orne</i>!" cried Dacres, as the whole truth flashed on his +mind. "What a devil of a jumble every thing has been getting +into!—By Heaven, dear boy, I congratulate you from the bottom of +my soul!"</p> + +<p>And he wrung Hawbury's hand as though all his soul was in that +grasp.</p> + +<p>But all this could not satisfy the impatience of the Baron. This was +all very well in its way, merely as an episode; but he was waiting for +the chief incident of the piece, and the chief incident was delaying +very unaccountably.</p> + +<p>So he strode up and down, and he fretted and he fumed and he chafed, +and the trumpeter kept blowing away.</p> + +<p>Until at last—</p> + +<p>Just before his eyes—</p> + +<p>Up there on the top of the bank, not far from where Dacres and Mrs. +Willoughby had made their appearance, the Baron caught sight of a tall, +lank, slim figure, clothed in rusty black, whose thin and leathery face, +rising above a white neck-tie, peered solemnly yet interrogatively +through the bushes; while just behind him the Baron caught a glimpse of +the flutter of a woman's dress.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">130</span> + +<p>He gave a loud cry of joy, and then sprang up the bank.</p> + +<p class = "center pad">******</p> + +<p>But over that meeting I think we had better draw a veil.</p> + +<hr class = "chapter"> + + +<h4 class = "chapter"><a name = "chapXXXIX" id = "chapXXXIX"> +CHAPTER XXXIX.</a></h4> + +<h6 class = "subhead"> +ASTONISHING WAY OF CONCLUDING AN ADVENTURE.</h6> + +<p><span class = "smallcaps">The</span> meeting between the Baron and +Minnie gave a new shock to poor Mrs. Willoughby, who looked with a +helpless expression, and walked away for a little distance. Dacres and +Hawbury were still eagerly conversing and questioning one another about +their adventures. Tozer also had descended and joined himself to the +priest; and each of these groups had leisure for a prolonged +conversation before they were interrupted. At length Minnie made her +appearance, and flung herself into her sister's arms, while at the same +time the Baron grasped Tozer by both hands, and called out, in a voice +loud enough to be heard by all,</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">130b</span> + +<p>"You shall marry us, parson—and this very day, by thunder!"</p> + +<p>These words came to Mrs. Willoughby's ears in the midst of her first +joy at meeting her sister, and shocked her inexpressibly.</p> + +<p>"What's that, Minnie darling?" she asked, anxiously. "What is it? Did +you hear what that dreadful—what the—the Baron said?"</p> + +<p>Minnie looked sweetly conscious, but said nothing.</p> + +<p>"What <i>does</i> he mean?" asked her sister again.</p> + +<p>"I suppose he means what he says," replied Minnie, with a timid air, +stealing a shy look at the Baron.</p> + +<p>"Oh dear!" said Mrs. Willoughby; "there's another dreadful trouble, I +know. It's very, very hard—"</p> + +<p>"Well, I'm sure," said Minnie, "I can't help it. They all do so. That +clergyman came and saved me, and he wasn't a Roman Catholic clergyman at +all, and he proposed—"</p> + +<p>"Proposed!" cried Mrs. Willoughby, aghast.</p> + +<p>"Oh yes," said Minnie, solemnly; "and I had hard work preventing him. +But, really, it was <i>too</i> absurd, and I would not let him be too +explicit. But I didn't hurt his feelings. Well, you know, then all of a +sudden, as we were sitting there, the bugle sounded, and we came back. +Well, then, Rufus K. Gunn came—and you know how very violent he is +in his way—and he said he saved my life again, and so he +proposed."</p> + +<p>"<i>He</i> proposed! Why, he had proposed before."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; but that was for an engagement, and this was for our +marriage."</p> + +<p>"Marriage!"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes; and, you see, he had actually saved my life twice, and he +was very urgent, and he is so awfully affectionate, and so—"</p> + +<p>"Well, what?" cried Mrs. Willoughby, seeing Minnie hesitate.</p> + +<p>"Why, he—"</p> + +<p>"Well?"</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">131</span> + +<p>"I mean, I—"</p> + +<p>"You what? Really, Minnie dearest, you might tell me, and not keep me +in such dreadful suspense."</p> + +<p>"Why, what could I say?"</p> + +<p>"But what <i>did</i> you say?"</p> + +<p>"Why, I think I—said—yes," said Minnie, casting down her +eyes with indescribable sweetness, shyness, meekness, and resignation. +Mrs. Willoughby actually shuddered.</p> + +<p>"Now, Kitty," exclaimed Minnie, who at once noticed it, "you needn't +be so horrid. I'm sure you can't say any thing against him <i>now</i>. +You needn't look so. You <i>always</i> hated him. You <i>never</i> would +treat him kindly."</p> + +<p>"But this—this marriage. It's too shocking."</p> + +<p>"Well, he saved my life."</p> + +<p>"And to-day! How utterly preposterous! It's shameful!"</p> + +<p>"Well, I'm sure I can't help it."</p> + +<p>"It's too horrid!" continued Mrs. Willoughby, in an excited tone. "It +will break poor papa's heart. And it will break poor darling aunty's +heart. And it will break my heart."</p> + +<p>"Now, Kitty dearest, this is too silly in you. If it hadn't been for +him, I would now be married to that wretched Count, who hadn't +sufficient affection for me to get me a chair to sit on, and who was +very, very rude to you. You didn't care, though, whether I was married +to him or not; and now when I am saved from him you have nothing but +very unpleasant things to say about Rufus K. Gunn."</p> + +<p>"Oh dear, what <i>would</i> I give if you were only safe home!"</p> + +<p>"Well, I'm sure I don't see what <i>I</i> can do. People are always +saving my life. And there is Captain Kirby hunting all over Italy for +me. And I <i>know</i> I will be saved by +somebody—if—if—I—I—if—I—if—you +know—that is—I'm sure—"</p> + +<p>"Nonsense!" said Mrs. Willoughby, as Minnie broke down in confusion. +"It is <i>too</i> absurd. I won't talk about it. You are a silly child. +Oh, how I <i>do</i> wish you were home!"</p> + +<p>At this juncture the conversation was interrupted by the Baron.</p> + +<p>"It is not my fashion, ma'am," said he, gravely, "to remind another +of any obligation under which he may be to me; but my claims on Minnie +have been so opposed by you and the rest of her friends that I have to +ask you to think of them. Your father knows what my first claims are. +You yourself, ma'am, know perfectly well what the last claims are which +I have won to-day."</p> + +<p>The Baron spoke calmly, firmly, and with dignity. Mrs. Willoughby +answered not a word.</p> + +<p>"If you think on your position last night, and Minnie's, ma'am," +resumed the Baron, "you'll acknowledge, I expect, that it was pretty +hard lines. What would you have given a few hours ago for a sight of my +uniform in that old house yonder? If I had come then to save Minnie from +the clutches of that <i>I</i>talian, +<span class = "pagenum">131b</span> +wouldn't you have given her to me with all your heart, and your prayers +too? You would, by thunder! Think, ma'am, on your sufferings last night, +and then answer me."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby involuntarily thought of that night of horror, and +shuddered, and said nothing.</p> + +<p>"Now, ma'am, just listen to this. I find on coming here that this +Italian had a priest here all ready to marry him and Minnie. If I'd been +delayed or defeated, Minnie would have been that rascal's wife by this +time. The priest was here. They would have been married as sure as +you're born. You, ma'am, would have had to see this poor, trembling, +broken-hearted, despairing girl torn from your arms, and bound by the +marriage tie to a ruffian and a scoundrel whom she loathed. And now, +ma'am, I save her from this. I have my priest too, ma'am. He ain't a +Roman Catholic, it is true—he's an orthodox parson—but, at +the same time, I ain't particular. Now I propose to avail myself this +day of his invaluable services at the earliest hour possible; but, at +the same time, if Min prefers it, I don't object to the priest, for I +have a kind of Roman Catholic leaning myself.</p> + +<p>"Now you may ask, ma'am," continued the Baron, as Mrs. Willoughby +continued silent—"you may ask why I'm in such a thundering hurry. +My answer is, because you fit me off so. You tried to keep me from Min. +You locked me out of your house. You threatened to hand me over to the +police (and I'd like to see one of them try it on with me). You said I +was mad or drunk; and finally you tried to run away. Then you rejected +my advice, and plunged head-foremost into this fix. Now, in view of all +this, my position is this—that I can't trust you. I've got Min +now, and I mean to keep her. If you got hold of her again, I feel it +would be the last of her. Consequently I ain't going to let her go. Not +me. Not by a long chalk.</p> + +<p>"Finally, ma'am, if you'll allow me, I'll touch upon another point. +I've thought over your objections to me. It ain't my rank—I'm a +noble; it ain't money—I'm worth a hundred thousand dollars; it +ain't my name—for I call myself Atramonte. It must be something in +me. I've come to the conclusion that it's my general style—my +manners and customs. Very well. Perhaps they don't come up to your +standard. They mayn't square with your ideas. Yet, let me inform you, +ma'am, there are other standards of action and manner and speech than +those to which you are accustomed, and mine is one of them. Minnie +doesn't object to that. She knows my heart is all right, and is willing +to trust herself to me. Consequently I take her, and I mean to make her +mine this day."</p> + +<p>As the Baron paused Mrs. Willoughby began, first of all, to express +her gratitude, and then to beg him to postpone the marriage. She +declared that it was an unheard-of thing, that it was shameful, that it +was shocking, that it was dreadful. She grew very much excited; +<span class = "pagenum">132</span> +she protested, she entreated. Finally she burst into tears, and appealed +to Lord Hawbury in the most moving terms. Hawbury listened very gravely, +with his eyes wandering over to where Ethel was; and Ethel caught the +expression of his face, and looked quite confused.</p> + +<p>"Oh, think, only think," said Mrs. Willoughby, after an eloquent and +pathetic appeal—"think how the poor child will be talked +about!"</p> + +<p>"Well, really—ah—'pon my life," said Hawbury, with his +eyes still wandering over toward Ethel, "I'm sure I +don't—ah—share your views altogether, Mrs. Willoughby; +for—ah—there <i>are</i> times, you know, when a fellow finds +it very uncommonly desirable—runaway matches, you know, and all +that sort of thing. And, by Jove! to tell the truth, I really admire the +idea, by Jove! And really—ah—I'm sure—I wish most +confoundedly it was the universal fashion, by Jove!"</p> + +<p>"But she'll be so talked about. She'll make herself so shockingly +<i>conspicuous</i>."</p> + +<p>"Conspicuous? By Jove!" said Hawbury, who seemed struck by the idea. +At that moment Minnie began talking to her sister, and Hawbury went off +to Ethel, to whom he began talking in the most earnest manner. The two +wandered off for some distance, and did not return for a full half hour. +When they did return Ethel looked somewhat embarrassed, and Hawbury was +radiant. With this radiance on his face he went up to Mrs. Willoughby, +leaving Ethel in the background.</p> + +<p>"Oh, by-the-way," said he, "you were remarking that your sister would +be too conspicuous by such a hasty marriage."</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Willoughby, anxiously.</p> + +<p>"Well, I thought I would tell you that she needn't be so <i>very</i> +conspicuous; for, in fact—that is, you know, Ethel and I—she +told you, I suppose, about our mistake?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes."</p> + +<p>"And I think I've persuaded her to save Minnie from being too +conspicuous."</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby gave Hawbury a look of astonishment and reproach.</p> + +<p>"You!" she cried; "and Ethel!"</p> + +<p>"Why, I'm sure, we're the very ones you might expect it from. Think +how infernally we've been humbugged by fate."</p> + +<p>"Fate!" said Mrs. Willoughby. "It was all your own fault. She was +chosen for you."</p> + +<p>"Chosen for me? What do you mean?"</p> + +<p>"By your mother."</p> + +<p>"My mother?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"She said one of Biggs's nieces."</p> + +<p>"Ethel is that niece."</p> + +<p>"The devil!" cried Hawbury. "I beg pardon. By Jove!"</p> + +<p>Hawbury, overwhelmed by this, went back to Ethel, and they wandered +off once more. The Baron had already wandered off with Minnie +<span class = "pagenum">132b</span> +in another direction. Tozer and the priest had gone to survey the +house.</p> + +<p>Seeing Mrs. Willoughby thus left alone, Dacres drifted up to her. He +came up silently.</p> + +<p>"Kitty," said he, in a low voice, "you seem sad."</p> + +<p>By which familiar address it will be seen that Dacres had made some +progress toward intimacy with her.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby did not seem at all offended at this, but looked up +with one of her frankest smiles, and the clouds of perplexity passed +away. She was an exceedingly pretty woman, and she was certainly not +over twenty-four.</p> + +<p>"I'm so worried," she said, plaintively.</p> + +<p>"What's the matter?" asked Dacres, in a tone of the deepest and +tenderest sympathy.</p> + +<p>"Why, these horrid men; and, what's worse, Lord Hawbury is actually +encouraging Mr.—the—the Baron; and I'm <i>so</i> worried. Oh +dear!"</p> + +<p>"But why should you be worried?"</p> + +<p>"It's so horrid. It's shocking. It's not to be thought of."</p> + +<p>"But why not?" asked Dacres.</p> + +<p>"Why, it's—it's so horrid," said Mrs. Willoughby.</p> + +<p>Dacres stood looking at her for a long time.</p> + +<p>"Kitty," said he at last.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby looked up.</p> + +<p>Dacres looked all around. He then took her hand.</p> + +<p>"Isn't it too bad," he said, "to let Minnie—"</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"To let her go through this ordeal alone?"</p> + +<p>"Alone!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, looking in wonder at him.</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"What <i>do</i> you mean?"</p> + +<p>"Couldn't <i>we</i> accompany her?"</p> + +<p>Mrs. Willoughby snatched away her hand.</p> + +<p>"Are you mad?" she cried. "I do believe the whole world's mad +to-day."</p> + +<p>"Mad!" cried Dacres. "Yes, I'm mad—insane—raving! Won't +you be merciful again? Won't you, Kitty? Won't you 'humor' my ravings? +Oh, do. Oh, Kitty! dear Kitty—!"</p> + +<p>"It's positive insanity!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, Kitty!"</p> + +<p>"You're raving!"</p> + +<p>"Won't you 'humor' me—just this once! only this once."</p> + +<p>"Hush! there they come," said Mrs. Willoughby, suddenly snatching +away her hand, which Dacres had somehow got hold of again, and moving a +little further away from him.</p> + +<p>It was the Baron and Minnie who were coming back again, while Hawbury +and Ethel were seen a little further away.</p> + +<p>There they all stood—there, on the spot where they had found +the crisis of their fortunes; and as they stood there the two clergymen, +Catholic and Protestant, slowly came out of the house.</p> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" noshade> +<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AMERICAN BARON***</p> +<p>******* This file should be named 13257-h.txt or 13257-h.zip *******</p> +<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br /> +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/3/2/5/13257">http://www.gutenberg.org/1/3/2/5/13257</a></p> +<p>Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed.</p> + +<p>Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: The American Baron + + +Author: James De Mille + + + +Release Date: July 17, 2007 [eBook #13257] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AMERICAN BARON*** + + +E-text prepared by Keith M. Eckrich, Curtis Weyant, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net) and +revised by Louise Hope using page images generously made available by +Internet Archive/American Libraries +(http://www.archive.org/details/americana) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 13257-h.htm or 13257-h.zip: + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/3/2/5/13257/13257-h/13257-h.htm) + or + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/3/2/5/13257/13257-h.zip) + + + Images of the original pages are available through + Internet Archive/American Libraries. See + http://www.archive.org/details/americanbaron00demiiala + + + + + +THE AMERICAN BARON. + +A Novel. + +by + +JAMES DE MILLE, + +Author of +"The Dodge Club," "The Cryptogram," "Cord and Creese," &c. + +With Illustrations. + + + + + + + +[Illustration: +"AND AS THEY STOOD THE CLERGYMEN SLOWLY CAME OUT OF THE HOUSE" +--(SEE PAGE 132.)] + + + +NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, +FRANKLIN SQUARE. +1872. + + + * * * * * + + +By PROF. JAMES DE MILLE. + + _THE DODGE CLUB_; or, Italy in 1859. Illustrated. 8vo, + Paper, 75 cents; Cloth, $1.25. + + _CORD AND CREESE_. A Novel. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper, 75 + cents; Cloth, $1.25. + + _THE CRYPTOGRAM_. A Novel. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper, $1.50; + Cloth, $2.00. + + _THE AMERICAN BARON_. A Novel. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper. + +Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. + +_Sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on +receipt of the price._ + + * * * * * + +Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by +HARPER & BROTHERS, +In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. + + + + +THE AMERICAN BARON. + + + + +[Illustration: "PARDON, MEES."] + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +THE AVALANCHE. + + +Somewhat less than a hundred years ago a party of travelers might have +been seen crossing over the Simplon Road, _en route_ for Italy. They +had been detained at Brieg by reports that the road was impassable; +and, as it was the month of March, the prospect of snow and storms and +avalanches was sufficient to make them hesitate. At length the road +had been reopened, and they were informed that the journey might be +made on sleds. + +Unwilling to wait at Brieg, and equally unwilling to make a detour so +as to take the railroad, the party decided to go on. They were +informed that they could go on wheels as far as the line of snow, but +that afterward their accommodations would not be so comfortable as +they might desire. The road had been cleared for only a few feet; the +snow was deep; the sleds were rude; and progress would be slow. These +statements, however, did not shake the resolution of the party; +and the end of it was that they determined to go on, and cross the +mountain if it were possible. + +On leaving Brieg the road began to ascend with a very slight incline, +winding around in an intricate sort of way, sometimes crossing deep +gullies, at other times piercing the hillside in long dark tunnels; +but amidst all these windings ever ascending, so that every step took +them higher and higher above the little valley where Brieg lay. The +party saw also that every step brought them steadily nearer to the +line of snow; and at length they found the road covered with a thin +white layer. Over this they rolled, and though the snow became deeper +with every furlong of their progress, yet they encountered but little +actual difficulty until they approached the first station where the +horses were to be changed. Here they came to a deep drift. Through +this a pathway had been cleared, so that there was no difficulty about +going through; but the sight of this served to show them what might be +expected further on, and to fill them all with grave doubts as to the +practicability of a journey which was thus interrupted so early. + +On reaching the station these doubts were confirmed. They were +informed that the road had been cleared for sleds on the preceding +day, but that on the previous night fresh snow had fallen, and in such +quantities that the road would have to be cleared afresh. The worst of +it was that there was every probability of new snow-storms, which +would cover the road still deeper, and once more obliterate the track. +This led to a fresh debate about the journey; but they were all +unwilling to turn back. Only a few miles separated them from Domo +d'Ossola, and they were assured that, if no fresh snow should fall, +they would be able to start on the following morning. This last +assurance once more confirmed their wavering resolution, and they +concluded to wait at the station. + +For the remainder of that day they waited at the little way-side inn, +amusing themselves with looking out upon their surroundings. They were +environed by a scene of universal white. Above them towered vast +Alpine summits, where the wild wind blew, sweeping the snow-wreaths +into the air. In front was a deep ravine, at the bottom of which there +ran a torrent that foamed and tossed over rocks and boulders. It was +not possible to take a walk to any distance. Their boots were made for +lighter purposes than plunging through snow-drifts; and so they were +forced to remain indoors, and pass the time as best they could. + +On the following morning they found every thing in readiness for a +start. In front of the inn they saw five sleds of that kind which is +universally used in the northern part of America. Each sled was of the +rudest possible construction, and was drawn by one horse; straw was +spread over the sled, upon which fur robes and blankets were flung. +The party was distributed among these sleds, so that each one should +have as light a load as possible, while one of the rude vehicles +carried the luggage. + +Thus arranged, they all started off. And now, since they are all +fairly under way, I propose to introduce them, individually and +collectively, to my very good friend the reader. + +First of all I must mention the fact that the party consisted chiefly +of ladies and their attendants. + +Of these the most prominent was a slim, tall, elderly lady, with +large, dark, soft eyes, that spoke of a vanished youth and beauty from +her heavily wrinkled face. She was the Dowager Lady Dalrymple, and +acted toward the rest of the party in the multifarious capacity of +chaperon, general, courier, guide, philosopher, friend, and Mentor. + +Next came Mrs. Willoughby, a widow of great beauty and fascination, a +brunette, good-natured, clever, and shrewd. I might here pause, and go +into no end of raptures on the various qualities of this lady's +character; but, on the whole, I think I'd better not, as they will be +sufficiently apparent before the end of this story is reached. + +Then there was Miss Minnie Fay, sister to Mrs. Willoughby, and utterly +unlike her in every respect. Minnie was a blonde, with blue eyes, +golden hair cut short and clustering about her little head, little bit +of a mouth, with very red, plump lips, and very white teeth. Minnie +was very small, and very elegant in shape, in gesture, in dress, in +every attitude and every movement. The most striking thing about her, +however, was the expression of her eyes and her face. There was about +her brow the glory of perfect innocence. Her eyes had a glance of +unfathomable melancholy, mingled with childlike trust in the +particular person upon whom her gaze was fastened. Minnie was +considered by all her friends as a child--was treated as a +child--humored, petted, coaxed, indulged, and talked to as a child. +Minnie, on her part, thought, spoke, lived, moved, and acted as a +child. She fretted, she teased, she pouted, she cried, she did every +thing as a child does; and thus carried up to the age of eighteen the +bloom and charm of eight. + +The two sisters were nieces of the Dowager Lady Dalrymple. Another +niece also accompanied them, who was a cousin of the two sisters. This +was Miss Ethel Orne, a young lady who had flourished through a London +season, and had refused any number of brilliant offers. She was a +brunette, with most wonderful dark eyes, figure of perfect grace, and +an expression of grave self-poise that awed the butterflies of +fashion, but offered an irresistible attraction to people of sense, +intellect, intelligence, esprit, and all that sort of thing--like you +and me, my boy. + +I am taking up too much time and anticipating somewhat, I fear, by +these descriptions; so let us drop Miss Ethel. + +These ladies being thus all related formed a family party, and had +made the journey thus far on the best of terms, without any other +escort than that which was afforded by their chaperon, general, +courier, guide, philosopher, friend, and Mentor--the Dowager Lady +Dalrymple. + +The party was enlarged by the presence of four maids and a foreign +gentleman. This last-mentioned personage was small in stature, with a +very handsome face and very brilliant eyes. His frame, though slight, +was sinewy and well knit, and he looked like an Italian. He had come +on alone, and had passed the night at the station-house. + +A track about six feet wide had been cut out through the snow, and +over this they passed. The snow was soft, and the horses sank deep, so +that progress was slow. Nor was the journey without the excitement of +apparent danger. At times before them and behind them there would come +a low, rumbling sound, and they would see a mass of snow and ice +rushing down some neighboring slope. Some of these fell on the road, +and more than once they had to quit their sleds and wait for the +drivers to get them over the heaps that had been formed across their +path. Fortunately, however, none of these came near them; and Minnie +Fay, who at first had screamed at intervals of about five minutes, +gradually gained confidence, and at length changed her mood so +completely that she laughed and clapped her little hands whenever she +saw the rush of snow and ice. Thus slowly, yet in safety, they pushed +onward, and at length reached the little village of Simplon. Here they +waited an hour to warm themselves, lunch, and change horses. At the +end of that time they set out afresh, and once more they were on their +winding way. + +They had now the gratification of finding that they were descending +the slope, and of knowing that this descent took them every minute +further from the regions of snow, and nearer to the sunny plains of +Italy. Minnie in particular gave utterance to her delight: and now, +having lost every particle of fear, she begged to be allowed to drive +in the foremost sled. Ethel had been in it thus far, but she willingly +changed places with Minnie, and thus the descent was made. + +The sleds and their occupants were now arranged in the following +order: + +First, Minnie Fay alone with the driver. + +Second, Mrs. Willoughby and Ethel. + +Third, the Dowager and her maid. + +Fourth, the three other maids. + +Fifth, the luggage. + +After these five sleds, containing our party, came another with the +foreign gentleman. + +Each of these sleds had a driver to itself. + +In this order the party went, until at length they came to the Gorge +of Gondo. This is a narrow valley, the sides of which rise up very +abruptly, and in some places precipitously, to a great height. At the +bottom flows a furious torrent, which boils and foams and roars as it +forces its impetuous way onward over fallen masses of rock and trees +and boulders, at one time gathering into still pools, at other times +roaring into cataracts. Their road had been cut out on the side of the +mountain, and the path had been cleared away here many feet above the +buried road; and as they wound along the slope they could look up at +the stupendous heights above them, and down at the abyss beneath them, +whose white snow-covering was marked at the bottom by the black line +of the roaring torrent. The smooth slope of snow ran down as far as +the eye could reach at a steep angle, filling up all crevices, with +here and there a projecting rock or a dark clump of trees to break its +surface. + +The road was far beneath them. The drivers had informed them that it +was forty feet deep at the top of the pass, and that its depth here +was over thirty. Long poles which were inserted in the snow projected +above its surface, and served to mark where the road ran. + +Here, then, they drove along, feeling wearied with the length of the +way, impatient at the slowness of their progress, and eager to reach +their journey's end. But little was said. All had talked till all were +tired out. Even Minnie Fay, who at first had evinced great enthusiasm +on finding herself leading the way, and had kept turning back +constantly to address remarks to her friends, had at length subsided, +and had rolled herself up more closely in her furs, and heaped the +straw higher about her little feet. + +Suddenly, before them, and above them, and behind them, and all around +them, there arose a deep, low, dull, rushing sound, which seemed as if +all the snow on the slope was moving. Their ears had by this time +become sufficiently well acquainted with the peculiar sound of the +rushing snow-masses to know that this was the noise that heralded +their progress, and to feel sure that this was an avalanche of no +common size. Yes, this was an avalanche, and every one heard it; but +no one could tell where it was moving, or whether it was near or far, +or whether it was before or behind. They only knew that it was +somewhere along the slope which they were traversing. + +A warning cry came from the foremost driver. He looked back, and his +face was as pale as death. He waved his hands above him, and then +shouting for the others to follow, he whipped up his horse furiously. +The animal plunged into the snow, and tossed and floundered and made a +rush onward. + +But the other drivers held back, and, instead of following, shouted to +the first driver to stop, and cried to the passengers to hold on. Not +a cry of fear escaped from any one of the ladies. All did as they were +directed, and grasped the stakes of their sleds, looking up at the +slope with white lips, and expectation of horror in their eyes, +watching for the avalanche. + +And down it came, a vast mass of snow and ice--down it came, +irresistibly, tremendously, with a force that nothing could withstand. +All eyes watched its progress in the silence of utter and helpless +terror. It came. It struck. All the sleds in the rear escaped, but +Minnie's sled lay in the course of the falling mass. The driver had +madly rushed into the very midst of the danger which he sought to +avoid. A scream from Minnie and a cry of despair from the driver burst +upon the ears of the horrified listeners, and the sled that bore them, +buried in the snow, went over the edge of the slope, and downward to +the abyss. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE PERILOUS DESCENT. + + +The shriek of Minnie and the driver's cry of despair were both stopped +abruptly by the rush of snow, and were smothered in the heap under +which they were buried. The whole party stood paralyzed, gazing +stupidly downward where the avalanche was hurrying on to the abyss, +bearing with it the ill-fated Minnie. The descent was a slope of +smooth snow, which went down at an angle of forty-five degrees for at +least a thousand feet. At that point there seemed to be a precipice. +As their aching eyes watched the falling mass they saw it approach +this place, and then as it came near the whole avalanche seemed to +divide as though it had been severed by some projecting rock. It +divided thus, and went to ruin; while in the midst of the ruin they +saw the sled, looking like a helpless boat in the midst of foaming +breakers. So, like such a helpless boat, it was dashed forward, and +shot out of sight over the precipice. + +Whither had it gone? Into what abyss had it fallen? What lay beneath +that point over which it had been thrown? Was it the fierce torrent +that rolled there, or were there black rocks and sharp crags lying at +the foot of the awful precipice? Such were the questions which flashed +through every mind, and deepened the universal horror into universal +despair. + +In the midst of this general dismay Ethel was the first to speak and +to act. She started to her feet, and looking back, called in a loud +voice: + +"Go down after her! A thousand pounds to the man who saves her! +Quick!" + +At this the drivers came forward. None of them could understand +English, and so had not comprehended her offer; but they saw by her +gestures what she wanted. They, however, did not seem inclined to act. +They pointed down, and pointed up, and shook their heads, and jabbered +some strange, unintelligible patois. + +"Cowards!" cried Ethel, "to leave a young girl to die. I will go down +myself." + +And then, just as she was, she stepped from the sled, and paused for a +moment, looking down the slope as though selecting a place. Lady +Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby screamed to her to come back, and the +drivers surrounded her with wild gesticulations. To all this she paid +no attention whatever, and would certainly have gone down in another +moment had not a hand been laid on her arm, and a voice close by her +said, with a strong foreign accent, + +"Mees!" + +She turned at once. + +It was the foreign gentleman who had been driving behind the party. He +had come up and had just reached the place. He now stood before her +with his hat in one hand and the other hand on his heart. + +"Pardon, mees," he said, with a bow. "Eet is too periloss. I sall go +down eef you 'low me to mak ze attemp." + +"Oh, monsieur," cried Ethel, "save her if you can!" + +"Do not fear. Be calm. I sall go down. Nevare mine." + +The stranger now turned to the drivers, and spoke to them in their own +language. They all obeyed at once. He was giving them explicit +directions in a way that showed a perfect command of the situation. It +now appeared that each sled had a coil of rope, which was evidently +supplied from an apprehension of some such accident as this. Hastily +yet dextrously the foreign gentleman took one of these coils, and then +binding a blanket around his waist, he passed the rope around this, so +that it would press against the blanket without cutting him. Having +secured this tightly, he gave some further directions to the drivers, +and then prepared to go down. + +Hitherto the drivers had acted in sullen submission rather than with +ready acquiescence. They were evidently afraid of another avalanche; +and the frequent glances which they threw at the slope above them +plainly showed that they expected this snow to follow the example of +the other. In spite of themselves an expression of this fear escaped +them, and came to the ears of the foreign gentleman. He turned at once +on the brink of the descent, and burst into a torrent of invective +against them. The ladies could not understand him, but they could +perceive that he was uttering threats, and that the men quailed before +him. He did not waste any time, however. After reducing the men to a +state of sulky submission, he turned once more and began the descent. + +As he went down the rope was held by the men, who allowed it to pass +through their hands so as to steady his descent. The task before the +adventurer was one of no common difficulty. The snow was soft, and at +every step he sank in at least to his knees. Frequently he came to +treacherous places, where he sank down above his waist, and was only +able to scramble out with difficulty. But the rope sustained him; and +as his progress was downward, he succeeded in moving with some +rapidity toward his destination. The ladies on the height above sat in +perfect silence, watching the progress of the man who was thus +descending with his life in his hand to seek and to save their lost +companion, and in the intensity of their anxiety forgot utterly about +any danger to themselves, though from time to time there arose the +well-known sound of sliding masses, not so far away but that under +other circumstances of less anxiety it might have filled them with +alarm. But now there was no alarm for themselves. + +And now the stranger was far down, and the coil of rope was well-nigh +exhausted. But this had been prepared for, and the drivers fastened +this rope to another coil, and after a time began to let out that one +also. + +Farther and farther down the descent went on. They saw the stranger +pursuing his way still with unfaltering resolution; and they sent +after him all their hearts and all their prayers. At last he plunged +down almost out of sight, but the next moment he emerged, and then, +after a few leaps, they saw that he had gained the place where lay the +ruins of the shattered avalanche. Over this he walked, sometimes +sinking, at other times running and leaping, until at length he came +to the precipice over which the sled had been flung. + +And now the suspense of the ladies became terrible. This was the +critical moment. Already his eyes could look down upon the mystery +that lay beneath that precipice. And what lay revealed there? Did his +eyes encounter a spectacle of horror? Did they gaze down into the +inaccessible depths of some hideous abyss? Did they see those jagged +rocks, those sharp crags, those giant boulders, those roaring billows, +which, in their imaginations, had drawn down their lost companion to +destruction? Such conjectures were too terrible. Their breath failed +them, and their hearts for a time almost ceased to beat as they sat +there, overcome by such dread thoughts as these. + +Suddenly a cry of delight escaped Ethel. She was kneeling down beside +Lady Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby, with her eyes staring from her +pallid face, when she saw the stranger turn and look up. He took off +his hat, and waved it two or three times. Then he beckoned to the +drivers. Then he sat down and prepared to let himself over the +precipice. This incident inspired hope. It did more. It gave a +moment's confidence, and the certainty that all was not lost. They +looked at each other, and wept tears of joy. But soon that momentary +hope vanished, and uncertainty returned. After all, what did the +stranger's gesture mean? He might have seen her--but how? He might +reach her, but would she be safe from harm? Could such a thing be +hoped for? Would she not, rather, be all marred and mutilated? Dared +they hope for any thing better? They dared not. And now they sat once +more, as sad as before, and their short-lived gleam of hope faded +away. + +They saw the stranger go over the precipice. + +Then he disappeared. + +The rope was let out for a little distance, and then stopped. Then +more went out. Then it stopped again. + +The rope now lay quite loose. There was no tension. + +What was the meaning of this? Was he clinging to the side of the +precipice? Impossible. It looked rather as though he had reached some +place where he was free to move, and had no further need of descent. +And it seemed as though the precipice might not be so deep or so +fearful as they had supposed. + +In a short time their eyes were greeted by the appearance of the +stranger above the precipice. He waved his hat again. Then he made +some gestures, and detached the rope from his person. The drivers +understood him as if this had been preconcerted. Two of them instantly +unharnessed the horse from one of the sleds, while the others pulled +up the rope which the stranger had cast off. Then the latter +disappeared once more behind the precipice. The ladies watched now in +deep suspense; inclining to hope, yet dreading the worst. They saw the +drivers fasten the rope to the sled, and let it down the slope. It was +light, and the runners were wide. It did not sink much, but slid down +quite rapidly. Once or twice it stuck, but by jerking it back it was +detached, and went on as before. At last it reached the precipice at a +point not more than a hundred feet from where the stranger had last +appeared. + +And now as they sat there, reduced once more to the uttermost +extremity of suspense, they saw a sight which sent a thrill of rapture +through their aching hearts. They saw the stranger come slowly above +the precipice, and then stop, and stoop, and look back. Then they +saw--oh, Heavens! who was that? Was not that her red hood--and that +figure who thus slowly emerged from behind the edge of the precipice +which had so long concealed her--that figure! Was it possible? Not +dead--not mangled, but living, moving, and, yes--wonder of +wonders--scaling a precipice! Could it be! Oh joy! Oh bliss! Oh +revulsion from despair! The ladies trembled and shivered, and laughed +and sobbed convulsively, and wept in one another's arms by turns. + +As far as they could see through the tears that dimmed their eyes, +Minnie could not be much injured. She moved quite lightly over the +snow, as the stranger led her toward the sled; only sinking once or +twice, and then extricating herself even more readily than her +companion. At last she reached the sled, and the stranger, taking off +the blanket that he had worn under the rope, threw it over her +shoulders. + +Then he signaled to the men above, and they began to pull up the sled. +The stranger climbed up after it through the deep snow, walking behind +it for some distance. At last he made a despairing gesture to the men, +and sank down. + +The men looked bewildered, and stopped pulling. + +The stranger started up, and waved his hands impatiently, pointing to +Minnie. + +The drivers began to pull once more at the sled, and the stranger once +more sank exhausted in the snow. + +At this Ethel started up. + +"That noble soul!" she cried; "that generous heart! See! he is saving +Minnie, and sitting down to die in the snow!" + +She sprang toward the men, and endeavored to make them do something. +By her gestures she tried to get two of the men to pull at the sled, +and the third man to let the fourth man down with a rope to the +stranger. The men refused; but at the offer of her purse, which was +well filled with gold, they consented. Two of them then pulled at the +sled, and number four bound the rope about him, and went down, while +number three held the rope. He went down without difficulty, and +reached the stranger. By this time Minnie had been drawn to the top, +and was clasped in the arms of her friends. + +But now the strength and the sense which had been so wonderfully +maintained gave way utterly; and no sooner did she find herself safe +than she fell down unconscious. + +They drew her to a sled, and tenderly laid her on the straw, and +lovingly and gently they tried to restore her, and call her back to +consciousness. But for a long time their efforts were of no avail. + +She lay there a picture of perfect loveliness, as beautiful as a +dream--like some child-angel. Her hair, frosted with snow dust, +clustered in golden curls over her fair white brow; her little hands +were folded meekly over her breast; her sweet lips were parted, and +disclosed the pearly teeth; the gentle eyes no longer looked forth +with their piteous expression of mute appeal; and her hearing was deaf +to the words of love and pity that were lavished upon her. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +THE CHILD-ANGEL AND HER WOES. + + +Mrs. Willoughby was in her room at the hotel in Milan, when the door +opened, and Minnie came in. She looked around the room, drew a long +breath, then locked the door, and flinging herself upon a sofa, she +reclined there in silence for some time, looking hard at the ceiling. +Mrs. Willoughby looked a little surprised at first; but after waiting +a few moments for Minnie to say something, resumed her reading, which +had been interrupted. + +"Kitty," said Minnie at last. + +"What?" said her sister, looking up. + +"I think you're horrid." + +"Why, what's the matter?" + +"Why, because when you see and know that I'm dying to speak to you, +you go on reading that wretched book." + +"Why, Minnie darling," said Mrs. Willoughby, "how in the world was I +to know that you wanted to speak to me?" + +"You _might_ have known," said Minnie, with a pout--"you saw me look +all round, and lock the door; and you saw how worried I looked, and I +think it a shame, and I've a great mind not to tell you any thing +about it." + +"About it--what _it_?" and Mrs. Willoughby put down her book, and +regarded her sister with some curiosity. + +"I've a great mind not to tell you, but I can't help it. Besides, I'm +dying to ask your advice. I don't know what to do; and I wish I was +dead--there!" + +"My poor Minnie! what _is_ the matter? You're _so_ incoherent." + +"Well, Kitty, it's all my accident." + +"Your accident!" + +"Yes; on the Alps, you know." + +"What! You haven't received any serious injury, have you?" asked Mrs. +Willoughby, with some alarm. + +"Oh! I don't mean that, but I'll tell you what I mean;" and here +Minnie got up from her reclining position, and allowed her little feet +to touch the carpet, while she fastened her great, fond, pleading, +piteous eyes upon her sister. + +"It's the Count, you know," said she. + +"The Count!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, somewhat dryly. "Well?" + +"Well--don't you know what I mean? Oh, how stupid you are!" + +"I really can not imagine." + +"Well--he--he--he pro--proposed, you know." + +"Proposed!" cried the other, in a voice of dismay. + +"Now, Kitty, if you speak in that horrid way I won't say another word. +I'm worried too much already, and I don't want you to scold me. And I +won't have it." + +"Minnie darling, I wish you would tell me something. I'm not scolding. +I merely wish to know what you mean. Do you really mean that the Count +has proposed to you?" + +"Of course that's what I mean." + +"What puzzles me is, how he could have got the chance. It's more than +a week since he saved you, and we all felt deeply grateful to him. But +saving a girl's life doesn't give a man any claim over her; and we +don't altogether like him; and so we all have tried, in a quiet way, +without hurting his feelings, you know, to prevent him from having any +acquaintance with you." + +"Oh, I know, I know," said Minnie, briskly. "He told me all that. He +understands that; but he doesn't care, he says, if _I_ only consent. +He will forgive _you_, he says." + +Minnie's volubility was suddenly checked by catching her sister's eye +fixed on her in new amazement. + +"Now you're beginning to be horrid," she cried. "Don't, don't--" + +"Will you have the kindness to tell me," said Mrs. Willoughby, very +quietly, "how in the world the Count contrived to tell you all this?" + +"Why--why--several times." + +"Several times!" + +"Yes." + +"Tell me where?" + +"Why, once at the amphitheatre. You were walking ahead, and I sat down +to rest, and he came and joined me. He left before you came back." + +"He must have been following us, then." + +"Yes. And another time in the picture-gallery; and yesterday in a +shop; and this morning at the Cathedral." + +"The Cathedral!" + +"Yes, Kitty. You know we all went, and Lady Dalrymple would not go up. +So Ethel and I went up. And when we got up to the top I walked about, +and Ethel sat down to admire the view. And, you know, I found myself +off at a little distance, when suddenly I saw Count Girasole. And +then, you know, he--he--proposed." + +Mrs. Willoughby sat silent for some time. + +"And what did you say to him?" she asked at length. + +"Why, what else could I say?" + +"What else than _what_?" + +"I don't see why you should act _so_ like a grand inquisitor, Kitty. +You really make me feel quite nervous," said Minnie, who put her +little rosy-tipped fingers to one of her eyes, and attempted a sob, +which turned out a failure. + +"Oh, I only asked you what you told him, you know." + +"Well," said Minnie, gravely, "I told him, you know, that I was +awfully grateful to him, and that I'd give any thing if I could to +express my gratitude. And then, you know--oh, he speaks such darling +broken English--he called me his 'mees,' and tried to make a pretty +speech, which was so mixed with Italian that I didn't understand one +single word. By-the-way, Kitty, isn't it odd how every body here +speaks Italian, even the children?" + +"Yes, very odd; but, Minnie dear, I want to know what you told him." + +"Why, I told him that I didn't know, you know." + +"And then?" + +"And then he took my hand. Now, Kitty, you're unkind. I really _can +not_ tell you all this." + +"Yes, but I only ask so as to advise you. I want to know how the case +stands." + +"Well, you know, he was so urgent--" + +"Yes?" + +"And so handsome--" + +"Well?" + +"And then, you know, he saved my life--didn't he, now? You must +acknowledge that much, mustn't you?" + +"Oh yes." + +"Well--" + +"Well?" + +Minnie sighed. + +"So what could I say?" + +Minnie paused. + +Mrs. Willoughby looked troubled. + +"Kitty, I _wish_ you wouldn't look at me with that dreadful +expression. You really make me feel quite frightened." + +"Minnie," said the other, in a serious voice, "do you really _love_ +this man?" + +"Love this man! why no, not particularly; but I _like_ him; that is, I +think I do, or rather I thought I did; but really I'm so worried about +all my troubles that I wish he had never come down after me. I don't +see why he did, either. I didn't ask him to. I remember, now, I really +felt quite embarrassed when I saw him. I knew there would be trouble +about it. And I wish you would take me back home. I hate Italy. Do, +Kitty darling. But then--" + +Minnie paused again. + +"Well, Minnie dear, we certainly must contrive some plan to shake him +off without hurting his feelings. It can't be thought of. There are a +hundred objections. If the worst comes to the worst we can go back, as +you say, to England." + +"I know; but then," said Minnie, "that's the very thing that I can't +do--" + +"Can't do what?" + +"Go back to England." + +"Back to England! Why not? I don't know what you mean." + +"Well, you see, Kitty, that's the very thing I came to see you about. +This dreadful man--the Count, you know--has some wonderful way of +finding out where I go; and he keeps all the time appearing and +disappearing in the very strangest manner; and when I saw him on the +roof of the Cathedral it really made me feel quite giddy. He is _so_ +determined to win me that I'm afraid to look round. He takes the +commonest civility as encouragement. And then, you know--there it +is--I really can't go back to England." + +"What do you mean by that?" + +"Why there's--a--a dreadful person there," said Minnie, with an awful +look in her eyes. + +"A what?" + +"A--person," said Minnie. + +"A man?" + +Minnie nodded. "Oh yes--of course. Really when one thinks of one's +troubles it's enough to drive one distracted. This person is a man. I +don't know why it is that I should be _so_ worried and _so_ distracted +by men. I do _not_ like them, and I wish there were no such persons." + +"Another man!" said Mrs. Willoughby, in some surprise. "Well, Minnie, +you certainly--" + +"Now don't, don't--not a word; I know all you're going to say, and I +won't stand it;" and Minnie ran over to her sister and held her hand +over her mouth. + +"I won't say a word," said Mrs. Willoughby, as soon as she had removed +Minnie's hand; "so begin." + +Minnie resumed her place on the sofa, and gave a long sigh. + +"Well, you know, Kitty darling, it happened at Brighton last +September. You were in Scotland then. I was with old Lady Shrewsbury, +who is as blind as a bat--and where's the use of having a person to +look after you when they're blind! You see, my horse ran away, and I +think he must have gone ever so many miles, over railroad bridges and +hedges and stone walls. I'm certain he jumped over a small cottage. +Well, you know, when all seemed lost, suddenly there was a strong hand +laid on the reins, and my horse was stopped. I tumbled into some +strange gentleman's arms, and was carried into a house, where I was +resuscitated. I returned home in the gentleman's carriage. + +"Now the worst of it is," said Minnie, with a piteous look, "that the +person who stopped the horse called to inquire after me the next day. +Lady Shrewsbury, like an old goose, was awfully civil to him; and so +there I was! His name is Captain Kirby, and I wish there were no +captains in the world. The life he led me! He used to call, and I had +to go out riding with him, and old Lady Shrewsbury utterly neglected +me; and so, you know, Kitty darling, he at last, you know, of course, +proposed. That's what they all do, you know, when they save your life. +Always! It's awful!" + +Minnie heaved a sigh, and sat apparently meditating on the enormous +baseness of the man who saved a lady's life and then proposed; and it +was not until Mrs. Willoughby had spoken twice that she was recalled +to herself. + +"What did you tell him?" was her sister's question. + +"Why, what could I tell him?" + +"What!" cried Mrs. Willoughby; "you don't--" + +"Now, Kitty, I think it's very unkind in you, when I want all your +sympathy, to be _so_ horrid." + +"Well, tell it your own way, Minnie dearest." + +Minnie sat for a time regarding vacancy with a soft, sad, and piteous +expression in her large blue eyes; with her head also a little on one +side, and her delicate hands gently clasped in front of her. + +[Illustration: "ANOTHER MAN!"] + +"You see, Kitty darling, he took me out riding, and--he took me to the +place where I had met him, and then he proposed. Well, you know, I +didn't know what to say. He was _so_ earnest, and _so_ despairing. And +then, you know, Kitty dearest, he had saved my life, and so--" + +"And so?" + +"Well, I told him I didn't know, and was shockingly confused, and then +we got up quite a scene. He swore that he would go to Mexico, though +why I can't imagine; and I really wish he had; but I was frightened at +the time, and I cried; and then he got worse, and I told him not to; +whereupon he went into raptures, and began to call me no end of +names--spooney names, you know; and I--oh, I did _so_ want him to +stop!--I think I must have promised him all that he wanted; and when I +got home I was frightened out of my poor little wits, and cried all +night." + +"Poor dear child!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, with tender sympathy. +"What a wretch!" + +"No, he wasn't a wretch at all; he was awfully handsome, only, you +know, he--was--so--_aw_fully persevering, and kept _so_ at my heels; +but I hurried home from Brighton, and thought I had got rid of him." + +"And hadn't you?" + +"Oh dear, no," said Minnie, mournfully. "On the day after my arrival +there came a letter; and, you know, I had to answer it; and then +another; and so it went on--" + +"Oh, Minnie! why didn't you tell me before?" + +"How could I when you were off in that horrid Scotland? I _always_ +hated Scotland." + +"You might have told papa." + +"I couldn't. I think papa's cruel _too_. He doesn't care for me at +all. Why didn't he find out our correspondence and intercept it, the +way papas always do in novels? If I were _his_ papa I'd not let _him_ +be so worried." + +"And did he never call on you?" + +"Yes; he got leave of absence once, and I had a dreadful time with +him. He was in a desperate state of mind. He was ordered off to +Gibraltar. But I managed to comfort him; and, oh dear, Kitty dear, did +you _ever_ try to comfort a man, and the man a total stranger?" + +At this innocent question Mrs. Willoughby's gravity gave way a little. + +Minnie frowned, and then sighed. + +"Well, you needn't be so unkind," said she; and then her little hand +tried to wipe away a tear, but failed. + +"Did he go to Gibraltar?" asked Mrs. Willoughby at length. + +"Yes, he did," said Minnie, with a little asperity. + +"Did he write?" + +"Of course he wrote," in the same tone. + +"Well, how did it end?" + +"End! It didn't end at all. And it never will end. It'll go on getting +worse and worse every day. You see he wrote, and said a lot of rubbish +about his getting leave of absence and coming to see me. And then I +determined to run away; and you know I begged you to take me to Italy, +and this is the first time I've told you the real reason." + +"So that was the real reason?" + +"Yes." + +"Well, Minnie, my poor child," said Mrs. Willoughby, after a pause, +"you're safe from your officer, at any rate; and as to Count Girasole, +we must save you from him. Don't give way." + +"But you can't save me. They'll come after me, I know. Captain Kirby, +the moment he finds out that I am here, will come flying after me; and +then, oh dear! the other one will come, and the American, too, of +course." + +"The what? who?" cried Mrs. Willoughby, starting up with new +excitement. "Who's that? What did you say, Minnie? The American? What +American?" + +Minnie threw a look of reproach at her sister, and her eyes fell. + +"You can't possibly mean that there are any more--" + +"There--is--_one_--more," said Minnie, in a low, faint voice, stealing +a glance at her sister, and looking a little frightened. + +"One more!" repeated her sister, breathless. + +"Well, I didn't come here to be scolded," said Minnie, rising, "and +I'll go. But I hoped that you'd help me; and I think you're very +unkind; and I wouldn't treat you so." + +"No, no, Minnie," said Mrs. Willoughby, rising, and putting her arm +round her sister, and drawing her back. "I had no idea of scolding. I +never scolded any one in my life, and wouldn't speak a cross word to +you for the world. Sit down now, Minnie darling, and tell me all. What +about the American? I won't express any more astonishment, no matter +what I may feel." + +"But you mustn't _feel_ any astonishment," insisted Minnie. + +"Well, darling, I won't," said her sister. + +Minnie gave a sigh. + +"It was last year, you know, in the spring. Papa and I were going out +to Montreal, to bring you home. You remember?" + +Mrs. Willoughby nodded, while a sad expression came over her face. + +"And, you remember, the steamer was wrecked." + +"Yes." + +"But I never told you how my life was saved." + +"Why, yes, you did. Didn't papa tell all about the heroic sailor who +swam ashore with you? how he was frantic about you, having been swept +away by a wave from you? and how he fainted away with joy when you +were brought to him? How can you suppose I would forget that? And then +how papa tried to find the noble sailor to reward him." + +"Oh yes," said Minnie, in a despondent tone. "That's all very true; +but he wasn't a noble sailor at all." + +"What!" + +"You see, he wasn't going to have a scene with papa, and so he kept +out of his way. Oh dear, how I wish he'd been as considerate with me! +But that's the way always; yes, always." + +"Well, who was he?" + +"Why, he was an American gentleman, returning home from a tour in +Europe. He saved me, as you have heard. I really don't remember much +about it, only there was a terrible rush of water, and a strong arm +seized me, and I thought it was papa all the time. And I found myself +carried, I don't know how, through the waves, and then I fainted; and +I really don't know any thing about it except papa's story." + +Mrs. Willoughby looked at Minnie in silence, but said nothing. + +"And then, you know, he traveled with us, and papa thought he was one +of the passengers, and was civil; and so he used to talk to me, and at +last, at Montreal, he used to call on me." + +"Where?" + +"At your house, dearest." + +"Why, how was that?" + +"You could not leave your room, darling, so I used to go down." + +"Oh, Minnie!" + +"And he proposed to me there." + +"Where? in my parlor?" + +"Yes; in your parlor, dearest." + +"I suppose it's not necessary for me to ask what you said." + +"I suppose not," said Minnie, in a sweet voice. "He was so grand and +so strong, and he never made any allusions to the wreck; and it +was--the--the--_very first_ time that any body ever--proposed; and so, +you know, I didn't know how to take it, and I didn't want to hurt his +feelings, and I couldn't deny that he had saved my life; and I don't +know when I _ever_ was so confused. It's awful, Kitty darling. + +"And then, you know, darling," continued Minnie, "he went away, and +used to write regularly every month. He came to see me once, and I was +frightened to death almost. He is going to marry me next year. He used +an awful expression, dearest. He told me he was a struggling man. +Isn't that horrid? What is it, Kitty? Isn't it something very, very +dreadful?" + +"He writes still, I suppose?" + +"Oh dear, yes." + +Mrs. Willoughby was silent for some time. + +"Oh, Minnie," said she at last, "what a trouble all this is! How I +wish you had been with me all this time!" + +"Well, what made you go and get married?" said Minnie. + +"Hush," said Mrs. Willoughby, sadly, "never mind. I've made up my mind +to one thing, and that is, I will never leave you alone with a +gentleman, unless--" + +[Illustration: +"HE BENT HIS HEAD DOWN, AND RAN HIS HAND THROUGH HIS BUSHY HAIR."] + +"Well, I'm sure I don't want the horrid creatures," said Minnie. "And +you needn't be so unkind. I'm sure I don't see why people will come +always and save my life wherever I go. I don't want them to. I don't +want to have my life saved any more. I think it's dreadful to have men +chasing me all over the world. I'm afraid to stop in Italy, and I'm +afraid to go back to England. Then I'm always afraid of that dreadful +American. I suppose it's no use for me to go to the Holy Land, or +Egypt, or Australia; for then my life would be saved by an Arab, or a +New Zealander. And oh, Kitty, wouldn't it be dreadful to have some +Arab proposing to me, or a Hindu! Oh, what _am_ I to do?" + +"Trust to me, darling. I'll get rid of Girasole. We will go to Naples. +He has to stop at Rome; I know that. We will thus pass quietly away +from him, without giving him any pain, and he'll soon forget all about +it. As for the others, I'll stop this correspondence first, and then +deal with them as they come." + +"You'll never do it, never!" cried Minnie; "I know you won't. You +don't know them." + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +IN THE CRATER OF VESUVIUS. + + +Lord Harry Hawbury had been wandering for three months on the +Continent, and had finally found himself in Naples. It was always a +favorite place of his, and he had established himself in comfortable +quarters on the Strada Nuova, from the windows of which there was a +magnificent view of the whole bay, with Vesuvius, Capri, Baiae, and all +the regions round about. Here an old friend had unexpectedly turned up +in the person of Scone Dacres. Their friendship had been formed some +five or six years before in South America, where they had made a +hazardous journey in company across the continent, and had thus +acquired a familiarity with one another which years of ordinary +association would have failed to give. Scone Dacres was several years +older than Lord Hawbury. + +One evening Lord Hawbury had just finished his dinner, and was +dawdling about in a listless way, when Dacres entered, quite +unceremoniously, and flung himself into a chair by one of the windows. + +"Any Bass, Hawbury?" was his only greeting, as he bent his head down, +and ran his hand through his bushy hair. + +"Lachryma Christi?" asked Hawbury, in an interrogative tone. + +"No, thanks. That wine is a humbug. I'm beastly thirsty, and as dry as +a cinder." + +Hawbury ordered the Bass, and Dacres soon was refreshing himself with +copious draughts. + +The two friends presented a singular contrast. Lord Hawbury was tall +and slim, with straight flaxen hair and flaxen whiskers, whose long, +pendent points hung down to his shoulders. His thin face, somewhat +pale, had an air of high refinement; and an ineradicable habit of +lounging, together with a drawling intonation, gave him the appearance +of being the laziest mortal alive. Dacres, on the other hand, was the +very opposite of all this. He was as tall as Lord Hawbury, but was +broad-shouldered and massive. He had a big head, a big mustache, and a +thick beard. His hair was dark, and covered his head in dense, bushy +curls. His voice was loud, his manner abrupt, and he always sat bolt +upright. + +"Any thing up, Sconey?" asked Lord Hawbury, after a pause, during +which he had been languidly gazing at his friend. + +"Well, no, nothing, except that I've been up Vesuvius." + +Lord Hawbury gave a long whistle. + +"And how did you find the mountain?" he asked; "lively?" + +"Rather so. In fact, infernally so," added Dacres, thoughtfully. "Look +here, Hawbury, do you detect any smell of sulphur about me?" + +"Sulphur! What in the name of--sulphur! Why, now that you mention it, +I _do_ notice something of a brimstone smell. Sulphur! Why, man, +you're as strong as a lighted match. What have you been doing with +yourself? Down inside, eh?" + +Dacres made no answer for some time, but sat stroking his beard with +his left hand, while his right held a cigar which he had just taken +out of a box at his elbow. His eyes were fixed upon a point in the sky +exactly half-way between Capri and Baiae, and about ten degrees above +the horizon. + +"Hawbury," said he, solemnly, after about two minutes of portentous +silence. + +"Well, old man?" + +"I've had an adventure." + +"An adventure! Well, don't be bashful. Breathe forth the tale in this +confiding ear." + +"You see," said Dacres, "I started off this morning for a ride, and +had no more intention of going to Vesuvius than to Jericho." + +"I should hope not. What business has a fellow like you with +Vesuvius--a fellow that has scaled Cotopaxi, and all that sort of +thing? Not you." + +Dacres put the cigar thoughtfully in his mouth, struck a light, and +tried to light it, but couldn't. Then he bit the end off, which he had +forgotten to do before. Then he gave three long, solemn, and +portentous puffs. Then he took the cigar between his first and second +fingers, and stretched his hand out toward Hawbury. + +"Hawbury, my boy," said he again. + +"All right." + +"You remember the time when I got that bullet in Uruguay?" + +"Yes." + +"Well, I had a shot to-day." + +"A shot! The deuce you had. Cool, too. Any of those confounded bandits +about? I thought that was all rot." + +"It wasn't a real shot; only figurative." + +"Figurative!" + +"Yes; it was a--a girl." + +"By Jove!" cried Hawbury, starting up from an easy posture which he +had secured for himself after fifteen minutes shifting and changing. +"A girl! You, Dacres, spooney! A fellow like you, and a girl! By +Jove!" + +Hawbury fell back again, and appeared to be vainly trying to grapple +with the thought. Dacres put his cigar between his lips again, and gave +one or two puffs at it, but it had gone out. He pitched it out of the +window, and struck his hand heavily on the arm of his chair. + +"Yes, Hawbury, a girl; and spooney, too--as spooney as blazes; but +I'll swear there isn't such another girl upon the whole face of the +earth; and when you bear in mind the fact that my observation, with +extended view, has surveyed mankind from China to Peru, you'll be able +to appreciate the value of my statement." + +"All right, old man; and now for the adventure." + +"The adventure? Well, you see, I started for a ride. Had a misty idea +of going to Sorrento, and was jogging along among a million pigs or so +at Portici, when I overtook a carriage that was going slowly along. +There were three ladies in it. The backs of two of them were turned +toward me, and I afterward saw that one was old--no doubt the +chaperon--and the other was young. But the third lady, Hawbury--Well, +it's enough to say that I, who have seen all women in all lands, have +never seen any thing like her. She was on the front seat, with her +face turned toward me. She was small, a perfect blonde; hair short and +curling; a round, girlish face; dimpled cheeks, and little mouth. Her +eyes were large and blue; and, as she looked at me, I saw such a +bewitching innocence, such plaintive entreaty, such pathetic trust, +such helpless, childlike--I'll be hanged if I can find words to +express what I want to say. The English language doesn't contain +them." + +"Do it in Latin, then, or else skip the whole description. All the +same. I know the whole story by heart. Love's young dream, and all +that sort of thing, you know." + +"Well," continued Dacres, "there was something so confoundedly +bewitching in the little girl's face that I found myself keeping on at +a slow pace in the rear of the carriage, and feasting on her looks. Of +course I wasn't rude about it or demonstrative." + +"Oh, of course. No demonstration. It's nothing to ride behind a +carriage for several hours, and 'feast' one's self on a pretty girl's +looks! But go on, old man." + +"Oh, I managed it without giving offense. You see, there was such a +beastly lot of pigs, peasants, cows, dirty children, lazaroni, and all +that sort of thing, that it was simply impossible to go any faster; so +you see I was compelled to ride behind. Sometimes, indeed, I fell a +good distance back." + +"And then caught up again to resume the 'feast?'" + +"Well--yes." + +"But I don't see what this has to do with your going to Vesuvius." + +"It has every thing to do. You see, I started without any fixed +purpose, and after I saw this carriage, I kept on insensibly after +it." + +"Oh, I see--yes. By Jove!" + +"And they drove up as far as they could." + +"Yes?" + +"And I followed. You see, I had nothing else to do--and that little +girl! Besides, it was the most natural thing in the world for me to be +going up; and the fact that I was bent on the same errand as +themselves was sufficient to account for my being near the carriage, +and would prevent them from supposing that I was following them. So, +you see, I followed, and at length they stopped at the Hermitage. I +left my horse there, and strolled forward, without going very far +away; my only idea was to keep the girl in sight. I had no idea that +they would go any further. To ascend the cone seemed quite out of the +question. I thought they would rest at the Hermitage, drink some +Lachryma Christi, and go back. But to my surprise, as I was walking +about, I saw the two young ladies come out and go toward the cone. + +"I kept out of the way, as you may suppose, and watched them, +wondering what idea they had. As they passed I heard the younger +one--the child-angel, you know, _my_ girl--teasing the other to make +the ascent of the cone, and the other seemed to be quite ready to +agree to the proposal. + +"Now, as far as the mere ascent is concerned, of course you know +_that_ is not much. The guides were there with straps and chairs, and +that sort of thing, all ready, so that there was no difficulty about +that. The real difficulty was in these girls going off unattended; and +I could only account for it by supposing that the chaperon knew +nothing whatever about their proposal. No doubt the old lady was +tired, and the young ones went out, as _she_ supposed, for a stroll; +and now, as _they_ proposed, this stroll meant nothing less than an +ascent of the cone. After all, there is nothing surprising in the fact +that a couple of active and spirited girls should attempt this. From +the Hermitage it does not seem to be at all difficult, and they had no +idea of the actual nature of the task. + +"What made it worse, however, was the state of the mountain at this +particular time. I don't know whether you have taken the trouble to +raise your eyes so high as the top of Vesuvius--" + +Hawbury languidly shook his head. + +"Well, I supposed not; but if you had taken the trouble, you would +have noticed an ugly cloud which is generally regarded here as +ominous. This morning, you know, there was an unusually large canopy +of very dirty smoke overhead. I knew by the look of things that it was +not a very pleasant place to go to. But of course they could not be +supposed to know any thing of the kind, and their very ignorance made +them rash. + +"Well, I walked along after them, not knowing what might turn up, but +determined to keep them in sight. Those beggars with chairs were not +to be trusted, and the ladies had gold enough about them to tempt +violence. What a reckless old devil of a chaperon she was, to let +those young girls go! So I walked on, cursing all the time the +conventionalities of civilization that prevented me from giving them +warning. They were rushing straight on into danger, and I had to keep +silent. + +"On reaching the foot of the cone a lot of fellows came up to them, +with chairs and straps, and that sort of thing. They employed some of +them, and, mounting the chairs, they were carried up, while I walked +up by myself at a distance from which I could observe all that was +going on. The girls were quite merry, appeared to be enchanted with +their ride up the cone, enjoyed the novelty of the sensation, and I +heard their lively chatter and their loud peals of ringing laughter, +and longed more than ever to be able to speak to them. + +"Now the little girl that I had first seen--the child-angel, you +know--seemed, to my amazement, to be more adventurous than the other. +By her face you would suppose her to be as timid as a dove, and yet on +this occasion she was the one who proposed the ascent, urged on her +companion, and answered all her objections. Of course she could not +have really been so plucky as she seemed. For my part, I believe the +other one had more real pluck of the two, but it was the child-angel's +ignorance that made her so bold. She went up the cone as she would +have gone up stairs, and looked at the smoke as she would have looked +at a rolling cloud. + +"At length the bearers stopped, and signified to the girls that they +could not go any further. The girls could not speak Italian, or any +other language apparently than English, and therefore could not very +well make out what the bearers were trying to say, but by their +gestures they might have known that they were warning them against +going any further. One might have supposed that no warning would have +been needed, and that one look upward would have been enough. The top +of the cone rose for upward of a hundred feet above them, its soil +composed of lava blocks and ashes intermingled with sulphur. In this +soil there were a million cracks and crevices, from which sulphurous +smoke was issuing; and the smoke, which was but faint and thin near +where they stood, grew denser farther up, till it intermingled with +the larger volumes that rolled up from the crater. + +"Now, as I stood there, I suddenly heard a wild proposal from the +child-angel. + +"'Oh, Ethel,' she said, 'I've a great mind to go up--'" + +Here Hawbury interrupted his friend: + +"What's that? Was that her friend's name?" he asked, with some +animation. "Ethel?--odd, too. Ethel? H'm. Ethel? Brunette, was she?" + +"Yes." + +"Odd, too; infernally odd. But, pooh! what rot! Just as though there +weren't a thousand Ethels!" + +"What's that you're saying about Ethel?" asked Dacres. + +"Oh, nothing, old man. Excuse my interrupting you. Go ahead. How did +it end?" + +"Well, the child-angel said, 'Ethel, I've a great mind to go up.' + +"This proposal Ethel scouted in horror and consternation. + +"'You must not--you shall not!' she cried. + +"'Oh, it's nothing, it's nothing,' said the child-angel. 'I'm dying to +take a peep into the crater. It must be awfully funny. Do come; do, do +come, Ethel darling.' + +"'Oh, Minnie, don't,' cried the other, in great alarm. And I now +learned that the child-angel's name was Minnie. 'Minnie,' she cried, +clinging to the child-angel, 'you must not go. I would not have come +up if I had thought you would be so unreasonable.' + +"'Ethel,' said the other, 'you are really getting to be quite a scold. +How ridiculous it is in you to set yourself up in this place as a +duenna! How can I help going up? and only one peep. And I never saw a +crater in my life, and I'm dying to know what it looks like. I know +it's awfully funny; and it's horrid in you to be so unkind about it. +And I really must go. Won't you come? Do, do, dear--dearest darling, +do--do--do!' + +"Ethel was firm, however, and tried to dissuade the other, but to no +purpose; for at length, with a laugh, the child-angel burst away, and +skipped lightly up the slope toward the crater. + +"'Just one peep,' she said. 'Come, Ethel, I must, I really must, you +know.' + +"She turned for an instant as she said this, and I saw the glory of +her child-face as it was irradiated by a smile of exquisite sweetness. +The play of feature, the light of her eyes, and the expression of +innocence and ignorance unconscious of danger, filled me with profound +sadness. And there was I, standing alone, seeing that sweet child +flinging herself to ruin, and yet unable to prevent her, simply +because I was bound hand and foot by the infernal restrictions of a +miserable and a senseless conventionality. Dash it, I say!" + +As Dacres growled out this Hawbury elevated his eyebrows, and stroked +his long, pendent whiskers lazily with his left hand, while with his +right he drummed on the table near him. + +"Well," resumed Dacres, "the child-angel ran up for some distance, +leaving Ethel behind. Ethel called after her for some time, and then +began to follow her up. Meanwhile the guides, who had thus far stood +apart, suddenly caught sight of the child-angel's figure, and, with a +loud warning cry, they ran after her. They seemed to me, however, to +be a lazy lot, for they scarce got up as far as the place where Ethel +was. Now, you know, all this time I was doomed to inaction. But at +this juncture I strolled carelessly along, pretending not to see any +thing in particular; and so, taking up an easy attitude, I waited for +the denouement. It was a terrible position too. That child-angel! I +would have laid down my life for her, but I had to stand idle, and see +her rush to fling her life away. And all because I had not happened to +have the mere formality of an introduction." + +[Illustration: "I SAW HER TURN AND WAVE HER HAND IN TRIUMPH."] + +"Well, you know, I stood there waiting for the denouement. Now it +happened that, as the child-angel went up, a brisk breeze had started, +which blew away all the smoke, so that she went along for some +distance without any apparent inconvenience. I saw her reach the top; +I saw her turn and wave her hand in triumph. Then I saw her rush +forward quickly and nimbly straight toward the crater. She seemed to +go down into it. And then the wind changed or died away, or both, for +there came a vast cloud of rolling smoke, black, cruel, suffocating; +and the mountain crest and the child-angel were snatched from my +sight. + +"I was roused by a shriek from Ethel. I saw her rush up the slope, and +struggle in a vain endeavor to save her friend. But before she had +taken a dozen steps down came the rolling smoke, black, wrathful, and +sulphurous; and I saw her crouch down and stagger back, and finally +emerge pale as death, and gasping for breath. She saw me as I stood +there; in fact, I had moved a little nearer. + +"'Oh, Sir,' she cried, 'save her! Oh, my God, she's lost!' + +"This was very informal, you know, and all that sort of thing; but +_she_ had broken the ice, and had accosted _me_; so I waived all +ceremony, and considered the introduction sufficient. I took off my +hat, and told her to calm herself. + +"But she only wrung her hands, and implored me to save her friend. + +"And now, my boy, lucky was it for me that my experience at Cotopaxi +and Popocatepetl had been so thorough and so peculiar. My knowledge +came into play at this time. I took my felt hat and put it over my +mouth, and then tied it around my neck so that the felt rim came over +my cheeks and throat. Thus I secured a plentiful supply of air, and +the felt acted as a kind of ventilator to prevent the access to my +lungs of too much of the sulphurous vapor. Of course such a +contrivance would not be good for more than five minutes; but then, +you know, five minutes were all that I wanted. + +"So up I rushed, and, as the slope was only about a hundred feet, I +soon reached the top. Here I could see nothing whatever. The +tremendous smoke-clouds rolled all about on every side, enveloping me +in their dense folds, and shutting every thing from view. I heard the +cry of the asses of guides, who were howling where I left them below, +and were crying to me to come back--the infernal idiots! The smoke was +impenetrable; so I got down on my hands and knees and groped about. I +was on her track, and knew she could not be far away. I could not +spend more than five minutes there, for my felt hat would not assist +me any longer. About two minutes had already passed. Another minute +was taken up in creeping about on my hands and knees. A half minute +more followed. I was in despair. The child-angel I saw must have run +in much further than I had supposed, and perhaps I could not find her +at all. A sickening fear came to me that she had grown dizzy, or had +slid down over the loose sand into the terrific abyss of the crater +itself. So another half minute passed; and now only one minute was +left." + +"I don't see how you managed to be so confoundedly accurate in your +reckoning. How was it? You didn't carry your watch in one hand, and +feel about with the other, I suppose?" + +"No; but I looked at my watch at intervals. But never mind that. Four +minutes, as I said, were up, and only one minute remained, and that +was not enough to take me back. I was at the last gasp already, and on +the verge of despair, when suddenly, as I crawled on, there lay the +child-angel full before me, within my reach. + +"Yes," continued Dacres, after a pause, "there she lay, just in my +grasp, just at my own last gasp. One second more and it must have been +all up. She was senseless, of course. I caught her up; I rose and ran +back as quick as I could, bearing my precious burden. She was as light +as a feather--no weight at all. I carried her as tenderly as if she +was a little baby. As I emerged from the smoke Ethel rushed up to me +and set up a cry, but I told her to keep quiet and it would be all +right. Then I directed the guides to carry her down, and I myself then +carried down the child-angel. + +"You see I wasn't going to give her up. I had had hard work enough +getting her. Besides, the atmosphere up there was horrible. It was +necessary, first of all, to get her down to the foot of the cone, +where she could have pure air, and then resuscitate her. Therefore I +directed the guides to take down Ethel in a chair, while I carried +down the child-angel. They had to carry her down over the lava blocks, +but I went to a part of the cone where it was all loose sand, and went +down flying. I was at the bottom a full half hour before the others. + +"Then I laid her upon the loose sand; and I swear to you, Hawbury, +never in all my life have I seen such a sight. She lay there before my +eyes a picture of loveliness beyond imagination--as beautiful as a +dream--more like a child-angel than ever. Her hair clustered in golden +curls over her white brow, her little hands were folded meekly over +her breast, her lips were parted into a sweet smile, the gentle eyes +no longer looked at me with the piteous, pleading, trustful, innocent +expression which I had noticed in them before, and her hearing was +deaf to the words of love and tenderness that I lavished upon her." + +"Good!" muttered Hawbury; "you talk like a novel. Drive on, old man. +I'm really beginning to feel excited." + +"'The fact is," said Dacres, "I have a certain set of expressions +about the child-angel that will come whenever I begin to describe +her." + +"It strikes me, though, that you are getting on pretty well. You were +speaking of 'love and tenderness.' Well?" + +"Well, she lay there senseless, you know, and I gently unclasped her +hands and began to rub them. I think the motion of carrying her, and +the fresh air, had both produced a favorable effect; for I had not +rubbed her hands ten minutes when she gave a low sigh. Then I rubbed +on, and her lips moved. I bent down close so as to listen, and I heard +her say, in a low voice, + +"'Am I at home?' + +[Illustration: "I BENT DOWN CLOSE."] + +"'Yes,' said I, gently, for I thought it was best to humor her +delirious fancy. + +"Then she spoke again: + +"'Is that you, papa dear?' + +"'Yes, darling,' said I, in a low voice; and I kissed her in a kind of +paternal way, so as to reassure her, and comfort her, and soothe her, +and all that sort of thing, you know." + +At this Hawbury burst into a shout of laughter. + +"What the mischief are you making that beastly row about?" growled +Dacres. + +"Excuse me, old boy. I couldn't help it. It was at the idea of your +doing the father so gravely." + +"Well, am I not old enough to be her father? What else could I do? She +had such a pleading, piteous way. By Jove! Besides, how did she know +any thing about it? It wasn't as if she was in her senses. She really +thought I _was_ her father, you know. And I'm sure I almost felt as if +I was, too." + +"All right, old man, don't get huffy. Drive on." + +"Well, you know, she kept her eyes closed, and didn't say another word +till she heard the voice of Ethel at a distance. Then she opened her +eyes, and got up on her feet. Then there was no end of a row--kissing, +crying, congratulating, reproaching, and all that sort of thing. I +withdrew to a respectful distance and waited. After a time they both +came to me, and the child-angel gave me a look that made me long to be +a father to her again. She held out her little hand, and I took it and +pressed it, with my heart beating awfully. I was horribly embarrassed. + +"'I'm awfully grateful to you,' she said; 'I'm sure I'd do any thing +in the world to repay you. I'm sure I don't know what would have +become of me if it hadn't been for you. And I hope you'll excuse me +for putting you to so much trouble. And, oh!' she concluded, half to +herself, 'what _will_ Kitty say now?'" + +"Kitty! Who's Kitty?" + +"I don't know." + +"All right. Never mind. Drive on, old chap." + +"Well, I mumbled something or other, and then offered to go and get +their carriage. But they would not hear of it. The child-angel said +she could walk. This I strongly dissuaded her from doing, and Ethel +insisted that the men should carry her. This was done, and in a short +time we got back to the Hermitage, where the old lady was in no end of +a worry. In the midst of the row I slipped away, and waited till the +carriage drove off. Then I followed at a sufficient distance not to be +observed, and saw where their house was." + +[Illustration: THE MEETING.] + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +THE BEGINNING OF BLUNDERS. + + +Dacres paused now, and lighting a fresh cigar, smoked away at it in +silence, with long and solemn and regular puffs. Hawbury watched him +for some time, with a look of dreamy curiosity and lazy interest. Then +he rose, and dawdled about the room for a few minutes. Then he lighted +a cigar, and finally, resuming his seat, he said: + +"By Jove!" + +Dacres puffed on. + +"I'm beginning to think," said Hawbury, "that your first statement is +correct. You are shot, my boy--hit hard--and all that; and now I +should like to ask you one question." + +"Ask away." + +"What are you going to do about it? Do you intend to pursue the +acquaintance?" + +"Of course. Why not?" + +"What do you intend to do next?" + +"Next? Why, call on her, and inquire after her health." + +"Very good." + +"Well, have you any thing to say against that?" + +"Certainly not. Only it surprises me a little." + +"Why?" + +"Because I never thought of Scone Dacres as a marrying man, and can't +altogether grapple with the idea." + +"I don't see why a fellow shouldn't marry if he wants to," said +Dacres. "What's the matter with me that I shouldn't get married as +well as lots of fellows?" + +"No reason in the world, my dear boy. Marry as many wives as you +choose. My remark referred merely to my own idea of you, and not to +any thing actually innate in your character. So don't get huffy at a +fellow." + +Some further conversation followed, and Dacres finally took his +departure, full of thoughts about his new acquaintance, and racking +his brains to devise some way of securing access to her. + +On the following evening he made his appearance once more at Hawbury's +rooms. + +"Well, old man, what's up? Any thing more about the child-angel?" + +"Well, a little. I've found out her name." + +"Ah! What is it?" + +"Fay. Her name is Minnie Fay." + +"Minnie Fay. I never heard of the name before. Who are her people?" + +"She is traveling with Lady Dalrymple." + +"The Dowager, I suppose?" + +"Yes." + +"Who are the other ladies?" + +"Well, I don't exactly remember." + +"Didn't you find out?" + +"Yes; I heard all their names, but I've forgotten. I know one of them +is the child-angel's sister, and the other is her cousin. The one I +saw with her was probably the sister." + +"What, the one named Ethel?" + +"Yes." + +"Ethel--Ethel Fay. H'm," said Hawbury, in a tone of disappointment. "I +knew it would be so. There are so many Ethels about." + +"What's that?" + +"Oh, nothing. I once knew a girl named Ethel, and--Well, I had a faint +idea that it would be odd if this should be the one. But there's no +such chance." + +"Oh, the name Ethel is common enough." + +"Well, and didn't you find out any thing about her people?" + +"Whose--Ethel's?" + +"Your child-angel's people." + +"No. What do I care about her people? They might be Jews or +Patagonians for all I care." + +"Still I should think your interest in her would make you ask." + +"Oh no; my interest refers to herself, not to her relatives. Her +sister Ethel is certainly a deuced pretty girl, though." + +"Sconey, my boy, I'm afraid you're getting demoralized. Why, I +remember the time when you regarded the whole female race with a lofty +scorn and a profound indifference that was a perpetual rebuke to more +inflammable natures. But now what a change! Here you are, with a +finely developed eye for female beauty, actually reveling in dreams of +child-angels and their sisters. By Jove!" + +"Nonsense," said Dacres. + +"Well, drive on, and tell all about it. You've seen her, of course?" + +"Oh yes." + +"Did you call?" + +"Yes; she was not at home. I went away with a snubbed and subdued +feeling, and rode along near the Villa Reale, when suddenly I met the +carriage with Lady Dalrymple and the child-angel. She knew me at once, +and gave a little start. Then she looked awfully embarrassed. Then she +turned to Lady Dalrymple; and by the time I had got up the carriage +had stopped, and the ladies both looked at me and bowed. I went up, +and they both held out their hands. Lady Dalrymple then made some +remarks expressive of gratitude, while the child-angel sat and +fastened her wonderful eyes on me, and threw at me such a pleading, +touching, entreating, piteous, grateful, beseeching look, that I +fairly collapsed. + +"When Lady Dalrymple stopped, she turned to her and said: + +"'And oh, aunty darling, did you _ever_ hear of any thing like it? It +was _so_ brave. Wasn't it an awfully plucky thing to do, now? And I +was really inside the crater! I'm sure _I_ never could have done such +a thing--no, not even for my _own papa_! Oh, how I do _wish_ I could +do something to show how _awfully_ grateful I am! And, aunty darling, +I do _wish_ you'd tell me what to do.' + +"All this quite turned my head, and I couldn't say any thing; but sat +on my saddle, devouring the little thing with my eyes, and drinking in +the wonderful look which she threw at me. At last the carriage +started, and the ladies, with a pleasant smile, drove on. I think I +stood still there for about five minutes, until I was nearly run down +by one of those beastly Neapolitan caleches loaded with twenty or +thirty natives." + +"See here, old man, what a confoundedly good memory you have! You +remember no end of a lot of things, and give all her speeches +verbatim. What a capital newspaper reporter you'd make!" + +"Oh, it's only _her_ words, you know. She quickens my memory, and +makes a different man of me." + +"By Jove!" + +"Yes, old chap, a different man altogether." + +"So I say, by Jove! Head turned, eyes distorted, heart generally +upset, circulation brought up to fever point, peace of mind gone, and +a general mania in the place of the old self-reliance and content." + +"Not content, old boy; I never had much of that." + +"Well, we won't argue, will we? But as to the child-angel--what next? +You'll call again?" + +"Of course." + +"When?" + +"To-morrow." + +"Strike while the iron is hot, hey? Well, old man, I'll stand by you. +Still I wish you could find out who her people are, just to satisfy a +legitimate curiosity." + +"Well, I don't know the Fays, but Lady Dalrymple is her aunt; and I +know, too, that she is a niece of Sir Gilbert Biggs." + +"What!" cried Hawbury, starting. "Who? Sir what?" + +"Sir Gilbert Biggs." + +"Sir Gilbert Biggs?" + +"Yes." + +"Sir Gilbert Biggs! By Jove! Are you sure you are right? Come, now. +Isn't there some mistake?" + +"Not a bit of a mistake; she's a niece of Sir Gilbert. I remember +that, because the name is a familiar one." + +"Familiar!" repeated Hawbury; "I should think so. By Jove!" + +Hawbury here relapsed into silence, and sat with a frown on his face, +and a puzzled expression. At times he would mutter such words as, +"Deuced odd!" "Confounded queer!" "What a lot!" "By Jove!" while +Dacres looked at him in some surprise. + +"Look here, old fellow!" said he at last. "Will you have the kindness +to inform me what there is in the little fact I just mentioned to +upset a man of your size, age, fighting weight, and general coolness +of blood?" + +"Well, there is a deuced odd coincidence about it, that's all." + +"Coincidence with what?" + +"Well, I'll tell some other time. It's a sore subject, old fellow. +Another time, my boy. I'll only mention now that it's the cause of my +present absence from England. There's a bother that I don't care to +encounter, and Sir Gilbert Biggs's nieces are at the bottom of it." + +"You don't mean this one, I hope?" cried Dacres, in some alarm. + +"Heaven forbid! By Jove! No. I hope not." + +"No, I hope not, by Jove!" echoed the other. + +"Well, old man," said Hawbury, after a fit of silence, "I suppose +you'll push matters on now, hard and fast, and launch yourself into +matrimony?" + +"Well--I--suppose--so," said Dacres, hesitatingly. + +"You _suppose_ so. Of course you will. Don't I know you, old chap? +Impetuous, tenacious of purpose, iron will, one idea, and all that +sort of thing. Of course you will; and you'll be married in a month." + +"Well," said Dacres, in the same hesitating way, "not so soon as that, +I'm afraid." + +"Why not?" + +"Why, I have to get the lady first." + +"The lady; oh, she seems to be willing enough, judging from your +description. Her pleading look at you. Why, man, there was love at +first sight. Then tumbling down the crater of a volcano, and getting +fished out. Why, man, what woman could resist a claim like that, +especially when it is enforced by a man like Scone Dacres? And, by +Jove! Sconey, allow me to inform you that I've always considered you a +most infernally handsome man; and what's more, my opinion is worth +something, by Jove!" + +Hereupon Hawbury stretched his head and shoulders back, and pulled +away with each hand at his long yellow pendent whiskers. Then he +yawned. And then he slowly ejaculated, + +"By Jove!" + +"Well," said Dacres, thoughtfully, "there is something in what you +say; and, to tell the truth, I think there's not a bad chance for me, +so far as the lady herself is concerned; but the difficulty is not in +that quarter." + +"Not in that quarter! Why, where the mischief else could there be any +difficulty, man?" + +Dacres was silent. + +"You're eager enough?" + +Dacres nodded his head sadly. + +"Eager! why, eager isn't the word. You're mad, man--mad as a March +hare! So go in and win." + +Dacres said nothing. + +"You're rich, not over old, handsome, well born, well bred, and have +saved the lady's life by extricating her from the crater of a volcano. +She seems too young and childlike to have had any other affairs. She's +probably just out of school; not been into society; not come out; just +the girl. Confound these girls, I say, that have gone through +engagements with other fellows!" + +"Oh, as to that," said Dacres, "this little thing is just like a +child, and in her very simplicity does not know what love is. +Engagement! By Jove, I don't believe she knows the meaning of the +word! She's perfectly fresh, artless, simple, and guileless. I don't +believe she ever heard a word of sentiment or tenderness from any man +in her life." + +"Very likely; so where's the difficulty?" + +"Well, to tell the truth, the difficulty is in my own affairs." + +"Your affairs! Odd, too. What's up? I didn't know any thing had +happened. That's too infernal bad, too." + +"Oh, it's nothing of that sort; money's all right; no swindle. It's an +affair of another character altogether." + +"Oh!" + +"And one, too, that makes me think that--" + +He hesitated. + +"That what?" + +"That I'd better start for Australia." + +"Australia!" + +"Yes." + +"What's the meaning of that?" + +"Why," said Dacres, gloomily, "it means giving up the child-angel, and +trying to forget her--if I ever can." + +"Forget her! What's the meaning of all this? Why, man, five minutes +ago you were all on fire about her, and now you talk quietly about +giving her up! I'm all adrift." + +"Well, it's a mixed up matter." + +"What is?" + +"My affair." + +"Your affair; something that has happened?" + +"Yes. It's a sore matter, and I don't care to speak about it just +now." + +"Oh!" + +"And it's the real cause why I don't go back to England." + +"The mischief it is! Why, Dacres, I'll be hanged if you're not using +the very words I myself used a few minutes ago." + +"Am I?" said Dacres, gloomily. + +"You certainly are; and that makes me think that our affairs are in a +similar complication." + +"Oh no; mine is very peculiar." + +"Well, there's one thing I should like to ask, and you needn't answer +unless you like." + +"Well?" + +"Doesn't your difficulty arise from some confounded woman or other?" + +"Well--yes." + +"By Jove, I knew it! And, old fellow, I'm in the same situation." + +[Illustration: "BY JOVE, I KNEW IT!"] + +"Oh ho! So you're driven away from England by a woman?" + +"Exactly." + +Dacres sighed heavily. + +"Yours can't be as bad as mine," said he, with a dismal look. "Mine is +the worst scrape that ever you heard of. And look at me now, with the +child-angel all ready to take me, and me not able to be taken. +Confound the abominable complications of an accursed civilization, I +say!" + +"And I say, Amen!" said Hawbury. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +THE FIERY TRIAL. + + +"See here, old chap," said Hawbury, "I'm going to make a clean breast +of it." + +"Of what?" + +"Of my affair." + +"That's right," said Dacres, dolefully. "I should like of all things +to hear it." + +"You see I wouldn't tell you, only you yourself turn out to be in a +similar situation, and so what I have to say may prove of use to you. +At any rate, you may give me some useful suggestion. + +"Very well, then," continued Hawbury--"to begin. You may remember that +I told you when we met here where I had been passing the time since I +saw you last." + +Dacres nodded assent. + +"Well, about two years ago I was in Canada. I went there for sport, +and plunged at once into the wilderness. And let me tell you it's a +very pretty country for hunting. Lots of game--fish, flesh, and +fowl--from the cariboo down to the smallest trout that you would care +to hook. Glorious country; magnificent forests waiting for the +lumberman; air that acts on you like wine, or even better; rivers and +lakes in all directions; no end of sport and all that sort of thing, +you know. Have you ever been in Canada?" + +"Only traveled through." + +"Well, the next time you feel inclined for high art sport we'll go +together, and have no end of fun--that is, if you're not married and +done for, which, of course, you will be. No matter. I was saying that +I was in a fine country. I spent a couple of months there with two or +three Indians, and at length started for Ottawa on my way home. The +Indians put me on the right path, after which I dismissed them, and +set out alone with my gun and fishing-rod. + +"The first day was all very well, and I slept well enough the first +night; but on the morning of the second day I found the air full of +smoke. However, I did not give much thought to that, for there had +been a smoky look about the sky for a week, and the woods are always +burning there, I believe, in one place or another. I kept on, and shot +enough for food, and thus the second day passed. That evening the air +was quite suffocating, and it was as hot as an oven. I struggled +through the night, I don't know how; and then on the third day made +another start. This third day was abominable. The atmosphere was +beastly hot; the sky was a dull yellow, and the birds seemed to have +all disappeared. As I went on it grew worse, but I found it was not +because the fires were in front of me. On the contrary, they were +behind me, and were driving on so that they were gradually approaching +nearer. I could do my thirty miles a day even in that rough country, +but the fires could do more. At last I came into a track that was a +little wider than the first one. As I went on I met cattle which +appeared stupefied. Showers of dust were in the air; the atmosphere +was worse than ever, and I never had such difficulty in my life in +walking along. I had to throw away my rifle and fishing-rod, and was +just thinking of pitching my clothes after them, when suddenly I +turned a bend in the path, and met a young girl full in the face. + +"By Jove! I swear I never was so astounded in my life. I hurried up to +her, and just began to ask where I was, when she interrupted me with a +question of the same kind. By-the-way, I forgot to say that she was on +horseback. The poor devil of a horse seemed to have had a deuced hard +time of it too, for he was trembling from head to foot, though whether +that arose from fatigue or fright I don't know. Perhaps it was both. + +"Well, the girl was evidently very much alarmed. She was awfully pale; +she was a monstrous pretty girl too--the prettiest by all odds I ever +saw, and that's saying a good deal. By Jove! Well, it turned out that +she had been stopping in the back country for a month, at a house +somewhere up the river, with her father. Her father had gone down to +Ottawa a week before, and was expected back on this day. She had come +out to meet him, and had lost her way. She had been out for hours, and +was completely bewildered. She was also frightened at the fires, which +now seemed to be all around us. This she told me in a few words, and +asked if I knew where the river was. + +"Of course I knew no more than she did, and it needed only a few words +from me to show her that I was as much in the dark as she was. I began +to question her, however, as to this river, for it struck me that in +the present state of affairs a river would not be a bad thing to have +near one. In answer to my question she said that she had come upon +this road from the woods on the left, and therefore it was evident +that the river lay in that direction. + +"I assured her that I would do whatever lay in my power; and with that +I walked on in the direction in which I had been going, while she rode +by my side. Some further questions as to the situation of the house +where she had been staying showed me that it was on the banks of the +river about fifty miles above Ottawa. By my own calculations I was +about that distance away. It seemed to me, then, that she had got lost +in the woods, and had wandered thus over some trail to the path where +she had met me. Every thing served to show me that the river lay to +the left, and so I resolved to turn in at the first path which I +reached. + +"At length, after about two miles, we came to a path which went into +the woods. My companion was sure that this was the very one by which +she had come out, and this confirmed the impression which the sight of +it had given me. I thought it certainly must lead toward the river. So +we turned into this path. I went first, and she followed, and so we +went for about a couple of miles further. + +"All this time the heat had been getting worse and worse. The air was +more smoky than ever; my mouth was parched and dry. I breathed with +difficulty, and could scarcely drag one leg after another. The lady +was almost as much exhausted as I was, and suffered acutely, as I +could easily see, though she uttered not a word of complaint. Her +horse also suffered terribly, and did not seem able to bear her weight +much longer. The poor brute trembled and staggered, and once or twice +stopped, so that it was difficult to start him again. The road had +gone in a winding way, but was not so crooked as I expected. I +afterward found that she had gone by other paths until she had found +herself in thick woods, and then on trying to retrace her way she had +strayed into this path. If she had turned to the left on first +reaching it, instead of to the right, the fate of each of us would +have been different. Our meeting was no doubt the salvation of both. + +"There was a wooded eminence in front, which we had been steadily +approaching for some time. At last we reached the top, and here a +scene burst upon us which was rather startling. The hill was high +enough to command an extensive view, and the first thing that we saw +was a vast extent of woods and water and smoke. By-and-by we were able +to distinguish each. The water was the river, which could be seen for +miles. Up the river toward the left the smoke arose in great volumes, +covering every thing; while in front of us, and immediately between us +and the river, there was a line of smoke which showed that the fires +had penetrated there and had intercepted us. + +"We stood still in bewilderment. I looked all around. To go back was +as bad as to go forward, for there, also, a line of smoke arose which +showed the progress of the flames. To the right there was less smoke; +but in that direction there was only a wilderness, through which we +could not hope to pass for any distance. The only hope was the river. +If we could traverse the flames in that direction, so as to reach the +water, we would be safe. In a few words I communicated my decision to +my companion. She said nothing, but bowed her head in acquiescence. + +"Without delaying any longer we resumed our walk. After about a mile +we found ourselves compelled once more to halt. The view here was +worse than ever. The path was now as wide as an ordinary road, and +grew wider still as it went on. It was evidently used to haul logs +down to the river, and as it approached the bank it grew steadily +wider; but between us and the river the woods were all burning. The +first rush of the fire was over, and now we looked forward and saw a +vast array of columns--the trunks of burned trees--some blackened and +charred, others glowing red. The ground below was also glowing red, +with blackened spaces here and there. + +"Still the burned tract was but a strip, and there lay our hope. The +fire, by some strange means, had passed on a track not wider than a +hundred yards, and this was what had to be traversed by us. The +question was, whether we could pass through that or not. The same +question came to both of us, and neither of us said a word. But before +I could ask the lady about it, her horse became frightened at the +flames. I advised her to dismount, for I knew that the poor brute +could never be forced through those fires. She did so, and the horse, +with a horrible snort, turned and galloped wildly away. + +"I now looked around once more, and saw that there was no escape +except in front. The flames were encircling us, and a vast cloud of +smoke surrounded us every where, rising far up and rolling overhead. +Cinders fell in immense showers, and the fine ashes, with which the +air was filled, choked us and got into our eyes. + +"'There is only one chance,' said I; 'and that is to make a dash for +the river. Can you do it?' + +"'I'll try,' she said. + +"'We'll have to go through the fires.' + +"She nodded. + +"'Well, then,' I said, 'do as I say. Take off your sacque and wrap it +around your head and shoulders.' + +"She took off her sacque at this. It was a loose robe of merino or +alpaca, or something of that sort, and very well suited for what I +wanted. I wrapped it round her so as to protect her face, head, and +shoulders; and taking off my coat I did the same. + +"'Now,' said I, 'hold your breath as well as you can. You may keep +your eyes shut. Give me your hand--I'll lead you.' + +"Taking her hand I led her forward at a rapid pace. Once she fell, but +she quickly recovered herself, and soon we reached the edge of the +flames. + +"I tell you what it is, my boy, the heat was terrific, and the sight +was more so. The river was not more than a hundred yards away, but +between us and it there lay what seemed as bad as the burning fiery +furnace of Messrs. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. If I were now +standing there, I don't think I could face it. But then I was with the +girl; I had to save her. Fire was behind us, racing after us; water +lay in front. Once there and we were safe. It was not a time to dawdle +or hesitate, I can assure you. + +"'Now,' said I, 'run for your life!' + +"Grasping her hand more firmly, I started off with her at the full +run. The place was terrible, and grew worse at every step. The road +here was about fifty feet wide. On each side was the burning forest, +with a row of burned trees like fiery columns, and the moss and +underbrush still glowing beneath. To pass through that was a thing +that it don't do to look back upon. The air was intolerable. I wrapped +my coat tighter over my head; my arms were thus exposed, and I felt +the heat on my hands. But that was nothing to the torments that I +endured from trying to breathe. Besides this, the enormous effort of +keeping up a run made breathing all the more difficult. A feeling of +despair came over me. Already we had gone half the distance, but at +that moment the space seemed lengthened out interminably, and I looked +in horror at the rest of the way, with a feeling of the utter +impossibility of traversing it. + +[Illustration: THE FIERY TRIAL.] + +"Suddenly the lady fell headlong. I stopped and raised her up. My coat +fell off; I felt the fiery air all round my face and head. I called +and screamed to the lady as I tried to raise her up; but she said +nothing. She was as lifeless as a stone. + +"Well, my boy, I thought it was all up with me; but I, at least, could +stand, though I did not think that I could take another breath. As for +the lady, there was no help for it; so I grasped her with all my +strength, still keeping her head covered as well as I could, and slung +her over my shoulders. Then away I ran. I don't remember much after +that. I must have lost my senses then, and, what is more, I must have +accomplished the rest of the journey in that semi-unconscious state. + +"What I do remember is this--a wild plunge into the water; and the +delicious coolness that I felt all around restored me, and I at once +comprehended all. The lady was by my side; the shock and the cool +water had restored her also. She was standing up to her shoulders just +where she had fallen, and was panting and sobbing. I spoke a few words +of good cheer, and then looked around for some place of refuge. Just +where we stood there was nothing but fire and desolation, and it was +necessary to go further away. Well, some distance out, about half-way +across the river, I saw a little island, with rocky sides, and trees +on the top. It looked safe and cool and inviting. I determined to try +to get there. Some deals were in the water by the bank, which had +probably floated down from some saw-mill. I took half a dozen of +these, flung two or three more on top of them, and then told the lady +my plan. It was to float out to the island by means of this raft. I +offered to put her on it and let her float; but she refused, +preferring to be in the water. + +"The river was pretty wide here, and the water was shallow, so that we +were able to wade for a long distance, pushing the raft before us. At +length it became deep, and then the lady held on while I floated and +tried to direct the raft toward the island. I had managed while wading +to guide the raft up the stream, so that when we got into deep water +the current carried us toward the island. At length we reached it +without much difficulty, and then, utterly worn out, I fell down on +the grass, and either fainted away or fell asleep. + +"When I revived I had several very queer sensations. The first thing +that I noticed was that I hadn't any whiskers." + +"What! no whiskers?" + +"No--all gone; and my eyebrows and mustache, and every wisp of hair +from my head." + +"See here, old fellow, do you mean to say that you've only taken one +year to grow those infernally long whiskers that you have now?" + +"It's a fact, my boy!" + +"I wouldn't have believed it; but some fellows can do such +extraordinary things. But drive on." + +"Well, the next thing I noticed was that it was as smoky as ever. Then +I jumped up and looked around. I felt quite dry, though it seemed as +if I had just come from the river. As I jumped up and turned I saw my +friend. She looked much better than she had. Her clothes also were +quite dry. She greeted me with a mournful smile, and rose up from the +trunk of a tree where she had been sitting, and made inquiries after +my health with the most earnest and tender sympathy. + +"I told her I was all right, laughed about my hair, and inquired very +anxiously how she was. She assured me that she was as well as ever. +Some conversation followed; and then, to my amazement, I found that I +had slept for an immense time, or had been unconscious, whichever it +was, and that the adventure had taken place on the preceding day. It +was now about the middle of the next day. You may imagine how +confounded I was at that. + +[Illustration: +"ALL GONE; MY EYEBROWS, AND MUSTACHE, AND EVERY WISP OF +HAIR FROM MY HEAD."] + +"The air was still abominably close and smoky; so I looked about the +island, and found a huge crevice in the rocks, which was almost a +cave. It was close by the water, and was far cooler than outside. In +fact, it was rather comfortable than otherwise. Here we took refuge, +and talked over our situation. As far as we could see, the whole +country was burned up. A vast cloud of smoke hung over all. One +comfort was that the glow had ceased on the river-bank, and only a +blackened forest now remained, with giant trees arising, all blasted. +We found that our stay would be a protracted one. + +"The first thing that I thought of was food. Fortunately I had my +hooks and lines; so I cut a pole, and fastening my line to it, I +succeeded in catching a few fish. + +"We lived there for two days on fish in that manner. The lady was sad +and anxious. I tried to cheer her up. Her chief trouble was the fear +that her father was lost. In the course of our conversations I found +out that her name was Ethel Orne." + +"Ethel Orne?" + +"Yes." + +"Don't think I ever heard the name before. Orne? No, I'm sure I +haven't. It isn't Horn?" + +"No; Orne--O R N E. Oh, there's no trouble about that. + +"Well, I rather enjoyed this island life, but she was awfully +melancholy; so I hit upon a plan for getting away. I went to the shore +and collected a lot of the deals that I mentioned, and made a very +decent sort of raft. I found a pole to guide it with, cut a lot of +brush for Ethel, and then we started, and floated down the river. We +didn't have any accidents. The only bother was that she was too +confoundedly anxious about me, and wouldn't let me work. We went +ashore every evening. We caught fish enough to eat. We were afloat +three days, and, naturally enough, became very well acquainted." + +Hawbury stopped, and sighed. + +"I tell you what it is, Dacres," said he, "there never lived a nobler, +more generous, and at the same time a braver soul than Ethel Orne. She +never said a word about gratitude and all that, but there was a +certain quiet look of devotion about her that gives me a deuced queer +feeling now when I think of it all." + +"And I dare say--But no matter." + +"What?" + +"Well, I was only going to remark that, under the circumstances, there +might have been a good deal of quiet devotion about you." + +Hawbury made no reply, but sat silent for a time. + +"Well, go on, man; don't keep me in suspense." + +"Let me see--where was I? Oh! floating on the raft. Well, we floated +that way, as I said, for three days, and at the end of that time we +reached a settlement. Here we found a steamer, and went on further, +and finally reached Ottawa. Here she went to the house of a friend. I +called on her as soon as possible, and found her in fearful anxiety. +She had learned that her father had gone up with a Mr. Willoughby, and +neither had been heard from. + +"Startled at this intelligence, I instituted a search myself. I could +not find out any thing, but only that there was good reason to believe +that both of the unhappy gentlemen had perished. On returning to the +house to call on Ethel, about a week after, I found that she had +received full confirmation of this dreadful intelligence, and had gone +to Montreal. It seems that Willoughby's wife was a relative of +Ethel's, and she had gone to stay with her. I longed to see her, but +of course I could not intrude upon her in her grief; and so I wrote to +her, expressing all the condolence I could. I told her that I was +going to Europe, but would return in the following year. I couldn't +say any more than that, you know. It wasn't a time for sentiment, of +course. + +"Well, I received a short note in reply. She said she would look +forward to seeing me again with pleasure, and all that; and that she +could never forget the days we had spent together. + +"So off I went, and in the following year I returned. But on reaching +Montreal, what was my disgust, on calling at Mrs. Willoughby's, to +find that she had given up her house, sold her furniture, and left the +city. No one knew any thing about her, and they said that she had only +come to the city a few months before her bereavement, and after that +had never made any acquaintances. Some said she had gone to the United +States; others thought she had gone to Quebec; others to England; but +no one knew any thing more." + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +A STARTLING REVELATION. + + +"It seems to me, Hawbury," said Dacres, after a period of thoughtful +silence--"it seems to me that when you talk of people having their +heads turned, you yourself comprehend the full meaning of that +sensation?" + +"Somewhat." + +"You knocked under at once, of course, to your Ethel?" + +"Yes." + +"And feel the same way toward her yet?" + +"Yes." + +"Hit hard?" + +"Yes; and that's what I'm coming to. The fact is, my whole business in +life for the last year has been to find her out." + +"You haven't dawdled so much, then, as people suppose?" + +"No; that's all very well to throw people off a fellow's scent; but +you know me well enough, Dacres; and we didn't dawdle much in South +America, did we?" + +"That's true, my boy; but as to this lady, what is it that makes it so +hard for you to find her? In the first place, is she an American?" + +"Oh no." + +"Why not?" + +"Oh, accent, manner, tone, idiom, and a hundred other things. Why, of +course, you know as well as I that an American lady is as different +from an English as a French or a German lady is. They may be all +equally ladies, but each nation has its own peculiarities." + +"Is she Canadian?" + +"Possibly. It is not always easy to tell a Canadian lady from an +English. They imitate us out there a good deal. I could tell in the +majority of cases, but there are many who can not be distinguished +from us very easily. And Ethel may be one." + +"Why mayn't she be English?" + +"She may be. It's impossible to perceive any difference." + +"Have you ever made any inquiries about her in England?" + +"No; I've not been in England much, and from the way she talked to me +I concluded that her home was in Canada." + +"Was her father an Englishman?" + +"I really don't know." + +"Couldn't you find out?" + +"No. You see he had but recently moved to Montreal, like Willoughby; +and I could not find any people who were acquainted with him." + +"He may have been English all the time." + +"Yes." + +"And she too." + +"By Jove!" + +"And she may be in England now." + +Hawbury started to his feet, and stared in silence at his friend for +several minutes. + +"By Jove!" he cried; "if I thought that, I swear I'd start for home +this evening, and hunt about every where for the representatives of +the Orne family. But no--surely it can't be possible." + +"Were you in London last season?" + +"No." + +"Well, how do you know but that she was there?" + +"By Jove!" + +"And the belle of the season, too?" + +"She would be if she were there, by Jove!" + +"Yes, if there wasn't another present that I wot of." + +"Well, we won't argue about that; besides, I haven't come to the point +yet." + +"The point?" + +"Yes, the real reason why I'm here, when I'm wanted home." + +"The real reason? Why, haven't you been telling it to me all along?" + +"Well, no; I haven't got to the point yet." + +"Drive on, then, old man." + +"Well, you know," continued Hawbury, "after hunting all through Canada +I gave up in despair, and concluded that Ethel was lost to me, at +least for the present. That was only about six or seven months ago. So +I went home, and spent a month in a shooting-box on the Highlands; +then I went to Ireland to visit a friend; and then to London. While +there I got a long letter from my mother. The good soul was convinced +that I was wasting my life; she urged me to settle down, and finally +informed me that she had selected a wife for me. Now I want you to +understand, old boy, that I fully appreciated my mother's motives. She +was quite right, I dare say, about my wasting my life; quite right, +too, about the benefit of settling down; and she was also very kind to +take all the trouble of selecting a wife off my hands. Under other +circumstances I dare say I should have thought the matter over, and +perhaps I should have been induced even to go so far as to survey the +lady from a distance, and argue the point with my mother pro and con. +But the fact is, the thing was distasteful, and wouldn't bear thinking +about, much less arguing. I was too lazy to go and explain the matter, +and writing was not my forte. Besides, I didn't want to thwart my +mother in her plans, or hurt her feelings; and so the long and the +short of it is, I solved the difficulty and cut the knot by crossing +quietly over to Norway. I wrote a short note to my mother, making no +allusion to her project, and since then I've been gradually working my +way down to the bottom of the map of Europe, and here I am." + +"You didn't see the lady, then?" + +"No." + +"Who was she?" + +"I don't know." + +"Don't know the lady?" + +"No." + +"Odd, too! Haven't you any idea? Surely her name was mentioned?" + +"No; my mother wrote in a roundabout style, so as to feel her way. She +knew me, and feared that I might take a prejudice against the lady. No +doubt I should have done so. She only alluded to her in a general +way." + +"A general way?" + +"Yes; that is, you know, she mentioned the fact that the lady was a +niece of Sir Gilbert Biggs." + +"What!" cried Dacres, with a start. + +"A niece of Sir Gilbert Biggs," repeated Hawbury. + +"A niece--of--Sir Gilbert Biggs?" said Dacres, slowly. "Good Lord!" + +"Yes; and what of that?" + +"Very much. Don't you know that Minnie Fay is a niece of Sir Gilbert +Biggs?" + +"By Jove! So she is. I remember being startled when you told me that, +and for a moment an odd fancy came to me. I wondered whether your +child-angel might not be the identical being about whom my poor dear +mother went into such raptures. Good Lord! what a joke! By Jove!" + +"A joke!" growled Dacres. "I don't see any joke in it. I remember when +you said that Biggs's nieces were at the bottom of your troubles, I +asked whether it might be this one." + +"So you did, old chap; and I replied that I hoped not. So you need not +shake your gory locks at me, my boy." + +"But I don't like the looks of it." + +"Neither do I." + +"Yes, but you see it looks as though she had been already set apart +for you especially." + +"And pray, old man, what difference can that make, when I don't set +myself apart for any thing of the kind?" + +Dacres sat in silence with a gloomy frown over his brow. + +"Besides, are you aware, my boy, of the solemn fact that Biggs's +nieces are legion?" said Hawbury. "The man himself is an infernal old +bloke; and as to his nieces--heavens and earth!--old! old as +Methuselah; and as to this one, she must be a grandniece--a second +generation. She's not a true, full-blooded niece. Now the lady I refer +to was one of the original Biggs's nieces. There's no mistake whatever +about that, for I have it in black and white, under my mother's own +hand." + +"Oh, she would select the best of them for you." + +"No, she wouldn't. How do you know that?" + +"There's no doubt about that." + +"It depends upon what you mean by the best. The one _you_ call the +best might not seem so to _her_, and so on. Now I dare say she's +picked out for me a great, raw-boned, redheaded niece, with a nose +like a horse. And she expects me to marry a woman like that! with a +pace like a horse! Good Lord!" + +And Hawbury leaned back, lost in the immensity of that one +overwhelming idea. + +"Besides," said he, standing up, "I don't care if she was the angel +Gabriel. I don't want any of Biggs's nieces. I won't have them. By +Jove! And am I to be entrapped into a plan like that? I want Ethel. +And what's more, I will have her, or go without. The child-angel may +be the very identical one that my mother selected, and if you assert +that she is, I'll be hanged if I'll argue the point. I only say this, +that it doesn't alter my position in the slightest degree. I don't +want her. I won't have her. I don't want to see her. I don't care if +the whole of Biggs's nieces, in solemn conclave, with old Biggs at +their head, had formally discussed the whole matter, and finally +resolved unanimously that she should be mine. Good Lord, man! don't +you understand how it is? What the mischief do I care about any body? +Do you think I went through that fiery furnace for nothing? And what +do you suppose that life on the island meant? Is all that nothing? Did +you ever live on an island with the child-angel? Did you ever make a +raft for her and fly? Did you ever float down a river current between +banks burned black by raging fires, feeding her, soothing her, +comforting her, and all the while feeling in a general fever about +her? You hauled her out of a crater, did you? By Jove! And what of +that? Why, that furnace that I pulled Ethel out of was worse than a +hundred of your craters. And yet, after all that, you think that I +could be swayed by the miserable schemes of a lot of Biggs's nieces! +And you scowl at a fellow, and get huffy and jealous. By Jove!" + +After this speech, which was delivered with unusual animation, Hawbury +lighted a cigar, which he puffed at most energetically. + +"All right, old boy," said Dacres. "A fellow's apt to judge others by +himself, you know. Don't make any more set speeches, though. I begin +to understand your position. Besides, after all--" + +Dacres paused, and the dark frown that was on his brow grew still +darker. + +"After all what?" asked Hawbury, who now began to perceive that +another feeling besides jealousy was the cause of his friend's gloomy +melancholy. + +"Well, after all, you know, old fellow, I fear I'll have to give her +up." + +"Give her up?" + +"Yes." + +"That's what you said before, and you mentioned Australia, and that +rot." + +"The more I think of it," said Dacres, dismally, and regarding the +opposite wall with a steady yet mournful stare--"the more I think of +it, the more I see that there's no such happiness in store for me." + +"Pooh, man! what is it all about? This is the secret that you spoke +about, I suppose?" + +"Yes; and it's enough to put a barrier between me and her. Was I +jealous? Did I seem huffy? What an idiot I must have been! Why, old +man, I can't do any thing or say any thing." + +"The man's mad," said Hawbury, addressing himself to a carved +tobacco-box on the table. + +"Mad? Yes, I was mad enough in ever letting myself be overpowered by +this bright dream. Here have I been giving myself up to a phantom--an +empty illusion--and now it's all over. My eyes are open." + +"You may as well open my eyes too; for I'll be hanged if I can see my +way through this!" + +"Strange! strange! strange!" continued Dacres, in a kind of soliloquy, +not noticing Hawbury's words. "How a man will sometimes forget +realities, and give himself up to dreams! It was my dream of the +child-angel that so turned my brain. I must see her no more." + +"Very well, old boy," said Hawbury. "Now speak Chinese a little for +variety. I'll understand you quite as well. I will, by Jove!" + +"And then, for a fellow that's had an experience like mine--before and +since," continued Dacres, still speaking in the tone of one who was +meditating aloud--"to allow such an idea even for a moment to take +shape in his brain! What an utter, unmitigated, unmanageable, and +unimprovable idiot, ass, dolt, and blockhead! Confound such a man! I +say; confound him!" + +[Illustration: "CONFOUND SUCH A MAN! I SAY."] + +And as Dacres said this he brought his fist down upon the table near +him with such an energetic crash that a wine-flask was sent spinning +on the floor, where its ruby contents splashed out in a pool, +intermingled with fragments of glass. + +Dacres was startled by the crash, and looked at it for a while in +silence. Then he raised his head and looked at his friend. Hawbury +encountered his glance without any expression. He merely sat and +smoked and passed his fingers through his pendent whiskers. + +"Excuse me," said Dacres, abruptly. + +"Certainly, my dear boy, a thousand times; only I hope you will allow +me to remark that your style is altogether a new one, and during the +whole course of our acquaintance I do not remember seeing it before. +You have a melodramatic way that is overpowering. Still I don't see +why you should swear at yourself in a place like Naples, where there +are so many other things to swear at. It's a waste of human energy, +and I don't understand it. We usedn't to indulge in soliloquies in +South America, used we?" + +[Illustration: "HAWBURY SANK BACK IN HIS SEAT, OVERWHELMED."] + +"No, by Jove! And look here, old chap, you'll overlook this little +outburst, won't you? In South America I was always cool, and you did +the hard swearing, my boy. I'll be cool again; and what's more, I'll +get back to South America again as soon as I can. Once on the pampas, +and I'll be a man again. I tell you what it is, I'll start to-morrow. +What do you say? Come." + +"Oh no," said Hawbury, coolly; "I can't do that. I have business, you +know." + +"Business?" + +"Oh yes, you know--Ethel, you know." + +"By Jove! so you have. That alters the matter." + +"But in any case I wouldn't go, nor would you. I still am quite unable +to understand you. Why you should grow desperate, and swear at +yourself, and then propose South America, is quite beyond me. Above +all, I don't yet see any reason why you should give up your +child-angel. You were all raptures but a short time since. Why are you +so cold now?" + +"I'll tell you," said Dacres. + +"So you said ever so long ago." + +"It's a sore subject, and difficult to speak about." + +"Well, old man, I'm sorry for you; and don't speak about it at all if +it gives you pain." + +"Oh, I'll make a clean breast of it. You've told your affair, and I'll +tell mine. I dare say I'll feel all the better for it." + +"Drive on, then, old man." + +Dacres rose, took a couple of glasses of beer in quick succession, +then resumed his seat, then picked out a cigar from the box with +unusual fastidiousness, then drew a match, then lighted the cigar, +then sent out a dozen heavy volumes of smoke, which encircled him so +completely that he became quite concealed from Hawbury's view. But +even this cloud did not seem sufficient to correspond with the gloom +of his soul. Other clouds rolled forth, and still others, until all +their congregated folds encircled him, and in the midst there was a +dim vision of a big head, whose stiff, high, curling, crisp hair, and +massive brow, and dense beard, seemed like some living manifestation +of cloud-compelling Jove. + +For some time there was silence, and Hawbury said nothing, but waited +for his friend to speak. + +At last a voice was heard--deep, solemn, awful, portentous, ominous, +sorrow-laden, weird, mysterious, prophetic, obscure, gloomy, doleful, +dismal, and apocalyptic. + +"_Hawbury!_" + +"Well, old man?" + +"HAWBURY!" + +"All right." + +"Are you listening?" + +"Certainly." + +"_Well--I'm--married!_" + +Hawbury sprang to his feet as though he had been shot. + +"What!" he cried. + +"_I'm married!_" + +"You're what? Married? _You! married!_ Scone Dacres! not you--not +_married?_" + +"_I'm married!_" + +"Good Lord!" + +"_I'm married_!" + +Hawbury sank back in his seat, overwhelmed by the force of this sudden +and tremendous revelation. For some time there was a deep silence. +Both were smoking. The clouds rolled forth from the lips of each, and +curled over their heads, and twined in voluminous folds, and gathered +over them in dark, impenetrable masses. Even so rested the clouds of +doubt, of darkness, and of gloom over the soul of each, and those +which were visible to the eye seemed to typify, symbolize, +characterize, and body forth the darker clouds that overshadowed the +mind. + +"_I'm married_!" repeated Dacres, who now seemed to have become like +Poe's raven, and all his words one melancholy burden bore. + +"You were not married when I was last with you?" said Hawbury at last, +in the tone of one who was recovering from a fainting fit. + +"Yes, I was." + +"Not in South America?" + +"Yes, in South America." + +"Married?" + +"Yes, married." + +"By Jove!" + +"Yes; and what's more, I've been married for ten years." + +"Ten years! Good Lord!" + +"It's true." + +"Why, how old could you have been when you got married?" + +"A miserable, ignorant, inexperienced dolt, idiot, and brat of a boy." + +"By Jove!" + +"Well, the secret's out; and now, if you care to hear, I will tell you +all about it." + +"I'm dying to hear, dear boy; so go on." + +And at this Scone Dacres began his story. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +A MAD WIFE. + + +"I'll tell you all about it," said Scone Dacres; "but don't laugh, for +matters like these are not to be trifled with, and I may take +offense." + +"Oh, bother, as if I ever laugh at any thing serious! By Jove! no. You +don't know me, old chap." + +"All right, then. Well, to begin. This wife that I speak of happened +to me very suddenly. I was only a boy, just out of Oxford, and just +into my fortune. I was on my way to Paris--my first visit--and was +full of no end of projects for enjoyment. I went from Dover, and in +the steamer there was the most infernally pretty girl. Black, +mischievous eyes, with the devil's light in them; hair curly, crispy, +frisky, luxuriant, all tossing over her head and shoulders, and an +awfully enticing manner. A portly old bloke was with her--her father, +I afterward learned. Somehow my hat blew off. She laughed. I laughed. +Our eyes met. I made a merry remark. She laughed again; and there we +were, introduced. She gave me a little felt hat of her own. I fastened +it on in triumph with a bit of string, and wore it all the rest of the +way. + +"Well, you understand it all. Of course, by the time we got to Calais, +I was head over heels in love, and so was she, for that matter. The +old man was a jolly old John Bull of a man. I don't believe he had the +slightest approach to any designs on me. He didn't know any thing +about me, so how could he? He was jolly, and when we got to Calais he +was convivial. I attached myself to the two, and had a glorious time. +Before three days I had exchanged vows of eternal fidelity with the +lady, and all that, and had gained her consent to marry me on reaching +England. As to the old man there was no trouble at all. He made no +inquiries about my means, but wrung my hand heartily, and said God +bless me. Besides, there were no friends of my own to consider. My +parents were dead, and I had no relations nearer than cousins, for +whom I didn't care a pin. + +"My wife lived at Exeter, and belonged to rather common people; but, +of course, I didn't care for that. Her own manners and style were +refined enough. She had been sent by her father to a very fashionable +boarding-school, where she had been run through the same mould as that +in which her superiors had been formed, and so she might have passed +muster any where. Her father was awfully fond of her, and proud of +her. She tyrannized over him completely. I soon found out that she had +been utterly spoiled by his excessive indulgence, and that she was the +most whimsical, nonsensical, headstrong, little spoiled beauty that +ever lived. But, of course, all that, instead of deterring me, only +increased the fascination which she exercised, and made me more madly +in love than ever. + +"Her name was not a particularly attractive one; but what are names! +It was Arethusa Wiggins. Now the old man always called her "Arry," +which sounded like the vulgar pronunciation of "Harry." Of course I +couldn't call her that, and Arethusa was too infernally long, for a +fellow doesn't want to be all day in pronouncing his wife's name. +Besides, it isn't a bad name in itself, of course; it's poetic, +classic, and does to name a ship of war, but isn't quite the thing for +one's home and hearth. + +"After our marriage we spent the honeymoon in Switzerland, and then +came home. I had a very nice estate, and have it yet. You've never +heard of Dacres Grange, perhaps--well, there's where we began life, +and a devil of a life she began to lead me. It was all very well at +first. During the honey-moon there were only a few outbursts, and +after we came to the Grange she repressed herself for about a +fortnight; but finally she broke out in the most furious fashion; and +I began to find that she had a devil of a temper, and in her fits she +was but a small remove from a mad woman. You see she had been humored +and indulged and petted and coddled by her old fool of a father, until +at last she had grown to be the most whimsical, conceited, tetchy, +suspicious, imperious, domineering, selfish, cruel, hard-hearted, and +malignant young vixen that ever lived; yet this evil nature dwelt in a +form as beautiful as ever lived. She was a beautiful demon, and I soon +found it out. + +"It began out of nothing at all. I had been her adoring slave for +three weeks, until I began to be conscious of the most abominable +tyranny on her part. I began to resist this, and we were on the verge +of an outbreak when we arrived at the Grange. The sight of the old +hall appeased her for a time, but finally the novelty wore off, and +her evil passions burst out. Naturally enough, my first blind +adoration passed away, and I began to take my proper position toward +her; that is to say, I undertook to give her some advice, which she +very sorely needed. This was the signal for a most furious outbreak. +What was worse, her outbreak took place before the servants. Of course +I could do nothing under such circumstances, so I left the room. When +I saw her again she was sullen and vicious. I attempted a +reconciliation, and kneeling down I passed my arms caressingly around +her. 'Look here,' said I, 'my own poor little darling, if I've done +wrong, I'm sorry, and--' + +"Well, what do you think my lady did?" + +"I don't know." + +"She _kicked me_! that's all; she kicked me, just as I was apologizing +to her--just as I was trying to make it up. She kicked me! when I had +done nothing, and she alone had been to blame. What's more, her boots +were rather heavy, and that kick made itself felt unmistakably. + +"I at once arose, and left her without a word. I did not speak to her +then for some time. I used to pass her in the house without looking at +her. This galled her terribly. She made the house too hot for the +servants, and I used to hear her all day long scolding them in a loud +shrill voice, till the sound of that voice became horrible to me. + +"You must not suppose, however, that I became alienated all at once. +That was impossible. I loved her very dearly. After she had kicked me +away my love still lasted. It was a galling thought to a man like me +that she, a common girl, the daughter of a small tradesman, should +have kicked me; me, the descendant of Crusaders, by Jove! and of the +best blood in England; but after a while pride gave way to love, and I +tried to open the way for a reconciliation once or twice. I attempted +to address her in her calmer moods, but it was without any success. +She would not answer me at all. If servants were in the room she would +at once proceed to give orders to them, just as though I had not +spoken. She showed a horrible malignancy in trying to dismiss the +older servants, whom she knew to be favorites of mine. Of course I +would not let her do it. + +"Well, one day I found that this sort of life was intolerable, and I +made an effort to put an end to it all. My love was not all gone yet, +and I began to think that I had been to blame. She had always been +indulged, and I ought to have kept up the system a little longer, and +let her down more gradually. I thought of her as I first saw her in +the glory of her youthful beauty on the Calais boat, and softened my +heart till I began to long for a reconciliation. Really I could not +see where I had done any thing out of the way. I was awfully fond of +her at first, and would have remained so if she had let me; but, you +perceive, her style was not exactly the kind which is best adapted to +keep a man at a woman's feet. If she had shown the slightest particle +of tenderness, I would have gladly forgiven her all--yes, even the +kick, by Jove! + +"We had been married about six months or so, and had not spoken for +over four months; so on the day I refer to I went to her room. She +received me with a sulky expression, and a hard stare full of insult. + +"'My dear,' said I, 'I have come to talk seriously with you.' + +"'Kate,' said she, 'show this gentleman out.' + +"It was her maid to whom she spoke. The maid colored. I turned to her +and pointed to the door, and she went out herself. My wife stood +trembling with rage--a beautiful fury. + +"'I have determined,' said I, quietly, 'to make one last effort for +reconciliation, and I want to be heard. Hear me now, dear, dear wife. +I want your love again; I can not live this way. Can nothing be done? +Must I, must you, always live this way? Have I done any wrong? If I +have, I repent. But come, let us forget our quarrel; let us remember +the first days of our acquaintance. We loved one another, darling. And +how beautiful you were! You are still as beautiful; won't you be as +loving? Don't be hard on a fellow, dear. If I've done any wrong, tell +me, and I'll make it right. See, we are joined together for life. +Can't we make life sweeter for one another than it is now? Come, my +wife, be mine again.' + +"I went on in this strain for some time, and my own words actually +softened me more as I spoke. I felt sorry, too, for my wife, she +seemed so wretched. Besides, it was a last chance, and I determined to +humble myself. Any thing was better than perpetual hate and misery. So +at last I got so affected by my own eloquence that I became quite +spooney. Her back was turned to me; I could not see her face. I +thought by her silence that she was affected, and, in a gush of +tenderness, I put my arm around her. + +"In an instant she flung it off, and stepped back, confronting me with +a face as hard and an eye as malevolent as a demon. + +"She reached out her hand toward the bell. + +"'What are you going to do?' I asked. + +"'Ring for my maid,' said she. + +[Illustration: "VERY WELL. HERE IT IS."] + +"'Don't,' said I, getting between her and the bell. 'Think; stop, I +implore you. This is our last chance for a reconciliation.' + +"She stepped back with a cruel smile. She had a small penknife in her +hand. Her eyes glittered venomously. + +"'Reconciliation,' she said, with a sneer. '_I_ don't want it; _I_ +don't want _you. You_ came and forced yourself here. Ring for my maid, +and I will let her show you the door.' + +"'You can't mean it?' I said. + +"'I do mean it,' she replied. 'Ring the bell,' she added, imperiously. + +"I stood looking at her. + +"'Leave the room, then,' she said. + +"'I must have a satisfactory answer,' said I. + +"'Very well,' said she. 'Here it is.' + +"And saying this she took the penknife by the blade, between her thumb +and finger, and slung it at me. It struck me on the arm, and buried +itself deep in the flesh till it touched the bone. I drew it out, and +without another word left the room. As I went out I heard her +summoning the maid in a loud, stern voice. + +"Well, after that I went to the Continent, and spent about six months. +Then I returned. + +"On my return I found every thing changed. She had sent off all the +servants, and brought there a lot of ruffians whom she was unable to +manage, and who threw every thing into confusion. All the gentry +talked of her, and avoided the place. My friends greeted me with +strange, pitying looks. She had cut down most of the woods, and sold +the timber; she had sent off a number of valuable pictures and sold +them. This was to get money, for I afterward found out that avarice +was one of her strongest vices. + +"The sight of all this filled me with indignation, and I at once +turned out the whole lot of servants, leaving only two or three maids. +I obtained some of the old servants, and reinstated them. All this +made my wife quite wild. She came up to me once and began to storm, +but I said something to her which shut her up at once. + +"One day I came home and found her on the portico, in her +riding-habit. She was whipping one of the maids with the butt end of +her riding-whip. I rushed up and released the poor creature, whose +cries were really heart-rending, when my wife turned on me, like a +fury, and struck two blows over my head. One of the scars is on my +forehead still. See." + +And Dacres put aside his hair on the top of his head, just over his +right eye, and showed a long red mark, which seemed like the scar of a +dangerous wound. + +"It was an ugly blow," he continued. "I at once tore the whip from +her, and, grasping her hand, led her into the drawing-room. There I +confronted her, holding her tight. I dare say I was rather a queer +sight, for the blood was rushing down over my face, and dripping from +my beard. + +"'Look here, now,' I said; 'do you know any reason why I shouldn't lay +this whip over your shoulders? The English law allows it. Don't you +feel that you deserve it?' + +"She shrank down, pale and trembling. She was a coward, evidently, and +accessible to physical terror. + +"'If I belonged to your class,' said I, 'I would do it. But I am of a +different order. I am a gentleman. Go. After all, I'm not sorry that +you gave me this blow.' + +"I stalked out of the room, had a doctor, who bound up the wound, and +then meditated over my situation. I made up my mind at once to a +separation. Thus far she had done nothing to warrant a divorce, and +separation was the only thing. I was laid up and feverish for about a +month, but at the end of that time I had an interview with my wife. I +proposed a separation, and suggested that she should go home to her +father. This she refused. She declared herself quite willing to have a +separation, but insisted on living at Dacres Grange. + +"'And what am I to do?' I asked. + +"'Whatever you please,' she replied, calmly. + +"'Do you really propose,' said I, 'to drive me out of the home of my +ancestors, and live here yourself? Do you think I will allow this +place to be under your control after the frightful havoc that you have +made?' + +"'I shall remain here,' said she, firmly. + +"I said nothing more. I saw that she was immovable. At the same time I +could not consent. I could not live with her, and I could not go away +leaving her there. I could not give up the ancestral home to her, to +mar and mangle and destroy. Well, I waited for about two months, and +then--" + +"Well?" asked Hawbury, as Dacres hesitated. + +"Dacres Grange was burned down," said the other, in a low voice. + +"Burned down!" + +"Yes." + +"Good Lord!" + +"It caught fire in the daytime. There were but few servants. No +fire-engines were near, for the Grange was in a remote place, and so +the fire soon gained headway and swept over all. My wife was frantic. +She came to me as I stood looking at the spectacle, and charged me +with setting fire to it. I smiled at her, but made no reply. + +"So you see she was burned out, and that question was settled. It was +a terrible thing, but desperate diseases require desperate remedies; +and I felt it more tolerable to have the house in ruins than to have +her living there while I had to be a wanderer. + +"She was now at my mercy. We went to Exeter. She went to her father, +and I finally succeeded in effecting an arrangement which was +satisfactory on all sides. + +"First of all, the separation should be absolute, and neither of us +should ever hold communication with the other in any shape or way. + +"Secondly, she should take another name, so as to conceal the fact +that she was my wife, and not do any further dishonor to the name. + +"In return for this I was to give her outright twenty thousand pounds +as her own absolutely, to invest or spend just as she chose. She +insisted on this, so that she need not be dependent on any annual +allowance. In consideration of this she forfeited every other claim, +all dower right in the event of my death, and every thing else. This +was all drawn up in a formal document, and worded as carefully as +possible. I don't believe that the document would be of much use in a +court of law in case she wished to claim any of her rights, but it +served to satisfy her, and she thought it was legally sound and +actually inviolable. + +"Here we separated. I left England, and have never been there since." + +Dacres stopped, and sat silent for a long time. + +"Could she have been mad?" asked Hawbury. + +"I used to think so, but I believe not. She showed too much sense in +every thing relating to herself. She sold pictures and timber, and +kept every penny. She was acute enough in grasping all she could. +During our last interviews while making these arrangements she was +perfectly cool and lady-like." + +"Have you ever heard about her since?" + +"Never." + +"Is she alive yet?" + +"That's the bother." + +"What! don't you know?" + +"No." + +"Haven't you ever tried to find out?" + +"Yes. Two years ago I went and had inquiries made at Exeter. Nothing +could be found out. She and her father had left the place immediately +after my departure, and nothing was known about them." + +"I wonder that you didn't go yourself?" + +"What for? I didn't care about seeing her or finding her." + +"Do you think she's alive yet?" + +"I'm afraid she is. You see she always had excellent health, and +there's no reason why she should not live to be an octogenarian." + +"Yet she may be dead." + +"_May_ be! And what sort of comfort is that to me in my present +position, I should like to know? _May_ be? Is that a sufficient +foundation for me to build on? No. In a moment of thoughtlessness I +have allowed myself to forget the horrible position in which I am. But +now I recall it. I'll crush down my feelings, and be a man again. I'll +see the child-angel once more; once more feast my soul over her sweet +and exquisite loveliness; once more get a glance from her tender, +innocent, and guileless eyes, and then away to South America." + +"You said your wife took another name." + +"Yes." + +"What was it? Do you know it?" + +"Oh yes; it was _Willoughby_" + +"_Willoughby_!" cried Hawbury, with a start; "why, that's the name of +my Ethel's friend, at Montreal. Could it have been the same?" + +"Pooh, man! How is that possible? Willoughby is not an uncommon name. +It's not more likely that your Willoughby and mine are the same than +it is that your Ethel is the one I met at Vesuvius. It's only a +coincidence, and not a very wonderful one, either." + +"It seems con-foundedly odd, too," said Hawbury, thoughtfully. +"Willoughby? Ethel? Good Lord! But pooh! What rot? As though they +_could_ be the same. Preposterous! By Jove!" + +And Hawbury stroked away the preposterous idea through his long, +pendent whiskers. + +[Illustration: "SHE CAUGHT MINNIE IN HER ARMS."] + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +NEW EMBARRASSMENTS. + + +Mrs. Willoughby had been spending a few days with a friend whom she +had found in Naples, and on her return was greatly shocked to hear of +Minnie's adventure on Vesuvius. Lady Dalrymple and Ethel had a story +to tell which needed no exaggerations and amplifications to agitate +her strongly. Minnie was not present during the recital; so, after +hearing it, Mrs. Willoughby went to her room. + +Here she caught Minnie in her arms, and kissed her in a very effusive +manner. + +"Oh, Minnie, my poor darling, what is all this about Vesuvius? Is it +true? It is terrible. And now I will never dare to leave you again. +How could I think that you would be in any danger with Lady Dalrymple +and Ethel? As to Ethel, I am astonished. She is always so grave and so +sad that she is the very last person I would have supposed capable of +leading you into danger." + +"Now, Kitty dearest, that's not true," said Minnie; "she didn't lead +me at all. I led her. And how did I know there was any danger? I +remember now that dear, darling Ethel said there was, and I didn't +believe her. But it's always the way." And Minnie threw her little +head on one side, and gave a resigned sigh. + +"And did you really get into the crater?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, with +a shudder. + +"Oh, I suppose so. They all said so," said Minnie, folding her little +hands in front of her. "I only remember some smoke, and then jolting +about dreadfully on the shoulder of some great--big--awful--man." + +"Oh dear!" sighed Mrs. Willoughby. + +"What's the matter, Kitty dearest?" + +"Another man!" groaned her sister. + +"Well, and how _could_ I help it?" said Minnie. "I'm _sure_ I didn't +want him. I'm _sure_ I think he might have let me alone. I don't see +_why_ they all act so. I _wish_ they wouldn't be all the time coming +and saving my life. If people _will_ go and save my life, I can't help +it. I think it's very, very horrid of them." + +"Oh dear! oh dear!" sighed her sister again. + +"Now, Kitty, stop." + +"Another man!" sighed Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Now, Kitty, if you are so unkind, I'll cry. You're _always_ teasing +me. You _never_ do any thing to comfort me. You _know_ I want comfort, +and I'm not strong, and people all come and save my life and worry me; +and I really sometimes think I'd rather not live at all if my life +_has_ to be saved so often. I'm sure _I_ don't know why they go and do +it. I'm sure _I_ never heard of any person who is always going and +getting her life saved, and bothered, and proposed to, and written to, +and chased, and frightened to death. And I've a _great_ mind to go and +get married, just to stop it all. And I'd _just_ as soon marry this +last man as not, and make him drive all the others away from me. He's +big enough." + +Minnie ended all this with a little sob; and her sister, as usual, did +her best to soothe and quiet her. + +"Well, but, darling, how did it all happen?" + +"Oh, don't, don't." + +"But you might tell _me_" + +"Oh, I can't bear to think of it. It's too horrible." + +"Poor darling--the crater?" + +"No, the great, big man. I didn't see any crater." + +"Weren't you in the crater?" + +"No, I wasn't." + +"They said you were." + +"I wasn't. I was on the back of a big, horrid man, who gave great +jumps down the side of an awful mountain, all sand and things, and +threw me down at the bottom of it, and--and--disarranged all my hair. +And I was so frightened that I couldn't even cur--cur--cry." + +Here Minnie sobbed afresh, and Mrs. Willoughby petted her again. + +"And you shouldn't tease me so; and it's very unkind in you; and you +know I'm not well; and I can't bear to think about it all; and I know +you're going to scold me; and you're _always_ scolding me; and you +_never_ do what I want you to. And then people are _always_ coming and +saving my life, and I can't bear it any more." + +"No-o-o-o-o-o, n-n-no-o-o-o, darling!" said Mrs. Willoughby, +soothingly, in the tone of a nurse appeasing a fretful child. "You +sha'n't bear it any more." + +"I don't _want_ them to save me any more." + +"Well, they sha'n't _do_ it, then," said Mrs. Willoughby, +affectionately, in a somewhat maudlin tone. + +"And the next time I lose my life, I don't want to be saved. I want +them to let me alone, and I'll come home myself." + +"And so you shall, darling; you shall do just as you please. So, now, +cheer up; don't cry;" and Mrs. Willoughby tried to wipe Minnie's eyes. + +"But you're treating me just like a baby, and I don't want to be +talked to so," said Minnie, fretfully. + +Mrs. Willoughby retreated with a look of despair. + +"Well, then, dear, I'll do just whatever you want me to do." + +"Well, then, I want you to tell me what I am to do." + +"About what?" + +"Why, about this great, big, horrid man." + +"I thought you didn't want me to talk about this any more." + +"But I _do_ want you to talk about it. You're the only person that +I've got to talk to about it; nobody else knows how peculiarly I'm +situated; and I didn't think that you'd give me up because I had fresh +troubles." + +"Give you up, darling!" echoed her sister, in surprise. + +"You said you wouldn't talk about it any more." + +"But I thought you didn't want me to talk about it." + +"But I _do_ want you to." + +"Very well, then; and now I want you first of all, darling, to tell me +how you happened to get into such danger." + +"Well, you know," began Minnie, who now seemed calmer--"you know we +all went out for a drive. And we drove along for miles. Such a drive! +There were lazaroni, and donkeys, and caleches with as many as twenty +in each, all pulled by one poor horse, and it's a great shame; and +pigs--oh, _such_ pigs! Not a particle of hair on them, you know, and +looking like young elephants, you know; and we saw great droves of +oxen, and long lines of booths, no end; and people selling macaroni, +and other people eating it right in the open street, you know--such +fun!--and fishermen and fish-wives. Oh, how they _were_ screaming, and +oh, _such_ a hubbub as there was! and we couldn't go on fast, and +Dowdy seemed really frightened." + +"Dowdy?" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, in an interrogative tone. + +"Oh, that's a name I've just invented for Lady Dalrymple. It's better +than Rymple. She said so. It's Dowager shortened. She's a dowager, you +know. And so, you know, I was on the front seat all the time, when all +at once I saw a gentleman on horseback. He was a great big man--oh, +_so_ handsome!--and he was looking at poor little me as though he +would eat me up. And the moment I saw him I was frightened out of my +poor little wits, for I knew he was coming to save my life." + +"You poor little puss! what put such an idea as that into your +ridiculous little head?" + +"Oh, I knew it--second-sight, you know. We've got Scotch blood, Kitty +darling, you know. So, you know, I sat, and I saw that he was +pretending not to see me, and not to be following us; but all the time +he was taking good care to keep behind us, when he could easily have +passed us, and all to get a good look at poor me, you know. + +"Well," continued Minnie, drawing a long breath, "you know I was +awfully frightened; and so I sat looking at him, and I whispered all +the time to myself: 'Oh, please don't!--ple-e-e-e-e-ease don't! Don't +come and save my life! Ple-e-e-e-e-ease let me alone! I don't want to +be saved at all.' I said this, you know, all to myself, and the more I +said it the more he seemed to fix his eyes on me." + +"It was very, very rude in him, _I_ think," said Mrs. Willoughby, with +some indignation. + +"No, it wasn't," said Minnie, sharply. "He wasn't rude at all. He +tried not to look at me. He pretended to be looking at the sea, and at +the pigs, and all that sort of thing, you know; but all the time, you +know, I knew very well that he saw me out of the corner of his +eye--this way." + +And Minnie half turned her head, and threw upon her sister, out of the +corner of her eyes, a glance so languishing that the other laughed. + +"He didn't look at you that way. I hope?" + +"There was nothing to laugh at in it at all," said Minnie. "He had an +awfully solemn look--it was so earnest, so sad, and so dreadful, that +I really began to feel quite frightened. And so would _you_; wouldn't +_you_, now, Kitty darling; now _wouldn't_ you? Please say so." + +"Oh yes!" + +"Of course you would. Well, this person followed us. I could see him +very easily, though he tried to avoid notice; and so at last we got to +the Hermitage, and he came too. Well, you know, I think I was very +much excited, and I asked Dowdy to let us go and see the cone; so she +let us go. She gave no end of warnings, and we promised to do all that +she said. So Ethel and I went out, and there was the stranger. Well, I +felt more excited than ever, and a little bit frightened--just a very, +very, tiny, little bit, you know, and I teased Ethel to go to the +cone. Well, the stranger kept in sight all the time, you know, and I +_felt_ his eyes on me--I really _felt_ them. So, you know, when we got +at the foot of the cone, I was so excited that I was really quite +beside myself, and I teased and teased, till at last Ethel consented +to go up. So the men took us up on chairs, and all the time the +stranger was in sight. He walked up by himself with great, big, long, +strong strides. So we went on till we got at the top, and then I was +wilder than ever. I didn't know that there was a particle of danger. I +was dying with curiosity to look down, and see where the smoke came +from. The stranger was standing there too, and that's what made me so +excited. I wanted to show him--I don't know what. I think my idea was +to show him that I could take care of myself. So then I teased and +teased, and Ethel begged and prayed, and she cried, and I laughed; and +there stood the stranger, seeing it all, until at last I started off, +and ran up to the top, you know." + +Mrs. Willoughby shuddered, and took her sister's hand. + +"There was no end of smoke, you know, and it was awfully unpleasant, +and I got to the top I don't know how, when suddenly I fainted." + +Minnie paused for a moment, and looked at her sister with a rueful +face. + +"Well, now, dear, darling, the very--next--thing--that I remember is +this, and it's horrid: I felt awful jolts, and found myself in the +arms of a great, big, horrid man, who was running down the side of the +mountain with dreadfully long jumps, and I felt as though he was some +horrid ogre carrying poor me away to his den to eat me up. But I +didn't say one word. I wasn't much frightened. I felt provoked. I knew +it was that horrid man. And then I wondered what you'd say; and I +thought, oh, how you _would_ scold! And then I knew that this horrid +man would chase me away from Italy; and then I would have to go to +Turkey, and have my life saved by a Mohammedan. And that was horrid. + +"Well, at last he stopped and laid me down. He was very gentle, though +he was so big. I kept my eyes shut, and lay as still as a mouse, +hoping that Ethel would come. But Ethel didn't. She was coming down +with the chair, you know, and her men couldn't run like mine. And oh, +Kitty darling, you have no _idea_ what I suffered. This horrid man was +rubbing and pounding at my hands, and sighing and groaning. I stole a +little bit of a look at him--just a little bit of a bit--and saw tears +in his eyes, and a wild look of fear in his face. Then I knew that he +was going to propose to me on the spot, and kept my eyes shut tighter +than ever. + +"Well, at last he hurt my hands so that I thought I'd try to make him +stop. So I spoke as low as I could, and asked if I was home, and he +said yes." + +Minnie paused. + +"Well?" asked her sister. + +"Well," said Minnie, in a doleful tone, "I then asked, 'Is that you, +papa dear?'" + +Minnie stopped again. + +"Well?" asked Mrs. Willoughby once more. + +"Well--" + +"Well, go on." + +"Well, he said--he said, 'Yes, darling'--and--" + +"And what?" + +"And he kissed me," said Minnie, in a doleful voice. + +"Kissed you!" exclaimed her sister, with flashing eyes. + +"Ye-yes," stammered Minnie, with a sob; "and I think it's a shame; and +none of them ever did so before; and I don't want you ever to go away +again, Kitty darling." + +"The miserable wretch!" cried Mrs. Willoughby, indignantly. + +"No, he isn't--he isn't that," said Minnie. "He isn't a miserable +wretch at all." + +"How could any one be so base who pretends to the name of gentleman!" +cried Mrs. Willoughby. + +"He wasn't base--and it's very wicked of you, Kitty. He only +pretended, you know." + +"Pretended!" + +"Yes." + +"Pretended what?" + +"Why, that he was my--my father, you know." + +"Does Ethel know this?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, after a curious look at +Minnie. + +"No, of course not, nor Dowdy either; and you mustn't go and make any +disturbance." + +"Disturbance? no; but if I ever see him, I'll let him know what I +think of him," said Mrs. Willoughby, severely. + +"But he saved my life, and so you know you can't be _very_ harsh with +him. Please don't--ple-e-e-ease now, Kitty darling." + +"Oh, you little goose, what whimsical idea have you got now?" + +"Please don't, ple-e-e-ease don't," repeated Minnie. + +"Oh, never mind; go on now, darling, and tell me about the rest of +it." + +"Well, there isn't any more. I lay still, you know, and at last Ethel +came; and then we went back to Dowdy, and then we came home, you +know." + +"Well, I hope you've lost him." + +"Lost him? Oh no; I never do. They always _will_ come. Besides, this +one will, I know." + +"Why?" + +"Because he said so." + +"Said so? when?" + +"Yesterday." + +"Yesterday?" + +"Yes; we met him." + +"Who?" + +"Dowdy and I. We were out driving. We stopped and spoke to him. He was +dreadfully earnest and awfully embarrassed; and I knew he was going to +propose; so I kept whispering to myself all the time, 'Oh, please +don't--please don't;' but I know he will; and he'll be here soon too." + +"He sha'n't. I won't let him. I'll never give him the chance." + +"I think you needn't be so cruel." + +"Cruel!" + +"Yes; to the poor man." + +"Why, you don't want another man, I hope?" + +"N-no; but then I don't want to hurt his feelings. It was awfully good +of him, you know, and _aw_fully plucky." + +[Illustration: +"IF I EVER SEE HIM, I'LL LET HIM KNOW WHAT I THINK OF HIM."] + +"Well, I should think that you would prefer avoiding him, in your +peculiar situation." + +"Yes, but he may feel hurt." + +"Oh, he may see you once or twice with me." + +"But he may want to see me alone, and what _can_ I do?" + +"Really now, Minnie, you must remember that you are in a serious +position. There is that wretched Captain Kirby." + +"I know," said Minnie, with a sigh. + +"And that dreadful American. By-the-way, darling, you have never told +me his name. It isn't of any consequence, but I should like to know +the American's name." + +"It's--Rufus K. Gunn." + +"Rufus K. Gunn; what a funny name! and what in the world is 'K' for?" + +"Oh, nothing. He says it is the fashion in his country to have some +letter of the alphabet between one's names, and he chose 'K,' because +it was so awfully uncommon. Isn't it funny, Kitty darling?" + +"Oh dear!" sighed her sister; "and then there is that pertinacious +Count Girasole. Think what trouble we had in getting quietly rid of +him. I'm afraid all the time that he will not stay at Florence, as he +said, for he seems to have no fixed abode. First he was going to Rome, +and then Venice, and at last he committed himself to a statement that +he had to remain at Florence, and so enabled us to get rid of him. But +I know he'll come upon us again somewhere, and then we'll have all the +trouble over again. Oh dear! Well, Minnie darling, do you know the +name of this last one?" + +"Oh yes." + +"What is it?" + +"It's a funny name," said Minnie; "a very funny name." + +"Tell it to me." + +"It's Scone Dacres; and isn't that a funny name?" + +Mrs. Willoughby started at the mention of that name. Then she turned +away her head, and did not say a word for a long time. + +"Kitty!" + +No answer. + +"Kitty darling, what's the matter?" + +Mrs. Willoughby turned her head once more. Her face was quite calm, +and her voice had its usual tone, as she asked, + +"Say that name again." + +"Scone Dacres," said Minnie. + +"Scone Dacres!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby; "and what sort of a man is +he?" + +"Big--very big--awfully big!" said Minnie. "Great, big head and broad +shoulders. Great, big arms, that carried me as if I were a feather; +big beard too; and it tickled me so when he--he pretended that he was +my father; and very sad. And, oh! I know I should be so _aw_fully fond +of him. And, oh! Kitty darling, what do you think?" + +"What, dearest?" + +"Why, I'm--I'm afraid--I'm really beginning to--to--like him--just a +little tiny bit, you know." + +"Scone Dacres!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, who didn't seem to have +heard this last effusion. "Scone Dacres! Well, darling, don't trouble +yourself; he sha'n't trouble you." + +"But I _want_ him to," said Minnie. + +"Oh, nonsense, child!" + +[Illustration: "HALLO, OLD MAN, WHAT'S UP NOW?"] + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +A FEARFUL DISCOVERY. + + +A few days after this Hawbury was in his room, when Dacres entered. + +"Hallo, old man, what's up now? How goes the war?" said Hawbury. "But +what the mischief's the matter? You look cut up. Your brow is sad; +your eyes beneath flash like a falchion from its sheath. What's +happened? You look half snubbed, and half desperate." + +Dacres said not a word, but flung himself into a chair with a look +that suited Hawbury's description of him quite accurately. His brows +lowered into a heavy frown, his lips were compressed, and his breath +came quick and hard through his inflated nostrils. He sat thus for +some time without taking any notice whatever of his friend, and at +length lighted a cigar, which he smoked, as he often did when excited, +in great voluminous puffs. Hawbury said nothing, but after one or two +quick glances at his friend, rang a bell and ordered some "Bass." + +"Here, old fellow," said he, drawing the attention of Dacres to the +refreshing draught. "Take some--'Quaff, oh, quaff this kind nepenthe, +and forget thy lost Lenore.'" + +Dacres at this gave a heavy sigh that sounded like a groan, and +swallowed several tumblers in quick succession. + +"Hawbury!" said he at length, in a half-stifled voice. + +"Well, old man?" + +"I've had a blow to-day full on the breast that fairly staggered me." + +"By Jove!" + +"Fact. I've just come from a mad ride along the shore. I've been mad, +I think, for two or three hours. Of all the monstrous, abominable, +infernal, and unheard-of catastrophes this is the worst." + +He stopped, and puffed away desperately at his cigar. + +"Don't keep a fellow in suspense this way," said Hawbury at last. +"What's up? Out with it, man." + +"Well, you know, yesterday I called there." + +Hawbury nodded. + +"She was not at home." + +"So you said." + +"You know she really wasn't, for I told you that I met their carriage. +The whole party were in it, and on the front seat beside Minnie there +was another lady. This is the one that I had not seen before. She +makes the fourth in that party. She and Minnie had their backs turned +as they came up. The other ladies bowed as they passed, and as I held +off my hat I half turned to catch Minnie's eyes, when I caught sight +of the face of the lady. It startled me so much that I was +thunder-struck, and stood there with my hat off after they had passed +me for some time." + +"You said nothing about that, old chap. Who the deuce could she have +been?" + +"No, I said nothing about it. As I cantered off I began to think that +it was only a fancy of mine, and finally I was sure of it, and laughed +it off. For, you must know, the lady's face looked astonishingly like +a certain face that I don't particularly care to see--certainly not in +such close connection with Minnie. But, you see, I thought it might +have been my fancy, so that I finally shook off the feeling, and said +nothing to you about it." + +Dacres paused here, rubbed his hand violently over his hair at the +place where the scar was, and then, frowning heavily, resumed: + +"Well, this afternoon I called again. They were at home. On entering I +found three ladies there. One was Lady Dalrymple, and the others were +Minnie and her friend Ethel--either her friend or her sister. I think +she's her sister. Well, I sat for about five minutes, and was just +beginning to feel the full sense of my happiness, when the door opened +and another lady entered. Hawbury"--and Dacres's tones deepened into +an awful solemnity--"Hawbury, it was the lady that I saw in the +carriage yesterday. One look at her was enough. I was assured then +that my impressions yesterday were not dreams, but the damnable and +abhorrent truth!" + +"What impressions--you haven't told me yet, you know?" + +[Illustration: "I STOOD TRANSFIXED."] + +"Wait a minute. I rose as she entered, and confronted her. She looked +at me calmly, and then stood as though expecting to be introduced. +There was no emotion visible whatever. She was prepared for it: I was +not: and so she was as cool as when I saw her last, and, what is more, +just as young and beautiful." + +"The devil!" cried Hawbury. + +Dacres poured out another glass of ale and drank it. His hand trembled +slightly as he put down the glass, and he sat for some time in thought +before he went on. + +"Well, Lady Dalrymple introduced us. It was Mrs. Willoughby!" + +"By Jove!" cried Hawbury. "I saw you were coming to that." + +"Well, you know, the whole thing was so sudden, so unexpected, and so +perfectly overwhelming, that I stood transfixed. I said nothing. I +believe I bowed, and then somehow or other, I really don't know how, I +got away, and, mounting my horse, rode off like a madman. Then I came +home, and here you see me." + +There was a silence now for some time. + +"Are you sure that it was your wife?" + +"Of course I am. How could I be mistaken?" + +"Are you sure the name was Willoughby?" + +"Perfectly sure." + +"And that is the name your wife took?" + +"Yes; I told you so before, didn't I?" + +"Yes. But think now. Mightn't there be some mistake?" + +"Pooh! how could there be any mistake?" + +"Didn't you see any change in her?" + +"No, only that she looked much more quiet than she used to. Not so +active, you know. In her best days she was always excitable, and a +little demonstrative; but now she seems to have sobered down, and is +as quiet and well-bred as any of the others." + +"Was there not any change in her at all?" + +"Not so much as I would have supposed; certainly not so much as there +is in me. But then I've been knocking about all over the world, and +she's been living a life of peace and calm, with the sweet +consciousness of having triumphed over a hated husband, and possessing +a handsome competency. Now she mingles in the best society. She +associates with lords and ladies. She enjoys life in England, while I +am an exile. No doubt she passes for a fine young widow. No doubt, +too, she has lots of admirers. They aspire to her hand. They write +poetry to her. They make love to her. Confound her!" + +Dacres's voice grew more and more agitated and excited as he spoke, +and at length his tirade against his wife ended in something that was +almost a roar. + +Hawbury said nothing, but listened, with his face full of sympathy. At +last his pent-up feeling found expression in his favorite exclamation, +"By Jove!" + +"Wouldn't I be justified in wringing her neck?" asked Dacres, after a +pause. "And what's worse," he continued, without waiting for an answer +to his question--"what's worse, her presence here in this unexpected +way has given me, _me_, mind you, a sense of guilt, while she is, of +course, immaculate. _I_, mind you--_I_, the injured husband, with the +scar on my head from a wound made by _her_ hand, and all the ghosts of +my ancestors howling curses over me at night for my desolated and +ruined home--_I_ am to be conscience-stricken in her presence, as if I +were a felon, while _she_, the really guilty one--the blight and +bitter destruction of my life--_she_ is to appear before me now as +injured, and must make her appearance here, standing by the side of +that sweet child-angel, and warning me away. Confound it all, man! Do +you mean to say that such a thing is to be borne?" + +Dacres was now quite frantic; so Hawbury, with a sigh of perplexity, +lighted a fresh cigar, and thus took refuge from the helplessness of +his position. It was clearly a state of things in which advice was +utterly useless, and consolation impossible. What could he advise, or +what consolation could he offer? The child-angel was now out of his +friend's reach, and the worst fears of the lover were more than +realized. + +"I told you I was afraid of this," continued Dacres. "I had a +suspicion that she was alive, and I firmly believe she'll outlive me +forty years; but I must say I never expected to see her in this way, +under such circumstances. And then to find her so infernally +beautiful! Confound her! she don't look over twenty-five. How the +mischief does she manage it? Oh, she's a deep one! But perhaps she's +changed. She seems so calm, and came into the room so gently, and +looked at me so steadily. Not a tremor, not a shake, as I live. Calm, +Sir; cool as steel, and hard too. She looked away, and then looked +back. They were searching glances, too, as though they read me through +and through. Well, there was no occasion for that. She ought to know +Scone Dacres well enough, I swear. Cool! And there stood I, with the +blood flashing to my head, and throbbing fire underneath the scar of +her wound--hers--her own property, for she made it! That was the woman +that kicked me, that struck at me, that caused the destruction of my +ancestral house, that drove me to exile, and that now drives me back +from my love. But, by Heaven! it'll take more than her to do it; and +I'll show her again, as I showed her once before, that Scone Dacres is +her master. And, by Jove! she'll find that it'll take more than +herself to keep me away from Minnie Fay." + +"See here, old boy," said Hawbury, "you may as well throw up the +sponge." + +"I won't," said Dacres, gruffly. + +"You see it isn't your wife that you have to consider, but the girl; +and do you think the girl or her friends would have a married man +paying his attentions in that quarter? Would you have the face to do +it under your own wife's eye? By Jove!" + +The undeniable truth of this assertion was felt by Dacres even in his +rage. But the very fact that it was unanswerable, and that he was +helpless, only served to deepen and intensify his rage. Yet he said +nothing; it was only in his face and manner that his rage was +manifested. He appeared almost to suffocate under the rush of fierce, +contending passions; big distended veins swelled out in his forehead, +which was also drawn far down in a gloomy frown; his breath came thick +and fast, and his hands were clenched tight together. Hawbury watched +him in silence as before, feeling all the time the impossibility of +saying any thing that could be of any use whatever. + +"Well, old fellow," said Dacres at last, giving a long breath, in +which he seemed to throw off some of his excitement, "you're right, of +course, and I am helpless. There's no chance for me. Paying +attentions is out of the question, and the only thing for me to do is +to give up the whole thing. But that isn't to be done at once. It's +been long since I've seen any one for whom I felt any tenderness, and +this little thing, I know, is fond of me. I can't quit her at once. I +must stay on for a time, at least, and have occasional glimpses at +her. It gives me a fresh sense of almost heavenly sweetness to look at +her fair young face. Besides, I feel that I am far more to her than +any other man. No other man has stood to her in the relation in which +I have stood. Recollect how I saved her from death. That is no light +thing. She must feel toward me as she has never felt to any other. She +is not one who can forget how I snatched her from a fearful death, and +brought her back to life. Every time she looks at me she seems to +convey all that to me in her glance." + +"Oh, well, my dear fellow, really now," said Hawbury, "just think. You +can't do any thing." + +"But I don't want to do any thing." + +"It never can end in any thing, you know." + +"But I don't want it to end in any thing." + +"You'll only bother her by entangling her affections." + +"But I don't want to entangle her affections." + +"Then what the mischief _do_ you want to do?" + +"Why, very little. I'll start off soon for the uttermost ends of the +earth, but I wish to stay a little longer and see her sweet face. It's +not much, is it? It won't compromise her, will it? She need not run +any risk, need she? And I'm a man of honor, am I not? You don't +suppose me to be capable of any baseness, do you?" + +"My dear fellow, how absurd! Of course not. Only I was afraid by +giving way to this you might drift on into a worse state of mind. +She's all safe, I fancy, surrounded as she is by so many guardians. It +is you that I'm anxious about." + +"Don't be alarmed, old chap, about me. I feel calmer already. I can +face my situation firmly, and prepare for the worst. While I have been +sitting here I have thought out the future. I will stay here four or +five weeks. I will only seek solace for myself by riding about where I +may meet her. I do not intend to go to the house at all. My demon of a +wife may have the whole house to herself. I won't even give her the +pleasure of supposing that she has thwarted me. She shall never even +suspect the state of my heart. That would be bliss indeed to one like +her, for then she would find herself able to put me on the rack. No, +my boy; I've thought it all over. Scone Dacres is himself again. No +more nonsense now. Do you understand now what I mean?" + +"Yes," said Hawbury, slowly, and in his worst drawl; "but ah, really, +don't you think it's all nonsense?" + +"What?" + +"Why, this ducking and diving about to get a glimpse of her face." + +"I don't intend to duck and dive about. I merely intend to ride like +any other gentleman. What put that into your head, man?" + +"Well, I don't know; I gathered it from the way you expressed +yourself." + +"Well, I don't intend any thing of the kind. I simply wish to have +occasional looks at her--to get a bow and a smile of recognition when +I meet her, and have a few additional recollections to turn over in my +thoughts after I have left her forever. Perhaps this seems odd." + +"Oh no, it doesn't. I quite understand it. A passing smile or a +parting sigh is sometimes more precious than any other memory. I know +all about it, you know--looks, glances, smiles, sighs, and all that +sort of thing, you know." + +"Well, now, old chap, there's one thing I want you to do for me." + +"Well, what is it?" + +"It isn't much, old fellow. It isn't much. I simply wish you to visit +there." + +"_Me_?--visit _there_? What! me--and visit? Why, my dear fellow, don't +you know how I hate such bother?" + +"I know all about that; but, old boy, it's only for a few weeks I ask +it, and for my sake, as a particular favor. I put it in that light." + +"Oh, well, really, dear boy, if you put it in that light, you know, of +course, that I'll do any thing, even if it comes to letting myself be +bored to death." + +"Just a visit a day or so." + +"A visit a day!" Hawbury looked aghast. + +"It isn't much to ask, you know," continued Dacres. "You see my reason +is this: I can't go there myself, as you see, but I hunger to hear +about her. I should like to hear how she looks, and what she says, and +whether she thinks of me." + +"Oh, come now! look here, my dear fellow, you're putting it a little +too strong. You don't expect me to go there and talk to her about you, +you know. Why, man alive, that's quite out of my way. I'm not much of +a talker at any time; and besides, you know, there's something +distasteful in acting as--as--By Jove! I don't know what to call it." + +"My dear boy, you don't understand me. Do you think I'm a sneak? Do +you suppose I'd ask you to act as a go-between? Nonsense! I merely ask +you to go as a cursory visitor. I don't want you to breathe my name, +or even think of me while you are there." + +"But suppose I make myself too agreeable to the young lady. By Jove! +she might think I was paying her attentions, you know." + +"Oh no, no! believe me, you don't know her. She's too earnest; she has +too much soul to shift and change. Oh no! I feel that she is mine, and +that the image of my own miserable self is indelibly impressed upon +her heart. Oh no! you don't know her. If you had heard her thrilling +expressions of gratitude, if you had seen the beseeching and pleading +looks which she gave me, you would know that she is one of those +natures who love once, and once only." + +"Oh, by Jove, now! Come! If that's the 'state of the case, why, I'll +go." + +"Thanks, old boy." + +"As a simple visitor." + +"Yes--that's all." + +"To talk about the weather, and that rot." + +"Yes." + +"And no more." + +"No." + +"Not a word about you." + +"Not a word." + +"No leading questions, and that sort of thing." + +"Nothing of the kind." + +"No hints, no watching, but just as if I went there of my own accord." + +"That's exactly the thing." + +"Very well; and now, pray, what good is all this going to do to you, +my boy?" + +"Well, just this; I can talk to you about her every evening, and you +can tell me how she looks, and what she says, and all that sort of +thing, you know." + +"By Jove!" + +"And you'll cheer my heart, old fellow." + +"Heavens and earth! old boy, you don't seem to think that this is +going to be no end of a bore." + +"I know it, old man; but then, you know, I'm desperate just now." + +"By Jove!" + +And Hawbury, uttering this exclamation, relapsed into silence, and +wondered over his friend's infatuation. + +On the following day when Dacres came in he found that Hawbury had +kept his word. + +"Great bore, old fellow," said he; "but I did it. The old lady is an +old acquaintance, you know. I'm going there to-morrow again. Didn't +see any thing to-day of the child-angel. But it's no end of a bore, +you know." + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +FALSE AND FORGETFUL. + + +The day when Lord Hawbury called on Lady Dalrymple was a very eventful +one in his life, and had it not been for a slight peculiarity of his, +the immediate result of that visit would have been of a highly +important character. This slight peculiarity consisted in the fact +that he was short-sighted, and, therefore, on a very critical occasion +turned away from that which would have been his greatest joy, although +it was full before his gaze. + +It happened in this wise: + +On the day when Hawbury called, Ethel happened to be sitting by the +window, and saw him as he rode up. Now the last time that she had seen +him he had a very different appearance--all his hair being burned off, +from head and cheeks and chin; and the whiskers which he had when she +first met him had been of a different cut from the present appendages. +In spite of this she recognized him almost in a moment; and her heart +beat fast, and her color came and went, and her hands clutched the +window ledge convulsively. + +[Illustration: "'IT'S HE!' SHE MURMURED."] + +"It's _he_!" she murmured. + +Of course there was only one idea in her mind, and that was that he +had heard of her presence in Naples, and had come to call on her. + +She sat there without motion, with her head eagerly bent forward, and +her eyes fixed upon him. He looked up carelessly as he came along, and +with his chin in the air, in a fashion peculiar to him, which, +by-the-way, gave a quite unintentional superciliousness to his +expression. For an instant his eyes rested upon her, then they moved +away, without the slightest recognition, and wandered elsewhere. + +Ethel's heart seemed turned to stone. He had seen her. He had not +noticed her. He had fixed his eyes on her and then looked away. +Bitter, indeed, was all this to her. To think that after so long a +period of waiting--after such hope and watching as hers had been--that +this should be the end. She turned away from the window, with a +choking sensation in her throat. No one was in the room. She was alone +with her thoughts and her tears. + +Suddenly her mood changed. A thought came to her which dispelled her +gloom. The glance that he had given was too hasty; perhaps he really +had not fairly looked at her. No doubt he had come for her, and she +would shortly be summoned down. + +And now this prospect brought new hope. Light returned to her eyes, +and joy to her heart. Yes, she would be summoned. She must prepare +herself to encounter his eager gaze. Quickly she stepped to the +mirror, hastily she arranged those little details in which consists +the charm of a lady's dress, and severely she scrutinized the face and +figure reflected there. The scrutiny was a satisfactory one. Face and +figure were perfect; nor was there in the world any thing more +graceful and more lovely than the image there, though the one who +looked upon it was far too self-distrustful to entertain any such idea +as that. + +Then she seated herself and waited. The time moved slowly, indeed, as +she waited there. After a few minutes she found it impossible to sit +any longer. She walked to the door, held it open, and listened. She +heard his voice below quite plainly. They had two suits of rooms in +the house--the bedrooms up stairs and reception-rooms below. Here Lord +Hawbury was, now, within hearing of Ethel. Well she knew that voice. +She listened and frowned. The tone was too flippant. He talked like a +man without a care--like a butterfly of society--and that was a +class which she scorned. Here he was, keeping her waiting. Here he +was, keeping up a hateful clatter of small-talk, while her heart was +aching with suspense. + +Ethel stood there listening. Minute succeeded to minute. There was no +request for her. How strong was the contrast between the cool +indifference of the man below, and the feverish impatience of that +listener above! A wild impulse came to her to go down, under the +pretense of looking for something; then another to go down and out for +a walk, so that he might see her. But in either case pride held her +back. How could she? Had he not already seen her? Must he not know +perfectly well that she was there? No; if he did not call for her she +could not go. She could not make advances. + +Minute succeeded to minute, and Ethel stood burning with impatience, +racked with suspense, a prey to the bitterest feelings. Still no +message. Why did he delay? Her heart ached now worse than ever, the +choking feeling in her throat returned, and her eyes grew moist. She +steadied herself by holding to the door. Her fingers grew white at the +tightness of her grasp; eyes and ears were strained in their intent +watchfulness over the room below. + +Of course the caller below was in a perfect state of ignorance about +all this. He had not the remotest idea of that one who now stood so +near. He came as a martyr. He came to make a call. It was a thing he +detested. It bored him. To a man like him the one thing to be avoided +on earth was a bore. To be bored was to his mind the uttermost depth +of misfortune. This he had voluntarily accepted. He was being bored, +and bored to death. + +Certainly no man ever accepted a calamity more gracefully than +Hawbury. He was charming, affable, easy, chatty. Of course he was +known to Lady Dalrymple. The Dowager could make herself as agreeable +as any lady living, except young and beautiful ones. The conversation, +therefore, was easy and flowing. Hawbury excelled in this. + +Now there are several variations in the great art of expression, and +each of these is a minor art by itself. Among these may be enumerated: + +First, of course, the art of novel-writing. + +Second, the art of writing editorials. + +Third, the art of writing paragraphs. + +After these come all the arts of oratory, letter-writing, +essay-writing, and all that sort of thing, among which there is one to +which I wish particularly to call attention, and this is: + +The art of small-talk. + +Now this art Hawbury had to an extraordinary degree of perfection. He +knew how to beat out the faintest shred of an idea into an illimitable +surface of small-talk. He never took refuge in the weather. He left +that to bunglers and beginners. His resources were of a different +character, and were so skillfully managed that he never failed to +leave a very agreeable impression. Small-talk! Why, I've been in +situations sometimes where I would have given the power of writing +like Dickens (if I had it) for perfection in this last art. + +But this careless, easy, limpid, smooth, natural, pleasant, and +agreeable flow of chat was nothing but gall and wormwood to the +listener above. She ought to be there. Why was she so slighted? Could +it be possible that he would go away without seeing her? + +She was soon to know. + +She heard him rise. She heard him saunter to the door. + +"Thanks, yes. Ha, ha, you're too kind--really--yes--very happy, you +know. To-morrow, is it? Good-morning." + +And with these words he went out. + +With pale face and staring eyes Ethel darted back to the window. He +did not see her. His back was turned. He mounted his horse and gayly +cantered away. For full five minutes Ethel stood, crouched in the +shadow of the window, staring after him, with her dark eyes burning +and glowing in the intensity of their gaze. Then she turned away with +a bewildered look. Then she locked the door. Then she flung herself +upon the sofa, buried her head in her hands, and burst into a +convulsive passion of tears. Miserable, indeed, were the thoughts that +came now to that poor stricken girl as she lay there prostrate. She +had waited long, and hoped fondly, and all her waiting and all her +hope had been for this. It was for this that she had been praying--for +this that she had so fondly cherished his memory. He had come at last, +and he had gone; but for her he had certainly shown nothing save an +indifference as profound as it was inexplicable. + +Ethel's excuse for not appearing at the dinner-table was a severe +headache. Her friends insisted on seeing her and ministering to her +sufferings. Among other things, they tried to cheer her by telling her +of Hawbury. Lady Dalrymple was full of him. She told all about his +family, his income, his habits, and his mode of life. She mentioned, +with much satisfaction, that he had made inquiries after Minnie, and +that she had promised to introduce him to her the next time he called. +Upon which he had laughingly insisted on calling the next day. All of +which led Lady Dalrymple to conclude that he had seen Minnie +somewhere, and had fallen in love with her. + +This was the pleasing strain of conversation into which the ladies +were led off by Lady Dalrymple. When I say the ladies, I mean Lady +Dalrymple and Minnie. Mrs. Willoughby said nothing, except once or +twice when she endeavored to give a turn to the conversation, in which +she was signally unsuccessful. Lady Dalrymple and Minnie engaged in an +animated argument over the interesting subject of Hawbury's +intentions, Minnie taking her stand on the ground of his indifference, +the other maintaining the position that he was in love. Minnie +declared that she had never seen him. Lady Dalrymple asserted her +belief that he had seen her. The latter also asserted that Hawbury +would no doubt be a constant visitor, and gave Minnie very sound +advice as to the best mode of treating him. + +[Illustration: "THEN SHE FLUNG HERSELF UPON THE SOFA."] + +On the following day Hawbury called, and was introduced to Minnie. He +chatted with her in his usual style, and Lady Dalrymple was more than +ever confirmed in her first belief. He suggested a ride, and the +suggestion was taken up. + +If any thing had been needed to complete Ethel's despair it was this +second visit and the project of a ride. Mrs. Willoughby was introduced +to him; but he took little notice of her, treating her with a kind of +reserve that was a little unusual with him. The reason of this was his +strong sympathy with his friend, and his detestation of Mrs. +Willoughby's former history. Mrs. Willoughby, however, had to ride +with them when they went out, and thus she was thrown a little more +into Hawbury's way. + +Ethel never made her appearance. The headaches which she avouched were +not pretended. They were real, and accompanied with heartaches that +were far more painful. Hawbury never saw her, nor did he ever hear her +mentioned. In general he himself kept the conversation in motion; and +as he never asked questions, they, of course, had no opportunity to +answer. On the other hand, there was no occasion to volunteer any +remarks about the number or the character of their party. When he +talked it was usually with Lady Dalrymple and Minnie: and with these +the conversation turned always upon glittering generalities, and the +airy nothings of pleasant gossip. All this, then, will very easily +account for the fact that Hawbury, though visiting there constantly, +never once saw Ethel, never heard her name mentioned, and had not the +faintest idea that she was so near. She, on the other hand, feeling +now sure that he was utterly false and completely forgetful, proudly +and calmly held aloof, and kept out of his way with the most jealous +care, until at last she staid indoors altogether, for fear, if she +went out, that she might meet him somewhere. For such a meeting she +did not feel sufficiently strong. + +Often she thought of quitting Naples and returning to England. Yet, +after all, she found a strange comfort in being there. She was near +him. She heard his voice every day, and saw his face. That was +something. And it was better than absence. + +Minnie used always to come to her and pour forth long accounts of Lord +Hawbury--how he looked, what he said, what he did, and what he +proposed to do. Certainly there was not the faintest approach to +love-making, or even sentiment, in Hawbury's attitude toward Minnie. +His words were of the world of small-talk--a world where sentiment and +love-making have but little place. Still there was the evident fact of +his attentions, which were too frequent to be overlooked. + +Hawbury rapidly became the most prominent subject of Minnie's +conversation. She used to prattle away for hours about him. She +alluded admiringly to his long whiskers. She thought them "lovely." +She said that he was "awfully nice." She told Mrs. Willoughby that "he +was nicer than any of them; and then, Kitty darling," she added, "it's +so awfully good of him not to be coming and saving my life, and +carrying me on his back down a mountain, like an ogre, and then +pretending that he's my father, you know. + +"For you know, Kitty pet, I've always longed so awfully to see some +really nice person, you know, who wouldn't go and save my life and +bother me. Now he doesn't seem a bit like proposing. I do _hope_ he +won't. Don't you, Kitty dearest? It's so _much_ nicer not to propose. +It's so horrid when they go and propose. And then, you know, I've had +so much of that sort of thing. So, Kitty, I think he's really the +nicest person that I ever saw, and I really think I'm beginning to +like him." + +Far different from these were the conversations which Mrs. Willoughby +had with Ethel. She was perfectly familiar with Ethel's story. It had +been confided to her long ago. She alone knew why it was that Ethel +had walked untouched through crowds of admirers. The terrible story of +her rescue was memorable to her for other reasons; and the one who had +taken the prominent part in that rescue could not be without interest +for her. + +"There is no use, Kitty--no use in talking about it any more," said +Ethel one day, after Mrs. Willoughby had been urging her to show +herself. "I can not. I will not. He has forgotten me utterly." + +"Perhaps he has no idea that you are here. He has never seen you." + +"Has he not been in Naples as long as we have? He must have seen me in +the streets. He saw Minnie." + +"Do you think it likely that he would come to this house and slight +you? If he had forgotten you he would not come here." + +"Oh yes, he would. He comes to see Minnie. He knows I am here, of +course. He doesn't care one atom whether I make my appearance or not. +He doesn't even give me a thought. It's so long since _that time_ that +he has forgotten even my existence. He has been all over the world +since then, and has had a hundred adventures. I have been living +quietly, cherishing the remembrance of that one thing." + +"Ethel, is it not worth trying? Go down and try him." + +"I can not bear it. I can not look at him. I lose all self-command +when he is near. I should make a fool of myself. He would look at me +with a smile of pity. Could I endure that? No, Kitty; my weakness must +never be known to him." + +"Oh, Ethel, how I wish you could try it!" + +"Kitty, just think how utterly I am forgotten. Mark this now. He knows +I was at _your_ house. He must remember your name. He wrote to me +there, and I answered him from there. He sees you now, and your name +must be associated with mine in his memory of me, if he has any. Tell +me now, Kitty, has he ever mentioned me? has he ever asked you about +me? has he ever made the remotest allusion to me?" + +Ethel spoke rapidly and impetuously, and as she spoke she raised +herself from the sofa where she was reclining, and turned her large, +earnest eyes full upon her friend with anxious and eager watchfulness. +Mrs. Willoughby looked back at her with a face full of sadness, and +mournfully shook her head. + +"You see," said Ethel, as she sank down again--"you see how true my +impression is." + +"I must say," said Mrs. Willoughby, "that I thought of this before. I +fully expected that he would make some inquiry after you. I was so +confident in the noble character of the man, both from your story and +the description of others, that I could not believe you were right. +But you are right, my poor Ethel. I wish I could comfort you, but I +can not. Indeed, my dear, not only has he not questioned me about you, +but he evidently avoids me. It is not that he is engrossed with +Minnie, for he is not so; but he certainly has some reason of his own +for avoiding me. Whenever he speaks to me there is an evident effort +on his part, and though perfectly courteous, his manner leaves a +certain disagreeable impression. Yes, he certainly has some reason for +avoiding me." + +"The reason is plain enough," murmured Ethel. "He wishes to prevent +you from speaking about a painful subject, or at least a distasteful +one. He keeps you off at a distance by an excess of formality. He will +give you no opportunity whatever to introduce any mention of me. And +now let me also ask you this--does he ever take any notice of any +allusion that may be made to me?" + +"I really don't remember hearing any allusion to you." + +"Oh, that's scarcely possible! You and Minnie must sometimes have +alluded to 'Ethel.'" + +"Well, now that you put it in that light, I do remember hearing Minnie +allude to you on several occasions. Once she wondered why 'Ethel' did +not ride. Again she remarked how 'Ethel' would enjoy a particular +view." + +"And he heard it?" + +"Oh, of course." + +"Then there is not a shadow of a doubt left. He knows I am here. He +has forgotten me so totally, and is so completely indifferent, that he +comes here and pays attention to another who is in the very same house +with me. It is hard. Oh, Kitty, is it not? Is it not bitter? How could +I have thought this of _him_?" + +A high-hearted girl was Ethel, and a proud one; but at this final +confirmation of her worst fears there burst from her a sharp cry, and +she buried her face in her hands, and moaned and wept. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +GIRASOLE AGAIN. + + +One day Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie were out driving. Hawbury was +riding by the carriage on the side next Minnie, when suddenly their +attention was arrested by a gentleman on horseback who was approaching +them at an easy pace, and staring hard at them. Minnie's hand suddenly +grasped her sister's arm very tightly, while her color came and went +rapidly. + +"Oh dear!" sighed Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Oh, what _shall_ I do?" said Minnie, in a hasty whisper. "Can't we +pretend not to see him?" + +"Nonsense, you little goose," was the reply. "How can you think of +such rudeness?" + +By this time the gentleman had reached them, and Mrs. Willoughby +stopped the carriage, and spoke to him in a tone of gracious suavity, +in which there was a sufficient recognition of his claims upon her +attention, mingled with a slight hauteur that was intended to act as a +check upon his Italian demonstrativeness. + +For it was no other than the Count Girasole, and his eyes glowed with +excitement and delight, and his hat was off and as far away from his +head as possible, and a thousand emotions contended together for +expression upon his swarthy and handsome countenance. As soon as he +could speak he poured forth a torrent of exclamations with amazing +volubility, in the midst of which his keen black eyes scrutinized very +closely the faces of the ladies, and finally turned an interrogative +glance upon Hawbury, who sat on his horse regarding the new-comer with +a certain mild surprise not unmingled with superciliousness. Hawbury's +chin was in the air, his eyes rested languidly upon the stranger, and +his left hand toyed with his left whisker. He really meant no offense +whatever. He knew absolutely nothing about the stranger, and had not +the slightest intention of giving offense. It was simply a way he had. +It was merely the normal attitude of the English swell before he is +introduced. As it was, that first glance which Girasole threw at the +English lord inspired him with the bitterest hate, which was destined +to produce important results afterward. + +Mrs. Willoughby was too good-natured and too wise to slight the Count +in any way. After introducing the two gentlemen she spoke a few more +civil words, and then bowed him away. But Girasole did not at all take +the hint. On the contrary, as the carriage started, he turned his +horse and rode along with it on the side next Mrs. Willoughby. Hawbury +elevated his eyebrows, and stared for an instant, and then went on +talking with Minnie. And now Minnie showed much more animation than +usual. She was much agitated and excited by this sudden appearance of +one whom she hoped to have got rid of, and talked rapidly, and laughed +nervously, and was so terrified at the idea that Girasole was near +that she was afraid to look at him, but directed all her attention to +Hawbury. It was a slight, and Girasole showed that he felt it; but +Minnie could not help it. After a time Girasole mastered his feelings, +and began an animated conversation with Mrs. Willoughby in very broken +English. Girasole's excitement at Minnie's slight made him somewhat +incoherent, his idioms were Italian rather than English, and his +pronunciation was very bad; he also had a fashion of using an Italian +word when he did not know the right English one, and so the +consequence was that Mrs. Willoughby understood not much more than +one-quarter of his remarks. + +Mrs. Willoughby did not altogether enjoy this state of things, and so +she determined to put an end to it by shortening her drive. She +therefore watched for an opportunity to do this so as not to make it +seem too marked, and finally reached a place which was suitable. Here +the carriage was turned, when, just as it was half-way round, they +noticed a horseman approaching. It was Scone Dacres, who had been +following them all the time, and who had not expected that the +carriage would turn. He was therefore taken completely by surprise, +and was close to them before he could collect his thoughts so as to do +any thing. To evade them was impossible, and so he rode on. As he +approached, the ladies saw his face. It was a face that one would +remember afterward. There was on it a profound sadness and dejection, +while at the same time the prevailing expression was one of sternness. +The ladies both bowed. Scone Dacres raised his hat, and disclosed his +broad, massive brow. He did not look at Minnie. His gaze was fixed on +Mrs. Willoughby. Her veil was down, and he seemed trying to read her +face behind it. As he passed he threw a quick, vivid glance at +Girasole. It was not a pleasant glance by any means, and was full of +quick, fierce, and insolent scrutiny--a "Who-the-devil-are-you?" +glance. It was for but an instant, however, and then he glanced at +Mrs. Willoughby again, and then he had passed. + +The ladies soon reached their home, and at once retired to Mrs. +Willoughby's room. There Minnie flung herself upon the sofa, and Mrs. +Willoughby sat down, with a perplexed face. + +"What in the world _are_ we to do?" said she. + +"I'm sure _I_ don't know," said Minnie. "I _knew_ it was going to be +so. I said that he would find me again." + +"He is _so_ annoying." + +"Yes, but, Kitty dear, we can't be rude to him, you know, for he saved +my life. But it's horrid, and I really begin to feel quite desperate." + +"I certainly will not let him see you. I have made up my mind to +that." + +"And oh! how he _will_ be coming and calling, and tease, tease, +teasing. Oh dear! I do wonder what Lord Hawbury thought. He looked +_so_ amazed. And then--oh, Kitty dear, it was so awfully funny!--did +you notice that other man?" + +Mrs. Willoughby nodded her head. + +"Did you notice how awfully black he looked? He wouldn't look at me at +all. _I_ know why." + +Mrs. Willoughby said nothing. + +"He's awfully jealous. Oh, _I_ know it. I saw it in his face. He was +as black as a thunder-cloud. Oh dear! And it's all about me. Oh, Kitty +darling, what _shall_ I do? There will be something dreadful, I know. +And how shocking to have it about me. And then the newspapers. They'll +all have it. And the reporters. Oh dear! Kitty, why _don't_ you say +something?" + +"Why, Minnie dearest, I really don't know what to say." + +"But, darling, you must say something. And then that Scone Dacres. I'm +more afraid of him than any body. Oh, I know he's going to _kill_ some +one. He is so big. Oh, if _you_ had only been on his back, Kitty +darling, and had him run down a steep mountain-side, you'd be as +awfully afraid of him as I am. Oh, how I _wish_ Lord Hawbury would +drive them off, or somebody do something to save me." + +"Would you rather that Lord Hawbury would stay, or would you like him +to go too?" + +"Oh dear! I don't care. If he would only go quietly and nicely, I +should like to have him go too, and never, never see a man again +except dear papa. And I think it's a shame. And I don't see why I +should be so persecuted. And I'm tired of staying here. And I don't +want to stay here any more. And, Kitty darling, why shouldn't we all +go to Rome?" + +"To Rome?" + +"Yes." + +"Would you prefer Rome?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, thoughtfully. + +"Well, yes--for several reasons. In the first place, I must go +somewhere, and I'd rather go there than any where else. Then, you +know, that dear, delightful holy-week will soon be here, and I'm dying +to be in Rome." + +"I think it would be better for all of us," said Mrs. Willoughby, +thoughtfully--"for all of us, if we were in Rome." + +"Of course it would, Kitty sweetest, and especially me. Now if I am in +Rome, I can pop into a convent whenever I choose." + +"A convent!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, in surprise. + +"Oh yes--it's going to come to that. They're all so horrid, you know. +Besides, it's getting worse. I got a letter yesterday from Captain +Kirby, written to me in England. He didn't know I was here. He has +just arrived at London, and was leaving for our place on what he +called the wings of the wind. I expect him here at almost any time. +Isn't it dreadful, Kitty dearest, to have so many? As fast as one goes +another comes, and then they all come together; and do you know, +darling, it really makes one feel quite dizzy. I'm sure _I_ don't know +what to do. And that's why I'm thinking of a convent, you know." + +"But you're not a Catholic." + +"Oh yes, I am, you know. Papa's an Anglo-Catholic, and I don't see the +difference. Besides, they're all the time going over to Rome; and why +shouldn't I? I'll be a novice--that is, you know, I'll only go for a +time, and not take the vows. The more I think of it, the more I see +that it's the only thing there is for me to do." + +"Well, Minnie, I really think so too, and not only for you, but for +all of us. There's Ethel, too; poor dear girl, her health is very +miserable, you know. I think a change would do her good." + +"Of course it would; I've been talking to her about it. But she won't +hear of leaving Naples. I _wish_ she wouldn't be so awfully sad." + +"Oh yes; it will certainly be the best thing for dear Ethel, and for +you and me and all of us. Then we must be in Rome in holy-week. I +wouldn't miss that for any thing." + +"And then, too, you know, Kitty darling, there's another thing," said +Minnie, very confidentially, "and it's very important. In Rome, you +know, all the gentlemen are clergymen--only, you know, the clergymen +of the Roman Church can't marry; and so, you know, of course, they can +never propose, no matter if they were to save one's life over and over +again. And oh! what a relief that would be to find one's self among +those dear, darling, delightful priests, and no chance of having one's +life saved and having an instant proposal following! It would be _so_ +charming." + +Mrs. Willoughby smiled. + +"Well, Minnie dearest," said she, "I really think that we had better +decide to go to Rome, and I don't see any difficulty in the way." + +"The only difficulty that I can see," said Minnie, "is that I +shouldn't like to hurt their feelings, you know." + +"Their feelings!" repeated her sister, in a doleful voice. + +"Yes; but then, you see, some one's feelings _must_ be hurt +eventually, so that lessens one's responsibility, you know; doesn't +it, Kitty darling?" + +While saying this Minnie had risen and gone to the window, with the +intention of taking her seat by it. No sooner had she reached the +place, however, than she started back, with a low exclamation, and, +standing on one side, looked cautiously forth. + +"Come here," she said, in a whisper. + +Mrs. Willoughby went over, and Minnie directed her attention to some +one outside. It was a gentleman on horseback, who was passing at a +slow pace. His head was bent on his breast. Suddenly, as he passed, he +raised his head and threw over the house a quick, searching glance. +They could see without being seen. They marked the profound sadness +that was over his face, and saw the deep disappointment with which his +head fell. + +"Scone Dacres!" said Minnie, as he passed on. "How _aw_fully sad he +is!" + +Mrs. Willoughby said nothing. + +"But, after all, I don't believe it's _me_." + +"Why not?" + +"Because he didn't look at me a bit when he passed to-day. He looked +at you, though." + +"Nonsense!" + +"Yes, and his face had an _aw_fully hungry look. I know what makes him +sad." + +"What?" + +"He's in love with you." + +Mrs. Willoughby stared at Minnie for a moment. Then a short laugh +burst from her. + +"Child!" she exclaimed, "you have no idea of any thing in the world +but falling in love. You will find out some day that there are other +feelings than that." + +"But, Kitty dear," said Minnie, "didn't you notice something very +peculiar about him?" + +"What?" + +"I noticed it. I had a good look at him. I saw that he fixed his eyes +on you with--oh! _such_ a queer look. And he was awfully sad too. He +looked as if he would like to seize you and lift you on his horse and +carry you off, just like young Lochinvar." + +"Me!" said Mrs. Willoughby, with a strange intonation. + +"Yes, you--oh yes; really now." + +"Oh, you little goose, you always think of people rushing after one +and carrying one off." + +"Well, I'm sure I've had reason to. So many people have always been +running after me, and snatching me up as if I were a parcel, and +carrying me every where in all sorts of places. And I think it's too +bad, and I really wish they'd stop it. But, Kitty dear--" + +"What?" + +"About this Scone Dacres. Don't you really think there's something +very peculiarly sad, and very delightfully interesting and pathetic, +and all that sort of thing, in his poor dear old face?" + +"I think Scone Dacres has suffered a great deal," said Mrs. +Willoughby, in a thoughtful tone. "But come now. Let us go to Ethel. +She's lonely." + +Soon after they joined the other ladies, and talked over the project +of going to Rome. Lady Dalrymple offered no objection; indeed, so far +as she had any choice, she preferred it. She was quite willing at all +times to do whatever the rest proposed, and also was not without some +curiosity as to the proceedings during holy-week. Ethel offered no +objections either. She had fallen into a state of profound melancholy, +from which nothing now could rouse her, and so she listened listlessly +to the discussion about the subject. Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie had +the most to say on this point, and offered the chief reasons for +going; and thus it was finally decided to take their departure, and to +start as soon as possible. + +Meanwhile Girasole had his own thoughts and experiences. He had +already, some time before, been conscious that his attentions were not +wanted, but it was only on the part of the other ladies that he +noticed any repugnance to himself. On Minnie's part he had not seen +any. In spite of their graciousness and their desire not to hurt his +feelings, they had not been able to avoid showing that, while they +felt grateful for his heroism in the rescue of Minnie, they could not +think of giving her to him. They had manoeuvred well enough to get rid +of him, but Girasole had also manoeuvred on his part to find them +again. He had fallen off from them at first when he saw that they were +determined on effecting this; but after allowing a sufficient time to +elapse, he had no difficulty in tracking them, and finding them at +Naples, as we have seen. + +But here he made one or two discoveries. + +One was that Minnie already had an accepted lover in the person of +Lord Hawbury. The lofty superciliousness of the British nobleman +seemed to Girasole to be the natural result of his position, and it +seemed the attitude of the successful lover toward the rejected +suitor. + +The other discovery was that Minnie herself was more pleased with the +attentions of the English lord than with his own. This was now +evident, and he could not help perceiving that his difficulties were +far more formidable from the presence of such a rival. + +But Girasole was not easily daunted. In the first place, he had +unbounded confidence in his own fascinations; in the second place, he +believed that he had a claim on Minnie that no other could equal, in +the fact that he had saved her life; in the third place, apart from +the question of love, he believed her to be a prize of no common +value, whose English gold would be welcome indeed to his Italian need +and greed; while, finally, the bitter hate with which Lord Hawbury had +inspired him gave an additional zest to the pursuit, and made him +follow after Minnie with fresh ardor. + +Once or twice after this he called upon them. On the first occasion +only Lady Dalrymple was visible. On the second, none of the ladies +were at home. He was baffled, but not discouraged. Returning from his +call, he met Minnie and Mrs. Willoughby. Hawbury was with them, riding +beside Minnie. The ladies bowed, and Girasole, as before, coolly +turned his horse and rode by the carriage, talking with Mrs. +Willoughby, and trying to throw at Minnie what he intended to be +impassioned glances. But Minnie would not look at him. Of course she +was frightened as usual, and grew excited, and, as before, talked with +unusual animation to Hawbury. Thus she overdid it altogether, and more +than ever confirmed Girasole in the opinion that she and Hawbury were +affianced. + +Two days after this Girasole called again. + +A bitter disappointment was in store for him. + +They were not there--they had gone. + +Eagerly he inquired where. + +"To Rome," was the reply. + +[Illustration: "'TO ROME!' HE MUTTERED, BETWEEN HIS SET TEETH."] + +"To Rome!" he muttered, between his set teeth; and mounting his horse +hurriedly, he rode away. + +He was not one to be daunted. He had set a certain task before +himself, and could not easily be turned aside. He thought bitterly of +the ingratitude with which he had been treated. He brought before his +mind the "stony British stare," the supercilious smile, and the +impertinent and insulting expression of Hawbury's face as he sat on +his saddle, with his chin up, stroking his whiskers, and surveyed him +for the first time. All these things combined to stimulate the hate as +well as the love of Girasole. He felt that he himself was not one who +could be lightly dismissed, and determined that they should learn +this. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +VAIN REMONSTRANCES. + + +Hawbury had immolated himself for as much as half a dozen times to +gratify Dacres. He had sacrificed himself over and over upon the altar +of friendship, and had allowed himself to be bored to death because +Dacres so wished it. The whole number of his calls was in reality only +about five or six; but that number, to one of his taste and +temperament, seemed positively enormous, and represented an immense +amount of human suffering. + +One day, upon reaching his quarters, after one of these calls, he +found Dacres there, making himself, as usual, very much at home. + +"Well, my dear fellow," said Hawbury, cheerfully, "how waves the flag +now? Are you hauling it down, or are you standing to your guns? Toss +over the cigars, and give an account of yourself." + +"Do you know any thing about law, Hawbury?" was Dacres's answer. + +"Law?" + +"Yes." + +"No, not much. But what in the world makes you ask such a question as +that? Law! No--not I." + +"Well, there's a point that I should like to ask somebody about." + +"Why not get a lawyer?" + +"An Italian lawyer's no use." + +"Well, English lawyers are to be found. I dare say there are twenty +within five minutes' distance of this place." + +"Oh, I don't want to bother. I only wanted to ask some one's opinion +in a general way." + +"Well, what's the point?" + +"Why this," said Dacres, after a little hesitation. "You've heard of +outlawry?" + +"Should think I had--Robin Hood and his merry men, Lincoln green, +Sherwood Forest, and all that sort of thing, you know. But what the +mischief sets you thinking about Robin Hood?" + +"Oh, I don't mean that rot. I mean real outlawry--when a fellow's in +debt, you know." + +"Well?" + +"Well; if he goes out of the country, and stays away a certain number +of years, the debt's outlawed, you know." + +"The deuce it is! Is it, though? _I've_ been in debt, but I always +managed to pull through without getting so far. But that's convenient +for some fellows too." + +"I'm a little muddy about it, but I've heard something to this effect. +I think the time is seven years. If the debt is not acknowledged +during the interval, it's outlawed. And now, 'pon my life, my dear +fellow, I really don't know but that I've jumbled up some fragments of +English law with American. I felt that I was muddy, and so I thought +I'd ask you." + +"Don't know any more about it than about the antediluvians." + +"It's an important point, and I should like to have it looked up." + +"Well, get a lawyer here; half London is on the Continent. But still, +my dear fellow, I don't see what you're driving at. You're not in +debt?" + +"No--this isn't debt; but it struck me that this might possibly apply +to other kinds of contracts." + +"Oh!" + +"Yes." + +"How--such as what, for instance?" + +"Well, you see, I thought, you know, that all contracts might be +included under it; and so I thought that if seven years or so annulled +all contracts, it might have some effect, you know, upon--the--the--the +marriage contract, you know." + +At this Hawbury started up, stared at Dacres, gave a loud whistle, and +then exclaimed, + +"By Jove!" + +"I may be mistaken," said Dacres, modestly. + +"Mistaken? Why, old chap, you're mad. Marriage? Good Lord! don't you +know nothing can abrogate that? Of course, in case of crime, one can +get a divorce; but there is no other way. Seven years? By Jove! A good +idea that. Why, man, if that were so, the kingdom would be +depopulated. Husbands running off from wives, and wives from husbands, +to pass the required seven years abroad. By Jove! You see, too, +there's another thing, my boy. Marriage is a sacrament, and you've not +only got to untie the civil knot, but the clerical one, my boy. No, +no; there's no help for it. You gave your word, old chap, 'till death +do us part,' and you're in for it." + +At this Dacres said nothing; it appeared to dispel his project from +his mind. He relapsed into a sullen sort of gloom, and remained so for +some time. At last he spoke: + +"Hawbury!" + +"Well?" + +"Have you found out who that fellow is?" + +"What fellow?" + +"Why that yellow Italian that goes prowling around after my wife." + +"Oh yes; I heard something or other today." + +"What was it?" + +"Well, it seems that he saved her life, or something of that sort." + +"Saved her life!" Dacres started. "How? where? Cool, too!" + +"Oh, on the Alps somewhere." + +"On the Alps! saved her life! Come now, I like that," said Dacres, +with bitter intonation. "Aha! don't I know her? I warrant you she +contrived all that. Oh, she's deep! But how did it happen? Did you +hear?" + +"Well, I didn't hear any thing very definite. It was something about a +precipice. It was Lady Dalrymple that told me. It seems she was +knocked over a precipice by an avalanche." + +"Was what? Knocked where? Over a precipice? By a what--an avalanche? +Good Lord! I don't believe it. I swear I don't. She invented it all. +It's some of her infernal humbug. She slid off over the snow, so as to +get him to go after her. Oh, don't I know her and her ways!" + +"Well, come now, old man, you shouldn't be too hard on her. You never +said that flirtation was one of her faults." + +"Well, neither it was; but, as she is a demon, she's capable of any +thing; and now she has sobered down, and all her vices have taken this +turn. Oh yes. I know her. No more storms now--no rage, no fury--all +quiet and sly. Flirtation! Ha, ha! That's the word. And my wife! And +going about the country, tumbling over precipices, with devilish +handsome Italians going down to save her life! Ha, ha, ha! I like +that!" + +"See here, old boy, I swear you're too suspicious. Come now. You're +going too far. If she chooses, she may trump up the same charge +against you and the child-angel at Vesuvius. Come now, old boy, be +just. You can afford to. Your wife may be a fiend in human form; and +if you insist upon it, I've nothing to say. But this last notion of +yours is nothing but the most wretched absurdity. It's worse. It's +lunacy." + +"Well, well," said Dacres, in a milder tone; "perhaps she didn't +contrive it. But then, you know," he added, "it's just as good for +her. She gets the Italian. Ha, ha, ha!" + +His laugh was forced, feverish, and unnatural. Hawbury didn't like it, +and tried to change the subject. + +"Oh, by-the-way," said he, "you needn't have any further trouble about +any of them. You don't seem inclined to take any definite action, so +the action will be taken for you." + +"What do you mean?" + +"I mean that they are all going to leave Naples." + +"To leave Naples!" + +Dacres uttered this in a voice of grief and surprise which astonished +Hawbury and touched him. + +"Yes," he said. "You know they've been here long enough. They want to +see Rome. Holy-week, you know. No end of excitement. Illumination of +St. Peter's, and all that sort of thing, you know." + +Dacres relapsed into sombre silence. For more than half an hour he did +not say a word. Hawbury respected his mood, and watched him with +something approaching to anxiety. + +"Hawbury," said he at last. + +"Well, old man?" + +"I'm going to Rome." + +"You--to Rome!" + +"Yes, me, to Rome." + +"Oh, nonsense! See here, old boy. You'd really better not, you know. +Break it up. You can't do any thing." + +"I'm going to Rome," repeated Dacres, stolidly. "I've made up my +mind." + +"But, really," remonstrated Hawbury. "See here now, my dear fellow; +look here, you know. By Jove! you don't consider, really." + +"Oh yes, I do. I know every thing; I consider every thing." + +"But what good will it do?" + +"It won't do any good; but it may prevent some evil." + +"Nothing but evil can ever come of it." + +"Oh, no evil need necessarily come of it." + +"By Jove!" exclaimed Hawbury, who began to be excited. "Really, my +dear fellow, you don't think. You see you can't gain any thing. She's +surrounded by friends, you know. She never can be yours, you know. +There's a great gulf between you, and all that sort of thing, you +know." + +"Yes," repeated Dacres, catching his last words--"yes, a great gulf, +as deep as the bottomless abyss, never to be traversed, where she +stands on one side, and I on the other, and between us hate, deep and +pitiless hate, undying, eternal!" + +"Then, by Jove! my dear fellow, what's the use of trying to fight +against it? You can't do any thing. If this were Indiana, now, or even +New York, I wouldn't say any thing, you know; but you know an Indiana +divorce wouldn't do _you_ any good. Her friends wouldn't take you on +those terms--and she wouldn't. Not she, by Jove!" + +"I _must_ go. I must follow her," continued Dacres. "The sight of her +has roused a devil within me that I thought was laid. I'm a changed +man, Hawbury." + +"I should think so, by Jove!" + +"A changed man," continued Dacres. "Oh, Heavens, what power there is +in a face! What terrific influence it has over a man! Here am I; a few +days ago I was a free man; now I am a slave. But, by Heaven! I'll +follow her to the world's end. She shall not shake me off. She thinks +to be happy without me. She shall not. I will silently follow as an +avenging fate. I can not have her, and no one else shall. The same +cursed fate that severs her from me shall keep her away from others. +If I am lonely and an exile, she shall not be as happy as she expects. +I shall not be the only one to suffer." + +"See here, by Jove!" cried Hawbury. "Really. You're going too far, my +dear boy, you know. You are, really. Come now. This is just like a +Surrey theatre, you know. You're really raving. Why, my poor old boy, +you _must_ give her up. You can't do any thing. You daren't call on +her. You're tied hand and foot. You may worship her here, and rave +about your child-angel till you're black in the face, but you never +can see her; and as to all this about stopping her from marrying any +other person, that's all rot and bosh. What do you suppose any other +man would care for your nonsensical ravings? Lonely and an exile! Why, +man, she'll be married and done for in three months." + +"You don't understand me," said Dacres, dryly. + +"I'm glad that I don't; but it's no wonder, old man, for really you +were quite incoherent." + +"And so they're going to Rome," said Dacres. "Well, they'll find that +I'm not to be shaken off so easily." + +"Come now, old man, you _must_ give up that." + +"And I suppose," continued Dacres, with a sneer, "our handsome, +dark-eyed little Italian cavalier is going with us. Ha, ha, ha! He's +at the house all the time, no doubt." + +"Well, yes; he was there once." + +"Ah! of course--quite devoted." + +"Oh yes; but don't be afraid. It was not to the child-angel. She +appears to avoid him. That's really quite evident. It's an apparent +aversion on her part." + +Dacres drew a long breath. + +"Oh," said he; "and so I suppose it's not _her_ that _he_ goes after. +I did not suppose that it was. Oh no. There's another one--more +piquant, you know--ha, ha!--a devoted lover--saved her life--quite +devoted--and she sits and accepts his attentions. Yet she's seen me, +and knows that I'm watching her. Don't she know _me_? Does she want +any further proof of what I am ready to do? The ruins of Dacres Grange +should serve her for life. She tempts fate when she carries on her +gallantries and her Italian cicisbeism under the eyes of Scone Dacres. +It'll end bad. By Heaven, it will!" + +Scone Dacres breathed hard, and, raising his head, turned upon Hawbury +a pair of eyes whose glow seemed of fire. + +"Bad!" he repeated, crashing his fist on the table. "Bad, by Heaven!" + +Hawbury looked at him earnestly. + +"My dear boy," said he, "you're getting too excited. Be cool. Really, +I don't believe you know what you're saying. I don't understand what +you mean. Haven't the faintest idea what you're driving at. You're +making ferocious threats against some people, but, for my life, I +don't know who they are. Hadn't you better try to speak so that a +fellow can understand the general drift, at least, of what you say?" + +"Well, then, you understand this much--I'm going to Rome." + +"I'm sorry for it, old boy." + +"And see here, Hawbury, I want you to come with me." + +"Me? What for?" + +"Well, I want you. I may have need of you." + +As Dacres said this his face assumed so dark and gloomy an expression +that Hawbury began to think that there was something serious in all +this menace. + +"'Pon my life," said he, "my dear boy, I really don't think you're in +a fit state to be allowed to go by yourself. You look quite desperate. +I wish I could make you give up this infernal Roman notion." + +"I'm going to Rome!" repeated Dacres, resolutely. + +Hawbury looked at him. + +"You'll come, Hawbury, won't you?" + +"Why, confound it all, of course. I'm afraid you'll do something rash, +old man, and you'll have to have me to stand between you and harm." + +"Oh, don't be concerned about me," said Dacres. "I only want to watch +her, and see what her little game is. I want to look at her in the +midst of her happiness. She's most infernally beautiful, too; hasn't +added a year or a day to her face; more lovely than ever; more +beautiful than she was even when I first saw her. And there's a +softness about her that she never had before. Where the deuce did she +get that? Good idea of hers, too, to cultivate the soft style. And +there's sadness in her face, too. Can it be real? By Heavens! if I +thought it could be real I'd--but pooh! what insanity! It's her art. +There never was such cunning. She cultivates the soft, sad style so as +to attract lovers--lovers--who adore her--who save her life--who +become her obedient slaves! Oh yes; and I--what am I? Why they get +together and laugh at me; they giggle; they snicker--" + +"Confound it all, man, what are you going on at that rate for?" +interrupted Hawbury. "Are you taking leave of your senses altogether? +By Jove, old man, you'd better give up this Roman journey." + +"No, I'll keep at it." + +"What for? Confound it! I don't see your object." + +"My object? Why, I mean to follow her. I can't give her up. I won't +give her up. I'll follow her. She shall see me every where. I'll +follow her. She sha'n't go any where without seeing me on her track. +She shall see that she is mine. She shall know that she's got a +master. She shall find herself cut off from that butterfly life which +she hopes to enter. I'll be her fate, and she shall know it." + +"By Jove!" cried Hawbury. "What the deuce is all this about? Are you +mad, or what? Look here, old boy, you're utterly beyond me, you know. +What the mischief do you mean? Whom are you going to follow? Whose +fate are you going to be? Whose track are you talking about?" + +"Who?" cried Dacres. "Why, my wife!" + +As he said this he struck his fist violently on the table. + +"The deuce!" exclaimed Hawbury, staring at him; after which he added, +thoughtfully, "by Jove!" + +Not much more was said. Dacres sat in silence for a long time, +breathing hard, and puffing violently at his cigar. Hawbury said +nothing to interrupt his meditation. After an hour or so Dacres +tramped off in silence, and Hawbury was left to meditate over the +situation. + +And this was the result of his meditations. + +He saw that Dacres was greatly excited, and had changed completely +from his old self. His state of mind seemed actually dangerous. There +was an evil gleam in his eyes that looked like madness. What made it +more perplexing still was the new revulsion of feeling that now was +manifest. It was not so much love for the child-angel as bitter and +venomous hate for his wife. The gentler feeling had given place to the +sterner one. It might have been possible to attempt an argument +against the indulgence of the former; but what could words avail +against revenge? And now there was rising in the soul of Dacres an +evident thirst for vengeance, the result of those injuries which had +been carried in his heart and brooded over for years. The sight of his +wife had evidently kindled all this. If she had not come across his +path he might have forgotten all; but she had come, and all was +revived. She had come, too, in a shape which was adapted in the +highest degree to stimulate all the passion of Dacres's soul--young, +beautiful, fascinating, elegant, refined, rich, honored, courted, and +happy. Upon such a being as this the homeless wanderer, the outcast, +looked, and his soul seemed turned to fire as he gazed. Was it any +wonder? + +All this Hawbury thought, and with full sympathy for his injured +friend. He saw also that Dacres could not be trusted by himself. Some +catastrophe would be sure to occur. He determined, therefore, to +accompany his friend, so as to do what he could to avert the calamity +which he dreaded. + +And this was the reason why he went with Dacres to Rome. + +As for Dacres, he seemed to be animated by but one motive, which he +expressed over and over again: + +"She stood between me and my child-angel, and so will I stand between +her and her Italian!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +THE ZOUAVE OFFICER. + + +Whatever trouble Ethel had experienced at Naples from her conviction +that Hawbury was false was increased and, if possible, intensified by +the discovery that he had followed them to Rome. His true motives for +this could not possibly be known to her, so she, of course, concluded +that it was his infatuation for Minnie, and his determination to win +her for himself. She felt confident that he knew that she belonged to +the party, but was so utterly indifferent to her that he completely +ignored her, and had not sufficient interest in her to ask the +commonest question about her. All this, of course, only confirmed her +previous opinion, and it also deepened her melancholy. One additional +effect it also had, and that was to deprive her of any pleasure that +might be had from drives about Rome. She felt a morbid dread of +meeting him somewhere; she did not yet feel able to encounter him; she +could not trust herself; she felt sure that if she saw him she would +lose all self-control, and make an exhibition of humiliating weakness. +The dread of this was sufficient to detain her at home; and so she +remained indoors, a prisoner, refusing her liberty, brooding over her +troubles, and striving to acquire that indifference to him which she +believed he had toward her. Now going about was the very thing which +would have alleviated her woes, but this was the very thing that she +was unwilling to do; nor could any persuasion shake her resolve. + +One day Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie were out driving, and in passing +through a street they encountered a crowd in front of one of the +churches. Another crowd was inside, and, as something was going on, +they stopped the carriage and sat looking. The Swiss Guards were there +in their picturesque costume, and the cardinals in their scarlet robes +and scarlet coaches, and military officers of high rank, and carriages +of the Roman aristocracy filled with beautiful ladies. Something of +importance was going on, the nature of which they did not know. A +little knot of Englishmen stood near; and from their remarks the +ladies gathered that this was the Church of the Jesuits, and that the +Pope in person was going to perform high-mass, and afterward hold a +reception. + +Soon there arose a murmur and a bustle among the crowd, which was +succeeded by a deep stillness. The Swiss Guards drove the throng to +either side, and a passage-way was thus formed through the people to +the church. A carriage drove up in great state. In this was seated an +elderly gentleman in rich pontifical robes. He had a mild and gentle +face, upon which was a sweet and winning smile. No face is more +attractive than that of Pio Nono. + +"Oh, look!" cried Minnie; "that must be the Pope. Oh, what a darling!" + +Mrs. Willoughby, however, was looking elsewhere. + +"Minnie," said she. + +"What, Kitty dear?" + +"Are you acquainted with any Zouave officer?" + +"Zouave officer! Why, no; what put such a thing as that into your +head, you old silly?" + +"Because there's a Zouave officer over there in the crowd who has been +staring fixedly at us ever since we came up, and trying to make +signals, and it's my opinion he's signaling to you. Look at him; he's +over there on the top of the steps." + +"I won't look," said Minnie, pettishly. "How do I know who he is? I +declare I'm afraid to look at any body. He'll be coming and saving my +life." + +"I'm sure this man is an old acquaintance." + +"Nonsense! how can he be?" + +"It may be Captain Kirby." + +"How silly! Why, Captain Kirby is in the Rifles." + +"Perhaps he is dressed this way just for amusement. Look at him." + +"Now, Kitty, I think you're unkind. You _know_ I don't want to look at +him; I don't want to see him. I don't care who he is--the great, big, +ugly, old horrid! And if you say any thing more, I'll go home." + +Mrs. Willoughby was about to say something, but her attention and +Minnie's, and that of every one else, was suddenly diverted to another +quarter. + +Among the crowd they had noticed a tall man, very thin, with a lean, +cadaverous face, and long, lanky, rusty black hair. He wore a white +neck-tie, and a suit of rusty black clothes. He also held a large +umbrella in his hand, which he kept carefully up out of the way of the +crowd. This figure was a conspicuous one, even in that crowd, and the +ladies had noticed it at the very first. + +As the Pope drove up they saw this long, slim, thin, cadaverous man, +in his suit of rusty black, edging his way through the crowd, so as to +get nearer, until at length he stood immediately behind the line of +Swiss Guards, who were keeping the crowd back, and forming a +passageway for the Pope. Meanwhile his Holiness was advancing through +the crowd. He reached out his hand, and smiled and bowed and murmured +a blessing over them. At last his carriage stopped. The door was +opened, and several attendants prepared to receive the Pope and assist +him out. + +At that instant the tall, slim stranger pushed forward his sallow +head, with its long, lanky, and rusty black hair, between two Swiss +Guards, and tried to squeeze between them. The Swiss at first stood +motionless, and the stranger had actually succeeded in getting about +half-way through. He was immediately in front of his Holiness, and +staring at him with all his might. His Holiness saw this very peculiar +face, and was so surprised that he uttered an involuntary exclamation, +and stopped short in his descent. + +The stranger stopped short too, and quite involuntarily also. For the +Swiss Guards, irritated by his pertinacity, and seeing the Pope's +gesture, turned suddenly, and two of them grasped the stranger by his +coat collar. + +It was, of course, an extremely undignified attitude for the Swiss +Guards, whose position is simply an ornamental one. Nothing but the +most unparalleled outrage to their dignity could have moved them to +this. So unusual a display of energy, however, did not last long. A +few persons in citizens' clothes darted forward from among the crowd, +and secured the stranger; while the Swiss, seeing who they were, +resumed their erect, rigid, and ornamental attitude. The Pope found no +longer any obstacle, and resumed his descent. For a moment the +stranger had created a wide-spread consternation in the breasts of all +the different and very numerous classes of men who composed that +crowd. The arrest was the signal for a murmur of voices, among which +the ladies heard those of the knot of Englishmen who stood near. + +"It's some Garibaldian," said they. + +And this was the general sentiment. + +Several hours after this they were at home, and a caller was +announced. It was the Baron Atramonte. + +"Atramonte!" said Lady Dalrymple. "Who is that? We're not at home, of +course. Atramonte! Some of these Italian nobles. Really, I think we +have seen enough of them. Who is he, Kitty?" + +"I'm sure I haven't the faintest idea. I never heard of him in my +life." + +"We're not at home, of course. It's a singular way, and surely can not +be Roman fashion. It's not civilized fashion. But the Continental +nobility are _so_ odd." + +In a few minutes the servant, who had been dispatched to say, "Not at +home," returned with the statement that the Baron wished particularly +to see Miss Fay on urgent business. + +[Illustration: "TWO OF THEM GRASPED THE STRANGER BY HIS COAT COLLAR."] + +At this extraordinary message Lady Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby +looked first at one another, and then at Minnie, in amazement. + +"I'm sure _I_ don't know any thing about him," said Minnie. "They +_always_ tease me so. Oh, do go and see who he is, and send him +away--please! Oh, do, please, Dowdy dear!" + +"Well, I suppose I had better see the person," said Lady Dalrymple, +good-naturedly. "There must be some mistake. How is he dressed?" she +asked the servant. "Is he a military gentleman? Most of them seem to +belong to the army." + +"Yes, my lady. Zouave dress, my lady." + +At this Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie looked at one another. Lady +Dalrymple went away; and as no other was present, Ethel being, as +usual, in her room, Mrs. Willoughby sighed and said, + +"I thought that man must know you." + +"Well, I'm sure I don't know him," said Minnie. "I never knew a Zouave +officer in my life." + +"It may be Captain Kirby, under an assumed name and a disguise." + +"Oh no, it isn't. I don't believe he would be such a perfect--monster. +Oh dear! It's somebody, though. It must be. And he wants me. Oh, what +_shall_ I do?" + +"Nonsense! You need not go. Aunty will see him, and send him off." + +"Oh, I do so hope he'll go; but I'm afraid he won't." + +After a short time Lady Dalrymple returned. + +"Really," said she, "this is a most extraordinary person. He speaks +English, but not at all like an Englishman. I don't know who he is. He +calls himself a Baron, but he doesn't seem to be a foreigner. I'm +puzzled." + +"I hope he's gone," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"No--that's the worst of it. He won't go. He says he must see Minnie, +and he won't tell his errand. I told him that he could not see you, +but that I would tell you what he wanted, and that you were not at +home. And what do you think he said?" + +"I'm sure I don't know, Dowdy dear." + +"Why, he said he had nothing to do, and would wait till you came back. +And he took his seat in a way that showed that he meant to wait. +Really, I'm quite at a loss what to do. You'll have to see him, Kitty +dear." + +"What a strange person!" said Mrs. Willoughby. "It's _so_ rude. And +don't you know what he is? How do you know he isn't an Italian?" + +"Oh, his English, you know. He speaks it perfectly, but not like an +Englishman, you know, nor like a Scotchman either, or an Irishman. I +wonder whether he may not be an American?" + +At this Minnie started. + +"Oh dear!" she said. + +"What's the matter, darling?" + +"An American! Oh dear! what _will_ become of me!" + +"Why," said Lady Dalrymple, "do you know him, then, after all?" + +"Oh, I'm _so_ afraid that I know him!" + +"Who is it, dear?" + +"Oh, Dowdy! Oh, Kitty!" + +"What's the matter?" + +"It must be that man. Oh, was there _ever_ such a trouble--" + +"Really, Minnie dearest, you are allowing yourself to get too +agitated. Who _is_ this person?" + +"He--he's--an--American." + +"An American? Why, I just said that I thought he might be one. I +didn't know that you were acquainted with any." + +"Oh yes; I did get acquainted with some in--in Canada." + +"Oh; and is this man a Canadian?" + +"No, Dowdy darling; only an American." + +"Well, if he's a friend of yours, I suppose you know something about +him. But how singular it is that you have so completely forgotten his +name. Atramonte? Why, I'm sure it's a _very_ singular name for an +American gentleman--at least it seems so to me--but I don't know much +about them, you know. Tell me, darling, who is he?" + +"He--he saved my life." + +"What! saved your life? Why, my precious child, what _are_ you talking +about? It was the Italian that saved your life, you know, not this +one." + +"Oh, but he did too," said Minnie, despairingly. "I couldn't help it. +He would do it. Papa was washed away. I wish they all wouldn't be so +horrid." + +Lady Dalrymple looked in an equally despairing manner at Mrs. +Willoughby. + +"What is it, Kitty dear? _Is_ the child insane, or what does she mean? +How could this person have saved her life?" + +"That's just what distracts me," said Minnie. "They all do it. Every +single person comes and saves my life. And now I suppose I must go +down and see this person." + +"Well, really, since you say he saved your life, perhaps it would be +as well not to be uncivil," said Lady Dalrymple; "but, at the same +time, he seems to me to act in a very extraordinary manner. And he +calls himself a Baron. Do they have nobles in America?" + +"I'm sure I don't know, Dowdy dear. I never knew that he was a Baron. +He may have been the son of some American Baron; and--and--I'm sure I +don't know." + +"Nonsense, Minnie dear," said Mrs. Willoughby. "This man's title is a +foreign one. He probably obtained it in Italy or Spain, or perhaps +Mexico. I think they have titles in Mexico, though I really don't +know." + +"Why, of course, one isn't expected to know any thing about America," +said Lady Dalrymple. "I can mention quite a number of English +statesmen, members of the cabinet, and others, who don't know any more +about America than I do." + +"Do you really intend to go down yourself and see him, Minnie dear?" +asked Mrs. Willoughby. + +"How can I help it? What am I to do? I must go, Kitty darling. He is +so very positive, and--and he insists so. I don't want to hurt his +feelings, you know; and I really think there is nothing for me to do +but to go. What do you think about it, Dowdy dear?" and she appealed +to her aunt. + +"Well, Minnie, my child, I think it would be best not to be unkind or +uncivil, since he saved your life." + +Upon this Minnie accompanied her sister to see the visitor. + +Mrs. Willoughby entered the room first, and Minnie was close behind +her, as though she sought protection from some unknown peril. On +entering the room they saw a man dressed in Zouave uniform. His hair +was cropped short; he wore a mustache and no beard; his features were +regular and handsome; while a pair of fine dark eyes were looking +earnestly at the door, and the face and the eyes had the expression of +one who is triumphantly awaiting the result of some agreeable +surprise. Mrs. Willoughby at once recognized the stranger as the +Zouave officer who had stared at them near the Church of the Jesuits. +She advanced with lady-like grace toward him, when suddenly he stepped +hastily past her, without taking any notice of her, and catching +Minnie in his arms, he kissed her several times. + +Mrs. Willoughby started back in horror. + +Minnie did not resist, nor did she scream, or faint, or do any thing. +She only looked a little confused, and managed to extricate herself, +after which she took a seat as far away as she could, putting her +sister between her and the Zouave. But the Zouave's joy was full, and +he didn't appear to notice it. He settled himself in a chair, and +laughed loud in his happiness. + +"Only to think of it," said he. "Why, I had no more idea of your being +here, Minnie, than _Victory_. Well, here you see me. Only been here a +couple of months or so. You got my last favor, of course? And ain't +you regular knocked up to see me a Baron? Yes, a Baron--a real, live +Baron! I'll tell you all about it. You see I was here two or three +years ago--the time of Mentana--and fought on the Pope's side. Odd +thing, too, wasn't it, for an American? But so it was. Well, they +promoted me, and wanted me to stay. But I couldn't fix it. I had +business off home, and was on my way there the time of the shipwreck. +Well, I've been dodgin' all round every where since then, but never +forgettin' little Min, mind you, and at last I found myself here, all +right. I'd been speculatin' in wines and raisins, and just dropped in +here to take pot-luck with some old Zouave friends, when, darn me! if +they didn't make me stay. It seems there's squally times ahead. They +wanted a live man. They knew I was that live man. They offered me any +thing I wanted. They offered me the title of Baron Atramonte. That +knocked me, I tell you. Says I, I'm your man. So now you see me Baron +Atramonte, captain in the Papal Zouaves, ready to go where glory waits +me--but fonder than ever of little Min. Oh, I tell you what, I ain't a +bit of a brag, but I'm _some_ here. The men think I'm a little the +tallest lot in the shape of a commander they ever _did_ see. When I'm +in Rome I do as the Romans do, and so I let fly at them a speech every +now and then. Why, I've gone through nearly the whole 'National +Speaker' by this time. I've given them Marcellus's speech to the mob, +Brutus's to the Romans, and Antony's over Caesar's dead body. I tried a +bit of Cicero against Catiline, but I couldn't remember it very well. +You know it, of course. _Quousque tandem_, you know." + +[Illustration: +"CATCHING MINNIE IN HIS ARMS, HE KISSED HER SEVERAL TIMES."] + +"Well, Min, how goes it?" he continued. "This _is_ jolly; and, what's +more, it's real good in you--darn me if it ain't! I knew you'd be +regularly struck up all of a heap when you heard of me as a Baron, but +I really didn't think you'd come all the way here to see me. And you +do look stunning! You do beat all! And this lady? You haven't +introduced me, you know." + +The Baron rose, and looked expectantly at Mrs. Willoughby, and then at +Minnie. The latter faltered forth some words, among which the Baron +caught the names Mrs. Willoughby and Rufus K. Gunn, the latter name +pronounced, with the middle initial and all, in a queer, prim way. + +"Mrs. Willoughby--ah!--Min's sister, I presume. Well, I'm pleased to +see you, ma'am. Do you know, ma'am, I have reason to remember your +name? It's associated with the brightest hours of my life. It was in +your parlor, ma'am, that I first obtained Min's promise of her hand. +Your hand, madam." + +And, stooping down, he grasped Mrs. Willoughby's hand, which was not +extended, and wrung it so hard that she actually gave a little shriek. + +"For my part, ma'am," he continued, "I'm not ashamed of my name--not a +mite. It's a good, honest name; but being as the Holy Father's gone +and made me a noble, I prefer being addressed by my title. All +Americans are above titles. They despise them. But being in Rome, you +see, we must do as the Romans do; and so you needn't know me as Rufus +K. Gunn, but as the Baron Atramonte. As for you, Min--you and I won't +stand on ceremony--you may call me 'Roof,' or any other name you +fancy. I would suggest some pet name--something a little loving, you +know." + +In the midst of all this, which was poured forth with extreme +volubility, the servant came and handed a card. + +"Count Girasole." + +[Illustration: "HAWBURY, AS I'M A LIVING SINNER!"] + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +THE AMERICAN BARON. + + +At any other time Mrs. Willoughby would perhaps have manoeuvred Minnie +out of the room; but on the present occasion the advent of the Italian +was an inexpressible relief. Mrs. Willoughby was not prepared for a +scene like this. The manners, the language, and the acts of Rufus K. +Gunn had filled her with simple horror. She was actually bewildered, +and her presence of mind was utterly gone. As for Minnie, she was +quite helpless, and sat, looking frightened. The Baron Atramonte might +have been one of the excellent of the earth--he might have been brave +and loyal and just and true and tender, but his manner was one to +which they were unaccustomed, and consequently Mrs. Willoughby was +quite overcome. + +The arrival of Girasole, therefore, was greeted by her with joy. She +at once rose to meet him, and could not help infusing into her +greeting a warmth which she had never shown him before. Girasole's +handsome eyes sparkled with delight, and when Mrs. Willoughby +pointedly made way for him to seat himself next to Minnie his cup of +joy was full. Mrs. Willoughby's only idea at that moment was to throw +some obstacle between Minnie and that "dreadful person" who claimed +her as his own, and had taken such shocking liberties. She did not +know that Girasole was in Rome, and now accepted his arrival at that +opportune moment as something little less than providential. + +And now, actuated still by the idea of throwing further obstacles +between Minnie and the Baron, she herself went over to the latter, and +began a series of polite remarks about the weather and about Rome; +while Girasole, eager to avail himself of his unexpected privilege, +conversed with Minnie in a low voice in his broken English. + +This arrangement was certainly not very agreeable to the Baron. His +flow of spirits seemed to be checked at once, and his volubility +ceased. He made only monosyllabic answers to Mrs. Willoughby's +remarks, and his eyes kept wandering, over beyond her to Minnie, and +scrutinizing the Italian who was thus monopolizing her at the very +moment when he was beginning to have a "realizing sense" of her +presence. He looked puzzled. He could not understand it at all. He +felt that some wrong was done by somebody. He fell into an ungracious +mood. He hated the Italian who had thus come between him and his +happiness, and who chatted with Minnie, in his abominable broken +English, just like an old acquaintance. He couldn't understand it. He +felt an unpleasant restraint thrown over him, and began to meditate a +departure, and a call at some more favorable time later in the +evening. But he wanted to have a few more words with "Min," and so he +tried to "sit out" the Italian. + +But the Italian was as determined as the American. It was the first +chance that he had had to get a word with Minnie since he was in +Milan, and he was eager to avail himself of it. Mrs. Willoughby, on +her part, having thus discomfited the Baron, was not unmindful of the +other danger; so she moved her seat to a position near enough to +overlook and check Girasole, and then resumed those formal, chilling, +heartless, but perfectly polite remarks which she had been +administering to the Baron since Girasole's arrival. + +At length Mrs. Willoughby began to be dreadfully bored, and groaned in +spirit over the situation in which Minnie had placed herself, and +racked her brains to find some way of retreat from these two +determined lovers, who thus set at naught the usages of society for +their own convenience. She grew indignant. She wondered if they would +_ever_ go. She wondered if it were not possible to engage the Count +and the Baron in a conversation by themselves, and, under cover of it, +withdraw. Finally she began to think whether she would not be +justified in being rude to them, since they were so inconsiderate. She +thought over this, and was rapidly coming to the decision that some +act of rudeness was her only hope, when, to her immense relief, the +servant entered and announced Lord Hawbury. + +The entrance of the welcome guest into the room where the unwelcome +ones were seated was to Mrs. Willoughby like light in a dark place. To +Minnie also it brought immense relief in her difficult position. The +ladies rose, and were about to greet the new-comer, when, to their +amazement, the Baron sprang forward, caught Lord Hawbury's hand, and +wrung it over and over again with the most astonishing vehemence. + +"Hawbury, as I'm a living sinner! Thunderation! Where did you come +from? Good again! Darn it all, Hawbury, this is real good! And how +well you look! _How_ are you? All right, and right side up? Who'd have +thought it? It ain't you, really, now, is it? Darn me if I ever was so +astonished in my life! You're the last man I'd have expected. Yes, +_Sir_. You may bet high on that." + +"Ah, really," said Hawbury, "my dear fellow! Flattered, I'm sure. And +how goes it with you? Deuced odd place to find you, old boy. And I'm +deuced glad to see you, you know, and all that sort of thing." + +And he wrung the Baron's hand quite as heartily as the other wrung +his; and the expression on his face was of as much cordiality and +pleasure as that upon the face of the other. Then Hawbury greeted the +ladies, and apologized by stating that the Baron was a very old and +tried friend, whom he had not seen for years; which intelligence +surprised Mrs. Willoughby greatly, and brought a faint ray of +something like peace to poor Minnie. + +The ladies were not imprisoned much longer. Girasole threw a black +look at Lord Hawbury, and retreated. After a few moments' chat Hawbury +also retired, and made the Baron go with him. And the Baron went +without any urging. He insisted, however, on shaking hands heartily +with both of the ladies, especially Minnie, whose poor little hand he +nearly crushed into a pulp; and to the latter he whispered the +consoling assurance that he would come to see her on the following +day. After which he followed his friend out. + +Then he took Hawbury over to his own quarters, and Hawbury made +himself very much at home in a rocking-chair, which the Baron regarded +as the pride and joy and glory of his room. + +"By Jove!" cried Hawbury. "This is deuced odd, do you know, old chap; +and I can't imagine how the mischief you got here!" + +This led to long explanations, and a long conversation, which was +protracted far into the night, to the immense enjoyment of both of the +friends. + +The Baron was, as Lord Hawbury had said, an old friend. He had become +acquainted with him many years before upon the prairies of America, +near the Rocky Mountains. The Baron had rescued him from Indians, by +whom he had been entrapped, and the two friends had wandered far over +those regions, enduring perils, fighting enemies, and roughing it in +general. This rough life had made each one's better nature visible to +the other, and had led to the formation of a friendship full of mutual +appreciation of the other's best qualities. Now it is just possible +that if they had not known one another, Hawbury might have thought the +Baron a boor, and the Baron might have called Hawbury a "thundering +snob;" but as it was, the possible boor and the possible snob each +thought the other one of the finest fellows in the world. + +"But you're not a Roman Catholic," said Hawbury, as the Baron +explained his position among the Zouaves. + +"What's the odds? All's fish that comes to their net. To get an office +in the Church may require a profession of faith, but we're not so +particular in the army. I take the oath, and they let me go. Besides, +I have Roman Catholic leanings." + +"Roman Catholic leanings?" + +"Yes; I like the Pope. He's a fine man, Sir--a fine man. I regard that +man more like a father than any thing else. There isn't one of us but +would lay down our lives for that old gentleman." + +"But you never go to confession, and you're not a member of the +Church." + +"No; but then I'm a member of the army, and I have long chats with +some of the English-speaking priests. There are some first-rate +fellows among them, too. Yes, Sir." + +"I don't see much of a leaning in all that." + +"Leaning? Why, it's all leaning. Why, look here. I remember the time +when I was a grim, true-blue Puritan. Well, I ain't that now. I used +to think the Pope was the Beast of the 'Pocalypse. Well, now I think +he's the finest old gentleman I ever saw. I didn't use to go to +Catholic chapel. Well, now I'm there often, and I rather kind o' like +it. Besides, I'm ready to argue with them all day and all night, and +what more can they expect from a fighting man? + +"You see, after our war I got my hand in, and couldn't stop fighting. +The Indians wouldn't do--too much throat-cutting and savagery. So I +came over here, took a fancy to the Pope, enlisted, was at Mentana, +fit there, got promoted, went home, couldn't stand it, and here I am, +back again; though how long I'm going to be here is more'n I can tell. +The fact is, I feel kind of onsettled." + +"Why so?" + +"Oh, it's an aggravating place, at the best." + +"How?" + +"There's such an everlasting waste of resources--such tarnation bad +management. Fact is, I've noted that it's always the case wherever you +trust ministers to do business. They're sure to make a mess of it. +I've known lots of cases. Why, that's always the way with us. Look at +our stock-companies of any kind, our religious societies, and our +publishing houses--wherever they get a ministerial committee, the +whole concern goes to blazes. I _know_ that. Yes, _Sir_. Now that's +the case here. Here's a fine country. Why, round this here city there's +a country, Sir, that, if properly managed, might beat any of our +prairies--and look at it. + +"Then, again, they complain of poverty. Why, I can tell you, from my +own observation, that they've got enough capital locked up, lying +useless, in this here city, to regenerate it all, and put it on its +feet. This capital wants to be utilized. It's been lying too long +without paying interest. It's time that it stopped. Why, I tell you +what it is, if they were to sell out what they have here lying idle, +and realize, they'd get enough money to form an endowment fund for the +Pope and his court so big that his Holiness and every official in the +place might get salaries all round out of the interest that would +enable them to live like--well, I was going to say like princes, but +there's a lot of princes in Rome that live so shabby that the +comparison ain't worth nothing. + +"Why, see here, now," continued the Baron, warming with his theme, +which seemed to be a congenial one; "just look here; see the position +of this Roman court. They can actually levy taxes on the whole world. +Voluntary contributions, Sir, are a wonderful power. Think of our +missionary societies--our Sabbath-school organizations in the States. +Think of the wealth, the activity, and the action of all our great +charitable, philanthropic, and religious bodies. What supports them +all? Voluntary contributions. Now what I mean to say is this--I mean +to say that if a proper organization was arranged here, they could get +annual receipts from the whole round globe that would make the Pope +the richest man on it. Why, in that case Rothschild wouldn't be a +circumstance. The Pope might go into banking himself, and control the +markets of the world. But no. There's a lot of ministers here, and +they haven't any head for it. I wish they'd give me a chance. I'd make +things spin. + +"Then, again, they've got other things here that's ruining them. +There's too much repression, and that don't do for the immortal mind. +My idea is that every man was created free and equal, and has a right +to do just as he darn pleases; but you can't beat that into the heads +of the governing class here. No, Sir. The fact is, what Rome wants is +a republic. It'll come, too, some day. The great mistake of his +Holiness's life is that he didn't put himself at the head of the +movement in '48. He had the chance, but he got frightened, and backed +down. Whereas if he had been a real, live Yankee, now--if he had been +like some of our Western parsons--he'd have put himself on the tiptop +of the highest wave, and gone in. Why, he could have had all Italy at +his right hand by this time, instead of having it all against him. +There's where he made his little mistake. If I were Pope I'd fight the +enemy with their own weapons. I'd accept the situation. I'd go in head +over heels for a republic. I'd have Rome the capital, myself +president, Garibaldi commander-in-chief, Mazzini secretary of state--a +man, Sir, that can lick even Bill Seward himself in a regular, +old-fashioned, tonguey, subtile, diplomatic note. And in that case, +with a few live men at the head of affairs, where would Victor Emanuel +be? Emphatically, nowhere! + +"Why, Sir," continued the Baron, "I'd engage to take this city as it +is, and the office of Pope, and run the whole Roman Catholic Church, +till it knocked out all opposition by the simple and natural process +of absorbing all opponents. We want a republic here in Rome. We want +freedom, Sir. Where is the Church making its greatest triumphs to-day? +In the States, Sir. If the Catholic Church made itself free and +liberal and go-ahead; if it kept up with the times; if it was imbued +with the spirit of progress, and pitched aside all old-fashioned +traditions--why, I tell you, Sir, it would be a little the tallest +organization on this green globe of ours. Yes, _Sir!_" + +While Hawbury and the Baron were thus engaged in high discourse, Mrs. +Willoughby and Minnie were engaged in discourses of a less elevated +but more engrossing character. + +After the ladies had escaped they went up stairs. Lady Dalrymple had +retired some time before to her own room, and they had the apartment +to themselves. Minnie flung herself into a chair and looked +bewildered; Mrs. Willoughby took another chair opposite, and said +nothing for a long time. + +"Well," said Minnie at last, "you needn't be so cross, Kitty; I didn't +bring him here." + +"Cross!" said her sister; "I'm not cross." + +"Well, you're showing temper, at any rate; and you know you are, and I +think it very unkind in you, when I have so much to trouble me." + +"Why, really, Minnie darling, I don't know what to say." + +"Well, why don't you tell me what you think of him, and all that sort +of thing? You _might_, you know." + +"Think of him!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby, elevating her eyebrows. + +"Yes, think of him; and you needn't go and make faces about him, at +any rate." + +"Did I make faces? Well, dear," said Mrs. Willoughby, patiently, "I'll +tell you what I think of him. I'm afraid of him." + +"Well, then," said Minnie, in a tone of triumph, "now you know how I +feel. Suppose he saved your life, and then came in his awfully +boisterous way to see you; and got you alone, and began that way, and +really quite overwhelmed you, you know; and then, when you were really +almost stunned, suppose he went and proposed to you? Now, then!" + +And Minnie ended this question with the air of one who could not be +answered, and knew it. + +"He's awful--perfectly awful!" said Mrs. Willoughby. "And the way he +treated you! It was _so_ shocking." + +"I know; and that's just the horrid way he _always_ does," said +Minnie, in a plaintive tone. "I'm sure _I_ don't know what to do with +him. And then he's Lord Hawbury's friend. So what _are_ we to do?" + +[Illustration: "LOOK AT THE MAN!"] + +"I don't know, unless we leave Rome at once." + +"But I don't _want_ to leave Rome," said Minnie. "I hate being chased +away from places by people--and they'd be sure to follow me, you +know--and I don't know what to do. And oh, Kitty darling, I've just +thought of something. It would be so nice. What do you think of it?" + +"What is it?" + +"Why, this. You know the Pope?" + +"No, I don't." + +"Oh, well, you've seen him, you know." + +"Yes; but what has he got to do with it?" + +"Why, I'll get you to take me, and I'll go to him, and tell him all +about it, and about all these horrid men; and I'll ask him if he can't +do something or other to help me. They have dispensations and things, +you know, that the Pope gives; and I want him to let me dispense with +these awful people." + +"Nonsense!" said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"I don't see any nonsense in it at all. I'm in earnest," said Minnie; +"and I think it's a great shame." + +"Nonsense!" said her sister again; "the only thing is for you to stay +in your room." + +"But I don't want to stay in my room, and I can't." + +"Oh dear! what can I do with this child?" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, +whose patience was giving way. + +Upon this Minnie went over and kissed her, and begged to be forgiven; +and offered to do any thing that darling Kitty wanted her to do. + +After this they talked a good deal over their difficulty, but without +being able to see their way out of it more clearly. + +That evening they were walking up and down the balcony of the house. +It was a quadrangular edifice, and they had a suite of rooms on the +second and third stories. They were on the balcony of the third story, +which looked down into the court-yard below. A fountain was in the +middle of this, and the moon was shining brightly. + +The ladies were standing looking down, when Minnie gently touched her +sister's arm, and whispered, + +"Look at the man!" + +"Where?" + +"By the fountain." + +Mrs. Willoughby looked, and saw the face of a man who was standing on +the other side of the fountain. His head rose above it, and his face +was turned toward them. He evidently did not know that he was seen, +but was watching the ladies, thinking that he himself was unobserved. +The moment that Mrs. Willoughby looked at the face she recognized it. + +"Come in," said she to Minnie. And drawing her sister after her, she +went into the house. + +"I knew the face; didn't you, Kitty dear?" said Minnie. "It's so easy +to tell it. It was Scone Dacres. But what in the world does he want? +Oh dear! I hope _he_ won't bother me." + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +THE INTRUDER. + + +Judging from the Baron's own words, it will be perceived that his +comprehension of the situation was a little different from the actual +fact. His idea was that his last letter had been received by Minnie in +England, whereupon she had been seized with such an ungovernable +longing to see him that she at once set out for Rome. She had not sent +him any message, for she wished to surprise him. She had done so +effectually. He was not merely surprised; he was overwhelmed, +overjoyed, intoxicated with joy. This was indeed kind, he thought--the +true part of a fond girl, who thus cast aside all silly scruples, and +followed the dictates of her own noble and loving heart. + +Now the fact that he had made a partial failure of his first visit to +his charmer did not in the slightest degree disconcert him. He was +naturally joyous, hilarious, and sanguine. His courage never faltered, +nor could the brightness of his soul be easily dimmed. A +disappointment on one day gave him but little trouble. It was quickly +thrown off, and then his buoyant spirit looked forward for better +fortune on the next day. The little disappointment which he had did +not, therefore, prevent him from letting his reason feast and his soul +flow with Lord Hawbury; nor, when that festive season was over, did it +prevent him from indulging in the brightest anticipations for the +following day. + +On the afternoon of that day, then, the Baron directed his steps +toward the hotel where his charmer resided, his heart beating high, +and the generous blood mantling his cheek, and all that sort of thing. +But the Baron was not alone. He had a companion, and this companion +was an acquaintance whom he had made that morning. This companion was +very tall, very thin, very sallow, with long, straggling locks of +rusty black hair, white neck-tie, and a suit of rather seedy black +clothes. In fact, it was the very stranger who had been arrested +almost under his eyes as a Garibaldian. His case had come under the +notice of the Baron, who had visited him, and found him not to be a +Garibaldian at all, but a fellow-countryman in distress--in short, no +less a person than the Reverend Saul Tozer, an esteemed clergyman, who +had been traveling through Europe for the benefit of his health and +the enlargement of his knowledge. This fellow-countryman in distress +had at once been released by the Baron's influence; and, not content +with giving him his liberty, he determined to take him under his +protection, and offered to introduce him to society; all of which +generous offices were fully appreciated by the grateful clergyman. + +The Baron's steps were first directed toward the place above +mentioned, and the Reverend Saul accompanied him. On reaching it he +knocked, and asked for Miss Fay. + +"Not at home," was the reply. + +"Oh, well," said he, "I'll go in and wait till she comes home. Come +along, parson, and make yourself quite at home. Oh, never mind, young +man," he continued to the servant; "I know the way. Come along, +parson." And with these words he led the way into the reception-room, +in which he had been before. + +An elderly lady was seated there whom the Baron recognized as having +seen before. It was Lady Dalrymple, whose name was, of course, unknown +to him, since he had only exchanged a few words on his former visit. +But as he was naturally chivalrous, and as he was bent on making +friends with all in the house, and as he was also in a glorious state +of good-will to the entire human race, he at once advanced to the lady +and made a low bow. + +"How do you do, ma'am?" + +Lady Dalrymple bowed good-naturedly, for she was good-natured to a +fault. + +"I suppose you remember me, ma'am," said the Baron, in rather a loud +voice; for, as the lady was elderly, he had a vague idea that she was +deaf--which impression, I may mention, was altogether unfounded--"I +suppose you remember me, ma'am? But I haven't had the pleasure of a +regular introduction to you; so we'll waive ceremony, if you choose, +and I'll introduce myself. I'm the Baron Atramonte, and this is my +very particular friend, the Reverend Saul Tozer." + +"I'm happy to make your acquaintance," said Lady Dalrymple, with a +smile, and not taking the Baron's offered hand--not, however, from +pride, but simply from laziness--for she hated the bother, and didn't +consider it good taste. + +"I called here, ma'am," said the Baron, without noticing that Lady +Dalrymple had not introduced _herself_--"I called here, ma'am, to see +my young friend, Miss Minnie Fay. I'm very sorry that she ain't at +home; but since I _am_ here, I rather think I'll just set down and +wait for her. I s'pose you couldn't tell me, ma'am, about how long +it'll be before she comes in?" + +Lady Dalrymple hadn't any idea. + +"All right," said the Baron; "the longer she keeps me waiting, the +more welcome she'll be when she does come. That's all I've got to +say." + +So the Baron handed a chair to the Reverend Saul, and then selecting +another for himself in a convenient position, he ensconced himself in +it as snugly as possible, and sat in silence for a few minutes. Lady +Dalrymple took no notice of him whatever, but appeared to be engrossed +with some trifle of needle-work. + +After about five minutes the Baron resumed the task of making himself +agreeable. + +He cleared his throat. + +"Long in these parts, ma'am?" he asked. + +"Not very long," said Lady Dalrymple, with her usual bland +good-nature. + +"A nice place this," continued the Baron. + +"Yes." + +"And do you keep your health, ma'am?" inquired the Baron, with some +anxiety. + +"Thanks," said Lady Dalrymple; which observation set the Baron's mind +wondering what she meant by that. + +"Pray, ma'am," said he, after a pause, "might you be any relation to a +young lady friend of mine that's staying here named Minnie Fay?" + +"A little," said Lady Dalrymple; which remark set the Baron again +wondering. And he was about to return to the charge with another and +more direct question, when his attention was arrested by the sound of +footsteps on the stairs; so he sat bolt upright, and stared hard at +the door. There was the rustle of a dress. The Baron rose. So did the +Reverend Saul Tozer. The lady appeared. It was not Minnie. It was Mrs. +Willoughby. + +Now during the Baron's visit there had been some excitement up stairs. +The ladies had told the servants that they were not at home to any +callers that day. They had found with consternation how carelessly the +Baron had brushed aside their little cobweb regulation, and had heard +his voice as he strove to keep up an easy conversation with their +aunt. Whereupon an earnest debate arose. They felt that it was not +fair to leave their aunt alone with the Baron, and that one of them +should go to the rescue. To Mrs. Willoughby's amazement, Minnie was +anxious to go. To this she utterly objected. Minnie insisted, and Mrs. +Willoughby was in despair. In vain she reproached that most whimsical +of young ladies. In vain she reminded her of the Baron's rudeness on a +former occasion. Minnie simply reminded her that the Baron had saved +her life. At last Mrs. Willoughby actually had to resort to +entreaties, and thus she persuaded Minnie not to go down. So she went +down herself, but in fear and trembling, for she did not know at what +moment her voluble and utterly unreliable sister might take it into +her head to follow her. + +The Baron, who had risen, full of expectation, stood looking at her, +full of disappointment, which was very strongly marked on his face. +Then he recollected that Minnie was "not at home," and that he must +wait till she did get home. This thought, and the hope that he would +not now have long to wait, brought back his friendly glow, and his +calm and his peace and his good-will toward the whole human race, +including the ladies in the room. He therefore bowed very low, and, +advancing, he made an effort to shake hands; but Mrs. Willoughby had +already known the dread pressure which the Baron gave, and evaded him +by a polite bow. Thereupon the Baron introduced the Reverend Saul +Tozer. + +The Baron took out his watch, looked at it, frowned, coughed, put it +back, and then drummed with his fingers on the arm of the chair. + +"Will it be long, ma'am," asked the Baron, "before Minnie gets back?" + +"She is not out," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Not out?" + +"No." + +"Why, the thundering fool of a servant went and told me that she was +not at home!" + +"She is at home," said Mrs. Willoughby, sweetly. + +"What! at home!" cried the Baron. "And does she know _I'm_ here?" + +"She does." + +"Then why in thunder don't she come down?" cried the Baron, +wonderingly. + +"Because she is indisposed." + +"Indisposed?" + +"Yes." + +This was the information which Mrs. Willoughby had decided to give to +the Baron. Minnie had stipulated that his feelings should not be hurt; +and this seemed to her to be the easiest mode of dealing with him. + +"Indisposed!" cried the Baron. + +"Yes." + +"Oh dear! Oh, I hope, ma'am--I do hope, ma'am, that she ain't very +bad. Is it any thing serious--or what?" + +"Not _very_ serious; she has to keep her room, though." + +"She ain't sick abed, I hope?" + +"Oh no--not so bad as that!" + +"Oh dear! it's all _me_, I know. _I'm_ to blame. She made this +journey--the poor little pet!--just to see me; and the fatigue and the +excitement have all been too much. Oh, I might have known it! Oh, I +remember now how pale she looked yesterday! Oh dear! what'll I do if +any thing happens to her? Oh, do tell me--is she better?--did she pass +a good night?--does she suffer any pain?--can I do any thing for +her?--will you take a little message from me to her?" + +"She is quite easy now, thanks," said Mrs. Willoughby; "but we have to +keep her perfectly quiet; the slightest excitement may be dangerous." + +Meanwhile the Reverend Saul had become wearied with sitting dumb, and +began to look around for some suitable means of taking part in the +conversation. As the Baron had introduced him to society, he felt that +it was his duty to take some part so as to assert himself both as a +man, a scholar, and a clergyman. So, as he found the Baron was +monopolizing Mrs. Willoughby, he gradually edged over till he came +within ear-shot of Lady Dalrymple, and then began to work his way +toward a conversation. + +"This, ma'am," he began, "is truly an interesting spot." + +Lady Dalrymple bowed. + +"Yes, ma'am. I've been for the past few days surveying the ruins of +antiquity. It is truly a soul-stirring spectacle." + +"So I have heard," remarked Lady Dalrymple, cheerfully. + +"Every thing around us, ma'am," continued the Reverend Saul, in a +dismal voice, "is subject to dissolution, or is actually dissolving. +How forcible air the words of the Psalmist: 'Our days air as the +grass, or like the morning flower; when blasting winds sweep o'er the +vale, they wither in an hour.' Yes, ma'am, I have this week stood in +the Roman Forum. The Coliseum, also, ma'am, is a wonderful place. It +was built by the Flavian emperors, and when completed could hold +eighty thousand spectators seated, with about twenty thousand +standing. In hot weather these spectators were protected from the rays +of the sun by means of awnings. It is a mighty fabric, ma'am!" + +"I should think so," said Lady Dalrymple. + +"The arch of Titus, ma'am, is a fine ruin. It was originally built by +the emperor of that name to commemorate the conquest of Jerusalem. The +arch of Septimius Severus was built by the Emperor of that name, and +the arch of Constantine was built by the emperor of _that_ name. They +are all very remarkable structures." + +"I'm charmed to hear you say so." + +"It's true, ma'am; but let me add, ma'am, that the ruins of this +ancient city do not offer to my eyes a spectacle half so melancholy as +the great moral ruin which is presented by the modern city. For, +ma'am, when I look around, what do I see? I behold the Babylon of the +Apocalypse! Pray, ma'am, have you ever reflected much on that?" + +"Not to any great extent," said Lady Dalrymple, who now began to feel +bored, and so arose to her feet. The Reverend Saul Tozer was just +getting on a full head of conversational steam, and was just fairly +under way, when this sad and chilling occurrence took place. She rose +and bowed to the gentlemen, and began to retreat. + +All this time the Baron had been pouring forth to Mrs. Willoughby his +excited interrogatories about Minnie's health, and had asked her to +take a message. This Mrs. Willoughby refused at first. + +"Oh no!" said she; "it will really disturb her too much. What she +wants most is perfect quiet. Her health is really _very_ delicate, and +I am _excessively_ anxious about her." + +"But does she--does she--is she--can she walk about her own room?" +stammered the Baron. + +"A little," said Mrs. Willoughby. "Oh, I hope in a few weeks she may +be able to come down. But the very _greatest_ care and quiet are +needed, for she is in such a _very_ delicate state that we watch her +night and day." + +"A few weeks!" echoed the Baron, in dismay. "Watch her night and day!" + +"Oh, you know, it is the only chance for her recovery. She is _so_ +delicate." + +The Baron looked at Mrs. Willoughby with a pale face, upon which there +was real suffering and real misery. + +"Can't I do something?" he gasped. "Won't you take a message to her? +It ought to do her good. Perhaps she thinks I'm neglecting her. +Perhaps she thinks I ain't here enough. Tell her I'm ready to give up +my office, and even my title of nobility, and come and live here, if +it'll be any comfort to her." + +"Oh, really, Sir, you _quite_ mistake her," said Mrs. Willoughby. "It +has no reference to you whatever. It's a nervous affection, +accompanied with general debility and neuralgia." + +"Oh no, you don't know her," said the Baron, incredulously. "I _know_ +her. I know what it is. But she walks, don't she?" + +"Yes, a little--just across the room; still, even that is too much. +She is _very, very_ weak, and must be _quite_ kept free from +excitement. Even the excitement of your visits is bad for her. Her +pulse is--is--always--accelerated--and--she--I--Oh, dear me!" + +While Mrs. Willoughby had been making up this last sentence she was +startled by a rustling on the stairs. It was the rustle of a female's +dress. An awful thought occurred to her, which distracted her, and +confused her in the middle of her sentence, and made her scarce able +to articulate her words. And as she spoke them the rustle drew nearer, +and she heard the sound of feet descending the stairs, until at last +the footsteps approached the door, and Mrs. Willoughby, to her utter +horror, saw Minnie herself. + +Now as to the Baron, in the course of his animated conversation with +Mrs. Willoughby, and in his excited entreaties to her to carry a +message up to the invalid, he had turned round with his back to the +door. It was about the time that Lady Dalrymple had begun to beat a +retreat. As she advanced the Baron saw her, and, with his usual +politeness, moved ever so far to one side, bowing low as he did so. +Lady Dalrymple passed, the Baron raised himself, and as Mrs. +Willoughby was yet speaking, and had just reached the exclamation +which concluded her last remark, he was astounded by the sudden +appearance of Minnie herself at the door. + +The effect of this sudden appearance was overwhelming. Mrs. Willoughby +stood thunder-struck, and the Baron utterly bewildered. The latter +recovered his faculties first. It was just as Lady Dalrymple was +passing out. With a bound he sprang toward Minnie, and caught her in +his arms, uttering a series of inarticulate cries. + +"Oh, Min! and you did come down, did you? And you couldn't stay up +there, could you? I wanted to send a message to you. Poor little Min! +you're so weak. Is it any thing serious? Oh, my darling little Min! +But sit down on this here seat. Don't stand; you're too weak. Why +didn't you send, and I'd have carried you down? But tell me now, +honest, wasn't it _me_ that brought this on? Never mind, I'll never +leave you again." + +This is the style which the gallant Baron adopted to express his +sentiments concerning Minnie; and the result was that he succeeded in +giving utterance to words that were quite as incoherent as any that +Minnie herself, in her most rambling moods, had ever uttered. + +The Baron now gave himself up to joy. He took no notice of any body. +He sat by Minnie's side on a sofa, and openly held her hand. The +Reverend Saul Tozer looked on with an approving smile, and surveyed +the scene like a father. Mrs. Willoughby's soul was on fire with +indignation at Minnie's folly and the Baron's impudence. She was also +indignant that her little conventional falsehoods had been suddenly +disproved by the act of Minnie herself. Yet she did not know what to +say, and so she went to a chair, and flung herself into it in fierce +anger. + +As for Minnie herself, she had come down to the Baron, and appeared +rather to enjoy the situation. She talked about Rome and Naples, and +asked him all about himself, and the Baron explained his whole +situation down to the minutest detail. She was utterly indifferent to +her sister. Once or twice the Baron made a move to go, but did not +succeed. He finally settled himself down apparently for the rest of +the day; but Mrs. Willoughby at last interposed. She walked forward. +She took Minnie's hand, and spoke to her in a tone which she but +seldom used. + +"You shall _not_ stay here any longer!" she cried. "Come." + +And Minnie obeyed at once. + +The Baron insisted on a tender adieu. Mrs. Willoughby stood by, with +flashing eyes and heaving breast. + +Minnie followed her up stairs in silence. + +"You silly child!" she cried. "Are you mad? What made you come down? +You broke your promise!" + +"Well--well--I couldn't help it, and he is so deliciously rude; and do +you know, Kitty dearest, I really begin to feel quite fond of him." + +"Now listen, child. You shall never see him again." + +"I don't see why not," whimpered Minnie. + +"And I'm going to telegraph to papa. I wouldn't have the +responsibility of you another week for the world." + +"Now, Kitty, you're horrid." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +THE BARON'S ASSAULTS. + + +On the eventful afternoon when the Baron had effected an entrance into +the heart of the enemy's country, another caller had come there--one +equally intent and equally determined, but not quite so aggressive. +This was the Count Girasole. The same answer was given to him which +had been given to the Baron, but with far different effect. The Baron +had carelessly brushed the slight obstacle aside. To the Count it was +an impenetrable barrier. It was a bitter disappointment, too; for he +had been filled with the brightest hopes and expectations by the +reception with which he had met on his last visit. That reception had +made him believe that they had changed their sentiments and their +attitude toward him, and that for the future he would be received in +the same fashion. He had determined, therefore, to make the most of +this favorable change, and so he at once repeated his call. This time, +however, his hopes were crushed. What made it worse, he had seen the +entrance of the Baron and the Reverend Saul, and knew by this that +instead of being a favored mortal in the eyes of these ladies, he was +really, in their estimation, placed below these comparative strangers. +By the language of Lord Hawbury on his previous call, he knew that the +acquaintance of the Baron with Mrs. Willoughby was but recent. + +The disappointment of the Count filled him with rage, and revived all +his old feelings and plans and projects. The Count was not one who +could suffer in silence. He was a crafty, wily, subtle, scheming +Italian, whose fertile brain was full of plans to achieve his desires, +and who preferred to accomplish his aims by a tortuous path, rather +than by a straight one. This repulse revived old projects, and he took +his departure with several little schemes in his mind, some of which, +at least, were destined to bear fruit afterward. + +On the following day the Baron called once more. The ladies in the +mean time had talked over the situation, but were unable to see what +they were to do with a man who insisted on forcing his way into their +house. Their treatment would have been easy enough if it had not been +for Minnie. She insisted that they should not be unkind to him. He had +saved her life, she said, and she could not treat him with rudeness. +Lady Dalrymple was in despair, and Mrs. Willoughby at her wit's end, +while Ethel, to whom the circumstance was made known, was roused by it +from her sadness, and tried to remonstrate with Minnie. All her +efforts, however, were as vain as those of her friends. Minnie could +not be induced to take any decided stand. She insisted on seeing him +whenever he called, on the ground that it would be unkind not to. + +"And will you insist on seeing Girasole also?" asked Mrs. Willoughby. + +"I don't know. I'm awfully sorry for him," said Minnie. + +"Well, then, Captain Kirby will be here next. Of course you will see +him?" + +"I suppose so," said Minnie, resignedly. + +"And how long do you think this sort of thing can go on? They'll meet, +and blood will be shed." + +"Oh dear! I'm afraid so." + +"Then I'm not going to allow it. I've telegraphed to papa. He'll see +whether you are going to have your own way or not." + +"I'm sure I don't see what dear papa can do." + +"He won't let you see those horrid men." + +"He won't be cruel enough to lock me up in the house. I do wish he +would come and take me away. I don't want them. They're all horrid." + +[Illustration: "MIN, IT'S ME!"] + +"This last one--this Gunn--is the most terrible man I ever saw." + +"Oh, Kitty dearest! How _can_ you say so? Why, his rudeness and +violence are perfectly irresistible. He's charming. He bullies one so +deliciously." + +Mrs. Willoughby at this turned away in despair. + +Minnie's very peculiar situation was certainly one which required a +speedy change. The forced entrance of the Baron had thrown +consternation into the family. Ethel herself had been roused, and took +a part in the debate. She began to see Minnie in a new light, and +Hawbury's attention to her began to assume the appearance of a very +mournful joke. To her mind Minnie was now the subject of desperate +attention from five men. + +Thus: + +1. Lord Hawbury. + +2. Count Girasole. + +3. Scone Dacres. + +4. Baron Atramonte. + +5. Captain Kirby, of whom Mrs. Willoughby had just told her. + +And of these, four had saved her life, and consequently had the +strongest possible claims on her. + +And the only satisfaction which Ethel could gain out of this was the +thought that Hawbury, at least, had not saved Minnie's life. + +And now to proceed. + +The Baron called, as has been said, on the following day. This time he +did not bring the Reverend Saul with him. He wished to see Minnie +alone, and felt the presence of third persons to be rather unpleasant. + +On reaching the place he was told, as before, that the ladies were not +at home. + +Now the Baron remembered that on the preceding day the servant had +said the same, while all the time the ladies were home. He was +charitably inclined to suppose that it was a mistake, and not a +deliberate lie; and, as he was in a frame of good-will to mankind, he +adopted this first theory. + +"All right, young man," said he; "but as you lied yesterday--under a +mistake--I prefer seeing for myself to-day." + +So the Baron brushed by the servant, and went in. He entered the room. +No one was there. He waited a little while, and thought. He was too +impatient to wait long. He could not trust these lying servants. So he +determined to try for himself. Her room was up stairs, somewhere in +the story above. + +So he went out of the room, and up the stairs, until his head was on a +level with the floor of the story above. Then he called: + +"_Min!_" + +No answer. + +"MIN!" in a louder voice. + +No answer. + +"MIN! it's ME!" still louder. + +No answer. + +"_MIN!_" a perfect yell. + +At this last shout there was a response. One of the doors opened, and +a lady made her appearance, while at two other doors appeared two +maids. The lady was young and beautiful, and her face was stern, and +her dark eyes looked indignantly toward the Baron. + +"Who are you?" she asked, abruptly; "and what do you want?" + +"Me? I'm the Baron Atramonte; and I want Min. Don't you know where she +is?" + +"Who?" + +"Min." + +"Min?" asked the other, in amazement. + +"Yes. My Min--Minnie, you know. Minnie Fay." + +At this the lady looked at the Baron with utter horror. + +"I want her." + +"She's not at home," said the lady. + +"Well, really, it's too bad. I must see her. Is she out?" + +"Yes." + +"Really? Honor bright now?" + +The lady retired and shut the door. + +"Well, darn it all, you needn't be so peppery," muttered the Baron. "I +didn't say any thing. I only asked a civil question. Out, hey? Well, +she must be this time. If she'd been in, she'd have made her +appearance. Well, I'd best go out and hunt her up. They don't seem to +me altogether so cordial as I'd like to have them. They're just a +leetle too 'ristocratic." + +With these observations to himself, the Baron descended the stairs, +and made his way to the door. Here he threw an engaging smile upon the +servant, and made a remark which set the other on the broad grin for +the remainder of the day. After this the Baron took his departure. + +The Baron this time went to some stables, and reappeared in a short +time mounted upon a gallant steed, and careering down the Corso. In +due time he reached the Piazza del Popolo, and then he ascended the +Pincian Hill. Here he rode about for some time, and finally his +perseverance was rewarded. He was looking down from the summit of the +hill upon the Piazza below, when he caught sight of a barouche, in +which were three ladies. One of these sat on the front seat, and her +white face and short golden hair seemed to indicate to him the one he +sought. + +In an instant he put spurs to his horse, and rode down the hill as +quick as possible, to the great alarm of the crowds who were going up +and down. In a short time he had caught up with the carriage. He was +right. It was the right one, and Minnie was there, together with Lady +Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby. The ladies, on learning of his +approach, exhibited no emotion. They were prepared for this, and +resigned. They had determined that Minnie should have no more +interviews with him indoors; and since they could not imprison her +altogether, they would have to submit for the present to his advances. +But they were rapidly becoming desperate. + +Lord Hawbury was riding by the carriage as the Baron came up. + +"Hallo!" said he to the former. "How do? and _how_ are you all? Why, +I've been hunting all over creation. Well, Minnie, how goes it? Feel +lively? That's right. Keep out in the open air. Take all the exercise +you can, and eat as hard as you can. You live too quiet as a general +thing, and want to knock around more. But we'll fix all that, won't +we, Min, before a month of Sundays?" + +The advent of the Baron in this manner, and his familiar address to +Minnie, filled Hawbury with amazement. He had been surprised at +finding him with the ladies on the previous day, but there was nothing +in his demeanor which was at all remarkable. Now, however, he noticed +the very great familiarity of his tone and manner toward Minnie, and +was naturally amazed. The Baron had not confided to him his secret, +and he could not understand the cause of such intimacy between the +representatives of such different classes. He therefore listened with +inexpressible astonishment to the Baron's language, and to Minnie's +artless replies. + +Minnie was sitting on the front seat of the barouche, and was alone in +that seat. As the gentlemen rode on each side of the carriage her face +was turned toward them. Hawbury rode back, so that he was beside Lady +Dalrymple; but the Baron rode forward, on the other side, so as to +bring himself as near to Minnie as possible. The Baron was exceedingly +happy. His happiness showed itself in the flush of his face, in the +glow of his eyes, and in the general exuberance and all-embracing +swell of his manner. His voice was loud, his gestures demonstrative, +and his remarks were addressed by turns to each one in the company. +The others soon gave up the attempt to talk, and left it all to the +Baron. Lady Dalrymple and Mrs. Willoughby exchanged glances of +despair. Hawbury still looked on in surprise, while Minnie remained +perfectly calm, perfectly self-possessed, and conversed with her usual +simplicity. + +As the party thus rode on they met a horseman, who threw a rapid +glance over all of them. It was Girasole. The ladies bowed, and Mrs. +Willoughby wished that he had come a little before, so that he could +have taken the place beside the carriage where the Baron now was. But +the place was now appropriated, and there was no chance for the Count. +Girasole threw a dark look over them, which rested more particularly +on Hawbury. Hawbury nodded lightly at the Count, and didn't appear to +take any further notice of him. All this took up but a few moments, +and the Count passed on. + +Shortly after they met another horseman. He sat erect, pale, sad, with +a solemn, earnest glow in his melancholy eyes. Minnie's back was +turned toward him, so that she could not see his face, but his eyes +were fixed upon Mrs. Willoughby. She looked back at him and bowed, as +did also Lady Dalrymple. He took off his hat, and the carriage rolled +past. Then he turned and looked after it, bareheaded, and Minnie +caught sight of him, and smiled and bowed. And then in a few moments +more the crowd swallowed up Scone Dacres. + +The Baron thus enjoyed himself in a large, exuberant fashion, and +monopolized the conversation in a large, exuberant way. He outdid +himself. He confided to the ladies his plans for the regeneration of +the Roman Church and the Roman State. He told stories of his +adventures in the Rocky Mountains. He mentioned the state of his +finances, and his prospects for the future. He was as open, as free, +and as communicative as if he had been at home, with fond sisters and +admiring brothers around him. The ladies were disgusted at it all; and +by the ladies I mean only Mrs. Willoughby and Lady Dalrymple. For +Minnie was not--she actually listened in delight. It was not +conventional. Very well. Neither was the Baron. And for that matter, +neither was she. He was a child of nature. So was she. His rudeness, +his aggressiveness, his noise, his talkativeness, his egotism, his +confidences about himself--all these did not make him so very +disagreeable to her as to her sister and aunt. + +So Minnie treated the Baron with the utmost complaisance, and Hawbury +was surprised, and Mrs. Willoughby and Lady Dalrymple were disgusted; +but the Baron was delighted, and his soul was filled with perfect joy. +Too soon for him was this drive over. But the end came, and they +reached the hotel. Hawbury left them, but the Baron lingered. The spot +was too sweet, the charm too dear--he could not tear himself away. + +In fact, he actually followed the ladies into the house. + +"I think I'll just make myself comfortable in here, Min, till you come +down," said the Baron. And with these words he walked into the +reception-room, where he selected a place on a sofa, and composed +himself to wait patiently for Minnie to come down. + +So he waited, and waited, and waited--but Minnie did not come. At last +he grew impatient. He walked out, and up the stairs, and listened. + +He heard ladies' voices. + +He spoke. + +"_Min!_" + +No answer. + +"MIN!" louder. + +No answer. + +"MIN! HALLO-O-O-O!" + +No answer. + +"_MIN!_" a perfect shout. + +At this a door was opened violently, and Mrs. Willoughby walked out. +Her cheeks were flushed, and her eyes glanced fire. + +"Sir," she said, "this is intolerable! You must be intoxicated. Go +away at once, or I shall certainly have you turned out of the house." + +And saying this she went back, shut the door, and locked it. + +The Baron was thunder-struck. He had never been treated so in his +life. He was cut to the heart. His feelings were deeply wounded. + +"Darn it!" he muttered. "What's all this for? I ain't been doing any +thing." + +He walked out very thoughtfully. He couldn't understand it at all. He +was troubled for some time. But at last his buoyant spirit rose +superior to this temporary depression. To-morrow would explain all, he +thought. Yes, to-morrow would make it all right. To-morrow he would +see Min, and get her to tell him what in thunder the row was. She'd +have to tell, for he could never find out. So he made up his mind to +keep his soul in patience. + +That evening Hawbury was over at the Baron's quarters, by special +invitation, and the Baron decided to ask his advice. So in the course +of the evening, while in the full, easy, and confidential mood that +arises out of social intercourse, he told Hawbury his whole +story--beginning with the account of his first meeting with Minnie, +and his rescue of her, and her acceptance of him, down to this very +day, when he had been so terribly snubbed by Mrs. Willoughby. To all +this Hawbury listened in amazement. It was completely new to him. He +wondered particularly to find another man who had saved the life of +this quiet, timid little girl. + +The Baron asked his advice, but Hawbury declined giving any. He said +he couldn't advise any man in a love-affair. Every man must trust to +himself. No one's advice could be of any avail. Hawbury, in fact, was +puzzled, but he said the best he could. The Baron himself was fully of +Hawbury's opinion. He swore that it was truth, and declared the man +that followed another's advice in a love-affair was a "darned fool +that didn't deserve to win his gal." + +There followed a general conversation on things of a different kind. +The Baron again discoursed on church and state. He then exhibited some +curiosities. Among other things a skull. He used it to hold his +tobacco. He declared that it was the skull of an ancient Roman. On the +inside was a paper pasted there, on which he had written the +following: + + "Oh, I'm the skull of a Roman bold + That fit in the ancient war; + From East to West I bore the flag + Of S. P. Q. and R. + + "In East and West, and North and South, + We made the nations fear us-- + Both Nebuchadnezzar and Hannibal, + And Pharaoh too, and Pyrrhus. + + "We took their statutes from the Greeks, + And lots of manuscripts too; + We set adrift on his world-wide tramp + The original wandering Jew. + + "But at last the beggarly Dutchman came, + With his lager and sauerkraut; + And wherever that beggarly Dutchman went + He made a terrible rout. + + "Wo ist der Deutscher's Vaterland? + Is it near the ocean wild? + Is it where the feathery palm-trees grow? + Not there, not there, my child. + + "But it's somewhere down around the Rhine; + And now that Bismarck's come, + Down goes Napoleon to the ground, + And away goes the Pope from Rome!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +"HE SAVED MY LIFE." + + +"I can't bear this any longer!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby. "Here you +are getting into all sorts of difficulties, each one worse than the +other. I'm sure I don't see why you should. You're very quiet, Minnie +dearest, but you have more unpleasant adventures than any person I +ever heard of. You're run away with on horseback, you're shipwrecked, +you're swept down a precipice by an avalanche, and you fall into the +crater of a burning volcano. Every time there is some horrid man who +saves you, and then proposes. As for you, you accept them all with +equal readiness, one after another, and what is worse, you won't give +any of them up. I've asked you explicitly which of them you'll give +up, and you actually refuse to say. My dear child, what are you +thinking of? You can't have them all. You can't have any of them. None +of them are agreeable to your family. They're horrid. What are you +going to do? Oh, how I wish you had dear mamma to take care of you! +But she is in a better world. And here is poor dear papa who can't +come. How shocked he would be if he knew all. What is worst, here is +that dreadful American savage, who is gradually killing me. He +certainly will be my death. What _am_ I to do, dear? Can't you +possibly show a little sense yourself--only a little, dear--and have +some consideration for your poor sister? Even Ethel worries about you, +though she has troubles of her own, poor darling; and aunty is really +quite ill with anxiety. What _are_ we going to do? I know one thing. +_I'm_ not going to put up with it. My mind is made up. I'll leave Rome +at once, and go home and tell papa." + +"Well, you needn't scold so," said Minnie. "It's my trouble. I can't +help it. They would come. I'm sure _I_ don't know what to do." + +"Well, you needn't be so awfully kind to them all. That's what +encourages them so. It's no use for me to try to keep them away if you +make them all so welcome. Now there's that dreadful Italian. I'm +positive he's going to get up some unpleasant plot. These Italians are +so very revengeful. And he thinks you're so fond of him, and I'm so +opposed. And he's right, too. You always act as if you're fond of him, +and all the rest. As to that terrible American savage, I'm afraid to +think of him; I positively am." + +"Well, you needn't be so awfully unkind to him. He saved my life." + +"That's no reason why he should deprive me of mine, which he will do +if he goes on so much longer." + +"You were very, very rude to him, Kitty," said Minnie, severely, "and +very, very unkind--" + +"I intended to be so." + +"I really felt like crying, and running out and explaining things." + +"I know you did, and ran back and locked the door. Oh, you wretched +little silly goose, what _am_ I _ever_ to do with such a child as you +are! You're really not a bit better than a baby." + +This conversation took place on the day following the Baron's last +eventful call. Poor Mrs. Willoughby was driven to desperation, and lay +awake all night, trying to think of some plan to baffle the enemy, but +was unsuccessful; and so she tried once more to have some influence +over Minnie by a remonstrance as sharp as she could give. + +"He's an American savage. I believe he's an Indian." + +"I'm sure I don't see any thing savage in him. He's as gentle and as +kind as he can be. And he's so awfully fond of me." + +"Think how he burst in here, forcing his way in, and taking possession +of the house. And then poor dear aunty! Oh, how she _was_ shocked and +horrified!" + +"It's because he is so _awfully_ fond of me, and was so perfectly +_crazy_ to see me." + +"And then, just as I was beginning to persuade him to go away quietly, +to think of you coming down!" + +"Well, I couldn't bear to have him so sad, when he saved my life, and +so I just thought I'd show myself, so as to put him at ease." + +"A pretty way to show yourself--to let a great, horrid man treat you +so." + +"Well, that's what they _all_ do," said Minnie, plaintively. "I'm sure +_I_ can't help it." + +"Oh dear! was there ever such a child! Why, Minnie darling, you must +know that such things are very, very ill-bred, and very, very +indelicate and unrefined. And then, think how he came forcing himself +upon us when we were driving. Couldn't he see that he wasn't wanted? +No, he's a savage. And then, how he kept giving us all a history of +his life. Every body could hear him, and people stared so that it was +really quite shocking." + +"Oh, that's because he is so very, very frank. He has none of the +deceit of society, you know, Kitty darling." + +"Deceit of society! I should think not. Only think how he acted +yesterday--forcing his way in and rushing up stairs. Why, it's +actually quite frightful. He's like a madman. We will have to keep all +the doors locked, and send for the police. Why, do you know, Ethel +says that he was here before, running about and shouting in the same +way: 'Min!' 'Min!' 'Min!'--that's what the horrid wretch calls you +--'Min! it's me.' 'Come, Min!'" + +At this Minnie burst into a peal of merry, musical laughter, and +laughed on till the tears came to her eyes. Her sister looked more +disgusted than ever. + +"He's such a boy," said Minnie; "he's just like a boy. He's so _aw_fully +funny. If I'm a child, he's a big boy, and the awfullest, funniest boy +I ever saw. And then he's _so_ fond of me. Why, he worships me. Oh, +it's awfully nice." + +"A boy! A beast, you mean--a horrid savage. What _can_ I do? I must +send for a policeman. I'll certainly have the doors all locked. And +then we'll all be prisoners." + +"Well, then, it'll all be your own fault, for _I_ don't want to have +any doors locked." + +"Oh dear!" sighed her sister. + +"Well, I don't. And I think you're very unkind." + +"Why, you silly child, he'd come here some day, carry you off, and +make you marry him." + +"Well, I do wish he would," said Minnie, gravely. "I wish somebody +would, for then it would put a stop to all this worry, and I really +don't know what else ever will. Do _you_, now, Kitty darling?" + +Mrs. Willoughby turned away with a gesture of despair. + +An hour or two after some letters were brought in, one of which was +addressed to + + MISS FAY, + + _Poste Restante_, + + _Roma_. + +Minnie opened this, and looked over it with a troubled air. Then she +spoke to her sister, and they both went off to Minnie's room. + +"Who do you think this is from?" she asked. + +"Oh, I don't know! Of course it's some more trouble." + +"It's from Captain Kirby." + +"Oh, of course! And of course he's here in Rome?" + +"No, he isn't." + +"What! Not yet?" + +"No; but he wrote this from London. He has been to the house, and +learned that we had gone to Italy. He says he has sent off letters to +me, directed to every city in Italy, so that I may be sure to get it. +Isn't that good of him?" + +"Well?" asked Mrs. Willoughby, repressing an exclamation of vexation. + +"Well, he says that in three days he will leave, and go first to Rome, +as he thinks we will be most likely to be there this season. And so, +you see, he's coming on; and he will be here in three days, you know." + +"Minnie," said her sister, after some moments' solemn thought. + +"Well, Kitty darling?" + +"Do you ever think?" + +"I don't know." + +"Would you like one of these gentlemen of yours to blow one of the +others' brains out, or stab him, or any thing of that sort?" + +"How shocking you are, Kitty dear! What a dreadful question!" + +"Well, understand me now. One of them _will_ do that. There will be +trouble, and your name will be associated with it." + +"Well," said Minnie, "I know who _won't_ be shot." + +"Who?" + +"Why, Rufus K. Gunn," said she, in the funny, prim way in which she +always pronounced that name. "If he finds it out, he'll drive all the +others away." + +"And would you like that?" + +"Well, you know, he's awfully fond of me, and he's so like a boy: and +if I'm such a child, I could do better with a man, you know, that's +like a boy, you know, than--than--" + +"Nonsense! He's a madman, and you're a simpleton, you little goose." + +"Well, then, we must be well suited to one another," said Minnie. + +"Now, child, listen," said Mrs. Willoughby, firmly. "I intend to put a +stop to this. I have made up my mind positively to leave Rome, and +take you home to papa. I'll tell him all about it, put you under his +care, and have no more responsibility with you. I think he'd better +send you back to school. I've been too gentle. You need a firm hand. +I'll be firm for a few days, till you can go to papa. You need not +begin to cry. It's for your own good. If you're indulged any more, +you'll simply go to ruin." + +Mrs. Willoughby's tone was different from usual, and Minnie was +impressed by it. She saw that her sister was resolved. So she stole up +to her and twined her arms about her and kissed her. + +"There, there," said her sister, kissing her again, "don't look so +sad, Minnie darling. It's for your own good. We must go away, or else +you'll have another of those dreadful people. You must trust to me +now, dearest, and not interfere with me in any way." + +"Well, well, you mustn't be unkind to poor Rufus K. Gunn," said +Minnie. + +"Unkind? Why, we won't be any thing to him at all." + +"And am I never to--to--see him again?" + +"No!" said her sister, firmly. + +Minnie started, and looked at Mrs. Willoughby, and saw in her face a +fixed resolution. + +"No, never!" repeated Mrs. Willoughby. "I am going to take you back to +England. I'm afraid to take any railroad or steamboat. I'll hire a +carriage, and we'll all go in a quiet way to Florence. Then we can +take the railroad to Leghorn, and go home by the way of Marseilles. No +one will know that we've gone away. They'll think we have gone on an +excursion. Now we'll go out driving this morning, and this afternoon +we must keep the outer door locked, and not let any one in. I suppose +there is no danger of meeting him in the morning. He must be on duty +then." + +"But mayn't I see him at all before we go?" + +"No!" + +"Just once--only once?" + +"No, not once. You've seen that horrid man for the last time." + +Minnie again looked at her sister, and again read her resolution in +her face. She turned away, her head dropped, a sob escaped from her, +and then she burst into tears. + +Mrs. Willoughby left the room. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +JEALOUSY. + + +Lord Hawbury had come to Rome for the sole purpose of watching over +his friend Scone Dacres. But he had not found it so easy to do so. His +friend kept by himself more than he used to, and for several days +Hawbury had seen nothing of him. Once while with the ladies he had met +him, and noticed the sadness and the gloom of his brow. He saw by this +that he was still a prey to those feelings the exhibition of which had +alarmed him at Naples, and made him resolve to accompany him here. + +A few days afterward, while Hawbury was in his room, his friend +entered. Hawbury arose and greeted him with unfeigned joy. + +"Well, old man," he said, "you've kept yourself close, too. What have +you been doing with yourself? I've only had one glimpse of you for an +age. Doing Rome, hey? Antiquities, arts, churches, palaces, and all +that sort of thing, I suppose. Come now, old boy, sit down and give an +account of yourself. Have a weed? Here's Bass in prime order. Light +up, my dear fellow, and let me look at you as you compose your manly +form for a friendly smoke. And don't speak till you feel inclined." + +Dacres took his seat with a melancholy smile, and selecting a cigar, +lighted it, and smoked in silence for some time. + +"Who was that Zouave fellow?" he asked at length: "the fellow that I +saw riding by the carriage the other day?" + +"That--oh, an old friend of mine. He's an American named Gunn. He's +joined the Papal Zouaves from some whim, and a deuced good thing it is +for them to get hold of such a man. I happened to call one day, and +found him with the ladies." + +"The ladies--ah!" and Dacres's eyes lighted up with a bad, hard light. +"I suppose he's another of those precious cavaliers--the scum of all +lands--that dance attendance on my charming wife." + +"Oh, see here now, my dear fellow, really now," said Hawbury, "none of +that, you know. This fellow is a friend of _mine_, and one of the best +fellows I ever saw. You'd like him, old chap. He'd suit you." + +"Yes, and suit my wife better," said Dacres, bitterly. + +"Oh, come now, really, my dear boy, you're completely out. He don't +know your wife at all. It's the other one, you know. Don't be jealous, +now, if I tell you." + +"Jealous!" + +"Yes. I know your weakness, you know; but this is an old affair. I +don't want to violate confidence, but--" + +Dacres looked hard at his friend and breathed heavily. He was +evidently much excited. + +"But what?" he said, hoarsely. + +"Well, you know, it's an old affair. It's the young one, you +know--Miss Fay. He rather affects her, you know. That's about it." + +"Miss Fay?" + +"Yes; your child-angel, you know. But it's an older affair than yours; +it is, really; so don't be giving way, man. Besides, his claims on her +are as great as yours; yes, greater too. By Jove!" + +"Miss Fay! Oh, is that all?" said Dacres, who, with a sigh of infinite +relief, shook off all his late excitement, and became cool once more. + +Hawbury noted this very thoughtfully. + +"You see," said Dacres, "that terrible wife of mine is so cursedly +beautiful and fascinating, and so infernally fond of admiration, that +she keeps no end of fellows tagging at her heels. And so I didn't know +but that this was some new admirer. Oh, she's a deep one! Her new +style, which she has been cultivating for ten years, has made her look +like an angel of light. Why, there's the very light of heaven in her +eyes, and in her face there is nothing, I swear, but gentleness and +purity and peace. Oh, had she but been what she now seems! Oh, if even +now I could but believe this, I would even now fling my memories to +the winds, and I'd lie down in the dust and let her trample on me, if +she would only give me that tender and gentle love that now lurks in +her face. Good Heavens! can such a change be possible? No; it's +impossible! It can't be! Don't I know her? Can't I remember her? Is my +memory all a dream? No, it's real; and it's marked deep by this scar +that I wear. Never till that scar is obliterated can that woman +change." + +Dacres had been speaking, as he often did now, half to himself; and as +he ended he rubbed his hand over the place where the scar lay, as +though to soothe the inflammation that arose from the rush of angry +blood to his head. + +"Well, dear boy, I can only say I wish from my heart that her nature +was like her face. She's no favorite of mine, for your story has made +me look on her with your eyes, and I never have spoken to her except +in the most distant way; but I must say I think her face has in it a +good deal of that gentleness which you mention. Miss Fay treats her +quite like an elder sister, and is deuced fond of her, too. I can see +that. So she can't be very fiendish to her. Like loves like, you know, +and the one that the child-angel loves ought to be a little of an +angel herself, oughtn't she?" + +Dacres was silent for a long time. + +"There's that confounded Italian," said he, "dangling forever at her +heels--the devil that saved her life. He must be her accepted lover, +you know. He goes out riding beside the carriage." + +"Well, really, my dear fellow, she doesn't seem overjoyed by his +attentions." + +"Oh, that's her art. She's so infernally deep. Do you think she'd let +the world see her feelings? Never. Slimy, Sir, and cold and subtle and +venomous and treacherous--a beautiful serpent. Aha! isn't that the way +to hit her off? Yes, a beautiful, malignant, venomous serpent, with +fascination in her eyes, and death and anguish in her bite. But she +shall find out yet that others are not without power. Confound her!" + +"Well, now, by Jove! old boy, I think the very best thing you can do +is to go away somewhere, and get rid of these troubles." + +"Go away! Can I go away from my own thoughts? Hawbury, the trouble is +in my own heart. I must keep near her. There's that Italian devil. He +shall not have her. I'll watch them, as I have watched them, till I +find a chance for revenge." + +"You have watched them, then?" asked Hawbury, in great surprise. + +"Yes, both of them. I've seen the Italian prowling about where she +lives. I've seen her on her balcony, evidently watching for him." + +"But have you seen any thing more? This is only your fancy." + +"Fancy! Didn't I see her herself standing on the balcony looking down. +I was concealed by the shadow of a fountain, and she couldn't see me. +She turned her face, and I saw it in that soft, sweet, gentle beauty +which she has cultivated so wonderfully. I swear it seemed like the +face of an angel, and I could have worshiped it. If she could have +seen my face in that thick shadow she would have thought I was an +adorer of hers, like the Italian--ha, ha!--instead of a pursuer, and +an enemy." + +"Well, I'll be hanged if I can tell myself which you are, old boy; +but, at any rate, I'm glad to be able to state that your trouble will +soon be over." + +"How's that?" + +"She's going away." + +"Going away!" + +"Yes." + +"She! going away! where?" + +"Back to England." + +"Back to England! why, she's just come here. What's that for?" + +"I don't know. I only know they're all going home. Well, you know, +holy week's over, and there is no object for them to stay longer." + +"Going away! going away!" replied Dacres, slowly. "Who told you?" + +"Miss Fay." + +"Oh, I don't believe it." + +"There's no doubt about it, my dear boy. Miss Fay told me explicitly. +She said they were going in a carriage by the way of Civita +Castellana." + +"What are they going that way for? What nonsense! I don't believe it." + +"Oh, it's a fact. Besides, they evidently don't want it to be known." + +"What's that?" asked Dacres, eagerly. + +"I say they don't seem to want it to be known. Miss Fay told me in her +childish way, and I saw that Mrs. Willoughby looked vexed, and tried +to stop her." + +"Tried to stop her! Ah! Who were there? Were you calling?" + +"Oh no--it was yesterday morning. I was riding, and, to my surprise, +met them. They were driving--Mrs. Willoughby and Miss Fay, you +know--so I chatted with them a few moments, or rather with Miss Fay, +and hoped I would see them again soon, at some _fete_ or other, when +she told me this." + +"And my wife tried to stop her?" + +"Yes." + +"And looked vexed?" + +"Yes." + +"Then it was some secret of _hers_. _She_ has some reason for keeping +dark. The other has none. Aha! don't I understand her? She wants to +keep it from _me_. She knows you're my friend, and was vexed that you +should know. Aha! she dreads my presence. She knows I'm on her track. +She wants to get away with her Italian--away from my sight. Aha! the +tables are turned at last. Aha! my lady. Now we'll see. Now take your +Italian and fly, and see how far you can get away from me. Take him, +and see if you can hold him. Aha! my angel face, my mild, soft eyes of +love, but devil's heart--can not I understand it all? I see through +it. I've watched, you. Wait till you see Scone Dacres on your track!" + +"What's that? You don't really mean it?" cried Hawbury. + +"Yes, I do." + +"Will you follow her?" + +"Yes, I will." + +"What for? For a vague fancy of your jealous mind?" + +"It isn't a fancy; it's a certainty. I've seen the Italian dogging +her, dodging about her house, and riding with her. I've seen her +looking very much as if she were expecting him at her balcony. Is all +that nothing? She's seen me, and feels conscience-stricken, and longs +to get away where she may be free from the terror of my presence. But +I'll track her. I'll strike at her--at her heart, too; for I will +strike through the Italian." + +"By Jove!" + +"I will, I swear!" cried Dacres, gloomily. + +"You're mad, Dacres. You imagine all this. You're like a madman in a +dream." + +"It's no dream. I'll follow her. I'll track her." + +"Then, by Jove, you'll have to take me with you, old boy! I see you're +not fit to take care of yourself. I'll have to go and keep you from +harm." + +"You won't keep me from harm, old chap," said Dacres, more gently; +"but I'd be glad if you would go. So come along." + +"I will, by Jove!" + +[Illustration: "I WATCHED HIM."] + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +THE BARON'S WOES. + + +Dacres was not the only excited visitor that Hawbury had that day. +Before its close another made his appearance in the person of the +Baron. + +"Well, my noble friend," cried Hawbury--"my Baron bold--how goes it? +But, by Jove! what's the matter, my boy? Your brow deep scars of +thunder have intrenched, and care sits on your faded cheek. Pour forth +the mournful tale. I'll sympathize." + +"I swear it's too almighty bad!" cried the Baron. + +"What?" + +"The way I'm getting humbugged." + +"Humbugged! Who's been humbugging you?" + +"Darn me if I know; and that's the worst of it by a thundering sight." + +"Well, my dear fellow, if I can help you, you'd better let me know +what it's all about." + +"Why, Minnie; that's the row. There ain't another thing on this green +earth that would trouble me for five seconds." + +"Minnie? Oh! And what has happened--a lover's quarrel?" + +"Not a quarrel. _She's_ all right." + +"What is it, then?" + +"Why, she's disappeared." + +"Disappeared! What do you mean by that?" + +"Darn me if I know. I only know this, that they keep their place +bolted and barred, and they've muffled the bell, and there's no +servant to be seen, and I can't find out any thing about them. And +it's too almighty bad. Now isn't it?" + +"It's deuced odd, too--queer, by Jove! I don't understand. Are you +sure they're all locked up?" + +"Course I am." + +"And no servants?" + +"Not a darned servant." + +"Did you ask the concierge?" + +"Course I did; and crossed his palm, too. But he didn't give me any +satisfaction." + +"What did he say?" + +"Why, he said they were at home, for they had been out in the morning, +and had got back again. Well, after that I went back and nearly +knocked the door down. And that was no good; I didn't get a word. The +concierge swore they were in, and they wouldn't so much as answer me. +Now I call that too almighty hard, and I'd like to know what in +thunder they all mean by it." + +"By Jove! odd, too." + +"Well, you know, I thought after a while that it would be all +explained the next day; so I went home and waited, and came back the +next afternoon. I tried it over again. Same result. I spoke to the +concierge again, and he swore again that they were all in. They had +been out in the morning, he said, and looked well. They had come home +by noon, and had gone to their rooms. Well, I really did start the +door that time, but didn't get any answer for my pains." + +"By Jove!" + +"Well, I was pretty hard up, I tell you. But I wasn't going to give +up. So I staid there, and began a siege. I crossed the concierge's +palm again, and was in and out all night. Toward morning I took a nap +in his chair. He thought it was some government business or other, and +assisted me all he could. I didn't see any thing at all though, except +an infernal Italian--a fellow that came calling the first day I was +there, and worked himself in between me and Min. He was prowling about +there, with another fellow, and stared hard at me. I watched him, and +said nothing, for I wanted to find out his little game. He's up to +something, I swear. When he saw I was on the ground, though, he beat a +retreat. + +"Well, I staid all night, and the next morning watched again. I didn't +knock. It wasn't a bit of use--not a darned bit. + +"Well, about nine o'clock the door opened, and I saw some one looking +out very cautiously. In a minute I was standing before her, and held +out my hand to shake hers. It was the old lady. But she didn't shake +hands. She looked at me quite coolly. + +"'Good-morning, ma'am,' said I, in quite a winning voice. +'Good-morning, ma'am.' + +"'Good-morning,' she said. + +"'I come to see Minnie,' said I. + +"'To see Minnie!' said she: and then she told me she wasn't up. + +"'Ain't up?' said I; 'and it so bright and early! Why, what's got her? +Well, you just go and tell her _I'm_ here, and I'll just step inside +and wait till she comes down,' said I. + +"But the old lady didn't budge. + +"'I'm not a servant,' she said, very stiff; 'I'm her aunt, and her +guardian, and I allow no messages to pass between her and strange +gentlemen.' + +"'Strange gentlemen!' I cried. 'Why, ain't I engaged to her?' + +"'I don't know you,' says she. + +"'Wasn't I introduced to you?' says I. + +"'No,' says she; 'I don't know you.' + +[Illustration: "BUT I SAVED HER LIFE."] + +"'But I'm engaged to Minnie,' says I. + +"'I don't recognize you,' says she. 'The family know nothing about +you; and my niece is a silly girl, who is going back to her father, +who will probably send her to school.' + +"'But I saved her life,' says I. + +"'That's very possible,' says she; 'many persons have done so; yet +that gives you no right to annoy her; and you shall _not_ annoy her. +Your engagement is an absurdity. The child herself is an absurdity. +_You_ are an absurdity. Was it not you who was creating such a +frightful disturbance here yesterday? Let me inform you, Sir, that if +you repeat it, you will be handed over to the police. The police would +certainly have been called yesterday had we not wished to avoid +hurting your feelings. We now find that you have no feelings to hurt.' + +"'Very well, ma'am,' says I; 'these are your views; but as you are not +Minnie, I don't accept them. I won't retire from the field till I hear +a command to that effect from Minnie herself. I allow no relatives to +stand between me and my love. Show me Minnie, and let me hear what she +has to say. That's all I ask, and that's fair and square.' + +"'You shall not see her at all,' says the old lady, quite mild; 'not +at all. You must not come again, for you will not be admitted. Police +will be here to put you out if you attempt to force an entrance as you +did before.' + +"'Force an entrance!' I cried. + +"'Yes,' she said, 'force an entrance. You did so, and you filled the +whole house with your shouts. Is that to be borne? Not by us, Sir. And +now go, and don't disturb us any more.' + +"Well, I'll be darned if I ever felt so cut up in my life. The old +lady was perfectly calm and cool; wasn't a bit scared--though there +was no reason why she should be. She just gave it to me that way. But +when she accused me of forcing an entrance and kicking up a row, I was +struck all of a heap and couldn't say a word. _Me_ force an entrance! +_Me_ kick up a row! And in Minnie's house! Why, the old woman's mad! + +"Well, the old lady shut the door in my face, and I walked off; and +I've been ever since trying to understand it, but I'll be darned if I +can make head or tail of it. The only thing I see is that they're all +keeping Minnie locked up away from me. They don't like me, though why +they don't I can't see; for I'm as good as any body, and I've been +particular about being civil to all of them. Still they don't like me, +and they see that Minnie does, and they're trying to break up the +engagement. But by the living jingo!" and the Baron clinched a +good-sized and very sinewy fist, which he brought down hard on the +table--"by the living jingo, they'll find they can't come it over +_me_! No, _Sir_!" + +"Is she fond of you--Miss Fay, I mean?" + +"Fond! Course she is. She dotes on me." + +"Are you sure?" + +"Sure! As sure as I am of my own existence. Why, the way she looks at +me is enough! She has a look of helpless trust, an innocent +confidence, a tender, child-like faith and love, and a beseeching, +pleading, imploring way that tells me she is mine through and +through." + +Hawbury was a little surprised. He thought he had heard something like +that before. + +"Oh, well," said he, "that's the chief thing, you know. If you're sure +of the girl's affections, the battle's half won." + +"Half won! Ain't it all won?" + +"Well, not exactly. You see, with us English, there are ever so many +considerations." + +"But with us Americans there is only one consideration, and that is, +Do you love me? Still, if her relatives are particular about dollars, +I can foot up as many thousands as her old man, I dare say; and then, +if they care for rank, why, I'm a Baron!" + +"And what's more, old boy," said Hawbury, earnestly, "if they wanted a +valiant, stout, true, honest, loyal soul, they needn't go further than +Rufus K. Gunn, Baron de Atramonte." + +The Baron's face flushed. + +"Hawbury," said he, "that's good in you. We've tried one another, +haven't we? You're a brick! And I don't need _you_ to tell _me_ what +you think of me. But if you could get a word into the ear of that +cantankerous old lady, and just let her know what _you_ know about me, +it might move her. You see you're after her style, and I'm not; and +she can't see any thing but a man's manner, which, after all, varies +in all countries. Now if you could speak a word for me, Hawbury--" + +"By Jove! my dear fellow, I'd be glad to do so--I swear I would; but +you don't appear to know that I won't have the chance. They're all +going to leave Rome to-morrow morning." + +The Baron started as though he had been shot. + +"What!" he cried, hoarsely. "What's that? Leave Rome?" + +"Yes." + +"And to-morrow morning?" + +"Yes; Miss Fay told me herself--" + +"Miss Fay told you herself! By Heaven! What do they mean by that?" And +the Baron sat trembling with excitement. + +"Well, the holy week's over." + +"Darn it all, that's got nothing to do with it! It's me! They're +trying to get her from me! How are they going? Do you know?" + +"They are going in a carriage by the way of Civita Castellana." + +"In a carriage by the way of Civita Castellana! Darn that old idiot of +a woman! what's she up to now? If she's running away from me, she'll +wish herself back before she gets far on that road. Why, there's an +infernal nest of brigands there that call themselves Garibaldians; +and, by thunder, the woman's crazy! They'll be seized and held to +ransom--perhaps worse. Heavens! I'll go mad! I'll run and tell them. +But no; they won't see me. What'll I do? And Minnie! I can't give her +up. She can't give me up. She's a poor, trembling little creature; her +whole life hangs on mine. Separation from me would kill her. Poor +little girl! Separation! By thunder, they shall never separate us! +What devil makes the old woman go by that infernal road? Brigands all +the way! But I'll go after them; I'll follow them. They'll find it +almighty hard work to keep her from me! I'll see her, by thunder! and +I'll get her out of their clutches! I swear I will! I'll bring her +back here to Rome, and I'll get the Pope himself to bind her to me +with a knot that all the old women under heaven can never loosen!" + +"What! You're going? By Jove! that's odd, for I'm going with a friend +on the same road." + +"Good again! Three cheers! And you'll see the old woman, and speak a +good word for me?" + +"If I see her and get a chance, I certainly will, by Jove!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +AN EVENTFUL JOURNEY. + + +On the day following two carriages rolled out of Rome, and took the +road toward Florence by the way of Civita Castellana. One carriage +held four ladies; the other one was occupied by four lady's-maids and +the luggage of the party. + +It was early morning, and over the wide Campagna there still hung +mists, which were dissipated gradually as the sun arose. As they went +on the day advanced, and with the departing mists there opened up a +wide view. On either side extended the desolate Campagna, over which +passed lines of ruined aqueducts on their way from the hills to the +city. Here and there crumbling ruins arose above the plain--some +ancient, others medieval, none modern. Before them, in the distance, +arose the Apennines, among which were, here and there, visible the +white outlines of some villa or hamlet. + +For mile after mile they drove on; and the drive soon proved very +monotonous. It was nothing but one long and unvarying plain, with this +only change, that every mile brought them nearer to the mountains. As +the mountains were their only hope, they all looked forward eagerly to +the time when they would arrive there and wind along the road among +them. + +Formerly Mrs. Willoughby alone had been the confidante of Minnie's +secret, but the events of the past few days had disclosed most of her +troubles to the other ladies also, at least as far as the general +outlines were concerned. The consequence was, that they all knew +perfectly well the reason why they were traveling in this way, and +Minnie knew that they all knew it. Yet this unpleasant consciousness +did not in the least interfere with the sweetness of her temper and +the gentleness of her manner. She sat there, with a meek smile and a +resigned air, as though the only part now left her in life was the +patient endurance of her unmerited wrongs. She blamed no one; she made +no complaint; yet there was in her attitude something so touching, so +clinging, so pathetic, so forlorn, and in her face something so sweet, +so sad, so reproachful, and so piteous, that she enforced sympathy; +and each one began to have a half-guilty fear that Minnie had been +wronged by her. Especially did Mrs. Willoughby feel this. She feared +that she had neglected the artless and simple-minded child; she feared +that she had not been sufficiently thoughtful about her; and now +longed to do something to make amends for this imaginary neglect. So +she sought to make the journey as pleasant as possible by cheerful +remarks and lively observations. None of these things, however, +produced any effect upon the attitude of Minnie. She sat there, with +unalterable sweetness and unvarying patience, just like a holy martyr, +who freely forgave all her enemies, and was praying for those who had +despitefully used her. + +[Illustration: THE PROCESSION ACROSS THE CAMPAGNA.] + +The exciting events consequent upon the Baron's appearance, and his +sudden revelation in the role of Minnie's lover, had exercised a +strong and varied effect upon all; but upon one its result was wholly +beneficial, and this was Ethel. It was so startling and so unexpected +that it had roused her from her gloom, and given her something to +think of. The Baron's debut in their parlor had been narrated to her +over and over by each of the three who had witnessed it, and each gave +the narrative her own coloring. Lady Dalrymple's account was humorous; +Mrs. Willoughby's indignant; Minnie's sentimental. Out of all these +Ethel gained a fourth idea, compounded of these three, which again +blended with another, and an original one of her own, gained from a +personal observation of the Baron, whose appearance on the stairs and +impatient summons for "Min" were very vividly impressed on her memory. +In addition to this there was the memory of that day on which they +endeavored to fight off the enemy. + +That was, indeed, a memorable day, and was now alluded to by them all +as the day of the siege. It was not without difficulty that they had +withstood Minnie's earnest protestations, and intrenched themselves. +But Mrs. Willoughby was obdurate, and Minnie's tears, which flowed +freely, were unavailing. + +Then there came the first knock of the impatient and aggressive +visitor, followed by others in swift succession, and in +ever-increasing power. Every knock went to Minnie's heart. It excited +an unlimited amount of sympathy for the one who had saved her life, +and was now excluded from her door. But as the knocks grew violent and +imperative, and Minnie grew sad and pitiful, the other ladies grew +indignant. Lady Dalrymple was on the point of sending off for the +police, and only Minnie's frantic entreaties prevented this. At last +the door seemed almost beaten in, and their feelings underwent a +change. They were convinced that he was mad, or else intoxicated. Of +the madness of love they did not think. Once convinced that he was +mad, they became terrified. The maids all hid themselves. None of them +now would venture out even to call the police. They expected that the +concierge would interpose, but in vain. The concierge was bribed. + +After a very eventful day night came. They heard footsteps pacing up +and down, and knew that it was their tormentor. Minnie's heart again +melted with tender pity for the man whose love for her had turned his +head, and she begged to be allowed to speak to him. But this was not +permitted. So she went to bed and fell asleep. So, in process of time, +did the others, and the night passed without any trouble. Then morning +came, and there was a debate as to who should confront the enemy. +There was no noise, but they knew that he was there. At last Lady +Dalrymple summoned up her energies, and went forth to do battle. The +result has already been described in the words of the bold Baron +himself. + +But even this great victory did not reassure the ladies. Dreading +another visit, they hurried away to a hotel, leaving the maids to +follow with the luggage as soon as possible. On the following morning +they had left the city. + +Events so very exciting as these had produced a very natural effect +upon the mind of Ethel. They had thrown her thoughts out of their old +groove, and fixed them in a new one. Besides, the fact that she was +actually leaving the man who had caused her so much sorrow was already +a partial relief. She had dreaded meeting him so much that she had +been forced to keep herself a prisoner. A deep grief still remained in +her heart; but, at any rate, there was now some pleasure to be felt, +if only of a superficial kind. + +As for Mrs. Willoughby, in spite of her self-reproach about her purely +imaginary neglect of Minnie, she felt such an extraordinary relief +that it affected all her nature. The others might feel fatigue from +the journey. Not she. She was willing to continue the journey for an +indefinite period, so long as she had the sweet consciousness that she +was bearing Minnie farther and farther away from the grasp of "that +horrid man." The consequence was, that she was lively, lovely, +brilliant, cheerful, and altogether delightful. She was as tender to +Minnie as a mother could be. She was lavish in her promises of what +she would do for her. She chatted gayly with Ethel about a thousand +things, and was delighted to find that Ethel reciprocated. She rallied +Lady Dalrymple on her silence, and congratulated her over and over, in +spite of Minnie's frowns, on the success of her generalship. And so at +last the weary Campagna was traversed, and the two carriages began to +ascend among the mountains. + +Several other travelers were passing over that Campagna road, and in +the same direction. They were not near enough for their faces to be +discerned, but the ladies could look back and see the signs of their +presence. First there was a carriage with two men, and about two miles +behind another carriage with two other men; while behind these, again, +there rode a solitary horseman, who was gradually gaining on the other +travelers. + +Now, if it had been possible for Mrs. Willoughby to look back and +discern the faces of the travelers who were moving along the road +behind her, what a sudden overturn there would have been in her +feelings, and what a blight would have fallen upon her spirits! But +Mrs. Willoughby remained in the most blissful ignorance of the persons +of these travelers, and so was able to maintain the sunshine of her +soul. + +At length there came over that sunny soul the first cloud. + +The solitary horseman, who had been riding behind, had overtaken the +different carriages. + +The first carriage contained Lord Hawbury and Scone Dacres. As the +horseman passed, he recognized them with a careless nod and smile. + +Scone Dacres grasped Lord Hawbury's arm. + +"Did you see him?" he cried. "The Italian! I thought so! What do you +say now? Wasn't I right?" + +"By Jove!" cried Lord Hawbury. + +Whereupon Dacres relapsed into silence, sitting upright, glaring after +the horseman, cherishing in his gloomy soul the darkest and most +vengeful thoughts. + +The horseman rode on further, and overtook the next carriage. In this +there were two men, one in the uniform of the Papal Zouaves, the other +in rusty black. He turned toward these, and greeted them with the same +nod and smile. + +"Do you see that man, parson?" said the Baron to his companion. "Do +you recognize him?" + +"No." + +"Well, you saw him at Minnie's house. He came in." + +"No, he didn't." + +"Didn't he? No. By thunder, it wasn't that time. Well, at any rate, +that man, I believe, is at the bottom of the row. It's my belief that +he's trying to cut me out, and he'll find he's got a hard row to hoe +before he succeeds in that project." + +And with these words the Baron sat glaring after the Italian, with +something in his eye that resembled faintly the fierce glance of Scone +Dacres. + +The Italian rode on. A few miles further were the two carriages. +Minnie and her sister were sitting on the front seats, and saw the +stranger as he advanced. He soon came near enough to be distinguished, +and Mrs. Willoughby recognized Girasole. + +Her surprise was so great that she uttered an exclamation of terror, +which startled the other ladies, and made them all look in that +direction. + +"How very odd!" said Ethel, thoughtfully. + +"And now I suppose you'll all go and say that I brought _him_ too," +said Minnie. "That's _always_ the way you do. You _never_ seem to +think that I may be innocent. You _always_ blame me for every little +mite of a thing that may happen." + +No one made any remark, and there was silence in the carriage as the +stranger approached. The ladies bowed somewhat coolly, except Minnie, +who threw upon him the most imploring look that could possibly be sent +from human eyes, and the Italian's impressible nature thrilled before +those beseeching, pleading, earnest, unfathomable, tender, helpless, +innocent orbs. Removing his hat, he bowed low. + +"I haf not been awara," he said, politely, in his broken English, +"that youar ladysippa's bin intend to travalla. Ees eet not subito +intenzion?" + +Mrs. Willoughby made a polite response of a general character, the +Italian paused a moment to drink in deep draughts from Minnie's great +beseeching eyes that were fixed upon his, and then, with a low bow, he +passed on. + +"I believe I'm losing my senses," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Why, Kitty darling?" asked Minnie. + +"I don't know how it is, but I actually trembled when that man came +up, and I haven't got over it yet." + +"I'm sure I don't see why," said Minnie. "You're _always_ imagining +things, though. Now _isn't_ she, Ethel dearest?" + +"Well, really, I don't see much in the Count to make one tremble. I +suppose poor dear Kitty has been too much agitated lately, and it's +her poor nerves." + +"I have my lavender, Kitty dear," said Lady Dalrymple. "Won't you take +it? Or would you prefer valerian?" + +"Thanks, much, but I do not need it," said Mrs. Willoughby. "I suppose +it will pass off." + +"I'm sure the poor Count never did any body any harm," said Minnie, +plaintively; "so you needn't all abuse him so--unless you're all angry +at him for saving my life. I remember a time when you all thought very +differently, and all praised him up, no end." + +"Really, Minnie darling, I have nothing against the Count, only once +he was a little too intrusive; but he seems to have got over that; and +if he'll only be nice and quiet and proper, I'm sure I've nothing to +say against him." + +They drove on for some time, and at length reached Civita Castellana. +Here they drove up to the hotel, and the ladies got out and went up to +their apartments. They had three rooms up stairs, two of which looked +out into the street, while the third was in the rear. At the front +windows was a balcony. + +The ladies now disrobed themselves, and their maids assisted them to +perform the duties of a very simple toilet. Mrs. Willoughby's was +first finished. So she walked over to the window, and looked out into +the street. + +It was not a very interesting place, nor was there much to be seen; +but she took a lazy, languid interest in the sight which met her eyes. +There were the two carriages. The horses were being led to water. +Around the carriages was a motley crowd, composed of the poor, the +maimed, the halt, the blind, forming that realm of beggars which from +immemorial ages has flourished in Italy. With these was intermingled a +crowd of ducks, geese, goats, pigs, and ill-looking, mangy, snarling +curs. + +Upon these Mrs. Willoughby looked for some time, when at length her +ears were arrested by the roll of wheels down the street. A carriage +was approaching, in which there were two travelers. One hasty glance +sufficed, and she turned her attention once more to the ducks, geese, +goats, dogs, and beggars. In a few minutes the crowd was scattered by +the newly-arrived carriage. It stopped. A man jumped out. For a moment +he looked up, staring hard at the windows. That moment was enough. +Mrs. Willoughby had recognized him. + +She rushed away from the windows. Lady Dalrymple and Ethel were in +this room, and Minnie in the one beyond. All were startled by Mrs. +Willoughby's exclamation, and still more by her looks. + +"Oh!" she cried. + +"What?" cried they. "What is it?" + +"_He's_ there! _He's_ there!" + +"Who? who?" they cried, in alarm. + +"That horrid man!" + +Lady Dalrymple and Ethel looked at one another in utter horror. + +As for Minnie, she burst into the room, peeped out of the windows, saw +"that horrid man," then ran back, then sat down, then jumped up, and +then burst into a peal of the merriest laughter that ever was heard +from her. + +"Oh, I'm _so_ glad! I'm _so_ glad!" she exclaimed. "Oh, it's so +_aw_fully funny. Oh, I'm _so_ glad! Oh, Kitty darling, don't, please +don't, look so cross. Oh, ple-e-e-e-e-e-e-ase don't, Kitty darling. +You make me laugh worse. It's so _aw_fully funny!" + +But while Minnie laughed thus, the others looked at each other in +still greater consternation, and for some time there was not one of +them who knew what to say. + +But Lady Dalrymple again threw herself in the gap. + +"You need not feel at all nervous, my dears," said she, gravely. "I do +not think that this person can give us any trouble. He certainly can +not intrude upon us in these apartments, and on the highway, you know, +it will be quite as difficult for him to hold any communication with +us. So I really don't see any cause for alarm on your part, nor do I +see why dear Minnie should exhibit such delight." + +These words brought comfort to Ethel and Mrs. Willoughby. They at once +perceived their truth. To force himself into their presence in a +public hotel was, of course, impossible, even for one so reckless as +he seemed to be; and on the road he could not trouble them in any way, +since he would have to drive before them or behind them. + +At Lady Dalrymple's reference to herself, Minnie looked up with a +bright smile. + +"You're awfully cross with me, aunty darling," she said; "but I +forgive you. Only I can't help laughing, you know, to see how +frightened you all are at poor Rufus K. Gunn. And, Kitty dearest, oh +how you _did_ run away from the window! It was awfully funny, you +know." + +Not long after the arrival of the Baron and his friends another +carriage drove up. None of the ladies were at the window, and so they +did not see the easy nonchalance of Hawbury as he lounged into the +house, or the stern face of Scone Dacres as he strode before him. + +[Illustration: "AS FOR DANGAIRE--POUF! DERE IS NONE."] + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +ADVICE REJECTED. + + +During dinner the ladies conversed freely about "that horrid man," +wondering what plan he would adopt to try to effect an entrance among +them. They were convinced that some such attempt would be made, and +the servants of the inn who waited on them were strictly charged to +see that no one disturbed them. However, their dinner was not +interrupted and after it was over they began to think of retiring, so +as to leave at an early hour on the following morning. Minnie had +already taken her departure, and the others were thinking of following +her example, when a knock came at the door. + +All started. One of the maids went to the door, and found a servant +there who brought a message from the Baron Atramonte. He wished to +speak to the ladies on business of the most urgent importance. At this +confirmation of their expectations the ladies looked at one another +with a smile mingled with vexation, and Lady Dalrymple at once sent +word that they could not possibly see him. + +But the Baron was not to be put off. In a few moments the servant came +back again, and brought another message, of a still more urgent +character, in which the Baron entreated them to grant him this +interview, and assured them that it was a matter of life and death. + +"He's beginning to be more and more violent," said Lady Dalrymple. +"Well, dears," she added, resignedly, "in my opinion it will be better +to see him, and have done with him. If we do not, I'm afraid he will +pester us further. I will see him. You had better retire to your own +apartments." + +Upon this she sent down an invitation to the Baron to come up, and the +ladies retreated to their rooms. + +The Baron entered, and, as usual, offered to shake hands--an offer +which, as usual, Lady Dalrymple did not accept. He then looked +earnestly all round the room, and gave a sigh. He evidently had +expected to see Minnie, and was disappointed. Lady Dalrymple marked +the glance, and the expression which followed. + +"Well, ma'am," said he, as he seated himself near to Lady Dalrymple, +"I said that the business I wanted to speak about was important, and +that it was a matter of life and death. I assure you that it is. But +before I tell it I want to say something about the row in Rome. I have +reason to understand that I caused a little annoyance to you all. If I +did, I'm sure I didn't intend it. I'm sorry. There! Let's say no more +about it. 'Tain't often that I say I'm sorry, but I say so now. +Conditionally, though--that is, if I really _did_ annoy any body." + +"Well, Sir?" + +"Well, ma'am--about the business I came for. You have made a sudden +decision to take this journey. I want to know, ma'am, if you made any +inquiries about this road before starting?" + +"This road? No, certainly not." + +"I thought so," said the Baron. "Well, ma'am, I've reason to believe +that it's somewhat unsafe." + +"Unsafe?" + +"Yes; particularly for ladies." + +"And why?" + +"Why, ma'am, the country is in a disordered state, and near the +boundary line it swarms with brigands. They call themselves +Garibaldians, but between you and me, ma'am, they're neither more nor +less than robbers. You see, along the boundary it is convenient for +them to dodge to one side or the other, and where the road runs there +are often crowds of them. Now our papal government means well, but it +ain't got power to keep down these brigands. It would like to, but it +can't. You see, the scum of all Italy gather along the borders, +because they know we _are_ weak; and so there it is." + +"And you think there is danger on this road?" said Lady Dalrymple, +looking keenly at him. + +"I do, ma'am." + +"Pray have you heard of any recent acts of violence along the road?" + +"No, ma'am." + +"Then what reason have you for supposing that there is any particular +danger now?" + +"A friend of mine told me so, ma'am." + +"But do not people use the road? Are not carriages constantly passing +and repassing? Is it likely that if it were unsafe there would be no +acts of violence? Yet you say there have been none." + +"Not of late, ma'am." + +"But it is of late, and of the present time, that we are speaking." + +"I can only say, ma'am, that the road is considered very dangerous." + +"Who considers it so?" + +"If you had made inquiries at Rome, ma'am, you would have found this +out, and never would have thought of this road." + +"And you advise us not to travel it?" + +"I do, ma'am." + +"What would you advise us to do?" + +"I would advise you, ma'am, most earnestly, to turn and go back to +Rome, and leave by another route." + +Lady Dalrymple looked at him, and a slight smile quivered on her lips. + +"I see, ma'am, that for some reason or other you doubt my word. Would +you put confidence in it if another person were to confirm what I have +said?" + +"That depends entirely upon who the other person may be." + +"The person I mean is Lord Hawbury." + +"Lord Hawbury? Indeed!" said Lady Dalrymple, in some surprise. "But +he's in Rome." + +"No, ma'am, he's not. He's here--in this hotel." + +"In this hotel? Here?" + +"Yes, ma'am." + +"I'm sure I should like to see him very much, and hear what he says +about it." + +"I'll go and get him, then," said the Baron, and, rising briskly, he +left the room. + +In a short time he returned with Hawbury. Lady Dalrymple expressed +surprise to see him, and Hawbury explained that he was traveling with +a friend. Lady Dalrymple, of course, thought this a fresh proof of his +infatuation about Minnie, and wondered how he could be a friend to a +man whom she considered as Minnie's persecutor and tormentor. + +The Baron at once proceeded to explain how the matter stood, and to +ask Hawbury's opinion. + +"Yes," said Lady Dalrymple, "I should really like to know what you +think about it." + +"Well, really," said Hawbury, "I have no acquaintance with the thing, +you know. Never been on this road in my life. But, at the same time, I +can assure you that this gentleman is a particular friend of mine, and +one of the best fellows I know. I'd stake my life on his perfect truth +and honor. If he says any thing, you may believe it because he says +it. If he says there are brigands on the road, they must be there." + +"Oh, of course," said Lady Dalrymple. "You are right to believe your +friend, and I should trust his word also. But do you not see that +perhaps he may believe what he says, and yet be mistaken?" + +At this the Baron's face fell. Lord Hawbury's warm commendation of him +had excited his hopes, but now Lady Dalrymple's answer had destroyed +them. + +"For my part," she added, "I don't really think any of us know much +about it. I wish we could find some citizen of the town, or some +reliable person, and ask him. I wonder whether the inn-keeper is a +trust-worthy man." + +The Baron shook his head. + +"I wouldn't trust one of them. They're the greatest rascals in the +country. Every man of them is in league with the Garibaldians and +brigands. This man would advise you to take whatever course would +benefit himself and his friends most." + +"But surely we might find some one whose opinion would be reliable. +What do you say to one of my drivers? The one that drove our carriage +looks like a good, honest man." + +"Well, perhaps so; but I wouldn't trust one of them. I don't believe +there's an honest vetturino in all Italy." + +Lady Dalrymple elevated her eyebrows, and threw at Hawbury a glance of +despair. + +"He speaks English, too," said Lady Dalrymple. + +"So do some of the worst rascals in the country," said the Baron. + +"Oh, I don't think he can be a very bad rascal. We had better question +him, at any rate. Don't you think so, Lord Hawbury?" + +"Well, yes; I suppose it won't do any harm to have a look at the +beggar." + +The driver alluded to was summoned, and soon made his appearance. He +was a square-headed fellow, with a grizzled beard, and one of those +non-committal faces which may be worn by either an honest man or a +knave. Lady Dalrymple thought him the former; the Baron the latter. +The result will show which of these was in the right. + +The driver spoke very fair English. He had been two or three times +over the road. He had not been over it later than two years before. He +didn't know it was dangerous. He had never heard of brigands being +here. He didn't know. There was a signore at the hotel who might know. +He was traveling to Florence alone. He was on horseback. + +As soon as Lady Dalrymple heard this she suspected that it was Count +Girasole. She determined to have his advice about it. So she sent a +private request to that effect. + +It was Count Girasole. He entered, and threw his usual smile around. +He was charmed, in his broken English, to be of any service to miladi. + +To Lady Dalrymple's statement and question Girasole listened +attentively. As she concluded a faint smile passed over his face. The +Baron watched him attentively. + +"I know no brigand on dissa road," said he. + +Lady Dalrymple looked triumphantly at the others. + +"I have travail dissa road many time. No dangaire--alla safe." + +Another smile from Lady Dalrymple. + +The Count Girasole looked at Hawbury and then at the Baron, with a +slight dash of mockery in his face. + +"As for dangaire," he said--"pouf! dere is none. See, I go alone--no +arms, not a knife--an' yet gold in my porte-monnaie." + +And he drew forth his porte-monnaie, and opened it so as to exhibit +its contents. + +A little further conversation followed. Girasole evidently was +perfectly familiar with the road. The idea of brigands appeared to +strike him as some exquisite piece of pleasantry. He looked as though +it was only his respect for the company which prevented him from +laughing outright. They had taken the trouble to summon him for that! +And, besides, as the Count suggested, even if a brigand did appear, +there would be always travelers within hearing. + +Both Hawbury and the Baron felt humiliated, especially the latter; and +Girasole certainly had the best of it on that occasion, whatever his +lot had been at other times. + +The Count withdrew. The Baron followed, in company with Hawbury. He +was deeply dejected. First of all, he had hoped to see Minnie. Then he +hoped to frighten the party back. As to the brigands, he was in most +serious earnest. All that he said he believed. He could not understand +the driver and Count Girasole. The former he might consider a +scoundrel; but why should Girasole mislead? And yet he believed that +he was right. As for Hawbury, he didn't believe much in the brigands, +but he did believe in his friend, and he didn't think much of +Girasole. He was sorry for his friend, yet didn't know whether he +wanted the party to turn back or not. His one trouble was Dacres, who +now was watching the Italian like a blood-hound, who had seen him, no +doubt, go up to the ladies, and, of course, would suppose that Mrs. +Willoughby had sent for him. + +As for the ladies, their excitement was great. The doors were thin, +and they had heard every word of the conversation. With Mrs. +Willoughby there was but one opinion as to the Baron's motive: she +thought he had come to get a peep at Minnie, and also to frighten them +back to Rome by silly stories. His signal failure afforded her great +triumph. Minnie, as usual, sympathized with him, but said nothing. As +for Ethel, the sudden arrival of Lord Hawbury was overwhelming, and +brought a return of all her former excitement. The sound of his voice +again vibrated through her, and at first there began to arise no end +of wild hopes, which, however, were as quickly dispelled. The question +arose, What brought him there? There seemed to her but one answer, and +that was his infatuation for Minnie. Yet to her, as well as to Lady +Dalrymple, it seemed very singular that he should be so warm a friend +to Minnie's tormentor. It was a puzzling thing. Perhaps he did not +know that the Baron was Minnie's lover. Perhaps he thought that his +friend would give her up, and he could win her. Amidst these thoughts +there came a wild hope that perhaps he did not love Minnie so very +much, after all. But this hope soon was dispelled as she recalled the +events of the past, and reflected on his cool and easy indifference to +every thing connected with her. + +Such emotions as these actuated the ladies; and when the guests had +gone they joined their aunt once more, and deliberated. Minnie took no +part in the debate, but sat apart, looking like an injured being. +There was among them all the same opinion, and that was that it was +all a clumsy device of the Baron's to frighten them back to Rome. Such +being their opinion, they did not occupy much time in debating about +their course on the morrow. The idea of going back did not enter their +heads. + +This event gave a much more agreeable feeling to Mrs. Willoughby and +Lady Dalrymple than they had known since they had been aware that the +Baron had followed them. They felt that they had grappled with the +difficulty. They had met the enemy and defeated him. Besides, the +presence of Hawbury was of itself a guarantee of peace. There could be +no further danger of any unpleasant scenes while Hawbury was with him. +Girasole's presence, also, was felt to be an additional guarantee of +safety. + +It was felt by all to be a remarkable circumstance that so many men +should have followed them on what they had intended as quite a secret +journey. These gentlemen who followed them were the very ones, and the +only ones, from whom they wished to conceal it. Yet it had all been +revealed to them, and lo! here they all were. Some debate arose as to +whether it would not be better to go back to Rome now, and defy the +Baron, and leave by another route. But this debate was soon given up, +and they looked forward to the journey as one which might afford new +and peculiar enjoyment. + +On the following morning they started at an early hour. Girasole left +about half an hour after them, and passed them a few miles along the +road. The Baron and the Reverend Saul left next; and last of all came +Hawbury and Dacres. The latter was, if possible, more gloomy and +vengeful than ever. The visit of the Italian on the preceding evening +was fully believed by him to be a scheme of his wife's. Nor could any +amount of persuasion or vehement statement on Hawbury's part in any +way shake his belief. + +"No," he would say, "you don't understand. Depend upon it, she got him +up there to feast her eyes on him. Depend upon it, she managed to get +some note from him, and pass one to him in return. He had only to run +it under the leaf of a table, or stick it inside of some book: no +doubt they have it all arranged, and pass their infernal love-letters +backward and forward. But I'll soon have a chance. My time is coming. +It's near, too. I'll have my vengeance; and then for all the wrongs of +all my life that demon of a woman shall pay me dear!" + +To all of which Hawbury had nothing to say. He could say nothing; he +could do nothing. He could only stand by his friend, go with him, and +watch over him, hoping to avert the crisis which he dreaded, or, if it +did come, to lessen the danger of his friend. + +The morning was clear and beautiful. The road wound among the hills. +The party went in the order above mentioned. + +First, Girasole, on horseback. + +Next, and two miles at least behind, came the two carriages with the +ladies and their maids. + +Third, and half a mile behind these, came the Baron and the Reverend +Saul. + +Last of all, and half a mile behind the Baron, came Hawbury and Scone +Dacres. + +These last drove along at about this distance. The scenery around grew +grander, and the mountains higher. The road was smooth and well +constructed, and the carriage rolled along with an easy, comfortable +rumble. + +They were driving up a slope which wound along the side of a hill. At +the top of the hill trees appeared on each side, and the road made a +sharp turn here. + +Suddenly the report of a shot sounded ahead. + +Then a scream. + +"Good Lord! Dacres, did you hear that?" cried Hawbury. "The Baron was +right, after all." + +The driver here tried to stop his horses, but Hawbury would not let +him. + +"Have you a pistol, Dacres?" + +"No." + +"Get out!" he shouted to the driver; and, kicking him out of the seat, +he seized the reins himself, and drove the horses straight forward to +where the noise arose. + +"It's the brigands, Dacres. The ladies are there." + +"My wife! O God! my wife!" groaned Dacres. But a minute before he had +been cursing her. + +"Get a knife! Get something, man! Have a fight for it!" + +Dacres murmured something. + +Hawbury lashed the horses, and drove them straight toward the wood. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +CAUGHT IN AMBUSH. + + +The ladies had been driving on, quite unconscious of the neighborhood +of any danger, admiring the beauty of the scenery, and calling one +another's attention to the various objects of interest which from time +to time became visible. Thus engaged, they slowly ascended the incline +already spoken of, and began to enter the forest. They had not gone +far when the road took a sudden turn, and here a startling spectacle +burst upon their view. + +The road on turning descended slightly into a hollow. On the right +arose a steep acclivity, covered with the dense forest. On the other +side the ground rose more gradually, and was covered over by a forest +much less dense. Some distance in front the road took another turn, +and was lost to view among the trees. About a hundred yards in front +of them a tree had been felled, and lay across the way, barring their +progress. + +About twenty armed men stood before them close by the place where the +turn was. Among them was a man on horseback. To their amazement, it +was Girasole. + +Before the ladies could recover from their astonishment two of the +armed men advanced, and the driver at once stopped the carriage. + +Girasole then came forward. + +"Miladi," said he, "I haf de honore of to invitar you to descend." + +"Pray what is the meaning of this?" inquired Lady Dalrymple, with much +agitation. + +"It means dat I war wrong. Dere are brigand on dis road." + +Lady Dalrymple said not another word. + +The Count approached, and politely offered his hand to assist the +ladies out, but they rejected it, and got out themselves. First Mrs. +Willoughby, then Ethel, then Lady Dalrymple, then Minnie. Three of the +ladies were white with utter horror, and looked around in sickening +fear upon the armed men; but Minnie showed not even the slightest +particle of fear. + +"How horrid!" she exclaimed. "And now some one will come and save my +life again. It's _always_ the way. I'm sure _this_ isn't my fault, +Kitty darling." + +Before her sister could say any thing Girasole approached. + +"Pardon, mees," he said; "but I haf made dis recepzion for you. You +sall be well treat. Do not fear. I lay down my life." + +"Villain!" cried Lady Dalrymple. "Arrest her at your peril. Remember +who she is. She has friends powerful enough to avenge her if you dare +to injure her." + +"You arra mistake," said Girasole, politely. "Se is mine, not yours. I +am her best fren. Se is fiancee to me. I save her life--tell her my +love--make a proposezion. Se accept me. Se is my fiancee. I was oppose +by you. What else sall I do? I mus haf her. Se is mine. I am an +Italiano nobile, an' I love her. Dere is no harm for any. You mus see +dat I haf de right. But for me se would be dead." + +Lady Dalrymple was not usually excitable, but now her whole nature was +aroused; her eyes flashed with indignation; her face turned red; she +gasped for breath, and fell to the ground. Ethel rushed to assist her, +and two of the maids came up. Lady Dalrymple lay senseless. + +With Mrs. Willoughby the result was different. She burst into tears. + +"Count Girasole," she cried, "oh, spare her! If you love her, spare +her. She is only a child. If we opposed you, it was not from any +objection to you; it was because she is such a child." + +"You mistake," said the Count, shrugging his shoulders. "I love her +better than life. Se love me. It will make her happy. You come too. +You sall see se is happy. Come. Be my sistaire. It is love--" + +Mrs. Willoughby burst into fresh tears at this, and flung her arms +around Minnie, and moaned and wept. + +"Well, now, Kitty darling, I think it's horrid. You're _never_ +satisfied. You're always finding fault. I'm sure if you don't like +Rufus K. Gunn, you--" + +But Minnie's voice was interrupted by the sound of approaching wheels. +It was the carriage of the Baron and his friend. The Baron had feared +brigands, but he was certainly not expecting to come upon them so +suddenly. The brigands had been prepared, and as the carriage turned +it was suddenly stopped by the two carriages in front, and at once was +surrounded. + +The Baron gave one lightning glance, and surveyed the whole situation. +He did not move, but his form was rigid, and every nerve was braced, +and his eyes gleamed fiercely. He saw it all--the crowd of women, the +calm face of Minnie, and the uncontrollable agitation of Mrs. +Willoughby. + +"Well, by thunder!" he exclaimed. + +Girasole rode up and called out: + +"Surrender! You arra my prisoner." + +"What! it's you, is it?" said the Baron; and he glared for a moment +with a vengeful look at Girasole. + +"Descend," said Girasole. "You mus be bound." + +"Bound? All right. Here, parson, you jump down, and let them tie your +hands." + +The Baron stood up. The Reverend Saul stood up too. The Reverend Saul +began to step down very carefully. The brigands gathered around, most +of them being on the side on which the two were about to descend. The +Reverend Saul had just stepped to the ground. The Baron was just +preparing to follow. The brigands were impatient to secure them, when +suddenly, with a quick movement, the Baron gave a spring out of the +opposite side of the carriage, and leaped to the ground. The brigands +were taken completely by surprise, and before they could prepare to +follow him, he had sprung into the forest, and, with long bounds, was +rushing up the steep hill and out of sight. + +One shot was fired after him, and that was the shot that Hawbury and +Dacres heard. Two men sprang after him with the hope of catching him. + +In a few moments a loud cry was heard from the woods. + +"MIN!" + +Minnie heard it; a gleam of light flashed from her eyes, a smile of +triumph came over her lips. + +"Wha-a-a-a-t?" she called in reply. + +"Wa-a-a-a-a-a-it!" was the cry that came back--and this was the cry +that Hawbury and Dacres had heard. + +"Sacr-r-r-r-r-r-remento!" growled Girasole. + +"I'm sure _I_ don't know what he means by telling me that," said +Minnie. "How can _I_ wait if this horrid Italian won't let me? I'm +sure he might be more considerate." + +Poor Mrs. Willoughby, who had for a moment been roused to hope by the +escape of the Baron, now fell again into despair, and wept and moaned +and clung to Minnie. Lady Dalrymple still lay senseless, in spite of +the efforts of Ethel and the maids. The occurrence had been more to +her than a mere encounter with brigands. It was the thought of her own +carelessness that overwhelmed her. In an instant the thought of the +Baron's warning and his solemn entreaties flashed across her memory. +She recollected how Hawbury had commended his friend, and how she had +turned from these to put her trust in the driver and Girasole, the +very men who had betrayed her. These were the thoughts that +overwhelmed her. + +But now there arose once more the noise of rolling wheels, advancing +more swiftly than the last, accompanied by the lash of a whip and +shouts of a human voice. Girasole spoke to his men, and they moved up +nearer to the bend, and stood in readiness there. + +What Hawbury's motive was it is not difficult to tell. He was not +armed, and therefore could not hope to do much; but he had in an +instant resolved to rush thus into the midst of the danger. First of +all he thought that a struggle might be going on between the drivers, +the other travelers, and the brigands; in which event his assistance +would be of great value. Though unarmed, he thought he might snatch or +wrest a weapon from some one of the enemy. In addition to this, he +wished to strike a blow to save the ladies from captivity, even if his +blow should be unavailing. Even if he had known how matters were, he +would probably have acted in precisely the same way. As for Dacres, he +had but one idea. He was sure it was some trick concocted by his wife +and the Italian, though why they should do so he did not stop, in his +mad mood, to inquire. A vague idea that a communication had passed +between them on the preceding evening with reference to this was now +in his mind, and his vengeful feeling was stimulated by this thought +to the utmost pitch of intensity. + +Hawbury thus lashed his horses, and they flew along the road. After +the first cry and the shot that they had heard there was no further +noise. The stillness was mysterious. It showed Hawbury that the +struggle, if there had been any, was over. But the first idea still +remained both in his own mind and in that of Dacres. On they went, and +now they came to the turn in the road. Round this they whirled, and in +an instant the scene revealed itself. + +Three carriages stopped; some drivers standing and staring +indifferently; a group of women crowding around a prostrate form that +lay in the road; a pale, beautiful girl, to whom a beautiful woman was +clinging passionately; a crowd of armed brigands with leveled pieces; +and immediately before them a horseman--the Italian, Girasole. + +One glance showed all this. Hawbury could not distinguish any face +among the crowd of women that bent over Lady Dalrymple, and Ethel's +face was thus still unrevealed; but he saw Minnie and Mrs. Willoughby +and Girasole. + +"What the devil's all this about?" asked Hawbury, haughtily, as his +horses stopped at the Baron's carriage. + +"You are prisoners--" began Girasole. + +But before he could say another word he was interrupted by a cry of +fury from Dacres, who, the moment that he had recognized him, sprang +to his feet, and with a long, keen knife in his hand, leaped from the +carriage into the midst of the brigands, striking right and left, and +endeavoring to force his way toward Girasole. In an instant Hawbury +was by his side. Two men fell beneath the fierce thrusts of Dacres's +knife, and Hawbury tore the rifle from a third. With the clubbed end +of this he began dealing blows right and left. The men fell back and +leveled their pieces. Dacres sprang forward, and was within three +steps of Girasole--his face full of ferocity, his eyes flashing, and +looking not so much like an English gentleman as one of the old +vikings in a Berserker rage. One more spring brought him closer to +Girasole. The Italian retreated. One of his men flung himself before +Dacres and tried to grapple with him. The next instant he fell with a +groan, stabbed to the heart. With a yell of rage the others rushed +upon Dacres; but the latter was now suddenly seized with a new idea. +Turning for an instant he held his assailants at bay; and then, +seizing the opportunity, sprang into the woods and ran. One or two +shots were fired, and then half a dozen men gave chase. + +Meanwhile one or two shots had been fired at Hawbury, but, in the +confusion, they had not taken effect. Suddenly, as he stood with +uplifted rifle ready to strike, his enemies made a simultaneous rush +upon him. He was seized by a dozen strong arms. He struggled fiercely, +but his efforts were unavailing. The odds were too great. Before long +he was thrown to the ground on his face, and his arms bound behind +him. After this he was gagged. + +The uproar of this fierce struggle had roused all the ladies, and they +turned their eyes in horror to where the two were fighting against +such odds. Ethel raised herself on her knees from beside Lady +Dalrymple, and caught sight of Hawbury. For a moment she remained +motionless; and then she saw the escape of Dacres, and Hawbury going +down in the grasp of his assailants. She gave a loud shriek and rushed +forward. But Girasole intercepted her. + +"Go back," he said. "De milor is my prisoner. Back, or you will be +bound." + +And at a gesture from him two of the men advanced to seize Ethel. + +"Back!" he said, once more, in a stern voice. "You mus be tentif to +miladi." + +Ethel shrank back. + +The sound of that scream had struck on Hawbury's ears, but he did not +recognize it. If he thought of it at all, he supposed it was the +scream of common terror from one of the women. He was sore and bruised +and fast bound. He was held down also in such a way that he could not +see the party of ladies. The Baron's carriage intercepted the view, +for he had fallen behind this during the final struggle. After a +little time he was allowed to sit up, but still he could not see +beyond. + +There was now some delay, and Girasole gave some orders to his men. +The ladies waited with fearful apprehensions. They listened eagerly to +hear if there might not be some sounds of approaching help. But no +such sounds came to gladden their hearts. Lady Dalrymple, also, still +lay senseless; and Ethel, full of the direst anxiety about Hawbury, +had to return to renew her efforts toward reviving her aunt. + +Before long the brigands who had been in pursuit of the fugitives +returned to the road. They did not bring back either of them. A +dreadful question arose in the minds of the ladies as to the meaning +of this. Did it mean that the fugitives had escaped, or had been shot +down in the woods by their wrathful pursuers? It was impossible for +them to find out. Girasole went over to them and conversed with them +apart. The men all looked sullen; but whether that arose from +disappointed vengeance or gratified ferocity it was impossible for +them to discern. + +[Illustration: THE MELEE.] + +The brigands now turned their attention to their own men. Two of these +had received bad but not dangerous wounds from the dagger of Dacres, +and the scowls of pain and rage which they threw upon Hawbury and the +other captives boded nothing but the most cruel fate to all of them. +Another, however, still lay there. It was the one who had intercepted +Dacres in his rush upon Girasole. He lay motionless in a pool of +blood. They turned him over. His white, rigid face, as it became +exposed to view, exhibited the unmistakable mark of death, and a gash +on his breast showed how his fate had met him. + +The brigands uttered loud cries, and advanced toward Hawbury. He sat +regarding them with perfect indifference. They raised their rifles, +some clubbing them, others taking aim, swearing and gesticulating all +the time like maniacs. + +Hawbury, however, did not move a muscle of his face, nor did he show +the slightest feeling of any kind. He was covered with dust, and his +clothes were torn and splashed with mud, and his hands were bound, and +his mouth was gagged; but he preserved a coolness that astonished his +enemies. Had it not been for this coolness his brains might have been +blown out--in which case this narrative would never have been written; +but there was something in his look which made the Italians pause, +gave Girasole time to interfere, and thus preserved my story from +ruin. + +Girasole then came up and made his men stand back. They obeyed +sullenly. + +Girasole removed the gag. + +Then he stood and looked at Hawbury. Hawbury sat and returned his look +with his usual nonchalance, regarding the Italian with a cold, steady +stare, which produced upon the latter its usual maddening effect. + +"Milor will be ver glad to hear," said he, with a mocking smile, "dat +de mees will be take good care to. Milor was attentif to de mees; but +de mees haf been fiancee to me, an' so I take dis occazione to mak her +mine. I sall love her, an' se sall love me. I haf save her life, an' +se haf been fiancee to me since den." + +Now Girasole had chosen to say this to Hawbury from the conviction +that Hawbury was Minnie's lover, and that the statement of this would +inflict a pang upon the heart of his supposed rival which would +destroy his coolness. Thus he chose rather to strike at Hawbury's +jealousy than at his fear or at his pride. + +But he was disappointed. Hawbury heard his statement with utter +indifference. + +"Well," said he, "all I can say is that it seems to me to be a +devilish odd way of going to work about it." + +"Aha!" said Girasole, fiercely. "You sall see. Se sall be mine. Aha!" + +Hawbury made no reply, and Girasole, after a gesture of impatience, +walked off, baffled. + +In a few minutes two men came up to Hawbury, and led him away to the +woods on the left. + +[Illustration: "THEY SAW A RUINED HOUSE."] + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +AMONG THE BRIGANDS. + + +Girasole now returned to the ladies. They were in the same position in +which he had left them. Mrs. Willoughby with Minnie, and Ethel, with +the maids, attending to Lady Dalrymple. + +"Miladi," said Girasole, "I beg your attenzion. I haf had de honore to +inform you dat dis mees is my fiancee. Se haf give me her heart an' +her hand; se love me, an' I love her. I was prevent from to see her, +an' I haf to take her in dis mannaire. I feel sad at de pain I haf +give you, an' assuir you dat it was inevitabile. You sall not be +troubled more. You are free. Mees," he continued, taking Minnie's +hand, "you haf promis me dis fair han', an' you are mine. You come to +one who loves you bettaire dan life, an' who you love. You owe youair +life to me. I sall make it so happy as nevair was." + +"I'm sure _I_ don't want to be happy," said Minnie. "I don't _want_ to +leave darling Kitty--and it's a shame--and you'll make me _hate_ you +if you do so." + +"Miladi," said Girasole to Mrs. Willoughby, "de mees says se not want +to leaf you. Eef you want to come, you may come an' be our sistaire." + +"Oh, Kitty darling, you won't leave me, will you, all alone with this +horrid man?" said Minnie. + +"My darling," moaned Mrs. Willoughby, "how can I? I'll go. Oh, my +sweet sister, what misery!" + +"Oh, now that will be really _quite_ delightful if you _will_ come, +Kitty darling. Only I'm afraid you'll find it awfully uncomfortable." + +Girasole turned once more to the other ladies. + +"I beg you will assura de miladi when she recovaire of my +considerazion de mos distingue, an' convey to her de regrettas dat I +haf. Miladi," he continued, addressing Ethel, "you are free, an' can +go. You will not be molest by me. You sall go safe. You haf not ver +far. You sall fin' houses dere--forward--before--not far." + +With these words he turned away. + +"You mus come wit me," he said to Mrs. Willoughby and Minnie. "Come. +Eet ees not ver far." + +He walked slowly into the woods on the left, and the two sisters +followed him. Of the two Minnie was far the more cool and collected. +She was as composed as usual; and, as there was no help for it, she +walked on. Mrs. Willoughby, however, was terribly agitated, and wept +and shuddered and moaned incessantly. + +"Kitty darling," said Minnie, "I _wish_ you wouldn't go on so. You +really make me feel quite nervous. I never saw you so bad in my life." + +"Poor Minnie! Poor child! Poor sweet child!" + +"Well, if I am a child, you needn't go and tell me about it all the +time. It's really quite horrid." + +Mrs. Willoughby said no more, but generously tried to repress her own +feelings, so as not to give distress to her sister. + +After the Count had entered the wood with the two sisters the drivers +removed the horses from the carriages and went away, led off by the +man who had driven the ladies. This was the man whose stolid face had +seemed likely to belong to an honest man, but who now was shown to +belong to the opposite class. These men went down the road over which +they had come, leaving the carriages there with the ladies and their +maids. + +Girasole now led the way, and Minnie and her sister followed him. The +wood was very thick, and grew more so as they advanced, but there was +not much underbrush, and progress was not difficult. Several times a +wild thought of flight came to Mrs. Willoughby, but was at once +dispelled by a helpless sense of its utter impossibility. How could +she persuade the impracticable Minnie, who seemed so free from all +concern? or, if she could persuade her, how could she accomplish her +desire? She would at once be pursued and surrounded, while, even if +she did manage to escape, how could she ever find her way to any place +of refuge? Every minute, also, drew them deeper and deeper into the +woods, and the path was a winding one, in which she soon became +bewildered, until at last all sense of her whereabouts was utterly +gone. At last even the idea of escaping ceased to suggest itself, and +there remained only a dull despair, a sense of utter helplessness and +hopelessness--the sense of one who is going to his doom. + +Girasole said nothing whatever, but led the way in silence, walking +slowly enough to accommodate the ladies, and sometimes holding an +overhanging branch to prevent it from springing back in their faces. +Minnie walked on lightly, and with an elastic step, looking around +with evident interest upon the forest. Once a passing lizard drew from +her a pretty little shriek of alarm, thus showing that while she was +so calm in the face of real and frightful danger, she could be alarmed +by even the most innocent object that affected her fancy. Mrs. +Willoughby thought that she understood Minnie before, but this little +shriek at a lizard, from one who smiled at the brigands, struck her as +a problem quite beyond her power to solve. + +The woods now began to grow thinner. The trees were larger and farther +apart, and rose all around in columnar array, so that it was possible +to see between them to a greater distance. At length there appeared +before them, through the trunks of the trees, the gleam of water. Mrs. +Willoughby noticed this, and wondered what it might be. At first she +thought it was a harbor on the coast; then she thought it was some +river; but finally, on coming nearer, she saw that it was a lake. In a +few minutes after they first caught sight of it they had reached its +banks. + +It was a most beautiful and sequestered spot. All around were high +wooded eminences, beyond whose undulating summits arose the towering +forms of the Apennine heights. Among these hills lay a little lake +about a mile in length and breadth, whose surface was as smooth as +glass, and reflected the surrounding shores. On their right, as they +descended, they saw some figures moving, and knew them to be the +brigands, while on their left they saw a ruined house. Toward this +Girasole led them. + +The house stood on the shore of the lake. It was of stone, and was two +stories in height. The roof was still good, but the windows were gone. +There was no door, but half a dozen or so of the brigands stood there, +and formed a sufficient guard to prevent the escape of any prisoner. +These men had dark, wicked eyes and sullen faces, which afforded fresh +terror to Mrs. Willoughby. She had thought, in her desperation, of +making some effort to escape by bribing the men, but the thorough-bred +rascality which was evinced in the faces of these ruffians showed her +that they were the very fellows who would take her money and cheat her +afterward. If she had been able to speak Italian, she might have +secured their services by the prospect of some future reward after +escaping; but, as it was, she could not speak a word of the language, +and thus could not enter upon even the preliminaries of an escape. + +On reaching the house the ruffians stood aside, staring hard at them. +Mrs. Willoughby shrank in terror from the baleful glances of their +eyes; but Minnie looked at them calmly and innocently, and not without +some of that curiosity which a child shows when he first sees a +Chinaman or an Arab in the streets. Girasole then led the way up +stairs to a room on the second story. + +It was an apartment of large size, extending across the house, with a +window at each end, and two on the side. On the floor there was a heap +of straw, over which some skins were thrown. There were no chairs, nor +was there any table. + +"Scusa me," said Girasole, "miladi, for dis accommodazion. It gifs me +pain, but I promise it sall not be long. Only dis day an' dis night +here. I haf to detain you dat time. Den we sall go to where I haf a +home fitter for de bride. I haf a home wharra you sall be a happy +bride, mees--" + +"But I don't want to stay here _at all_ in such a horrid place," said +Minnie, looking around in disgust. + +"Only dis day an' dis night," said Girasole, imploringly. "Aftaire you +sall have all you sall wis." + +"Well, at any rate, I think it's very horrid in you to shut me up +here. You might let me walk outside in the woods. I'm so _aw_fully +fond of the woods." + +Girasole smiled faintly. + +"And so you sall have plenty of de wood--but to-morra. You wait here +now. All safe--oh yes--secura--all aright--oh yes--slip to-night, an' +in de mornin' early you sall be mine. Dere sall come a priest, an' we +sall have de ceremony." + +"Well, I think it was very unkind in you to bring me to such a horrid +place. And how can I sit down? You _might_ have had a chair. And look +at poor, darling Kitty. You may be unkind to me, but you needn't make +_her_ sit on the floor. You never saved _her_ life, and you have no +right to be unkind to her." + +"Unkind! Oh, mees!--my heart, my life, all arra youairs, an' I lay my +life at youair foot." + +"I think it would be far more kind if you would put a chair at poor +Kitty's feet," retorted Minnie, with some show of temper. + +"But, oh, carissima, tink--de wild wood--noting here--no, noting--not +a chair--only de straw." + +"Then you had no business to bring me here. You might have known that +there were no chairs here. I can't sit down on nothing. But I suppose +you expect me to stand up. And if that isn't horrid, I don't know what +is. I'm sure I don't know what poor dear papa would say if he were to +see me now." + +[Illustration: "WHAT IS THIS FOR?"] + +"Do not grieve, carissima mia--do not, charming mees, decompose +yourself. To-morra you sall go to a bettaire place, an' I will carra +you to my castello. You sall haf every want, you sall enjoy every wis, +you sall be happy." + +"But I don't see how I can be happy without a chair," reiterated +Minnie, in whose mind this one grievance now became pre-eminent. "You +talk as though you think I am made of stone or iron, and you think I +can stand here all day or all night, and you want me to sleep on that +horrid straw and those horrid furry things. I suppose this is the +castle that you speak of; and I'm sure I wonder why you _ever_ thought +of bringing me here. I suppose it doesn't make so much difference +about a _carpet_; but you will not even let me have a _chair_; and I +think you're _very_ unkind." + +Girasole was in despair. He stood in thought for some time. He felt +that Minnie's rebuke was deserved. If she had reproached him with +waylaying her and carrying her off, he could have borne it, and could +have found a reply. But such a charge as this was unanswerable. It +certainly was very hard that she should not be able to sit down. But +then how was it possible for him to find a chair in the woods? It was +an insoluble problem. How in the world could he satisfy her? + +Minnie's expression also was most touching. The fact that she had no +chair to sit on seemed to absolutely overwhelm her. The look that she +gave Girasole was so piteous, so reproachful, so heart-rending, that +his soul actually quaked, and a thrill of remorse passed all through +his frame. He felt a cold chill running to the very marrow of his +bones. + +"I think you're _very, very_ unkind," said Minnie, "and I really don't +see how I can _ever_ speak to you again." + +This was too much. Girasole turned away. He rushed down stairs. He +wandered frantically about. He looked in all directions for a chair. +There was plenty of wood certainly--for all around he saw the vast +forest--but of what use was it? He could not transform a tree into a +chair. He communicated his difficulty to some of the men. They shook +their heads helplessly. At last he saw the stump of a tree which was +of such a shape that it looked as though it might be used as a seat. +It was his only resource, and he seized it. Calling two or three of +the men, he had the stump carried to the old house. He rushed up +stairs to acquaint Minnie with his success, and to try to console her. +She listened in coldness to his hasty words. The men who were carrying +the stump came up with a clump and a clatter, breathing hard, for the +stump was very heavy, and finally placed it on the landing in front of +Minnie's door. On reaching that spot it was found that it would not go +in. + +Minnie heard the noise and came out. She looked at the stump, then at +the men and then at Girasole. + +"What is this for?" she asked. + +"Eet--eet ees for a chair." + +"A chair!" exclaimed Minnie. "Why, it's nothing but a great big, +horrid, ugly old stump, and--" + +Her remarks ended in a scream. She turned and ran back into the room. + +"What--what is de mattaire?" cried the Count, looking into the room +with a face pale with anxiety. + +"Oh, take it away! take it away!" cried Minnie, in terror. + +"What? what?" + +"Take it away! take it away!" she repeated. + +"But eet ees for you--eet ees a seat." + +"I don't want it. I won't have it!" cried Minnie. "It's full of horrid +ants and things. And it's dreadful--and _very, very_ cruel in you to +bring them up here just to _tease_ me, when you _know_ I hate them so. +Take it away! take it away! oh, do please take it away! And oh, do +please go away yourself, and leave me with dear, darling Kitty. _She_ +never teases me. She is _always_ kind." + +Girasole turned away once more, in fresh trouble. He had the stump +carried off, and then he wandered away. He was quite at a loss what to +do. He was desperately in love, and it was a very small request for +Minnie to make, and he was in that state of mind when it would be a +happiness to grant her slightest wish; but here he found himself in a +difficulty from which he could find no possible means of escape. + +"And now, Kitty darling," said Minnie, after Girasole had gone--"now +you see how very, very wrong you were to be so opposed to that dear, +good, kind, nice Rufus K. Gunn. _He_ would never have treated me so. +_He_ would never have taken me to a place like this--a horrid old +house by a horrid damp pond, without doors and windows, just like a +beggar's house--and then put me in a room without a chair to sit on +when I'm so _aw_fully tired. He was _always_ kind to me, and that was +the reason you hated him so, because you couldn't bear to have people +kind to me. And I'm _so_ tired." + +"Come, then, poor darling. I'll make a nice seat for you out of these +skins." + +And Mrs. Willoughby began to fold some of them up and lay them one +upon the other. + +"What is that for, Kitty dear?" asked Minnie. + +"To make you a nice, soft seat, dearest." + +"But I don't want them, and I won't sit on the horrid things," said +Minnie. + +"But, darling, they are as soft as a cushion. See!" And her sister +pressed her hand on them, so as to show how soft they were. + +"I don't think they're soft _at all_," said Minnie; "and I wish you +wouldn't tease me so, when I'm _so_ tired." + +"Then come, darling; I will sit on them, and you shall sit on my +knees." + +"But I don't want to go near those horrid furry things. They belong to +cows and things. I think _every body's_ unkind to me to-day." + +"Minnie, dearest, you really wound me when you talk in that way. Be +reasonable now. See what pains I take. I do all I can for you." + +"But I'm _always_ reasonable, and it's _you_ that are unreasonable, +when you want me to sit on that horrid fur. It's very, _very_ +disagreeable in you, Kitty dear." + +Mrs. Willoughby said nothing, but went on folding some more skins. +These she placed on the straw so that a pile was formed about as high +as an ordinary chair. This pile was placed against the wall so that +the wall served as a support. + +Then she seated herself upon this. + +"Minnie, dearest," said she. + +"Well, Kitty darling." + +"It's really quite soft and comfortable. Do come and sit on it; do, +just to please me, only for five minutes. See! I'll spread my dress +over it so that you need not touch it. Come, dearest, only for five +minutes." + +"Well, I'll sit on it just for a little mite of a time, if you promise +not to tease me." + +"Tease you, dear! Why, of course not. Come." + +So Minnie went over and sat by her sister's side. + +In about an hour Girasole came back. The two sisters were seated +there. Minnie's head was resting on her sister's shoulder, and she was +fast asleep, while Mrs. Willoughby sat motionless, with her face +turned toward him, and such an expression in her dark eyes that +Girasole felt awed. He turned in silence and went away. + + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +SEEKING FOR HELP. + + +The departure of the drivers with their horses had increased the +difficulties of the party, and had added to their danger. Of that +party Ethel was now the head, and her efforts were directed more +zealously than ever to bring back Lady Dalrymple to her senses. At +last these efforts were crowned with success, and, after being +senseless for nearly an hour, she came to herself. The restoration of +her senses, however, brought with it the discovery of all that had +occurred, and thus caused a new rush of emotion, which threatened +painful consequences. But the consequences were averted, and at length +she was able to rise. She was then helped into her carriage, after +which the question arose as to their next proceeding. + +[Illustration: "ETHEL OBTAINED A PAIR OF SCISSORS."] + +The loss of the horses and drivers was a very embarrassing thing to +them, and for a time they were utterly at a loss what course to adopt. +Lady Dalrymple was too weak to walk, and they had no means of +conveying her. The maids had simply lost their wits from fright; and +Ethel could not see her way clearly out of the difficulty. At this +juncture they were roused by the approach of the Rev. Saul Tozer. + +This reverend man had been bound as he descended from his carriage, +and had remained bound ever since. In that state he had been a +spectator of the struggle and its consequences, and he now came +forward to offer his services. + +"I don't know whether you remember me, ma'am," said he to Lady +Dalrymple, "but I looked in at your place at Rome; and in any case I +am bound to offer you my assistance, since you are companions with me +in my bonds, which I'd be much obliged if one of you ladies would +untie or cut. Perhaps it would be best to untie it, as rope's +valuable." + +At this request Ethel obtained a pair of scissors from one of the +maids, and after vigorous efforts succeeded in freeing the reverend +gentleman. + +"Really, Sir, I am very much obliged for this kind offer," said Lady +Dalrymple, "and I avail myself of it gratefully. Can you advise us +what is best to do?" + +"Well, ma'am, I've been turning it over in my mind, and have made it a +subject of prayer; and it seems to me that it wouldn't be bad to go +out and see the country." + +"There are no houses for miles," said Ethel. + +"Have you ever been this road before?" said Tozer. + +"No." + +"Then how do you know?" + +"Oh, I was thinking of the part we had passed over." + +"True; but the country in front may be different. Didn't that brigand +captain say something about getting help ahead?" + +"Yes, so he did; I remember now," said Ethel. + +"Well, I wouldn't take his advice generally, but in this matter I +don't see any harm in following it; so I move that I be a committee of +one to go ahead and investigate the country and bring help." + +"Oh, thanks, thanks, very much. Really, Sir, this is very kind," said +Lady Dalrymple. + +"And I'll go too," said Ethel, as a sudden thought occurred to her. +"Would you be afraid, aunty dear, to stay here alone?" + +"Certainly not, dear. I have no more fear for myself, but I'm afraid +to trust you out of my sight." + +"Oh, you need not fear for me," said Ethel. "I shall certainly be as +safe farther on as I am here. Besides, if we can find help I will know +best what is wanted." + +"Well, dear, I suppose you may go." + +Without further delay Ethel started off, and Tozer walked by her side. +They went under the fallen tree, and then walked quickly along the +road. + +"Do you speak Italian, miss?" asked Tozer. + +"No." + +"I'm sorry for that. I don't either. I'm told it's a fine language." + +"So I believe; but how very awkward it will be not to be able to speak +to any person!" + +"Well, the Italian is a kind of offshoot of the Latin, and I can +scrape together a few Latin words--enough to make myself understood, I +do believe." + +"Can you, really? How very fortunate!" + +"It is somewhat providential, miss, and I hope I may succeed." + +They walked on in silence now for some time. Ethel was too sad to +talk, and Tozer was busily engaged in recalling all the Latin at his +command. After a while he began to grow sociable. + +"Might I ask, miss, what persuasion you are?" + +"Persuasion?" said Ethel, in surprise. + +"Yes, 'm; de-nomination--religious body, you know." + +"Oh! why, I belong to the Church." + +"Oh! and what church did you say, 'm?" + +"The Church of England." + +"H'm. The 'Piscopalian body. Well, it's a high-toned body." + +Ethel gave a faint smile at this whimsical application of a name to +her church, and then Tozer returned to the charge. + +"Are you a professor?" + +"A what?" + +"A professor." + +"A professor?" repeated Ethel. "I don't think I _quite_ understand +you." + +"Well, do you belong to the church? Are you a member?" + +"Oh yes." + +"I'm glad to hear it. It's a high and a holy and a happy perrivelege +to belong to the church and enjoy the means of grace. I trust you live +up to your perriveleges?" + +"Live what?" asked Ethel. + +"Live up to your perriveleges," repeated Tozer--"attend on all the +means of grace--be often at the assembling of yourself together." + +"The assembling of myself together? I don't think I _quite_ get your +meaning," said Ethel. + +"Meeting, you know--church-meeting." + +"Oh yes; I didn't understand. Oh yes, I always go to church." + +"That's right," said Tozer, with a sigh of relief; "and I suppose, +now, you feel an interest in the cause of missions?" + +"Missions? Oh, I don't know. The Roman Catholics practice that to some +extent, and several of my friends say they feel benefit from a mission +once a year; but for my part I have not yet any very decided leanings +to Roman Catholicism." + +"Oh, dear me, dear me!" cried Tozer, "that's not what I mean at all; I +mean Protestant missions to the heathen, you know." + +"I beg your pardon," said Ethel. "I thought you were referring to +something else." + +Tozer was silent now for a few minutes, and then asked her, abruptly, + +"What's your opinion about the Jews?" + +"The Jews?" exclaimed Ethel, looking at him in some surprise, and +thinking that her companion must be a little insane to carry on such +an extraordinary conversation with such very abrupt changes--"the +Jews?" + +"Yes, the Jews." + +"Oh, I don't like them at all." + +"But they're the chosen people." + +"I can't help that. I don't like them. But then, you know, I never +really saw much of them." + +"I refer to their future prospects," said Tozer--"to prophecy. I +should like to ask you how you regard them in that light. Do you +believe in a spiritual or a temporal Zion?" + +"Spiritual Zion? Temporal Zion?" + +"Yes, 'm." + +"Well, really, I don't know. I don't think I believe any thing at all +about it." + +"But you _must_ believe in either one or the other--you've _got_ to," +said Tozer, positively. + +"But I _don't_, you know; and how can I?" + +Tozer threw at her a look of commiseration, and began to think that +his companion was not much better than a heathen. In his own home +circle he could have put his hand on little girls of ten who were +quite at home on all these subjects. He was silent for a time, and +then began again. + +"I'd like to ask you one thing," said he, "very much." + +"What is it?" asked Ethel. + +"Do you believe," asked Tozer, solemnly, "that we're living in the +Seventh Vial?" + +"Vial? Seventh Vial?" said Ethel, in fresh amazement. + +"Yes, the Seventh Vial," said Tozer, in a sepulchral voice. + +"Living in the Seventh Vial? I really don't know how one can live in a +vial." + +"The Great Tribulation, you know." + +"Great Tribulation?" + +"Yes; for instance, now, don't you believe in the Apocalyptic Beast?" + +"I don't know," said Ethel, faintly. + +"Well, at any rate, you believe in his number--you must." + +"His number?" + +"Yes." + +"What do you mean?" + +"Why, the number six, six, six--six hundred and sixty-six." + +"I really don't understand this," said Ethel. + +"Don't you believe that the Sixth Vial is done?" + +"Sixth Vial? What, another vial?" + +"Yes; and the drying of the Euphrates." + +"The Euphrates? drying?" repeated Ethel in a trembling voice. She +began to be alarmed. She felt sure that this man was insane. She had +never heard such incoherency in her life. And she was alone with him. +She stole a timid look, and saw his long, sallow face, on which there +was now a preoccupied expression, and the look did not reassure her. + +But Tozer himself was a little puzzled, and felt sure that his +companion must have her own opinions on the subject, so he began +again: + +"Now I suppose you've read Fleming on the Papacy?" + +"No, I haven't. I never heard of it." + +"Strange, too. You've heard of Elliot's 'Horae Apocalypticae?', I +suppose?" + +"No," said Ethel, timidly. + +"Well, it's all in Cumming--and you've read him, of course?" + +"Cumming? I never heard of him. Who is he?" + +"What, never heard of Cumming?" + +"Never." + +"And never read his 'Great Tribulation?'" + +"No." + +"Nor his 'Great Expectation?'" + +"No." + +"What! not even his 'Apocalyptic Sketches?'" + +"I never heard of them." + +[Illustration: "TONITRUENDUM EST MALUM!"] + +Tozer looked at her in astonishment; but at this moment they came to a +turn in the road, when a sight appeared which drew from Ethel an +expression of joy. + +It was a little valley on the right, in which was a small hamlet with +a church. The houses were but small, and could not give them much +accommodation, but they hoped to find help there. + +"I wouldn't trust the people," said Ethel. "I dare say they're all +brigands; but there ought to be a priest there, and we can appeal to +him." + +This proposal pleased Tozer, who resumed his work of collecting among +the stores of his memory scraps of Latin which he had once stored away +there. + +The village was at no very great distance away from the road, and they +reached it in a short time. They went at once to the church. The door +was open, and a priest, who seemed the village priest, was standing +there. He was stout, with a good-natured expression on his hearty, +rosy face, and a fine twinkle in his eye, which lighted up pleasantly +as he saw the strangers enter. + +Tozer at once held out his hand and shook that of the priest. + +"Buon giorno," said the priest. + +Ethel shook her head. + +"Parlate Italiano?" said he. + +Ethel shook her head. + +"Salve, domine," said Tozer, who at once plunged headlong into Latin. + +"Salve bene," said the priest, in some surprise. + +"Quomodo vales?" asked Tozer. + +"Optime valeo, Dei gratia. Spero vos valere." + +Tozer found the priest's pronunciation a little difficult, but managed +to understand him. + +"Domine," said he, "sumus viatores infelices et innocentes, in quos +fures nuper impetum fecerunt. Omnia bona nostra arripuerunt--" + +"Fieri non potest!" said the priest. + +"Et omnes amicos nostros in captivitatem lachrymabilem tractaverunt--" + +"Cor dolet," said the priest; "miseret me vestrum." + +"Cujusmodi terra est haec in qua sustenendum est tot labores?" + +The priest sighed. + +"Tonitruendum est malum!" exclaimed Tozer, excited by the recollection +of his wrongs. + +The priest stared. + +"In hostium manibus fuimus, et, bonum tonitru! omnia impedimenta +amissimus. Est nimis omnipotens malum!" + +"Quid vis dicere?" said the priest, looking puzzled. "Quid tibi vis?" + +"Est nimis sempiternum durum!" + +"In nomine omnium sanctorum apostolorumque," cried the priest, "quid +vis dicere?" + +"Potes ne juvare nos," continued Tozer, "in hoc lachrymabile tempore? +Volo unum verum vivum virum qui possit--" + +"Diabolus arripiat me si possim unum solum verbum intelligere!" cried +the priest. "Be jabers if I ondherstan' yez at all at all; an' there +ye have it." + +And with this the priest raised his head, with its puzzled look, and +scratched that organ with such a natural air, and with such a full +Irish flavor in his brogue and in his face, that both of his visitors +were perfectly astounded. + +"Good gracious!" cried Tozer; and seizing the priest's hand in both of +his, he nearly wrung it off. "Why, what a providence! Why, really, +now! And you were an Irishman all the time! And why didn't you speak +English?" + +"Sure and what made you spake Latin?" cried the priest. "And what was +it you were thryin' to say wid yer 'sempiternum durum,' and yer +'tonitruendum malum?' Sure an' ye made me fairly profeen wid yer talk, +so ye did." + +"Well, I dare say," said Tozer, candidly--"I dare say 'tain't onlikely +that I _did_ introduce one or two Americanisms in the Latin; but then, +you know, I ain't been in practice." + +The priest now brought chairs for his visitors, and, sitting thus in +the church, they told him about their adventures, and entreated him to +do something for them. To all this the priest listened with thoughtful +attention, and when they were done he at once promised to find horses +for them which would draw the carriages to this hamlet or to the next +town. Ethel did not think Lady Dalrymple could go further than this +place, and the priest offered to find some accommodations. + +He then left them, and in about half an hour he returned with two or +three peasants, each of whom had a horse. + +"They'll be able to bring the leedies," said the priest, "and haul the +impty wagons afther thim." + +"I think, miss," said Tozer, "that you'd better stay here. It's too +far for you to walk." + +"Sure an' there's no use in the wide wurruld for _you_ to be goin' +back," said the priest to Ethel. "You can't do any gud, an' you'd +betther rist till they come. Yer frind'll be enough." + +Ethel at first thought of walking back, but finally she saw that it +would be quite useless, and so she resolved to remain and wait for her +aunt. So Tozer went off with the men and the horses, and the priest +asked Ethel all about the affair once more. Whatever his opinions +were, he said nothing. + +While he was talking there came a man to the door who beckoned him +out. He went out, and was gone for some time. He came back at last, +looking very serious. + +"I've just got a missage from thim," said he. + +"A message," exclaimed Ethel, "from them? What, from Girasole?" + +"Yis. They want a praste, and they've sint for me." + +"A priest?" + +"Yis; an' they want a maid-servant to wait on the young leedies; and +they want thim immajitly; an' I'll have to start off soon. There's a +man dead among thim that wants to be put undherground to-night, for +the rist av thim are goin' off in the mornin'; an' accordin' to all I +hear, I wouldn't wondher but what I'd be wanted for somethin' else +afore mornin'." + +"Oh, my God!" cried Ethel; "they're going to kill him, then!" + +"Kill him! Kill who? Sure an' it's not killin' they want me for. It's +the other--it's marryin'." + +"Marrying?" cried Ethel. "Poor, darling Minnie! Oh, you can not--you +will not marry them?" + +"Sure an' I don't know but it's the best thing I can do--as things +are," said the priest. + +"Oh, what shall I do! what shall I do!" moaned Ethel. + +"Well, ye've got to bear up, so ye have. There's throubles for all of +us, an' lots av thim too; an' more'n some av us can bear." + +Ethel sat in the darkest and bitterest grief for some time, a prey to +thoughts and fears that were perfect agony to her. + +At last a thought came to her which made her start, and look up, and +cast at the priest a look full of wonder and entreaty. The priest +watched her with the deepest sympathy visible on his face. + +"We must save them!" she cried. + +"Sure an' it's me that made up me moind to that same," said the +priest, "only I didn't want to rise yer hopes." + +"_We_ must save them," said Ethel, with strong emphasis. + +"_We?_ What can you do?" + +Ethel got up, walked to the church door, looked out, came back, looked +anxiously all around, and then, resuming her seat, she drew close to +the priest, and began to whisper, long and anxiously. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +THE AVENGER ON THE TRACK. + + +When Dacres had sprung aside into the woods in the moment of his +fierce rush upon Girasole, he had been animated by a sudden thought +that escape for himself was possible, and that it would be more +serviceable to his friends. Thus, then, he had bounded into the woods, +and with swift steps he forced his way among the trees deeper and +deeper into the forest. Some of the brigands had given chase, but +without effect. Dacres's superior strength and agility gave him the +advantage, and his love of life was a greater stimulus than their +thirst for vengeance. In addition to this the trees gave every +assistance toward the escape of a fugitive, while they threw every +impediment in the way of a pursuer. The consequence was, therefore, +that Dacres soon put a great distance between himself and his +pursuers, and, what is more, he ran in such a circuitous route that +they soon lost all idea of their own locality, and had not the +faintest idea where he had gone. In this respect, however, Dacres +himself was not one whit wiser than they, for he soon found himself +completely bewildered in the mazes of the forest; and when at length +the deep silence around gave no further sound of pursuers, he sank +down to take breath, with no idea whatever in what direction the road +lay. + +After a brief rest he arose and plunged deeper still into the forest, +so as to put an additional distance between himself and any possible +pursuit. He at length found himself at the foot of a precipice about +fifty feet in height, which was deep in the recesses of the forest. Up +this he climbed, and found a mossy place among the trees at its top, +where he could find rest, and at the same time be in a more favorable +position either for hearing or seeing any signs of approaching +pursuers. + +Here, then, he flung himself down to rest, and soon buried himself +among thoughts of the most exciting kind. The scene which he had just +left was fresh in his mind, and amidst all the fury of that strife +there rose most prominent in his memory the form of the two ladies, +Minnie standing calm and unmoved, while Mrs. Willoughby was convulsed +with agitated feeling. What was the cause of that? Could it be +possible that his wife had indeed contrived such a plot with the +Italian? Was it possible that she had chosen this way of striking two +blows, by one of which she could win her Italian, and by the other of +which she could get rid of himself, her husband? Such had been his +conjecture during the fury of the fight, and the thought had roused +him up to his Berserker madness; but now, as it recurred again, he saw +other things to shake his full belief. Her agitation seemed too +natural. + +Yet, on the other hand, he asked himself, why should she not show +agitation? She was a consummate actress. She could show on her +beautiful face the softness and the tenderness of an angel of light +while a demon reigned in her malignant heart. Why should she not +choose this way of keeping up appearances? She had betrayed her +friends, and sought her husband's death; but would she wish to have +her crime made manifest? Not she. It was for this, then, that she wept +and clung to the child-angel. + +Such thoughts as these were not at all adapted to give comfort to his +mind, or make his rest refreshing. Soon, by such fancies, he kindled +anew his old rage, and his blood rose to fever heat, so that inaction +became no longer tolerable. He had rest enough. He started up, and +looked all around, and listened attentively. No sound arose and no +sight appeared which at all excited suspicion. He determined to set +forth once more, he scarcely knew where. He had a vague idea of +finding his way back to the road, so as to be able to assist the +ladies, together with another idea, equally ill defined, of coming +upon the brigands, finding the Italian, and watching for an +opportunity to wreak vengeance upon this assassin and his guilty +partner. + +He drew his knife once more from a leathern sheath on the inside of +the breast of his coat, into which he had thrust it some time before, +and holding this he set forth, watchfully and warily. On the left side +of the precipice the ground sloped down, and at the bottom of this +there was a narrow valley. It seemed to him that this might be the +course of some spring torrent, and that by following its descent he +might come out upon some stream. With this intention he descended to +the valley, and then walked along, following the descent of the +ground, and keeping himself as much as possible among the thickest +growths of the trees. + +The ground descended very gradually, and the narrow valley wound along +among rolling hills that were covered with trees and brush. As he +confined himself to the thicker parts of this, his progress was +necessarily slow; but at the end of that turn he saw before him +unmistakable signs of the neighborhood of some open place. Before him +he saw the sky in such a way that it showed the absence of forest +trees. He now moved on more cautiously, and, quitting the valley, he +crept up the hill-slope among the brush as carefully as possible, +until he was at a sufficient height, and then, turning toward the +open, he crept forward from cover to cover. At length he stopped. A +slight eminence was before him, beyond which all was open, yet +concealed from his view. Descending the slope a little, he once more +advanced, and finally emerged at the edge of the forest. + +He found himself upon a gentle declivity. Immediately in front of him +lay a lake, circular in shape, and about a mile in diameter, embosomed +among wooded hills. At first he saw no signs of any habitation; but as +his eyes wandered round he saw upon his right, about a quarter of a +mile away, an old stone house, and beyond this smoke curling up from +among the forest trees on the borders of the lake. + +The scene startled him. It was so quiet, so lonely, and so deserted +that it seemed a fit place for a robber's haunt. Could this be indeed +the home of his enemies, and had he thus so wonderfully come upon them +in the very midst of their retreat? He believed that it was so. A +little further observation showed figures among the trees moving to +and fro, and soon he distinguished faint traces of smoke in other +places, which he had not seen at first, as though there were more +fires than one. + +Dacres exulted with a fierce and vengeful joy over this discovery. He +felt now not like the fugitive, but rather the pursuer. He looked down +upon this as the tiger looks from his jungle upon some Indian village. +His foes were numerous, but he was concealed, and his presence +unsuspected. He grasped his dagger with a firmer clutch, and then +pondered for a few minutes on what he had better do next. + +One thing was necessary first of all, and that was to get as near as +he possibly could without discovery. A slight survey of the situation +showed him that he might venture much nearer; and his eye ran along +the border of the lake which lay between him and the old house, and he +saw that it was all covered over with a thick fringe of trees and +brush-wood. The narrow valley along which he had come ended at the +shore of the lake just below him on his right, and beyond this the +shore arose again to a height equal to where he now was. To gain that +opposite height was now his first task. + +Before starting he looked all around, so as to be sure that he was not +observed. Then he went back for some distance, after which he +descended into the valley, crouching low, and crawling stealthily +among the brush-wood. Moving thus, he at length succeeded in reaching +the opposite slope without appearing to have attracted any attention +from any pursuers. Up this slope he now moved as carefully as ever, +not relaxing his vigilance one jot, but, if possible, calling into +play even a larger caution as he found himself drawing nearer to those +whom he began to regard as his prey. + +Moving up this slope, then, in this way, he at length attained the +top, and found himself here among the forest trees and underbrush. +They were here even denser than they were on the place which he had +just left. As he moved along he saw no indications that they had been +traversed by human footsteps. Every thing gave indication of an +unbroken and undisturbed solitude. After feeling his way along here +with all the caution which he could exercise, he finally ventured +toward the shore of the lake, and found himself able to go to the very +edge without coming to any open space or crossing any path. + +On looking forth from the top of the bank he found that he had not +only drawn much nearer to the old house, but that he could see the +whole line of shore. He now saw that there were some men by the door +of the house, and began to suspect that this was nothing else than the +headquarters and citadel of the brigands. The sight of the shore now +showed him that he could approach very much nearer, and unless the +brigands, or whoever they were, kept scouts out, he would be able to +reach a point immediately overlooking the house, from which he could +survey it at his leisure. To reach this point became now his next aim. + +The wood being dense, Dacres found no more difficulty in passing +through this than in traversing what lay behind him. The caution which +he exercised here was as great as ever, and his progress was as slow, +but as sure. At length he found himself upon the desired point, and, +crawling cautiously forward to the shore, he looked down upon the very +old house which he had desired to reach. + +The house stood close by the lake, upon a sloping bank which lay +below. It did not seem to be more than fifty yards away. The doors and +windows were gone. Five or six ill-looking fellows were near the +doorway, some sprawling on the ground, others lolling and lounging +about. One glance at the men was sufficient to assure him that they +were the brigands, and also to show him that they kept no guard or +scout or outpost of any kind, at least in this direction. + +Here, then, Dacres lay and watched. He could not wish for a better +situation. With his knife in his hand, ready to defend himself in case +of need, and his whole form concealed perfectly by the thick +underbrush into the midst of which he had crawled, he peered forth +through the overhanging leaves, and watched in breathless interest. +From the point where he now was he could see the shore beyond the +house, where the smoke was rising. He could now see that there were no +less than four different columns of smoke ascending from as many +fires. He saw as many as twenty or thirty figures moving among the +trees, made conspicuous by the bright colors of their costumes. They +seemed to be busy about something which he could not make out. + +Suddenly, while his eye roved over the scene, it was struck by some +fluttering color at the open window of the old house. He had not +noticed this before. He now looked at it attentively. Before long he +saw a figure cross the window and return. It was a female figure. + +The sight of this revived all that agitation which he had felt before, +but which had been calmed during the severe efforts which he had been +putting forth. There was but one thought in his mind, and but one +desire in his heart. + +His wife. + +He crouched low, with a more feverish dread of discovery at this +supreme moment, and a fiercer thirst for some further revelation which +might disclose what he suspected. His breathing came thick and hard, +and his brow lowered gloomily over his gleaming eyes. + +He waited thus for some minutes, and the figure passed again. + +He still watched. + +Suddenly a figure appeared at the window. It was a young girl, a +blonde, with short golden curls. The face was familiar indeed to him. +Could he ever forget it? There it was full before him, turned toward +him, as though that one, by some strange spiritual sympathy, was aware +of his presence, and was thus turning toward him this mute appeal. Her +face was near enough for its expression to be visible. He could +distinguish the childish face, with its soft, sweet innocence, and he +knew that upon it there was now that piteous, pleading, beseeching +look which formerly had so thrilled his heart. And it was thus that +Dacres saw his child-angel. + +A prisoner, turning toward him this appeal! What was the cause, and +what did the Italian want of this innocent child? Such was his +thought. What could his fiend of a wife gain by the betrayal of that +angelic being? Was it possible that even her demon soul could compass +iniquity like this? He had thought that he had fathomed her capacity +for malignant wickedness; but the presence here of the child-angel in +the power of these miscreants showed him that this capacity was indeed +unfathomable. At this sudden revelation of sin so enormous his very +soul turned sick with horror. + +He watched, and still looked with an anxiety that was increasing to +positive pain. + +And now, after one brief glance, Minnie drew back into the room. There +was nothing more to be seen for some time, but at last another figure +appeared. + +He expected this; he was waiting for it; he was sure of it; yet deep +down in the bottom of his heart there was a hope that it might not be +so, that his suspicions, in this case at least, might be unfounded. +But now the proof came; it was made manifest here before his eyes, and +in the light of day. + +In spite of himself a low groan escaped him. He buried his face in his +hands and shut out the sight. Then suddenly he raised his head again +and stared, as though in this face there was an irresistible +fascination by which a spell was thrown over him. + +It was the face of Mrs. Willoughby--youthful, beautiful, and touching +in its tender grace. Tears were now in those dark, luminous eyes, but +they were unseen by him. Yet he could mark the despondency of her +attitude; he could see a certain wild way of looking up and down and +in all directions; he noted how her hands grasped the window-ledge as +if for support. + +And oh, beautiful demon angel, he thought, if you could but know how +near you are to the avenger! Why are you so anxious, my demon wife? +Are you impatient because your Italian is delaying? Can you not live +for five seconds longer without him? Are you looking in all directions +to see where he is? Don't fret; he'll soon be here. + +And now there came a confirmation of his thoughts. He was not +surprised; he knew it; he suspected it. It was all as it should be. +Was it not in the confident expectation of this that he had come here +with his dagger--on their trail? + +It was Girasole. + +He came from the place, further along the shore, where the brigands +were around their fires. He was walking quickly. He had a purpose. It +was with a renewed agony that Dacres watched his enemy--coming to +visit his wife. The intensity of that thirst for vengeance, which had +now to be checked until a better opportunity, made his whole frame +tremble. A wild desire came to him then and there to bound down upon +his enemy, and kill and be killed in the presence of his wife. But the +other brigands deterred him. These men might interpose and save the +Italian, and make him a prisoner. No; he must wait till he could meet +his enemy on something like equal terms--when he could strike a blow +that would not be in vain. Thus he overmastered himself. + +He saw Girasole enter the house. He watched breathlessly. The time +seemed long indeed. He could not hear any thing; the conversation, if +there was any, was carried on in a low tone. He could not see any +thing; those who conversed kept quiet; no one passed in front of the +window. It was all a mystery, and this made the time seem longer. At +length Dacres began to think that Girasole would not go at all. A long +time passed. Hours went away, and still Girasole did not quit the +house. + +It was now sundown. Dacres had eaten nothing since morning, but the +conflict of passion drove away all hunger or thirst. The approach of +darkness was in accordance with his own gloomy wishes. Twilight in +Italy is short. Night would soon be over all. + +The house was on the slope of the bank. At the corner nearest him the +house was sunk into the ground in such a way that it looked as though +one might climb into the upper story window. As Dacres looked he made +up his mind to attempt it. By standing here on tiptoe he could catch +the upper window-ledge with his hands. He was strong. He was tall. His +enemy was in the house. The hour was at hand. He was the man. + +Another hour passed. + +All was still. + +There was a flickering lamp in the hall, but the men seemed to be +asleep. + +Another hour passed. + +There was no noise. + +Then Dacres ventured down. He moved slowly and cautiously, crouching +low, and thus traversing the intervening space. + +He neared the house and touched it. Before him was the window of the +lower story. Above him was the window of the upper story. He lifted up +his hands. They could reach the window-ledge. + +He put his long, keen knife between his teeth, and caught at the upper +window-ledge. Exerting all his strength, he raised himself up so high +that he could fling one elbow over. For a moment he hung thus, and +waited to take breath and listen. + +There was a rush below. Half a dozen shadowy forms surrounded him. He +had been seen. He had been trapped. + +He dropped down and, seizing his knife, struck right and left. + +In vain. He was hurled to the ground and bound tight. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +FACE TO FACE. + + +Hawbury, on his capture, had been at once taken into the woods, and +led and pushed on by no gentle hands. He had thus gone on until he had +found himself by that same lake which others of the party had come +upon in the various ways which have been described. Toward this lake +he was taken, until finally his party reached the old house, which +they entered. It has already been said that it was a two-story house. +It was also of stone, and strongly built. The door was in the middle +of it, and rooms were on each side of the hall. The interior plan of +the house was peculiar, for the hall did not run through, but +consisted of a square room, and the stone steps wound spirally from +the lower hall to the upper one. There were three rooms up stairs, one +taking up one end of the house, which was occupied by Mrs. Willoughby +and Minnie; another in the rear of the house, into which a door opened +from the upper hall, close by the head of the stairs; and a third, +which was opposite the room first mentioned. + +Hawbury was taken to this house, and led up stairs into this room in +the rear of the house. At the end farthest from the door he saw a heap +of straw with a few dirty rugs upon it. In the wall a beam was set, to +which an iron ring was fastened. He was taken toward this bed, and +here his legs were bound together, and the rope that secured them was +run around the iron ring so as to allow of no more motion than a few +feet. Having thus secured the prisoner, the men left him to his own +meditations. + +The room was perfectly bare of furniture, nothing being in it but the +straw and the dirty rugs. Hawbury could not approach to the windows, +for he was bound in a way which prevented that. In fact, he could not +move in any direction, for his arms and legs were fastened in such a +way that he could scarcely raise himself from where he was sitting. He +therefore was compelled to remain in one position, and threw himself +down upon the straw on his side, with his face to the wall, for he +found that position easier than any other. In this way he lay for some +time, until at length he was roused by the sound of footsteps +ascending the stairs. Several people were passing his room. He heard +the voice of Girasole. He listened with deep attention. For some time +there was no reply. At length there was the sound of a woman's +voice--clear, plain, and unmistakable. It was a fretful voice of +complaint. Girasole was trying to answer it. After a time Girasole +left. Then all was still. Then Girasole returned. Then there was a +clattering noise on the stairs, and the bumping of some heavy weight, +and the heavy breathing of men. Then he heard Girasole say something, +after which arose Minnie's voice, close by, as though she was in the +hall, and her words were, "Oh, take it away, take it away!" followed +by long reproaches, which Hawbury did not fully understand. + +This showed him that Minnie, at least, was a prisoner, and in this +house, and in the adjoining room, along with some one whom he rightly +supposed was Mrs. Willoughby. + +After this there was a further silence for some time, which at last +was broken by fresh sounds of trampling and shuffling, together with +the confused directions of several voices all speaking at once. +Hawbury listened, and turned on his couch of straw so as to see any +thing which presented itself. The clatter and the noise approached +nearer, ascending the stairs, until at last he saw that they were +entering his room. Two of the brigands came first, carrying something +carefully. In a few moments the burden which they bore was revealed. + +It was a rude litter, hastily made from bushes fastened together. Upon +this lay the dead body of a man, his white face upturned, and his +limbs stiffened in the rigidity of death. Hawbury did not remember +very distinctly any of the particular events of his confused struggle +with the brigands; but he was not at all surprised to see that there +had been one of the ruffians sent to his account. The brigands who +carried in their dead companion looked at the captive with a sullen +ferocity and a scowling vengefulness, which showed plainly that they +would demand of him a reckoning for their comrade's blood if it were +only in their power. But they did not delay, nor did they make any +actual demonstrations to Hawbury. They placed the corpse of their +comrade upon the floor in the middle of the room, and then went out. + +The presence of the corpse only added to the gloom of Hawbury's +situation, and he once more turned his face to the wall, so as to shut +out the sight. Once more he gave himself up to his own thoughts, and +so the time passed slowly on. He heard no sounds now from the room +where Miss Fay was confined. He heard no noise from the men below, and +could not tell whether they were still guarding the door, or had gone +away. Various projects came to him, foremost among which was the idea +of escaping. Bribery seemed the only possible way. There was about +this, however, the same difficulty which Mrs. Willoughby had +found--his ignorance of the language. He thought that this would be an +effectual bar to any communication, and saw no other alternative than +to wait Girasole's pleasure. It seemed to him that a ransom would be +asked, and he felt sure, from Girasole's offensive manner, that the +ransom would be large. But there was no help for it. He felt more +troubled about Miss Fay; for Girasole's remarks about her seemed to +point to views of his own which were incompatible with her liberation. + +In the midst of these reflections another noise arose below. It was a +steady tramp of two or three men walking. The noise ascended the +stairway, and drew nearer and nearer. Hawbury turned once more, and +saw two men entering the room, carrying between them a box about six +feet long and eighteen inches or two feet wide. It was coarsely but +strongly made, and was undoubtedly intended as a coffin for the corpse +of the brigand. The men put the coffin down against the wall and +retired. After a few minutes they returned again with the coffin lid. +They then lifted the dead body into the coffin, and one of them put +the lid in its place and secured it with half a dozen screws. After +this Hawbury was once more left alone. He found this far more +tolerable, for now he had no longer before his very eyes the abhorrent +sight of the dead body. Hidden in its coffin, it no longer gave +offense to his sensibilities. Once more, therefore, Hawbury turned his +thoughts toward projects of escape, and discussed in his mind the +probabilities for and against. + +The day had been long, and longer still did it seem to the captive as +hour after hour passed slowly by. He could not look at his watch, +which his captors had spared; but from the shadows as they fell +through the windows, and from the general appearance of the sky, he +knew that the close of the day was not far off. He began to wonder +that he was left so long alone and in suspense, and to feel impatient +to know the worst as to his fate. Why did not some of them come to +tell him? Where was Girasole? Was he the chief? Were the brigands +debating about his fate, or were they thus leaving him in suspense so +as to make him despondent and submissive to their terms? From all that +he had ever heard of brigands and their ways, the latter seemed not +unlikely; and this thought made him see the necessity of guarding +himself against being too impatient for freedom, and too compliant +with any demands of theirs. + +From these thoughts he was at last roused by footsteps which ascended +the stairs. He turned and looked toward the door. A man entered. + +It was Girasole. + +He entered slowly, with folded arms, and coming about half-way, he +stood and surveyed the prisoner in silence. Hawbury, with a sudden +effort, brought himself up to a sitting posture, and calmly surveyed +the Italian. + +"Well," asked Hawbury, "I should like to know how long you intend to +keep up this sort of thing? What are you going to do about it? Name +your price, man, and we'll discuss it, and settle upon something +reasonable." + +"My price?" repeated Girasole, with peculiar emphasis. + +"Yes. Of course I understand you fellows. It's your trade, you know. +You've caught me, and, of course, you'll try to make the best of me, +and all that sort of thing. So don't keep me waiting." + +"Inglis milor," said Girasole, with a sharp, quick accent, his face +flushing up as he spoke--"Inglis milor, dere is no price as you mean, +an' no ransom. De price is one dat you will not wis to pay." + +"Oh, come, now, my good fellow, really you must remember that I'm tied +up, and not in a position to be chaffed. Bother your Italian humbug! +Don't speak in these confounded figures of speech, you know, but say +up and down--how much?" + +"De brigands haf talk you ovair, an' dey will haf no price." + +"What the devil is all that rot about?" + +"Dey will haf youair blood." + +"My blood?" + +"Yes." + +"And pray, my good fellow, what good is that going to do them?" + +"It is vengeance," said Girasole. + +"Vengeance? Pooh! Nonsense! What rot! What have I ever done?" + +"Dat--dere--his blood," said Girasole, pointing to the coffin. + +"What! that scoundrel? Why, man alive, are you crazy? That was a fair +stand-up fight. That is, it was two English against twenty Italians, +if you call that fair; but perhaps it is. His blood! By Jove! Cool, +that! Come, I like it." + +"An' more," said Girasole, who now grew more excited. "It is not de +brigand who condemn you; it is also me. I condemn you." + +"You?" said Hawbury, elevating his eyebrows in some surprise, and +fixing a cool stare upon Girasole. "And what the devil's _this_ row +about, I should like to know? I don't know _you_. What have you +against _me_?" + +"Inglis milor," cried Girasole, who was stung to the quick by a +certain indescribable yet most irritating superciliousness in +Hawbury's tone--"Inglis milor, you sall see what you sall soffair. You +sall die! Dere is no hope. You are condemn by de brigand. You also are +condemn by me, for you insult me." + +"Well, of all the beastly rot I ever heard, this is about the worst! +What do you mean by all this infernal nonsense? Insult you! What would +I insult you for? Why, man alive, you're as mad as a March hare! If I +thought you were a gentleman, I'd--by Jove, I will, too! See here, you +fellow: I'll fight you for it--pistols, or any thing. Come, now. I'll +drop all considerations of rank. I'll treat you as if you were a real +count, and not a sham one. Come, now. What do you say? Shall we have +it out? Pistols--in the woods there. You've got all your infernal crew +around you, you know. Well? What? You won't? By Jove!" + +Girasole's gesture showed that he declined the proposition. + +"Inglis milor," said he, with a venomous glitter in his eyes, "I sall +haf youair life--wis de pistol, but not in de duello. I sall blow your +brain out myself." + +"Blow and be hanged, then!" said Hawbury. + +And with these words he fell back on his straw, and took no further +notice of the Italian. + +[Illustration: "INGLIS MILOR, I SALL HAF YOUAIR LIFE."] + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +TORN ASUNDER. + + +When Dacres made his attempt upon the house he was not so unobserved +as he supposed himself to be. Minnie and Mrs. Willoughby happened at +that time to be sitting on the floor by the window, one on each side, +and they were looking out. They had chosen the seat as affording some +prospect of the outer world. There was in Mrs. Willoughby a certain +instinctive feeling that if any rescue came, it would come from the +land side; and, therefore, though the hope was faint indeed, it +nevertheless was sufficiently well defined to inspire her with an +uneasy and incessant vigilance. Thus, then, she had seated herself by +the window, and Minnie had taken her place on the opposite side, and +the two sisters, with clasped hands, sat listening to the voices of +the night. + +At length they became aware of a movement upon the bank just above +them and lying opposite. The sisters clasped one another's hands more +closely, and peered earnestly through the gloom. It was pretty dark, +and the forest threw down a heavy shadow, but still their eyes were by +this time accustomed to the dark, and they could distinguish most of +the objects there. Among these they soon distinguished a moving +figure; but what it was, whether man or beast, they could not make +out. + +This moving figure was crawling down the bank. There was no cover to +afford concealment, and it was evident that he was trusting altogether +to the concealment of the darkness. It was a hazardous experiment, and +Mrs. Willoughby trembled in suspense. + +Minnie, however, did not tremble at all, nor was the suspense at all +painful. When Mrs. Willoughby first cautiously directed her attention +to it in a whisper, Minnie thought it was some animal. + +"Why, Kitty dear," she said, speaking back in a whisper, "why, it's an +animal; I wonder if the creature is a wild beast. I'm sure I think +it's very dangerous, and no doors or windows. But it's _always_ the +way. He wouldn't give me a chair; and so I dare say I shall be eaten +up by a bear before morning." + +Minnie gave utterance to this expectation without the slightest +excitement, just as though the prospect of becoming food for a bear +was one of the very commonest incidents of her life. + +"Oh, I don't think it's a bear." + +"Well, then, it's a tiger or a lion, or perhaps a wolf. I'm sure _I_ +don't see what difference it makes what one is eaten by, when one +_has_ to be eaten." + +"It's a man!" said Mrs. Willoughby, tremulously. + +"A man!--nonsense, Kitty darling. A man walks; he doesn't go on +all-fours, except when he is very, very small." + +"Hush! it's some one coming to help us. Watch him, Minnie dear. Oh, +how dangerous!" + +"Do you really think so?" said Minnie, with evident pleasure. "Now +that is really kind. But I wonder who it _can_ be?" + +Mrs. Willoughby squeezed her hand, and made no reply. She was watching +the slow and cautious movement of the shadowy figure. + +"He's coming nearer!" said she, tremulously. + +Minnie felt her sister's hand throb at the quick movement of her +heart, and heard her short, quick breathing. + +"Who _can_ it be, I wonder?" said Minnie, full of curiosity, but +without any excitement at all. + +"Oh, Minnie!" + +"What's the matter, darling?" + +"It's so terrible." + +"What?" + +"This suspense. Oh, I'm so afraid!" + +"Afraid! Why, I'm not afraid at all." + +"Oh! he'll be caught." + +"No, he won't," said Minnie, confidently. "I _knew_ he'd come. They +_always_ do. Don't be afraid that he'll be caught, or that he'll fail. +They _never_ fail. They always _will_ save me. Wait till your life has +been saved as often as mine has, Kitty darling. Oh, I expected it all! +I was thinking a little while ago he ought to be here soon." + +"He! Who?" + +"Why, any person; the person who is going to save me this time. I +don't know, of course, who he is; some horrid man, of course. And +then--oh dear!--I'll have it all over again. He'll carry me away on +his back, and through those wretched woods, and bump me against the +trees and things. Then he'll get me to the road, and put me on a +horrid old horse, and gallop away. And by that time it will be +morning. And then he'll propose. And so there'll be another. And I +don't know what I _shall_ do about it. Oh dear!" + +Mrs. Willoughby had not heard half of this. All her soul was intent +upon the figure outside. She only pressed her sister's hand, and gave +a warning "Hus-s-s-h!" + +"I know one thing I _do_ wish," said Minnie. + +Her sister made no reply. + +"I do wish it would turn out to be that nice, dear, good, kind Rufus +K. Gunn. I don't want any more of them. And I'm sure he's nicer than +this horrid Count, who wouldn't take the trouble to get me even a +chair. And yet he pretends to be fond of me." + +"Hus-s-s-h!" said her sister. + +But Minnie was irrepressible. + +"I don't want any horrid stranger. But, oh, Kitty darling, it would be +so awfully funny if he were to be caught! and then he _couldn't_ +propose, you know." + +By this time the figure had reached the house. Minnie peeped over and +looked down. Then she drew back her head and sighed. + +"Oh dear!" she said, in a plaintive tone. + +"What, darling?" + +"Why, Kitty darling, do you know he really looks a little like that +great, big, horrid man that ran with me down the volcano, and then +pretended he was my dear papa. And here he comes to save me again. Oh, +what _shall_ I do? Won't you pretend you're me, Kitty darling, and +please go yourself? Oh, ple-e-ease do!" + +But now Minnie was interrupted by two strong hands grasping the +window-sill. A moment after a shadowy head arose above it. Mrs. +Willoughby started back, but through the gloom she was able to +recognize the strongly marked face of Scone Dacres. + +For a moment he stared through the darkness. Then he flung his elbow +over. + +There arose a noise below. There was a rush. The figure disappeared +from the window. A furious struggle followed, in the midst of which +arose fierce oaths and deep breathings, and the sound of blows. Then +the struggle subsided, and they heard footsteps tramping heavily. They +followed the sound into the house. They heard men coming up the stairs +and into the hall outside. Then they all moved into, the front-room +opposite theirs. After a few minutes they heard the steps descending +the stairs. By this they judged that the prisoner had been taken to +that room which was on the other side of the hall and in the front of +the house. + +"There dies our last hope!" said Mrs. Willoughby, and burst into +tears. + +"I'm sure I don't see what you're crying about," said Minnie. "You +certainly oughtn't to want me to be carried off again by that person. +If he had me, he'd _never_ give me up--especially after saving me +twice." + +Mrs. Willoughby made no reply, and the sisters sat in silence for +nearly an hour. They were then aroused by the approach of footsteps +which entered the house; after which voices were heard below. + +Then some one ascended the stairs, and they saw the flicker of a +light. It was Girasole. + +He came into the room with a small lamp, holding his hand in front of +the flame. This lamp he set down in a corner out of the draught, and +then turned to the ladies. + +"Miladi," said Girasole, in a gentle voice, "I am ver pained to haf to +tella you dat it is necessaire for you to separat dis night--till +to-morra." + +"To separate?" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby. + +"Only till to-morra, miladi. Den you sall be togeder foravva. But it +is now necessaire. Dere haf ben an attemp to a rescue. I mus guard +again dis--an' it mus be done by a separazion. If you are togeder you +might run. Dis man was almos up here. It was only chance dat I saw him +in time." + +"Oh, Sir," cried Mrs. Willoughby, "you can not--you will not separate +us. You can not have the heart to. I promise most solemnly that we +will not escape if you only leave us together." + +Girasole shook his head. + +"I can not," said he, firmly; "de mees is too precious. I dare not. If +you are prisonaire se will not try to fly, an' so I secure her de +more; but if you are togeder you will find some help. You will bribe +de men. I can not trust dem." + +"Oh, do not separate us. Tie us. Bind us. Fasten us with chains. +Fasten me with chains, but leave me with her." + +"Chains? nonsance; dat is impossibile. Chains? no, miladi. You sall be +treat beautiful. No chain, no; notin but affection--till to-morra, an' +den de mees sall be my wife. De priest haf come, an' it sall be +allaright to-morra, an' you sall be wit her again. An' now you haf to +come away; for if you do not be pleasant, I sall not be able to 'low +you to stay to-morra wit de mees when se become my Contessa." + +Mrs. Willoughby flung her arms about her sister, and clasped her in a +convulsive embrace. + +"Well, Kitty darling," said Minnie, "don't cry, or you'll make me cry +too. It's just what we might have expected, you know. He's been as +unkind as he could be about the chair, and of course he'll do all he +can to tease me. Don't cry, dear. You must go, I suppose, since that +horrid man talks and scolds so about it; only be sure to be back +early; but how I am _ever_ to pass the night here all alone and +standing up, I'm sure _I_ don't know." + +"Alone? Oh no," said Girasole. "Charming mees, you sall not be alone; +I haf guard for dat. I haf sent for a maid." + +"But I don't want any of your horrid old maids. I want my own maid, or +none at all." + +"Se sall be your own maid. I haf sent for her." + +"What, my own maid?--Dowlas?" + +"I am ver sorry, but it is not dat one. It is anoder--an Italian." + +"Well, I think that is _very_ unkind, when you _know_ I can't speak a +word of the language. But you _always_ do all you can to tease me. I +_wish_ I had never seen you." + +Girasole looked hurt. + +"Charming mees," said he, "I will lay down my life for you." + +"But I don't want you to lay down your life. I want Dowlas." + +"And you sall haf Dowlas to-morra. An' to-night you sall haf de +Italian maid." + +"Well, I suppose I must," said Minnie, resignedly. + +"Miladi," said Girasole, turning to Mrs. Willoughby, "I am ver sorry +for dis leetle accommodazion. De room where you mus go is de one where +I haf put de man dat try to safe you. He is tied fast. You mus promis +you will not loose him. Haf you a knife?" + +"No," said Mrs. Willoughby, in a scarce audible tone. + +"Do not mourn. You sall be able to talk to de prisonaire and get +consolazion. But come." + +With these words Girasole led the way out into the hall, and into the +front-room on the opposite side. He carried the lamp in his hand. Mrs. +Willoughby saw a figure lying at the other end of the room on the +floor. His face was turned toward them, but in the darkness she could +not see it plainly. Some straw was heaped up in the corner next her. + +"Dere," said Girasole, "is your bed. I am sorra. Do not be trouble." + +With this he went away. + +Mrs. Willoughby flung herself on her knees, and bowed her head and +wept convulsively. She heard the heavy step of Girasole as he went +down stairs. Her first impulse was to rush back to her sister. But she +dreaded discovery, and felt that disobedience would only make her fate +harder. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +FOUND AT LAST. + + +In a few moments Girasole came back and entered Minnie's room. He was +followed by a woman who was dressed in the garb of an Italian peasant +girl. Over her head she wore a hood to protect her from the night air, +the limp folds of which hung over her face. Minnie looked carelessly +at this woman and then at Girasole. + +"Charming mees," said Girasole, "I haf brought you a maid for dis +night. When we leaf dis you sall haf what maid you wis." + +"That horrid old fright!" said Minnie. "I don't want her." + +"You sall only haf her for dis night," said Girasole. "You will be +taken care for." + +"I suppose nobody cares for what _I_ want," said Minnie, "and I may as +well speak to the wall, for all the good it does." + +[Illustration: "ONE ARM WENT AROUND HER NECK."] + +Girasole smiled and bowed, and put his hand on his heart, and then +called down the stairs: + +"Padre Patricio!" + +A solid, firm step now sounded on the stairs, and in a few moments the +priest came up. Girasole led the way into Hawbury's room. The prisoner +lay on his side. He was in a deep sleep. Girasole looked in wonder at +the sleeper who was spending in this way the last hours of his life, +and then pointed to the coffin. + +"Here," said he, in Italian, "is the body. When the grave is dug they +will tell you. You must stay here. You will not be afraid to be with +the dead." + +The priest smiled. + +Girasole now retreated and went down stairs. + +Soon all was still. + +The Italian woman had been standing where she had stopped ever since +she first came into the room. Minnie had not paid any attention to +her, but at last she noticed this. + +"I _wish_ you wouldn't stand there in that way. You really make me +feel quite nervous. And what with the dark, and not having any light, +and losing poor dear Kitty, and not having any chair to sit upon, +really one's life is scarce worth having. But all this is thrown away, +as you can't speak English--and how horrid it is to have no one to +talk to." + +The woman made no reply, but with a quiet, stealthy step she drew near +to Minnie. + +"What do you want? You horrid creature, keep away," said Minnie, +drawing back in some alarm. + +"Minnie dear!" said the woman. "H-s-s-s-h!" she added, in a low +whisper. + +Minnie started. + +"Who are you?" she whispered. + +One arm went around her neck, and another hand went over her mouth, +and the woman drew nearer to her. + +"Not a word. H-s-s-s-h! I've risked my life. The priest brought me." + +"Why, my darling, darling love of an Ethel!" said Minnie, who was +overwhelmed with surprise. + +"H-s-s-s-h!" + +"But how can I h-s-s-s-h when I'm so perfectly frantic with delight? +Oh, you darling pet!" + +"H-s-s-s-h! Not another word. I'll be discovered and lost." + +"Well, dear, I'll speak very, very low. But how did you come here?" + +"The priest brought me." + +"The priest?" + +"Yes. He was sent for, you know; and I thought I could help you, and +he is going to save you." + +"He! Who?" + +"The priest, you know." + +"The priest! Is he a Roman Catholic priest, Ethel darling?" + +"Yes, dear." + +"And _he_ is going to save me this time, is he?" + +"I hope so, dear." + +"Oh, how perfectly lovely that is! and it was so kind and thoughtful +in you! Now this is really quite nice, for you know I've _longed_ so +to be saved by a priest. These horrid men, you know, all go and +propose the moment they save one's life; but a priest _can't_, you +know--no, not if he saved one a thousand times over. Can he now, Ethel +darling?" + +"Oh no!" said Ethel, in a little surprise. "But stop, darling. You +really must _not_ say another word--no, not so much as a whisper--for +we certainly _will_ be heard; and don't notice what I do, or the +priest either, for it's very, very important, dear. But you keep as +still as a little mouse, and wait till we are all ready." + +"Well, Ethel dear, I will; but it's awfully funny to see you here--and +oh, _such_ a funny figure as you are!" + +"H-s-s-s-h!" + +Minnie relapsed into silence now, and Ethel withdrew near to the door, +where she stood and listened. All was still. Down stairs there was no +light and no sound. In the hall above she could see nothing, and could +not tell whether any guards were there or not. + +Hawbury's room was at the back of the house, as has been said, and the +door was just at the top of the stairs. The door where Ethel was +standing was there too, and was close by the other, so that she could +listen and hear the deep breathing of the sleeper. One or two +indistinct sounds escaped him from time to time, and this was all that +broke the deep stillness. + +She waited thus for nearly an hour, during which all was still, and +Minnie said not a word. Then a shadowy figure appeared near her at +Hawbury's door, and a hand touched her shoulder. + +Not a word was said. + +Ethel stole softly and noiselessly into Hawbury's room, where the +priest was. She could see the two windows, and the priest indicated to +her the position of the sleeper. + +Slowly and cautiously she stole over toward him. + +She reached the place. + +She knelt by his side, and bent low over him. Her lips touched his +forehead. + +The sleeper moved slightly, and murmured some words. + +"All fire," he murmured; "fire--and flame. It is a furnace before us. +She must not die." + +Then he sighed. + +Ethel's heart beat wildly. The words that he spoke told her where his +thoughts were wandering. She bent lower; tears fell from her eyes and +upon his face. + +"My darling," murmured the sleeper, "we will land here. I will cook +the fish. How pale! Don't cry, dearest." + +The house was all still. Not a sound arose. Ethel still bent down and +listened for more of these words which were so sweet to her. + +"Ethel!" murmured the sleeper, "where are you? Lost! lost!" + +A heavy sigh escaped him, which found an echo in the heart of the +listener. She touched his forehead gently with one hand, and +whispered, + +"My lord!" + +Hawbury started. + +"What's this?" he murmured. + +"A friend," said Ethel. + +At this Hawbury became wide awake. + +"Who are you?" he whispered, in a trembling voice. "For God's +sake--oh, for God's sake, speak again! tell me!" + +"Harry," said Ethel. + +Hawbury recognized the voice at once. + +A slight cry escaped him, which was instantly suppressed, and then a +torrent of whispered words followed. + +"Oh, my darling! my darling! my darling! What is this? How is this? Is +it a dream? Oh, am I awake? Is it you? Oh, my darling! my darling! Oh, +if my arms were but free!" + +Ethel bent over him, and passed her arm around him till she felt the +cords that bound him. She had a sharp knife ready, and with this she +cut the cords. Hawbury raised himself, without waiting for his feet to +be freed, and caught Ethel in his freed arms in a silent embrace, and +pressed her over and over again to his heart. + +Ethel with difficulty extricated herself. + +"There's no time to lose," said she. "I came to save you. Don't waste +another moment; it will be too late. Oh, do not! Oh, wait!" she added, +as Hawbury made another effort to clasp her in his arms. "Oh, do what +I say, for my sake!" + +She felt for his feet, and cut the rest of his bonds. + +"What am I to do?" asked Hawbury, clasping her close, as though he was +afraid that he would lose her again. + +"Escape." + +"Well, come! I'll leap with you from the window." + +"You can't. The house and all around swarms with brigands. They watch +us all closely." + +"I'll fight my way through them." + +"Then you'll be killed, and I'll die." + +"Well, I'll do whatever you say." + +"Listen, then. You must escape alone." + +"What! and leave you? Never!" + +"I'm safe. I'm disguised, and a priest is with me as my protector." + +"How can you be safe in such a place as this?" + +"I am safe. Do not argue. There is no time to lose. The priest brought +me here, and will take me away." + +"But there are others here. I can't leave them. Isn't Miss Fay a +prisoner? and another lady?" + +"Yes; but the priest and I will be able, I hope, to liberate them. We +have a plan." + +"But can't I go with you and help you?" + +"Oh no! it's impossible. You could not. We are going to take them away +in disguise. We have a dress. You couldn't be disguised." + +"And _must_ I go alone?" + +"You must." + +"I'll do it, then. Tell me what it is. But oh, my darling! how can I +leave you, and in such a place as this?" + +"I assure you I am not in the slightest danger." + +"I shall feel terribly anxious." + +"H-s-s-s-h! no more of this. Listen now." + +"Well?" + +Ethel bent lower, and whispered in his ear, in even lower tones than +ever, the plan which she had contrived. + + + + +CHAPTER XXX. + +A DESPERATE PLAN. + + +Ethel's plan was hastily revealed. The position was exceedingly +perilous; time was short, and this was the only way of escape. + +It was the priest who had concocted it, and he had thought of it as +the only plan by which Hawbury's rescue could be effected. This +ingenious Irishman had also formed another plan for the rescue of +Minnie and her sister, which was to be attempted in due course of +time. + +Now no ordinary mode of escape was possible for Hawbury. A strict +watch was kept. The priest had noticed on his approach that guards +were posted in different directions in such a way that no fugitive +from the house could elude them. He had also seen that the guard +inside the house was equally vigilant. To leap from the window and run +for it would be certain death, for that was the very thing which the +brigands anticipated. To make a sudden rush down the stairs was not +possible, for at the door below there were guards; and there, most +vigilant of all, was Girasole himself. + +The decision of the Irish priest was correct, as has been proved in +the case of Dacres, who, in spite of all his caution, was observed and +captured. Of this the priest knew nothing, but judged from what he +himself had seen on his approach to the house. + +The plan of the priest had been hastily communicated to Ethel, who +shared his convictions and adopted his conclusions. She also had +noticed the vigilance with which the guard had been kept up, and only +the fact that a woman had been sent for and was expected with the +priest had preserved her from discovery and its consequences. As it +was, however, no notice was taken of her, and her pretended character +was assumed to be her real one. Even Girasole had scarcely glanced at +her. A village peasant was of no interest in his eyes. His only +thought was of Minnie, and the woman that the priest brought was only +used as a desperate effort to show a desire for her comfort. After he +had decided to separate the sisters the woman was of more importance; +but he had nothing to say to her, and thus Ethel had effected her +entrance to Minnie's presence in safety, with the result that has been +described. + +The priest had been turning over many projects in his brain, but at +last one suggested itself which had originated in connection with the +very nature of his errand. + +One part of that errand was that a man should be conveyed out of the +house and carried away and left in a certain place. Now the man who +was thus to be carried out was a dead man, and the certain place to +which he was to be borne and where he was to be left was the grave; +but these stern facts did not at all deter the Irish priest from +trying to make use of this task that lay before him for the benefit of +Hawbury. + +Here was a problem. A prisoner anxious for escape, and a dead man +awaiting burial; how were these two things to be exchanged so that the +living man might pass out without going to the grave? + +The Irish priest puzzled and pondered and grew black in the face with +his efforts to get to the solution of this problem, and at length +succeeded--to his own satisfaction, at any rate. What is more, when he +explained his plan to Ethel, she adopted it. She started, it is true; +she shuddered, she recoiled from it at first, but finally she adopted +it. Furthermore, she took it upon herself to persuade Hawbury to fall +in with it. + +So much with regard to Hawbury. For Minnie and her sister the +indefatigable priest had already concocted a plan before leaving home. +This was the very commonplace plan of a disguise. It was to be an old +woman's apparel, and he trusted to the chapter of accidents to make +the plan a success. He noticed with pleasure that some women were at +the place, and thought that the prisoners might be confounded with +them. + +When at length Ethel had explained the plan to Hawbury he made a few +further objections, but finally declared himself ready to carry it +out. + +The priest now began to put his project into execution. He had brought +a screw-driver with him, and with this he took out the screws from the +coffin one by one, as quietly as possible. + +Then the lid was lifted off, and Hawbury arose and helped the priest +to transfer the corpse from the coffin to the straw. They then put the +corpse on its side, with the face to the wall, and bound the hands +behind it, and the feet also. The priest then took Hawbury's +handkerchief and bound it around the head of the corpse. One or two +rugs that lay near were thrown over the figure, so that it at length +looked like a sleeping man. + +Hawbury now got into the coffin and lay down on his back at full +length. The priest had brought some bits of wood with him, and these +he put on the edge of the coffin in such a way that the lid would be +kept off at a distance of about a quarter of an inch. Through this +opening Hawbury could have all the air that was requisite for +breathing. + +Then Ethel assisted the priest to lift the lid on. + +Thus far all had been quiet; but now a slight noise was heard below. +Some men were moving. Ethel was distracted with anxiety, but the +priest was as cool as a clock. He whispered to her to go back to the +room where she belonged. + +"Will you be able to finish it?" she asked. + +"Sure an' I will--only don't you be afther stayin' here any longer." + +At this Ethel stole back to Minnie's room, and stood listening with a +quick-beating heart. + +But the priest worked coolly and dextrously. He felt for the holes to +which the screws belonged, and succeeded in putting in two of them. + +Then there was a noise in the hall below. + +The priest began to put in the third screw. + +There were footsteps on the stairs. + +He screwed on. + +Nearer and nearer came the steps. + +The priest still kept to his task. + +At last a man entered the room. Ethel, who had heard all, was faint +with anxiety. She was afraid that the priest had not finished his +task. + +Her fears were groundless. + +Just as the foremost of the men entered the room the priest finished +screwing, and stood by the coffin, having slipped the screw-driver +into his pocket, as calm as though nothing had happened. Three of the +screws were in, and that was as many as were needed. + +The men brought no light with them, and this circumstance was in the +priest's favor. + +"You've been keeping me waiting long," said the priest, in Italian. + +"You may be glad it wasn't longer," said one of them, in a sullen +tone. "Where is it?" + +"Here," said the priest. + +The men gathered around the coffin, and stooped down over it, one at +each corner. Then they raised it up. Then they carried it out; and +soon the heavy steps of the men were heard as they went down the +stairs with their burden. + +Ethel still stood watching and listening. + +As she listened she heard some one ascending the stairs. New terror +arose. Something was wrong, and all would be discovered. But the man +who came up had no light, and that was one comfort. She could not see +who it was. + +The man stopped for a moment in front of Minnie's door, and stood so +close to her that she heard his breathing. It was quick and heavy, +like the breathing of a very tired or a very excited man. Then he +turned away and went to the door of the front-room opposite. Here he +also stood for a few moments. + +All was still. + +Then he came back, and entered Hawbury's room. + +Now the crisis had come--the moment when all might be discovered. And +if so, they all were lost. Ethel bent far forward and tried to peer +through the gloom. She saw the dark figure of the new-comer pass by +one of the windows, and by the outline she knew that it was Girasole. +He passed on into the shadow, and toward the place where the straw +was. She could not see him any more. + +Girasole stepped noiselessly and cautiously, as though fearful of +waking the sleeper. At every step he paused and listened. The silence +reassured him. + +He drew nearer and nearer, his left hand groping forward, and his +right hand holding a pistol. His movements were perfectly noiseless. + +His own excitement was now intense, his heart throbbed fiercely and +almost painfully as he approached his victim. + +At last he reached the spot, and knelt on one knee. He listened for a +moment. There was no noise and no movement on the part of the figure +before him. + +In the gloom he could see the outline of that figure plainly. It lay +on its side, curled up in the most comfortable attitude which could be +assumed, where arms and legs were bound. + +"How soundly he sleeps!" thought Girasole. + +He paused for a moment, and seemed to hesitate; but it was only for a +moment. Then, summing up his resolution, he held his pistol close to +the head of the figure, and fired. + +[Illustration: "HE HELD HIS PISTOL CLOSE TO THE HEAD, AND FIRED."] + +The loud report echoed through the house. A shriek came from Minnie's +room, and a cry came from Mrs. Willoughby, who sprang toward the hall. +But Girasole came out and intercepted her. + +"Eet ees notin," said he, in a tremulous voice. "Eet ees all ovair. +Eet ees only a false alarm." + +Mrs. Willoughby retreated to her room, and Minnie said nothing. As for +Ethel, the suspense with her had passed away as the report of the +pistol came to her ears. + +Meanwhile the coffin was carried out of the house, and the men, +together with the priest, walked on toward a place further up the +shore and on the outskirts of the woods. They reached a place where a +grave was dug. + +At this moment a pistol-shot sounded. The priest stopped, and the men +stopped also. They did not understand it. The priest did not know the +cause of the shot, but seeing the alarm of the men he endeavored to +excite their fears. One of the men went back, and was cursed by +Girasole for his pains. So he returned to the grave, cursing every +body. + +The coffin was now lowered into the grave, and the priest urged the +men to go away and let him finish the work; but they refused. The +fellows seemed to have some affection for their dead comrade, and +wished to show it by putting him underground, and doing the last +honors. So the efforts of the Irish priest, though very well meant, +and very urgent, and very persevering, did not meet with that success +which he anticipated. + +Suddenly he stopped in the midst of the burial service, which he was +prolonging to the utmost. + +"Hark!" he cried, in Italian. + +"What?" they asked. + +"It's a gun! It's an alarm!" + +"There's no gun, and no alarm," said they. + +All listened, but there was no repetition of the sound, and the priest +went on. + +He had to finish it. + +He stood trembling and at his wit's end. Already the men began to +throw in the earth. + +But now there came a real alarm. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI. + +DISCOVERED. + + +The report of the pistol had startled Minnie, and for a moment had +greatly agitated her. The cry of Mrs. Willoughby elicited a response +from her to the effect that all was right, and would, no doubt, have +resulted in a conversation, had it not been prevented by Girasole. + +Minnie then relapsed into silence for a time, and Ethel took a seat by +her side on the floor, for Minnie would not go near the straw, and +then the two interlocked their arms in an affectionate embrace. + +"Ethel darling," whispered Minnie, "do you know I'm beginning to get +awfully tired of this?" + +"I should think so, poor darling!" + +"If I only had some place to sit on," said Minnie, still reverting to +her original grievance, "it wouldn't be so very bad, you know. I could +put up with not having a bed, or a sofa, or that sort of thing, you +know; but really I must say not to have any kind of a seat seems to me +to be very, very inconsiderate, to say the least of it." + +"Poor darling!" said Ethel again. + +"And now do you know, Ethel dear, I'm beginning to feel as though I +should really like to run away from this place, if I thought that +horrid man wouldn't see me?" + +"Minnie darling," said Ethel, "that's the very thing I came for, you +know." + +"Oh yes, I know! And that dear, nice, good, kind, delightful priest! +Oh, it was so nice of you to think of a priest, Ethel dear! I'm so +grateful! But when is he coming?" + +"Soon, I hope. But _do_ try not to talk so." + +"But I'm only whispering." + +"Yes, but your whispers are too loud, and I'm afraid they'll hear." + +"Well, I'll try to keep still; but it's so _awfully_ hard, you know, +when one has _so_ much to say, Ethel dear." + +Minnie now remained silent for about five minutes. + +"How did you say you were going to take me away?" she asked at length. + +"In disguise," said Ethel. + +"But _what_ disguise?" + +"In an old woman's dress--but hu-s-s-s-sh!" + +"But I don't _want_ to be dressed up in an old woman's clothes; they +make me _such_ a figure. Why, I'd be a perfect fright." + +"Hu-s-s-s-sh! Dear, dear Minnie, you're talking too loud. They'll +certainly hear us," said Ethel, in a low, frightened whisper. + +"But _do_--_do_ promise you won't take me in an old woman's clothes!" + +"Oh, there--there it is again!" said Ethel. "Dear, dear Minnie, +there's some one listening." + +"Well, I don't see what harm there is in what I'm saying. I only +wanted--" + +Here there was a movement on the stairs just outside. Ethel had heard +a sound of that kind two or three times, and it had given her alarm; +but now Minnie herself heard it, and stopped speaking. + +And now a voice sounded from the stairs. Some Italian words were +spoken, and seemed to be addressed to them. Of course they could make +no reply. The words were repeated, with others, and the speaker seemed +to be impatient. Suddenly it flashed across Ethel's mind that the +speaker was Girasole, and that the words were addressed to her. + +Her impression was correct, and the speaker was Girasole. He had heard +the sibilant sounds of the whispering, and, knowing that Minnie could +not speak Italian, it had struck him as being a very singular thing +that she should be whispering. Had her sister joined her? He thought +he would go up and see. So he went up softly, and the whispering still +went on. He therefore concluded that the "Italian woman" was not doing +her duty, and that Mrs. Willoughby had joined her sister. This he +would not allow; but as he had already been sufficiently harsh he did +not wish to be more so, and therefore he called to the "Italian +woman." + +"Hallo, you woman there! didn't I tell you not to let the ladies speak +to one another?" + +Of course no answer was given, so Girasole grew more angry still, and +cried out again, more imperatively: + +"Why do you not answer me? Where are you? Is this the way you watch?" + +Still there was no answer. Ethel heard, and by this time knew what his +suspicion was; but she could neither do nor say any thing. + +"Come down here at once, you hag!" + +But the "hag" did not come down, nor did she give any answer. The +"hag" was trembling violently, and saw that all was lost. If the +priest were only here! If she could only have gone and returned with +him! What kept him? + +Girasole now came to the top of the stairs, and spoke to Minnie. + +"Charming mees, are you awake?" + +"Yes," said Minnie. + +"Ees your sistaire wit you?" + +"No. How can _she_ be with me, I should like to know, when you've gone +and put her in some horrid old room?" + +"Ah! not wit you? Who are you whisperin' to, den?" + +Minnie hesitated. + +"To my maid," said she. + +[Illustration: "WHAT DIT YOU COME FOR?"--"FOR HER."] + +"Does de maid spik Inglis?" asked Girasole. + +"Yes," said Minnie. + +"Ah! I did not know eet. I mus have a look at de contadina who spiks +Inglis. Come here, Italiana. You don't spik Italiano, I tink. Come +here." + +Ethel rose to her feet. + +Girasole ran down, and came back after a few minutes with a lamp. +Concealment was useless, and so Ethel did not cover her face with the +hood. It had fallen off when she was sitting by Minnie, and hung +loosely down her shoulders from the strings which were around her +neck. Girasole recognized her at one glance. + +"Ah!" said he; and then he stood thinking. As for Ethel, now that the +suspense was over and the worst realized, her agitation ceased. She +stood looking at him with perfect calm. + +"What dit you come for?" he asked. + +"For _her_," said Ethel, making a gesture toward Minnie. + +"What could you do wit her?" + +"I could see her and comfort her." + +"Ah! an' you hope to make her escape. Ha, ha! ver well. You mus not +complain eef you haf to soffair de consequence. Aha! an' so de priest +bring you here--ha?" + +Ethel was silent. + +"Ah! you fear to say--you fear you harma de priest--ha?" + +Minnie had thus far said nothing, but now she rose and looked at +Girasole, and then at Ethel. Then she twined one arm around Ethel's +waist, and turned her large, soft, childish eyes upon Girasole. + +"What do you mean," she said, "by _always_ coming here and teasing, +and worrying, and firing off pistols, and frightening people? I'm sure +it was horrid enough for you to make me come to this wretched place, +when you _know_ I don't like it, without annoying me so. Why did you +go and take away poor darling Kitty? And what do you mean now, pray, +by coming here? I never was treated so unkindly in my life. I did not +think that _any one_ could be so very, very rude." + +"Charming mees," said Girasole, with a deprecating air, "it pains me +to do any ting dat you do not like." + +"It don't pain you," said Minnie--"it don't pain you _at all_. You're +_always_ teasing me. You _never_ do what I want you to. You wouldn't +even give me a chair." + +"Alas, carissima mia, to-morra you sall haf all! But dis place is so +remote." + +"It is _not_ remote," said Minnie. "It's close by roads and villages +and things. Why, here is Ethel; she has been in a village where there +are houses, and people, and as many chairs as she wants." + +"Oh, mees, eef you will but wait an' be patient--eef you will but wait +an' see how tender I will be, an' how I lof you." + +"You _don't_ love me," said Minnie, "one bit. Is this love--not to +give me a chair? I have been standing up till I am nearly ready to +drop. And you have nothing better than some wretched promises. I don't +care for to-morrow; I want to be comfortable to-day. You won't let me +have a single thing. And now you come to tease me again, and frighten +poor, dear, darling Ethel." + +"Eet ees because she deceif me--she come wit a plot--she steal in +here. Eef she had wait, all would be well." + +"You mustn't _dare_ to touch her," said Minnie, vehemently. "You +_shall_ leave her here. She _shall_ stay with me." + +"I am ver pain--oh, very; but oh, my angel--sweet--charming mees--eet +ees dangaire to my lof. She plot to take you away. An' all my life is +in you. Tink what I haf to do to gain you!" + +Minnie looked upon Girasole, with her large eyes dilated with +excitement and resentment. + +"You are a horrid, horrid man," she exclaimed. "I _hate_ you." + +"Oh, my angel," pleaded Girasole, with deep agitation, "take back dat +word." + +"I'm sorry you ever saved my life," said Minnie, very calmly; "and I'm +sorry I ever saw you. I _hate_ you." + +"Ah, you gif me torment. You do not mean dis. You say once you lof +me." + +"_I_ did not say I loved _you_. It was _you_ who said you loved _me_. +_I_ never liked _you_. And I don't really see how I _could_ be engaged +to you when I was engaged to another man before. He is the only one +whom I recognize now. I don't know you at all. For I couldn't be bound +to two men; could I, Ethel dear?" + +Ethel did not reply to this strange question. + +But upon Girasole its effect was very great. The manner of Minnie had +been excessively perplexing to him all through this eventful day. If +she had stormed and gone into a fine frenzy he could have borne it. It +would have been natural. But she was perfectly unconcerned, and her +only complaint was about trifles. Such trifles too! He felt ashamed to +think that he could have subjected to such annoyances a woman whom he +so dearly loved. And now he was once more puzzled. Minnie confronted +him, looking at him fixedly, without one particle of fear, with her +large, earnest, innocent eyes fastened upon his--with the calm, cool +gaze, of some high-minded child rebuking a younger child-companion. +This was a proceeding which he was not prepared for. Besides, the +child-innocence of her face and of her words actually daunted him. She +seemed so fearless, because she was so innocent. She became a greater +puzzle than ever. He had never seen much of her before, and this day's +experience of her had actually daunted him and confounded him. And +what was the worst to him of all her words was her calm and simple +declaration, "I hate you!" + +"Yes," said Minnie, thoughtfully, "it must be so; and dear Kitty would +have said the same, only she was so awfully prejudiced. And I always +thought he was so nice. Yes, I think I really must be engaged to him. +But as for you," she said, turning full upon Girasole, "I hate you!" + +Girasole's face grew white with rage and jealousy. + +"Aha!" said he. "You lof _him_. Aha! An' you were engage to _him_. +Aha!" + +"Yes, I really think so." + +"Aha! Well, listen," cried Girasole, in a hoarse voice--"listen. +He--he--de rival--de one you say you are engage--he is dead!" + +And with this he fastened upon Minnie his eyes that now gleamed with +rage, and had an expression in them that might have made Ethel quiver +with horror, but she did not, for she knew that Girasole was mistaken +on that point. + +As for Minnie, she was not at all impressed by his fierce looks. + +"I don't think you really know what you're talking about," said she; +"and you're very, very unpleasant. At any rate, you are altogether in +the wrong when you say he is dead." + +"Dead! He is dead! I swear it!" cried Girasole, whose manner was a +little toned down by Minnie's coolness. + +"This is getting to be awfully funny, you know," said Minnie. "I +really think we don't know what one another is talking about. I'm sure +_I_ don't, and I'm sure _he_ don't, either; does he, Ethel darling?" + +"De Inglis milor," said Girasole. "He is dead." + +"Well, but I don't mean him at all," said Minnie. + +"Who--who?" gasped Girasole. "Who--who--who?" + +"Why, the person I mean," said Minnie, very placidly, "is Rufus K. +Gunn." + +Girasole uttered something like a howl, and retreated. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII. + +UNDER ARREST. + + +Girasole retreated half-way down the stairs, and then he stopped for +some time and thought. Then he came back and motioned to Ethel. + +"You must come," he said, gruffly. + +"You shall not," said Minnie. + +"No, no, darling," said Ethel; "I had better go. It will only get you +into fresh trouble. And I'll be back as soon as I can." + +"Oh, how I _hate_ you!" said Minnie to Girasole. The latter said +nothing. Ethel kissed Minnie, and descended the stairs after him. + +The Irish priest was standing over the grave bathed in a cold +perspiration, his heart throbbing violently, every new thud of the +earth, as it sounded violently against the coffin, sending a cold +chill of horror through every nerve. Already enough earth had been +thrown to cover three-quarters of the lid, and at the foot it was +heaped up some distance. He tried to frame some excuse to get the men +away. His brain whirled; his mind was confused; his thoughts refused +to be collected. + +And now, in the midst of this, the attention of all was attracted by a +loud stern voice, which sounded from some one near. The priest looked +around. The men stopped shoveling, and turned to see the cause of the +noise. + +Girasole was seen approaching, and was already near enough to be +distinguished. Behind him followed a female form. At this sight the +priest's mind misgave him. + +Girasole came up, and now the priest saw that the female was no other +than Ethel. + +"Where is this priest?" asked Girasole, angrily, speaking, of course, +in Italian. + +The priest advanced. + +"I am here," said he, with quiet dignity. + +At this change in the state of affairs the priest regained his +presence of mind. The cessation in the work gave him relief, and +enabled him to recall his scattered and confused thoughts. The men +stood looking at the speakers, and listening, leaning on their +shovels. + +"You were sent for?" + +"Yes." + +"And a maid?" + +"Yes." + +"You brought this lady?" + +"Yes." + +"You put her in disguise; you passed her off as an Italian?" + +"Yes." + +The priest made no attempt at denial or equivocation. He knew that +this would be useless. He waited for an opportunity to excuse himself, +and to explain rather than to deny. But every answer of his only +served to increase the fury of Girasole, who seemed determined to +visit upon the head of the priest and Ethel the rage that he felt at +his last interview with Minnie. + +"Then why," cried Girasole, "did you try to trick us? Don't you know +the punishment we give to spies and traitors?" + +"I have nothing to do with spies and traitors." + +"You are one yourself." + +"I am not." + +"You lie!" + +"I do not," said the priest, mildly. "Hear me, and let me tell my +story, and you will see that I am not a traitor; or, if you don't wish +to listen, then question me." + +"There is but one question. What made you bring this lady?" + +"That is simply answered," said the priest, with unfaltering calmness. +"This lady and her friends arrived at my village and claimed +hospitality. They were in distress. Some of their friends had been +taken from them. A message came from you requesting my presence, and +also a lady's-maid. There was no stipulation about the kind of one. +This lady was the intimate friend of the captive, and entreated me to +take her, so that she should see her friend, and comfort her, and +share her captivity. I saw no harm in the wish. She proposed to become +a lady's-maid. I saw no harm in that." + +"Why did she disguise herself?" + +"So as to pass without trouble. She didn't want to be delayed. She +wanted to see her friends as soon as possible. If you had questioned +her, you would no doubt have let her pass." + +"I would, no doubt, have done nothing of the kind." + +"I don't see any objection," said the priest. + +"Objection? She is a spy!" + +"A spy? Of what, pray?" + +"She came to help her friend to escape." + +"To escape? How could she possibly help her to escape? Do you think it +so easy to escape from this place?" + +Girasole was silent. + +"Do you think a young lady, who has never been out of the care of her +friends before, could do much to assist a friend like herself in an +escape?" + +"She might." + +"But how? This is not the street of a city. That house is watched, I +think. There seem to be a few men in these woods, if I am not +mistaken. Could this young lady help her friend to elude all these +guards? Why, you know very well that she could not." + +"Yes; but then there is--" + +"Who?" + +"Yourself." + +"Myself?" + +"Yes." + +"What of me?" + +"What do I know about your designs?" + +"What designs could _I_ have? Do you think _I_ could plan an escape?" + +"Why not?" + +"Why not? What! living here close beside you? _I_ be a traitor? _I_, +with my life at your mercy at all times--with my throat within such +easy reach of any assassin who might choose to revenge my treachery?" + +"We are not assassins," said Girasole, angrily. + +"And I am not a traitor," rejoined the priest, mildly. + +[Illustration: UNDER GUARD.] + +Girasole was silent, and stood in thought. The men at the grave had +heard every word of this conversation. Once they laughed in scorn when +the priest alluded to the absurdity of a young girl escaping. It was +too ridiculous. Their sympathies were evidently with the priest. The +charge against him could not be maintained. + +"Well," said Girasole at length, "I don't trust you. You may be +traitors, after all. I will have you guarded, and if I find out any +thing that looks like treason, by Heaven I will have your life, old +man, even if you should be the Holy Father himself; and as to the +lady--well, I will find plenty of ways," he added, with a sneer, "of +inflicting on her a punishment commensurable with her crime. Here, you +men, come along with me," he added, looking at the men by the grave. + +"But we want to finish poor Antonio's grave," remonstrated one of the +men. + +"Bah! he'll keep," said Girasole, with a sneer. + +"Can't one of us stay?" asked the man. + +"No, not one; I want you all. If they are traitors, they are deep +ones. They must be guarded; and, mind you, if they escape, you shall +suffer." + +With these words he led the way, and the priest and Ethel followed +him. After these came the men, who had thrown down their shovels +beside the grave. They all walked on in silence, following Girasole, +who led the way to a place beyond the grave, and within view of one of +the fires formerly alluded to. The place was about half-way between +the grave and the fire. It was a little knoll bare of trees, and from +it they could be seen by those at the nearest fire. Here Girasole +paused, and, with some final words of warning to the guards, he turned +and took his departure. + +The priest sat down upon the grass, and urged Ethel to do the same. +She followed his advice, and sat down by his side. The guards sat +around them so as to encircle them, and, mindful of Girasole's charge, +they kept their faces turned toward them, so as to prevent even the +very thought of flight. The priest addressed a few mild parental words +to the men, who gave him very civil responses, but relaxed not a +particle of their vigilance. + +In the priest's mind there was still some anxiety, but much greater +hope than he had dared to have for some time. He remembered that the +coffin was not all covered over, and hoped that the inmate might be +able to breathe. The fact that the work had been so unexpectedly +interrupted was one which filled him with joy, and gave rise to the +best hopes. The only offset to all this was his own captivity, but +that was a very serious one. Besides, he knew that his life hung upon +a thread. Before the next day Girasole would certainly discover all, +and in that case he was a doomed man. But his nature was of a kind +that could not borrow trouble, and so the fact of the immediate safety +of Hawbury was of far more importance, and attracted far more of his +thoughts, than his own certain but more remote danger. + +As for Ethel, she was now a prey to the deepest anxiety. All was +discovered except the mere fact of Hawbury's removal, and how long +that would remain concealed she could not know. Every moment she +expected to hear the cry of those who might discover the exchange. And +Hawbury, so long lost, so lately found--Hawbury, whom she had +suspected of falsity so long and so long avoided, who now had proved +himself so constant and so true--what was his fate? She had gazed with +eyes of horror at that grave wherein he lay, and had seen the men +shoveling in the earth as she came up. The recollection of this filled +her with anguish. Had they buried him?--how deep was the earth that +lay over him?--could there, indeed, be any hope? + +All depended on the priest. She hoped that he had prevented things +from going too far. She had seen him watching the grave, and +motionless. What did that inactivity mean? Was it a sign that Hawbury +was safe, or was it merely because he could not do any thing? + +She was distracted by such fearful thoughts as these. Her heart once +more throbbed with those painful pulsations which she had felt when +approaching Hawbury. For some time she sat supporting her agony as +best she could, and not daring to ask the priest, for fear their +guards might suspect the truth, or perhaps understand her words. + +But at last she could bear it no longer. + +She touched the priest's arm as he sat beside her, without looking at +him. + +The priest returned the touch. + +"Is he safe?" she asked, in a tremulous voice, which was scarce +audible from grief and anxiety. + +"He is," said the priest. + +And then, looking at the man before him, he added immediately, in an +unconcerned tone, + +"She wants to know what time it is, and I told her two o'clock. That's +right, isn't it?" + +"About right," said the man. + +Now that was a lie, but whether it was justifiable or not may be left +to others to decide. + +As for Ethel, an immense load of anxiety was lifted off her mind, and +she began to breathe more freely. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII. + +THE DEMON WIFE. + + +When Dacres was overpowered by his assailants no mercy was shown him. +His hands were bound tight behind him, and kicks and blows were +liberally bestowed during the operation. Finally, he was pushed and +dragged into the house, and up stairs to the room already mentioned. +There he was still further secured by a tight rope around his ankles, +after which he was left to his own meditations. + +Gloomy and bitter and fierce, indeed, were those meditations. His body +was covered with bruises, and though no bones were broken, yet his +pain was great. In addition to this the cords around his wrists and +ankles were very tight, and his veins seemed swollen to bursting. It +was difficult to get an easy position, and he could only lie on his +side or on his face. These bodily pains only intensified the +fierceness of his thoughts and made them turn more vindictively than +ever upon the subject of his wife. + +She was the cause of all this, he thought. She had sacrificed every +thing to her love for her accursed paramour. For this she had betrayed +him, and her friends, and the innocent girl who was her companion. All +the malignant feelings which had filled his soul through the day now +swelled within him, till he was well-nigh mad. Most intolerable of all +was his position now--the baffled enemy. He had come as the avenger, +he had come as the destroyer; but he had been entrapped before he had +struck his blow, and here he was now lying, defeated, degraded, and +humiliated! No doubt he would be kept to afford sport to his +enemy--perhaps even his wife might come to gloat over his sufferings, +and feast her soul with the sight of his ruin. Over such thoughts as +these he brooded, until at last he had wrought himself into something +like frenzy, and with the pain that he felt, and the weariness that +followed the fatigues of that day, these thoughts might finally have +brought on madness, had they gone on without any thing to disturb +them. + +But all these thoughts and ravings were destined to come to a full and +sudden stop, and to be changed to others of a far different character. +This change took place when Girasole, after visiting the ladies, came, +with Mrs. Willoughby, to his room. As Dacres lay on the floor he heard +the voice of the Italian, and the faint, mournful, pleading tones of a +woman's voice, and, finally, he saw the flash of a light, and knew +that the Italian was coming to his room, and perhaps this woman also. +He held his breath in suspense. What did it mean? The tone of Girasole +was not the tone of love. The light drew nearer, and the footsteps +too--one a heavy footfall, the tread of a man; the other lighter, the +step of a woman. He waited almost breathless. + +At last she appeared. There she was before him, and with the Italian; +but oh, how changed from that demon woman of his fancies, who was to +appear before him with his enemy and gloat over his sufferings! Was +there a trace of a fiend in that beautiful and gentle face? Was there +thought of joy or exultation over him in that noble and mournful lady, +whose melancholy grace and tearful eyes now riveted his gaze? Where +was the foul traitor who had done to death her husband and her friend? +Where was the miscreant who had sacrificed all to a guilty passion? +Not there; not with that face; not with those tears: to think that was +impossible--it was unholy. He might rave when he did not see her, but +now that his eyes beheld her those mad fancies were all dissipated. + +There was only one thing there--a woman full of loveliness and grace, +in the very bloom of her life, overwhelmed with suffering which this +Italian was inflicting on her. Why? Could he indulge the unholy +thought that the Italian had cast her off, and supplied her place with +the younger beauty? Away with such a thought! It was not jealousy of +that younger lady that Dacres perceived; it was the cry of a loving, +yearning heart that clung to that other one, from whom the Italian had +violently severed her. There was no mistake as to the source of this +sorrow. Nothing was left to the imagination. Her own words told all. + +Then the light was taken away, and the lady crouched upon the floor. +Dacres could no longer see her amidst that gloom; but he could hear +her; and every sob, and every sigh, and every moan went straight to +his heart and thrilled through every fibre of his being. He lay there +listening, and quivering thus as he listened with a very intensity of +sympathy that shut out from his mind every other thought except that +of the mourning, stricken one before him. + +Thus a long time passed, and the lady wept still, and other sounds +arose, and there were footsteps in the house, and whisperings, and +people passing to and fro; but to all these Dacres was deaf, and they +caused no more impression on his senses than if they were not. His +ears and his sense of hearing existed only for these sobs and these +sighs. + +At last a pistol-shot roused him. The lady sprang up and called in +despair. A cry came back, and the lady was about to venture to the +other room, when she was driven back by the stern voice of Girasole. +Then she stood for a moment, after which she knelt, and Dacres heard +her voice in prayer. The prayer was not audible, but now and then +words struck upon his ears which gave the key to her other words, and +he knew that it was no prayer of remorse for guilt, but a cry for help +in sore affliction. + +Had any thing more been needed to destroy the last vestige of Dacres's +former suspicions it was furnished by the words which he now heard. + +"Oh, Heaven!" he thought; "can this woman be what I have thought her? +But if not, what a villain am I! Yet now I must rather believe myself +to be a villain than her!" + +In the midst of this prayer Girasole's voice sounded, and then +Minnie's tones came clearly audible. The lady rose and listened, and a +great sigh of relief escaped her. Then Girasole descended the stairs, +and the lady again sank upon her knees. + +Thus far there seemed a spell upon Dacres; but this last incident and +the clear child-voice of Minnie seemed to break it. He could no longer +keep silence. His emotion was as intense as ever, but the bonds which +had bound his lips seemed now to be loosened. + +"Oh, Arethusa!" he moaned. + +At the sound of his voice Mrs. Willoughby started, and rose to her +feet. So great had been her anxiety and agitation that for some time +she had not thought of another being in the room, and there had been +no sound from him to suggest his existence. But now his voice startled +her. She gave no answer, however. + +"Arethusa!" repeated Dacres, gently and longingly and tenderly. + +"Poor fellow!" thought Mrs. Willoughby; "he's dreaming." + +"Arethusa! oh, Arethusa!" said Dacres once more. "Do not keep away. +Come to me. I am calm now." + +"Poor fellow!" thought Mrs. Willoughby. "He doesn't seem to be asleep. +He's talking to me. I really think he is." + +"Arethusa," said Dacres again, "will you answer me one question?" + +Mrs. Willoughby hesitated for a moment, but now perceived that Dacres +was really speaking to her. "He's in delirium," she thought. "Poor +fellow, I must humor him, I suppose. But what a funny name to give +me!" + +So, after a little preparatory cough, Mrs. Willoughby said, in a low +voice, + +"What question?" + +Dacres was silent for a few moments. He was overcome by his emotions. +He wished to ask her one question--the question of all questions in +his mind. Already her acts had answered it sufficiently; but he longed +to have the answer in her own words. Yet he hesitated to ask it. It +was dishonor to her to ask it. And thus, between longing and +hesitation, he delayed so long that Mrs. Willoughby imagined that he +had fallen back into his dreams or into his delirium, and would say no +more. + +But at last Dacres staked every thing on the issue, and asked it: + +"Arethusa! oh, Arethusa! do you--do you love--the--the Italian?" + +"The Italian!" said Mrs. Willoughby--"love the Italian! me!" and then +in a moment she thought that this was his delirium, and she must humor +it. "Poor fellow!" she sighed again; "how he fought them! and no doubt +he has had fearful blows on his head." + +"Do you? do you? Oh, answer, I implore you!" cried Dacres. + +"No!" said Mrs. Willoughby, solemnly. "I hate him as I never hated man +before." She spoke her mind this time, although she thought the other +was delirious. + +A sigh of relief and of happiness came from Dacres, so deep that it +was almost a groan. + +"And oh," he continued, "tell me this--have you ever loved him at +all?" + +"I always disliked him excessively," said Mrs. Willoughby, in the same +low and solemn tone. "I saw something bad--altogether bad--in his +face." + +"Oh, may Heaven forever bless you for that word!" exclaimed Dacres, +with such a depth of fervor that Mrs. Willoughby was surprised. She +now believed that he was intermingling dreams with realities, and +tried to lead him to sense by reminding him of the truth. + +"It was Minnie, you know, that he was fond of." + +"What! Minnie Fay?" + +"Yes; oh yes. I never saw any thing of him." + +"Oh, Heavens!" cried Dacres; "oh, Heavens, what a fool, beast, +villain, and scoundrel I have been! Oh, how I have misjudged _you_! +And can _you_ forgive me? Oh, can you? But no--you can not." + +At this appeal Mrs. Willoughby was startled, and did not know what to +say or to do. How much of this was delirium and how much real she +could not tell. One thing seemed evident to her, and that was that, +whether delirious or not, he took her for another person. But she was +so full of pity for him, and so very tender-hearted, that her only idea +was to "humor" him. + +"Oh," he cried again, "can this all be true, and have all my +suspicions been as mad as these last? And _you_--how _you_ have +changed! How beautiful you are! What tenderness there is in your +glance--what a pure and gentle and touching grace there is in your +expression! I swear to you, by Heaven! I have stood gazing at you in +places where you have not seen me, and thought I saw heaven in your +face, and worshiped you in my inmost soul. This is the reason why I +have followed you. From the time I saw you when you came into the room +at Naples till this night I could not get rid of your image. I fought +against the feeling, but I can not overcome it. Never, never were you +half so dear as you are now!" + +Now, of course, that was all very well, considered as the language of +an estranged husband seeking for reconciliation with an estranged +wife; but when one regards it simply as the language of a passionate +lover directed to a young and exceedingly pretty widow, one will +perceive that it was _not_ all very well, and that under ordinary +circumstances it might create a sensation. + +Upon Mrs. Willoughby the sensation was simply tremendous. She had +begun by "humoring" the delirious man; but now she found his delirium +taking a course which was excessively embarrassing. The worst of it +was, there was truth enough in his language to increase the +embarrassment. She remembered at once how the mournful face of this +man had appeared before her in different places. Her thoughts +instantly reverted to that evening on the balcony when his pale face +appeared behind the fountain. There was truth in his words; and her +heart beat with extraordinary agitation at the thought. Yet at the +same time there was some mistake about it all; and he was clearly +delirious. + +"Oh, Heavens!" he cried. "Can you ever forgive me? Is there a +possibility of it? Oh, can you forgive me? Can you--can you?" + +He was clearly delirious now. Her heart was full of pity for him. He +was suffering too. He was bound fast. Could she not release him? It +was terrible for this man to lie there bound thus. And perhaps he had +fallen into the hands of these ruffians while trying to save _her_ and +her sister. She must free him. + +"Would you like to be loosed?" she asked, coming nearer. "Shall I cut +your bonds?" + +She spoke in a low whisper. + +"Oh, tell me first, I implore you! Can you forgive me?" + +He spoke in such a piteous tone that her heart was touched. + +"Forgive you?" she said, in a voice full of sympathy and pity. "There +is nothing for _me_ to forgive." + +"Now may Heaven forever bless you for that sweet and gentle word!" +said Dacres, who altogether misinterpreted her words, and the emphasis +she placed on them; and in his voice there was such peace, and such a +gentle, exultant happiness, that Mrs. Willoughby again felt touched. + +"Poor fellow!" she thought; "how he _must_ have suffered!" + +"Where are you fastened?" she whispered, as she bent over him. Dacres +felt her breath upon his cheek; the hem of her garment touched his +sleeve, and a thrill passed through him. He felt as though he would +like to be forever thus, with _her_ bending over him. + +"My hands are fastened behind me," said he. + +"I have a knife," said Mrs. Willoughby. She did not stop to think of +danger. It was chiefly pity that incited her to this. She could not +bear to see him lying thus in pain, which he had perhaps, as she +supposed, encountered for her. She was impulsive, and though she +thought of his assistance toward the escape of Minnie and herself, yet +pity and compassion were her chief inspiring motives. + +Mrs. Willoughby had told Girasole that she had no knife; but this was +not quite true, for she now produced one, and cut the cords that bound +his wrists. Again a thrill flashed through him at the touch of her +little fingers; she then cut the cords that bound his ankles. + +Dacres sat up. His ankles and wrists were badly swollen, but he was no +longer conscious of pain. There was rapture in his soul, and of that +alone was he conscious. + +"Be careful!" she whispered, warningly; "guards are all around, and +listeners. Be careful! If you can think of a way of escape, do so." + +Dacres rubbed his hand over his forehead. + +"Am I dreaming?" said he; "or is it all true? A while ago I was +suffering from some hideous vision; yet now you say you forgive me!" + +Mrs. Willoughby saw in this a sign of returning delirium. "But the +poor fellow must be humored, I suppose," she thought. + +"Oh, there is nothing for _me_ to forgive," said she. + +"But if there were any thing, would you?" + +"Yes." + +"Freely?" he cried, with a strong emphasis. + +"Yes, freely." + +"Oh, could you answer me one more question? Oh, could you?" + +"No, no; not now--not now, I entreat you," said Mrs. Willoughby, in +nervous dread. She was afraid that his delirium would bring him upon +delicate ground, and she tried to hold him back. + +"But I must ask you," said Dacres, trembling fearfully--"I must--now +or never. Tell me my doom; I have suffered so much. Oh, Heavens! +Answer me. Can you? Can you feel toward me as you once did?" + +"He's utterly mad," thought Mrs. Willoughby; "but he'll get worse if I +don't soothe him. Poor fellow! I ought to answer him." + +"Yes," she said, in a low voice. + +"Oh, my darling!" murmured Dacres, in rapture inexpressible; "my +darling!" he repeated; and grasping Mrs. Willoughby's hand, he pressed +it to his lips. "And you will love me again--you will love me?" + +Mrs. Willoughby paused. The man was mad, but the ground was so +dangerous! Yes, she must humor him. She felt his hot kisses on her +hand. + +"You _will_--you _will_ love me, will you not?" he repeated. "Oh, +answer me! Answer me, or I shall die!" + +"Yes," whispered Mrs. Willoughby, faintly. + +As she said this a cold chill passed through her. But it was too late. +Dacres's arms were around her. He had drawn her to him, and pressed +her against his breast, and she felt hot tears upon her head. + +"Oh, Arethusa!" cried Dacres. + +"Well," said Mrs. Willoughby, as soon as she could extricate herself, +"there's a mistake, you know." + +"A mistake, darling?" + +"Oh dear, what _shall_ I do?" thought Mrs. Willoughby; "he's beginning +again. I must stop this, and bring him to his senses. How terrible it +is to humor a delirious man!" + +"Oh, Arethusa!" sighed Dacres once more. + +Mrs. Willoughby arose. + +"I'm not Arethusa at all," said she; "that isn't my name. If you _can_ +shake off your delirium, I wish you would. I really do." + +"What!" cried Dacres, in amazement. + +"I'm not Arethusa at all; that isn't my name." + +"Not your name?" + +"No; my name's Kitty." + +"Kitty!" cried Dacres, starting to his feet. + +At that instant the report of a gun burst upon their ears, followed by +another and another; then there were wild calls and loud shouts. Other +guns were heard. + +Yet amidst all this wild alarm there was nothing which had so +tremendous an effect upon Dacres as this last remark of Mrs. +Willoughby's. + +[Illustration: "THE PRIEST FLUNG HIMSELF FORWARD."] + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV. + +THE CRISIS OF LIFE. + + +When the Irish priest conjectured that it was about two o'clock in the +morning he was not very far astray in his calculation. The short +remarks that were exchanged between him and Ethel, and afterward +between him and the men, were followed by a profound silence. Ethel +sat by the side of the priest, with her head bent forward and her eyes +closed as though she were asleep; yet sleep was farther from her than +ever it had been, and the thrilling events of the night afforded +sufficient material to keep her awake for many a long hour yet to +come. Her mind was now filled with a thousand conflicting and most +exciting fancies, in the midst of which she might again have sunk into +despair had she not been sustained by the assurance of the priest. + +Sitting near Ethel, the priest for some time looked fixedly ahead of +him as though he were contemplating the solemn midnight scene, or +meditating upon the beauties of nature. In truth, the scene around was +one which was deserving even of the close attention which the priest +appeared to give. Immediately before him lay the lake, its shore not +far beneath, and almost at their feet. Around it arose the wooded +hills, whose dark forms, darker from the gloom of night, threw +profound shadows over the opposite shores. Near by the shore extended +on either side. On the right there were fires, now burning low, yet +occasionally sending forth flashes; on the left, and at some distance, +might be seen the dusky outline of the old stone house. Behind them +was the forest, vast, gloomy, clothed in impenetrable shade, in which +lay their only hope of safety, yet where even now there lurked the +watchful guards of the brigands. It was close behind them. Once in its +shelter, and they might gain freedom; yet between them and it was an +impassable barrier of enemies, and there also lay a still more +impassable barrier in the grave where Hawbury lay. To fly, even if +they could fly, would be to give him up to death; yet to remain, as +they must remain, would be to doom him to death none the less, and +themselves too. + +Seated there, with his eyes directed toward the water, the priest saw +nothing of the scene before him; his eyes were fixed on vacancy; his +thoughts were endeavoring to grapple with the situation and master it. +Yet so complicated was that situation, and so perplexing the dilemma +in which he found himself--a dilemma where death perched upon either +horn--that the good priest found his faculties becoming gradually more +and more unable to deal with the difficulty, and he felt himself once +more sinking down deeper and deeper into that abyss of despair from +which he had but recently extricated himself. + +And still the time passed, and the precious moments, laden with the +fate not only of Hawbury, but of all the others--the moments of the +night during which alone any escape was to be thought of--moved all +too swiftly away. + +Now in this hour of perplexity the good priest bethought him of a +friend whose fidelity had been proved through the varied events of a +life--a friend which, in his life of celibacy, had found in his heart +something of that place which a fond and faithful wife may hold in the +heart of a more fortunate man. It was a little friend, a fragrant +friend, a tawny and somewhat grimy friend; it was in the pocket of his +coat; it was of clay; in fact, it was nothing else than a dudeen. + +Where in the world had the good priest who lived in this remote corner +of Italy got that emblem of his green native isle? Perhaps he had +brought it with him in the band of his hat when he first turned his +back upon his country, or perhaps he had obtained it from the same +quarter which had supplied him with that very black plug of tobacco +which he brought forth shortly afterward. The one was the complement +of the other, and each was handled with equal love and care. Soon the +occupation of cutting up the tobacco and rubbing it gave a temporary +distraction to his thoughts, which distraction was prolonged by the +further operation of pressing the tobacco into the bowl of the dudeen. + +Here the priest paused and cast a longing look toward the fire, which +was not far away. + +"Would you have any objection to let me go and get a coal to light the +pipe?" said he to one of the men. + +The man had an objection, and a very strong one. + +"Would one of you be kind enough to go and get me a brand or a hot +coal?" + +This led to an earnest debate, and finally one of the men thought that +he might venture. Before doing so, however, a solemn promise was +extorted from the priest that he would not try to escape during his +absence. This the priest gave. + +"Escape!" he said--"it's a smoke I want. Besides, how can I escape +with three of ye watching me? And then, what would I want to escape +for? I'm safe enough here." + +The man now went off, and returned in a short time with a brand. The +priest gave him his blessing, and received the brand with a quiet +exultation that was pleasing to behold. + +"Matches," said he, "ruin the smoke. They give it a sulphur taste. +There's nothing like a hot coal." + +Saying this, he lighted his pipe. This operation was accomplished with +a series of those short, quick, hard, percussive puffs with which the +Irish race in every clime on this terrestrial ball perform the solemn +rite. + +And now the thoughts of the priest became more calm and regular and +manageable. His confusion departed, and gradually, as the smoke +ascended to the skies, there was diffused over his soul a certain +soothing and all-pervading calm. + +He now began to face the full difficulty of his position. He saw that +escape was impossible and death inevitable. He made up his mind to +die. The discovery would surely be made in the morning that Hawbury +had been substituted for the robber; he would be found and punished, +and the priest would be involved in his fate. His only care now was +for Ethel; and he turned his thoughts toward the formation of some +plan by which he might obtain mercy for her. + +He was in the midst of these thoughts--for himself resigned, for Ethel +anxious--and turning over in his mind all the various modes by which +the emotion of pity or mercy might be roused in a merciless and +pitiless nature; he was thinking of an appeal to the brigands +themselves, and had already decided that in this there lay his best +hope of success--when all of a sudden these thoughts were rudely +interrupted and dissipated and scattered to the winds by a most +startling cry. + +Ethel started to her feet. + +"Oh Heavens!" she cried, "what was that?" + +"Down! down!" cried the men, wrathfully; but before Ethel could obey +the sound was repeated, and the men themselves were arrested by it. + +The sound that thus interrupted the meditations of the priest was the +explosion of a rifle. As Ethel started up another followed. This +excited the men themselves, who now listened intently to learn the +cause. + +They did not have to wait long. + +Another rifle explosion followed, which was succeeded by a loud, long +shriek. + +"An attack!" cried one of the men, with a deep curse. They listened +still, yet did not move away from the place, for the duty to which +they had been assigned was still prominent in their minds. The priest +had already risen to his feet, still smoking his pipe, as though in +this new turn of affairs its assistance might be more than ever needed +to enable him to preserve his presence of mind, and keep his soul +serene in the midst of confusion. + +And now they saw all around them the signs of agitation. Figures in +swift motion flitted to and fro amidst the shade, and others darted +past the smouldering fires. In the midst of this another shot sounded, +and another, and still another. At the third there was a wild yell of +rage and pain, followed by the shrill cry of a woman's voice. The fact +was evident that some one of the brigands had fallen, and the women +were lamenting. + +The confusion grew greater. Loud cries arose; calls of encouragement, +of entreaty, of command, and of defiance. Over by the old house there +was the uproar of rushing men, and in the midst of it a loud, stern +voice of command. The voices and the rushing footsteps moved from the +house to the woods. Then all was still for a time. + +It was but for a short time, however. Then came shot after shot in +rapid succession. The flashes could be seen among the trees. All +around them there seemed to be a struggle going on. There was some +unseen assailant striking terrific blows from the impenetrable shadow +of the woods. The brigands were firing back, but they fired only into +thick darkness. Shrieks and yells of pain arose from time to time, the +direction of which showed that the brigands were suffering. Among the +assailants there was neither voice nor cry. But, in spite of their +losses and the disadvantage under which they labored, the brigands +fought well, and resisted stubbornly. From time to time a loud, stern +voice arose, whose commands resounded far and wide, and sustained the +courage of the men and directed their movements. + +The men who guarded the priest and Ethel were growing more and more +excited every moment, and were impatient at their enforced inaction. + +"They must be soldiers," said one. + +"Of course," said another. + +"They fight well." + +"Ay; better than the last time." + +"How did they learn to fight so well under cover?" + +"They've improved. The last time we met them we shot them like sheep, +and drove them back in five minutes." + +"They've got a leader who understands fighting in the woods. He keeps +them under cover." + +"Who is he?" + +"Diavolo! who knows? They get new captains every day." + +"Was there not a famous American Indian--" + +"True. I heard of him. An Indian warrior from the American forests. +Guiseppe saw him when he was at Rome." + +"Bah!--you all saw him." + +"Where?" + +"On the road." + +"We didn't." + +"You did. He was the Zouave who fled to the woods first." + +"He?" + +"Yes." + +"Diavolo!" + +These words were exchanged between them as they looked at the +fighting. But suddenly there came rapid flashes and rolling volleys +beyond the fires that lay before them, and the movement of the flashes +showed that a rush had been made toward the lake. Wild yells arose, +then fierce returning fires, and these showed that the brigands were +being driven back. + +The guards could endure this no longer. + +"They are beating us," cried one of the men, with a curse. "We must go +and fight." + +"What shall we do with these prisoners?" + +"Tie them and leave them." + +"Have you a rope?" + +"No. There is one by the grave." + +"Let's take the prisoners there and bind them." + +This proposition was accepted; and, seizing the priest and Ethel, the +four men hurried them back to the grave. The square hole lay there +just beside them, with the earth by its side. Ethel tried to see into +it, but was not near enough to do so. One of the men found the rope, +and began in great haste to bind the arms of the priest behind him. +Another began to bind Ethel in the same way. + +But now there came loud cries, and the rush of men near them. A loud, +stern voice was encouraging the men. + +"On! on!" he cried. "Follow me! We'll drive them back!" + +Saying this, a man hurried on, followed by a score of brigands. + +It was Girasole. + +He had been guarding the woods at this side when he had seen the rush +that had been made farther up. He had seen his men driven in, and was +now hurrying up to the place to retrieve the battle. As he was running +on he came up to the party at the grave. + +He stopped. + +"What's this?" he cried. + +"The prisoners--we were securing them." + +It was now lighter than it had been, and dawn was not far off. The +features of Girasole were plainly distinguishable. They were convulsed +with the most furious passion, which was not caused so much by the +rage of conflict as by the sight of the prisoners. He had suspected +treachery on their part, and had spared them for a time only so as to +see whether his suspicions were true or not. But now this sudden +assault by night, conducted so skillfully, and by such a powerful +force, pointed clearly to treachery, as he saw it, and the ones who to +him seemed most prominent in guilt were the priest and Ethel. + +His suspicions were quite reasonable under the circumstances. Here was +a priest whom he regarded as his natural enemy. These brigands +identified themselves with republicans and Garibaldians whenever it +suited their purposes to do so, and consequently, as such, they were +under the condemnation of the Pope; and any priest might think he was +doing the Pope good service by betraying those who were his enemies. +As to this priest, every thing was against him. He lived close by; +every step of the country was no doubt familiar to him; he had come to +the camp under very suspicious circumstances, bringing with him a +stranger in disguise. He had given plausible answers to the +cross-questioning of Girasole; but those were empty words, which went +for nothing in the presence of the living facts that now stood before +him in the presence of the enemy. + +These thoughts had all occurred to Girasole, and the sight of the two +prisoners kindled his rage to madness. It was the deadliest purpose of +vengeance that gleamed in his eyes as he looked upon them, and they +knew it. He gave one glance, and then turned to his men. + +"On! on!" he cried; "I will join you in an instant; and you," he said +to the guards, "wait a moment." + +The brigands rushed on with shouts to assist their comrades in the +fight, while the other four waited. + +All this time the fight had not ceased. The air was filled with the +reports of rifle-shots, the shouts of men, the yells of the wounded. +The flashes seemed to be gradually drawing nearer, as though the +assailants were still driving the brigands. But their progress was +slow, for the fighting was carried on among the trees, and the +brigands resisted stubbornly, retreating from cover to cover, and +stopping every moment to make a fresh stand. But the assailants had +gained much ground, and were already close by the borders of the lake, +and advancing along toward the old stone house. + +The robbers had not succeeded in binding their prisoners. The priest +and Ethel both stood where they had encountered Girasole, and the +ropes fell from the robbers' hands at the new interruption. The grave +with its mound was only a few feet away. + +Girasole had a pistol in his left hand and a sword in his right. He +sheathed his sword and drew another pistol, keeping his eyes fixed +steadily all the while upon his victims. + +"You needn't bind these prisoners," said Girasole, grimly; "I know a +better way to secure them." + +"In the name of God," cried the priest, "I implore you not to shed +innocent blood!" + +"Pooh!" said Girasole. + +"This lady is innocent; you will at least spare her!" + +"She shall die first!" said Girasole, in a fury, and reached out his +hand to grasp Ethel. The priest flung himself forward between the two. +Girasole dashed him aside. + +"Give us time to pray, for God's sake--one moment to pray!" + +"Not a moment!" cried Girasole, grasping at Ethel. + +Ethel gave a loud shriek and started away in horror. Girasole sprang +after her. The four men turned to seize her. With a wild and frantic +energy, inspired by the deadly terror that was in her heart, she +bounded away toward the grave. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV. + +BURIED ALIVE. + + +Hawbury last vanished from the scene to a place which is but seldom +resorted to by a living man. Once inside of his terrible retreat he +became a prey to feelings of the most varied and harrowing character, +in the midst of which there was a suspense, twofold, agonizing, and +intolerable. First of all, his suspense was for Ethel, and then for +himself. In that narrow and restricted retreat his senses soon became +sharpened to an unusual degree of acuteness. Every touch against it +communicated itself to his frame, as though the wood of his inclosure +had become part of himself; and every sound intensified itself to an +extraordinary degree of distinctness, as though the temporary loss of +vision had been compensated for by an exaggeration of the sense of +hearing. This was particularly the case as the priest drove in the +screws. He heard the shuffle on the stairs, the whisper to Ethel, her +retreat, and the ascending footsteps; while at the same time he was +aware of the unalterable coolness of the priest, who kept calmly at +his work until the very last moment. The screws seemed to enter his +own frame, and the slight noise which was made, inaudible as it was to +others, to him seemed loud enough to rouse all in the house. + +Then he felt himself raised and carried down stairs. Fortunately he +had got in with his feet toward the door, and as that end was carried +out first, his descent of the stairs was not attended with the +inconvenience which he might have felt had it been taken down in an +opposite direction. + +One fact gave him very great relief, for he had feared that his +breathing would be difficult. Thanks, however, to the precautions of +the priest, he felt no difficulty at all in that respect. The little +bits of wood which prevented the lid from resting close to the coffin +formed apertures which freely admitted all the air that was necessary. + +He was borne on thus from the house toward the grave, and heard the +voice of the priest from time to time, and rightly supposed that the +remarks of the priest were addressed not so much to the brigands as to +himself, so as to let him know that he was not deserted. The journey +to the grave was accomplished without any inconvenience, and the +coffin was at length put upon the ground. + +Then it was lowered into the grave. + +There was something in this which was so horrible to Hawbury that an +involuntary shudder passed through every nerve, and all the terror of +the grave and the bitterness of death in that one moment seemed to +descend upon him. He had not thought of this, and consequently was not +prepared for it. He had expected that he would be put down somewhere +on the ground, and that the priest would be able to get rid of the +men, and effect his liberation before it had gone so far. + +It required an effort to prevent himself from crying out; and longer +efforts were needed and more time before he could regain any portion +of his self-control. He now heard the priest performing the burial +rites; these seemed to him to be protracted to an amazing length; and +so, indeed, they were; but to the inmate of that grave the time seemed +longer far than it did to those who were outside. A thousand thoughts +swept through his mind, and a thousand fears swelled within his heart. +At last the suspicion came to him that the priest himself was unable +to do any better, and this suspicion was confirmed as he detected the +efforts which he made to get the men to leave the grave. This was +particularly evident when he pretended to hear an alarm, by which he +hoped to get rid of the brigands. It failed, however, and with this +failure the hopes of Hawbury sank lower than ever. + +But the climax of his horror was attained as the first clod fell upon +his narrow abode. It seemed like a death-blow. He felt it as if it had +struck himself, and for a moment it was as though he had been stunned. +The dull, heavy sound which those heard who stood above, to his ears +became transformed and enlarged, and extended to something like a +thunder-peal, with long reverberations through his now fevered and +distempered brain. Other clods fell, and still others, and the work +went on till his brain reeled, and under the mighty emotions of the +hour his reason began to give way. Then all his fortitude and courage +sank. All thought left him save the consciousness of the one horror +that had now fixed itself upon his soul. It was intolerable. In +another moment his despair would have overmastered him, and under its +impulse he would have burst through all restraint, and turned all his +energies toward forcing himself from his awful prison house. + +He turned himself over. He gathered himself up as well as he could. +Already he was bracing himself for a mighty effort to burst up the +lid, when suddenly the voice of Girasole struck upon his ear, and a +wild fear for Ethel came to his heart, and the anguish of that fear +checked at once all further thought of himself. + +He lay still and listened. He did this the more patiently as the men +also stopped from their work, and as the hideous earth-clods no longer +fell down. He listened. From the conversation he gathered pretty +accurately the state of affairs. He knew that Ethel was there; that +she had been discovered and dragged forth; that she was in danger. He +listened in the anguish of a new suspense. He heard the words of the +priest, his calm denial of treachery, his quiet appeal to Girasole's +good sense. Then he heard the decision of Girasole, and the party +walked away with their prisoners, and he was left alone. + +Alone! + +At any other time it would have been a terrible thing thus to be left +alone in such a place, but now to him who was thus imprisoned it +afforded a great relief. The work of burial, with all its hideous +accompaniments, was stayed. He could collect his senses and make up +his mind as to what he should do. + +Now, first of all, he determined to gain more air if possible. The +earth that had fallen had covered up many of the chinks, so that his +breathing had become sensibly more difficult. His confinement, with +this oppression of his breathing, was intolerable. He therefore braced +himself once more to make an effort. The coffin was large and rudely +constructed, being merely an oblong box. He had more play to his +limbs than he could have had in one of a more regular construction, +and thus he was able to bring a great effort to bear upon the lid. He +pressed. The screws gave way. He lifted it up to some distance. He +drew in a long draught of fresh air, and felt in that one draught that +he received new life and strength and hope. + +He now lay still and thought about what he should do next. If it had +only been himself, he would, of course, have escaped in that first +instant, and fled to the woods. But the thought of Ethel detained him. + +What was her position; and what could he do to save her? This was his +thought. + +He knew that she, together with the priest, was in the hands of four +of the brigands, who were commanded to keep their prisoners safe at +the peril of their lives. Where they were he did not know, nor could +he tell whether she was near or at a distance. Girasole had led them +away. + +[Illustration: +"IN AN INSTANT THE OCCUPANT OF THE GRAVE SPRANG FORTH."] + +He determined to look out and watch. He perceived that this grave, in +the heart of the brigands' camp, afforded the very safest place in +which he could be for the purpose of watching. Girasole's words had +indicated that the work of burial would not be resumed that night, and +if any passers-by should come they would avoid such a place as this. +Here, then, he could stay until dawn at least, and watch unobserved. +Perhaps he could find where Ethel was guarded; perhaps he could do +something to distract the attention of the brigands, and afford her an +opportunity for flight. + +He now arose, and, kneeling in the coffin, he raised the lid. The +earth that was upon it fell down inside. He tilted the lid up, and +holding it up thus with one hand, he put his head carefully out of the +grave, and looked out in the direction where Girasole had gone with +his prisoners. The knoll to which he had led them was a very +conspicuous place, and had probably been selected for that reason, +since it could be under his own observation, from time to time, even +at a distance. It was about half-way between the grave and the nearest +fire, which fire, though low, still gave forth some light, and the +light was in a line with the knoll to Hawbury's eyes. The party on the +knoll, therefore, appeared thrown out into relief by the faint +fire-light behind them, especially the priest and Ethel. + +And now Hawbury kept his watch, and looked and listened and waited, +ever mindful of his own immediate neighborhood, and guarding carefully +against any approach. But his own place was in gloom, and no one would +have thought of looking there, so that he was unobserved. + +But all his watching gave him no assistance toward finding out any way +of rescuing Ethel. He saw the vigilant guard around the prisoners. +Once or twice he saw a movement among them, but it was soon over, and +resulted in nothing. Now he began to despond, and to speculate in his +mind as to whether Ethel was in any danger or not. He began to +calculate the time that might be required to go for help with which to +attack the brigands. He wondered what reason Girasole might have to +injure Ethel. But whatever hope he had that mercy might be shown her +was counterbalanced by his own experience of Girasole's cruelty, and +his knowledge of his merciless character. + +Suddenly he was roused by the rifle-shot and the confusion that +followed. He saw the party on the mound start to their feet. He heard +the shots that succeeded the first one. He saw shadows darting to and +fro. Then the confusion grew worse, and all the sounds of battle +arose--the cries, the shrieks, and the stern words of command. + +All this filled him with hope. An attack was being made. They might +all be saved. He could see that the brigands were being driven back, +and that the assailants were pressing on. + +Then he saw the party moving from the knoll. It was already much +lighter. They advanced toward him. He sank down and waited. He had no +fear now that this party would complete his burial. He thought they +were flying with the prisoners. If so, the assailants would soon be +here; he could join them, and lead them on to the rescue of Ethel. + +He lay low with the lid over him. He heard them close beside him. Then +there was the noise of rushing men, and Girasole's voice arose. + +He heard all that followed. + +Then Ethel's shriek sounded out, as she sprang toward the grave. + +In an instant the occupant of the grave, seizing the lid, raised it +up, and with a wild yell sprang forth. + +The effect was tremendous. + +The brigands thought the dead Antonio had come to life. They did not +stop to look, but with a howl of awful terror, and in an anguish of +fright, they turned and ran for their lives! + +Girasole saw him too, with equal horror, if not greater. He saw +Hawbury. It was the man whom he had killed stone-dead with his own +hand. He was there before him--or was it his ghost? For an instant +horror paralyzed him; and then, with a yell like a madman's, he leaped +back and fled after the others. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI. + +FLY! FLY! + + +In the midst of that wild uproar which had roused Dacres and Mrs. +Willoughby there was nothing that startled him so much as her +declaration that she was not Arethusa. He stood bewildered. While she +was listening to the sounds, he was listening to the echo of her +words; while she was wondering at the cause of such a tumult, he was +wondering at this disclosure. In a moment a thousand little things +suggested themselves as he stood there in his confusion, which little +things all went to throw a flood of light upon her statement, and +prove that she was another person than that "demon wife" who had been +the cause of all his woes. Her soft glance, her gentle manner, her +sweet and tender expression--above all, the tone of her voice; all +these at once opened his eyes. In the course of their conversation she +had spoken in a low tone, often in a whisper, so that this fact with +regard to the difference of voice had not been perceptible; but her +last words were spoken louder, and he observed the difference. + +Now the tumult grew greater, and the reports of the rifles more +frequent. The noise was communicated to the house, and in the rooms +and the hall below there were tramplings of feet, and hurryings to and +fro, and the rattle of arms, and the voices of men, in the midst of +which rose the stern command of Girasole. + +"Forward! Follow me!" + +Then the distant reports grew nearer and yet nearer, and all the men +rushed from the house, and their tramp was heard outside as they +hurried away to the scene of conflict. + +"It's an attack! The brigands are attacked!" cried Mrs. Willoughby. + +Dacres said nothing. He was collecting his scattered thoughts. + +"Oh, may Heaven grant that we may be saved! Oh, it is the troops--it +must be! Oh, Sir, come, come; help us to escape! My darling sister is +here. Save her!" + +"Your sister?" cried Dacres. + +"Oh yes; come, save her! My sister--my darling Minnie!" + +With these words Mrs. Willoughby rushed from the room. + +"Her sister! her sister!" repeated Dacres--"Minnie Fay! _Her_ sister! +Good Lord! What a most infernal ass I've been making of myself this +last month!" + +He stood still for a few moments, overwhelmed by this thought, and +apparently endeavoring to realize the full extent and enormous size +and immense proportions, together with the infinite extent of ear, +appertaining to the ass to which he had transformed himself; but +finally he shook his head despondingly, as though he gave it up +altogether. Then he hurried after Mrs. Willoughby. + +Mrs. Willoughby rushed into Minnie's room, and clasped her sister in +her arms with frantic tears and kisses. + +"Oh, my precious darling!" she exclaimed. + +"Oh dear!" said Minnie, "isn't this really too bad? I was _so_ tired, +you know, and I was just beginning to go to sleep, when those horrid +men began firing their guns. I really do think that every body is +banded together to tease me. I do _wish_ they'd all go away and let me +have a little peace. I am so tired and sleepy!" + +While Minnie was saying this her sister was embracing her and kissing +her and crying over her. + +"Oh, come, Minnie, come!" she cried; "make haste. We must fly!" + +"Where to?" said Minnie, wonderingly. + +"Any where--any where out of this awful place: into the woods." + +"Why, I don't see the use of going into the woods. It's all wet, you +know. Can't we get a carriage?" + +"Oh no, no; we must not wait. They'll all be back soon and kill us." + +"Kill us! What for?" cried Minnie. "What do you mean? How silly you +are, Kitty darling!" + +At this moment Dacres entered. The image of the immeasurable ass was +still very prominent in his mind, and he had lost all his fever and +delirium. One thought only remained (besides that of the ass, of +course), and that was--escape. + +"Are you ready?" he asked, hurriedly. + +"Oh yes, yes; let us make haste," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"I think no one is below," said he; "but I will go first. There is a +good place close by. We will run there. If I fall, you must run on and +try to get there. It is the bank just opposite. Once there, you are in +the woods. Do you understand?" + +"Oh yes, yes!" cried Mrs. Willoughby. "Haste! Oh, haste!" + +Dacres turned, and Mrs. Willoughby had just grasped Minnie's hand to +follow, when suddenly they heard footsteps below. + +They stopped, appalled. + +The robbers had not all gone, then. Some of them must have remained on +guard. But how many? + +Dacres listened and the ladies listened, and in their suspense the +beating of each heart was audible. The footsteps below could be heard +going from room to room, and pausing in each. + +"There seems to be only one man," said Dacres, in a whisper. "If there +is only one, I'll engage to manage him. While I grapple, you run for +your lives. Remember the bank." + +"Oh yes; but oh, Sir, there may be more," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"I'll see," said Dacres, softly. + +He went cautiously to the front window and looked out. By the +increased light he could see quite plainly. No men were visible. From +afar the noise of the strife came to his ears louder than ever, and he +could see the flashes of the rifles. + +Dacres stole back again from the window and went to the door. He stood +and listened. + +And now the footsteps came across the hall to the foot of the stairs. +Dacres could see the figure of a solitary man, but it was dark in the +hall, and he could not make him out. + +He began to think that there was only one enemy to encounter. + +The man below put his foot on the lowest stair. + +Then he hesitated. + +Dacres stood in the shadow of the other doorway, which was nearer to +the head of the stairs, and prepared to spring as soon as the stranger +should come within reach. But the stranger delayed still. + +At length he spoke: + +"Hallo, up there!" + +The sound of those simple words produced an amazing effect upon the +hearers. Dacres sprang down with a cry of joy. "Come, come!" he +shouted to the ladies; "friends are here!" And running down the +stairs, he reached the bottom and grasped the stranger by both arms. + +In the dim light he could detect a tall, slim, sinewy form, with long, +black, ragged hair and white neck-tie. + +"You'd best get out of this, and quick, too," said the Rev. Saul +Tozer. "They're all off now, but they'll be back here in less than no +time. I jest thought I'd look in to see if any of you folks was +around." + +By this time the ladies were both at the bottom of the stairs. + +"Come!" said Tozer; "hurry up, folks. I'll take one lady and you take +t'other." + +"Do you know the woods?" + +"Like a book." + +"So do I," said Dacres. + +He grasped Mrs. Willoughby's hand and started. + +"But Minnie!" said Mrs. Willoughby. + +"You had better let him take her; it's safer for all of us," said +Dacres. + +Mrs. Willoughby looked back as she was dragged on after Dacres, and +saw Tozer following them, holding Minnie's hand. This reassured her. + +Dacres dragged her on to the foot of the bank. Here she tried to keep +up with him, but it was steep, and she could not. + +Whereupon Dacres stopped, and, without a word, raised her in his arms +as though she were a little child, and ran up the bank. He plunged +into the woods. Then he ran on farther. Then he turned and doubled. + +Mrs. Willoughby begged him to put her down. + +"No," said he; "they are behind us. You can not go fast enough. I +should have to wait and defend you, and then we would both be lost." + +"But, oh! we are losing Minnie." + +"No, we are not," cried Dacres; "that man is ten times stronger than I +am. He is a perfect elephant in strength. He dashed past me up the +hill." + +"I didn't see him." + +"Your face was turned the other way. He is ahead of us now somewhere." + +"Oh, I wish we _could_ catch up to him." + +[Illustration: "AT THIS DACRES RUSHED ON FASTER."] + +At this Dacres rushed on faster. The effort was tremendous. He leaped +over fallen timbers, he burst through the underbrush. + +"Oh, I'm sure you'll _kill_ yourself if you go so fast," said Mrs. +Willoughby. "We can't catch up to them." + +At this Dacres slackened his pace, and went on more carefully. She +again begged him to put her down. He again refused. Upon this she felt +perfectly helpless, and recalled, in a vague way, Minnie's ridiculous +question of "How would you like to be run away with by a great, big, +horrid man, Kitty darling?" + +Then she began to think he was insane, and felt very anxious. + +At last Dacres stopped. He was utterly exhausted. He was panting +terribly. It had been a fearful journey. He had run along the bank up +to that narrow valley which he had traversed the day before, and when +he stopped it was on the top of that precipice where he had formerly +rested, and where he had nurtured such dark purposes against Mrs. +Willoughby. + +Mrs. Willoughby looked at him, full of pity. He was utterly broken +down by this last effort. + +"Oh dear!" she thought. "Is he sane or insane? What _am_ I to do? It +is dreadful to have to go on and humor his queer fancies." + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVII. + +MINNIE'S LAST LIFE-PRESERVER. + + +When Tozer started after Dacres he led Minnie by the hand for only a +little distance. On reaching the acclivity he seized her in his arms, +thus imitating Dacres's example, and rushed up, reaching the top +before the other. Then he plunged into the woods, and soon became +separated from his companion. + +Once in the woods, he went along quite leisurely, carrying Minnie +without any difficulty, and occasionally addressing to her a soothing +remark, assuring her that she was safe. Minnie, however, made no +remark of any kind, good or bad, but remained quite silent, occupied +with her own thoughts. At length Tozer stopped and put her down. It +was a place upon the edge of a cliff on the shore of the lake, and as +much as a mile from the house. The cliff was almost fifty feet high, +and was perpendicular. All around was the thick forest, and it was +unlikely that such a place could be discovered. + +[Illustration: "'WORSE AND WORSE,' SAID TOZER."] + +"Here," said he; "we've got to stop here, and it's about the right +place. We couldn't get any where nigh to the soldiers without the +brigands seeing us; so we'll wait here till the fight's over, and the +brigands all chased off." + +"The soldiers! what soldiers?" asked Minnie. + +"Why, they're having a fight over there--the soldiers are attacking +the brigands." + +"Well, I didn't know. Nobody told me. And did you come with the +soldiers?" + +"Well, not exactly. I came with the priest and the young lady." + +"But you were not at the house?" + +"No. They wouldn't take me all the way. The priest said I couldn't be +disguised--but I don't see why not--so he left me in the woods till he +came back. And then the soldiers came, and we crept on till we came +nigh the lake. Well, then I stole away; and when they made an attack +the brigands all ran there to fight, and I watched till I saw the +coast clear; and so I came, and here we are." + +Minnie now was quite silent and preoccupied, and occasionally she +glanced sadly at Tozer with her large, pathetic, child-like eyes. It +was a very piteous look, full of the most tender entreaty. Tozer +occasionally glanced at her, and then, like her, he sat silent, +involved in his own thoughts. + +"And so," said Minnie at last, "you're not the priest himself?" + +"The priest?" + +"Yes." + +"Well, no; I don't call myself a priest. I'm a minister of the +Gospel." + +"Well, you're not a _real_ priest, then." + +"All men of my calling are real priests--yes, priests and kings. I +yield to no man in the estimate which I set upon my high and holy +calling." + +"Oh, but I mean a Roman Catholic priest," said Minnie. + +"A Roman Catholic priest! Me! Why, what a question! Me! a Roman +Catholic! Why, in our parts folks call me the Protestant Champion." + +"Oh, and so you're only a Protestant, after all," said Minnie, in a +disappointed tone. + +"Only a Protestant!" repeated Tozer, severely--"_only_ a Protestant. +Why, ain't you one yourself?" + +"Oh yes; but I hoped you were the other priest, you know. I did _so_ +want to have a Roman Catholic priest this time." + +Tozer was silent. It struck him that this young lady was in danger. +Her wish for a Roman Catholic priest boded no good. She had just come +from Rome. No doubt she had been tampered with. Some Jesuits had +caught her, and had tried to proselytize her. His soul swelled with +indignation at the thought. + +"Oh dear!" said Minnie again. + +"What's the matter?" asked Tozer, in a sympathizing voice. + +"I'm so sorry." + +"What for?" + +"Why, that you saved my life, you know." + +"Sorry? sorry? that I saved your life?" repeated Tozer, in amazement. + +"Oh, well, you know, I did so want to be saved by a Roman Catholic +priest, you know." + +"To be saved by a Roman Catholic priest!" repeated Tozer, pondering +these words in his mind as he slowly pronounced them. He could make +nothing of them at first, but finally concluded that they concealed +some half-suggested tendency to Rome. + +"I don't like this--I don't like this," he said, solemnly. + +"What don't you like?" + +"It's dangerous. It looks bad," said Tozer, with increased solemnity. + +"What's dangerous? You look so solemn that you really make me feel +quite nervous. What's dangerous?" + +"Why, your words. I see in you, I think, a kind of leaning toward +Rome." + +"It isn't Rome," said Minnie. "I don't lean to Rome. I only lean a +little toward a Roman Catholic priest." + +"Worse and worse," said Tozer. "Dear! dear! dear! worse _and_ worse. +This beats all. Young woman, beware! But perhaps I don't understand +you. You surely don't mean that your affections are engaged to any +Roman Catholic priest. You can't mean _that_. Why, they can't marry." + +"But that's just what I like them so for," said Minnie. "I like people +that don't marry; I hate people that want to marry." + +Tozer turned this over in his mind, but could make nothing of it. At +length he thought he saw in this an additional proof that she had been +tampered with by Jesuits at Rome. He thought he saw in this a +statement of her belief in the Roman Catholic doctrine of celibacy. + +He shook his head more solemnly than ever. "It's not Gospel," said he. +"It's mere human tradition. Why, for centuries there was a married +priesthood even in the Latin Church. Dunstan's chief measures +consisted in a fierce war on the married clergy. So did +Hildebrand's--Gregory the Seventh, you know. The Church at Milan, +sustained by the doctrines of the great Ambrose, always preferred a +married clergy. The worst measures of Hildebrand were against these +good pastors and their wives. And in the Eastern Church they have +always had it." + +Of course all this was quite beyond Minnie; so she gave a little sigh, +and said nothing. + +"Now as to Rome," resumed Tozer. "Have you ever given a careful study +to the Apocalypse--not a hasty reading, as people generally do, but a +serious, earnest, and careful examination?" + +"I'm sure I haven't any idea what in the world you're talking about," +said Minnie. "I _wish_ you wouldn't talk so. I don't understand one +single word of what you say." + +Tozer started and stared at this. It was a depth of ignorance that +transcended that of the other young lady with whom he had conversed. +But he attributed it all to "Roman" influences. They dreaded the +Apocalypse, and had not allowed either of these young ladies to become +acquainted with its tremendous pages. Moreover, there was something +else. There was a certain light and trifling tone which she used in +referring to these things, and it pained him. He sat involved in a +long and very serious consideration of her case, and once or twice +looked at her with so very peculiar an expression that Minnie began to +feel very uneasy indeed. + +Tozer at length cleared his throat, and fixed upon Minnie a very +affectionate and tender look. + +"My dear young friend," said he, "have you ever reflected upon the way +you are living?" + +At this Minnie gave him a frightened little look, and her head fell. + +"You are young now, but you can't be young always; youth and beauty +and loveliness all are yours, but they can't last; and now is the time +for you to make your choice--now in life's gay morn. It ain't easy +when you get old. Remember that, my dear. Make your choice now--now." + +"Oh dear!" said Minnie; "I knew it. But I can't--and I don't want +to--and I think it's _very_ unkind in you. I don't want to make _any_ +choice. I don't want any of you. It's _so_ horrid." + +This was a dreadful shock to Tozer; but he could not turn aside from +this beautiful yet erring creature. + +"Oh, I entreat you--I implore you, my dear, _dear_--" + +"I do _wish_ you wouldn't talk to me that way, and call me your +_dear_. I don't like it; no, not even if you _did_ save my life, +though really I didn't know there was any danger. But I'm not _your_ +dear." + +And Minnie tossed her head with a little air of determination, as +though she had quite made up her mind on that point. + +"Oh, well now, really now," said Tozer, "it was only a natural +expression. I _do_ take a deep interest in you, my--that is--miss; I +feel a sincere regard and affection and--" + +"But it's no use," said Minnie. "You really _can't,_ you know; and so, +why, you _mustn't_, you know." + +Tozer did not clearly understand this, so after a brief pause he +resumed: + +"But what I was saying is of far more importance. I referred to your +life. Now you're not happy as you are." + +"Oh yes, but I am," said Minnie, briskly. + +Tozer sighed. + +"I'm _very_ happy," continued Minnie, "very, very happy--that is, when +I'm with dear, darling Kitty, and dear, dear Ethel, and my darling old +Dowdy, and dear, kind papa." + +Tozer sighed again. + +"You can't be _truly_ happy thus," he said, mournfully. "You may think +you are, but you _ain't_. My heart fairly yearns over you when I see +you, so young, so lovely, and so innocent; and I know you can't be +happy as you are. You must live otherwise. And oh, I pray you--I +entreat you to set your affections elsewhere!" + +"Well, then, I think it's very, very horrid in you to press me so," +said, Minnie, with something actually like asperity in her tone; "but +it's _quite_ impossible." + +"But oh, why?" + +"Why, because I don't want to have things any different. But if I have +to be worried and teased so, and if people insist on it so, why, +there's only one that I'll _ever_ consent to." + +"And what is that?" asked Tozer, looking at her with the most +affectionate solicitude. + +"Why, it's--it's--" Minnie paused, and looked a little confused. + +"It's what?" asked Tozer, with still deeper and more anxious interest. + +"Why, it's--it's--Rufus K. Gunn." + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVIII. + +THE IMPATIENT BARON. + + +The brigands had resisted stubbornly, but finally found themselves +without a leader. Girasole had disappeared; and as his voice no longer +directed their movements, they began to fall into confusion. The +attacking party, on the other hand, was well led, and made a steady +advance, driving the enemy before them. At length the brigands lost +heart, and took to flight. With a wild cheer the assailants followed +in pursuit. But the fugitives took to the forest, and were soon beyond +the reach of their pursuers in its familiar intricacies, and the +victors were summoned back by the sound of the trumpet. + +[Illustration: "THE DISCOVERY OF A BODY ON THE SHORE OF THE LAKE."] + +It was now daylight, and as the conquering party emerged from the +forest they showed the uniform of the Papal Zouaves; while their +leader, who had shown himself so skillful in forest warfare, proved to +be no less a personage than our friend the Baron. Led by him, the +party advanced to the old stone house, and here, drawing up his men in +front, their leader rushed in, and searched every room. To his +amazement, he found the house deserted, its only inmate being that +dead brigand whom Girasole had mistaken for Hawbury. This discovery +filled the Baron with consternation. He had expected to find the +prisoners here, and his dismay and grief were excessive. At first he +could not believe in his ill luck; but another search convinced him of +it, and reduced him to a state of perfect bewilderment. + +But he was not one who could long remain inactive. Feeling confident +that the brigands were scattered every where in headlong flight, he +sent his men out in different directions, into the woods and along the +shore, to see if they could find any traces of the lost ones. He +himself remained near the house, so as to direct the search most +efficiently. After about an hour they came back, one by one, without +being able to find many traces. One had found an empty coffin in a +grave, another a woman's hood, a third had found a scarf. All of these +had endeavored to follow up these traces, but without result. Finally +a man approached who announced the discovery of a body on the shore of +the lake. After him came a party who was carrying the corpse for the +inspection of their captain. + +The Baron went to look at it. The body showed a great gap in the +skull. On questioning the men, he learned that they had found it on +the shore, at the bottom of a steep rock, about half-way between the +house and the place where they had first emerged from the woods. His +head was lying pressed against a sharp rock in such a way that it was +evident that he had fallen over the cliff, and had been instantly +killed. The Baron looked at the face, and recognized the features of +Girasole. He ordered it to be taken away and laid in the empty grave +for future burial. + +The Baron now became impatient. This was not what he had bargained for +at all. At length he thought that they might have fled, and might now +be concealed in the woods around; and together with this thought there +came to his mind an idea of an effective way to reach them. The +trumpeter could send forth a blast which could be heard far and wide. +But what might, could, would, or should the trumpeter sound forth +which should give the concealed listeners a certainty that the summons +came from friends and not from foes? This the Baron puzzled over for +some time. At length he solved this problem also, and triumphantly. + +There was one strain which the trumpeter might sound that could not be +mistaken. It would at once convey to the concealed hearers all the +truth, and gently woo them home. It would be at once a note of +victory, a song of joy, a call of love, a sound of peace, and an +invitation--"Wanderer, come home!" + +Of course there was only one tune that, to the mind of the Baron, was +capable of doing this. + +And of course that tune was "Yankee Doodle." + +Did the trumpeter know it? + +Of course he did. + +Who does not know it? + +All men know that tune. Man is born with an innate knowledge of the +strain of "Yankee Doodle." No one can remember when he first learned +it. The reason is because he never learned it at all. It was born in +him. + +So the trumpeter sounded it forth, and wild and high and clear and far +the sounds arose; and it was "Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes +flying; and answer, echoes, answer, Yankee Doodle dying." + +And while the trumpet sounded the Baron listened and listened, and +walked up and down, and fretted and fumed and chafed, and I'm afraid +he swore a little too; and at last he was going to tell the trumpeter +to stop his infernal noise, when, just at that moment, what should he +see all of a sudden emerging from the woods but three figures! + +And I'll leave you to imagine, if you can, the joy and delight which +agitated the bosom of our good Baron as he recognized among these +three figures the well-known face and form of his friend Hawbury. With +Hawbury was a lady whom the Baron remembered having seen once in the +upper hall of a certain house in Rome, on a memorable occasion, when +he stood on the stairs calling _Min_. The lady was very austere then, +but she was very gracious now, and very wonderfully sweet in the +expression of her face. And with them was a stranger in the garb of a +priest. + +Now as soon as the party met the Baron, who rushed to meet them, +Hawbury wrung his hand, and stared at him in unbounded astonishment. + +"You!" he cried; "yourself, old boy! By Jove!" + +"Yes," said the Baron. "You see, the moment we got into that ambush I +kept my eye open, and got a chance to spring into the woods. There I +was all right, and ran for it. I got into the road again a couple of +miles back, got a horse, rode to Civita Castellana, and there I was +lucky enough to find a company of Zouaves. Well, Sir, we came here +flying, mind, I tell you, and got hold of a chap that we made guide us +to the lake. Then we opened on them; and here we are, by thunder! But +where's Min?" + +"Who?" asked Hawbury. + +"Min," said the Baron, in the most natural tone in the world. + +"Oh! Why, isn't she here?" + +"No. We've hunted every where. No one's here at all." And the Baron +went on to tell about their search and its results. Hawbury was +chiefly struck by the news of Girasole. + +"He must have gone mad with terror," said Hawbury, as he told the +Baron about his adventure at the grave. "If that's so," he added, "I +don't see how the ladies could be harmed. I dare say they've run off. +Why, we started to run, and got so far off that we couldn't find our +way back, even after the trumpet began to sound. You must keep blowing +at it, you know. Play all the national tunes you can--no end. They'll +find their way back if you give them time." + +And now they all went back to the house, and the Baron in his anxiety +could not talk any more, but began his former occupation of walking up +and down, and fuming and fretting and chafing, and, I'm again afraid, +swearing--when all of a sudden, on the bank in front of him, on the +very top, just emerging from the thick underbrush which had concealed +them till that moment, to their utter amazement and indescribable +delight, they beheld Scone Dacres and Mrs. Willoughby. Scone Dacres +appeared to Hawbury to be in a totally different frame of mind from +that in which he had been when he last saw him; and what perplexed him +most, yea, and absolutely confounded him, was the sight of Scone +Dacres with his demon wife, whom he had been pursuing for the sake of +vengeance, and whose frenzy had been so violent that he himself had +been drawn with him on purpose to try and restrain him. And now what +was the injured husband doing with his demon wife? Doing! why, doing +the impassioned lover most vigorously; sustaining her steps most +tenderly; grasping her hand; pushing aside the bushes; assisting her +down the slope; overwhelming her, in short; hovering round her, +apparently unconscious that there was in all the wide world any other +being than Mrs. Willoughby. And as Hawbury looked upon all this his +eyes dilated and his lips parted involuntarily in utter wonder; and +finally, as Dacres reached the spot, the only greeting which he could +give his friend was, + +"By Jove!" + +And now, while Mrs. Willoughby and Ethel were embracing with tears of +joy, and overwhelming one another with questions, the Baron sought +information from Dacres. + +Dacres then informed him all about Tozer's advent and departure. + +"Tozer!" cried the Baron, in intense delight. "Good on his darned old +head! Hurrah for the parson! He shall marry us for this--he, and no +other, by thunder!" + +Upon which Mrs. Willoughby and Ethel exchanged glances, but said not a +word. Not they. + +But in about five minutes, when Mrs. Willoughby had Ethel apart a +little by herself, she said, + +"Oh, Ethel dear, isn't it dreadful?" + +"What?" asked Ethel. + +"Why, poor Minnie." + +"Poor Minnie?" + +"Yes. Another horrid man. And he'll be claiming her too. And, oh dear! +what shall I do?" + +"Why, you'll have to let her decide for herself. I think it will +be--this person." + +Mrs. Willoughby clasped her hands, and looked up with a pretty little +expression of horror. + +"And do you know, dear," added Ethel, "I'm beginning to think that it +wouldn't be so _very_ bad. He's Lord Hawbury's friend, you know, and +then he's very, very brave; and, above all, think what we all owe +him." + +Mrs. Willoughby gave a resigned sigh. + +And now the Baron was wilder with impatience than ever. He had +questioned Dacres, and found that he could give him no information +whatever as to Tozer's route, and consequently had no idea where to +search. But he still had boundless confidence in "Yankee Doodle." + +"That's the way," said Dacres; "we heard it ever so far, and it was +the first thing that told us it was safe to return. We didn't dare to +venture before." + +Meanwhile Hawbury had got Dacres by himself, and poured a torrent of +questions over him. Dacres told him in general terms how he was +captured. Then he informed him how Mrs. Willoughby was put in the same +room, and his discovery that it was Minnie that the Italian wanted. + +"Well, do you know, old chap," continued Dacres, "I couldn't stand it; +so I offered to make it all up with her." + +"Oh, I see you've done that, old boy. Congrat--" + +"Pooh! wait a minute," said Dacres, interrupting him. "Well, you know, +she wasn't my wife at all." + +At this Hawbury stood utterly aghast. + +"What's that?" + +"She wasn't my wife at all. She looks confoundedly like what my wife +was at her best, but she's another person. It's a most extraordinary +likeness; and yet she's isn't any relation, but a great deal prettier +woman. What made me so sure, you know, was the infernally odd +coincidence of the name; and then I only saw her off and on, you know, +and I never heard her voice. Then, you know, I was mad with jealousy; +and so I made myself worse and worse, till I was ripe for murder, +arson, assasination, and all that sort of thing, you know." + +To all this Hawbury listened in amazement, and could not utter a word, +until at last, as Dacres paused, he said, + +"By Jove!" + +"Well, old man, I was the most infernal ass that ever lived. And how I +must have bored you!" + +"By Jove!" exclaimed Hawbury again. "But drive on, old boy." + +"Well, you know, the row occurred just then, and away went the +scoundrels to the fight, and in came that parson fellow, and away we +went. I took Mrs. Willoughby to a safe place, where I kept her till I +heard the trumpet, you know. And I've got another thing to tell you. +It's deuced odd, but she knew all about me." + +"The deuce she did!" + +"Yes, the whole story. Lived somewhere in the county. But I don't +remember the Fays. At any rate, she lived there; and do you know, old +fellow, the county people used to think I beat my wife!" + +"By Jove!" + +"Yes; and afterward they raised a report that my cruelty had driven +her mad. But I had a few friends that stood up for me; and among +others these Fays, you know, had heard the truth of it, and, as it +happened, Kitty--" + +"Kitty?" + +"Well, Mrs. Willoughby, I mean--her name's Kitty--has always known the +truth about it; and when she saw me at Naples she felt interested in +me." + +"Oho!" and Hawbury opened his eyes. + +"Well, she knew all about it; and, among other things, she gave me one +piece of intelligence that has eased my mind." + +"Ah! what's that?" + +"Why, my wife _is_ dead." + +"Oh, then there's no doubt about it?" + +"Not a bit. She died eight years ago, and in an insane asylum." + +"By Jove! Then she was mad all the time." + +"Yes; that accounts for it, and turns all my curses into pity." + +Dacres was silent now for a few moments. At length he looked at +Hawbury with a very singular expression. + +"Hawbury, old boy." + +"Well, Sconey?" + +"I think we'll keep it up." + +"Who?" + +"Why, Kitty and I--that is, Mrs. Willoughby and I--her name's Kitty, +you know." + +"Keep what up?" + +"Why, the--the--the fond illusion, and all that sort of thing. You see +I've got into such an infernal habit of regarding her as my wife that +I can't look on her in any other light. I claimed her, you know, and +all that sort of thing, and she thought I was delirious, and felt +sorry, and humored me, and gave me a very favorable answer." + +"Humored you?" + +"Yes; that's what she says now, you know. But I'm holding her to it, +and I've every reason to believe, you know--in fact, I may as well say +that it is an understood thing, you know, that she'll let it go, you +know, and at some early day, you know, we'll have it all formally +settled, and all that sort of thing, you know." + +Hawbury wrung his friend's hand. + +"See here, old boy; you see Ethel there?" + +"Yes." + +"Who do you think she is?" + +"Who?" + +"_Ethel Orne_!" + +"Ethel _Orne_!" cried Dacres, as the whole truth flashed on his mind. +"What a devil of a jumble every thing has been getting into!--By +Heaven, dear boy, I congratulate you from the bottom of my soul!" + +And he wrung Hawbury's hand as though all his soul was in that grasp. + +But all this could not satisfy the impatience of the Baron. This was +all very well in its way, merely as an episode; but he was waiting for +the chief incident of the piece, and the chief incident was delaying +very unaccountably. + +So he strode up and down, and he fretted and he fumed and he chafed, +and the trumpeter kept blowing away. + +Until at last-- + +Just before his eyes-- + +Up there on the top of the bank, not far from where Dacres and Mrs. +Willoughby had made their appearance, the Baron caught sight of a +tall, lank, slim figure, clothed in rusty black, whose thin and +leathery face, rising above a white neck-tie, peered solemnly yet +interrogatively through the bushes; while just behind him the Baron +caught a glimpse of the flutter of a woman's dress. + +[Illustration: +"HE GAVE A LOUD CRY OF JOY, AND THEN SPRANG UP THE BANK."] + +He gave a loud cry of joy, and then sprang up the bank. + + * * * * * * + +But over that meeting I think we had better draw a veil. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIX. + +ASTONISHING WAY OF CONCLUDING AN ADVENTURE. + + +The meeting between the Baron and Minnie gave a new shock to poor Mrs. +Willoughby, who looked with a helpless expression, and walked away for +a little distance. Dacres and Hawbury were still eagerly conversing +and questioning one another about their adventures. Tozer also had +descended and joined himself to the priest; and each of these groups +had leisure for a prolonged conversation before they were interrupted. +At length Minnie made her appearance, and flung herself into her +sister's arms, while at the same time the Baron grasped Tozer by both +hands, and called out, in a voice loud enough to be heard by all, + +"You shall marry us, parson--and this very day, by thunder!" + +These words came to Mrs. Willoughby's ears in the midst of her first +joy at meeting her sister, and shocked her inexpressibly. + +"What's that, Minnie darling?" she asked, anxiously. "What is it? Did +you hear what that dreadful--what the--the Baron said?" + +Minnie looked sweetly conscious, but said nothing. + +"What _does_ he mean?" asked her sister again. + +"I suppose he means what he says," replied Minnie, with a timid air, +stealing a shy look at the Baron. + +"Oh dear!" said Mrs. Willoughby; "there's another dreadful trouble, I +know. It's very, very hard--" + +"Well, I'm sure," said Minnie, "I can't help it. They all do so. That +clergyman came and saved me, and he wasn't a Roman Catholic clergyman +at all, and he proposed--" + +"Proposed!" cried Mrs. Willoughby, aghast. + +"Oh yes," said Minnie, solemnly; "and I had hard work preventing him. +But, really, it was _too_ absurd, and I would not let him be too +explicit. But I didn't hurt his feelings. Well, you know, then all of +a sudden, as we were sitting there, the bugle sounded, and we came +back. Well, then, Rufus K. Gunn came--and you know how very violent he +is in his way--and he said he saved my life again, and so he +proposed." + +"_He_ proposed! Why, he had proposed before." + +"Oh yes; but that was for an engagement, and this was for our +marriage." + +"Marriage!" + +"Oh yes; and, you see, he had actually saved my life twice, and he was +very urgent, and he is so awfully affectionate, and so--" + +"Well, what?" cried Mrs. Willoughby, seeing Minnie hesitate. + +"Why, he--" + +"Well?" + +"I mean, I--" + +"You what? Really, Minnie dearest, you might tell me, and not keep me +in such dreadful suspense." + +"Why, what could I say?" + +"But what _did_ you say?" + +"Why, I think I--said--yes," said Minnie, casting down her eyes with +indescribable sweetness, shyness, meekness, and resignation. Mrs. +Willoughby actually shuddered. + +"Now, Kitty," exclaimed Minnie, who at once noticed it, "you needn't +be so horrid. I'm sure you can't say any thing against him _now_. You +needn't look so. You _always_ hated him. You _never_ would treat him +kindly." + +"But this--this marriage. It's too shocking." + +"Well, he saved my life." + +"And to-day! How utterly preposterous! It's shameful!" + +"Well, I'm sure I can't help it." + +"It's too horrid!" continued Mrs. Willoughby, in an excited tone. "It +will break poor papa's heart. And it will break poor darling aunty's +heart. And it will break my heart." + +"Now, Kitty dearest, this is too silly in you. If it hadn't been for +him, I would now be married to that wretched Count, who hadn't +sufficient affection for me to get me a chair to sit on, and who was +very, very rude to you. You didn't care, though, whether I was married +to him or not; and now when I am saved from him you have nothing but +very unpleasant things to say about Rufus K. Gunn." + +"Oh dear, what _would_ I give if you were only safe home!" + +"Well, I'm sure I don't see what _I_ can do. People are always saving +my life. And there is Captain Kirby hunting all over Italy for me. And +I _know_ I will be saved by somebody--if--if--I--I--if--I--if--you +know--that is--I'm sure--" + +"Nonsense!" said Mrs. Willoughby, as Minnie broke down in confusion. +"It is _too_ absurd. I won't talk about it. You are a silly child. Oh, +how I _do_ wish you were home!" + +At this juncture the conversation was interrupted by the Baron. + +"It is not my fashion, ma'am," said he, gravely, "to remind another of +any obligation under which he may be to me; but my claims on Minnie +have been so opposed by you and the rest of her friends that I have to +ask you to think of them. Your father knows what my first claims are. +You yourself, ma'am, know perfectly well what the last claims are +which I have won to-day." + +The Baron spoke calmly, firmly, and with dignity. Mrs. Willoughby +answered not a word. + +"If you think on your position last night, and Minnie's, ma'am," +resumed the Baron, "you'll acknowledge, I expect, that it was pretty +hard lines. What would you have given a few hours ago for a sight of +my uniform in that old house yonder? If I had come then to save Minnie +from the clutches of that _I_talian, wouldn't you have given her to me +with all your heart, and your prayers too? You would, by thunder! +Think, ma'am, on your sufferings last night, and then answer me." + +Mrs. Willoughby involuntarily thought of that night of horror, and +shuddered, and said nothing. + +"Now, ma'am, just listen to this. I find on coming here that this +Italian had a priest here all ready to marry him and Minnie. If I'd +been delayed or defeated, Minnie would have been that rascal's wife by +this time. The priest was here. They would have been married as sure +as you're born. You, ma'am, would have had to see this poor, +trembling, broken-hearted, despairing girl torn from your arms, and +bound by the marriage tie to a ruffian and a scoundrel whom she +loathed. And now, ma'am, I save her from this. I have my priest too, +ma'am. He ain't a Roman Catholic, it is true--he's an orthodox +parson--but, at the same time, I ain't particular. Now I propose to +avail myself this day of his invaluable services at the earliest hour +possible; but, at the same time, if Min prefers it, I don't object to +the priest, for I have a kind of Roman Catholic leaning myself. + +"Now you may ask, ma'am," continued the Baron, as Mrs. Willoughby +continued silent--"you may ask why I'm in such a thundering hurry. My +answer is, because you fit me off so. You tried to keep me from Min. +You locked me out of your house. You threatened to hand me over to the +police (and I'd like to see one of them try it on with me). You said I +was mad or drunk; and finally you tried to run away. Then you rejected +my advice, and plunged head-foremost into this fix. Now, in view of +all this, my position is this--that I can't trust you. I've got Min +now, and I mean to keep her. If you got hold of her again, I feel it +would be the last of her. Consequently I ain't going to let her go. +Not me. Not by a long chalk. + +"Finally, ma'am, if you'll allow me, I'll touch upon another point. +I've thought over your objections to me. It ain't my rank--I'm a +noble; it ain't money--I'm worth a hundred thousand dollars; it ain't +my name--for I call myself Atramonte. It must be something in me. I've +come to the conclusion that it's my general style--my manners and +customs. Very well. Perhaps they don't come up to your standard. They +mayn't square with your ideas. Yet, let me inform you, ma'am, there +are other standards of action and manner and speech than those to +which you are accustomed, and mine is one of them. Minnie doesn't +object to that. She knows my heart is all right, and is willing to +trust herself to me. Consequently I take her, and I mean to make her +mine this day." + +As the Baron paused Mrs. Willoughby began, first of all, to express +her gratitude, and then to beg him to postpone the marriage. She +declared that it was an unheard-of thing, that it was shameful, that +it was shocking, that it was dreadful. She grew very much excited; she +protested, she entreated. Finally she burst into tears, and appealed +to Lord Hawbury in the most moving terms. Hawbury listened very +gravely, with his eyes wandering over to where Ethel was; and Ethel +caught the expression of his face, and looked quite confused. + +"Oh, think, only think," said Mrs. Willoughby, after an eloquent and +pathetic appeal--"think how the poor child will be talked about!" + +"Well, really--ah--'pon my life," said Hawbury, with his eyes still +wandering over toward Ethel, "I'm sure I don't--ah--share your views +altogether, Mrs. Willoughby; for--ah--there _are_ times, you know, +when a fellow finds it very uncommonly desirable--runaway matches, you +know, and all that sort of thing. And, by Jove! to tell the truth, I +really admire the idea, by Jove! And really--ah--I'm sure--I wish most +confoundedly it was the universal fashion, by Jove!" + +"But she'll be so talked about. She'll make herself so shockingly +_conspicuous_." + +"Conspicuous? By Jove!" said Hawbury, who seemed struck by the idea. +At that moment Minnie began talking to her sister, and Hawbury went +off to Ethel, to whom he began talking in the most earnest manner. The +two wandered off for some distance, and did not return for a full half +hour. When they did return Ethel looked somewhat embarrassed, and +Hawbury was radiant. With this radiance on his face he went up to Mrs. +Willoughby, leaving Ethel in the background. + +"Oh, by-the-way," said he, "you were remarking that your sister would +be too conspicuous by such a hasty marriage." + +"Yes," said Mrs. Willoughby, anxiously. + +"Well, I thought I would tell you that she needn't be so _very_ +conspicuous; for, in fact--that is, you know, Ethel and I--she told +you, I suppose, about our mistake?" + +"Oh yes." + +"And I think I've persuaded her to save Minnie from being too +conspicuous." + +Mrs. Willoughby gave Hawbury a look of astonishment and reproach. + +"You!" she cried; "and Ethel!" + +"Why, I'm sure, we're the very ones you might expect it from. Think +how infernally we've been humbugged by fate." + +"Fate!" said Mrs. Willoughby. "It was all your own fault. She was +chosen for you." + +"Chosen for me? What do you mean?" + +"By your mother." + +"My mother?" + +"Yes." + +"She said one of Biggs's nieces." + +"Ethel is that niece." + +"The devil!" cried Hawbury. "I beg pardon. By Jove!" + +Hawbury, overwhelmed by this, went back to Ethel, and they wandered +off once more. The Baron had already wandered off with Minnie in +another direction. Tozer and the priest had gone to survey the house. + +Seeing Mrs. Willoughby thus left alone, Dacres drifted up to her. He +came up silently. + +"Kitty," said he, in a low voice, "you seem sad." + +By which familiar address it will be seen that Dacres had made some +progress toward intimacy with her. + +Mrs. Willoughby did not seem at all offended at this, but looked up +with one of her frankest smiles, and the clouds of perplexity passed +away. She was an exceedingly pretty woman, and she was certainly not +over twenty-four. + +"I'm so worried," she said, plaintively. + +"What's the matter?" asked Dacres, in a tone of the deepest and +tenderest sympathy. + +"Why, these horrid men; and, what's worse, Lord Hawbury is actually +encouraging Mr.--the--the Baron; and I'm _so_ worried. Oh dear!" + +"But why should you be worried?" + +"It's so horrid. It's shocking. It's not to be thought of." + +"But why not?" asked Dacres. + +"Why, it's--it's so horrid," said Mrs. Willoughby. + +Dacres stood looking at her for a long time. + +"Kitty," said he at last. + +Mrs. Willoughby looked up. + +Dacres looked all around. He then took her hand. + +"Isn't it too bad," he said, "to let Minnie--" + +"What?" + +"To let her go through this ordeal alone?" + +"Alone!" exclaimed Mrs. Willoughby, looking in wonder at him. + +"Yes." + +"What _do_ you mean?" + +"Couldn't _we_ accompany her?" + +Mrs. Willoughby snatched away her hand. + +"Are you mad?" she cried. "I do believe the whole world's mad to-day." + +"Mad!" cried Dacres. "Yes, I'm mad--insane--raving! Won't you be +merciful again? Won't you, Kitty? Won't you 'humor' my ravings? Oh, +do. Oh, Kitty! dear Kitty--!" + +"It's positive insanity!" + +"Oh, Kitty!" + +"You're raving!" + +"Won't you 'humor' me--just this once! only this once." + +"Hush! there they come," said Mrs. Willoughby, suddenly snatching away +her hand, which Dacres had somehow got hold of again, and moving a +little further away from him. + +It was the Baron and Minnie who were coming back again, while Hawbury +and Ethel were seen a little further away. + +There they all stood--there, on the spot where they had found the +crisis of their fortunes; and as they stood there the two clergymen, +Catholic and Protestant, slowly came out of the house. + + +THE END. + + + + * * * * * + + + +Errors and anomalies noted by transcriber: + + dextrously (both occurrences); cariboo; Guiseppe; assasination + [spelling unchanged] + It seems con-foundedly odd + de-nomination + [hyphens in original] + + perfectly cool and lady-like." + [missing close quote] + "Well, he said--he said, 'Yes, darling'--and--" + [missing open quote before "Yes"] + I really wish they'd stop it. But, Kitty dear--" + [missing close quote] + "Aha! don't I know her? I warrant you... + [missing open quote] + + Potes ne juvare nos [spacing in original] + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AMERICAN BARON*** + + +******* This file should be named 13257.txt or 13257.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/3/2/5/13257 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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