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diff --git a/41672-0.txt b/41672-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c9c1ffd --- /dev/null +++ b/41672-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,18907 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41672 *** + + A CHANGED HEART + + A Novel. + + BY MAY AGNES FLEMING, + + AUTHOR OF "GUY EARLSCOURT'S WIFE," "A TERRIBLE SECRET," "A WONDERFUL + WOMAN," "ONE NIGHT'S MYSTERY," "SILENT AND TRUE," "A MAD MARRIAGE," + "LOST FOR A WOMAN," ETC., ETC. + + + "If Fortune, with a smiling face, + Strew roses on our way, + When shall we stoop to pick them up? + To-day, my love, to-day." + + + NEW YORK: + Copyright, 1881, by + _G. W. Carleton & Co., Publishers_, + LONDON: S. LOW, SON & CO. + MDCCCLXXXIII. + + Stereotyped by + SAMUEL STODDER, + ELECTROTYPER & STEREOTYPER, + 90 ANN STREET, N. Y. + + + TROW + PRINTING AND BOOK-BINDING CO. + N. Y. + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + CHAPTER PAGE + + I. Miss McGregor at home 7 + + II. Nathalie 14 + + III. Miss Rose 25 + + IV. Val's office 36 + + V. Killing two birds with one stone 46 + + VI. An evening at Miss Blake's 59 + + VII. Too many irons in the fire 67 + + VIII. Val turns mentor 82 + + IX. Wooed and won 95 + + X. Fast and loose 112 + + XI. How Captain Cavendish meant to marry Cherrie. 123 + + XII. In which the wedding comes off 138 + + XIII. After the wedding 150 + + XIV. Mining the ground 157 + + XV. Springing the mine 167 + + XVI. A crime 179 + + XVII. Found guilty 191 + + XVIII. The darkening sky 207 + + XIX. The flight 217 + + XX. "One more unfortunate" 227 + + XXI. Mrs. Butterby's lodgings 236 + + XXII. The heiress of Redmon 247 + + XXIII. The heiress of Redmon enters society 259 + + XXIV. The spell of the enchantress 275 + + XXV. The double compact 283 + + XXVI. Mr. Paul Wyndham 299 + + XXVII. Mr. Wyndham's wooing 312 + + XXVIII. Mr. Wyndham's wedding 324 + + XXIX. Mr. Wyndham's mother 336 + + XXX. Very mysterious 349 + + XXXI. Val's discovery 366 + + XXXII. Cherrie tells the truth 377 + + XXXIII. Overtaken 391 + + XXXIV. The Vesper-Hymn 406 + + XXXV. "Quoth the Raven, 'Nevermore'" 417 + + XXXVI. Drifting out 425 + + XXXVII. Dies Iræ, Dies Illa 430 + + XXXVIII. Out of the crooked ways 450 + + XXXIX. In Hope 478 + + + + +A CHANGED HEART. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +MISS McGREGOR AT HOME. + + +It was a foggy night in Speckport. There was nothing uncommon in its +being foggy this close May evening; but it was rather provoking and +ungallant of the clerk of the weather, seeing that Miss McGregor +particularly desired it to be fine. Miss Jeannette (she had been +christened plain Jane, but scorned to answer to anything so +unromantic)--Miss Jeannette McGregor was at home to-night to all the +élite of Speckport; and as a good many of the élite owned no other +conveyance than that which Nature had given them, it was particularly +desirable the weather should be fine. But it wasn't fine; it was nasty +and drizzly, and sultry and foggy; and sky and sea were blotted out; and +the gas-lamps sprinkled through the sloppy streets of Speckport blinked +feebly through the gloom; and people buttoned up to the chin and wrapped +in cloaks flitted by each other like phantoms, in the pale blank of wet +and fog. And half the year round that is the sort of weather they enjoy +in Speckport. + +You don't know Speckport! There I have the advantage of you; for I know +its whole history, past, present, and--future, I was going to say, +though I don't set up for a prophet; but the future of Speckport does +not seem hard to foretell. The Union-jack floats over it, the State of +Maine is its next-door neighbor, and fish and fog are its principal +productions. It also had the honor of producing Miss McGregor, who was +born one other foggy night, just two-and-twenty years previous to this +"At Home," to which you and I are going presently, in a dirty little +black street, which she scorns to know even by name now. Two-and-twenty +years ago, Sandy McGregor worked as a day-laborer in a shipyard, at +three and sixpence per day. Now, Mr. Alexander McGregor is a +ship-builder, and has an income of ten thousand gold dollars per year. +Not a millionaire, you know; but very well off, and very comfortable, +and very contented; living in a nice house, nicely furnished, keeping +horses and carriage, and very much looked up to, and very much respected +in Speckport. + +Speckport has its Fifth Avenue as well as New York. Not that they call +it Fifth Avenue, you understand; its name is Golden Row, and the abiders +therein are made of the porcelain of human clay. Great people, magnates +and aristocrats to their finger-tips, scorning the pigmies who move in +second and third society and have only the happiness of walking through +Golden Row, never of dwelling there. The houses were not brown-stone +fronts. Oh, no! there were half-a-dozen brick buildings, some pretty, +little Gothic cottages, with green vines, and beehives, and bird-houses, +about them, and all the rest were great painted palaces of wood. Some +had green shutters, and some had not; some were painted white, and some +brown, and some stone-color and drab, and they all had a glittering air +of spickspan-newness about them, as if their owners had them painted +every other week. And in one of these palaces Mr. McGregor lived. + +You drove down Golden Row through the fog and drizzle, between the +blinking lamps, and you stop at a stone-colored house with a brown +hall-door, and steps going up to it. The hall is brilliant with gas, so +is the drawing-room, so are the two parlors, so is the dining-room, so +are the dressing rooms; and the élite of Speckport are bustling and +jostling one another about, and making considerable noise, and up in the +gallery the band is in full blast at the "Lancers"--for they know how +to dance the Lancers in Speckport--and the young ladies dipping and +bowing through the intricacies of the dance, wear their dresses just as +low in the neck and as short in the sleeves as any Fifth avenue belle +dare to do. + +Very pretty girls they are, floating about in all the colors of the +rainbow. There are no diamonds, perhaps, except glass ones; but there +are gold chains and crosses, and bracelets, and lockets and things; and +some of the young ladies have rings right up to the middle joint of +their fingers. The young gentlemen wear rings, too, and glittering +shirt-studs and bosom-pins, and are good looking and gentlemanly. While +the young folks dance, the old folks play wallflower or cards, or take +snuff or punch, or talk politics. All the juvenile rag-tag and bobtail +of Speckport are outside, gaping up with open-mouthed admiration at the +blazing front of the McGregor mansion, and swallowing the music that +floats through the open windows. + +Sailing along Golden Row, with an umbrella up to protect her bonnet from +the fog, comes a tall lady, unprotected and alone, and "There's Miss Jo, +hurrah!" yells a shrill voice; and the tall lady receives her ovation +with a gratified face, and bows as she steps over the McGregor +threshold. Ten minutes later, she enters the drawing-room, divested of +her wrappings; and you see she is elderly and angular, and prim and +precise, and withal good-natured. She is sharp at the joints and +shoulder-blades, and her black silk dress is hooked up behind in the +fashion of twenty years ago. She wears no crinoline, and looks about as +graceful as a lamp-post; but she is fearfully and wonderfully fine, with +a massive gold chain about her neck that would have made a ship's cable +easily, and a cross and a locket clattering from it, and beating time to +her movements on a cameo brooch the size of a dinner-plate. Eardrops, a +finger-length long, dangle from her ears; cameo bracelets adorn her +skinny wrists; and her hair, of which she has nothing to speak of, is +worn in little corkscrew curls about her sallow face. + +Miss Joanna Blake is an old maid, and looks like it; she is also an +exile of Erin, and the most inveterate gossip in Speckport. + +A tremendous uproar greets her as she enters the drawing-room, and she +stops in considerable consternation. + +In a recess near the door was a card-table, round which four elderly +ladies and four elderly gentlemen sat, with a laughing crowd looking on +from behind. The card-party were in a violently agitated and excited +state, all screaming out together at the top of the gamut. + +Miss Jo swept on in majestic silence, nodding right and left as she +streamed down the apartment to where Mrs. McGregor stood, with a little +knot of matrons around her--a lady as tall as Miss Jo herself, and ever +so much stouter, her fat face hot and flushed, and wielding a fan +ponderously, as if it were a ton weight. Mrs. McGregor, during forty +years of her life, had been a good deal more familiar with +scrubbing-brushes than fans; but you would not think so now, maybe, if +you saw her in that purple-satin dress and gold watch, her fat hands +flashing with rings, and that bewildering combination of white lace and +ribbons on her head. Her voice was as loud as her style of dress, and +she shook Miss Jo's hand as if it had been a pump-handle. + +"And how do you do, Miss Blake, and whatever on earth kept you till this +hour? I was just saying to Jeannette, a while ago, I didn't believe you +were going to come at all." + +"I could not help it," said Miss Jo. "Val didn't come home till late, +and then I had to stop and find him his things. You know, my dear, what +a trouble men are, and that Val beats them all. Has everybody come?" + +"I think so; everybody but your Val and the Marshes. Maybe my lady is in +one of her tantrums, and won't let Natty come at all. Jeannette is all +but distracted. Natty's got lots of parts in them things they're +having--tablets--no; tableaux, that's the name, and they never can get +on without her. Jeannette's gone to look for Sandy to send him up to +Redmon to see." + +"I say, Miss Jo, how do you find yourself this evening?" exclaimed a +spirited voice behind her; and Mrs. McGregor gave a little yelp of +delight as she saw who it was--a young man, not more than twenty, +perhaps, very good-looking, with bright gray eyes, fair hair, and a +sunny smile. He was holding out a hand, small and fair as a lady's, to +Miss Blake, who took it and shook it heartily. + +"Jo's very well, thank you, Mr. Charles. How is your mamma this +evening?" + +"She was all right when I left home. Is Val here?" + +"Not yet. Have you just come?" + +The young gentleman nodded, and was turning away, but Mrs. McGregor +recalled him. + +"Isn't your mother coming, Charley?" + +"No, she can't," said Charley. "The new teacher's come, and she's got to +stay with her. She told me to bring her apologies." + +The ladies were all animation directly. The new teacher! What was she +like? When did she come? Was she young? Was she pretty? Did she seem +nice? + +"I didn't see her," said Charley, lounging against a sofa and flapping +his gloves about. + +"Didn't see her! I thought you said she was in your house?" cried Mrs. +McGregor. + +"So she is. I mean I didn't see her face. She had a thick vail on, and +kept it down, and I left two or three minutes after she came." + +"She came to Speckport in this evening's boat, then?" said Miss Jo. +"What did she wear?" + +Charley was bowing and smiling to a pretty girl passing on her partner's +arm. + +Mrs. McGregor nodded, and Charley sauntered off. The two ladies looked +after him. + +"What a nice young man that Charley Marsh is!" exclaimed Miss Jo, +admiringly, "and so good-looking, and so steady, and so good to his +mamma. You won't find many like him nowadays." + +Mrs. McGregor lowered her voice to a mysterious whisper. + +"Do you know, Miss Jo, they say he goes after that Cherrie Nettleby. Did +you hear it?" + +"Fiddlestick!" said Miss Jo, politely. "Speckport's got that story out, +has it? I don't believe a word of it!" + +"Here's Val!" cried Mrs. McGregor, off on a new tack; "and, my patience! +what a swell he's got with him!" + +Miss Jo looked round. Coming down the long room together were two young +men, whose appearance created a visible sensation--one of them, +preposterously tall and thin, with uncommonly long legs and arms--a +veritable Shanghai--was Mr. Valentine Blake, Miss Jo's brother and sole +earthly relative. He looked seven-and-twenty, was carelessly dressed, +his clothes hanging about him any way--not handsome, but with a droll +look of good humor about his face, and a roguish twinkle in his eyes +that would have redeemed a plainer countenance. + +His companion was a stranger, and it was he who created the sensation, +not easy Val. Mrs. McGregor had called him a "swell," but Mrs. McGregor +was not a very refined judge. He was dressed well, but not overdressed, +as the slang term would imply, and he looked a thorough gentleman. A +very handsome one, too, with dark curling hair, dark, bright, handsome +eyes, a jetty mustache on his lip, and a flashing diamond ring on his +finger. There was a certain air militaire about him that bespoke his +profession, though he wore civilian's clothes, and he and Val looked +about the same age. No wonder the apparition of so distinguished-looking +a stranger in Mrs. McGregor's drawing-room should create a buzzing among +the Speckport bon ton. + +"My goodness!" cried Mrs. McGregor, all in a flutter. "Whoever can he +be? He looks like a soldier, don't he?" + +"There came a regiment from Halifax this morning," said Miss Jo. "Here's +Val bringing him up." + +Mr. Val was presenting him even while she spoke. "Captain Cavendish, +Mrs. McGregor, of the --th," and then the captain was bowing profoundly; +and the lady of the mansion was returning it, in a violent trepidation +and tremor, not knowing in the least what she was expected to say to so +distinguished a visitor. But relief was at hand. Charley Marsh was +beside them with a young lady on his arm--a young lady best described by +that odious word "genteel." She was not pretty; she was sandy-haired +and freckled, but she was the daughter of the house, and, as such, +demanding attention. Val introduced the captain directly, and Mrs. +McGregor breathed freely again. + +"Look here, Val!" she whispered, catching him by the button, "who is he, +anyway?" + +Val lowered his voice and looked round him cautiously. + +"Did you ever hear of the Marquis of Carrabas, Mrs. McGregor?" + +"No--yes--I don't remember. Is he an English nobleman?" + +"A very great nobleman, Ma'am; famous in history as connected with the +cat-trade, and Captain Cavendish is next heir to the title. Mrs. Marsh +can tell you all about the Marquis; can't she, Charley?" + +Charley, who was ready to burst into a fit of laughter at +Mrs. McGregor's open-mouthed awe, took hold of the arm of a +feeble-minded-looking young gentleman, whose freckled features, sandy +hair, and general resemblance to the family, proclaimed him to be Mr. +Alexander McGregor, Junior, and walked him off. + +"And he came from Halifax this evening, Val?" Mrs. McGregor asked, +gazing at the young Englishman in the same state of awe and delight. + +"Yes," said Val, "it was there I got acquainted with him first. I met +him on my way here, and thought you would not be offended at the liberty +I took in fetching him along." + +"Offended! My dear Val, you couldn't have pleased me better if you had +been trying for a week. A Markis and a Captain in the Army! Why, it's +the greatest honor, and I'm ever so much obliged to you. I am, indeed!" + +"All right," said Val. "Speckport will be envious enough, I dare say, +for it's not every place he'll go to, and all will want him. You'll lose +Jane if you're not careful, though--see how he's talking to her." + +Mrs. McGregor's eyes were dancing in her head. A dazzling vision rose +before her--her daughter a Marchioness, living in a castle, dressed in +satin and diamonds the year round! She could have hugged Val in her +rapture; and Val reading some such idea in her beaming face, backed a +little, in some alarm. + +"I say, though, wasn't there to be tableaux or something?" he inquired. +"When are they coming off?" + +"As soon as Natty Marsh gets here; they can't get on without her." + +"What keeps her?" asked Val. + +"The new teacher's come to Mrs. Marsh's, Charley says, and Natty is +stopping in to see her. There's the captain asking Jeannette to dance." + +So he was; and Miss Jeannette, with a gratified simper, was just laying +her kidded fingers inside his coat-sleeve, when her brother came +breathlessly up. + +"Look here, Janie! you'd better not go off dancing," was his cry, "if +you mean to have those tableaux to-night. Natty's come!" + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +NATHALIE. + + +Mrs. McGregor's drawing-room was empty. Everybody had flocked into the +front parlor and arranged themselves on seats there to witness the +performance; that is to say, everybody who had no part in the +proceedings. Most of the young people of both sexes were behind the +solemn green curtain, with its row of footlights, that separated the two +rooms, dressing for their parts. The old people were as much interested +in the proceedings as the young people, for their sons and daughters +were the actors and actresses. + +Captain Cavendish and Mr. Val Blake occupied a front seat. Val had a +part assigned him; but it did not come on for some time, so he was +playing spectator now. + +"I saw you making up to little Jane, Cavendish," Val was saying, sotto +voce, for Miss Janie's mamma sat near. "Was it a case of love at first +sight?" + +"Miss McGregor is not very pretty," said Captain Cavendish, moderately. +"Who was that young lady with the red cheeks and bright eyes I saw you +speaking to, just before we came here?" + +"Red cheeks and bright eyes!" repeated Val, putting on his +considering-cap, "that description applies to half the girls in +Speckport. What had she on?" + +Captain Cavendish laughed. + +"Would any one in the world but Val Blake ask such a question? She had +on a pink dress, and had pink and white flowers in her hair, and looked +saucy." + +"Oh, I know now!" Val cried, with a flash of recollection; "that was +Laura Blair, one of the nicest little girls that ever sported crinoline! +Such a girl to laugh, you know!" + +"She looks it! Ah! up you go!" + +This apostrophe was addressed to the curtain, which was rising as he +spoke. There was a general flutter, and settling in seats to look; the +orchestra pealed forth and the first tableau was revealed. + +It was very pretty, but very common--"Rebecca and Rowena." Miss Laura +Blair was Rowena, and a tall brunette, Rebecca. The audience +applauded, as in duty bound, and the curtain fell. The second was +"Patience"--"Patience on a monument smiling at Grief." On a high +pedestal stood Miss Laura Blair, again, draped in a white sheet, like a +ghost, her hair all loose about her, and an azure girdle all over +spangles clasping her waist. + +At the foot of the pedestal crouched Grief, in a strange, distorted +attitude of pain. The face of the performer was hidden in her hands; her +black garments falling heavily around her, her hair unbound, too, her +whole manner expressing despair, as fully as attitude could express it. +The music seemed changing to a wail; the effect of the whole was +perfect. + +"What do you think of that?" said Val. + +"Very good," said Captain Cavendish. "It goes considerably ahead of +anything I had expected. Patience is very nice-looking girl." + +"And isn't she jolly? She's dying to shout out this minute! I should +think the glare of these footlights would force her eyelids open." + +"Who is Grief?" + +"Miss Catty Clowrie--isn't there music in that name? She makes a very +good Grief--looks as if she had supped sorrow in spoonfuls." + +"Is she pretty? She won't let us see her face." + +"Beauty's a matter of taste," said Val, "perhaps you'll think her +pretty. If you do, you will be the only one who ever thought the like. +She is a nice little girl though, is Catty--the double-distilled essence +of good-nature. Down goes the curtain!" + +It rose next on a totally different scene, and to music solemn and sad. +The stage was darkened, and made as much as possible to resemble a +convent-cell. The walls were hung with religious pictures and statues, a +coverless deal table held a crucifix, an open missal, and a candle which +flared and guttered in the draft. On a prie-dieu before the table a +figure knelt--a nun, eyes uplifted, the young face, quite colorless, +raised, the hands holding her rosary, clasped in prayer. It was +Evangeline--beautiful, broken-hearted Evangeline--the white face, the +great dark lustrous eyes full of unspeakable woe. Fainter, sweeter and +sadder the music wailed out; dimmer and dimmer paled the lights; all +hushed their breathing to watch. The kneeling figure never moved, the +face looked deadly pale by the flickering candle-gleam, and slowly the +curtain began to descend. It was down; the tableau was over; the music +closed, but for a second or two not a sound was to be heard. Then a +tumult of applause broke out rapturously, and "Encore, encore!" twenty +voices cried, in an ecstasy. + +Captain Cavendish turned to Val with an enthusiastic face. + +"By George, Blake! what a beautiful girl! Evangeline herself never was +half so lovely. Who is she?" + +"That's Natty," said Val, with composure. "Charley Marsh's sister." + +"I never saw a lovelier face in all my life! Blake, you must give me an +introduction as soon as these tableaux are over." + +"All right! But you needn't fall in love with her--it's of no use." + +"Why isn't it?" + +"Because the cantankerous old toad who owns her will never let her get +married." + +"Do you mean her mother?" + +"No, I don't, she doesn't live with her mother. And, besides, she has no +room in her heart for any one but Charley. She idolizes him!" + +"Happy fellow! That Evangeline was perfect. I never saw anything more +exquisite." + +"I don't believe Longfellow's Evangeline was half as good-looking as +Natty," said Val. "Oh! there she is again!" + +Val stopped talking. The curtain had arisen on an old scene--"Rebecca at +the well." Evangeline had transformed herself into a Jewish maiden in an +incredibly short space of time, and stood with her pitcher on her +shoulder, looking down on Eleazer at her feet. Sandy McGregor was +Eleazer, and a sorry Jew he made, but nobody except his mother looked at +him. Like a young queen Rebecca stood, her eyes fixed on the bracelets +and rings, her hair falling in a shower of golden bronze ripples over +her bare white shoulders. One would have expected black hair with those +luminous dark eyes, but no ebon tresses could have been half so +magnificent as that waving mass of darkened gold. + +"Nice hair, isn't it?" whispered Val. "Natty's proud of her hair and her +voice beyond anything. You ought to hear her sing!" + +"She sings well?" Captain Cavendish asked, his eyes fixed as if +fascinated on the beautiful face. + +"Like another Jenny Lind! She leads the choir up there in the cathedral, +and plays the organ besides." + +Captain Cavendish had a pretty pink half-blown rose in his button-hole. +He took it out and flung it at her feet as the curtain was going down. +He had time to see her bright dark eye turn upon it, then with a little +pleased smile over the spectators in quest of the donor, and then that +envious green curtain hid all again. + +"Very neat and appropriate," criticised Val. "You're not going to wait +for the introduction to begin your love-passage, I see, Captain +Cavendish." + +The captain laughed. + +"Nothing like taking time by the forelock, my dear fellow. I will never +be able to thank you sufficiently for bringing me here to-night!" + +"You don't say so!" exclaimed Val, opening his eyes, "you never mean to +say you're in love already, do you?" + +"It's something very like it, then. Where are you going?" + +"Behind the scenes. The next is 'Jack and the Beanstalk,' and they want +me for the beanstalk," said Val, complacently, as his long legs strode +over the carpet on his way to the back parlor. + +There were ever so many tableaux after that--Captain Cavendish, +impatient and fidgety, wondered if they would ever end. Perhaps you +don't believe in love at first sight, dear reader mine; perhaps I don't +myself; but Captain Cavendish, of Her Most Gracious Majesty's --th +Regiment of Artillery did, and had fallen in love at first sight at +least a dozen times within quarter that number of years. + +Captain Cavendish had to exercise the virtue of patience for another +half-hour, and then the end came. + +In flocked the performers, in laughing commotion, to find themselves +surrounded by the rest, and showered with congratulations. Captain +Cavendish stood apart, leaning against a fauteuil, stroking his mustache +thoughtfully, and looking on. Looking on one face and form only of all +the dozens before him; a form tall, taller than the average height, +slender, graceful, and girlish as became its owner's eighteen years; +and a face inexpressibly lovely in the garish gaslight. There was +nobility as well as beauty in that classic profile, that broad brow; +fire in those laughing blue eyes, so dark that you nearly mistook them +for black; resolution in those molded lips, the sweetest that ever were +kissed. The hair alone of Nathalie Marsh would have made a plain face +pretty; it hung loose over her shoulders as it had done on the stage, +reaching to her waist, a cloud of spun gold, half waves, half curls, +half yellow ripples. + +Few could have worn this hair like that, but it was eminently becoming +to Nathalie, whom everything became. Her dress was of rose color, of a +tint just deeper than the rose color in her cheeks, thin and flouting, +and she was entirely without ornament. A half-blown rose was fastened in +the snowy lace of her corsage, a rose that had decked the buttonhole of +Captain Cavendish half an hour before. + +Val espied him at last and came over. "Are you making a tableau of +yourself," he asked, "for a certain pair of bright eyes to admire? I saw +them wandering curiously this way two or three times since we came in." + +"Whose were they?" + +"Miss Nathalie Marsh's. Come and be introduced." + +"But she is surrounded." + +"Never mind, they'll make way for you. Stand out of the way, Sandy. Lo! +the conquering hero comes! Miss Marsh, let me present Captain Cavendish, +of the --th; Miss Marsh, Captain Cavendish." + +The music at that instant struck up a delicious waltz. Mr. Val Blake, +without ceremony, laid hold of the nearest young lady he could grab. + +"Come, Catty! let's take a twist or two. That's it, Cavendish! follow in +our wake!" + +For Captain Cavendish, having asked Miss Marsh to waltz, was leading her +off, and received the encouraging nod of Val with an amused smile. + +"What a character he is!" he said, looking after Val, spinning around +with considerable more energy than grace; "the most unceremonious and +best-natured fellow in existence." + +The young lady laughed. + +"Oh, everybody likes Val! Have you known him long?" + +"About a year. I have seen him in Halifax frequently, and we are the +greatest friends, I assure you. Damon and Pythias were nothing to us!" + +"It is something new for Mr. Blake to be so enthusiastic, then. Pythias +is a new rôle for him. I hope he played it better than he did Robert +Bruce in that horrid tableau awhile ago." + +They both laughed at the recollection. Natty scented her rose. + +"Some one threw me this. Gallant, wasn't it? I love roses." + +"Sweets to the sweet! I am only sorry I had not something more worthy +'Evangeline,' than that poor little flower." + +"Then it was you. I thought so! Thank you for the rose and the +compliment. One is as pretty as the other." + +She laughed saucily, her bright eyes flashing a dangerous glance at him. +Next instant they were floating round, and round, and round; and Captain +Cavendish began to think the world must be a great rose garden, and +Speckport Eden, since in it he had found his Eve. Not quite his yet, +though, for the moment the waltz concluded, a dashing and dangerously +good-looking young fellow stepped coolly up and bore her off. + +Val having given his partner a finishing whirl into a seat, left her +there, and came up, wiping his face. + +"By jingo, 'tis hard work, and Catty Clowrie goes the pace with a +vengeance. How do you like Natty?" + +"'Like' is not the word. Who is that gentleman she is walking with?" + +"That--where are they? Oh, I see--that is Captain Locksley, of the +merchant-service. The army and navy forever, eh! Where are you going?" + +"Out of this hot room a moment. I'll be back directly." + +Mrs. McGregor came up and asked Val to join a whist-party she was +getting up. "And be my partner, Val," she enjoined, as she led him off, +"because you're the best cheat I know of." + +Val was soon completely absorbed in the fascinations of whist, at a +penny a game, but the announcement of supper soon broke up both +card-playing and dancing; and as he rose from the table he caught sight +of Captain Cavendish just entering. His long legs crossed the room in +three strides. + +"You've got back, have you? What have you been about all this time?" + +"I was smoking a cigar out there on the steps, and getting a little +fresh air--no, fog, for I'll take my oath it's thick enough to be cut +with a knife. When I was in London, I thought I knew something of fog, +but Speckport beats it all to nothing." + +"Yes," said Val, gravely, "it's one of the institutions of the country, +and we're proud of it. Did you see Charley Marsh anywhere in your +travels. I heard Natty just now asking for him." + +"Oh, yes, I've seen him," said Captain Cavendish, significantly. + +There was that in his tone which made Val look at him. "Where was he and +what was he doing?" he inquired. + +"Making love, to your first question; sitting in a recess of the tall +window, to your second. He did not see me, but I saw him." + +"Who was he with?" + +"Something very pretty--prettier than anything in this room, excepting +Miss Natty. Black eyes, black curls, rosy cheeks, and the dearest little +waist! Who is she?" + +Val gave a long, low whistle. + +"Do you know her?" persisted Captain Cavendish. + +"Oh, don't I though? Was she little, and was she laughing?" + +"Yes, to both questions. Now, who is she?" + +Val's answer was a shower of mysterious nods. + +"I heard the story before, but I didn't think the boy was such a fool. +Speckport is such a place for gossip, you know; but it seems the gossips +were right for once. What will Natty say, I wonder?" + +"Will you tell me who she is?" cried Captain Cavendish, impatiently. + +"Come to supper," was Val's answer; "I'm too hungry to talk now. I'll +tell you about it by-and-by." + +Charley was before them at the table, helping all the young ladies right +and left, and keeping up a running fire of jokes, old and new, stale and +original, and setting the table in a roar. Everybody was talking and +laughing at the top of their lungs; glass and china, and knives and +forks, rattled and jingled until the uproar became deafening, and people +shouted with laughter, without in the least knowing what they were +laughing at. The mustached lip of Captain Cavendish curled with a little +contemptuous smile at the whole thing, and Miss Jeannette McGregor, who +had managed to get him beside her, saw it, and felt fit to die with +mortification. + +"What a dreadful noise they do keep up. It makes my head ache to listen +to them!" she said, resentfully. + +Captain Cavendish, who had been listening to her tattle-tittle for the +last half-hour, answering yes and no at random, started into +consciousness that she was talking again. + +"I beg your pardon, Miss McGregor. What was it you said? I am afraid I +was not attending." + +"I am afraid you were not," said Miss McGregor, forcing a laugh, while +biting her lips. "They are going back to the drawing-room--_Dieu merci!_ +It is like Babel being here." + +"Let us wait," said Captain Cavendish, eying the crowd, and beginning to +be gallant. "I am not going to have you jostled to death. One would +think it was for life or death they were pushing." + +It was fully ten minutes before the coast was clear, and then the +captain drew Miss Jeannette's arm within his, and led her to the +drawing-room. Mrs. McGregor, sitting there among her satellites, saw +them, and the maternal bosom glowed with pride. It was the future +Marquis and Marchioness of Carrabas! + +Some one was singing. A splendid soprano voice was ringing through the +room, singing, "Hear me, Norma." It finished as they drew near, and the +singer, Miss Natty Marsh, glancing over her shoulder, flashed one of her +bright bewitching glances at them. + +She rose up from the piano, flirting out her gauze skirts, and laughing +at the shower of entreaties to sing again. + +"I am going to see some engravings Alick has promised to show me," she +said; "so spare your eloquence, Mesdames et Messieurs. I am inexorable." + +"I think I will go over and have a look at the engravings, too," said +Captain Cavendish. + +She was sitting at a little stand, all her bright hair loose around her, +and shading the pictures. Young McGregor was bending devoutly near her, +but not talking, only too happy to be just there, and talking was not +the young gentleman's forte. + +"Captain Cavendish," said the clear voice, as, without turning round, +she held the engraving over her shoulder, "look at this--is it not +pretty?" + +How had she seen him? Had she eyes in the back of her head? He took the +engraving, wondering inwardly, and sat down beside her. + +It was a strange picture she had given him. A black and wrathful sky, a +black and heaving sea, and a long strip of black and desolate coast. A +full moon flickered ghastly through the scudding clouds, and wan in its +light you saw a girl standing on a high rock, straining her eyes out to +sea. Her hair and dress fluttered in the wind; her face was wild, +spectral, and agonized. Captain Cavendish gazed on it as if fascinated. + +"What a story it tells!" Nathalie cried. "It makes one think of Charles +Kingsley's weird song of the 'Three Fishers.' Well, Charley, what is +it?" + +"It is the carryall from Redmon come for you," said Charley, who had +sauntered up. "If you are done looking at the pictures you had better go +home." + +Natty pushed the portfolio away pettishly, and rose, half-poutingly. + +"What a nuisance, to go so soon!" + +Then, catching Captain Cavendish's eye, she laughed good-naturedly. + +"What can't be cured--you know the proverb, Captain Cavendish. Charley, +wait for me in the hall, I will be there directly." + +She crossed the room with the airy elegance peculiar to her light +swinging tread, made her adieux quietly to the hostess, and sought her +wrappings and the dressing-room. + +As she ran down into the hall in a large shawl, gracefully worn, and a +white cloud round her pretty face, she found Captain Cavendish waiting +with Charley. It was he who offered her his arm, and Charley ran down +the steps before them. Through the wet fog they saw an old-fashioned +two-seated buggy waiting, and the driver looking impatiently down. + +"I wish you would drive up with me, Charley," said Natty, settling +herself in her seat. + +"Can't," said Charley. "I am going to see somebody else's sister home. +I'll take a run up to-morrow evening." + +"Miss Marsh," Captain Cavendish lazily began, "if you will permit me +to----" but Natty cut him short with a gay laugh. + +"And make all the young ladies in there miserable for the rest of the +evening! No, thank you! I am not quite so heartless. Good night!" + +She leaned forward to say it, the next moment she was lost in the fog. +He caught one glimpse of a white hand waved, of the half-saucy, +half-wicked, wholly-bewitching smile, of the dancing blue eyes and +golden hair, and then there was nothing but a pale blank of mist and +wet, and Charley was speaking: + +"Hang the fog! it goes through one like a knife! Come along in, captain, +they are going to dance." + +Captain Cavendish went in, but not to dance. He had come from curiosity +to see what the Speckportonians were like, not intending to remain over +an hour or so. Now that Natty was gone, there was no inducement to stay. +He sought out Mrs. McGregor, to say good-night. + +"What's your hurry?" said Val, following him out. + +"It is growing late, and I am ashamed to say I am sleepy. Will you be in +the office to-morrow morning?" + +"From eight till two," said Val. + +"Then I'll drop in. Good night!" + +The cathedral clock struck three as he came out into the drizzly +morning, and all the other clocks in the town took it up. The streets +were empty, as he walked rapidly to his lodgings, with buttoned-up +overcoat, and hat drawn over his eyes. But a "dancing shape, an image +gay" were with him, flashing on him through the fog; hunting him all the +way home, through the smur and mist of the dismal day-dawn. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +MISS ROSE. + + +Eight was striking by every clock in the town, as down Queen Street--the +Broadway of Speckport--a tall female streamed, with a step that rang and +resounded on the wooden pavement. The tall female, nodding to her +acquaintances right and left, and holding up her bombazine skirts out of +the slop, was Miss Jo Blake, as bright as a new penny, though she had +not had a wink of sleep the night before. Early as the hour was, Miss Jo +was going to make a morning call, and strode on through the fog with her +head up, and a nod for nearly every one she passed. + +Down Queen Street Miss Jo turned to the left, and kept straight on, +facing the bay, all blurred and misty, so that you could hardly tell +where the fog ended and the sun began. The business part of the town, +with its noise and rattle and bustle, was left half a mile behind, and +Miss Jo turned into a pretty and quiet street, right down on the +sea-shore. It was called Cottage Street, very appropriately, too; for +all the houses in it were cozy little cottages, a story and a half high, +all as much alike as if turned out of a mold. They were all painted +white, had a red door in the center, and two windows on either side of +the door, decorated with green shutters. They had little grass-plots and +flower-beds in front, with white palings, and white gate, and a little +graveled path, and behind they had vegetable-yards sloping right down to +the very water. If you leaned over the fences at the lower end of these +gardens, on a stormy day, and at high tide, you could feel the salt +spray dashing up in your face, from the waves below. At low water, there +was a long, smooth, sandy beach, delightful to walk over on hot summer +days. + +Before one of the cottages Miss Jo drew rein, and rapped. While waiting +for the door to open, the flutter of a skirt in the back garden caught +her eye; and, peering round the corner of the house, she had a full view +of it and its wearer. + +And Miss Jo set herself to contemplate the view with keenest interest. +To see the wearer of that fluttering skirt it was that had brought Miss +Jo all the way from her own home so early in the morning, though she had +never set eyes on her before. + +Uncommonly friendly, perhaps you are thinking. Not at all: Miss Jo was a +woman, consequently curious; and curiosity, not kindness, had brought +her out. + +The sight was very well worth looking at. You might have gazed for a +week, steadily, and not grown tired of the prospect. A figure, slender +and small, wearing a black dress, white linen cuffs at the wrists, a +white linen collar, fastened with a knot of crape, a profusion of pretty +brown hair, worn in braids, and low in the neck, hands like a child's, +small and white. She was leaning against a tree, a gnarled old rowan +tree, with her face turned sea-ward, watching the fishing-boats gliding +in and out through the fog; but presently, at some noise in the street, +she glanced around, and Miss Jo saw her face. A small, pale face, very +pale, with pretty features, and lit with large, soft eyes. A face that +was a history, could Miss Jo have read it; pale and patient, gentle and +sweet, and in the brown eye a look of settled melancholy. This young +lady in black had been learning the great lesson of life, that most of +us poor mortals must learn, sooner or later, endurance--the lesson One +too sublime to name came on earth to teach. + +Miss Jo dodged back, the door swung open, and a fat girl, bursting out +of her hooks and eyes, and with a head like a tow mop, opened the door. +Miss Jo strode in without ceremony. + +"Good morning, Betsy Ann! Is Mrs. Marsh at home this morning?" + +"Yes, Miss Jo," said Betsy Ann, opening a door to the left, for there +was a door on either hand; that to the right, leading to the +drawing-room of the cottage, and a staircase at the end leading to the +sleeping-room above; the door to the left admitted you to the +sitting-room and dining-room, for it was both in one--a pleasant little +room enough, with a red and green ingrain carpet, cane-seated chairs, +red moreen window-curtains on the two windows, one looking on the bay, +the other on the street. There was a little upright piano in one corner, +a lounge in another; pictures on the papered walls; a Dutch clock and +some china cats and dogs and shepherdesses on the mantel-piece; a +coal-fire in the Franklin, and a table laid for breakfast. + +The room had but one occupant, a faded and feeble-looking woman, who sat +in a low rocking-chair, her feet crossed on the fender, a shawl around +her, and a book in her hand. She looked up in her surprise at her early +visitor. + +"Law! Miss Blake, is it you? Who'd have thought it? Betsy Ann, give Miss +Blake a chair." + +"It's quite a piece from our house here, and I feel kind of tired," said +Miss Jo, seating herself. "Your fire feels comfortable, Mrs. Marsh; +these foggy days are chilly. Ain't you had breakfast yet?" + +"It's all Charley's fault; he hasn't come down stairs yet. How did you +enjoy yourself at the party last night?" + +"First-rate. Never went home till six this morning, and then I had to +turn to and make Val his breakfast. Charley left early." + +"Early!" retorted Mrs. Marsh; "I don't know what you call early. It was +after six when he came here, Betsy Ann says." + +"Well, that's odd," said Miss Jo. "He left McGregor's about half past +three, anyway. Did you hear they had an officer there last night?" + +"An officer! No. Who is it?" + +"His name is Captain Cavendish, and a beautiful man he is, with a +diamond ring on his finger, my dear, and the look of a real gentleman. +His folks are very great in England. His brother's the Marquis of +Cabbage--Carraways--no, I forget it; but Val knows all about him." + +"Law!" exclaimed Mrs. Marsh, opening her light-blue eyes, "a Marquis! +Who brought him?" + +"Val did. Val knows every one, I believe, and got acquainted with him in +Halifax. You never saw any one so proud as Mr. McGregor. I didn't say +anything, my dear; but I thought of the time when lords and marquises, +and dukes and captains without end, used to be entertained at Castle +Blake," said Miss Jo, sighing. + +"And what does he look like? Is he handsome?" asked Mrs. Marsh, with +interest; for Castle Blake and its melancholy reminiscences were an old +story to her. + +"Uncommon," said Miss Jo; "and I believe Mrs. McGregor thinks her Jane +will get him. You never saw any one so tickled in your life. Why weren't +you up?--I expected you." + +"I couldn't go. Miss Rose came just as I was getting ready, and of +course I had to stay with her." + +"Oh, the new teacher! I saw a young woman in black standing in the +background as I came in; was that her?" said Miss Jo, who did not always +choose to be confined to the rules of severe grammar. + +"Yes," said Mrs. Marsh; "and what do you think, Miss Blake, if she +wasn't up this morning before six o'clock? Betsy Ann always rises at +six, and when she was rolling up the blind Miss Rose came down-stairs +already dressed, and has been out in the garden ever since. Betsy Ann +says she was weeding the flowers most of the time." + +"She's a little thing, isn't she?" said Miss Jo; "and so +delicate-looking! I don't believe she'll ever be able to manage them big +rough girls in the school. What's her other name besides Miss Rose?" + +"I don't know. She looks as if she had seen trouble," said Mrs. Marsh, +pensively. + +"Who is she in mourning for?" + +"I don't know. I didn't like to ask, and she doesn't talk much herself." + +"Where did she come from? Montreal, wasn't it?" + +"I forget. Natty knows. Natty was here last night before she went up to +McGregor's. She said she would come back this morning, and go with Miss +Rose to the school. Here's Charley at last." Miss Jo faced round, and +confronted that young gentleman sauntering in. + +"Well, Sleeping Beauty, you've got up now, have you?" was her salute. +"How do you feel after all you danced last night?" + +"Never better. You're out betimes this morning, Miss Jo." + +"Yes," said Miss Jo; "the sun don't catch me simmering in bed like it +does some folks. Did it take you from half-past three till six to get +home this morning, Mr. Charles?" + +"Who says it was six?" said Charley. + +"Betsy Ann does," replied his mother. "Where were you all the time?" + +"Betsy Ann's eyes were a couple of hours too fast. I say, mother, is the +breakfast ready? It's nearly time I was off." + +"It's been ready this half-hour. Betsy Ann!" + +That maiden appeared. + +"Go and ask Miss Rose to please come in to breakfast, and then fetch the +coffee." + +Betsy Ann fled off, and Charley glanced out of the window. + +"Miss Rose is taking a constitutional, is she? What is she like, +mother--pretty? I didn't see her last night, you know." + +"What odds is it to you?" demanded Miss Jo; "she's not as pretty as +Cherrie Nettleby, anyhow." + +Charley turned scarlet, and Miss Jo's eyes twinkled at the success of +her random shaft. The door opened at that instant, and the small, +slender black figure glided in. Glided was the word for that swift, +light motion, so noiseless and fleet. + +"Good morning," said Mrs. Marsh, rising smiling to shake hands; "you are +an early bird, I find. Miss Blake, Miss Rose--Miss Rose, my son +Charles." + +My son Charles and Miss Blake both shook hands with the new teacher, and +welcomed her to Speckport. A faint smile, a shy fluttering color coming +and going in her delicate cheeks, and a few low-murmured words, and then +Miss Rose sat down on the chair Charley had placed for her, her pretty +eyes fixed on the coals, her small childlike hands fluttering still one +over the other. Betsy Ann came in with the coffee-pot and rolls and +eggs, and Mrs. Marsh invited Miss Jo to sit over and have some +breakfast. + +"I don't care if I do," said Miss Jo, untying her bonnet promptly. "I +didn't feel like taking anything when Val had his this morning, and your +coffee smells good. Are you fond of coffee, Miss Rose?" + +Miss Rose smiled a little as they all took their places. + +"Yes, I like it very well." + +"Some folks like tea best," said Miss Jo, pensively, stirring in a third +teaspoonful of sugar in her cup, "but I don't. What sort of a journey +had you, Miss Rose?" + +"Very pleasant, indeed." + +"You arrived yesterday?" + +Miss Rose assented. + +"Was it from Halifax you came?" + +"No, ma'am; from Montreal." + +"Oh, from Montreal! You were born in Montreal, I suppose?" + +"No, I was born in New York." + +"Law!" cried Mrs. Marsh, "then, you're a Yankee, Miss Rose?" + +"Do your folks live in Montreal, Miss Rose?" recommenced the persevering +Miss Jo. + +The faint, rosy light flickered and faded again in the face of Miss +Rose. + +"I have no relatives," she said, without lifting her eyes. + +"None at all! Father, nor mother, nor brothers, nor sisters, nor +nothing." + +"I have none at all." + +"Dear me, that's a pity! Who are you in black for?" + +There was a pause--then Miss Rose answered, still without looking up: + +"For my father." + +"Oh, for your father! Has he been long dead? Another cup, if you please. +Betsy Ann knows how to make nice coffee." + +"He has been dead ten months," said Miss Rose, a flash of intolerable +pain dyeing her pale cheeks at this questioning. + +"How do you think you'll like Speckport?" went on the dauntless Miss Jo. +"It's not equal to Montreal or New York, they tell me, but the Bluenoses +think there's no place like it. Poor things! if they once saw Dublin, +it's little they'd think of such a place as this is." + +"Halte là!" cried Charley; "please to remember, Miss Jo, I am a native, +to the manner born, an out-and-out Bluenose, and will stand no nonsense +about Speckport! There's no place like it. See Speckport and die! +Mother, I'll trouble you for some of that toast." + +"Won't you have some, Miss Rose?" said Mrs. Marsh. "You ain't eating +anything." + +"Not any more, thank you. I like Speckport very much, Miss Blake; all I +have seen of it." + +"That's right, Miss Rose!" exclaimed Charley; "say you like fog and all. +Are you going to commence teaching to-day?" + +"I should prefer commencing at once. Miss Marsh said she was coming this +morning, did she not?" Miss Rose asked, lifting her shy brown eyes to +Mrs. Marsh. + +"Yes, dear. Charley, what time did Natty go home last night?" + +"She didn't go home last night; it was half-past two this morning." + +"Did she walk?" + +"No; the old lady sent that wheelbarrow of hers after her." + +"Wheelbarrow!" cried his mother, aghast. "Why, Charley, what do you +mean?" + +"It's the same thing," said Charley. "I'd as soon go in a wheelbarrow as +that carryall. Such a shabby old rattle-trap! It's like nothing but the +old dame herself." + +"Charley, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. Did you go with her?" + +"Not I! I was better engaged. Another gentleman offered his services, +but she declined." + +"Who was it? Captain Locksley?" + +"No, another captain--Captain Cavendish." + +"Did he want to go home with Natty?" asked Miss Jo, with interest. "I +thought he was more attentive to her than to Jane McGregor! Why wouldn't +she have him?" + +"She would look fine having him--an utter stranger! If it had been +Locksley, it would have been different. See here, Miss Rose," Charley +cried, springing up in alarm, "what is the matter?" + +"She is going to faint!" exclaimed Miss Jo, in consternation. "Charley, +run for a glass of water." + +Miss Rose had fallen suddenly back in her seat, her face growing so +dreadfully white that they might well be startled. It was nothing for +Miss Rose to look pale, only this was like the pallor of death. Charley +made a rush for the water, and was back in a twinkling, holding it to +her lips. She drank a portion, pushed it away, and sat up, trying to +smile. + +"I am afraid I have startled you," she said, as if necessary to +apologize, "but I am not very strong, and----" + +Her voice, faltering throughout, died entirely away; and, leaning her +elbows on the table, she bowed her forehead on her hands. Miss Jo looked +at her with compressed lips and prophetic eye. + +"You'll never stand that school, Miss Rose, and I thought so from the +first. Them girls would try a constitution of iron, let alone yours." + +Miss Rose lifted her white face, and arose from the table. + +"It is nothing," she said, faintly. "I do not often get weak, like this. +Thank you!" + +She had gone to the window, as if for air, and Charley had sprung +forward and opened it. + +"Does the air revive you, or shall I fetch you some more water?" +inquired Charley, with a face full of concern. + +"Oh, no! indeed, it is nothing. I am quite well now." + +"You don't look like it," said Miss Jo; "you are as white as a sheet +yet. Don't you go near that school to-day, mind." + +Miss Rose essayed a smile. + +"The school will do me no harm, Miss Blake--thank you for your kindness +all the same." + +Miss Jo shook her head. + +"You ain't fit for it, and that you'll find. Are you off, Charley?" + +"Very hard, isn't it, Miss Jo?" said Charley, drawing on his gloves. +"But I must tear myself away. Old Pestle and Mortar will be fit to +bastinado me for staying till this time of day." + +"Look here, then," said Miss Jo, "have you any engagement particular for +this evening?" + +"Particular? no, not very. I promised Natty to spend the evening up at +Redmon, that's all." + +"Oh, that's nothing, then. I want you and your mother, and Miss Rose, to +come over to our house this evening, and take a cup of tea. I'll get +Natty to come, too." + +"All right," said Charley, boyishly, taking his wide-awake. "I'll take +two or three cups if you like. Good morning, all. Miss Rose, don't you +go and use yourself up in that hot school-room to-day." + +Off went Charley, whistling "Cheer, boys, cheer!" and his hands rammed +down in his coat-pockets; and Miss Jo got up and took her bonnet. + +"You'll be sure to come, Mrs. Marsh, you and Miss Rose, and come nice +and early, so as we can have a chat." + +"Certainly," said Mrs. Marsh, "if Miss Rose has no objection." + +Miss Rose hesitated a little, and glanced at her mourning dress, and +from it to Miss Jo, with her soft, wistful eyes. + +"I have not gone out at all since--since----" + +"Yes, dear, I know," said Miss Jo, kindly, interrupting. "But it isn't a +party or anything, only just two or three friends to spend a few hours. +Now, don't make any objection. I shall expect you both, without fail, so +good-bye." + +With one of her familiar nods, Miss Jo strode out, and nearly ran +against a young lady, who was opening the gate. + +"Is it you, Miss Jo? You nearly knocked me down! You must have been up +with the birds this morning, to get here so soon." + +The speaker was a young lady who had been at Mrs. McGregor's the +previous night; a small, wiry damsel, with sallow face, thin lips, dull, +yellow, lusterless hair, and light, faded-looking eyes. She was not +pretty, but she looked pleasant--that is, if incessant smiles can make a +face pleasant--and she had the softest and sweetest of voices--you could +liken it to nothing but the purring of a cat; and her hands were limp +and velvety, and catlike too. + +Miss Jo nodded her recognition. + +"How d'ye do, Catty? How do you feel after last night?" + +"Very well." + +"Well enough to spend this evening with me?" + +Miss Catty Clowrie laughed. + +"I am always well enough for that, Miss Jo! Are you going to eclipse +Mrs. McGregor?" + +"Nonsense! Mrs. Marsh and Miss Rose are coming to take tea with me, +that's all, and I want you to come up." + +"I shall be very happy to. Are Natty and--Charley coming?" + +Miss Jo nodded again, and without further parley walked away. As she +turned the corner of Cottage Street into a more busy thoroughfare, known +as Park Lane, she saw a lady and gentleman taking the sidewalk in +dashing style. Everybody looked after them, and everybody might have +gone a long way without finding anything better worth looking after. The +young lady's tall, slight, willowy figure was set off by a close-fitting +black cloth basque, and a little, coquettish, black velvet cap was +placed above one of the most bewitching faces that ever turned a man's +head. Roseate, smiling, sunshiny, the bright blue eyes flashing laughing +light everywhere they fell. Her gloved hands daintily uplifting her +skirts, and displaying the pretty high-heeled boots, as she sailed along +with a very peculiar, jaunty, swinging gait. + +And quite as well worth looking at, in his way, was her cavalier, +gallant and handsome, with an unmistakable military stride, and an +unmistakable military air generally, although dressed in civilian's +clothes. As they swept past Miss Jo, the young lady made a dashing bow; +and the young gentleman lifted his hat. Miss Jo stood, with her mouth +open, gazing after them. + +"A splendid couple, ain't they, Miss Blake?" said a man, passing. It was +Mr. Clowrie, on his way to his office, and Miss Jo, just deigning to +acknowledge him, walked on. + +"My patience!" was her mental ejaculation, "what a swell they cut! He's +as handsome as a lord, that young man; and she's every bit as +good-looking! I must go up to Redmon this afternoon, and ask her down. +Wouldn't it be great now, if that should turn out to be a match!" + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +VAL'S OFFICE. + + +Among the many tall, dingy brick buildings, fronting on that busy +thoroughfare of Speckport, Queen Street, there stood one to the right as +you went up, taller and dingier, if possible, than its neighbors, and +bearing this legend along its grimy front, "Office of Speckport +Spouter." There were a dozen newspapers, more or less, published in +Speckport, weekly, semi-weekly, and daily; but the Spouter went ahead of +them all, and distanced all competitors. + +At about half-past seven o'clock, this foggy spring morning, two +individuals of the manly sex occupied the principal apartment of the +printing establishment. A dirty, nasty, noisy place it generally was; +and dirty and nasty, though not very noisy, it was this morning, for the +only sound to be heard was the voice of one of its occupants, chattering +incessantly, and the scratching of the other's pen, as he wrote, perched +up on a high stool. + +The writer was foreman in the office, a sober-looking, middle-aged man, +who wore spectacles, and wrote away as mechanically as if he was doing +it by steam. The speaker was a lively youth of twelve, office-boy, +printer's devil, and errand-runner, and gossiper-in-chief to the place. +His name was in the baptismal register of Speckport cathedral, William +Blair; but in every-day life he was Bill Blair, brother to pretty Laura, +whom Val Blake had eulogized as "such a girl to laugh." + +Laughter seemed to be a weakness in the family, for Master Bill's mouth +was generally stretched in a steady grin from one week's end to the +other, and was, just at this present moment. He was perched up on +another high stool, swinging his legs about, chewing gum, looking out of +the window, and talking. + +"And there goes Old Leach in his gig, tearing along as if Old Nick was +after him," went on Master Bill, criticising the passers-by. "Somebody's +kicking the bucket in Speckport! And there's Sim Tod hobbling along on +his stick! Now, I should admire to know how long that old codger's going +to live; he must be as old as Methuselah's cat by this time. And there, +I vow, if there ain't Miss Jo, streaking along as tall as a grenadier, +and as spry as if she hadn't been up all night at that rout in Golden +Row. What a frisky old girl it is!" + +"I tell you what, Bill Blair," said the foreman, Mr. Gilcase, "if you +don't take yourself down out of that, and get to work, I'll report you +to Mr. Blake as soon as he comes in!" + +"No, you won't!" said Bill, snapping his gum between his teeth like a +pistol-shot. "There ain't nothing to do. I swept the office, and +sprinkled this floor, and I want a rest now, I should think. I feel as +if I should drop!" + +"The office looks as if it had been swept," said Mr. Gilcase, +contemptuously; "there's the addresses to write on those wrappers; go +and do that!" + +"That's time enough," said Bill; "Blake won't be here for an hour or two +yet; he's snoozing, I'll bet you, after being up all night. Look here, +Mr. Gilcase, did you know the new teacher was come?" + +"No," said the foreman, looking somewhat interested; "has she?" + +"Came last night," nodded Bill; "our Laury heard so last night at the +party. Her name's Miss Rose. Did you know they had an officer last night +at McGregor's?" + +"I didn't think the officers visited McGregor's?" + +"None of 'em ever did before; but one of them was there last night, a +captain, by the same token; and, I expect, old McGregor's as proud as a +pig with two tails. As for Jane, there'll be no standing her now, and +she was stuck-up enough before. Oh, here's Clowrie, and about as +pleasant-looking as a wild cat with the whooping-cough!" + +A heavy, lumbering foot was ascending the steep dark stairs, and the +door opened presently to admit a young gentleman in a pea-jacket and +glazed cap. A short and thick-set young gentleman, with a sulky face, +who was never known to laugh, and whose life it was the delight of +Master Bill Blair to torment and make a misery of. The young gentleman +was Mr. Jacob Clowrie, eldest son and hope of Peter Clowrie, Esq., +attorney-at-law. + +"How are you, Jake?" began Mr. Blair, in a friendly tone, knocking his +heels about on the stool. "You look kind of sour this morning. Was the +milk at breakfast curdled, or didn't Catty get up to make you any +breakfast at all?" + +Mr. Clowrie's reply to this was a growl, as he hung up his cap. + +"I say, Jake, you weren't at McGregor's tea-splash last night, were you? +I know the old man and Catty were there. Scaly lot not to ask you and +me!" + +Mr. Clowrie growled again, and sat down at a desk. + +"I say, Jake," resumed that young demon, Bill, grinning from ear to ear, +"how's our Cherrie, eh?--seen her lately?" + +"What would you give to know?" snapped Mr. Clowrie, condescending to +retort. + +"But I do know, though, without giving nothing! and I know your cake's +dough, my boy! Lor, I think I see 'em now!" cried Bill, going off in a +shout of laughter at some lively recollection. + +Mr. Clowrie glared at him over the top of his desk, with savage inquiry. + +"Oh, you're cut out, old fellow! you're dished, you are! Cherrie's got a +new beau, and you're left in the lurch!" + +"What do you mean, you young imp?" inquired Mr. Clowrie, growing very +red in the face. "I'll go over and twist your neck for you, if you don't +look sharp!" + +Mr. Blair winked. + +"Don't you think you see yourself doing it, Jakey? I tell you it's as +true as preaching! Cherrie's got a new fellow, and the chap's name is +Charley Marsh." + +There was a pause. Bill looked triumphant, Mr. Clowrie black as a +thunderbolt, and the foreman amused in spite of himself. Bill crunched +his gum and waited for his announcement to have proper effect, and then +resumed, in an explanatory tone: + +"You see, Jake, I had heard Charley was after her, but I didn't believe +it till last night, when I see them with my own two blessed eyes. My +governor and Laury were off to McGregor's, so I cut over to Jim Tod's, +to see a lot of terrier-pups he's got--me and Tom Smith--and he promised +us a pup apiece. Jim's folks were at the junketing, too; so we had the +house to ourselves. And Jim, he stole in the pantry through the window +and hooked a lot of pies and cakes, and raspberry wine, and Tom had a +pack of cards in his trowsers pocket. And we went up to Jim's room, and, +crackey! hadn't we a time! There was no hurry neither; for we knew the +old folks wouldn't be home till all hours, so we staid till after three +in the morning, and by this time Jim and me had lost three shillings in +pennies each, and the three of us were about ready to burst with all we +had eat and drank! It was foggy and misty coming home, and me and Tom +cut across them fields and waste lots between Tod's and Park Lane, when +just as we turned into Golden Row, who should we meet but Charley Marsh +and Cherrie. There they were, coming along as large as life, linking +together, and Charley's head down, listening to her, till their noses +were nearly touching. Me and Tom laughed till we were fit to split!" + +Mr. Blair laughed again at the recollection, but Mr. Clowrie, scowling +more darkly than ever, replied not save by scornful silence. Bill had +his laugh out, and recommenced. + +"So you see, Jake, it's no go! You can't get the beautifulest mug that +ever was looked at, and you haven't the shadow of a chance against such +a fellow as Charley Marsh! O Lor!" + +With the last ejaculation of alarm, Bill sprang down from his perch in +consternation, as the door opened and Mr. Val Blake entered. He had been +so absorbed chaffing Mr. Clowrie that he had not heard Val coming +up-stairs, and now made a desperate dash at the nearest desk. Val +stretched out his long arm and pinned him. + +"You young vagabond! is this the way you spend your time in my absence? +What's that about Charley Marsh?" + +"Nothing, sir," said Bill, grinning a malicious grin over at Mr. +Clowrie. "I was only telling Jake how he was being cut out!" + +"Cut out! What do you mean?" + +"Why, with that Cherrie Nettleby! Charley Marsh's got her now!" + +"What!" said Val, shortly; "what are you talking about, you little +rascal?" + +"I can't help it, sir," said Bill, with an injured look, "if I am a +rascal. I saw him seeing her home this morning between three and four +o'clock, and if that don't look like cutting Jake out, I don't know what +does!" + +"And what were you doing out at three o'clock in the morning, Master +Blair?" + +"I was over to Tod's spending the evening, me and a lot more fellows, +and that was the time we were getting home. I don't see," said Bill, +with a still more aggrieved air, "why we shouldn't stop out a while, if +all the old codgers in the town set us the example!" + +Val released him, and strode on to an inner room. + +"See if you can attend to your business for one morning, sir, and give +your tongue a holiday. Mr. Gilcase, was the postman here?" + +"Yes, sir. The letters and papers are on your table." + +Val disappeared, closing the door behind him, and Master Blair turned a +somersault of delight and cut a pigeon-wing afterward. + +"Get to work, sir!" shouted Mr. Gilcase, "or I'll make Mr. Blake turn +you out of the office!" + +"Mr. Blake knows better," retorted the incorrigible. "I rather think the +Spouter would be nowhere if I left; Do you know, Mr. Gilcase, I think +Blake has some notion of taking me into partnership shortly! He has to +work like a horse now." + +Val had to work hard--no mistake about it, for he was sole editor and +proprietor of the Sunday and Weekly Speckport Spouter. He is sitting in +his room now--and a dusty, grimy, littered, disordered room it +is--before a table heaped with papers, letters, books, and manuscript of +all kinds, busily tearing the envelopes off sundry overgrown letters, +and disgorging their contents. + +"What's this? a private note from Miss Incognita. 'Would I be so kind as +to speak to the printers; they made such frightful mistakes in her last +sketch, filled her heroine's eyes with tars, instead of tears, and in +the battle-scene defeated Cromwell and his soldiers with wildest +laughter, instead of slaughter!' Humph. + +"It's her own fault; why don't she write decently? Very well, Miss +Laura, I'll stick you in; you think I don't know you, I suppose. Come +in." + +Val looked up from his literary labors to answer a tap at the door. Mr. +Gilcase put in his head. + +"There's a gentleman here wants to see you, sir. Captain Cavendish." + +Val got up and went out. Captain Cavendish, in a loose overcoat, and +smoking a cigar, was lounging against a desk, and being stared at by +Messrs. Clowrie and Blair, took out his cigar and extended his hand +languidly to Val. + +"Good morning! Are you very busy? Am I an intruder? If so, I'll go away +again." + +"I'm no busier than common," said Val. "Come in, this is my sanctum, and +here's the editorial chair; sit down." + +"Is it any harm to smoke?" inquired the Captain, looking rather +doubtful. + +"Not the least. I'll blow a cloud myself. How did you find your way here +through the clouds of fog?" + +"Not very easily. Does the sun ever shine at all in Speckport?" + +"Occasionally--when it cannot help itself. But when did you take to +early rising, pray? You used to be lounging over your breakfast about +this hour when I knew you in Halifax." + +"Yes, I know--I'm a reformed character. Apropos, early rising seems to +be the style here. I met two ladies of my acquaintance figuring through +the streets ever so long ago." + +"Who were they?" + +"Your sister was one; Miss Marsh, the other." + +"Natty, eh? Oh, she always was an early bird. Were you speaking to her?" + +"I had the pleasure of escorting her to her mother's. By the way, she +does not live with her mother, does she?" + +"No; she lives with old Lady Leroy, up at Redmon." + +"Where is Redmon?" + +"About a mile from Speckport. Natty walks it two or three times a day, +and thinks it's only a hen's jump. Redmon's a fine place." + +"Indeed." + +"Not the house exactly--it's a great barn--but the property. It's worth +eight thousand pounds." + +"So much?" said Captain Cavendish, looking interested. "And who is Lady +Leroy?" + +"The wife--the widow of a dead Jew. Don't stare, she only gets the title +as a nickname, for she's the greatest old oddity the sun ever shone on. +She's a cousin of Natty's mother, and Natty is to be her heiress." + +Captain Cavendish's eyes lightened vividly. + +"Her heiress! Is she very rich, then?" + +"Immensely! Worth thirty thousand pounds or more, and the stingiest old +skinflint that ever breathed. Natty has been with her over a year now, +as a sort of companion, and a fine time she has with the old toad, I +know." + +"And there is no doubt Miss Marsh is to be her heiress?" + +"None at all--the will is made and in the hands of Darcy, her lawyer. +She has no children, and no relatives that ever I heard of nearer than +Miss Marsh. She was old Leroy's servant when he married her--it happened +in New York, where he made his money. This place, Redmon, was to be +sold for debt; Leroy bid it in dirt cheap, and rented it, employing +Darcy as his agent to collect rents, for there is quite a village +attached to it. After the old fellow's death, a year and a half ago, his +venerable relict came here, took up her abode at Redmon, with as great +an oddity as herself for a servant. She took a great fancy to pretty +Natty after awhile, and got her to go up there and reside as companion." + +"And those Marshes--what are they? like the rest of Speckport--begging +your pardon!--nobody?" + +"Family, you mean? That question is so like an Englishman. The father +was a gentleman. His profession was that of engineer, and his family, I +have heard, was something extra in England; but he made a low marriage +over here, and they would have nothing more to do with him. Mrs. Marsh +was pretty, and as insipid as a mug of milk and water, caring for +nothing in the world wide but sitting in a rocking-chair reading novels. +He married her, though; and they lived quite in style until Charley was +fourteen and Natty twelve years old. Then Mr. Marsh had a stroke of +paralysis which left him altogether incapable of attending to his +business, of doing anything, in fact, but teaching. He started a school, +and got a salary for playing the organ in the cathedral, but he only +lived two years after. Before he died they had to give up their fine +house, dismiss their servants, auction their furniture, and rent the +cottage they live in now. Miss Natty, sir, kept the school, gave +music-lessons after hours, took the organ Sundays, and supported the +family for the next three years; in point of fact, does to this day." + +"How is that?" said Captain Cavendish. "Mrs. Leroy pays her a salary as +companion, I suppose?" + +"She does; but that's only a pittance, wouldn't pay her mother's bills +in the circulating library. Natty refused to go to Redmon unless under +certain conditions. She would retain the school, the organ, and her +music pupils as usual, only she would engage another teacher for the +school, coming there one hour a day to superintend. That would take +about four hours a day, the rest was at the service of Lady Leroy. Her +ladyship grumbled, but had to consent; so Natty went to live up at +Redmon, and between all has her hands full." + +"She is indeed a brave girl! What are her duties at the old lady's?" + +"No trifle! She reads to her, retails all the news of the town, writes +her letters, keeps her accounts, receives the rents, makes out the +receipts, oversees the household--does a thousand things besides. If she +had as many hands as what's his name, the fellow in the +mythology,--Briareus, wasn't it?--the old vixen would keep them all +occupied. By the way, did you see Charley this morning when you were +in?" + +"I wasn't in, I left Miss Natty at the door. I say, Val, you didn't tell +me last night who that pretty girl was I saw him with in the window. She +was not a guest, though I'll take my oath there wasn't a young lady +present half so pretty, save the belle of Speckport herself. Who was +she?" + +"Cherrie, otherwise Miss Charlotte Nettleby. A little flirting piece of +conceit. She has had the young men of Speckport tagging after her. Rumor +set Charley down lately as one of her killed or wounded; but Speckport +is always gossiping, and I paid no attention to it. It seems it's true +though, for that young scamp Blair in the next room saw him escorting +her home this morning." + +"What was she doing at the house if not invited!" + +"How should I know? Cherrie is everywhere--she knows the servants, I +suppose." + +"Oh, is that it? Then she is nobody." + +"I wish she heard you! If ever any one thought themselves somebody it's +the same Miss Cherrie. She aspires to be a lady--bless your heart!--and +that foolish boy is to be entrapped into marrying her." + +Val stopped to knock the ashes off his cigar. + +"Well; and what then?" asked the captain. + +"Why, Natty will go frantic, that is all. She thinks the Princess Royal +not half good enough for Charley." + +"Is Miss Cherrie's position in life so low, then?" + +"It's not that. Her father is a gardener, a poor man, but honest and +respectable enough. It's Cherrie herself; she's a shallow, vain, silly +little beauty, as ever made fools of men, and her vanity, and her +idleness, and her dress, and her flirtations are the scandal of the +town. Not that anything worse can be said of little Cherrie, mind; but +she is not the girl for Charley Marsh to marry." + +"Charley is a gentleman; perhaps he isn't going to marry her," suggested +Captain Cavendish, with a light laugh, that told more of his character +than folios could have done. + +"Being a gentleman," said Val, with emphasis, "he means to marry her if +he means anything at all." + +And the young officer shrugged his shoulders. + +"_Chacun à son goût._ I must be going, I believe. Here I have been +trespassing on your time these two hours." + +"The day's young yet," said Val; "have you any engagement for this +evening?" + +"I believe not, except a dinner at the mess-room, which can be shirked." + +"Then come up to Redmon. If you are a student of character, Mrs. Leroy +will amply repay the trouble." + +"I'm there! but not," said Captain Cavendish, laughing, "to see Mrs. +Leroy." + +"I understand. Well, good morning." + +"Until then, _au revoir_." + +Mr. Bill Blair, perched on his high stool, his elbows spread out on the +desk, stared at him as he went out. + +"Cracky, what a rum swell them officer chaps are? I say, Clowrie, +wouldn't Cherrie like that cove for a beau? He would be safe to win if +he tried it on, and Charley Marsh would be where you are now--nowhere." + +And little did Mr. William Blair or his hearers think he was uttering a +prophecy. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE. + + +Captain Cavendish, looking very handsome and distinguished in the +admiring eyes of Speckport, lounged down Queen Street, and down half a +dozen other streets, toward the sea-shore. The tide was ebbing as he +descended to the beach, and the long, lazy swell breaking on the strand +was singing the old everlasting song it has sung through all time. Its +mysterious music was lost on Captain Cavendish; his thoughts were +hundreds of miles away. Not very pleasant thoughts, either, judging by +his contracted brow and compressed lips, as he leaned against a tall +rock, his eyes looking out to sea. He started up after awhile, with a +gesture of impatience. + +"Pshaw!" he said; "what's the use of thinking of it now? it's all past +and gone. It is Fate, I suppose; and if Fate has ordained I must marry a +rich wife or none, where is the good of my puny struggles? But poor +little Winnie! I have been the greatest villain that ever was known to +you." + +He walked along the beach, sending pebbles skimming over the waves as he +went. Two fishermen in oilcloth trowsers, very scaly and rattling, were +drawing up their boat, laden to the water's edge with gaspereaux, all +alive and kicking. Captain Cavendish stopped and looked at them. + +"Your freight looks lively, my men. You have got a fine boatload there." + +The two young men looked at him. They were tall, strapping, sunburnt, +black-eyed, good-looking fellows both, and the one hauling up the boat +answered; the other, pulling the fish out of the nets, went on with his +work in silence. + +"Yes, sir, we had a good haul last night. The freshet's been strong +this spring, and has made the fishing good." + +"Were you out all night?" + +"Yes; we have to go when the tide suits." + +"You had a foggy night for it, then. Can you tell me which is the road +to Redmon?" + +The young fisherman turned and pointed to a path going up the hillside +from the shore. + +"Do you see that path? Well, follow it; cut across the field, and let +down the bars t'other side. There's a road there; keep straight on and +it will fetch you to Redmon. You can't miss the house when you get to +it; it's a big brick building on a sort of hill, with lots of trees +around it." + +"Thank you. I'll find it, I think." + +He sauntered lazily up the hillside-path, cut across the fields, and let +down the bars as he had been directed, putting them conscientiously up +again. + +The road was a very quiet one; green meadows on either hand, and clumps +of cedar and spruce wood sparsely dotting it here and there. The breeze +swept up cool and fresh from the sea; the town with its bustle and noise +was out of sight and hearing. + +He was walking so slowly that it was nearly half an hour before Redmon +came in sight--a large weather-beaten brick house on the summit of a +hill, with bleak corners and reedy marshes, and dark trees all around +it, the whole inclosed by a high wooden fence. The place took its name +from these marshes or moors about it, sown in some time with crimson +cranberries and pigeonberries, like fields of red stars. But Captain +Cavendish only glanced once at Redmon; for the instant it had come in +sight something else had come in sight, too, a thousand times better +worth looking at. Just outside the extremity of the fence nearest him +there stood a cottage--a little whitewashed affair, standing out in +dazzling contrast to the black cedar woods beside it, hop-vines +clustering round its door and windows, and a tall gate at one side +opening into a well-cultivated vegetable garden. + +Swinging back and forward on this gate was a young girl, whom Captain +Cavendish recognized in a moment. It was a face that few young men +forgot easily, for its owner was a beauty born; the figure was petite +and plump, delightfully rounded and ripe indeed, with no nasty sharp +curves or harsh angles; the complexion dark and clear, the forehead low, +with black, arching brows; the eyes like black beads; the cheeks like +June roses; the lips as red, and ripe, and sweet as summer strawberries, +the teeth they parted to disclose, literally like pearls, and they +parted very often, indeed, to disclose them. The hair was black as hair +can be, and all clustering in little short, shining rings and kinks +about the forehead and neck. Captain Cavendish had seen that face for +the first time last night, in the window with Charley Marsh, but he was +a sufficiently good judge of physiognomy to know it was not necessary to +be very ceremonious with Miss Cherrie Nettleby. He therefore advanced at +once, with a neat little fiction at the top of his tongue. + +"I beg your pardon," he said politely, "but I am very thirsty. Will you +be kind enough to give me a drink?" + +Miss Cherrie, though but nineteen in years, was forty at least in +penetration where handsome men were concerned, and saw through the ruse +at once. She sprang down from the gate and held it open, with the +prettiest affectation of timidity in the world. + +"Yes, sir. Will you please to walk in." + +"Thank you," said the captain, languidly, "I believe I will. My walk has +completely used me up." + +Miss Cherrie led the way into the cottage. The front door opened +directly into the parlor of the dwelling, a neat little room, the floor +covered with mats; a table, with books and knicknacks in the center; a +lounge and a rocking-chair, and some common colored prints on the walls. +It had an occupant as they came in, a sallow, dark-eyed girl of sixteen, +whose hands fairly flew as she sat at the window, netting on a +fisherman's net, already some twenty fathoms long. + +"Ann," said Cherrie, placing a chair for their distinguished visitor, +"go and fetch the gentleman a drink." + +The girl turned her sallow but somewhat sullen face, without rising. + +"There ain't no water in," she said, curtly. + +"Go for some now," said Cherrie. "I'll knit till you come back." + +"No, no!" hastily interposed Captain Cavendish. "I beg you will give +yourself no such trouble. I am not so thirsty as I thought I was." + +"Oh, we'll want the water anyhow to get the boys' dinner," said Cherrie, +throwing off her scarlet shawl. "Go, Ann, and make haste." + +Ann got up crossly, and strolled out of the room at a snail's pace, and +Miss Cherrie took her place, and went to work industriously. + +"Is that your sister?" he asked, watching Cherrie's hand flying as +swiftly in and out as Ann's had done. + +"Yes, that's our Ann," replied the young lady, as if every one should +know Ann, as a matter of course. + +"And do you and Ann live here alone together?" + +Cherrie giggled at the idea. + +"Oh dear, no. There's father and the boys." + +"The boys, and are they----" + +"My brothers," said Cherrie. "Two of 'em, Rob and Eddie. They fish, you +know, and Ann, she knits the nets." + +"Are those you are now making for them?" + +"Yes, these are shad-nets. I hate to knit, but the boys pay Ann for +doing it, and she does them all. I guess you'll be pretty thirsty," said +Cherrie, laughing as easily as if she had known him for the past ten +years, "before Ann gets back with the water. She's horrid slow." + +"Never mind. The longer she is away, the better I shall like it, Miss +Cherrie." + +Miss Cherrie dropped her needle and mesh-block, and opened her black +eyes. + +"Why, how did you find out my name? You don't know me, do you?" + +"A little. I trust we shall be very well acquainted before long." + +Cherrie smiled graciously. + +"Everybody knows me, I think. How did you find out who I was?" + +"I saw you last night." + +"No! did you, though? What time? where was I?" + +"Sitting in a window, breaking a young gentleman's heart." + +Cherrie giggled again. + +"I'm sure I wasn't doing any such thing. That was only Charley Marsh." + +"Only Charley Marsh. Had you and he a pleasant walk home this morning?" + +"Now, I never. How did you know he saw me home?" + +"A little bird told me. I only wish it had been my good fortune." + +"Oh, what a story!" cried Cherrie, her wicked black eyes dancing in her +head; "I wonder you ain't ashamed! Didn't I hear you wanting to ride +home with Miss Natty. I was peeking out through the dining-room door, +and I heard you as plain as could be." + +"Well, I wanted to be polite, you know. Not having the honor of your +acquaintance, Cherrie, I knew there was no hope of escorting you; so I +made the offer to Miss Marsh in sheer despair. Now, Cherrie, I don't +want you to get too fond of that brother of hers." + +Cherrie tittered once more. + +"Now, how can you! I'm sure I don't care nothing about him; but I can't +help his talking to me, and seeing me home, can I?" + +"I don't know. I wouldn't talk too much to him, if I were you; and as +for seeing you home, I'd rather do it myself. There is no telling what +nonsense he may get talking! Does he come here often?" + +"Pretty often; but all the young fellows come! Sandy McGregor, Jake +Clowrie, Mr. Blake, Charley Marsh, and the whole lot of 'em!" + +"What time do they come?" + +"Evenings, mostly. Then, there's a whole lot of Bob and Eddie's friends +come, too, and the house is full most every night!" + +"And what do you all do?" + +"Oh, ever so many things! Play cards, sing songs, and carry on, and +dance, sometimes." + +"May I come, too, Cherrie?" + +"You may, if you like," said Cherrie, with coquettish indifference. "But +the young ladies in Speckport won't like that!" + +"What do I care for the young ladies in Speckport! Oh, here's the +water!" + +Ann came in with a glass, and the captain drank it without being the +least thirsty. + +"Bob and Eddie's coming up the road," said Ann to her sister; "you knit +while I peel the potatoes for dinner." + +"I am afraid I must go," said Captain Cavendish, rising, having no +desire to make the acquaintance of the Messrs. Nettleby. "I have been +here nearly half an hour." + +"That ain't long, I'm sure," said Cherrie; "what's your hurry?" + +"I have a call to make. May I come again, Miss Cherrie?" + +"Oh, of course!" said Miss Cherrie, with perfect coolness; "we always +like to see our friends. Are you going to Redmon?" + +Captain Cavendish nodded, and took his hat. Pretty Cherrie got up to +escort him to the gate. + +"Good-bye, Miss Cherrie," he said, making her a flourishing bow. "I will +have the pleasure of calling on you to-morrow." + +Cherrie smiled most gracious consent. + +As he turned out of the gate he encountered the two young fishermen who +had directed him to Redmon. They were Cherrie's brothers, then; and, +laughing inwardly at the memory of the late interview with that young +lady, he entered the grounds of Redmon. + +"She's a deuced pretty girl!" he said, slapping his boot with a rattan +he carried; "and, faith, she's free and easy! No nonsensical prudery +about Miss Cherrie. I only hope I may get on as well with the +golden-haired heiress as I seem to have done with the black-eyed +grisette!" + +He opened the wooden gate, and sauntered along a bleak avenue, the +grounds on either hand overrun with rank weeds, and spruce, and +tamarack, and fir trees, casting somber gloom around. + +The house, a great red barn, as Val had said, looked like a black, grimy +jail; the shutters were closed on every window, the hall-door seemed +hermetically sealed, and swallows flew about it, and built their nests +in security on the eaves and down the chimneys. There was a great, grim +iron knocker on the door, and the young man's knock reverberated with a +hollow and ghostly echo through the weird house. + +"What a place for such a girl to live in!" he thought, looking up at it. +"Her desire for wealth must be strong to tempt her to bury herself alive +in such an old tomb. The riches of the Rothschilds would not induce me." + +A rusty key grated in a lock, the door swung open with a creaking sound, +and the bright face of Nathalie Marsh looked out. + +She smiled when she saw who it was, and frankly held out her hand. + +"You have lost no time, Monsieur. Walk in, and please to excuse me a few +moments. I must go back to Mrs. Leroy." + +They were in a long and dismal hall, flanked with doors, and with a +great, wide, old-fashioned staircase sweeping up and losing itself +somehow in the upper gloom. Natty opened one of the doors, ushered him +into the reception parlor of the establishment, and then flew swiftly up +the stairs and was gone. + +Captain Cavendish looked about him, that is, as well as he could for the +gloom. The parlor of Redmon was furnished after the style of the cabin +of a certain "fine ould Irish gintleman," immortalized in song, "with +nothing at all for show." No carpet on the dreary Sahara of floor; no +curtains on the gloomy windows; no pictures on the dead, blank waste of +whitewashed walls; a few chairs, a black, old mahogany table, a dreary +horsehair sofa, about as soft as if cushioned with bricks; and that was +all. The silence of the place was something blood-chilling; not the +squeak of a mouse relieved its deathlike quiet. + +Five, ten, fifteen, twenty minutes passed, and the captain, getting +desperate, was seriously thinking of making his escape, when a light +step came tripping down the stairs, and Natty, all breathless and +laughing, came breezily in. + +"Are you tired to death waiting?" she laughed gayly. "Mrs. Leroy is +dreadfully tiresome over her toilet, and I am femme de chambre, if you +please! It is over now, and she desires me to escort you to her +presence, and be introduced. I hope you may make a favorable +impression!" + +"But what am I to do?" said Captain Cavendish, with an appalled face. +"How am I to insinuate myself into her good graces? Where is the key to +her heart?" + +"The key was lost years ago, and her heart is now closed. Don't +contradict her, whatever you do. Hush! here we are!" + +They had ascended to a hall like the one below; flanked, like it, by +doors. Natty, with a glance of wicked delight at his dolorous face, +opened the first door to the right, and ushered him at once into the +presence of the awful Lady Leroy. + +Something--it certainly looked more like an Egyptian mummy than anything +else--swathed in shawls and swaddling-clothes, was stuck up in a vast +Sleepy Hollow open arm-chair, and had its face turned to the door. That +face, and a very yellow, and seared, and wrinkled, and unlovely face it +was, buried in the flapping obscurity of a deeply-frilled white cap, was +lit by a pair of little, twinkling eyes, bright and keen as two +stilettos. + +"Mrs. Leroy," said Natty, her tone demure, but her mischievous eyes +dancing under their lashes, "this is Captain Cavendish." + +"How d'ye do, Captain Cavendish?" said Mrs. Leroy, in a shrill, +squeaking voice, like a penny whistle out of tune; "sit down--do! Natty, +can't you give the young man a cheer?" + +Natty did not cheer, but she placed a chair for him, whispering, as she +did so, "Speak loud, or she won't hear you." + +"What's the weather like out o' doors?" inquired the old lady, scanning +him from head to foot with her little piercing eyes; "be the sun +a-shining, hey?" + +"No, Madam," said Captain Cavendish, in a loud key, "it is foggy." + +She had paid no attention to his reply; she had been staring at him all +the time, until even he, cool as any man of the world could be, got a +trifle disconcerted. Natty, sitting demurely near, was enjoying it all +with silent but intense delight. + +"So you're the young English captain Natty was telling me about. You're +not so handsome as she said you were; leastways, you ain't to my taste!" + +It was Natty's turn now to look disconcerted, which she did with a +vengeance, as the dark, laughing eyes of the young officer turned upon +her. + +"Miss Marsh does me too much honor to mention me at all," he said, +speaking more at the young lady than to the old one. + +"Hey?" inquired Lady Leroy, shrilly. "What's that? What did you say?" + +"I was saying how remarkably well you were looking, ma'am," said the +captain, raising his voice, "and that this Redmon is a very fine old +place." + +"It's not!" screamed Lady Leroy, viciously; "it's the hatefulest, +daftest, uncomfortablest hole ever anybody set foot in! Natty!" + +"Yes, ma'am!" said Natty. "What is it?" + +"Is old Nettleby planting them potatoes to-day?" + +"Yes, of course he is." + +"He'll plant Carters where he ought to plant Early Blues! I know he +will!" cried the old lady in an ecstasy of alarm; "run out as fast as +you can, Natty, and tell him not to plant any Carters in the +three-cornered field. Run, run, run!" + +Natty knew Lady Leroy a great deal too well to expostulate. "I will be +back directly," she said, in a low voice, the laughing light in her eyes +still, as she passed her visitor; "do not get into trouble if you can +help it, in my absence." + +She was gone, and Lady Leroy, with her eyes fixed on the opposite wall, +seemed to have gone off into a fit of musing. Captain Cavendish tried to +look about him, which he had not ventured to do before, under those +basilisk eyes. It was a large square room, like all the rest in the +house, and stiflingly close and warm. No wonder, for a small +cooking-stove was burning away, and every window was closed and +shuttered. A bed stood in one corner, an old-fashioned clock ticked in a +loud hoarse voice on the mantel-piece, a small round table stood at the +old lady's elbow, and the floor was covered with a carpet that had been +Brussels once, but which was dirty, and colorless, and ragged now. There +was an open cupboard with dishes, and a sort of pantry with a half glass +door, through which he could see boxes and barrels, hams and dried beef, +and other commissary stores. The chair matched the flinty sofa down +stairs, and the only thing to attract attention in the room was a green +cabinet of covered wood that stood beside the bed. While he was looking +at it, the old-fashioned clock began striking twelve in a gruff and +surly way, as if it did it against its better judgment. The sound woke +the old lady up from her brown study--woke her up with a sharp jerk. + +"It's twelve o'clock!" she exclaimed shrilly, "and I want my dinner! +Call Midge!" + +This was addressed to Captain Cavendish, and in so peremptory a tone +that that gallant young officer looked alarmed and disconcerted. + +"Call Midge, I tell you! Call her quick!" yelped Lady Leroy in an +excited way. "Call Midge, will you!" + +"Where is she? Where will I call her?" said the young man, in +considerable consternation. + +"Open that door, stupid, and call Midge!" cried the old woman, violently +excited; "call her quick, I tell you!" + +Thus ordered, Captain Cavendish opened the door and began calling loudly +on the unknown lady bearing the name of Midge. + +Out of the gloom and dismalness below a hoarse voice shouted in reply, +"I'm a coming;" and Captain Cavendish went back to his seat. The voice +was that of a man, and of a man with a shocking bad cold, too; and the +step lumbering up stairs was a man's step; but for all that, Midge +wasn't a man, but a woman. Such a woman! the Egyptian mummy in the +arm-chair was a Parisian belle compared to her. Between three and four +feet high, and between four and five feet broad, Midge was just able to +waddle under the weight of her own fair person, and no more. A shock of +hair, very like a tar-mop, stood, bristling defiance at combs and +brushes, up on end, like "quills upon the fretful porcupine." To say she +had no forehead, and only two pinholes for eyes, and a little round lump +of flesh in lieu of a decent nose, would be doing no sort of justice to +the subject; for the face, with its fat, puffy cheeks, was altogether +indescribable. The costume of the lady was scant, her dress displaying +to the best advantage a pair of ankles some fifteen inches in +circumference, and a pair of powerful arms, bare to the shoulders, were +rolled up in a cotton apron. With the airy tread of an elephant inclined +to embonpoint, this sylph-like being crossed the hall and stood in the +doorway awaiting orders, while Captain Cavendish stared aghast, and +backed a few paces with a feeble "By Jove!" + +"What do you want, ma'am?" inquired the damsel in the doorway, who might +have been anywhere in the vale of years between twenty and fifty. + +"Get my dinner! It's after twelve! Don't I always tell you to come and +get my dinner when you hear the clock strike twelve?" + +"And how do you suppose I can hear that there clock half a mile off, +down in that kitchen!" retorted Midge, sharply. "I ain't jest got ears +as sharp as lancets, I'd have you know. I'll take the key!" + +Mrs. Leroy produced a key from a pocket somewhere about her; and Midge, +rather jerking it out of her hands than otherwise, unlocked the pantry, +and began busying herself among the forage there. Mrs. Leroy's keen eyes +followed every motion as a cat follows its prey, and Captain Cavendish +gazed too, as if fascinated, on the fairy form of Miss Midge. In passing +to and fro, Midge had more than once caught his eye, and at last her +feelings got the better of her, and, pausing abruptly before him, with +her arms akimbo, burst out, "Look here, sir! I don't know who you are, +but if you're a doggertype-man, come to take my picter, I'd jest thank +you to be quick about it, and not sit there gaping like----" + +"Midge!" called a ringing voice in the doorway. It was Nathalie, her +face stern, her voice imperative. "Midge, how dare you speak so?" + +"Oh, never mind!" said Captain Cavendish, who, in the main, was a +good-natured young officer. "I deserve it, I dare say. I have made an +unpardonably long call, I believe. Mrs. Leroy, I wish you good morning." + +"Good morning!" said Mrs. Leroy, without looking at him, all her eyes +being absorbed in the doings of Midge in the culinary department. +"Natty, you let him out." + +Natty did so, and they both laughed when at a safe distance. + +"What did you do to Midge?" she inquired, "to tempt her to pour the +vials of her wrath on your head, as she was doing when I came in." + +"Staring very hard, I am afraid! Where is Barnum, that he does not get +hold of that domestic monstrosity?" + +"Oh, hush!" said Natty. But the warning came too late. Midge, descending +the stairs, had heard the speech, and gave the speaker a look so baleful +and vindictive, that, had he been troubled with those feminine miseries, +nerves, might have haunted him many a day. He smiled at it then, but he +remembered that look long after. + +"She is acutely sensitive, dull as she seems," said Natty, with a pained +look. "I am sorry she heard you." + +"I am sincerely sorry for my thoughtless words, then, Miss Marsh, if +they pain you." + +"She saved Charley's life once," said Natty, "when he was a little +fellow. I have always liked Midge since, and I believe she loves me with +the faithful and blind fidelity of--but no irreverence--a dog. A +slighting word rankles in her memory long." + +"I shall fetch her a peace-offering the next time I come, which, by the +way," he said, coolly, "is to be this evening, with your permission. +Blake is to be my chaperon on the occasion." + +"I regret I shall not see either of you then; but," said Natty, with a +funny look, "no doubt Mrs. Leroy will be delighted to entertain you till +her bedtime comes, which is precisely nine o'clock." + +"Not see us? Are you----" + +"I have promised to spend the evening out. When I was with the gardener +a few moments ago, Miss Blake came in and asked me to spend the evening +with her. Mamma and Miss Rose, the new teacher, are to be there, and I +could not refuse." + +"Then I shall postpone my call. Oh, there is a summons for you! How +impatient your old lady is!" + +They shook hands, and parted. Captain Cavendish lit a cigar, and went +smoking, meditatingly, down the dreary avenue, and out into the +highroad. Standing near the gate was pretty Cherrie, and a refulgent +smile greeted him from the rosy lips. He lifted his hat, and passed on; +for standing in the doorway was the stalwart young fishermen of the +beach. + +"Two very pretty girls!" he mused, over his Havana; "_belle blonde, et +jolie brunette_. It's extremely convenient their living so near +together; one journey does for both. I think I understand now what is +meant by the old adage of killing two birds with one stone." + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +AN EVENING AT MISS BLAKE'S. + + +The establishment of Miss Joanna Blake was not on a scale of +magnificence. Miss Jo's only parlor being about ten feet square, was not +too grandly vast at any time, and not exactly adapted for the mirthful +throng to disport themselves in. The style of furniture, too, was, some +people might think, on a trifle too grand a scale for its dimensions. +When Val, and his fourteen or fifteen friends aforesaid, lit their +cigars, tilted back their chairs, elevated the heels of their boots on +the piano or table, and all puffed away together, the parlor became +rather obscure, and a stranger suddenly entering might have conceived +the idea that the house was in flames; and that, perhaps, was the reason +the parlor always smelt like a tobacconist's shop. Besides the parlor, +Miss Jo had a dining-room and a kitchen, and two bedrooms, in the floor, +though, and she did her own work. + +In the parlor of No. 16 Great St. Peter's Street, the lamp was lit, the +drab moreen curtains let down, and the table set for tea. There was a +snowy cloth on the mahogany which hid the marks of the bootheels and the +stains of the punch-tumblers, and the china cups and saucers, and the +glass preserve-plates and butter-dish, and spoon-holder, not to speak of +the spoons themselves, which were of real silver, and had cost a dollar +a piece, and had a big capital "B" engraven thereon, glittered and +flashed in the light. There was buttered toast, and hot biscuit, and +pound-cake, and fruit-cake, and mince-pie, and quince-jelly, and cold +chicken, and coffee and tea--all the work of Miss Jo's own fair hands; +and Miss Jo herself, rather flushed with the heat, but very imposing and +stately to look at in a green poplin dress--real Irish poplin at +that--and a worked collar a finger-length deep, presided at the +tea-tray, and dispensed the hospitalities of the festive board. Val, +sitting opposite, did his part, which consisted chiefly in attempting to +pass the cake-plates, and spilling their contents, of upsetting +everything he touched, and looking mildly but reproachfully at the +refractory object afterward. Mrs. Marsh was there, placid, and insipid, +and faded, and feeble, as usual; and Miss Rose was there, pale and +pretty; and Miss Clowrie was there, smiling and soft of voice, and deft +of touch, and purring more than ever; and Miss Blair was there, laughing +at all the funny things, and rosy as Hebe herself; and Charley Marsh was +there, making a martyr of himself in the attempt to be fascinating to +three young ladies at once; and everybody had eaten and drank, forced +thereto by Miss Blake, until they were, as Charley forcibly put it, "a +misery to themselves." So a move was made to adjourn, which just +consisted of pushing their chairs about five inches from the table, not +being able to push them any further, and Miss Jo began rattling among +the tea-things, which she called clearing them off. Miss Catty, always +sweet and obliging, and that sort of a thing, insisted on helping her, +and Charley opening the upright, clattered a "Fisher's Hornpipe" in +spirited style. + +"Come and sing us a song, Laura--that's a good girl," he said, while +Val, making an apology, slipped out. "Come and sing 'The Laird o' +Cockpen.'" + +Miss Blair, all smiles, took her seat, and sung not only "The Laird o' +Cockpen," but a dozen others of the same kidney. + +"What do you think of that?" inquired Miss Blair, triumphantly rising +up, with a finishing bang. "Who says I can't sing? Now, Miss Rose, you +sing, I know." + +"Of course she does," said Charley. "Miss Rose, permit me to lead you to +the instrument." + +Miss Rose looked as though she were about to excuse herself, but that +impulsive Laura Blair ran over and caught her by both hands. + +"Up with you! We won't take any excuses. Charley, the young lady is at +your mercy, lead her off." + +Charley promptly did so. Miss Rose, smiling graciously, ran her white +fingers over the yellow keys, and looked up at him. + +"What shall I sing, Monsieur?" + +"Anything you please, Mademoiselle. I am prepared to be delighted with +'Old Dan Tucker,' if you chose it." + +The white fingers still ran idly over the keys, breaking into a +plaintive prelude at last, and in a voice, "low and sweet" as Annie +Laurie's own, the song began. The words were those of a gifted young +American poetess; the melody, a low sweet air, in a melancholy minor +key--Miss Rose's own, perhaps. + +The sweet voice faltered a little toward the close; but as a buzz of +congratulation ran around the circle she arose hastily. Arose to find +herself face to face with two gentlemen who had entered as she began her +song, and who had stood silently listening with the rest. It was Captain +Cavendish and Val; and the young officer's face wore a look no one in +that room had ever seen it wear before--a pale and startled look of +anxiety, almost of fear--and as she faced them he backed a few paces +involuntarily. Miss Rose, evidently taken completely by surprise, +started visibly, growing white and red by turns. But Val was introducing +them, and only he and one other present saw the changing faces of the +twain. That other was Miss Catty Clowrie, whose eyes were as keen as any +other cat's, and who watched them furtively, with vividest interest. +Miss Catty was enough of a mathematician to know there is no effect +without a cause. What, then, was the cause of this? It was easily enough +answered. Captain Cavendish and Miss Rose had met before, and had known +each other well, though they were now bowing as perfect strangers. The +elegant officer had recovered all his high-bred sangfroid, and was +smooth and bland as sweet oil; but Miss Rose's face had settled into so +deadly a pallor that Mrs. Marsh, albeit not the most eagle-sighted in +the world, noticed it. + +"Dear me, Miss Rose, how pale you are! Aren't you well?" + +Miss Rose murmured something about the heat, and subsided into the most +shadowy corner she could find; and Charley created a diversion by +sitting down to the piano himself and rattling off a jingling symphony. + +In the midst of it carriage wheels rolled up to the door of No. 16, and +the first-floor bell rang loudly a minute after. + +"That's Natty," said Charley. + +Miss Jo met her in the hall and escorted her to her bedroom, which was +the dressing-room for the evening; and presently Miss Nathalie came in, +dressed in black silk, trimmed with black lace, and all her beautiful +golden hair falling in glittering ringlets over her shoulders, her +cheeks glowing with the rapid ride through the night air. Brilliant she +looked; and Captain Cavendish's heart, or whatever the thing is that +does duty for a heart with men of the world, quickened its beating a +little, as he shook hands. Nathalie kissed Miss Rose, sitting so very +still in her quiet corner. + +"My pale little girl! Here you sit like a white shadow, all by yourself. +Charley, what on earth are you shouting there?" + +"Now, Natty, it's your turn," said Miss Jo. + +"Here's the cards," said Charley, laying hold of a pack. "While Natty's +singing we'll play 'Muggins.' Does anybody here know 'Muggins'?" + +Nobody did. + +"What a disgrace! Then I'll teach you. Miss Jo, I'll sit beside you. +Come along, captain; here Laura, Catty, Val, mother; Miss Rose, won't +you join us?" + +"Don't, Miss Rose," said Natty, who was playing a waltz. "They're +nothing but a noisy set. Come here and sing with me." + +Natty sung everything--Italian arias, French chansonettes, German and +Scotch ballads; her full, rich soprano voice filling the room with +melody, as on Sundays it filled the long cathedral aisles. Natty's voice +was superb--Miss Rose listened like one entranced. So did another, +Captain Cavendish, who made all sorts of blunders in the game, and could +not learn it at all, for watching the two black figures at the +piano--the little pale girl with the modest brown braids, and the +stately heiress with her shining yellow curls. Catty Clowrie watched +them and the captain, and the game too, noting everything, and making no +mistakes. A very noisy party they were, every one laughing, +expostulating, and straining their voices together, and Charley winning +everything right and left. + +"I say, Cavendish, old fellow! what are you thinking of?" cried Val. +"This is the third time I've told you to play." + +Captain Cavendish started into recollection, and began playing with the +wildest rapidity, utterly at random. + +"Look here, Natty," called Charley, as the card-party, more noisy than +ever, broke up; "I say it's not fair of you to monopolize Miss Rose all +the evening. Here's Captain Cavendish has lost all his spare change, +because he couldn't watch the game for watching that piano." + +Miss Rose retreated hastily to her corner; Natty wheeled round on the +piano-stool. + +"What noise you have been making. Have you finished your game?" + +Charley jingled a pocketful of pennies--Speckport pennies at that--as +large as quoits. + +"Yes, we have finished, for the simple reason I have cleaned the whole +party completely out, and I have won small change enough to keep me in +cigars for the next two months. Who's this?" + +"It's somebody for me," said Natty, starting up; "that's Rob Nettleby's +knock." + +"Don't go yet, Natty," said Val, "it is too early." + +"It is half-past ten; I should have been off half an hour ago. Miss +Blake, my things, please." + +Miss Jo produced a white cloud and large cloak, and Natty's move was a +signal for all to depart. Catty, Laura, Miss Rose, and Mrs. Marsh's +mufflings had to be got, and the little parlor was a scene of "confusion +worse confounded." + +Val strolled over to where Captain Cavendish was making himself useful, +helping Miss Marsh on with her cloak. + +"Natty, I'll go home with you, if you like," said polite Val; "it will +be rather a dismal drive up there with no one but Rob Nettleby." + +"Mr. Blake is forestalled," said Captain Cavendish, coolly. "Miss Marsh +has accorded the honor to me." + +"All right," said Val, "I'll go home with Laura Blair, then. Charley can +take care of the other three, for Catty lives next door." + +Lady Leroy's carryall, with Cherrie Nettleby's elder brother for driver, +was waiting at the door. Good-byes were said, Natty kissed her mamma, +Laura and Miss Rose, but only shook hands with Miss Clowrie. Captain +Cavendish noticed the omission as he seated himself beside her, and they +drove off. + +"I don't like her," said Natty; "I never did, since I was a child. She +was such a crafty, cunning little thing in those days--a sort of spy on +the rest of us--a sort of female Uriah Heep." + +"Is she so still?" + +"Oh, no; she is well enough now; but old prejudices cling to one, you +know. I don't like her, because I don't like her--an excellent female +reason, you understand." + +"Does your brother share your prejudices, Miss Marsh?" asked the young +officer, with a meaning smile. + +"Charley? I don't know. Why?" + +"Because I fancy the young lady is rather disposed to regard him with +favor. I may be mistaken, though." + +Natty suddenly drew herself up. + +"I think you are mistaken, Captain Cavendish. Catty Clowrie has sense, +whatever else she may lack, and never would dream of so preposterous a +thing." + +"Pardon! it has been my mistake, then. You seem to be all old friends in +this place." + +"Oh," said Natty, with her gay laugh, "every one knows every one else in +Speckport, and a stranger is a marked being at once. Apropos of +strangers, what a perfect darling that Miss Rose is." + +"How very young-ladylike! Miss Rose does not sound like a family name; +has she no other cognomen?" + +"Her letter to me was signed W. Rose. I don't know what the 'W' is for. +I think she has the sweetest face I ever saw." + +"What a lovely night it is?" was Captain Cavendish's somewhat irrelevant +answer; and had the moon been shining, Natty might have seen the flush +his face wore. Perhaps it was the sea-breeze, though; for it was blowing +up fresh and bracing, and a host of stars spangled a sky of cloudless +blue. The monotonous plash of the waves on the shore came dully booming +over the rattle of their own carriage-wheels. + +"What are the wild waves saying? Miss Rose and I have a bond of sympathy +between us: we both love the sea. I suppose," said Natty, going off into +another subject, "Mrs. Leroy will read me a lecture for my long stay, +when I get back." + +"Will she not be asleep?" + +"Asleep? No, indeed; I believe if I staid out for a week she would never +close an eye until I got back." + +"Is she so very fond of you, then?" + +"It is not that; though I think she is as fond of me as it is in her +nature to be of anything, except," with another laugh, "eating and +money. It is fear that keeps her awake; she dreads being left alone." + +"Why? Not from an evil conscience, I trust." + +"For shame, sir. No, she always keeps a large sum of money in her +chamber--you saw that queer cabinet--well, in that; and she is terribly +scared of robbers, in spite of all our bolts and bars." + +"She should not keep it about her, then." + +"Very true; but she will. I sleep in the room next hers, and I presume +she feels my presence there a sort of safeguard against burglars. In +Midge she has no confidence whatever." + +"And yet I should consider Midge the greatest possible safeguard. The +sight of her might scare away an army of robbers." + +"Now, now!" cried Natty. "I shall not have Midge abused. She is the most +faithful and trustworthy creature that ever lived." + +"Perhaps so; but you will own that she is not the most lovely. When I +was a boy at Eton, I used to read German legends of beautiful +princesses guarded by malignant spirits, in uncouth human forms. I +thought of the stories this morning when I was at Redmon." + +"That's a compliment, I suppose," said Natty, "but I don't relish +compliments, I can tell you, at Midge's expense. Here we are at the +cottage." + +"What cottage is it?" Captain Cavendish asked, forgetting suddenly that +he had spent half an hour there that very morning. + +"The Nettlebys. The father is our gardener; the sons, the whole family, +make themselves useful about the place, all but Cherrie, who is more for +ornament than use. Here we are at Redmon, and there is the light burning +in Mrs. Leroy's window." + +"Does it burn all night?" he asked, looking up at it. + +"No; it is a beacon for me. I must go to her room the first thing now, +give an account of myself, and extinguish it. Good-night; I hope you +will enjoy your solitary journey back." + +"I shall have pleasant thoughts of a lady fair to keep me company. Are +you sure you can get in?" + +"Midge is opening the door now; once more, good-night." + +Waving her hand to him, she was gone while she spoke. Midge stood +blinking in the doorway, holding a candle above her head, which tar-mop +was now tied up in a red flannel petticoat. + +She shaded her eyes with her hand, peering out at the tall figure in the +loose overcoat; and when she made sure of his identity, slamming the +door to with a bang that left no doubt of her feelings toward him. + +"Midge, why did you do that?" Natty said, reprovingly. + +"Because I never want to see his wicked face here, Miss Natty; that's +why!" cried Midge, shrilly; "and I don't want to see him with you, for +he is a villain, and he will turn out one, if he was ten officers, ten +times over." + +But Natty was flying up the polished stairs with a new happiness at her +heart, singing as she went a snatch of "Love's Young Dream." + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. + + +Mr. Val Blake was a young gentleman possessing a great many admirable +virtues, among others the fearful one of always saying what he thought. +Another, not quite so terrible to society, was that of early rising. The +sun, whenever that luminary condescended to show its face in Speckport, +which wasn't so very often, never found him in bed, either winter or +summer. Val might be up until two o'clock in the office, as he sometimes +was in busy seasons, such as election times, but that never prevented +his rising at half-past four the next morning, as bright as a new penny. + +Val had escorted Miss Laura Blair home from his sister's little +sociable--not only escorted her home, in fact, but had gone in with her. +It was past eleven then, but Papa Blair had invited him to blow a +friendly cloud, and Val had accepted the invitation. There they sat, +smoking and talking politics until after one, and it was half-past when +he got back to No. 16 Great St. Peter's Street; but for all that, here +he was next morning at the hour of six, coming striding along the +sea-shore, a pipe in his mouth, and a towel in his hand. Val had been +taking a sea-bath, his invariable custom every fine morning, from the +first of May to the last of October, to the alarming increase of his +appetite for breakfast. There were few to be met on the sand, at that +hour, except in the fishing seasons; and the fishermen not being in yet +from the night's work, the shore was entirely deserted. The editor of +the Speckport Gazette had not the shore all to himself after all; for, +as he passed a jutting bowlder, he came in view of a fluttering figure +walking slowly on before. The black dress waving in the breeze, the +slender form in the long black mantle, the little straw hat, and the +brown braid were familiar by this time. + +Miss Rose, the pretty little school-teacher, was taking an early +constitutional as well as himself, with a book for her only companion. +Val's long legs were beginning to measure off the sand in vast strides, +to join her, when he was forestalled most unexpectedly. Starting up from +behind a tall rock, in whose shadow on the warm sand he had been lying, +his hat pulled over his eyes to protect him from the sun, a gentleman +came forward, lifted his hat, and accosted her. Val knew the gentleman +quite as well as he did the lady, and stopped. At the sound of his voice +coming so suddenly, she had recoiled with a suppressed cry, but at sight +of whom it was, she stood perfectly still, as if transfixed. + +There was a path up the hillside--the very path Captain Cavendish had +been shown by the young Nettlebys the day before. Val turned up this, +with his hands in his pockets, and his mind in a state of soliloquy. + +"I'm not wanted, I expect; so I'll keep clear! There's something queer +about this--they were both taken aback last night, were they not? She's +a pretty little thing, and he's been in Montreal, I know; was quartered +there before he was ordered to Halifax. I suppose it's the old story--he +always was a flirt, and his handsome face sets the girls loony wherever +he goes. Miss Rose looks sensible, but I dare say she's as bad as the +rest." + +Val's suspicions might have become certainty had he been listening to +the conversation of the young officer and the little school-teacher; but +there was no one to listen, except the waves and the wind, and the +seagulls clanging over their heads. + +"Winnie!" Captain Cavendish was hurriedly saying, "I knew you would be +here, and I have been waiting for the past half hour. No, do not go! +Pray stay and hear me out." + +"I must go!" Miss Rose said, in a violent tremor and agitation. "You +have nothing to say to me, Captain Cavendish. I cannot be seen here with +you." + +"There is no one to see us--the shore is deserted! Winnie! you must +stay." + +She had turned to go; but he caught her hand, his own face pale as hers +had turned. + +"Let go my hand, sir!" she cried, in so peremptory a tone that he +dropped it at once; "every word you speak to me is an insult! Let me +go!" + +"Only one moment, Winnie." + +Again she interposed, her eyes quite flashing. + +"Have the goodness, Captain Cavendish, to be a little less familiar; to +cease calling me Winnie." + +"What shall I call you, then?" he said, with a strange look, "Miss +Rose?" + +She turned away, and made a little passionate gesture with her hand. + +"You have no right to call me anything--to speak to me at all! I do not +know what evil fate has driven us together here; but if you have one +feeling of honor, Captain Cavendish, you will leave me in peace--you +will let me alone. My lot is not such a happy one that you should wish +to destroy the little comfort I have left." + +Her voice choked and something fell on her book and wet it. The face of +the English officer looked strangely moved for him. + +"Heaven knows, Winnie, I have no desire to disturb it; I have been a +villain--we both know that--but destiny was against me. I am poor; I am +in debt--I was then--what could I do?" + +"Will you let me go?" was her answer, without turning her averted face +to him. + +"Am I, then, utterly hateful to you?" he asked, with some bitterness. +"You have soon forgotten the past, but I deserve it! I do not ask what +chain of circumstances brought you here; I only ask, being here, that +you will not reveal the story of--of what is past and gone. Will you +promise me this, Winnie?" + +"What right have you to ask any promise of me?" she demanded, her gentle +voice full of indignation. + +"Very little, I know; but still, I want the promise, Winnie, for your +own sake, as well as for me." + +"I am not likely to tell; the story of one's own folly is not too +pleasant to repeat. And now, in return, Captain Cavendish, I want, I +demand, a promise from you! We met last night as strangers, as strangers +let us meet henceforth. Go your own way. I shall not molest you, never +fear; and be generous enough to grant me the same favor. My life is to +be one of hard work. I do not regret that. Let me find happiness in my +own way, and do not disturb me any more." + +"And it has all come to this!" he said, moodily, looking out over the +wide sea. "Well, Winnie, let it be as you wish, only I never thought you +could be so unforgiving." + +"I have forgiven long ago; I want to try and forget as well!" + +She walked rapidly away. Only once had she looked at him all the +time--after that first glance of recognition, her face had been averted. + +Captain Cavendish watched her out of sight, took two or three turns up +and down the sand, and then strolled away to his lodgings. His rooms +were in the Speckport House, fronting on Queen Street; and after +disposing of his beefsteak and coffee with a very good appetite, he +seated himself near an open window, to smoke no end of cigars and watch +the passers-by. + +A great many passers-by there were, and nearly all strangers to him; but +presently, two young men went strutting past, arm-in-arm, and, chancing +to look at his window, lifted their hats in passing. A sudden thought +seemed to flash through the officer's mind as he saw them, and, seizing +his hat, he started out after them. It was young McGregor and Charley +Marsh, and he speedily overtook them. + +"I have been sitting there for over half an hour," he said, taking +Charley's other arm, familiarly, "watching society go by, and you two +were the first I knew. Being tired of my own company, I thought I would +join you. Have a cigar?" + +"You find Speckport rather slow, I suppose?" said Charley, lighting his +weed. "I should myself, if I had nothing to do." + +"Oh, I am used to it; and," with a droll look, "I have discovered there +is more than one pill to kill time, even in Speckport." + +"Already! where do you mean?" + +"Prince Street, for instance." + +Charley laughed, and young McGregor smiled. + +"You go there, do you? Well, I have lived all my life in Speckport, but +I have never set foot over the threshold you mean, yet." + +"Nor I," said young McGregor. "By George, wouldn't the old man look +half-a-dozen ways at once if he thought I would dare look at it twice." + +There was a smile on Captain Cavendish's face, half of amusement, half +of contempt. + +"I am going there now, and was about asking you to accompany me for an +hour's amusement. Come on, better late than never." + +Charley hesitated, coloring and laughing, but McGregor caught at the +invitation at once. + +"I say, Marsh, let us go! I've always wanted to go there, but never had +a chance without the governor finding it out, and kicking up the deuce +of a row!" + +"I have the entree," said Captain Cavendish; "no one will be the wiser, +and if they should, what matter? It is only to kill time, after all." + +But still Charley hesitated, half laughing, half tempted, half +reluctant. "That is all very well from Captain Cavendish, nephew of a +baronet, and with more money than he knows what to do with; but it's of +no use going to that place with empty pockets, and medical students, it +is proverbial, never have anything to spare. No, I think you must hold +me excused." + +"Oh, confound it, Charley," exclaimed McGregor, impatiently, "I'll lend +you whatever you want. Fetch him along, captain; what he says is only +gammon." + +"Perhaps," said the captain, with a cynical smile, "Mr. Marsh has +conscientious scruples--some people have, I am told. If so----" + +He did not finish the sentence, but the smile deepened. That mocking +smile did more to overthrow Charley's resolution than any words could +have done. He turned at once in the direction of Prince Street: "The +only scruples I know anything about relate to weights and measures, and +I believe these are in a dram. I have a couple of hours before dinner; +so until then, I am at your service, captain." + +The trio turned into Prince Street--a quiet street, with staid rows of +white houses, and only one of any pretension, at one of its quiet +corners. Captain Cavendish ran up the steps, with the air of a man +perfectly at home, opened the outer door and rang the bell. There were +few people passing, but Charley and McGregor glanced uneasily about +them, before going in, and closed the street door after them with some +precipitation. + +Charley had told the captain he was at his service for two hours, but +over four passed before the three issued forth again. Charley looked +flushed, excited, and in high spirits, so did Alick McGregor; but +Captain Cavendish, though laughing, was a trifle serious, too. "I had no +idea you were such an adept, Mr. Marsh," he was saying, "but you must +give me my revenge. Better luck next time." + +"All right," said Charley, in his boyish way, "whenever you like, now +that the ice is broken. What do you say, Mac?" + +"I'm your man. The sooner the better, as I intend keeping on until I +make a fortune on my own account. Would not the governor stare if he +knew the pile I made this morning." + +As they passed into Queen Street, the town clock struck three. Charley +looked aghast. + +"Three o'clock! I had no idea it was two. Won't they be wondering what +has become of me at home. I feel as though I should like my dinner." + +"Dine with me," said the captain; "I ordered dinner at half-past three, +and we will be in the nick of time." + +The two young Speckportians accepted the invitation, and the three went +up crowded Queen Street together. + +Streaming down among the crowd came Miss Cherrie Nettleby. One +kid-gloved hand uplifted her silken robe, and displayed an elaborately +embroidered under-skirt to the admiring beholder; the other poised a +blue parasol; and, gorgeous to behold, Miss Nettleby flashed like a +meteor through Speckport. All the men spoke to her--all the women turned +up their fair noses and sailed by in delicate disdain. Charley blushed +vividly at sight of her. + +"Don't blush, Charley," drawled young McGregor, "it's too +young-lady-like, but I suppose you can't help it any more than you can +being in love with her. Good afternoon, Miss Cherrie." + +Miss Cherrie smiled graciously, made them a bow that ballooned her silk +skirt over the whole sidewalk, and sailed on. Charley looked as if he +should like to follow her, but that was next to impossible, so he walked +on. + +"Cherrie comes out to show herself every afternoon," explained Alick; +"you don't know her, Captain Cavendish, do you?" + +"I have seen her before, I think. A very pretty girl." + +"Charley thinks so--don't you, old fellow? Half the young men in the +town are looney about her." + +"I must make her acquaintance, then," said Captain Cavendish, running up +the hotel steps. "The girl that all are praising is just the girl for +me. This way, gentlemen." + +While the triad sat over their dinner and dessert, Miss Nettleby did her +shopping--that is, she chatted with the good-looking clerks over the +counter, and swept past the old and ugly ones in silent contempt. +Cherrie was in no hurry; she had made up her mind before starting to go +through every drygoods store in Speckport, and kept her word. It was +growing dusk when the dress was finally bought, cut off, and paid for--a +bright pink ground, with a brighter pink sprig running through it. + +"Shall we send it, Miss Nettleby?" insinuated the gentlemanly clerk, +tying it up with his most fascinating smile. + +"Of course," said Cherrie, shaking out her skirts with an air; "Mr. +Nettleby's, Redmon Road. Good evening, Mr. Johnston." + +Cherrie was soliloquizing as she gained the street. + +"Now, I do wonder if he'll be home. They have tea at six, I know, and +it's only a quarter to six, now. I can say I want a book, and he'll be +sure to come home with me. I must see that new teacher." + +Walking very fast Cherrie reached Cottage Street as the clocks of +Speckport were chiming six, and the laborers' bells ringing their +dismissal. Catty Clowrie was standing in her own doorway, but Cherrie +did not stop to speak, only nodded, and knocked at Mrs. Marsh's door. +Betsy Ann opened it and Cherrie walked into the sitting-room, where a +fire burned, warm as the afternoon had been, and Mrs. Marsh, with a +shawl about her and a novel in her hand, swayed to and fro in her +rocking-chair. Miss Rose in the parlor was trying her new piano, which +Natty had ordered that morning, and which had just come home. + +"Dear me!" said Mrs. Marsh, looking up from the book and holding out her +hand, "is it you, Cherrie? How do you do? Sit down." + +Cherrie did so. + +"I've been out all the afternoon shopping for Miss Natty, and I thought +I would call here before I went home to ask you for another book. That +last one was real nice." + +"Of course. What were you buying for Natty?" + +"Oh, it was only a calico dress for Midge; it's being sent up. Mrs. +Marsh, who's that playing the piano?" + +"That's Miss Rose, Natty's teacher. Have you seen her yet?" + +"No. How nice she plays. Don't she?" + +"She plays very well. And so you liked that last book--what's this it +was--'Regina,' wasn't it?" + +"Yes," said Cherrie; "and oh, it was lovely. That earl was so nice, and +I liked Regina, too. What's that you're reading?" + +"This is 'Queechy'--a very good story. Did you ever read 'The +Lamplighter?' I'll lend you that." + +"Thank you, ma'am," said Cherrie. "It's getting late. I suppose I must +go." + +"Stay for tea," said Mrs. Marsh, who liked Cherrie; "it's all ready, +and we are only waiting for Charley. I don't see where he's gone too; he +wasn't home to dinner, either." + +"I saw him this afternoon," said Cherrie; "him and young McGregor and +Captain Cavendish were going up Queen Street." + +"Was he? Perhaps they had dinner together there. How did you know +Captain Cavendish, Cherrie?" + +"I saw him at Redmon. He was up all yesterday forenoon. I guess he is +after Miss Natty." + +Mrs. Marsh smiled and settled her cap. + +"Oh, I don't know. Take off your things, Cherrie, and stay for tea. It's +of no use waiting for Charley. Betsy Ann, bring us the teapot, and call +Miss Rose." + +Cherrie laid aside her turban and lace, and was duly made acquainted +with Miss Rose. Cherrie had heard the new teacher was pretty, but she +had hoped she was not so very pretty as this, and a pang of jealousy +went through her vain little heart. She had stayed for tea, hoping +Charley would partake of that repast with them, and afterward escort her +home; but it commenced and was over, but that young gentleman did not +appear. + +Miss Rose played after tea, and Cherrie lingered and lingered, under +pretense of being charmed; but it got dark, and still that provoking +Charley did not come. Cherrie could wait no longer, and a little cross +and a good deal disappointed, she arose to go. + +"You will perish in that lace mantle," said Miss Rose, kindly. "You had +better wear my shawl; these spring nights are chilly." + +Cherrie accepted the offer, rolled her lace up in a copy of the +"Speckport Spouter," and started on her homeward journey. The street +lamps were lit, the shop windows ablaze with illumination, and the cold, +keen stars were cleaving sharp and chill through the blue concave above. +A pale young crescent moon shone serene in their midst, but it might +have been an old oil-lamp for all Miss Nettleby cared, in her present +irate and vexed frame of mind. But there was balm in Gilead; a step was +behind her, a man's step, firm and quick; a tall form was making rapid +head-way in her direction. Cherrie looked behind, half frightened, but +there was no mistaking that commanding presence, that military stride, +in the handsome face with the thick black mustache, looking down upon +her. Cherrie's heart was bounding, but how was he to know that. + +"I knew it was you, Cherrie," he said, familiarly. "Are you not afraid +to take so long and lonely a walk at this hour?" + +"I couldn't help it," said Cherrie, all her good humor returning. "There +was no one to come with me. I was down at Mrs. Marsh's, and Charley +wasn't home." + +"I don't want you to go to Mrs. Marsh's, and I am glad Charley wasn't +home." + +"I didn't go to see Charley," said Cherrie, coquettishly. "I wanted a +book, and I wanted to see Miss Rose. Do you know where Charley is?" + +"He is up at Redmon." + +"And you are going there, too, I suppose." + +"I am going to see you home, just now. Let me carry that parcel, +Cherrie, and don't walk so fast. There's no hurry, now that I am with +you. Cherrie, you looked like an angel this afternoon, in Queen Street." + +As we do not generally picture angelic beings in shot silks and blue +parasols, not to speak of turban hats, it is to be presumed Captain +Cavendish's ideas on the subject must have been somewhat vague. Cherrie +obeyed his injunction not to hurry, and it was an hour before they +reached the cottage. + +Captain Cavendish declined going in, but stood in the shadow of the +trees, opposite the house, tattling to her for another half hour, then +shook hands, and went to Lady Leroy's, where he and Charley and Mr. +Blake were to spend the evening. + +Val and Charley were there before him, the former having but just +entered. The captain had not seen Val, but Val had seen the captain, and +watched him now with a comical look, playing the devoted to Nathalie. + +In Mrs. Leroy's mansion there was no lack of rooms--Natty had two to +herself--sleeping-room adjoining the old lady's, and a parlor adjoining +that. It was in this parlor Natty received her own friends and +visitors, and there the three gentlemen were now. Natty's rooms were the +only light and cheerful ones in the vast, gloomy old house, and Natty +had fitted them up at her own expense. Delicate paper on the walls; +pretty drawings and landscapes, in water-colors, the work of her own +artistic fingers, hung around; a lounge, cushioned in chintz; an +arm-chair, cushioned in the same; attractive trifles of all sorts, +books, a work-table, and an old piano--made the apartment quite pleasant +and home-like. The only thing it wanted was a fire; for it was +essentially a bleak house, full of draughts--but a fire in any room save +her own was a piece of extravagance Lady Leroy would not hear of. So the +gentlemen sat in their overcoats; and Lady Leroy, who had been wheeled +in, in her arm-chair, looked more like an Egyptian mummy than ever. + +Midge sat behind her, on her hunkers, if you know what that is; her +elbows on her knees, her chin between her hands, glaring balefully on +Captain Cavendish, making himself fascinating to her young mistress. If +that gallant young officer had ever heard the legend of the Evil Eye, he +might have thought of it then, with Midge's malignant regards upon him. + +Lady Leroy, who dearly loved gossip, was chattering like a superannuated +magpie to Val and Charley. Mr. Blake was giving her what he knew of the +captain's history. + +"His uncle," said Val, "is a baronet--a Yorkshire baronet at that--and +Captain Cavendish is next heir to the title. Meantime, he has nothing +but his pay, which would be enough for any reasonable man, but isn't a +tithe to him." + +"And he wants a rich wife," said Lady Leroy, with a spiteful glance over +at him. "Ah! I see what he's coming after. Natty!" + +"Ma'am!" said Natty, looking up, and still laughing at some anecdote +Captain Cavendish had been relating. + +"What are you laughing at?" she said, sharply. + +"Only at a story I have been listening to! Do you want anything?" + +"Yes. Go into my room and see what time it is." + +"We bring Time with us," said Mr. Blake, producing a watch as big as a +small football; "it's five minutes to nine." + +"Then it's my bedtime! Natty, go and make me my punch. Midge, wheel me +in, and warm the bed. Young men, it's time for you to go." + +Captain Cavendish and Val exchanged an amused glance and arose. Charley +stepped forward and laid his hand on the arm-chair. + +"I'll wheel you in, Mrs. Leroy. Stand clear, Midge, or the train will +run into you. Go ahead, fellows, I'll be after you." + +"You must not mind Mrs. Leroy's eccentricities, you know," said Natty, +shaking hands shyly and wistfully at the front door with the captain. +"Mr. Blake is quite used to it, and thinks nothing of it." + +"Think better of me, Miss Marsh. I do not mind her brusqueness any more +than he does; in proof whereof I shall speedily pay my respects at +Redmon again. Good night!" + +"Tell Charley to overtake us. Good night, Natty!" called Val, striding +down the moon-lit avenue, and out into the road. + +Captain Cavendish lit a cigar, handed another to his companion, took his +arm and walked along, thinking. The Nettleby cottage was in a state of +illumination, as they passed it; and the shrieks of an accordion, +atrociously played, and somebody singing a totally different air, and +shouts of laughter, mingling together, came noisily to their listening +ears. Val nodded toward it. + +"Cherrie holds a levee every night--the house is full now. Will you come +in? 'All the more the merrier,' is the motto there." + +"No," said the captain, shrinking fastidiously; "I have no fancy for +making one in Miss Cherrie's menagerie." + +"Does the objection extend to Miss Cherrie herself?" asked Mr. Blake, +puffing energetically. + +"What do I know of Miss Cherrie?" + +"Can't say, only I should suppose you found out something while seeing +her home an hour ago, and standing making love to her under the trees +afterward." + +Captain Cavendish took out his cigar and looked at him. + +"Where were you?" + +"Coming through the rye--I mean the fields. The next time you try it on, +take a more secluded spot, my dear fellow, than the queen's highroad!" + +"Oh, hang it!" exclaimed the young officer, impatiently; "it seems to +me, Blake, you see more than you have any business to do. Suppose I did +talk to the little girl. I met her on the road alone. Could I do less +than escort her home?" + +"Look here," said Val, "there is an old saying, 'If you have too many +irons in the fire, some of them must cool.' Now, that's your case +exactly. You have too many irons in the fire." + +"I don't understand." + +"Don't you? Here it is, then! This morning, bright and early, I saw you +promenading the shore with Miss Rose. This evening, I saw you making up +to Cherrie Nettleby; and, ten minutes ago, you were as sweet as +sugar-candy on Natty Marsh. No man can be in love with three women at +once, without getting into trouble. Therefore, take a friend's advice, +and drop two of them." + +"Which two?" + +"That's your affair. Please yourself." + +"Precisely what I mean to do; and now, Val, old boy, keep your own +counsel; there's no harm done, and there will be none. A man cannot help +being polite to a pretty girl--it's nature, you know; and, dear old +fellow, don't see so much, if you can help it. It is rather annoying, +and will do neither of us any good." + +Perhaps Captain Cavendish would have been still more annoyed had he +known Val was not the only witness of that little flirtation with +Cherrie. As that young lady, when he left her, after watching him out +of sight, was about crossing the road to go into the house, a voice +suddenly called, "Hallo, Cherrie! How are you?" + +Cherrie looked up greatly astonished, for the voice came from above her +head. Was it the voice of a spirit?--if so, the spirit must have a +shocking bad cold in the head, and inclined to over-familiarity at that. +The voice came again, and still from above. + +"I say, Cherrie! You put in a pretty long stretch of courting that time! +I like to see you cutting out the rest of the Speckport girls, and +getting that military swell all to yourself." + +Cherrie beheld the speaker at last; and a very substantial spirit he +was, perched up on a very high branch of a tree, his legs dangling about +in the atmosphere, and his hands stuck in his trowsers. + +"Lor!" cried Miss Nettleby, quite startled, "if it ain't that Bill +Blair! I declare I took it for a ghost!" + +Bill kicked his heels about in an ecstasy. + +"Oh, crickey! Wasn't it prime! I ain't heard anything like it this month +of Sundays. Can't he keep company stunning, Cherrie? I say, Charley's +dished, ain't he, Cherrie?" + +"How long have you been up there, you young imp?" asked Cherrie, her +wrath rising. + +"Long enough to hear every word of it! Don't be mad, Cherrie--Oh, no, I +never mentions it, its name is never heard--honor bright, you know." + +"Oh, if I had you here," cried Miss Nettleby, looking viciously up at +him, "wouldn't I box your ears for you!" + +"Oh, no, you wouldn't!" said Bill, swinging about. "How was I to know +when I roosted up here that you were going to take a whack at courting +over there. I was going over to Jim Tod's, and, feeling tired, I got up +here to rest. I say, Cherrie? would you like to hear a secret?" + +Cherrie would like nothing better, only before he told it, she would +rather he got down. It gave her the fidgets to look at him up there. +Bill got lazily down accordingly. + +"Now, what's the secret?" asked the young lady. + +"It's this," replied the young gentleman. "Do you know who Captain +Cavendish happens to be?" + +"I know he's an Englishman," said Cherrie; "all the officers are that." + +"Yes; but you don't know who his folks are, I bet." + +"No. Who are they? Very rich, I suppose?" + +"Rich!" exclaimed Mr. Blair, contemptuously. "I say, Cherrie, you won't +tell, will you? It's a secret." + +"Of course not, stupid. Go on." + +"Say, 'pon your word and honor." + +"'Pon my word! Now go on." + +"Well, then," said Bill, in a mysterious whisper, "he's--Queen +Victoria's--eldest--son!" + +"What!" + +"I told you it was a secret, and it is. I heard him telling my +boss--Blake, you know, and they didn't think I was listening. Queen +Victoria, when she was a young woman, was married secretly to a duke, +the Duke of Cavendish, and had one son. When her folks found it +out--jimminy! wasn't there a row, and the Duke was beheaded for high +treason, and she was married to Prince Albert. Now, you'll never tell, +will you, Cherrie?" + +"Never!" answered Cherrie, breathlessly. "Well?" + +"Well, Captain Cavendish was brought up private, and is the right heir +to the throne; and he expects his mother to leave it to him in her will +when she dies, instead of the Prince of Wales. Now, if he marries you, +Cherrie, and I am pretty sure he will before long--then you are Queen of +England at once." + +"Now, Billy Blair," said Cherrie, puzzled whether to believe his solemn +face or not, "I do believe you're telling lies." + +"It's true as preaching, I tell you. Didn't I hear 'em with my own ears. +That chap's sure to be King of England some day, and when you're queen, +Cherrie, send for Bill Blair to be your prime-minister. And now I must +go--good night." + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +VAL TURNS MENTOR. + + +Miss Nathalie Marsh was not the only person in existence who took a +violent fancy to the pretty, pale little school-mistress, Miss Rose. +Before the end of the month, Speckport pronounced her perfection; +though, to do Speckport justice, it was not greatly given to overpraise. +Indeed, it was a common saying with the inhabitants that Speckport would +find fault with an archangel, did one of these celestial spirits think +fit to alight there, and the very person most vehement in this assertion +would have been the first in the backbiting. Yet Speckport praised Miss +Rose, and said their Johnnys and Marys had never get on so fast in their +A B abs, before, and the little ones themselves chanted her praises with +all their hearts. If she appeared in the streets, they rushed headlong +to meet her, sure of a smile for their pains. They brought her flowers +every morning, and a reproachful look was the severest punishment known +in the schoolroom. The old women dropped their courtesies; the old men +pronounced her the nicest young woman they had seen for many a day, and +the young men--poor things! fell in love. + +There was some one else winning golden opinions, but not from all sorts +of people. Only from young ladies, who were ready to tear each other's +dear little eyes out, if it could have helped the matter: and the man +was Captain George Cavendish. Speckport was proud to have him at its +parties; for was he not to be a baronet some day? and was his family in +England, their Alma Mater, not as old as the hills, and older? But he +was an expensive luxury. Their daughters fell in love with him, and +their sons spent their money frightfully fast with him; and all sons or +daughters got in return were fascinating smiles, courtly bows, and +gallant speeches. He was not a marrying man, that was evident; and yet +he did seem rather serious with Nathalie Marsh. Miss Marsh was the +handsomest girl in Speckport; she would be the richest, and she was for +certain the only one that ever had a grandfather--that is, to speak of: +in the course of nature they all had, perhaps; but the grandfathers were +less than nobody--peddlers, rag-men, and fish-hawkers. But her father +and grandfather had been gentlemen born; and it is well to have good +blood in one's veins, even on one side. So the young ladies hated Miss +Marsh, and were jealous of each other; and that high-stepping young +heiress laughed in their face, and walked and talked, and rode and +sailed, and sang and danced with Captain Cavendish, and triumphed over +them like a princess born. + +It was June, and very hot. Speckport was being grilled alive, and the +dust flew in choking simooms. + +Cool through all the heat, Captain Cavendish walked up Queen Street in +the broiling noonday sun. Charley Marsh and Alick McGregor walked on +either side of him, like that other day on which they had met Cherrie; +and Charley's face was flushed and clouded, and young McGregor's drawn +down to a most lugubrious length. They had just come from Prince +Street--an every-day resort now; and Charley and McGregor seldom left it +of that late without clouded expression. Captain Cavendish was laughing +at them both. + +"All in the downs!" he cried; "nonsense, Marsh. One would think you were +ruined for life." + +"I soon shall be at this rate. I owe you a small fortune now." + +"Only fifty pounds," said the captain, as carelessly as if it were fifty +pence, "a mere trifle." + +"And I owe you twice as much," said young McGregor, with a sort of +groan; "won't there be the dickens to pay when it's found out at home." + +"Don't let them find it out, then," said Captain Cavendish, in the same +off-hand manner. + +"That's easily said. How am I to help it?" + +"Your father has a check-book--help yourself." + +"That would be killing the goose that lays the golden eggs," said +Charley. "Let the old man find that out and good-bye to Alick's chance +of ever seeing Prince Street again. Here are my quarters--no use asking +you in to hear the row old Leach will make at my delay, I suppose." + +He nodded, with his own careless laugh, and entered the office of Doctor +Leach. Captain Cavendish looked at his watch. + +"Half-past eleven! I believe I owe your people a call, McGregor; so _en +avant_!" + +Miss Jeannette McGregor was at home, and received the captain and her +brother in her boudoir, a charming little room, with velvet-pile carpet, +gilding, and ormolu, and medallion pictures of celebrated beauties set +in the oval paneled walls. A copy of Longfellow, all gold and azure, was +in her hand; she had once heard Captain Cavendish express his admiration +of the great American poet; and having seen her brother and he coming up +the front steps, she had arranged this little tableau expressly for the +occasion. If there was one young lady in all Speckport who more than +another sincerely hated Nathalie Marsh, or more sincerely admired +Captain Cavendish, that one was Miss McGregor. She had long been jealous +of Natty's beauty, but now she detested her with an honest earnestness +that, I think, only women ever feel. She kissed her whenever they met; +she invited her to every party they gave; she made calls at Redmon: and +she hated her all the time, and could have seen her laid in her coffin +with the greatest pleasure. It is a very common case, my brethren; Judas +Iscariot was not a woman, but kisses after his fashion are very popular +among the gentler sex. + +"Evangeline," said Captain Cavendish, taking up her book; "I always +liked that, but never half so well as since I came to Speckport." + +"Because you saw Miss Marsh in the character," said Jeannette, laughing, +as young ladies must, in these cases. + +"Miss Marsh took her character very well, but that is not the only +reason why I shall long remember that night." + +A glance accompanied this speech that brought a glow to Miss McGregor's +cheek and a flutter to her heart. Captain Cavendish was a clever man. He +had more irons in the fire than even Val knew of, and allowed none of +them to cool; and it does take a clever man to make love discreetly to +half-a-dozen women at once. + +"Natty looked stunning that night," put in Alick; "she is the handsomest +girl in Speckport." + +"You think so--we all know that," said Jeannette, flashing a spiteful +glance at him; "you have been making a simpleton of yourself about her +for the last two years. Why don't you propose at once." + +"Because she wouldn't have me," blurted honest Alick; "I wish to heaven +she would! I would soon do the popping." + +"Faint heart never won fair lady; take courage and try," said the +captain. + +Jeannette looked at him with her most taking smile. + +"Are you quite sincere in that, Captain Cavendish?" + +"Quite! Why not?" + +"Oh, nothing! Only rumor says you are going to carry a Bluenose bride +back to Merrie England." + +"Perhaps I may. You are a Bluenose, are you not, Miss Jeannette?" + +Before Jeannette could answer, a sort of shout from Alick, who was at +the window, took their attention. Miss McGregor looked languidly over. + +"Oh, how noisy you are! What is it, pray?" + +The door-bell rang loudly. + +"It's Natty herself and Laura Blair. You ought to have seen Natty +driving up, captain; she handles the ribbons in tiptop style, and that +black mare of Blair's is no joke to drive." + +Before he had finished speaking, the door opened, and a servant showed +in the two young ladies. Miss Jeannette sprang up with the utmost +effusion, and kissed each on both cheeks. + +"You darling Natty! It is ages since you were here. Laura, how good it +is of you to fetch her! for I know it must have been you." + +"So it was," said Laura, shaking hands with Captain Cavendish. "I +haven't time, I haven't time, is always her cry. I tell her there will +be time when we are all dead--won't there, captain?" + +"I presume so, unless at the loss of Miss Laura Blair the whole economy +of creation blows up with a crash." + +"And so you see," said Laura, sitting down on a chair, and flirting out +her skirts all around her, "I drove up to Redmon this morning, with a +great basketful of English strawberries the size of crab-apples, as a +coaxer to Lady Leroy; and through their eloquence, and the promise of +another, got her to let Natty come to town with me on business." + +"On business;" said Captain Cavendish; "that means shopping." + +"No, sir, it doesn't; it means something serious, and that you must take +share in. You, too, Jeannette, and you, Alick, if we run short." + +"Thank you," said Alick, "what is it?" + +"Why, you know," began Miss Blair, with the air of one about entering +upon a story, "there's that Mrs. Hill--you know her, Alick?" + +"What! the wife of the pilot who was drowned in the storm last week?" + +"That's the one," nodded Laura. "Well, she's poor--Oh, dear me! ever so +poor, and her two children down in the measles, and herself half dead +with rheumatism. I shouldn't have known a thing about it only for Miss +Rose. I do declare Miss Rose is next door to an angel; she found her +out, and did lots of things for her, and told me at last how poor she +was, and asked me to send her some things. So then I made up this plan." + +"What plan?" inquired Jeannette, as Laura stopped for want of breath, +and Nathalie sat listening with an amused look. + +"Oh, didn't I tell you? Why, we're going to have a play, and every one +of us turn into actors; admission, half a dollar. Won't it be grand?" + +"And the play is Laura's own," said Nathalie; "nothing less than the +adventures of Telemachus dramatized." + +"That is delightful," said Jeannette, with sparkling eyes. "Have I a +part, Laura?" + +"To be sure, and so has Natty, and myself, and Captain Cavendish, and +Val Blake, and Charley Marsh, and as many more as we want. The new wing +that pa has built to our house is just finished, and, being unfurnished, +will make a lovely theater. Only a select number of tickets will be +issued, and the place is sure to be crowded. The proceeds will be a +little fortune to Mrs. Hill." + +"You should have given Miss Rose a part, as she was the head of it," +suggested Alick. + +"She wouldn't have it. I tried hard enough, but she was resolute. She is +such a timid little thing, you know, and she would make a lovely nymph, +too." + +"What part have you assigned me?" inquired Captain Cavendish. + +"Being a soldier and a hero, you are Ulysses, of course; Charley is +Telemachus; Val is Mentor--fancy Val with flowing white hair and beard, +like an old nanny-goat. Jeannette, you will be Calypso; Natty will take +Eucharis; I, Penelope. I wanted Miss Rose to be Eucharis--the part would +have suited her so well." + +"I don't believe it would come natural to Charley to make love to her," +said Alick; "he'll have to, won't he, if he is Telemachus?" + +"You must change the casts, Miss Blair," said the captain, decidedly. +"If Telemachus is to do the love-making, I must be Telemachus. Mr. Marsh +and I must change." + +"You would make such a nice Ulysses," said Laura, meditatingly, while +Nathalie blushed; "but please yourself. You must all spend the evening +at our house, and when the whole _dramatis personæ_ are gathered, we can +discuss and settle the thing for good, fix the rehearsal and the night +of the play. Don't fail to come." + +"You need not be in a hurry," said Jeannette, as Laura rose and was +sailing off; "stay for luncheon." + +"Couldn't possibly--promised to leave Natty back safe and sound in an +hour, and it only wants ten minutes now. If we fail one second, she +will never get off for rehearsals. Remember, you are all engaged for +this evening." + +The two long parlors of the Blairs were pretty well filled that night +with young ladies and gentlemen, and a very gay party they were. There +was so much laughing and chaffing over it, that it was some trouble to +settle preliminaries; but Laura was intensely in earnest, and could see +nothing to laugh at, and Captain Cavendish coming gallantly to her aid, +matters were arranged at last. Charley Marsh, who was a Rubens on a +small scale, undertook to paint the scenery, superintend the carpenters +and the machinery of the stage. The young ladies arranged the costumes; +everybody got their parts in MS.; rehearsals were appointed, and some +time before midnight the amateurs dispersed. In the June moonlight, the +English officer drove Nathalie home, and it was not all theatricals they +talked by the way. There was a good deal of trouble about the thing yet, +now that it was finally started. In the first place, there was that +tiresome Lady Leroy, who made a row every time Natty went to rehearsal, +and required lots of strawberries, and jellies, and bottles of old wine, +to bring her to reason. Then they bungled so in their parts, and wanted +so much prompting, and Miss Elvira Tod, sister to the Rev. Augustus, who +was tall and prim, and played Minerva, objected to wearing a tin shield, +and wanted to keep on her hoops. + +"Now, Miss Tod," expostulated Laura, ready to cry, "you know the goddess +Minerva always is painted with a breastplate, to conceal her want of a +bust; and as for your skeleton, you would be a nice goddess with +hoops--wouldn't you?" + +On the whole, things progressed as favorably as could be expected; and +the eventful night was announced, tickets were issued and eagerly +bought, and Speckport was on the qui vive for the great event. When the +appointed night came, the impromptu theater was crowded at an early +hour, and with nothing but the upper-crust, either; the military band, +which formed the orchestra, played the "Nymph's Dance" ravishingly, and +amid a breathless hush, the curtain rose. + +Mrs. Hill, the destitute widow, was made happy next day by some twenty +pounds, the produce of the play, and Speckport could talk of nothing +else for a week. The Speckport Spouter even went into personalities. +"Miss Nathalie Marsh," that journal said, "as Eucharis, astonished every +one. The fire, the energy, the pathos of her acting could not be +surpassed by the greatest professionals of the day. Captain Cavendish, +as the hero, performed his part to the life--it seemed more like reality +than mere acting; and Mr. C. Marsh as Ulysses, and Miss Laura Blair as +Penelope, were also excellent." + +On the morning after this laudatory notice appeared in the Spouter, a +young gentleman, one of the employees of that office, walked slowly +along Queen Street, his hands thrust deep in his coat-pockets, his cap +very much on one side of his head, and his face lengthened to +preternatural solemnity. The young gentleman was Bill Blair; and that he +had something on his mind was evident, for his countenance was +seriously, not to say dismally, meditative. Reaching the office, he +walked deliberately up-stairs, entered the outer room, swung himself +nimbly up on the handiest stool, and began flinging his legs about, +without the ceremony of removing his cap. Mr. Clowrie, the only other +occupant of the apartment, looked at him over his desk with a frown. + +"I thought Mr. Blake told you to be here at half-past six this morning, +and now it's a quarter past eight," began Mr. Clowrie; "if I was Blake, +I would turn you out of the office." + +"But you ain't Blake!" retorted Master Blair; "so don't ruffle your fine +feathers for nothing, Jakey! If you had been up till half-past one this +morning, perhaps you wouldn't be any spryer than I am." + +"What kept you up till that time? Some devilment, I'll be bound." + +"No, it wasn't," said Bill; "our folks, the whole crowd but me, streaked +off to the theatre; so as I couldn't see the fun of playing Robinson +Crusoe at home, I just went over to Jim Tod's to have a game of +all-fours, and a look at the pups, and they're growing lovely. I didn't +mean to stay long, but some of the rest of the fellows were there, and +Jim had a box of cigars, and a bottle of sherry he had cribbaged out of +the sideboard, and it was all so jolly I'll be blowed if it didn't +strike twelve before we knew where we were." + +"Well, now you've come, go to work, or there will be a precious row when +the boss comes." + +"Blake won't row," said Bill, nodding mysteriously; "but I know where +there will be one before long. Cracky, won't there be a flare-up when +it's found out!" + +Mr. Clowrie laid down his pen and looked up. + +"When what's found out?" + +"That's my secret," replied Bill, with a perfect shower of mysterious +nods. "I saw the rummiest go last night when I was coming home ever you +heard tell of." + +"I don't believe it," said Jake, disdainfully; "you're always finding +mare's-nests, and a lot they come to when all's done!" + +"Jake, look here! you won't tell, will you?" + +"Bosh! go to work. What should I tell for?" + +"Well, then," said Bill, lowering his voice, "I've found out who stole +that hundred pounds from old McGregor." + +"What?" + +"You remember that hundred pounds old McGregor had stole a week ago, and +that went so mysteriously? Well, I've found out who took it." + +"You have!" cried Mr. Clowrie, excited; "why, there's a reward of fifty +dollars out for the thief!" + +Bill nodded again. + +"I know it, but I ain't going to apply. You won't tell--honor bright!" + +"I won't tell! who was it?" + +"Don't faint if you can! It was his own son, Alick!" + +"Wha-a-t!" + +"I tell you it was; I heard him say so myself, last night." + +Mr. Clowrie sat thunderstruck, staring. Master Blair went on: + +"Charley Marsh is in the mess too--I don't mean about the +money-stealing, mind! but him and Sandy McGregor are galloping the road +to ruin at a 2.40 rate!" + +"What do you mean?" + +Bill looked round as if fearful the very walls would hear him. + +"They go to Prince Street, Jake! I met them coming out of a certain +house there past twelve o'clock last night!" + +"By ginger!" exclaimed Mr. Clowrie, aghast. "You never mean to say young +McGregor stole the money to gam--" + +"Hu-sh-sh! I wouldn't have it found out through me for the world. It's +all the work of that dandified officer; he was with them in a long +overcoat, but I knew him the minute I clapped eyes on him. They were +talking about the bank-note, and the captain was laughing and smoking +away as jolly as you please; but I saw Charley's face as they passed a +gas-lamp, and I swear he was as white as a ghost!" + +"I suppose he'd been losing." + +"I reckon so, and Alick didn't look much better. That captain's a +regular scape--he's after Cherrie Nettleby as regular as clock-work +now." + +Mr. Clowrie scowled suddenly, but Bill clattered on: + +"I saw him twice last night; once before I met them in Prince Street. It +was about nine, and Cherrie was with him. There the two of them were +standing, like Paul and Virginny, at the gate, making love like sixty! +That Cherrie's the preciousest fool that ever drew breath, I do think. +Why don't you----" + +He stopped short in consternation, for the door swung open and Val +strode in, and, as he had done once before, collared him. With the other +hand he turned the key in the lock to keep out intruders, and Bill +fairly quaked, for Val's face looked ominous. + +"Now, look you, Master Bill Blair," he began, in a tone exceedingly in +earnest, "I have been listening out there for some time, and I have just +got this to say to you: if ever I find you repeat it to mortal man or +woman, as long as you live, I'll break every bone in your body! Do you +hear that?" + +Yes, Master Bill heard, and jerked himself free with a very red and +sulky face. + +"Don't forget now!" reiterated Val; "I'll thrash you within an inch of +your life, as sure as your name's Bill! And you, Clowrie, if you want to +keep yourself out of trouble, take my advice and say nothing about it. +Now get to work, you, sir, and no more gossiping." + +Val strode off to his own room, and sat down to look over a file of +exchanges, and read his letters. But he could neither read nor do +anything else with comfort this morning. The boy's gossip had disturbed +him more than he would have owned; and at last, in desperation, he +pitched all from him, seized his hat, and went out. + +"I played Mentor the other night on the stage. I think I'll try it in +real life. Confound that Cavendish; why can't he let the boy alone? I +don't mind McGregor; he's only a noodle at best, and the old man can +afford to lose the money; but Charley's another story! That Cherrie, +too! The fellow's a scoundrel, and she's a--! Oh, here she comes!" + +Sure enough, tripping along, her blue parasol up, her turban on, a +little white lace vail down, a black silk mantle flapping in the breeze, +a buff calico morning-wrapper, with a perfect hailstorm of white buttons +all over it, sweeping the dust, came Miss Nettleby herself, arrayed as +usual for conquest. The incessant smile, ever parting her rosy lips, +greeted Val. Cherrie always kept a large assortment of different quality +on hand for different gentlemen. Val greeted her and turned. + +"Where are you going, Cherrie?" + +"Down to Mrs. Marsh's. I've got a book of hers to return. How's Miss +Jo?" + +"She's well. I'll walk with you, Cherrie; I have something to say to +you." + +His tone was so serious that Cherrie stared. + +"Lord, Mr. Blake! what is it?" + +"Let us go down this street--it is quiet. Cherrie, does Captain +Cavendish go to see you every evening in the week?" + +"Gracious me, Mr. Blake!" giggled Cherrie, "what a question!" + +"Answer it, Cherrie." + +"Now, Mr. Blake, I never! if you ain't the oddest man! I shan't tell you +a thing about it!" + +"He was with you last night, was he not?" + +"It's none of your business!" said polite Cherrie; "he has as much right +to be with me as any one else, I hope. You come yourself sometimes, for +that matter." + +"Yes; but I don't make love to you, you know." + +"It wouldn't be any use for you if you did," said Miss Cherrie, +bridling. + +"It's a different case altogether," said Val; "you and I are old +friends--he is a stranger." + +"He's not! I've known him more than five weeks! If you only came to +preach, Mr. Blake, I guess you had better go back, and I'll find Mrs. +Marsh's alone." + +"Cherrie, I want to warn you--the less you have to do with Captain +Cavendish the better. People are talking about you now." + +"Let 'em talk," retorted Miss Nettleby, loftily; "when Speckport stops +talking the world will come to an end. I'll just do as I please, and +talk to whom I like; and if everybody minded their own business, it +would be better for some folks." + +With which the young lady swept away majestically, leaving Mr. Blake to +turn back or follow if he pleased. He chose the former, and walked along +to Dr. Leach's office. Charley was standing, looking out of the window, +and whistling a tune. + +"Hallo, Val!" was his greeting, "what brings you here? Want a tooth +pulled, or a little bleeding, or a trifle of physic of any kind? Happy +to serve you in the absence of the doctor." + +"No, I don't want any physic, but I have come to give you a dose. Are +you alone?" + +"Quite. Leach went to visit a patient ten minutes ago. What's the +matter?" + +"Everything's the matter! What's this I hear you have been about +lately?" + +"Turning actor--do you mean that? Much obliged to you, Val, for the puff +you gave me in yesterday's Spouter." + +"No, sir, I don't mean that! Isn't Alick McGregor a nice fellow to rob +his own father and you his aider and abettor? Fine doings that!" + +Charley fairly bounded. + +"Oh, the d----! Where did you find that out?" + +"Never mind, I have found it out; that is enough!" + +"Is it known? Who else knows it?" + +"Two that are not quite so safe to keep it as I am! No, I won't tell you +who they are. Charley, what are you coming to?" + +"The gallows, I suppose; but I had no hand in that. If McGregor took the +money, it was his own doings, and his father could spare it." + +"What did he want of it?" + +"Am I his keeper? How should I know?" + +"You do know! When did you turn gambler, Charley?" + +Charley turned round, his face white. + +"You know that, too?" + +"I do! McGregor stole the hundred pounds to pay a gambling-debt to +Captain Cavendish. And you--where does your money come from, Marsh?" + +"I don't steal it," said Charley, turning from pale to red; "be sure of +that!" + +"Come, my boy, don't be angry. You know I don't deserve that speech; but +surely, Charley, this sort of thing should not go on. Where will it +end?" + +"Where, indeed?" said Charley, gloomily. "Val, I wish you would tell me +how you found this out?" + +"Pshaw! do you really expect to go in and out of the most notorious +gambling-house in Speckport, at all hours of the day and night, and it +not be discovered? You ought to know this place better." + +"That is true; but how did that infernal business of McGregor's leak +out? No one knew it but ourselves." + +"It has leaked out, and is known to two persons, who may blow on you all +at any moment." + +"And I wanted to keep it from Natty. Val, old fellow, do tell me who +they are." + +"You know I won't; it would do no good. Charley, I wish you would stop +in time." + +"Stuff! it's no hanging matter after all. Dozens go there as well as I!" + +"You won't give it up, then?" + +"Not until I win back what I have lost. My coffers are not so full that +I can lose without trying to win it back. Don't talk to me, Blake, it's +of no use; win I must, there is no alternative. Won't Alick go into +white horror when he finds the murder's out?" + +Val turned to leave. + +"You're going, are you?" said Charley. "I need hardly tell you to keep +dark about this; it will only mar, not mend matters, to let it get wind. +Don't look so solemn, old boy, all's not lost that's in danger." + +Val said nothing--what was the use? He passed out and went home to his +domain. + +"I knew how it would be," he said to himself, going along; "but I have +done my duty, and that's satisfactory. I'll keep my eye on you, Captain +Cavendish, and if ever I get a chance, won't I play you a good turn for +this!" + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +WOOED AND WON. + + +"And if ever I find her going prancing round with him any more," said +Lady Leroy, clawing the air viciously with her skinny fingers, "or +letting him come home with her again, I'll turn her out of doors, I +will, as sure as your name's Midge." + +"Which it isn't," said Midge; "for I was christened Prisciller. And as +for turning her out, you know right well, ma'am, you can never get along +without her, so where's the good of your gabbing." + +The dialogue between mistress and maid took place, of course, in the +former's room, which she rarely left. Midge was preparing her ladyship's +dinner, all the cooking being done in the chamber, and all the edibles +being kept under lock and key, and doled out in ounces. Midge and Lady +Leroy fought regular pitched battles every day over the stinted +allowance awarded her; and Natty had to come to the rescue by +purchasing, from her own private purse, the wherewithal to satisfy +Midge. No other servant would have lived at Redmon on the penurious +wages the old lady grumblingly gave, probably on no wages at all, +considering the loneliness of the place, its crabbed and miserly +mistress, and hard work; but Midge stayed through her love of Nathalie, +and contradicted and bickered with Lady Leroy from morning till night. +In the days when the Marshes were rich and prosperous, Midge had been a +hanger on of the household, doing pretty much as she pleased, and coming +and going, and working or loafing as she liked. She had saved Charley's +life once, nearly at the risk of her own, and loved him and Nathalie +with a depth of self-sacrificing and jealous tenderness few would have +given her credit for. Nathalie was good to her always, considerate and +kind, putting up with her humor and querulousness, and ready to shield +her from slights at any time. Midge scolded the young lady roundly on +many an occasion, and Natty took it good-humoredly always. She was out +now, and Lady Leroy's wrath had been kindled by something that had +happened the preceding night, and which she had found out through +Cherrie Nettleby, for Midge told no tales. Captain Cavendish, contrary +to her express orders, had seen Nathalie home from a little sociable at +her mother's. Val, Miss Jo, Laura Blair, Catty Clowrie, Jeannette and +Alick McGregor, Charley, and Captain Cavendish only had been there; for +some sick pauper had sent for Miss Rose, and she had gone, glad to +escape. Cherrie had seen the captain and Miss Marsh pass the cottage, +and, spiteful and jealous, had tattled next morning. Lady Leroy disliked +Captain Cavendish--she did most people for that matter, but she honored +him with especial aversion. Nathalie had gone off after breakfast to +Speckport, to attend to her music-pupils and visit the school. Cherrie +had come in afterward to retail the town-gossip, and had but just +departed; and now the old lady was raging to Midge. + +"I tell you, Midge, I don't like him!" she shrilly cried, "I don't like +him, and I don't want him coming here." + +"No more don't I," retorted Midge, "I'd go to his hanging with the +greatest pleasure; but where's the odds? He don't care whether we like +him or not; he only laughs and jeers at both of us, so long as she +does." + +"It ain't her he likes," said Lady Leroy, "it's my money, my money, that +I've pinched and spared to save, and that he thinks to squander. But +I'll be a match for him, and for her too, the ungrateful minx, if she +thinks to play upon me." + +"She ain't an ungrateful minx, ma'am!" sharply contradicted Midge; +"she's better nor ever you were or ever will be! She lives shut up here +from one week's end to t'other, slavin' herself for you, and much she +gets for it! She can do what she likes with the money when you're dead!" + +Lady Leroy's face turned so horribly ghastly at this speech that it was +quite dreadful to look at. The thought of death was her nightmare, her +daily horror. She never thought of it at all if she could, and thus +forcibly reminded, her features worked for a moment as if she had a fit. +Even Midge grew a little scared at what she had done. + +"There, ma'am!" she cried, "you needn't go into fits about it. My +speaking of it won't make you die any sooner. I dessay you're good for +twenty years yet, if your appetite holds out!" + +The old woman's livid face grew a shade less deathlike. + +"Do you think so, Midge? Do you think so?" + +"Oh, I think so fast enough! Folks like you always is sure to spin out +till everybody's tired to death of 'em. Here's your dinner ready now; +so swallow it, and save your breath for that!" + +The sight of her meals always had an inspiring effect on the mistress of +Redmon, and Natty was for the moment forgotten. Perhaps it might have +spoiled her appetite a little had she seen the way that young lady was +returning home, and in what company. Not walking discreetly along Redmon +road, and not alone. In the pretty boat, all white and gold, with the +name "Nathalie" in golden letters--the boat that had been poor Alick +McGregor's gift--a merry little party were skimming over the sunlit +waves, reaching Redmon by sea instead of land. The snow-white sail was +set, and Nathalie Marsh was steering; the sea-wind blowing about her +tangled yellow curls, fluttering the azure ribbons of her pretty hat, +deepening the roses in her cheeks, and brightening the starry eyes. She +sang as she steered, "Over the Sea in my Fairy Bark," and the melodious +voice rang sweetly out over the wide sea. Near her Captain Cavendish +lounged over the side, watching the ripples as they flew along in the +teeth of the breeze, and looking perfectly content to stay there +forever. Beside him sat Laura Blair, and, near her, Miss Jo Blake. Laura +was often with Miss Jo, whom she liked, partly for her own sake--for she +was the best-natured old maid that ever petted a cat--and partly for her +brother's, whom Miss Blair considered but one remove from an angel. + +The quartet had "met by chance, the usual way," and Nathalie had invited +him to have a sail. She had rowed herself to town in her batteau, but +the sail back was inconceivably pleasanter. As the batteau ran up on the +beach below Redmon, Natty did not ask them to the house, but no one was +surprised at that. They accompanied her to the gate, Captain Cavendish +slinging the light oars over his shoulder. + +"And you will be at the picnic day after to-morrow, without fail," Laura +was saying to Nathalie. + +"Can't promise," replied Natty. "Mrs. Leroy may take it into her head to +refuse permission, and I have been out a great deal lately." + +"I don't care," said Laura, "you must come! If Mrs. Leroy turns +inexorable, I will go up with a basket of oranges and let them plead in +your behalf. You see, captain, we have to 'stay that old lady with +flagons and comfort her with apples' when we want Natty very badly, and +she turns refractory." + +"All the oranges in Seville would not be thrown away in such a cause. By +all means, Miss Marsh, come to the picnic." + +Speckport was famous for its picnics, and excursions by land and water. +This one was the first of the season, and was to be held on Lady Leroy's +grounds--a pretty high price having to be paid for the privilege. + +"There won't be any fun without you, Natty," said Miss Jo; "I won't hear +of your absenting yourself at all. Is Miss Rose to have a holiday on the +occasion?" + +"I offered her one, but she declined; she did not care for going, she +said." + +"What a singular girl she is!" said Laura, thoughtfully; "she seems to +care very little for pleasure of any kind for herself; but the poor of +Speckport look upon her as an angel sent down expressly to write their +letters, look after them in sickness, make them beef-tea, and teach +their children for nothing. I wish you would make her go to the picnic, +Natty, and not let her mope herself to death, drudging in that horrid +school-room." + +Captain George Cavendish, leaning on the oars he had been carrying, +seemed not to be listening. He was looking dreamily before him, seeing +neither the broad green fields with the summer sunlight sleeping in +sheets of gold upon them, nor the white, winding, dusty highroad, nor +the ceaseless sea, spreading away and away until it kissed the +horizon-sky, nor tall Miss Blake, nor even the two pretty girls who +talked. It had all faded from before him; and he was many a mile away in +a strange, foreign-looking city, with narrow, crooked streets, filled +with foreign-looking men and women, and priests in long black soutanes, +and queer hats, and black nuns and gray nuns, and Notre Dame nuns and +Sisters of Charity and Mercy, all talking in French, and looking at each +other with dark Canadian eyes. He was back in Montreal, he saw the +Champ-de-Mars, the Place d'Arme, the great convents, the innumerable +churches with their tall crosses pointing to the heaven we are all +trying to reach, and he saw himself beside one--fairer in his eyes than +all the dusky Canadian beauties in the world, with their purple-black +hair and great flashing black eyes. "Winnie! Winnie! Winnie!" his false +heart was passionately crying, as that old time came back, and +golden-haired, violet-eyed Nathalie Marsh was no more to him than if she +had been but the fantasy of a dream. He had flirted and played the lover +to scores; played it so long and so often that it had become second +nature, as necessary as the air he breathed; but he had only loved one, +and he seemed in a fair way of going on to the end. He had been a +traitor, but he could not forget. The girl he had jilted was avenged if +she wished for vengeance: no pang he had ever given could be keener than +what he felt himself. + +A laugh aroused him, a merry, girlish laugh. He awoke from his dream +with a start, and found them all looking at him. + +"So you have awoke at last," laughed Laura. "Three times have I told you +we were going, and there you stood, staring at empty space, and paying +no more attention than if you were stone-deaf. Pray, Captain Cavendish, +where were you just now?" + +Before he could answer, the gate against which Nathalie leaned was +pushed violently open, and the thick dwarfish figure and unlovely face +of Midge was thrust out--not made more prepossessing by an ugly scowl. + +"Miss Natty," she shrilly cried, "I want to know if you mean to stand +here all day long? It's past two now, and when you go up to the house, +perhaps the old woman won't give it you--and serve you right, too!" +added Miss Midge, sotto voce. + +"So late!" Nathalie cried, in alarm. "I had no idea of it! Good-bye, +Miss Jo; good-bye, Laura. I must go!" + +She had smiled and nodded her farewell to the captain, and was off like +a dart. Midge slammed the gate in their faces, and went sulkily after. + +In considerable consternation, Nathalie ran up-stairs and into the awful +presence of the mistress of the house. She knew well she was in for a +scolding, and was bracing herself to meet it. + +Lady Leroy had never been so furiously angry since the first day the +young lady had entered beneath her roof, and the storm burst before Miss +Marsh was fairly in the room. Such a tempest of angry words, such a +tornado of scolding, such a wrathful outbreak of old woman's fury, it +has been the ill-fortune of but few to hear. Nathalie bore it like a +heroine, without flinching and without retreat, though her cheeks were +scarlet, and her blue eyes flashing fire. She had clinched one little +hand involuntarily, and set her teeth, and compressed her lips, as if to +force herself not to fling back the old woman's rage in her face; but +the struggle was hard. Passionate and proud Nathalie's nature was, but +the fiery steeds of pride and passion she had been taught, long ago, at +her father's knee, to rein with the curb of patience. But I am afraid it +was not this Christian motive that held her silent always under Lady +Leroy's unreasonable abuse. Ambition was the girl's ruling passion. With +her whole heart and soul she longed for wealth and power, and the first +of these priceless blessings, in whose train the second followed, could +only be obtained through this vituperative old bel-dame. If Nathalie let +nature and passion have their way, and flung back fury for fury, she +would find herself incontinently turned out of doors, and back again, +probably, the day after, in that odious school-room, wearing out her +heart, and going mad slowly with the dull drudgery of a poor teacher's +life. This motive in itself was strong enough, but of late days another +and a stronger had been added. If she were Miss Marsh, the +school-mistress, Captain Cavendish, the heir of a baronet, would +doubtless admire, and--have nothing whatever to say to her; but Miss +Marsh, the heiress of Redmon and of Lady Leroy's thousands, was quite +another thing. He was poor now, comparatively speaking; she knew +that--how sweet it would be to lay a fortune at the feet of the man she +loved! Some day in the bright future he would lay a title at her fair +feet in return, and all her dreams of love, and power, and greatness, +would be more than realized. Not that Nathalie for one instant fancied +George Cavendish sought her for her fortune--she would have flung back +such a suspicion furiously in the face of the profferer--but she knew +enough of the fitness of things to be aware that, however much he might +secretly adore her rose-hued cheeks, golden hair, and violet eyes, he +could never marry a portionless bride. On this tiger-cat old Tartar, +then, all these sweet dreams depended for their fruition; and she must +pocket her pride, and eat humble pie, and make no wry faces over that +unpalatable pastry. She must be patient and long-suffering now, that she +might reign like a princess royal hereafter; so while Lady Leroy stormed +and poured no end of vials of wrath on her ward's unfortunate head, that +young person only shut her rosy lips the harder, and bated her breath +not to reply. We are so strong to conquer ourselves, you see, when +pounds, shillings, and pence are concerned, and so weak and cowardly to +obey the commands of One who was led "as a lamb to the slaughter, and +who opened not his mouth." So Nathalie stood, breathing quick, and only +holding herself from flying at her tormentress by main force, and Lady +Leroy stormed on until forced to stop from want of breath. + +"And now, Miss," she wound up, her little eyes glaring on the young +lady, "I should like to know what you've got to say for yourself." + +"I have nothing to say," replied Nathalie, speaking for the first time. + +"Oh, I dare say not! All I say goes in one ear and out t'other, doesn't +it, now? Ain't you ashamed of yourself, you minx?" + +"No!" quietly said Nathalie. + +Mrs. Leroy glared upon her with a look of fury, horribly revolting in +that old and wrinkled face. + +"Do you mean to say you'll ever do it again? Do you mean to say you'll +go with that man any more? Do you mean to say you defy and disobey me? +Tell me!" cried Lady Leroy, clawing the air as if she were clawing the +eyes out of Captain Cavendish's handsome head, "tell me if you mean to +do this!" + +"Yes!" was the fiery answer flaming in the girl's crimson cheeks and +flashing eyes, "I defy you to the death!" But prudence sidled up to her +and whispered, "Heiress of Redmon, remember what you risk!" and so--oh, +that I should have to tell it!--Nathalie Marsh smoothed her contracted +brows, vailed the angry brightness of her blue eyes under their sweeping +lashes, and steadily said: + +"Mrs. Leroy, you know I have no wish to willfully defy or disobey you. I +should be sorry to be anything but true and dutiful to you, and I am not +conscious of being anything else now." + +"You are--you know you are!" the old woman passionately cried. "You know +I hate this man--this spendthrift, this fortune-seeker, this +smooth-spoken, false-hearted hypocrite! Give up this man--promise me +never to speak to him again, and then I will believe you!" + +Nathalie stood silent. + +"Promise," shrilly screamed Lady Leroy, "promise or else----" + +She stopped short, but the white rage in her distorted face finished the +sentence with emphasis. + +"I will promise you one thing," said Nathalie, turning pale and cold, +"that he shall not come to Redmon any more. You accuse him unjustly, +Mrs. Leroy--he is none of the things you say. Do not ask me to promise +anything else--I cannot do it!" + +What Lady Leroy would have said to this Nathalie never knew; for at that +moment there came a loud knock at the front door, and Miss Marsh, only +too glad to escape, flew down to answer it. + +The alarm at the outer door proved to come from Charley Marsh; and +Nathalie stared, as she saw how pale and haggard he looked--so unlike +her bright-faced brother. + +"What ails you, Charley?" she anxiously asked. "Are you sick?" + +"Sick? No! Why should I be sick?" + +"You are as pale and worn-looking as if you had been ill for a month. +Something has gone wrong." + +"I have been up all night," said Charley, omitting, however, to add, +playing billiards. "That's why. Nathalie," hurriedly and nervously, +"have you any money? I can't ask before that old virago up-stairs." + +"Money! Yes, I have some. Do you want it?" + +"I want you to lend me as much as you can, for a short time. There!" he +said, impatiently, "don't begin asking questions, Natty. I want it +particularly, and I will pay you back as soon as I can. How much have +you got?" + +"I have nearly twenty pounds, more or less. Will that do?" + +"It will help. Don't say anything about it, Natty, like a good girl. +Who's in?" + +"No one but Mrs. Leroy. Won't you come up?" + +"I must, I suppose. Get the money while I am talking to her, and give it +to me as I go out. What a solemn face you have got, Natty!" + +He laughed as he spoke--Charley's careless, boyish laugh, but Nathalie +only sighed as they ascended the stairs together. + +"Mrs. Leroy has been scolding ever since I came from town. If ever a +fortune was dearly bought, Charley, mine will be." + +"Paying too dear for your whistle--eh? Never mind, Natty! it can't last +forever, and neither can Lady Leroy." + +All the shadow had gone from Charley's brow, and the change was magical. +Whether it was the promise of the money, or his natural elasticity of +spirit rebounding, he knew best; but certainly when he shook hands with +the mistress of the domain, the sunshine outside was not brighter than +his handsome face. Mrs. Leroy rather liked Charley, which is saying +folios in the young man's favor, considering how few that cantankerous +old cat admitted to her favor--but every one liked Charley Marsh. + +While Nathalie went to her own room for the money, Nathalie's brother +was holding Mrs. Leroy spell-bound with his brilliant flow of +conversation. All the gossip and scandal of Speckport was +retailed--business, pleasure, fashion, and fights, related with +appetizing gusto; and where the reality fell short, Mr. Marsh called +upon his lively imagination for a few extra facts. The forthcoming +picnic and its delights were discussed, and Charley advised her to +strain a point and be present. + +"Midge can wheel you about the field, you know, in your chair," said +Charley. "You won't take cold--the day's sure to be delightful, and I +know every one will enjoy themselves ten times better for having you +there. You had better come. Val Blake and I will carry you down stairs!" + +To the astonishment of Nathalie, Mrs. Leroy assented readily to the odd +proposition; and Charley departed, having charmed the old lady into +utter forgetfulness, for the time being, of her antipathy to Captain +Cavendish. Speckport could talk of nothing for a week beforehand but the +picnic--the first of the season. All Speckport was going, young and old, +rich and poor. Admission, twenty-five cents; children, half price. + +The Redmon grounds, where the picnic was to be held, were extensive and +beautiful. Broad velvety fields, green lanes, among miniature forests of +fragrant cedar and spruce, and all sloping down to the smooth, white +sands of the beach, with the gray sea tramping dully in, and the salt +spray dashing up in your face. And "I hope it won't be foggy! I do hope +it won't be foggy!" was the burden of every one's cry; the fog generally +choosing to step in and stay a week or two, whenever Speckport proposed +a picnic. How many blinds were drawn aside in the gray and dismal dawn +of that eventful morning, and how many eager pairs of eyes, shaded by +night-cap borders, turned anxiously heavenward; and how delightedly they +were drawn in again! for, wonderful to tell, the sky was blue and +without a cloud, and the sun, rising in a canopy of rose and amber, +promised all beholders a day of unremitting sunshine. + +Before nine o'clock the Redmon road was alive with people--all in +gorgeous array. Before ten, the droves of men, women, and children +increased fourfold, and the dust was something awful. The sun fairly +blazed in the sky; had it ever shone so dazzlingly before, or was there +ever so brilliantly blue a sky, or such heaps and heaps of billows of +snowy white, floating through it? Before eleven, that boiling seaside +sun would have grilled you alive only for the strong sea-breeze, +heaven-sent, sweeping up from the bay. Through fiery heat, and choking +dust, the cry was "still they come," and Redmon grounds swarmed with +people, as the fields of Egypt once swarmed with locust. A great arch of +evergreens surmounted the entrance-gate, and the Union Jack floated +loyally over it in the morning sunshine. The clanging of the band and +the roll of the drum greeted your delighted ears the moment you entered +the fairy arch, and you found yourself lost and bewildered in a sea of +people you never saw before. The swings were flying with dizzying +velocity, young belles went up until the toes of their gaiters nearly +touched the firmament, and your head reeled to look at them. Some two or +three hundred ladies and gentlemen were tripping the light fantastic toe +to the inspiring music of a set of Irish quadrilles; and some eight +hundred spectators were gathered in tremendous circles about them, +looking on, gazing as if never in all their lives had so glorious and +wonderful a vision as their fellow-sinners jigging up and down, dazzled +their enchanted eyes. The refreshment tents were in such a crowded and +jammed and suffocating state, that you could see the steam ascending +from them as from an escape-valve; and the fair ones behind the tables, +bewildered by two dozen clamorous voices, demanding the attention of +each one at once, passed pies and tarts, and sandwiches and soda water, +and coffee and cakes frantically and at random, and let little boys feed +in corners unnoticed, and were altogether reduced to a state of utter +imbecility by the necessity of doing half a dozen things at one and the +same time. Pink and blue, and yellow and green ribbons fluttered, and +silks and muslins and bareges trailed the grass and got torn off the +waist by masculine bootheels; and the picnic was too delightful for +description, and, over all, the fiery noonday July sun blazed like a +wheel of fire, and the sea wind swept up fresh and delicious, and the +waves sang their old song down on the shore, and no one listened to +their mystic music or wondered, like poor little Paul Dombey, what they +were saying. + +No one! Yes, there was one sitting on a green bank, all alone, who had +been very busy all morning until now, arranging tables and waiting on +hungry pleasure-seekers, making little boys and girls behave themselves, +and swinging little people who could get no one else to attend them. The +breeze that set the tall reeds and fern at fandangoing waved her black +barege dress, and flung back the little black lace vail falling from her +hat. Tired and hot, she had wandered here to listen to the waves and to +the tumult behind her. + +What were the thoughts of the man who leaned against a tall tamarack +tree and watched the reclining figure as a cat does a mouse? There are +some souls so dark that all the beauty of earth and heaven are as blank +pages to them. They see without comprehending, without one feeling of +thoughtfulness for all the glory around them. Surely it were better for +such to have been born blind. This man saw no wide sea spreading before +him, glittering as if sown with stars. There was more to him worth +watching in one flutter of that thin black dress on the bank than in all +the world beside, and he stood and watched with his eyes half closed, +waiting until she should see him. + +He had not to wait long. Some prescience that something out of harmony +with the scene was near, made her restless. She rose up on her elbow, +and looked round--a second after, her face flushed, she was up off the +grass and on her feet. The man lifted his hat and advanced. + +"Pardon my intrusion, Winnie--Miss Rose, and--no, no--I beg you will not +go!" + +She had made to turn away, but he himself interposed--something of +agitation in his manner, and it was but rarely, indeed. Captain George +Cavendish allowed himself to be agitated. She stopped gently enough, the +surprised flush faded out from her face--that pretty, pale face, +tranquil as face could be, was only very grave. + +"If you have anything to say to me, Captain Cavendish, please to say it +quickly. I do not wish to be seen here." + +"Is it such a disgrace, then, to be seen for one poor instant with me?" +he said, bitterly. + +She did not reply, save by an impatient tapping of one foot on the +grass, and a backward glance at the crowded grounds. + +"Winnie!" he broke out, passionately, as if stung by her manner, "have +you turned into a flirt? Have you entirely forgotten what is past? You +cannot--you cannot have ceased altogether to care for me, since I +cannot, do what I will, forget you!" + +Miss Rose looked at him--steadily, quietly, gravely, out of her brown +eyes. If he had hoped for anything, that one look would have shivered +his air-castles as a stone shivers brittle glass. + +"I told you once before, Captain Cavendish, that such words from you to +me were insults. The past, where you are concerned, is no more to me +than if you had never existed. I have not forgotten it, but it has no +more power to move me than the waves there can move those piles of rock. +No! I have not forgotten it. I look back often enough now with wonder +and pity at myself, that I ever should have been the idiot that I was." + +His face turned crimson at the unmistakable earnestness of her words. + +"Then I need scruple or hesitate no longer," he said, launching his last +pitiful shaft. "I need hesitate no longer, on your score, to speak the +words that will make one who is rich and beautiful, and who loves me, +happy. I came here willingly to make what atonement I could for the +past, by telling you beforehand, lest the shock of my marriage----" + +He stopped in actual confusion, but raging inwardly at the humiliation +she was making him feel--this poor little pale schoolmistress, whom he +could have lifted with one hand and flung easily over the bank. She was +smiling as she listened to him, a smile not of mockery or disdain, only +so gallingly full of utter indifference to him. + +"There is no atonement necessary," she said, with that conscious smile +still hovering on her lips; "none, I assure you. I have no hard feelings +toward you, Captain Cavendish, nothing to resent or forgive. If I was an +idiot, it was my own fault, I dare say, and I would not blot out one day +that is gone if I could. Marry when you will, marry as soon as you +please, and no one will wish you joy more sincerely on your wedding day +than I." + +It half-maddened him, that supreme indifference, that serene face. He +knew that he loved her, herself, and her alone; and while he fancied her +pining and love-lorn, he was very well satisfied and quite complacent +over her case. But this turn of the story was a little too mortifying to +any man's pride to stand, and the man a lady-killer by profession at +that. + +"I don't believe it," he said, savagely, "you have not forgotten--you +cared for me too much for that. I did not think you could stoop to +falsehood while playing the rôle of a saint." + +Miss Rose gave him a look--a look before which, with all his fury, he +shrank. She had turned to walk away, but she stopped for a moment. + +"I am telling no falsehood, Captain Cavendish: before I stoop to that, I +pray I may die. You know in your heart I mean what I say, and you know +that you believe me. I have many things to be thankful for, but chief +among them, when I kneel down to thank God for his mercies, I thank him +that I am not your wife!" + +She walked slowly away, and he did not follow her; he only stood there, +swallowing the bitter pill, and digesting it as best he might. It was +provoking, no doubt, not to be able to forget this wretched little +school-ma'am, while she so coolly banished him from her memory--so +utterly and entirely banished him; for Captain Cavendish knew better +than to disbelieve her. He had jilted her, it is true, as he had many +another; but where was his triumph now? If he could only have forgotten +her himself; but when the grapes were within his reach, he had despised +them, and now that they grew above his head, and he did want them, it +was exasperating that he could not get them. + +"Pah!" he thought bitterly, "what a fool I am! I could not marry her +were she ever so willing now, any more than I could then. This cursed +debt is dragging me to--perdition--I was going to say, and I must marry +a fortune, and that soon. Nathalie Marsh is the richest girl in +Speckport, therefore I shall marry Nathalie Marsh. She is ten times more +beautiful than that little quakeress who is just gone; but I can't love +her, and I can't forget the other." + +Captain Cavendish leaned against the tamarack a long time, thinking. The +uproar behind him and the roar of the surf on the shore blended together +in a dull, meaningless tumult in his ears. He was thinking of this +marriage de convenance he must make, of this bride he must one day take +home to England. He was a gambler and a spendthrift, this man, over head +and ears in debt, and with no way but this one of ever getting out of +it. From his friends in England? He had no friends in England on whom he +could rely. His only rich relative, his uncle, the baronet, had taken it +into his head, at the age of fifty-five, to get married; and what was +more, there was an heir, a young gentleman of five months old, between +him and the baronetcy. His commission had been purchased by his uncle, +and it seemed all he need ever expect from him. He had never seen +service, and had no particular desire to see any. He must marry a rich +wife--there was no alternative--and he knew the power of his handsome +face extremely well. He had no fear of a refusal; there was no use in +delaying; he would make the heiress of Redmon happy that very day. + +The sun was going down behind the waves, in an oriflamme of gold and +crimson and purple and rose, flushing the whole sky with its tropical +beauty, when the young officer turned away to seek for his future wife. +As if his thoughts had evoked her she was coming toward him, and all +alone; her white dress floating mistily about her, all her golden curls +hanging damp and loose over her shoulders, and her cheeks flushed with +the heat. She had taken off her hat, and was swinging it by its azure +ribbons, as she came up; and she looked so beautiful that the young +Englishman thought that it would not be so very dreadful a thing to +sell himself to this violet-eyed sultana after all. + +"Truant!" said Nathalie, "where have you been all the afternoon? I +thought you had gone away." + +"And all the time I have been standing here, like Patience on a +monument, wishing you would come up." + +"Did you want me, then?" + +"When do I not want you?" + +Nathalie laughed, but she also blushed. "Then you should have gone in +search of me, sir. Mrs. Leroy wants to go home now, and I must go with +her." + +"But not just yet. I have something to say to you, Nathalie." + +And so here, in the hot warmth of the red sunset, the old, old story was +told--the story that has been told over and over again since the world +began, and will be told until its end, and yet is ever new. The story to +which two little words, yes or no, ends so ecstatically, or gives the +deathblow. It was yes this time; and when Nathalie Marsh, half an hour +after, went home with Mrs. Leroy, she was wondering if there was one +among all those thousands--one in all the wide world--as happy as she! + +The last red glimmer of the sunset had faded out of the sky, and the +summer moon was up, round and white and full, before the last of the +picnickers went home. And in its pale rays, with his hands in his +pockets, and a cigar between his lips, Captain Cavendish went home with +Cherrie Nettleby. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +FAST AND LOOSE. + + +Miss Nathalie Marsh was not the only young lady who received a proposal +that memorable picnic-day. Flashing in and out among the other belles of +Speckport, and eclipsing them all as she went, the belle of the +bourgeois, par excellence, came Miss Cherrie Nettleby, quite dazzling to +look at in a pink and white plaid silk, a white lace mantle, the blue +parasol you wot of, the turban-hat, with a long white feather streaking +round it, and the colored white lace vail over her blooming brunette +face. Miss Nettleby had fawn-colored kid gloves, an embroidered kerchief +sticking out of her pocket; and, to crown all, two or three yards of +gold chain around her neck, and hanging ever so far below her waist. An +overgrown locket and a carnelian cross dangled from the chain; and no +giddy young peacock ever strutted about prouder of its tail than did the +little black-eyed belle of these glittering fetters. She had only +received the chain, and locket, and cross the night before; they had +come in a box, with a huge bouquet, under the weight of which a small +black boy staggered, with the compliments of Captain Cavendish, and +would Miss Nettleby do him the honor of accepting them? Nettleby did him +the honor, and was not able to sleep a wink all night for rapture. A +gold chain had been the desire of her heart for many and many a day; +and, at last, some good fairy had taken pity on her and sent it, with +the handsomest man in Speckport for her ambassador. Cherrie's ecstasies +are not to be described; a chain from any one would have been a +delightful gift; but from Captain Cavendish, one smile from whom Cherrie +would have given all the rest of her admirers for, delightedly. She had +hugged Ann in her transports, until that young person, breaking +indignantly from her, demanded to know if she had gone mad; and she had +dressed for the picnic, expecting to have the young Englishman devotedly +by her side the whole day long, before the aggravated and envious eyes +of all Speckport. But Cherrie had never made a greater mistake in all +her life; the blue parasol, the pink silk, the white lace mantle, and +fawn-colored kid gloves were powerless to charm--Captain Cavendish never +came near her. He had not come at all until late, and then he had driven +in in the McGregor barouche, with the heiress of that house by his side, +resplendent to look at; and he had walked about with her, and with Miss +Laura Blair, and Miss Marsh, and sundry other young ladies, a step or +two higher up the ladder of life than Miss Nettleby, but he had not once +walked with her. He had passed her two or three times, as he could not +very well help doing, since she had put herself straight in his way; and +he had nodded and smiled, and walked deliberately on. Cherrie could have +cried with chagrin; but she didn't, not wishing to redden her eyes and +swell her nose there, and she consoled herself by flirting outrageously +with everybody who would be flirted with. + +As the afternoon wore on, Cherrie began to experience that fatigue which +five or six hours' dancing in a blazing July sun is apt to engender, and +informed her partner in the quadrille she was roasted to death. The +partner--who was Mr. Charles Marsh, and who had been her most devoted +all day--was leaning against a stout elderly gentleman as against a +post, fanning himself with his straw wideawake, leisurely set that +headpiece sideways on his brown locks and presented his arm. + +"I thought you would come to that by-and-by, Miss Nettleby, in spite of +your love of dancing. Quadrilles are all very well in December, but I +can't say that I fancy them in the dog-days. Suppose we go down to the +shore and get a whiff of fresh air." + +Miss Nettleby put her fawn-colored kid-glove inside Mr. Marsh's +coat-sleeve, and poising her azure parasol in the other hand, strolled +with him to the beach. On their way, Nathalie, standing with Captain +Locksley, young McGregor, and a number of other gentlemen and ladies, +espied them, and her color rose and her blue eyes flashed at the sight. + +"Egad! I think they'll make a match of it!" laughed Locksley. "Charley +seems to be completely taken in tow by that flyaway Cherrie." + +Nathalie said nothing, but her brow contracted ominously as she turned +impatiently away. + +"Oh, that's nothing," said the Reverend Augustus Tod; "it's the fashion +to go with Cherrie, and Charley is ready to follow fashion's lead. The +little girl will settle down some day, I dare say, into a sensible, +hard-working fisherman's wife." + +Even Nathalie laughed at the idea of Miss Nettleby hard-working and +sensible; and that young lady and her escort sauntered leisurely on to +the breezy seashore. The sun was dipping behind the western waves, the +sky all flushed and radiant with the scarlet and golden glory of its +decline, the blue sea itself flooded with crimson radiance. Even Mr. +Marsh was moved to admiration of its gorgeous splendor. + +"Neat thing in the way of sunsets, Cherrie," he remarked, taking out a +cigar, and lighting it. + +"What a nice magenta color them clouds is!" said Miss Nettleby, +admiringly; "they would make a lovely dress trimmed with black braid. +And that mauve cloud over there with the yellow edge, I should like to +have a scarf of that." + +"Well," said Charley, "I can't get you the mauve cloud, but if there's a +scarf at all like it in Speckport you shall have it. By the way, +Cherrie, where did you get that chain?" + +"You didn't give it to me, anyhow," replied Miss Nettleby, tossing her +turban. "I might wait a long time for anything before I got it from +you." + +"I didn't know you wanted one, or I might. I wish you wouldn't take +presents from anybody but me, Cherrie." + +"From anybody but you!" retorted Cherrie, with scorn. "I'd like to know +the time you gave me anything, Charley Marsh?" + +"Come now, Cherrie, I don't want to be mean, but that's a little too +bad!" + +"I suppose you're hinting at that coral set you sent me last week?" said +Cherrie, in a resentful tone. "But, I can tell you, there's lots of +folks, not a thousand miles off, would be glad to give me ten times as +much if I would take it." + +"Don't take their gifts, Cherrie; there's a good girl; it's not +ladylike, you know; and some day you shall have whatever you want--when +I am rich and you are my wife, Cherrie." + +"The idea!" giggled Cherrie, her color rising, "your wife, indeed; I +think I see myself!" + +"Wouldn't you have me, Cherrie?" + +He was still smoking, and still looking at the sunset--not seeing it, +however. Poor Charley Marsh, light as was his tone, was exceedingly in +earnest. Miss Nettleby stole a glance at him from under the blue +parasol, not quite certain whether he were in jest or in earnest, and +her silly little heart beating a trifle faster than was its wont. + +"I suppose, Mr. Marsh," said the young lady, after a moment's +deliberation, thinking it best to stand on her dignity, "you think it a +fine thing to make fun of me; but I can tell you I ain't going to stand +it, if you are a doctor, and me only a gardener's daughter. I think you +might find something else to amuse you." + +"I'll take my oath, Cherrie," said Charley, throwing his cigar over the +bank, "I never was so much in earnest in all my life." + +"I don't believe it," said Miss Nettleby. + +"What's the reason you don't? Haven't I been going with you long enough? +What did you suppose I meant?" + +"I didn't suppose nothing at all about it. You aren't the only one that +pays attention to me." + +"No; but I don't think any of the others mean anything. I intend to +marry you, Cherrie, if you'll consent." + +Cherrie tossed her turban disdainfully, but in her secret heart she was +in raptures. Not that she meant to accept him just then, with Captain +Cavendish in the background; but neither had she the slightest intention +of refusing him. The handsome Englishman had given her a gold chain, to +be sure, but then he had also given her the cold shoulder all that day; +and if things did not turn out with him as she could wish, Charley Marsh +would do as a dernier resort. Cherrie liked Charley, and he could make +her a lady; and if she failed in becoming Mrs. Cavendish, it would be a +very nice thing to become Mrs. Marsh, and half the young ladies in +Speckport would be dying of envy. Cherrie thought all this in about two +seconds and a half. + +"Well, Cherrie, have you nothing to say?" inquired Charley, rather +anxiously. + +"Mr. Marsh," said Miss Nettleby, with dignity, remembering how the +heroine of the last novel she had read had answered in a similar case, +"I require time to pon--ponder over it. On some other occasion, when I +have seriously reflected on it, you shall have my answer." + +Mr. Marsh stood aghast for a moment, staring at the young lady, and then +went off into a fit of uproarious laughter. + +"Well," demanded Cherrie, facing round rather fiercely, "and what are +you laughing at, sir?" + +"Oh, I beg your pardon, Cherrie," said Charley, recovering from his +paroxysm; "but really you did that so well that I----" + +Charley came near going off again; but, seeing the black eyes flashing, +recovered himself. + +"Come, Cherrie, never mind Laura-Matilda speeches, but tell me, like a +sensible little girl, that you like me, and by-and-by will be my wife." + +"I'll do nothing of the sort!" cried Miss Nettleby, in a state of +exasperation, "either now or at any other time, if I don't choose. +You'll just wait for your answer, or go without." + +She sailed away as she spoke, leaving Charley too much taken aback, not +to say mortified, to follow her. + +"Hang it!" was Mr. Marsh's exclamation, as he turned in an opposite +direction; "the idea of getting such an answer from that girl! What +would Natty say? She would think it bad enough my proposing at all, but +to get such a reply." + +Yet, even in the midst of his chagrin, he laughed again at the +recollection of Miss Nettleby's speech--careless Charley, who never let +anything trouble him long. + +"She'll come to it, I dare say," he reflected, as he went along, "and I +can wait. I do like her, she's such a pretty little thing, and good, +too, in the main, though rather frivolous on the surface. Well, Miss +Rose, how are you enjoying yourself?" + +Miss Rose's fair, sweet face was rather a striking contrast after +Cherrie's, but Charley was not thinking of that, as he offered her his +arm. Cherrie in the distance saw the act, and felt a pang of jealousy. + +"He's gone off with that pale-faced school-mistress, now," she thought, +resentfully. "I dare say she'd be glad to catch him, if she could. Oh!" + +She stopped short with an exclamation half suppressed. She had come upon +Captain Cavendish leaning against a tall tree, and talking to Nathalie +Marsh. Another jealous pang pierced the frivolous heart, and--I am sorry +to tell it--she crept in close under the tree, with the blue parasol +furled, and--yes, she did--she listened. Listened for over twenty +minutes, her color coming and going, her breath bated, her hands +clenched. Then she fluttered hurriedly off, just in time to escape them, +as they walked away, plighted lovers. + +There was a little clump of cedar-bushes, forming a sort of dell, up the +side of the bank. Cherrie Nettleby fell down here in the tall grass, +dashing the blue parasol down beside her, crumpling the turban, soiling +the white feather, and smearing the pink dress, tore off the gold chain, +and burst into such a passion of spiteful, jealous, and enraged tears, +as she had never before shed in her life. To think that all her hopes +should have come to this; that the gold chain was only a glittering +delusion; all his pretty speeches and lover-like attentions only hollow +cheats, and Nathalie Marsh going to be his wife! Cherrie seized the +chain in a paroxysm of fury, as she thought of it, and hurled it over +the bank. + +"The hateful, lying, deceitful scamp," she passionately cried. "I hate +him, and I'll go and marry Charley Marsh, just for spite." + +Charley was not hard to find. He was playing quoits with a lot of other +young Speckportians; and Miss Catty Clowrie was standing gazing +admiringly on, and ready to talk to him between whiles. Cherrie tapped +him on the arm with her parasol, and looked shyly up in his face with a +rosy blush. But the shy look and the blush were exceedingly well got up, +and Charley dropped the quoits with a delighted face. + +"Cherrie! what is it? Have you made up your mind, then?" + +"Yes, Charley! You didn't believe I was in earnest that time, did you? I +do like you, and I will be your wife as soon as ever you like." + +Did Miss Catty Clowrie, standing unheeded by, with ears as sharp as +lances, hear this very straightforward avowal? She had flashed a keen, +quick glance from one to the other; had dropped her vail suddenly over +her face, and turned away. Neither noticed her. + +Charley was in raptures, and might have fallen on Miss Nettleby and +embraced her there and then, only that before that maiden had quite +finished speaking, Nathalie confronted them, her face haughty, her step +ringing, her voice imperious. + +"Charley, Mrs. Leroy is going home, and desires you to come immediately +and assist Mr. Blake." + +"Oh, bother!" cried Charley, politely, "let her get some of the other +fellows; I can't go." + +"Charley!" + +"Why can't she get McGregor, or some of the rest?" said Charley, +impatiently; "don't you see I'm playing quoits, Natty?" + +"I see you're doing nothing of the sort, sir, and I insist on you coming +this instant! Don't trouble yourself about Miss Nettleby, she has +legions of adorers here, who will only be too happy to attend her +home." + +Miss Marsh swept away like a young queen; her violet eyes flashing, her +perfect lips curling. Charley turned to follow, saying, hurriedly, as he +went: + +"I'll be back in half an hour, Cherrie, wait for me here." + +"Proud, hateful thing!" exclaimed Cherrie, apostrophizing the receding +form of Miss Marsh; "she looked at me that time as if she scorned to +touch me! Wait until I am her brother's wife, we will see who will put +on mistress." From where she stood, Cherrie could see the party for +Redmon come. Charley and Val Blake wheeled Mrs. Leroy in her chair of +state over the grass, that mummy having consented to be exhumed for the +occasion, and having been the chief curiosity and attraction of the +picnic. Nathalie walked on one side, and Midge on the other, but Captain +Cavendish did not make one of the party now, for the moment they were +out of sight, that gallant officer hurriedly walked deliberately up to +her. Cherrie tossed her turban again, and curled her lip suspiciously, +not deigning to notice him by so much as a glance. + +"Come, Cherrie, what's the matter?" he began, in a free and easy way; +"how have I got into disgrace?" + +"Oh, it's you, Captain Cavendish, is it?" said Cherrie, loftily, +condescending to become aware of his presence, "I don't know what you +mean." + +"Nonsense, Cherrie! What is the matter? Come, now, be reasonable, and +tell me what I have done." + +"You haven't done anything to me," quite frigidly, though; "how could +you?" + +"That's precisely what I want to know. Where is that chain I saw around +your neck a short time ago?" + +"In my pocket. You had better take it back again. I don't want it." + +Captain Cavendish stared. Miss Nettleby, grasping the parasol firmly, +though the sun had gone down, and the moon was rising, with a very +becoming glow in her cheeks, and bright, angry light in her eyes, +looked straight before her, and addressed empty space when she spoke. + +"There is some mystery here, and I am going to get at the bottom of it," +he said, resolutely; "Cherrie, let me go home with you, and see if we +cannot clear it up by the way." + +"With me?" said Cherrie, stepping back, and looking at him disdainfully; +"why, what would Miss Marsh say to that?" + +A light broke on the captain. + +"Miss Marsh! Why, what have I to do with Miss Marsh?" + +"A great deal, I should think, after what passed between you over there +on the beach." + +"Cherrie! where were you? Not listening?" + +"I was passing," said Miss Nettleby, stiffly, "and I chanced to +overhear. It wasn't my fault if you spoke out loud." + +Even Captain Cavendish stood for a moment non-plussed by this turn of +affairs. He had no desire his proposal to Miss Marsh should become +public property, for many reasons; and he knew he might as well have +published it in the Speckport Spouter, as let Cherrie find it out. +Another thing he did not want--to lose Cherrie; she was a great deal too +pretty, and he fancied her a great deal too much for that. + +"Cherrie, that was all an--an accident! I didn't mean anything! There +are too many people looking at us here, to talk; but, if you will go +home, I will explain by the way." + +"No," said Cherrie, standing resolutely on her dignity, but trying to +keep from crying, "I can't. I promised Mr. Marsh to wait for him." + +"Oh, confound Mr. Marsh! Come with me, and never mind him." + +"No, Captain Cavendish; I think I'll wait. Charley thinks more of me +than you do, since he asked me to marry him this afternoon, and I am +going to do it." + +Captain Cavendish looked at her. He knew Cherrie's regard for truth was +not the most stringent; that she would invent, and tell a fib with all +the composure in life, but she was palpably telling no falsehood this +time. He saw it in the triumphant flash of her black eyes, in the flush +of her face, and set his teeth inwardly with anger and mortification. +"How blessings brighten as they take their flight!" Never had Cherrie +Nettleby looked so beautiful; never had her eyes been so much like black +diamonds as now, when their light seemed setting to him forever. Captain +Cavendish believed her, and resolved not to lose her, in spite of all +the Charley Marshes in the world. + +"So Marsh has asked you to be his wife, has he? Now, Cherrie, suppose I +asked you the same question, what would you say?" + +"You asked Miss Marsh to-day, and I think that's enough." + +"I did not mean it, Cherrie. I swear I did not! I am fifty times as much +in love with you as I am with her." + +And Captain Cavendish was speaking truth. Humiliating as it is to say so +of one's heroine, the black-eyed grisette was a hundred times more to +his taste than the blue-eyed lady. Could they have changed places, he +would have married Cherrie off-hand, and never given one sigh to +Nathalie. It was the prospective fortune of that young lady he was in +love with. + +"Cherrie, you don't believe me," he said, seeing incredulity in her +face, "but I swear I am telling the truth. Let me prove it--give up +Charley Marsh and marry me!" + +"Captain!" + +"I mean it! Which of us do you like best--Marsh or I?" + +"You know well enough," said Cherrie, crying. "I like you ever so much +the best; but when I heard you asking Miss Natty, I--I----" here the +voice broke down in good earnest, and Cherrie's tears began to flow. + +Captain Cavendish looked hurriedly about him. The last rays of the +sunset had burned themselves out, and the moon was making for herself a +track of silver sheen over the sea. The crowd were flocking homeward, +tired out, and there was no one near; but in the distance his eagle eye +saw Charley Marsh striding over the dewy evening grass. Poor Charley! +The captain drew Cherrie's arm inside his own, and walked her rapidly +away. They were out on the Redmon road before either spoke again. + +"I did not mean one word of what I said to Miss Marsh. But I'll tell you +a secret, Cherrie, if you'll never mention it again." + +"I won't," said Cherrie. "What is it?" + +"I should like to share her fortune--that is, you and I--and if she +thinks I am in love with her, I stand a good chance. I should like to be +richer than I am, for your sake, you know; so you must not be jealous. I +don't care a straw for her, but for her money." + +"And you do care for me?" + +"You know I do! Are you ready to give up Charley, and marry me?" + +"Oh!" said Cherrie, and it was all she replied; but it was uttered so +rapturously that it perfectly satisfied him. + +"Then that is settled? Let me see--suppose we get married next week, or +the week after?" + +"Oh! Captain!" cried the enraptured Cherrie. + +"Then that is settled too. What a little darling you are, Cherrie! And +now I have only one request to make of you--that you will not breathe +one word of this to a living soul. Not a syllable--do you understand?" + +"Why? said Cherrie, a little disappointed. + +"My dear girl, it would ruin us both! We will be married privately--no +one shall know it but the clergyman and--Mr. Blake." + +"Mr. Blake? Val?" + +"Yes," said Captain Cavendish, gravely, "he shall be present at the +ceremony, but not another being in Speckport must find it out. If they +do, Cherrie, I will have to leave you forever. There are many reasons +for this that I cannot now explain. You will continue to live at home, +and no one but ourselves shall be the wiser. There, don't look so +disappointed; it won't last long, my darling. Let Charley still think +himself your lover; but, mind you, keep him at a respectful distance, +Cherrie." + +They reached the cottage at last, but it took them a very long time. +Captain Cavendish walked back to Speckport in the moonlight, smoking, +and with an odd little smile on his handsome face. + +"I'll do it, too," he said, glancing up at the moon, as if informing +that luminary in confidence. "There's a law against bigamy, I believe; +but I'll marry them both, the maid first, the mistress afterward." + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +HOW CAPTAIN CAVENDISH MEANT TO MARRY CHERRIE. + + +The clerk of the weather in Speckport might have been a woman, so fickle +and changeable in his mind was he. You never could put any trust in him; +if you did, you were sure to be taken in. A bleak, raw, cheerless, +gloomy morning, making parlor fires pleasant in spite of its being July, +and hot coffee as delicious a beverage as cool soda-water had been the +day before; a morning not at all suited for constitutionals; yet on this +cold, wet, raw, foggy morning Charley Marsh had arisen at five o'clock, +and gone off for a walk, and was only opening the front-door of the +little cottage as the clock on the sitting-room mantel was chiming nine. +Breakfast was over, and there was no one in the room but Mrs. Marsh, in +her shawl and rocker, beside the fire which was burning in the Franklin, +immersed ten fathoms deep in the adventures of a gentleman, inclosed +between two yellow covers, and bearing the euphonious name of "Rinaldo +Rinaldi." Miss Rose had gone to school, Betsy Ann was clattering among +the pots in the kitchen; the breakfast-table looked sloppy and littered; +the room, altogether dreary. Perhaps it was his walk in that cheerless +fog, but Charley looked as dreary as the room; his bright face haggard +and pale, his eyes heavy, and with dark circles under them, bespeaking a +sleepless night. Mrs. Marsh dropped "Rinaldo Rinaldi," and looked up +with a fretful air. + +"Dear me, Charley, how late you are! What will Doctor Leach say? Where +have you been?" + +"Out for a walk." + +"Such a hateful morning--it's enough to give you your death! Betsy Ann, +bring in the coffee-pot!" + +Betsy Ann appeared with that household god, and a face shining with +smiles and yellow soap, and her mistress relapsed into "Rinaldo Rinaldi" +again. Charley seemed to have lost his appetite as well as his spirits. +He drank a cup of coffee, pushed the bread and butter impatiently away, +donned his hat and overcoat, the former pulled very much over his eyes, +and set out for the office. + +Charley had enough to trouble him. It was not only Cherrie's desertion, +though that was enough, for he really loved the girl with the whole +fervor and strength of a fresh young heart, and meant to make her his +honored wife. He was infatuated, no doubt; he knew her to be illiterate, +silly, unprincipled, false and foolish, a little dressy piece of +ignorance, vanity, selfishness and conceit, or might have known it if he +chose; but he knew, too, she was a beautiful, brilliant, bewitching +little fairy, with good-natured and generous impulses now and then, and +the dearest little thing generally that ever was born. In short, he was +in love with her, and love knows nothing about common sense; so when he +had seen her walk off the previous evening with Captain Cavendish, and +desert him, he had leaned against a tree, feeling--heaven only knows how +deeply and how bitterly. Once he had started up to follow them, but had +stopped--the memory of a heavy debt contracted in Prince Street, owing +to this man, and hanging like an incubus about his neck, night and day, +thrust him back as with a hand of iron. He was in the power of the +English officer, beyond redemption; he could not afford to make him his +enemy. + +How that long morning dragged on, Charley never knew; certainly his +medical studies did not progress much. Poor and in debt, in love and +deserted, those were the changes on which his thoughts rang. A +sulky-faced clock, striking one, made him start. It was time to go home +to dinner, and he arose and went out. As he opened the shop-door, he +stopped short. Tripping gayly along the foggy and sloppy streets came +Cherrie herself, her dress pinned artistically up, to display a +brilliant Balmoral skirt, of all the colors of a dying dolphin; her +high-heeled boots clinking briskly over the pavement. Charley's foolish +heart gave a great bound, and he stepped impulsively forward, with her +name on his lips. + +"Cherrie?" + +Cherrie had not seen him until he spoke, and she recoiled with a scream. + +"Sir! Charley Marsh! how you scare me! I wish you wouldn't shout out so +sudden and frighten me out of my wits!" + +"You may spare your hysterics, Cherrie," said Charley, rather coldly; +"you could stand more than that if Captain Cavendish was in question." + +Cherrie laughed, and tripped along beside him with dancing eyes. She +liked Charley, though in a far less degree than the dashing and elegant +young officer, and was in a particularly good-natured state of mind that +morning. There was more than her liking for Charley to induce her to +keep good friends with him--the warning of the captain and her own +prudence. Cherrie, faithless herself, had no very profound trust in her +fellow-creatures. Until she was actually the captain's wife, she was not +sure of him; there is many a slip, she knew; and if he failed her, +Charley was the next best in Speckport. Therefore, at his insinuation, +she only tossed her turbaned head after her coquettish fashion, until +all her black curls danced a fandango, and showed her brilliant white +teeth in a gay little laugh. + +"Oh, you're jealous, are you?" she said. "I thought you would be!" + +"Cherrie!" + +"There, now, Charley, don't be cross! I just did it to make you jealous, +and nothing else! I was mad at you for going off the way you did!" + +"You know I could not help it!" + +"Oh, I dare say not. I'm nobody beside Miss Natty! So, when Captain +Cavendish came up and asked leave to see me home, I just let him! I +thought it wouldn't do you any harm to be a little jealous, you know, +Charley." + +Charley's hopes were high again; but his heart had been too deeply +pained for him to forget its soreness at one encouraging word. Something +wanting in Cherrie, he could not quite define what, had often struck him +before, but never so palpably as now. That want was principle, of which +the black-eyed young lady was totally devoid; and he was vaguely +realizing that trusting to her was much like leaning on a broken reed. + +Cherrie, a good deal piqued, and a little alarmed by his silence, looked +at him askance. + +"Oh, you're sulky, are you? Very well, sir, you can just please +yourself. If you've a mind to get mad for nothing, you may." + +"Cherrie," Charley said, quite gravely for him, "do you think you did +right last night? After promising to be my wife, to go off and leave me +as you did?" + +"I didn't, either!" retorted Cherrie; "it was you went off and left me." + +"That was no fault of mine, and I didn't go with another young lady. +Cherrie, I want you to promise me you will let Captain Cavendish see you +home no more." + +"I shall promise nothing of the sort!" cried Cherrie, with shrill +indignation. "Because I promised to marry you, I suppose you would like +me to live like a nun for the rest of my life, and not even look at any +other man. I'll just do as I did before, Mr. Charley Marsh; and if you +ain't satisfied with that, you may go and marry somebody else--Miss +Rose, or Miss Clowrie--she'd have you, fast enough!" + +"I don't want Miss Clowrie; I only want you, Cherrie; and if you cared +for me, you wouldn't act and talk as you do." + +Some of poor Charley's pain was in his voice and it touched the +coquette's frivolous heart. She stopped, at a dry-goods store, for an +encouraging word before entering. + +"You know very well, Charley, I like you ever so much--a great deal +better than I do any one else; but I can't help being pretty, and having +the young men after me, and I hate to be cross to them, too. Come up to +Redmon this evening, I haven't time to stop to talk now." + +With which the little hypocrite made a smiling obeisance, and darted +into the shop, leaving her lover to pursue his homeward way, a little +lighter in the region of the heart, but still dissatisfied and +mistrustful. + +The afternoon was as long and dreary as the morning. Charley sat in the +dismal little back-office, listening listlessly to the customers coming +in and out of the surgery, to buy Epsom-salts and senna, or hair-oil and +bilious pills; and the shopboy droning over a song-book, which he read +half aloud, in a monotonous sing-song way, when alone, staring vacantly +at the rotten leaves, and bits of chips and straw and paper fluttering +about the wet yard in the chill afternoon wind. And still the fog +settled down thicker, and wetter, and colder than ever; and when the +shopboy came in a little after six, to light the flaring gas-jet--it was +already growing dark--Charley arose, drearily, to go. + +"What a long day it has been!" he said, gaping in the boy's face; "it +seems like a week since I got up this morning. Where's the doctor?" + +"Up to Squire Tod's, sir. The old gentleman's took bad again with the +gout." + +The lamps were flaring through the foggy streets as he walked along, and +the few people abroad flitted in and out of the wet gloom, like shadowy +phantoms. Queen Street was bright enough with the illumination from +shop-windows, but the less busy thoroughfares looked dismal and +deserted, and the spectral passers-by more shadowy than ever. As he was +turning the corner of Cottage Street, one of these phantoms, buttoned up +in an overcoat, and bearing an umbrella, accosted him in a very +unphantomlike voice, and with a very unphantomlike slap on the shoulder. + +"How are you, Marsh? I thought I should come upon you here!" + +Charley turned round, and, with no particular expression of rapture, +recognized Captain Cavendish. + +"Good evening," he said, coldly; "were you looking for me?" + +The captain turned and linked his arm within his own. + +"I was. What became of you last night? We expected you at Prince +Street." + +"I made another engagement." + +"You will be there to-night, of course? I owe you your revenge, you +know." + +"Which means," said Charley, with a laugh, that sounded strange and +bitter from him, "you will get me some thirty or forty dollars more in +your debt!" + +"Talking of debt," said Captain Cavendish, in an indifferent +matter-of-fact tone, "could you oblige me with a trifle on account--say +twenty pounds?" + +Charley silently produced his pocketbook, and handed over the twenty he +had received from Nathalie a few days before. The nonchalant young +officer pocketed it as coolly as if it had been twenty pence. + +"Thanks! One often needs a trifle of this sort on an occasion. Is this +your house? Who is that playing? Not your sister?" + +They had halted in front of the cottage, and could hear the sound of the +piano from within. + +"It is Miss Rose, I presume," said Charley, in the same cold voice; +"will you come in?" + +"Not now. You will be up at Prince Street for certain then to-night?" + +Charley nodded, and entered the house. + +At her own door stood Miss Catty Clowrie. She was often standing there; +and though she returned the captain's bow, it was after Charley she +looked until he disappeared. There was no one in the sitting-room when +he entered; his mother's rocking-chair was vacant, and Miss Rose was +playing and singing in the parlor--touching the keys so lightly and +singing so sweetly that it seemed more an echo of the wind and waves +than anything else. The table was set for tea, and Betsy Ann was +scouring knives in the kitchen, humming some doleful ditty at her work. +There was a lounge under the window overlooking the bay, sullen and +stormy to-night. Charley flung himself upon it, his arm across the +pillow, his face lying in it, and listened in a vague and dismal way to +the music. The song was weird and mournful, truly an echo of the wailing +wind and sea. + +"Come to supper, ma'am!" at this juncture shrilly pealed the voice of +Betsy Ann at the foot of the stairs, to some invisible person above; +"Mr. Charley's here, and the biscuit is getting cold." + +The song died away, as if it had drifted out on the gale surging up from +the black bay, and Mrs. Marsh crept shivering down stairs. + +"Come in, Miss Rose," she said, looking in at the parlor door before +entering the room; "tea is ready, and Charley is here." + +Charley started up; and, as he did so, the front door unceremoniously +opened, and Nathalie, wrapped in a large shawl, and wearing a white +cloud about her head, stepped in, to the surprise of all. + +"Gracious me! Natty! is it you?" cried her mamma, in feeble +consternation, "whatever has taken you out such an evening?" + +"What's the matter with the evening?" said Nathalie, kissing her and +Miss Rose. "A little cold sea-fog is nothing new, that it should keep me +in-doors. Good evening, Charley." + +"It's not a good evening," said Charley; "it's a very bad one, and you +deserve to get your death of cold for venturing out in it. Did the old +lady send you?" + +"No, indeed! I had hard work to get off. Is tea ready, mamma? I have +had no dinner, and am almost famished." + +Mrs. Marsh was profuse in her sympathy. Another cup and plate were laid, +and the quartet sat down to tea. It was wonderful how Nathalie's bright +presence radiated the before gloomy room; the laughing light of her +violet eyes made sunshine of their own, and all her luxuriant golden +hair, falling loose and damp, in curls short and long around her face +and shoulders, never looked so much like silky sunbeams before. + +"How did you get on in school to-day?" she was asking Miss Rose; "I +could not get down. The picnic must have disagreed with Mrs. Leroy; for +I never saw her so cross." + +"I should say all the cake, and pastry, and nastiness of that sort she +devoured, would have disagreed with a horse," said Charley; "it was a +sight only to see Laura Blair cramming her." + +"I got on very well," answered Miss Rose, smiling at Charley's remark, +which was perfectly true; "but the day seems long, Miss Marsh, when you +do not visit us, and the children seem to think so too. I have got a new +music-pupil--little Vattie Gates." + +"You will make your fortune, Miss Rose, if you are not careful," said +Charley; "eight dollars per quarter from each of those music-pupils, +beside your school-salary. What do you mean to do with it all?" + +"I should say rather she will work herself to death," said Nathalie. "Do +you want to kill yourself, Miss Rose, that you take so many pupils?" + +"Dear me! I think it agrees with her," remarked Mrs. Marsh, languidly, +stirring her tea; "she is getting fat." + +Everybody laughed. Miss Rose was not getting very fat; but she certainly +had gained flesh and color since her advent in Speckport, though the +small face was still rather pale, and the small brow sometimes too +thoughtful and anxious. As they arose from table, Miss Clowrie came in +with her crotcheting to spend the evening, Natty went to the piano, Miss +Rose, with some very unfanciful-looking work in a dropsical +work-basket, sat down at the window to sew while the last gray ray of +daylight lingered in the sky, and Charley lounged on the sofa, beside +Catty. + +"What are you making, Miss Rose?" inquired Miss Clowrie, looking +curiously at the small black figure, drooping over the work, at the +window. Miss Rose laughed, and threaded her needle. + +"You needn't ask," said Nathalie; "clothes for all the poor in +Speckport, of course. Why don't you become a Sister of Charity at once, +Miss Winnie?" + +"I came very near it one time," smiled Miss Rose; "perhaps I may yet. I +wish I could." + +There was no mistaking the sincerity of her tone. Nathalie shrugged her +shoulders--to her it looked like wishing for something very dreary and +dismal indeed. The world seemed a very bright and beautiful place to the +heiress of Redmon that foggy summer night. + +"Why don't you become one, then?" asked Catty, who would have been very +glad of it; "I should think they would be pleased to get you." + +"I am not so sure of that; I would be no great acquisition. But just at +present there is a reason that renders it impossible." + +Of course, no one could ask the reason, though all would have liked to +know. When it grew too dark to sew or play, the lamp was lit, and they +had cards, and it was nine when Nathalie arose to go. + +"Couldn't you stay all night, Natty?" asked her mother; "it's dreadfully +foggy to go up to Redmon to-night." + +"If it were ten times as foggy, I should have to go. I don't mind it, +though, in company with Charley and an umbrella." + +She kissed them all good night, even Catty, in the happiness of her +heart; and, wrapped in her shawl and cloud, she took her brother's arm +and started. The fog was thicker, and wetter, and colder than ever; the +night as wretched a one for a walk as could well be imagined, and the +bleak sea wind blew raw in their faces all the way. + +"How confoundedly cold it is!" exclaimed Charley, "more like January +than July. You will perish, Natty, before we get to Redmon! You should +not have come out this evening." + +"I wanted to talk to you, Charley, on a very important matter indeed!" + +Charley stared at her grave tone, but it all flashed upon him directly. +Nathalie was used to talk to him more as a mother than a sister, in her +superior woman's wisdom, and Charley was accustomed to take her lectures +cheerfully enough; but in the damp darkness his face flushed +rebelliously now. + +He would not speak again, and his sister, after waiting a moment, broke +the silence herself. + +"It is about that girl, Charley?" + +"What girl?" inquired Mr. Marsh, rather sulkily. + +"You know well enough--Cherrie Nettleby." + +"Well, what of Cherrie Nettleby?" this time defiantly. + +"Charley, what do you mean by going with her as you do?" + +"Nathalie," said Charley, mimicking her tone, "what do you mean by going +with Captain Cavendish as you do?" + +"My going with Captain Cavendish has nothing whatever to do with it; but +if you want to know what I mean--I mean to marry him!" + +"Nathalie, I don't want you to have anything to do with that man," +Charley burst out passionately. "He is a villain!" + +"Charley!" + +"He is, I tell you! You know nothing about him--I do! I tell you he is a +villain!" + +"This is ungenerous of you, Charley," she calmly said; "it is cowardly. +Is not Captain Cavendish your friend?" + +"A friend I could throttle with the greatest pleasure in life!" +exclaimed Charley, savagely. + +"What has he done?" + +"More than I would like to tell you--more than you would care to hear! +All I have to say is, I would rather shoot you than see you his wife!" + +"You are slandering him!" said Nathalie, her passion rising in spite of +herself. "You are trying to baffle me; to keep me from talking of +Cherrie, but I'll not be put off. You cannot--you cannot mean to marry +that girl." + +"Natty look here," he said, more gently, "I don't want to be +disagreeable, but I cannot be dictated to in this! I am a man, and must +choose for myself. I have obeyed you all my life; but in this you must +let me be my own master." + +"You know what a name she has! She is the talk of all Speckport!" + +"Is Speckport ever done talking? Wouldn't it slander an archangel, if it +got the chance?" + +"But it is true in this instance--she is all that Speckport says--an +idle, silly, senseless, flirty, foolish, dressy, extravagant thing! She +has nothing in the wide world to recommend her but her good looks." + +"Neither has Captain Cavendish, if it comes to that!" + +"Charley, it is false! He is a gentleman by birth, rank, and education!" + +"Yes," said Charley, bitterly. "Nature did her best to make a gentleman +of him, but I know street-sweepers in Speckport ten times more of a +gentleman than he! I tell you he is corrupt to the core of his heart--a +spendthrift and a fortune-hunter! If you were Miss Marsh, the +school-teacher, as you were two or three years ago, he would as soon ask +Miss Jo Blake to be his wife as you!" + +"I don't doubt it," said Nathalie, quite calmly; "he may not be able to +afford the luxury of a penniless bride, and for all that be no +fortune-hunter. You can't shake my faith in him, Charley!" + +"You are blind!" Charley cried, vehemently. "I am telling you Heaven's +truth, Natty, with no other motive than your good!" + +"We will drop the subject," said Nathalie, loftily, "and talk of you and +Cherrie Nettleby!" + +"We'll do nothing of the sort," replied Charley, "resolutely go your own +way, Natty, if you will, and I will go mine! The one marriage can be no +madder than the other!" + +"And you will really marry this girl?" + +"I really will, if she will have me!" + +Nathalie laughed a low and bitter laugh. + +"Have you? Oh, there is little doubt of that, I fancy. Every one knows +how she has been running after you this many a day!" + +"But there is doubt of it. Your fine Captain Cavendish pursues her like +her shadow." + +"Charley, I will not listen to another word," cried Nathalie, +imperiously. "Your infatuation seems to have changed your very nature. +Why, oh why, has this girl crossed your path? If you wanted to marry, +why could you not have chosen some one else? Why could you not have +chosen Miss Rose?" + +Charley smiled under cover of the darkness. The question was absurd. Why +could she not have chosen any of her other suitors, all good and +honorable men? Why could she not have chosen Captain Locksley, young, +handsome, rich, and the soul of integrity. He did not say so, however, +and neither spoke again till the gate of Redmon was reached. + +"Good night," Nathalie briefly said, her voice full of inward pain. + +"Good night, Natty," Charley replied, "and God bless you and," lowering +his voice as he turned away "keep you from ever becoming the wife of +Captain Cavendish!" + +He walked on and entered the Nettleby cottage, where he found Cherrie in +the parlor alone, bending over a novel. Cherrie's welcome to her lover +was uncommonly cordial, for she was ennuied nearly to death. She had +expected Captain Cavendish all the afternoon, and had been disappointed. +Had she known that officer was making arrangements for their speedy +nuptials, she might perhaps have forgiven him; and at that very moment, +whilst talking to Charley of the time when she should be Mrs. Marsh, +everything was arranged for her becoming, the very next week, Mrs. +Captain George Cavendish. + +About five o'clock of that foggy July afternoon, Mr. Val Blake sat in +his private room, in the office of the Speckport Spouter, his +shirt-collar limp and wilted with the heat, his hair wildly disheveled, +and his expression altogether bewildered and distracted. The table at +which he sat was, as usual, heaped with MS., letters, books, buff +envelopes, and newspapers; and Mr. Blake was poring over some sheets of +white ruled foolscap, closely written in a very cramp and spidery hand. +It was a story from "the fascinating pen of our gifted and talented +contributor 'Incognita,' whose previous charming productions have held +spellbound hosts of readers," as the Spouter said, in announcing it the +following week, and the title of the fascinating production was the "Ten +Daughters of Dives." Miss Laura Blair had just finished reading the +"Seven Loves of Mammon," by Mr. George Augustus Sala; hence the title +and the quaint style in which the thing was written. So extremely quaint +and original indeed was the style, that it soared totally beyond the +comprehension of all ordinary intellects, beginning in the most +disconcertingly abrupt manner, and ending with a jerk, while you were +endeavoring to make out what it was all about. + +"It's of no use trying," he murmured, pensively, "the thing is beyond me +altogether. I'll put it in, hit or miss, or Laura will never forgive me; +and I dare say the women will make out what it means, though I can't +make top or tail of it." + +There was a tap at the door as he arrived at this conclusion, and Master +Bill Blair, in a state of ink, and with a paper cap on his head, labeled +with the startling word "Devil" made his appearance, and announced that +Captain Cavendish was in the office and wanted to see him. + +"Tell him to come in," said Val, rather glad than otherwise of a chat by +way of relaxation after his late severe mental labor. + +The captain accordingly came in, smoking a cigar, and presented his +cigar-case the first thing to Val. That gentleman helped himself, and +the twain puffed in concert, and discussed the foggy state of the +weather and the prospects of the "Spouter." As this desultory +conversation began to flag, and the weed smoked out, Mr. Blake +remembered he was in a hurry. + +"I say, captain, you'll excuse me, won't you, if I tell you I haven't +much time to spare this evening. We go press to to-morrow, and I shall +have to get to work." + +Captain Cavendish came out of a brown study he had fallen into, and lit +another cigar. + +"I won't detain you long, Val. I know you're a good fellow, and would do +me a favor if you could." + +Val nodded and lit a cigar also. + +"I want you to do me the greatest service, and I shall be forever your +debtor." + +"Right," said Val; "let us hear what it is." + +"You won't faint, will you? I am going to be married." + +"Are you?" said Mr. Blake, no way discomposed. "To whom?" + +"To Cherrie Nettleby." + +Val did start this time, and stared with all his eyes. + +"To what? You're joking, ain't you? To Cherrie Nettleby!" + +"Yes, to Cherrie Nettleby, but on the cross you know, not on the square. +Do you comprehend?" + +"Not a bit of it. I thought you were after Natty Marsh all the time." + +Captain Cavendish laughed. + +"You dear old daisy, you're as innocent as a new-born babe. I'm not +going to marry Cherrie in earnest, only sham a marriage, and I cannot do +it without your help. The girl is ready to run away with me any day; but +to make matters smooth for her, I want her to think, for a while at +least, she is my wife. You understand now?" + +"I understand," said Val, betraying, I regret to say, not the slightest +particle of emotion at this exposé of villainy; "but it's an +ugly-looking job, Cavendish." + +"Not as bad as if she ran away with me in cold blood--for her I +mean--and she is sure to do it. You know the kind of girl pretty little +Cherrie is, Blake; so you will be doing her rather a service than +otherwise in helping me on. If you won't help, you know I can easily get +some one who will, and I trust to your honor to keep silent. But come, +like a good fellow, help me out." + +"What do you want me to do? Not to play clergyman?" + +"No; but to get some one--a stranger to Cherrie and I--consequently a +stranger in Speckport, who will tie the knot, and on whose discretion +you may depend. You shall play witness." + +Val put his hands in his pockets and mused. + +"Well," he said, after a pause, "it's a horrid shame, but rather than +that she should run off with you, without any excuse at all, I'll do it. +How soon do you want the thing to come off?" + +"As early as possible next week--say Tuesday night. It will be better +after night, she won't be so apt to notice deficiencies." + +Val mused again. + +"Cherrie's a Methodist herself; at least, she sits under the teaching of +the Reverend Mr. Drone, who used to be rather an admirer of hers before +he got married. The chapel is in an out-of-the-way street, and I can +feign an excuse for getting the key from Drone. Suppose it takes place +there?" + +Captain Cavendish grasped his hand, and gave it a friendly vise-like +grasp. + +"Val, you're a trump! You shall have my everlasting gratitude for this." + +"Next Tuesday night, then," responded Val, taking the officer's rapture +stoically enough. "And now I must beg you to leave me, for I have +bushels of work on hand." + +Captain Cavendish, expressing his gratitude once more, lounged into the +drear and foggy night. How lucky for the peace of the community at +large, we cannot read each other's thoughts. The young captain's ran +something after this fashion: + +"I always knew Blake was a spoon, but I never thought he was such an +infernal scoundrel as this. Why, he is worse than I am; for I really am +in love with the girl, and he does his rascality without a single +earthly motive. Well, it's all the better for me. I'll have Cherrie as +sure as a gun." + +Mr. Blake, in the seclusion of his room, leaned back in his chair, and +indulged himself in a low and quiet laugh, before commencing work. + +"I said I owed you one," he soliloquized, throwing away the stump of his +second cigar, "for leading Charley Marsh astray, and now's the time to +pay you. If I don't serve you out this go, Captain Cavendish, my name's +not Valentine Blake!" + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +IN WHICH THE WEDDING COMES OFF. + + +The foggy day had ended in a stormy night. Black clouds had hurried +wildly over the troubled face of the sky; a dull peal of thunder, +booming in the distance, had been its herald. Rain, and thunder, and +lightning had it all its own way until about midnight, when the sullen +clouds had drifted slowly, and the moon showed her fair, sweet face in +her place. A day of brightest sunshine, accompanied by a high wind, had +been the result; and in its morning refulgence, Captain Cavendish was +sauntering along the Redmon road. Not going to the big brick house, +surely: Nathalie had told him the picnic day of Mrs. Leroy's growing +dislike to visitors, and the hint had been taken. Perhaps it was only +for a constitutional, or to kill time; but there he was, lounging in the +teeth of the gale, and whistling an opera air as he went. The Nettleby +cottage, fairly overrun with its luxuriance of sweetbrier, and climbing +roses, and honeysuckle, was a pretty sight, and well worth looking at, +and perhaps that was the reason Captain Cavendish stood still to admire +it. The windows, all wreathed with crimson and pink roses, were open; +and at one sat Cherrie, in all her beauty, like a picture in a frame. +The crimson July roses about her were not brighter than her cheeks at +the sight of him, and her starry eyes flashed a welcome few men would +not have coveted. How prettily she was dressed, too--knowing well he +would come, the gypsy!--in pink muslin; her bare neck and arms rising +plump and rounded out of the gauziness; all her shining jetty curls +flashing about, and sprays of rosebuds twisted through them. How the +pale, blue-eyed, snowy-skinned, fair-haired prettiness of Nathalie +dimmed in the young officer's ardent imagination beside this tropical, +gorgeous loveliness of the sunny South. He opened the little gate, and +was at the window before she arose. + +"My black-eyed fairy? You look perfectly dazzling this morning. Who is +in?" + +"No one," said Cherrie, showing her pearl-white teeth in her deepening +smile. "The boys are off fishing; father's up working in Lady Leroy's +garden, and Ann's gone to town for groceries." + +"Allah be praised! I may come in, then, my darling, may I not?" + +Cherrie's answer was to throw the door wide open; and the young officer +entered and took a seat, screened from the view of passers-by by the +green gloom of the vines. That green twilight of roses and honeysuckles +was just the thing for lovers to talk in; and Captain Cavendish had a +great deal to say to Cherrie, and to all he said Cherrie had nothing to +give but rapturous assents, and was altogether in the seventh heaven, +not to say a few miles beyond that lofty elysium. It was all arranged at +last as the young gentleman wished, and, lolling easily on the sofa, he +went off on another tack. + +"Are you often up in Redmon House, Cherrie?" he asked, stringing the +black ringlets about his fingers. + +Cherrie, seated on a low stool beside his couch, nestled luxuriously, +with her head on his knee. + +"Pretty often, George." It had come to that, you see. "Why?" + +"Because--because I think you might find out something for me. I have a +fancy, do you know, that the old lady doesn't over and above like me." + +"I know she don't," said Cherrie, decidedly. "She can't bear you, nor +Midge either. They scold Miss Natty like sixty every time you go there." + +"The deuce they do? Suppose she fancied--mind, I only say fancied--I +wanted to marry Miss Natty, do you suppose she would consent?" + +"Consent! She'd pack Miss Natty bag and baggage out of the house, more +likely. She'd die before she'd give in, would Mrs. Leroy." + +Captain Cavendish fell to musing, and mused so long that Cherrie glanced +up from under her black lashes, wondering what made his handsome face +look so grave. + +"What are you thinking about?" she pouted; "Miss Natty, I suppose." + +"No, my little black-eye. I was thinking how you could do something for +me." + +"What is it?" + +"Couldn't you listen; couldn't you manage to hear sometimes what Mrs. +Leroy says to Natty, when they are talking of me?" + +Miss Nettleby was not at all shocked at this proposal; but I suppose the +reader is. I know very well it is disgraceful in one calling himself a +gentleman, and altogether dishonorable; but Captain Cavendish's ideas of +honor, and yours and mine, are rather different. Had any one called him +a liar or a swindler, or thrown a decanter at his head, or a tumbler of +wine in his face, at the mess-table, or elsewhere, he would have +considered his honor forfeited forever, if he did not stand up to shoot +and be shot at by the offending party, as soon as possible afterward. In +one word, not to mince matters, Captain Cavendish, handsome and elegant +as he was, was an infidel and a villain, and you may as well know it +first as last. + +"I dare say I can," was Cherrie's reply to his proposal. "I am up there +often enough, and I know all the ins and outs of the place. I'll do what +I can." + +Captain Cavendish rewarded her, as lovers do reward one another, I am +told, and shortly after arose to take his leave. Miss Nettleby escorted +him to the gate. + +"You won't forget Tuesday night, Cherrie," he said, turning to go. + +"It's not very likely," said Cherrie; "but I'll see you again before +that--won't I, George?" + +"Of course, my darling! Take care of yourself, and good-bye." + +He sauntered up the road at an easy pace; and Cherrie lingered at the +gate, admiring his tall and elegant figure, and thinking, with an +exultant heart beating, what a happy and lucky girl she was. Forget +Tuesday night! the night that was to make her his bride. She quite +laughed aloud at the thought, in the glee of her heart. He was still in +sight, this Adonis of hers, and she still lingered at the gate watching +him. Lingering there, she saw something not quite so pleasant as she +could wish. Miss Nathalie Marsh, in a dress of blue barege, a black silk +mantle, and a pretty white hat trimmed with azure ribbon, its long white +plume tipped with blue, and set jauntily on her flowing sunny curls; +came down the avenue from the house, opened the gate, and stepped into +the road, and confronted her (Cherrie's) beloved. Cherrie saw him start +eagerly forward, but could not hear what he said, and perhaps for her +peace of mind it was just as well. + +"My darling Nathalie! the fortunate chance I have been wishing for has +come then! Are you going to town?" + +Nathalie, smiling and blushing, shyly held out her hand. + +"Good morning, Captain Cavendish! I----" but he interposed +reproachfully. + +"Captain Cavendish, from you, Nathalie; I thought you knew my name." + +"Perhaps I have forgotten it," she laughed. "What are you doing up here, +George," a little hesitatingly, though, and with a vivid flush, not half +so glibly as Miss Nettleby had uttered it ten minutes before. "Were you +going to call?" + +"Hardly--remembering the hint you gave me the other day. But though I +could not storm the castle of my fairy-princess, it was pleasant, at +least, to reconnoiter the outside, and I hoped, too, for the lucky +chance that has arrived. Am I to have the happy privilege of escorting +you into town?" + +Nathalie cast a half-apprehensive glance behind, but Midge was not on +the watch. Had she known how dearly she was to pay for that walk--for +that escort, rather--she had hardly answered with that happy, careless +laugh. + +"Yes, you may have that happy privilege! What did you do with yourself +all day yesterday in the fog?" Cavendish thought of what he had been +doing in Val's office, but he did not tell Miss Marsh. Cherrie was still +standing by the cottage gate, and they were passing it now, looking like +a black-eyed queen, under the arches of scarlet runners and +morning-glories. + +"A pretty place," said Captain Cavendish, "and that girl at the gate has +a beautiful face. They tell me she has turned half the heads in +Speckport." + +Nathalie's fair brow contracted; not in jealousy, she never thought of +that, but at the recollection of Charley. She made no answer. Her +attention was attracted by a lady who was coming toward them. A young +lady, nicely dressed, who stepped mincingly along, with a sweet smile on +her sullen face. + +"What brings Catty Clowrie up this way, I wonder?" exclaimed Nathalie, +bowing as she passed, while the captain lifted his hat. "It is ever so +long since I have seen her on this road before. I hope she is not going +to Redmon." + +But Miss Clowrie was going to Redmon. She had not started with that +idea; it had never entered her head until she met the lovers; but she +turned and looked after them with a smile of evil menace on her face. + +"I hate her!" was her thought. "I hate her! But for her I might have had +him once. Now he is that Nettleby girl's beyond hope. I wish Miss Marsh +joy of her sister-in-law." + +"That Nettleby girl" still stood at the gate. Miss Clowrie bestowed the +light of her smile upon her in passing, still deep in thought. "They say +in Speckport Lady Leroy has forbidden Captain Cavendish the house, and +threatens to disinherit Natty if she keeps his company. Perhaps she does +not know of this. I think I'll go up and tell her. One good turn +deserves another." + +Midge answered the young lady's knock, and admitted her to the presence +of Lady Leroy. That mummy she found in her usual state of wrappings, and +very ready for a little gossip. + +"Why don't you go out more, Mrs. Leroy," insinuated Catty; "it would do +you good, I am sure." + +"No, it wouldn't!" snapped the old lady. "It does me harm. I hain't got +over that picnic yet." + +"But I should think you would find it very lonely here, with Nathalie +away so much. I hear she spends most of her time in town of late." + +"So she does," Lady Leroy screamed. "She will go in spite of me. If it +ain't the school, it's a party or a picnic--something or other; but +she's gallivanting all the time." + +"I met her just now," remarked Catty, in a careless way, "with Captain +Cavendish. He had been waiting for her, I think, at the gate." + +"What?" shrieked Lady Leroy, "who with, or who did you say?" + +"Captain Cavendish," repeated Miss Clowrie, looking surprised. "I +thought you said they were engaged! At least, every one says they are." + +Lady Leroy fell back, gasping, clawing the air in her struggle with her +ten talon-like fingers. Catty, quite alarmed, started up to assist her. +Lady Leroy grasped her by the wrist with a fierce grip. + +"You're sure of this? You're sure of this?" she huskily whispered, still +gasping. "You're sure she was walking with him? You're sure she is +engaged to him?" + +"I am sure she was walking with him," said Catty; "and every one says +she is engaged to him; and what every one says must be true. It's very +strange you did not know it." + +Lady Leroy "grinned horribly a ghastly smile." "I do know it now! I told +her not to go with him--I told her not to go with him--and this is the +way she obeys me!" + +She fell to clawing the air again, in a manner so very uncomfortable to +look at, that Miss Clowrie arose, with some precipitation, to go. + +"They say he is a fortune-hunter and very extravagant, and goes after +her because she is your heiress; but I'm sure I don't know. Good +morning, Mrs. Leroy. I am glad to see you looking so well." + +With which the fair Miss Clowrie bowed herself out, smiling more than +Midge had ever seen her before, and quite laughing, in fact, when she +got out of doors. + +"I think I have paid a little of my debt, Miss Natty," she thought. +"I'll pay it all, my dear, I hope, before either of us die." + +In the silent solitude of her lonely room, Lady Leroy had ample time to +nurse her wrath before the return of her ward. It was nearly noon before +that young lady reached home, her pretty face glowing with her rapid +walk. + +"Midge," was her first breathless question, "has Catty Clowrie been here +this morning?" + +Midge answered in the affirmative, and Nathalie's heart sank. All the +way up-stairs she was preparing herself for a violent outburst of wrath; +but, to her astonishment, Lady Leroy was quite tranquil. She glanced +very hard at her, it is true, and her fingers were clawing empty air +very viciously, but her voice was not loud nor angry. + +"You're very late, aren't you?" she said. "What kept you?" + +"I ran down to see mamma. Miss Rose told me she was not very well; but I +hurried home as fast as I could. I'll make out those bills now." + +"Let the bills wait awhile," said the old lady. "I have something to +tell you." + +This was an ominous commencement, and Nathalie looked at her in some +dread. + +"Who was it you walked into town with this morning?" she asked, glaring +harder than ever. + +Catty had told, then. All the blood in Nathalie's body seemed blazing in +her face, as she answered: + +"It was Captain Cavendish. I chanced to meet him near the gate, and I +could not very well help his walking back to town with me." + +"Didn't you promise me," said Lady Leroy, still speaking with +astonishing calmness, but clawing the air fiercely with both hands, +"when I forbade you going with him, that you would walk with him no +more?" + +"No," said Nathalie. "I said he would come here no more, and neither he +shall." + +"Until I am dead, I suppose," said the old woman, with a laugh that was +very unpleasant to hear, "and you have all my money. Answer me one +question, Natty. Are you engaged to him? Don't tell a lie." + +"No," said Nathalie, proudly, "I am not in the habit of telling +deliberate lies. I am!" + +Lady Leroy gave a shrill gasp, her fingers working convulsively, but the +spasm was over in a moment. She sat up again; and Nathalie, hurriedly +and imploringly, went on: + +"Dear Mrs. Leroy, don't be angry! Indeed, you misjudge Captain +Cavendish; he is a good and honorable man, and respects you much. Dear +Mrs. Leroy, consent to our engagement and I will be the happiest girl in +the world!" + +She went over and put her arms round the mummy's neck, kissing the +withered face. The old woman pushed her away with another of her +unpleasant laughs. + +"There--there, child! do as you please. I knew you would do it anyway, +only I won't have him here--mind. I won't have him here! Now, get to +work at them bills. What's the matter with your mother?" + +"Sick headache," said Nathalie, chilled, she scarcely knew why, by the +old woman's manner. "She wanted me to stay with her this afternoon; but +I told her I was afraid you could not spare me." + +Mrs. Leroy mused a few moments, while Nathalie wrote, and then looked +up. + +"I'll spare you this afternoon, Natty, since your mother is sick. You +can take the bills in with you and collect them. If you are back by +nine, it will do." + +Nathalie was so amazed, she dropped her pen and sat staring, quite +unable to return a word of thanks, and not quite certain she was not +dreaming. + +"Get on, get on!" exclaimed Lady Leroy, in her customary testy tone. +"You'll never have the bills done at that rate." + +Nathalie finished the bills mechanically, and with a mind far otherwise +absorbed. Then she went to her room, and put on her hat and mantle for +another walk to Speckport; but all the time that uneasy feeling of doubt +and uncertainty remained. Mrs. Leroy had acted so strangely, had been so +ominously quiet and unlike herself, and had not consented. Nathalie came +in dressed for town, and bent over her, until her long bright curls +swept the yellow old face. + +"Dear Mrs. Leroy!" she pleadingly said, "I cannot feel satisfied until +you actually say you agree to this engagement. Do--do, if you love your +Natty, for all my happiness depends upon it. Do say you consent, and I +will never offend you again as long as I live?" + +Lady Leroy glared up at her with green, and glittering, and wicked old +eyes. + +"If I don't consent, will you break off, Natty?" + +"You know I cannot. I love him with all my heart. Oh, Mrs. Leroy! +remember you were once young yourself, and don't be hard!" + +Looking at that dry and withered old antediluvian, it was hard to +imagine her ever young--harder still to imagine her knowing anything +about the fever called love. She pushed Nathalie impatiently away. + +"Get along with you, and don't bother!" was her cry. "I told you to have +your way, and you ought to be satisfied. You won't give in to me, but +you'd like me to give in to you--wouldn't you? Go along, and don't +torment me!" + +When Mrs. Leroy's cracked voice grew shrill and piercing, and her little +eyes gleamed greenish flame, Nathalie knew better than to irritate her +by disobedience. She turned to go, with a strange sinking of the heart. + +"I will be back by nine," she said, simply, as she quitted the room. + +Miss Nettleby, seated at her cottage door, under the roses and +sweetbrier, industriously stitching on some gossamer article to be worn +next Tuesday evening, looked up in some surprise at sight of Miss Marsh +on her way to Speckport, for the second time that day. + +"Going back to town, Miss Natty?" she called out, familiarly. + +Miss Natty's answer was a cold and formal bow, as she passed on. Cherrie +dropped her work and started up. + +"I'll go to the house and have a talk with Granny Grumpy herself before +she comes back. Perhaps I may find out something. I wonder what sort of +humor she is in." + +Lady Leroy was in uncommonly serene humor for her. Before Nathalie had +been ten minutes gone, she had shouted for Midge; and that household +treasure appearing, with sleeves rolled up over her elbows, and in a +very soapy and steamy state, had desired her to array herself in other +garments, and go right away into Speckport. + +"Go into Speckport!" cried Midge, in shrill indignation. "I'll see you +boiled alive first, ma'am, and that's the long and short of it. Go into +town, wash-day, indeed! What do you want in town, ma'am?" + +"I want Mr. Darcy--that's what I want!" vehemently replied her mistress. +"I want Mr. Darcy, you ugly little imp; and if you don't go straight +after him, I'll heave this at your head, I will!" + +"This" was a huge black case bottle, which trifle of glass the lady of +Redmon brandished in a manner that made even Midge draw back a few paces +in alarm. + +"I want Mr. Darcy on important business, I do!" screamed Lady Leroy. +"And tell him not to let the grass grow under his feet on the way. Be +off, will you?" + +"Why didn't you tell Miss Natty?" sulkily said Midge. + +"Because she isn't coming back till nine o'clock, that's why; and I +can't wait. Well, what do you want, young woman?" + +This last polite interrogation was addressed to Miss Nettleby, who stood +smiling in the doorway, in all the splendor of her charms. + +"I just ran up to see how you were," said Cherrie. "If you want any +errand done in the town, Mrs. Leroy, I'll go. I can walk faster than +Midge, you know." + +"So she can," cried Midge; "let her go, ma'am; I won't." + +With which Midge waddled off, making the hall quake with her airy tread. +Mrs. Leroy looked with unusual graciousness at the young lady. + +"Will you go, Cherrie, and be quick about it. Tell Darcy to hurry; you +can drive back with him, you know." + +Cherrie wanted nothing better, and was off like a dart, scenting a +secret, and determined to get at the bottom of it. + +"What does she want with her lawyer, I wonder?" soliloquized Cherrie, on +the road. "I'll find out. Miss Natty's out of the way, and Midge will be +down in the kitchen. I'll find out." + +Mr. Darcy was one of the best lawyers in the town, and was Lady Leroy's +man of business ever since her advent in Speckport. Cherrie found him in +his office--a handsome and gentlemanly old man, with gray hair, +whiskers, and mustache, and a clear, bright eye. + +"What can the old lady want?" he wondered, aloud, putting on his hat; +"she didn't tell you, I suppose? Will you drive back with me, Miss +Cherrie?" + +Miss Cherrie consented, and they had a very pleasant drive together, the +old gentleman chaffing her about her beaux, and wanting to know when she +was going to stop breaking hearts, and get married. Cherrie did not say +"next Tuesday," she only laughed, and desired to be set down at her own +gate. + +There she watched the lawyer out of sight, and then went deliberately +after him. Not to the front door, however, but to a back window she knew +of, easily lifted, through it, up-stairs on tiptoe, and into Nathalie's +room, which she locked on the inside. Nathalie's room adjoined Lady +Leroy's, and the wall being thin, the conversation of the lawyer and the +old woman was distinctly audible. Cherrie sat down on the floor, with +her ear glued to the wall, and listened. It was a prolonged and excited +talk, the lawyer angrily protesting, Mrs. Leroy angrily determined; +and it ended in Mr. Darcy's yielding, but grumblingly, and +still under protest. Cherrie had fairly held her breath while +listening--astonishment and delight pictured on her face. + +There was a long silence; Mr. Darcy was writing. In half an hour his +task was completed, and he read it aloud to the mistress of Redmon. +"That will do," said Lady Leroy, "I'm glad it's over." + +"Do you want that paper witnessed? Call Midge." + +Mr. Darcy opened the door, and shouted through the darkness for Midge, +as Captain Cavendish had once done before. Midge made her appearance, as +soapy and steamy as ever. + +"Write your name here," said Mr. Darcy, abruptly pointing to the place. + +"What is it?" inquired Midge. + +"That's no affair of yours, is it? Sign it, will you?" + +Midge took the pen as if it weighed half a ton or so, set her head very +much on one side, thrust her tongue a little out of one corner of her +mouth, and with much labor and painstaking, affixed a blotted +autograph--Priscilla Short. + +"That will do," said Mr. Darcy; "we want another. Call in old +Nettleby--he can write." + +Midge, casting a parting look, of much complacence at her performance, +departed on her errand, and old Nettleby coming in shortly after, +affixed another blotted signature. Mr. Darcy dispatched him about his +business, folded the document, put it in his pocket-book, and took his +hat and cane to go. On the threshold he paused. + +"This has been done under the influence of anger, Mrs. Leroy," he said; +"and you will think better of it, and send me word to destroy it before +long. I consider it most unjust--exceedingly unjust--altogether +unjustifiable! Good afternoon, ma'am." + +Cherrie waited in her hiding-place until she heard the hall door close +after him, then stole noiselessly out, down-stairs, through the window, +and gained her own home, unobserved. + +What had she heard? Her face was flushed, her eyes bright, her whole +manner strangely excited. She could not keep still--she walked +ceaselessly to and from the gate, straining her eyes in the direction of +Speckport. + +"Why don't he come! Why don't he come!" she kept repeating, hurriedly. +"Oh, what will he say to this?" + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +AFTER THE WEDDING. + + +Ann Nettleby, busy in the culinary department, never remembered seeing +her restless sister so exceedingly restless as on this afternoon. When +the clock struck six, and old Mr. Nettleby plodded home from his day's +work, and the two young Mr. Nettleby's came whistling from town, and tea +was ready, Ann came out to call her to partake. But Cherrie impatiently +declined to partake; and still waited and watched, while the sunset was +burning itself out of the purple sky, and the cinnamon roses drooped in +the evening wind. The last amber and crimson flush was paling behind the +blue western hills, when he, so long waited for, came up the dusty road, +twirling a cane in his hand, and smoking a cigar. The unspeakable beauty +and serenity of the summer twilight was no more to him than to her who +watched at the vine-wreathed gate. A handsome man and a pretty +girl--each was far more to the taste of the other than all the beauty of +sky and earth. + +Right opposite the cottage were the dark, silent cedar woods. The moment +he came in sight, Cherrie opened the gate, motioning him to follow, +struck into the narrow footpath, winding among the woods. Captain +Cavendish followed, and found her sitting on a little knoll, under the +tree. + +"I have been watching for you this ever so long," she breathlessly +began; "I thought you would never come! I have something to tell you, +and I daren't tell you in the house, for father and the boys are there." + +Captain Cavendish leaned against a tree, puffed his cigar, and looked +lazily down at her. + +"Well, petite, what is it?" + +"Oh, it's something dreadfully important. It's about Miss Marsh." + +The young captain threw away his cigar, and took a seat beside Cherrie, +interested at once. He put his arm round her waist, too, but this is +by-the-way. + +"About Miss Marsh? Have you been listening?" + +Cherrie gave him an account how she had gone for Mr. Darcy, and hidden +afterward in Nathalie's room. + +"My clever little darling! And what did you hear?" + +"You never could guess! O my goodness," cried Cherrie, clasping her +hands, "won't Miss Natty be in a passion, when she finds it out." + +"Will she, though? Let us hear it, Cherrie." + +"Well," said Cherrie, "you know Miss Natty was to be heiress of Redmon, +and have all Lady Leroy's money when she dies?" + +"Yes! well?" + +"Well, she isn't to be any longer! Lady Leroy made a new will this +afternoon, and Miss Natty is disinherited!" + +Captain Cavendish started with something like an oath. + +"Cherrie! are you sure of this?" + +"Certain sure!" said Cherrie, with a look and tone there was no +doubting. "I heard every word of it--her telling him so first, and him +reading the will afterward and father and Midge signed it!" + +"The--devil!" said Captain Cavendish between his teeth; "but what put +such a freak in the old hag's head?" + +"You!" said Cherrie. + +"I!" + +"Yes--just you! She told Mr. Darcy Natty was engaged to you, and would +not give you up, all she could say; so she meant to disinherit her. She +said Nathalie should never know, unless she married you before she was +dead--if she didn't, she shouldn't find it out until she was in her +grave, and then you would desert her when you found out she was poor, +and Nathalie would be rewarded for her disobedience!" + +Captain Cavendish's handsome face wore a scowl so black, and the oath he +swore was so dreadful, that even Cherrie shrank away in something like +terror. + +"The old hag! I could throttle her if I had her here! Cherrie, who did +she leave her money to?" + +"To her brother--or, in case of his death, to his heirs; and five pounds +to Natty to buy a mourning ring." + +"Did you hear her brother's name?" + +"Yes, but I forget! It was Harrington, or Harrison, or something like +that. Mr. Darcy scolded like everything, and said it was unjust; but +Lady Leroy didn't seem to mind him. Isn't it good I listened?" + +"Cherrie! Cherrie! Cherrie!" called Ann Nettleby, "Where are you, +Cherrie? There's somebody in the house wants you!" + +"I must go!" said Cherrie, rising. "You stay here, so Ann won't see you. +Will you be up to-morrow?" + +"Yes," said Captain Cavendish; and Cherrie flitted away rapidly in the +growing dusk. For once he was glad to be rid of Cherrie--glad to be calm +and think, and the late-rising moon was high in the sky before he left +the wood, and walked back to Speckport. + +Cherrie's visitor turned out to be Charley Marsh, who received the +reverse of a cordial welcome from his fickle-minded lady-love, who was +more than a little provoked at his shortening her interview with one she +liked better. She seated herself by the window, with her eyes fixed on +the cedar wood, rapidly blackening now, waiting for her lover to emerge; +but when his tall dark figure did at length stride out through the dark +path, night had fairly fallen, and it was too late to see what +expression his face wore. + +Whatever the young Englishman's state of mind had been on leaving the +wood that night, it was serene as mood could be when, next morning, +Sunday, Miss Nettleby, _en grande tenue_, gold chain and all, made her +appearance in Speckport, and met him as she turned out of Redmon road. +Miss Nettleby was going to patronize the cathedral this morning, +confirmation was to take place, with all the magnificent and poetical +ceremonies of the Catholic Church, and Cherrie would not have missed it +for the world. Neither would Captain Cavendish, who went partly from +curiosity, partly to kill time, partly to show himself in full uniform, +and partly to hear Nathalie Marsh play and sing. Out of the great organ +she was drawing such inspiring strains as Captain Cavendish thought he +had never heard before; rolling out in volumes of harmony over the ears +of people below, and grand and grateful were the notes the instrument +gave forth to her master-hand. In front of the altar all the youthful +aspirants for confirmation were seated, the girls robed in snowy white, +and wearing vails and wreaths on their bowed heads, like young brides. +But now the bishop, in mitre and chasuble, with a throng of attendant +priests, in splendid vestments, preceded by a score of acolytes in +scarlet soutanes, and white lace surplices, bearing candles and crozier, +are all on the altar, and the choir have burst forth as with one voice, +into the plaintive cry "Kyrie Eleison," and pontifical high mass has +begun. High over all that swelling choir, high, clear and sweet, one +soprano voice arises, the voice of the golden-haired organist: "Gloria +in Excelsis!" Something in the deep solemnity of the scene, in the +inspiring music, in the white-robed and flower-crowned girls, in the +silent devotion of the thousands around him, stirred a feeling in the +soul of the man, that he had never felt since, in early boyhood, before +he knew Eton or Voltaire, he had knelt at his mother's knee, and +learned there his childish prayers. He forgot, for a brief while, his +wickedness and his worldliness, forgot the black-eyed girl by his side, +and the blue-eyed girl whose voice vibrated through those lofty aisles, +and, with dreamy eyes, and a heart that went back to that old time, +listened to the sermon of the aged and white-haired priest, grown gray +in the service of that God whom he, a poor atom of the dust, dared +deride. It was one of those moments in which the great Creator, in his +infinite compassion for his lost sheep, goes in search of us to lead us +back to the fold, in which our good angel flutters his white wings about +us, and tries to lift us out of the slime in which we are wallowing. But +the sermon was over, the benediction given, the last voluntary was +playing, and the vast crowd were pouring out. Captain Cavendish took his +hat and went out with the rest; and before he had fairly passed through +the cathedral gates was his old, worldly, infidel self again, and was +pouring congratulations and praise into the too-willing ears of Nathalie +Marsh, on her admirable performances, while Charley went home with +Cherrie. + +All that day, and the next, and the next, Captain Cavendish never came +near Redmon, or the pretty cottage where the roses and sweetbriers grew; +but Mr. Johnston, a pleasant-spoken and dapper young cockney, without an +h in his alphabet, and the captain's confidential valet, came back and +forth with messages, and took all trouble and suspicion off his master. +Neither had Miss Nettleby made her appearance in Speckport; she had +spent the chief part of her time about the red-brick house, but had +learned nothing further by all her eavesdropping. In a most restless and +excited state of mind had the young lady been ever since Monday morning, +in a sort of inward fever that grew worse and worse with every passing +hour. She got up and sat down, and wandered in and out, and tried to +read, and sew, and net, and play the accordion, and threw down each +impatiently, after a few moments' trial. She sat down to her meals and +got up without eating anything; her cheeks burned with a deep, steady +fever-red, her eyes had the unnatural brightness of the same disease, +and Ann stared at her, and opined she was losing her wits. + +In rain and gloom the wedding-day dawned at last. Cherrie's fever was +worse--she wandered from room to room of the cottage all day long, the +fire in her eyes and the hectic on her cheek more brilliant than ever. +The sky was like lead, the wind had a warning wail in its voice, and the +rain fell sullenly and ceaselessly. But the rain could not keep the girl +in-doors; she went out and wandered around in it all, returning dripping +wet, three or four times, to change her drenched clothes. The girls had +the cottage to themselves; old Nettleby was out in the shed, mending his +gardening-tools, and the boys were in Speckport. The dull day was ending +in a duller and rainier twilight, and Ann Nettleby was bustling about +the tidy kitchen, getting tea, and wondering if Cherrie had gone to bed +in her room up-stairs, she had been so quiet for the last half-hour. She +did not go up to see; but set the tea to draw, laid the table, and lit +the lamp. The wet twilight had now closed in, in a black and dismal +night, when Ann heard a carriage stop at the gate, and, a moment after, +a loud knock at the front door. Before she could open it, some person +without did so, and Ann saw Mr. Val Blake, wrapped in a mackintosh, and +waiting at the gate a cab, with a lighted lamp. + +"How are you, Ann?" inquired Mr. Blake. "Is Cherrie in?" + +"Yes, here I am!" a voice called out, and Cherrie herself came running +down stairs, her heart beating so fast and thick she could hardly speak. + +"I thought you would like a drive this evening, Cherrie," said Val; +"it's wet, but you won't mind it in the cab, and I'll fetch you back +before ten. Run and wrap up and come along." + +It was not the first time Ann Nettleby had heard such impromptu +invitations given and accepted, and it was none of her business to +interfere. Cherrie was off like a flash, and down again directly, in +out-door dress, her vail down, to hide her flushed and excited face. + +Ann Nettleby, standing in the cottage-door, watched the cab drive away +through the rainy night, and then, closing the door, went back to the +kitchen, to give her father his tea. She took her own with him, setting +the teapot back on the stove, to keep hot for her brothers. Old Nettleby +fell asleep immediately after tea, with his pipe in his mouth, and Ann +went back to her netting, wondering once more what Cherrie was about, +and wishing she could have such fine times as her elder sister. Could +she only have seen in some magic mirror what was at that moment going on +in a humble little Wesleyan chapel in a retired street of the town! The +building dimly lighted by one flickering candle; a minister, or what +looked like one, in white neckcloth and clerical suit of black; the tall +and distinguished man, wearing a shrouding cloak, and the little girl, +who trembled and quivered so fearfully, standing before him, while he +pronounced them man and wife; and that other tall young man, with his +hands in his coat-pockets, listening and looking on! Could Ann Nettleby +only have seen it all, and known that her pretty sister was that very +night a bride! + +Val Blake was certainly the soul of punctuality. As the clock on the +kitchen-mantel was striking ten, the cab stopped once more at the +cottage-door, and she heard his unceremonious voice bidding Cherrie +good-night. Ann opened the door, and Cherrie, her vail still down, +brushed past her without saying a word, and flitted up the staircase to +her own room. + +It was half an hour later when Ann Nettleby's two brothers came, +dripping like water-dogs, home from town; and Ann having admitted them, +went yawningly up-stairs to bed. + +"I say, father," said Rob Nettleby, pulling off his wet jacket, "was +there company up at Redmon to-day?" + +"No," replied the old man. "Why?" + +"Oh, because we met a carriage tearing by just now, as if Old Nick was +driving. I wonder what it was about?" + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +MINING THE GROUND. + + +Miss Cherrie Nettleby was not a young lady of very deep feeling, or one +likely to be long overcome by romantic emotion of any sort. Therefore, +before a week stood between her and that rainy July night, she was all +her own self again, and that night seemed to have come and gone out of +her life, and left no trace behind it. She was Cherrie Nettleby still, +not Mrs. Captain Cavendish; she lived in the cottage instead of the +handsome suite of apartments the elegant young officer occupied in the +best hotel in Speckport. She flaunted in the old gay way through her +native town, and held her usual evening levee of young men in the +cottage-parlor as regularly as the evening came round. It did seem a +little strange to her at first that marriage, which makes such a change +in the lives of other girls, should make so little in hers. She never +doubted for a single second that she was really and legally his wife, +and Val Blake kept his own counsel. The captain told her that he would +resign his commission or exchange into the first homeward-bound +regiment; and meantime she was to be a good girl and keep their secret +inviolably. She was to encourage Charley Marsh, still--poor Charley! +while he every day played the devoted to Nathalie. + +Cherrie's wedding night had been nearly the last of July. The crimson +glory of an August sunset lay on the climbing roses, the sweetbrier and +honeysuckle arches of the cottage, and was turning its windows into +sheets of red gold. The sun, a crimson globe, was dropping in an +oriflamme of indescribable gorgeousness behind the tree-tops; and at all +this tropical richness of light and coloring, Cherrie, leaning over her +father's garden-gate, looked. + +There were not many passers-by to look at that hot August evening; but +presently up the dusty road came a young man, well-dressed and +well-looking. Cherrie knew him, and greeted him with a gracious smile, +for it was Mr. Johnston, Captain Cavendish's servant. Mr. Johnston, with +a look of unqualified admiration at her dark, bright face, took off his +hat. + +"Good-evening, Miss Nettleby. Ain't it shocking 'ot? Been to the picnic +to-day?" + +Cherrie nodded. + +"'Ad a good time, I 'ope. Weren't you nearly melted with the 'eat?" + +"Yes, it was warm," said Cherrie; "got anything for me?" + +"A letter," said Mr. Johnston, producing the document, "which he'd 'ave +come himself honely hold Major Grove hinvited 'im to dinner." + +Cherrie eagerly broke open the envelope and read: + + "DEAREST:--Meet me to-night, at half-past eight, in the cedar dell, + without fail. Destroy this as soon as read. + + "G. S." + +Cherrie tore the note into atoms, and strewed them over the grass. + +"There was to be a hanswer," insinuated Mr. Johnston. + +"Tell him yes," said Cherrie; "that is all." + +Mr. Johnston took off his hat once more, and himself immediately after. +Ann Nettleby, at the same moment, came to the door to tell Cherrie tea +was ready; and Cherrie went in and partook of that repast with her +father, sister, and brothers. + +"Did you hear, boys," said old Nettleby, "that Lady Leroy has sold +Partridge Farm?" + +"Sold Partridge Farm!" repeated Rob. "No! has she, though? Who to?" + +"To young Mr. Oaks, so Midge tells me; and a rare penny she'll get for +it, I'll warrant you." + +"What does Oaks want of it, I wonder?" said his other son. "He isn't +going to take to farming." + +"Oaks is the richest fellow in Speckport," said Rob Nettleby; "he has +more money a great deal than he knows what to do with, and he may as +well lay it out in property as at the gaming-table." + +"Does he gamble?" asked Cherrie, helping herself to bread and butter. + +Her brother laughed significantly. + +"Doesn't he, though? You may find him and that Captain Cavendish all +hours of the day and night in Prince Street." + +"Is Captain Cavendish a gambler?" said Ann; "that's bad for Miss Natty. +They say they're going to be married." + +Cherrie smiled to herself, and Rob went on speaking. + +"It's bad for Miss Nathalie, for that Cavendish is a villain, for all +his fine airs and graces, and is leading her brother to the devil. I met +him and young McGregor coming from Prince Street last night, and they +hadn't a leg to put under them--either one." + +"Drunk?" said Cherrie, stirring her tea. + +"Drunk as lords, the pair of 'em. I helped them both home, and found out +afterward how it was. They had gone with Cavendish to the gaming-house +as usual, had lost heavily also, as usual, and, excited and maddened, +had drank brandy until they could hardly stand. Young McGregor will +fleece his father before he stops; and where Marsh's money comes from, I +can't tell." + +"You ought to tell Miss Natty, Rob," said his father. "I should not like +to see her throw herself away on such a man, such a handsome and +pleasant-spoken young lady as she is." + +"Not I," said his son, getting up; "she wouldn't thank me, and it's none +of my business. Let Charley tell her, if he likes--a poor fellow like me +has no call to interfere with fine ladies and gentlemen." + +Cherrie, with a little disdainful toss of her black curls, but +discreetly holding her tongue, went into the front room and seated +herself with a novel at the window. She read until a quarter past eight, +and it grew too dark to see; then, rising, she wrapped herself in a +plaided shawl and crossed the deserted road unobserved. Cedar dell, the +place of tryst, was but a few yards off--the green hollow in the woods +where Cherrie had told the captain of the result of her eavesdropping; a +delightful place, shut in by the tall, dark trees, with a carpet of +velvet sward, and a rustic bench of twisted boughs. Cherrie sat down on +the bench and listened to the twittering of the birds in their nests, +the restless murmuring and swaying of the trees in the night-wind, and +watched the blue patches of sky and the pale rays of the new moon +glancing in and out of the black boughs. All the holy beauty of the pale +summer night could not lift her heart to the Creator who had made +it--she was only waiting for the fall of a well-known step, for the +sound of a well-known voice. Both came presently. The branches were +swept aside, a step crashed over the dry twigs, a pale and handsome +face, with dark eyes and mustache, under a broad-brimmed hat, looked in +the white moonlight through the opening, and the expected voice asked: + +"Are you there, Cherrie?" + +"Yes, George," said Cherrie composedly, "Come in." + +Captain George Cavendish came in accordingly, embraced her in very +husbandly fashion, and sat down beside her on the bench. The gloom of +the place and the hat he wore obscured his face, but not so much but +that the girl could see how pale it was, and notice something strange in +his voice and manner. + +"Is there anything the matter?" she asked. "Did you want anything very +particular, George?" + +"Yes," he said, in a low, impressive voice, taking both her hands in +his, and holding them tightly. "I want you to do me the greatest service +it may ever be in your power to render me, Cherrie." + +Cherrie looked up at his white, set face, feeling frightened. + +"I will do whatever I can for you, George. What is it?" + +"You know you are my wife, Cherrie, and that my interests are yours now. +Wouldn't you like I should become rich and take you away from this +place, and keep you like a lady all the rest of your life?" + +Yes--Cherrie would decidedly like that, and gave him to understand +accordingly. + +"Then you must take an oath, Cherrie--do you hear?--an oath to obey me +in all things, and never reveal to living mortal what I shall tell you +to-night." + +Now, Cherrie, thinking very little of a falsehood on ordinary occasions, +held an oath to be something solemn and sacred, and not to be broken, +and hesitated a little. + +"Perhaps it is something hard--something I can't do. I feel afraid to +take an oath, George." + +"You must take it! It is not a matter of choice, and I will ask nothing +you can't do. You must only swear to keep a secret." + +"Well, I'll try," said Cherrie, with a sigh, "but I hate to do it." + +"I dare say you do!" he said, breaking into a slight smile; "it is not +in your line, I know, to keep secrets, Cherrie; but at present there is +no help for it. You know what an oath is, don't you, Cherrie?" + +"Yes." + +"And you swear never to reveal what I am about to say to you?" + +"Yes," said Cherrie, her curiosity getting the better of her fear. "I +swear! What is it?" + +Was it the gloom of the place, or some inward struggle, that darkened so +his handsome face. The silence lasted so long after her question, that +Cherrie's heart began to beat with a cold and nameless fear. He turned +to her at last, holding both her hands in his own, and so hard that she +could have cried out with the pain. + +"You have sworn, Cherrie, to help me. Say you hope you may die if you +ever break that oath. Say it!" + +The girl repeated the frightful words, with a shiver. + +"Then, Cherrie, listen, and don't scream. I'm going to rob Lady Leroy +to-morrow night." + +Cherrie did not scream; but she gave a gasping cry, and her eyes and +mouth opened to their widest extent. + +"Going to rob Lady Leroy," repeated Captain Cavendish, looking at her +fixedly, and magnetizing her with his powerful glance, "to-morrow night; +and I want you to help me, Cherrie." + +"But--but they'll put you in prison for it," gasped Cherrie, all aghast. + +"No, they won't, with your help. I mean they shall put somebody else in +prison for it; not through any dislike to him, poor devil, but to avert +suspicion from myself. Will you help me, Cherrie? Remember, you have +sworn." + +"I will do what I can," shivered poor Cherrie, "but oh! I am dreadfully +scared." + +"There is no need--your part will be very easy, and to-morrow afternoon +you shall leave Speckport forever." + +Cherrie's face turned radiant. + +"With you, George! Oh, I am so glad! Tell me what you want me to do, and +see if I don't do it." + +"That is my good little wife. Now then for explanations. Do you know +that Lady Leroy has sold Partridge Farm?" + +"To Mr. Tom Oaks--yes, and that he is coming up to-morrow to pay her +eight thousand pounds for it." + +"Who told you?" + +"Father and the boys were talking about it at tea. George, is that the +money you're going to steal?" + +"It is. I am deucedly hard-up just at present, Cherrie, and eight +thousand would be a godsend. Now, my dearest, you must be up at the +house when Oaks comes, and find out where the money is put." + +"I know where she always keeps the money," said Cherrie; "and she's sure +to put this with the rest. It is in that black japanned tin box on the +stand at the head of her bed." + +"Very well. You see, I must do it to-morrow night, for she never would +keep so large a sum in the house; it will go into the bank the day +after. The steamer for Halifax leaves to-morrow night at eleven o'clock, +and I shall go to Halifax in her." + +"And take me with you?" eagerly asked Cherrie. + +"No; you must go in another direction. Until our marriage is made +public, it never would do for us to go together, Cherrie. Let me see. +You told me once you had a cousin up in Greentown, who wanted you to +visit her, did not you?" + +"Yes--Cousin Ellen." + +"Well, there is a train leaving Speckport at half-past five in the +afternoon. You must depart by that, and you will be in Greentown before +nine. Take care to make your departure as public as possible. Go into +Speckport early in the morning, and bid everybody you know good-bye. +Tell them you don't know how long you may be tempted to stay." + +"Yes," said Cherrie, with a submissive sigh. + +"All but one. You must tell Charley Marsh a different story." + +"Charley! Why, what's Charley Marsh got to do with it?" + +"A good deal, since I mean he shall be arrested for the robbery. I hate +to do it, but there is no help for it, Cherrie. You told me the other +day that he was getting desperate, and wanted you to elope with him." + +"So he did," said Cherrie. "He went on dreadfully; said he was going to +perdition, and you were dragging him down, but he would take me from you +if he could. He wanted me to go with him to the United States, and we +would be married in Boston." + +"And you--what is this you told him, Cherrie?" + +"I told him I would think about it, and give him his answer in a day or +two." + +"Very well. Give him his answer to-morrow morning. Call at the office, +and tell him you consent to run away with him, but that, to avoid +suspicion for a few days, you are going to give out you are off on a +visit to your cousin in Greentown. That you will actually start in the +cars, but will step quietly out at the first station, which is only +three miles from town, and that you will walk back and get to Speckport +about dark. You understand, Cherrie? You are not really to do this, only +to tell Marsh you will." + +"Yes," said Cherrie, looking hopelessly bewildered. + +"Tell him to come to Redmon between eight and nine, to call at your +cottage first, and if you are not there, to go to Lady Leroy's and wait +there as long as he can. If you are not there before the house is +closed, he is to wait in the grounds for you in front of the house until +you do come. I will enter by that back window you showed me, Cherrie, +and the probability is Charley will wait all night, and, of course, will +be seen by several people, and actually suspected of the robbery." + +"It seems a pity, though, don't it?" said Cherrie, her woman's heart +touched for poor Charley. + +"If he is not suspected, I will be," said Captain Cavendish, sternly. +"Remember your oath." + +"I remember. Is there anything else?" + +"Yes; you must send him a note in the afternoon. Ann will fetch it for +you. To-morrow is Thursday, and at eight in the morning the steamer +leaves for Boston." + +"Here," said the young man, putting his hand in his pocket and producing +a slip of paper, "is a draft of the note you are to send him, written in +pencil. Copy it word for word, and then tear this up. Listen, and I will +read it." + +More from memory than the pale moon's rays glancing through the woods, +Captain Cavendish read: + + "DEAR CHARLEY:--I forgot to tell you this morning, when I consented + to elope with you, that you had better go down to the steamboat + office to-day and secure staterooms, so that we may conceal + ourselves as soon as we go on board. You can pay for this out of + that money; it will do us more good than it ever would do that + miser of a Lady Leroy. Ever yours, + + "CHERRIE NETTLEBY." + +"What money?" inquired Cherrie. "What money is he to pay for the +staterooms out of?" + +"Oh, I forgot. When you see him in the morning, give him this," +producing a bank note. "I know he has not a stiver, and I got this from +Oaks myself yesterday. It is for ten pounds, and Oaks's initials were +scrawled on it, as he has a fashion of doing with all his bills. Tell +him Lady Leroy gave it to your father in payment, and he presented it to +you. Charley will take it; he is too hard up to be fastidious. Your note +will, no doubt, be found upon him, and convict him at once." + +"There's another thing," said Cherrie. "When Charley's arrested and my +name found to that note, they'll think I knew about the robbery, and +come up to Greentown after me. What should I do then?" + +"That is true," said the captain, thoughtfully. "Perhaps, after all, +then, you had better not go to your cousin's. Go on to Bridgeford; it is +thirty miles further up, and a quiet out-of-the-way place, where no one +ever stops, hardly. There is one hotel there, where you can stay quietly +for a few days, and then slip off and get board in some farmer's house. +Call yourself Miss Smith, and write to me when you are settled, telling +all the particulars. Disguise your hand in writing the address, and I +will run up and see you as soon as I safely can, and settle our future +plans. Now, you are sure you remember and understand all I have been +saying?" + +"Yes," said Cherrie; "but, oh, dear me! I feel just as nervous and as +scared! What will they do to Charley? Maybe they'll hang him!" + +"Not the least fear of it. If they put him in prison, I'll try and get +him clear off. You say they always go to bed for certain at nine o'clock +at Redmon house?" + +"At nine to a minute; but Lady Leroy always locks her door, nights. How +will you get in?" + +Captain Cavendish smiled. + +"If it all was as easy as that, it would be a simple affair. Don't look +so discouraged, my darling black eyes. With eight thousand pounds in my +pocket, and the prettiest little girl in wide America as my wife, I will +be off to merry England, and you and I will forget this land of fog and +fish. I'm off now, Cherrie and perhaps it may be two or three weeks +before I shall see you again, so take care of yourself. Here are eight +sovereigns to pay your expenses; and be sure you write to me from +Bridgeford." + +He got up, but Cherrie clung to him, crying: + +"Oh, I am afraid! O George, I am afraid I will never see you again." + +"Little simpleton," he said, giving her a parting caress, "what can +happen if you do your part bravely? If you fail, then, indeed, we will +never meet again." + +Cherrie's tears were falling fast now. + +"I will not fail; but--but----" + +"But what, my darling?" + +"When you go to Halifax, perhaps you will never come back; perhaps you +will never come to Bridgeford." + +"Cherrie, you are a goose! Don't you know I am in your power, and that I +must come back? Come, stop crying now, and give me a kiss, and say +good-bye. It won't be long, you know." + +One other parting caress, and then he was gone. + +Cherrie listened until the echo of his footsteps died out in the +distance, and then she threw herself on her face in the wet grass, +heedless of her white dress, and cried like a spoiled child whose doll +has been taken away. She was frightened, she was excited, she was +grieved, but she was not remorseful. There was little compunction in her +heart for the part she was to play--betraying the man who loved her and +trusted her. It was the old story of Delilah and Samson over again. + +The clocks of Speckport striking ten, and clearly heard this still +summer night, had ceased before she came out, her cheeks pale, her eyes +red with weeping. There was a dull circle round the moon, foreboding a +coming storm; but what was there to give warning to poor Charley Marsh +of the storm about to burst upon him? + +Ann Nettleby was at the door waiting patiently for Cherrie. She turned +crossly upon her when she appeared. + +"I wish you would learn to come home earlier, and not keep folks out of +their beds all night. What were you doing in the woods?" + +"Crying," said Cherrie, quite as crossly as her sister. "I'm tired to +death of this dull place. I'll go off to Greentown to-morrow." + +"I wish to mercy you would; the rest of us would have some peace then. +Did you expect Charley Marsh to-night?" + +"No; why?" + +"He's been here, then, and only just gone. Come in, and let me lock the +door." + +Cherrie went up to her room, but not to sleep. She sat by the window, +looking out on the quiet road, the black woods, and the moon's sickly, +watery glimmer, while the long hours dragged slowly on, and her sister +slept. She was thinking of the eventful to-morrow--the to-morrow that +was to be the beginning of a new life to her. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +SPRINGING THE MINE. + + +When Mr. Robert Nettleby informed his family circle that Charley Marsh +was going to--well, to a certain dark spirit not to be lightly named in +polite literature, he was about right. That young gentleman, mounted on +the furious steed of extravagance, was galloping over the road to ruin +at the rate of an express train. + +Not alone, either; young McGregor, Tom Oaks, Esquire, and some dozen +more young Speckportians, were keeping him company--and all ran nearly +abreast in the dizzy race. + +The terrible terminus--Disgrace, Misery, and Sudden Death--looked very +near to some of them, very near, indeed, to the brother of Nathalie. He +had taken to hard drinking of late, as a natural sequence of the other +vice; gamblers must drink to drown remorse, and it was no unusual thing +now for him to be helped home by pitying friends, and carried up-stairs +to bed. How the mother cried and scolded; how the sister wept in +passionate shame and sorrow in the silence of her own room; how he, the +prodigal, suffered after, Heaven only knows, but it never came to +anything. + +Next day's splitting headache, and insuperable shame and remorse, must +be drowned in brandy; that fatal stimulant brought the old delusive +hopes--he must go back, he must win. + +He was over four hundred dollars indebted to Captain Cavendish now, +without possessing one dollar in the world, or the hope of one, to pay +him. He had ceased to ask money from Nathalie--she had no more to give +him, and Alick McGregor and Tom Oaks found enough to do to foot their +own bills. + +Strange to say, the primary mover of this mischief, the arch-tempter +himself, George Percy Cavendish, remained unsuspected, save by a few, +and went altogether unblamed. Captain Cavendish seldom lost his money, +never his temper; never got excited, was ever gentlemanly and cool, +though half the men about him were mad with liquor and losses, and ready +to hold pistols to their heads and blow their miserable brains out. + +Nathalie, humbled to the very dust with shame for Charley, never +suspected her betrothed lover--never for one second; in her eyes he was +the incarnation of all that was honorable and good. + +It was in one of his fits of rage and remorse that Charley had asked +Cherrie to fly with him. Not that he expected to atone by that; but, far +from Speckport, which enchanting town was fast becoming hateful to him, +and with her as his wife, he hoped to begin a new life, away from those +he had disgraced. He hated Captain Cavendish with a furious and savage +hatred, and it would be a demoniac satisfaction to tear Cherrie from +him. For, with the eyes of jealousy, Charley saw his game, though all +Speckport was blind. Miss Nettleby, at her old game of fast and loose, +had put him off indefinitely. And, casting bitter reproaches to Fate, +after the manner of Dick Swiveller, Charley Marsh let himself drift +with the rapid current, bearing him along to a fearful end. + +The day that came after the night spent by Cherrie and Captain Cavendish +in the cedar dell was one of scorching, broiling heat and sunshine. The +sun was like a wheel of red flame, the sky of burnished brass, the bay a +sea of amber fire. + +Through all the fiery glare of this fierce August morning, went Charley +Marsh to the office of Dr. Leach. No longer the Charley Marsh who had +been the life of Mrs. McGregor's party, that foggy May evening when +Captain Cavendish had first appeared in Speckport, but a pale, +sunken-cheeked, hollow-eyed vision, with parched and feverish lip, and +gaze that shrunk from meeting that of his fellow-men, his temples seemed +splitting, his eyes ached with the blinding gleam, and he could have +cursed the heat in his impious impatience and suffering. He glanced down +toward the shining bay, and thought, if it had only looked blue and +cool, instead of being a lake of fire, he could have gone and lain down +in its pleasant waters, and escaped forever from the miseries of this +life, at least. + +"Charley!" + +The voice at his elbow made him bound. He turned and saw Cherrie +Nettleby, her shining ebon ringlets freshly curled, her black eyes dark +and dewy, her rosy cheeks bright and unwilted, her dress airy and +cool--unflushed, unheated; basking, like a little salamander, in the +genial sunlight, and wearing the smile of an angel. Charley could scarce +believe his eyes. + +"You here, Cherrie!" he cried, "this blazing day. Have you been in +Speckport all night?" + +"No, I got a drive in this morning, and, Charley," dropping her wicked +eyes, "I came to see you!" + +They were near the office. The surgery looked cool and shady, and +Charley opened the door and ushered the young lady in. The shopboy had +the place to himself, and he retreated to a distant corner, with a +knowing grin, at sight of the pair. Dr. Leach was rarely at home. People +would persist in devouring new potatoes, and green peas, and cucumbers, +and string-beans, and other green stuffs, and having pains, and cramps, +and cholera afterward, and the doctor was fairly run off his legs--that +is to say, his horse was. + +"How nice and cool it is in here," said Cherrie; "it's the hottest day +came this summer, I think. What a hurry you were in leaving, last night, +Charley." + +"Hurry! It was past ten." + +"Well, I came in a few minutes after, and was so mad when I found you +were gone. I got such a jawing for being out! I won't stand it," cried +Miss Cherrie, flying out in an affected temper; "I just won't!" + +"Stand what?" + +"Why, being scolded and put upon the way I am! It's dreadful dull, too, +and I am getting tired of the place altogether; and so, I am going to +leave it." + +"With me, Cherrie?" + +"I don't care if I do! I'm off this very day; I'll not stand it a minute +longer--so, if you want me to go with you, you haven't much time to +spare!" + +Charley grasped both her hands, his pale face lighting with ecstasy; and +the shopboy behind the pestle-and-mortar grinned delightedly at the +scene, although he could not hear a word. + +"My darling Cherrie!" Charley cried, "you have made me the happiest +fellow alive! Wait until to-morrow, and we will be off in the boat to +Boston." + +Miss Nettleby fell to musing. + +"Well, I don't care if I do," she said, at length. "I should like to see +Boston, and the trip in the steamboat will be nice. But, look here, +Charley, I've gone and told our folks and everybody else that I was +going to Greentown, in this afternoon's train, and it won't do to back +out." + +"But you must back out, Cherrie! You cannot go to Greentown and to +Boston, both." + +Cherrie put on her considering-cap again, only for a moment, though, and +then she looked up with a sparkling face. + +"I have it, Charley! The nicest plan! This evening, at half-past five, +I'll go off in the cars, and every one will think I've gone to +Greentown, so my absence to-morrow won't be noticed. I'll get out at the +first station, three miles off, and walk back home, but won't go in. +About eight to-night you call at our house, pretending you don't know +about my being off, you know; and when our Ann tells you I have gone, +you go up to Lady Leroy's and stay till bed-time. Then wait around the +grounds in front of the house, and I'll come to you about ten. I can +stop in one of the hotels here, where they don't know me. I'll wear a +thick vail until morning, and then we will hide on board the boat. Isn't +it a splendid plan, Charley? They'll think I'm in Greentown, and never +suspect we have gone off together!" + +No poor fly ever got entangled in a spider's web more readily than did +Charley Marsh in that of Captain Cavendish. He thought the plan was +capital, and he told her so. + +"You must be sure to wait in front of the house until I come," said the +wicked little enchantress, keeping her black eyes fixed anywhere but on +his face. "And here, Charley--now don't refuse--it is only a trifle, and +I won't go with you, if you don't take it. I don't suppose you have much +money, and father made it a present to me after Lady Leroy paid him. I +must go now, because I have ever so much to do before evening. Good-bye, +Charley, you won't forget anything I've said?" + +Forget! That face, fair in spite of its haggardness, was radiant. Bad as +Cherrie was, she had not the heart to look at him as she hurried out of +the shop and down the street. If he had only known!--if he had only +known!--known of the cunning trap laid for him, into which he was +falling headlong--if he had only known what was to take place that fatal +night! + +Charley Marsh did not go home to his dinner; he had dinner enough for +that day. All that long sweltering afternoon he sat in the smothering +little back-office, staring out at the baked and blistered backyard, and +weaving, oh! such radiant dreams of the future. Such dreams as we all +weave; as we see wither to shreds, even in the next hour. Visions of a +home, far, very far from Speckport, where the past should be atoned for +and forgotten--a home of which Cherrie, his darling little Cherrie, +should be the mistress and fireside fairy. + +It was some time past five, when, awakening from these blissful +day-dreams, Charley Marsh found that the little back office was so +insufferably hot as not to be borne any longer, and that a most +extraordinary change had come over the sky, or at least as much of the +firmament as was visible from the dirty office-window. He took his hat +and sauntered out, pausing in the shop-door to stare at the sky. It had +turned livid; a sort of ghostly, greenish glare, all over with wrathful +black clouds and bars of blood-red streaking the western horizon. Not a +breath of air stirred; the trees along the streets of Speckport and in +its squares hung motionless in the dead calm, and feathers and bits of +paper and straw lay on the sidewalk. The sea was of the same ghastly +tinge as sky and air, as if some commotion in its watery bowels had +turned it sick. And, worst of all, the heat was unabated, the planked +sidewalks scorched your feet as you walked, and you gasped for a +mouthful of air. Speckport declined taking its tea; its butter was +butter no longer, but oil; its milk had turned sour, and the water from +the street-hydrants nearly warm enough to make tea of, without boiling +at all. There were very few out as Charley walked down Queen Street, but +among these few he encountered Mr. Val Blake, striding in the direction +of Great St. Peter Street. + +Val nodded familiarly. + +"Hot day, Charley. Going to be a thunder-storm, I take it. By the way, +she'll have an ugly night for her journey." + +"Who will?" + +"Little Cherrie, of course; she's off to Greentown, man! Didn't you know +it? I was down at the station ten minutes ago, and saw her off. How's +the mother?" + +"Getting better. Good afternoon, Val," said Charley, passing on, and +smiling at the news Mr. Blake had told him. + +"What a clever head the little darling has to put them off the scent! +Hallo, what do you want?" + +Some one had shouted after him; and turning round, he saw Master Bill +Blair, his hands in his pockets, his hat cocked on one side of his head, +following at an extremely leisurely pace. + +"I want you to hold on. I'll go part of the way with you, for I'm going +home to tea," replied Mr. Blair, not hurrying himself. "It's hot enough +to roast an ox, it is. You don't suppose the sky has got the jaundice, +do you; it is turned as yellow as a kite's claw." + +"You had better send up and inquire," said Charley, shortly, preferring +his own thoughts to this companionship. + +"I say, Marsh," said Bill, grinning from ear to ear, "Cherrie's gone, +hasn't she? Good riddance, I say. What took her streaking off to +Greentown, and whatever will you do without her?" + +Mr. Marsh came to a sudden stand-still--they were in a quiet street--and +took Mr. Blair by the collar. + +"Look you here, Master Bill," said Charley, emphatically, "you see the +water down there! Well, now take warning; the next time I find you +making too free use of that tongue of yours, I'll duck you! Mind! I've +said it!" + +With which Mr. Marsh released him, and stalked on. Mr. Blair, pretty +well used to being collared, took this admonition so much to heart, that +he leaned against a lamp-post, and went off with a roar of laughter that +awoke all the sleeping echoes of the place. + +There was no one in the cottage parlor when Charley went in; and on the +lounge in the sitting-room his mother lay asleep. He went softly +up-stairs to his own room, so as not to awake her. That poor, pale, +peevish, querulous, novel-reading, fond mother, when should he see her +again? + +A murmur of voices caught the young man's ear as he ascended; it came +from Miss Rose's room--the door of which, that sultry evening, stood +half open. Charley glanced in. Miss Rose, sitting at a little table, was +writing, and an old woman on a chair near, with her shawl and bonnet +on, rocked to and fro, and dictated. Charley knew Miss Rose was scribe +to all the poor illiterate of Speckport, and knew she was at one of +those sacred tasks now. He saw the pale, sweet face in profile; the +drooping white eyelids, hiding the hazel eyes, and the brown hair, damp +and loose, falling over her mourning-dress. He thought of what Nathalie +had said--"If you must marry any one, why not Miss Rose?" as he closed +the door without disturbing them. + +"No, Natty," he mentally answered. "Miss Rose is an angel, which I am +not, unless it be an angel of darkness. No; she is too innocent and good +for such a fellow as I am. I wouldn't marry her if I could, and +couldn't, I dare say, if I would." + +He changed his dress, and packed his trunk, laying out a long waterproof +coat on the bed, as a shield against the coming rain. Before he had +finished, he heard Betsy Ann calling Miss Rose to tea. That reminded him +he had had no dinner, and was hungry; so he went down stairs, and Mrs. +Marsh, at sight of him, broke out in petulant complainings. + +Why had he not come home to dinner? Where had he been? What was the +reason it was so hot, and why was he in evening dress? And Charley +laughed good-humoredly as he took his place at the table. + +"Be easy, mother mine! Who could think of so preposterous a thing as +dinner this sweltering day? I have been in the office since morning." + +"Catty Clowrie was in here some time ago," pursued Mrs. Marsh, feebly +stirring her tea, "and she told me Cherrie Nettleby had gone away up the +country. What's taken her off?" + +Miss Rose was kind-hearted enough not to look at him, and his mother was +without her specs; so neither noticed the hot flush that arose to his +face. + +"How should I know? Am I Miss Nettleby's confidant? Was Nathalie in the +school-room to-day, Miss Rose?" + +"No." + +"It was too hot, I suppose. This intense closeness can only end in a +thunder-storm." + +"I fancy we will have it shortly. The sky looks fearful; it has turned +perfectly livid." + +The meal ended, Charley walked to the window overlooking the wide sea, +and stood blankly gazing out. It was nearly seven--time he was off to +Redmon; and yet, with love and Cherrie beckoning him on, he was +hesitating. When should he stand here again--in this pleasant home where +he had spent so many happy years? When, indeed? He was going to his +fate, as we all go, blindly; and there was no foreshadowing dread to +whisper to him--stand back. + +The clock struck seven. It was possible to linger no longer. He went +over to where his mother sat, and bent over her. Miss Rose in the next +room was practicing. + +"Mother!" Charley said, trying to laugh, and speaking very fast, "I have +not been a very good boy lately, but I am going to turn over a new leaf +from to-day. You can forgive the past, mother dear, can you not, if I +promise better for the future?" + +Mrs. Marsh looked up at him rather surprised, but still peevish. + +"I am glad to hear it, I am sure. You have been acting disgracefully of +late, just as if you wanted to break my heart." + +"But I don't, mother, and I am going to amend. And when after this you +hear others speaking ill of me, you will be my defender, will you not, +mother?" + +"Of course, Charles," his mother said, pettishly, "if you deserve it." + +"Good-bye, then, mother; take care of yourself, and try and forgive me." + +He kissed her, and hastily left the room. Miss Rose faintly and sweetly +was playing some evening hymn. He stopped a moment to look at the slight +black figure--for the last time, perhaps, he thought. + +"Good-bye, Miss Rose," he called out; "I am off." + +She turned round with a smile. + +"Good-bye, Mr. Marsh! There is a storm coming--take care!" + +How little she dreamed of the storm that was coming when she gave him +that warning. He went out of the cottage, closing the hall door after +him; and the street and the figures in it looked blurred to him, seen +through some foolish mist in his eyes. + +With the waterproof overcoat thrown across his arm, his umbrella in his +hand, and his hat pulled far over his eyes, Charley Marsh walked through +the streets of Speckport steadily to his fate. There was an ominous hush +in the stifling atmosphere, a voiceless but terrible menace in the +sullen sky, the black and glassy bay, and the livid-hued evening. +Charley's thoughts wandered to Cherrie. The storm would overtake her +coming to town; she would get drenched, and frightened half to death, +for it was going to lighten. He could not walk fast, owing to the heat, +and night fell before the Nettleby cottage came in sight. With it fell +the storm, flash after flash of lightning cleaving black cloud and +yellow air like a two-edged sword--flash after flash, blinding, +intermittent, for nearly five minutes. Then a long dull roar, that +seemed to shake the town, with great plashing drops of rain, as large +and heavy as peas. And then the tempest burst in its might--flash, +flash, flash!--the heavens seemed one sheet of flame--the earth rocking +with the ceaseless roll of thunder, and the rain descending in torrents. +Some low spruce-bushes, a zigzag fence, his glazed overcoat and +umbrella, were shelter enough for Charley. He sat on a rock by the +wayside, his hands over his eyes, feeling as though the fierce blue +glare had struck him blind. The summer-hurricane was sublime in its +fury, but too violent to last long. In three-quarters of an hour the +lightning and thunder had ceased, but the rain still fell heavily. +Charley got up, drew out his watch, struck a match--for the night had +struck in pitch black--and looked at the hour. A quarter to nine, and +where, oh where, in all this tempest was poor Cherrie? He hurried on at +a frantic pace, fumbling in the blind blackness, until the red light of +the cottage-window streamed across the inky gloom. He never stopped to +imagine what they would think of his presence there at such a time; he +was too full of anxiety for Cherrie. She might have hired a cab and +driven home, frightened by the storm, and he rapped loudly at the door. +Ann Nettleby, lamp in hand, answered his authoritative summons. + +"Is Cherrie here, Ann?" + +Ann stared. + +"Law, Mr. Marsh! how should she be here? Don't you know she went off to +Greentown in the half-past five train?" + +Charley stood looking at her, so pale and wild and wet, that Ann stared +at him harder than ever. + +"Is Lady Leroy worse?" she asked. + +"Worse! Yes--no--I don't know. Has she been ill?" + +"She's been very bad all the day. Dr. Leach has been up to see her, and +our Bob's staying there all night for fear she should take another bad +turn, and some one should be wanted to go for him again." + +This was news to Charley. + +"What is the matter with her?" he asked. + +"Cramps. Did you not get Cherrie's letter?" + +"What?" + +"Cherrie's letter! She left a letter for you, and told me to fetch it to +town to you, and I did this evening, but you weren't in, the boy said." + +"Did you leave it at the office?" + +"Yes." + +Charley wondered what it could be about, but he did not ask Ann. He +turned and walked through the darkness and the slanting rain, to Redmon +House. The outer gate never was fastened, and he went under the dripping +trees up to the castle of Lady Leroy. It was all in darkness, looming up +a blacker spot in the blackness, but one feeble ray shone from +Nathalie's room. Charley knew it was of no use entering then--past +nine--when the place was closed and locked for the night, so he stood +under the tall, gaunt trees, and watched that feeble, flickering ray. It +seemed to connect him--to bring him in communion--with Nathalie; and +when it went out, and all was dark and lonely, a light--the light of his +love for her--seemed to go out of his heart with it. + +And now there was nothing to do but to watch for Cherrie. He seemed to +have bidden farewell to all his old friends, and have only her left. His +past life seemed gliding behind him, out of sight--a newer and better +life opening before him, with her by his side to share it, until they +should lie down at the far end, full of years and good works. He leaned +against a tree, thinking of this, and waiting. The storm was abating, +the rain ceasing, the clouds parting, and a pale and watery moon staring +wanly across the gloom. In another hour the clouds were scudding wildly +before a rising gale, and the moon had broken out, through their black +bars, lighting up the grim old house with an eerie and spectral gloom. +The trees looked like tall, moaning ghosts in the sickly and fitful +rays, and the loneliness of the tomb reigned over all. Another weary +hour of watching, and Charley was nearly mad with impatience and +anxiety. Where--where--was Cherrie? The sighing night-wind, the moaning +and tossing trees, the ghastly light of the fitful moon, and the ominous +silence of nature, had no answer to give him. + +What was that which rent the silence of the night? A shriek from the +house behind him--a woman's shriek--the sound of flying feet, a key +turning in a rusty lock, and the front door thrown wide open. En sac de +nuit, which means, in a short night-gown and red flannel petticoat, her +head tied up in a yellow silk handkerchief, Midge rushed frantically +out, followed by a man. Charley had started forward, and the moon's +light fell full upon his black form in the middle of the park. Quick as +lightning, the iron grasp of the dwarf was upon his collar, and the +shrill voice piercing wildly the night air: "I have him! I have him! +Murder! Murder! Murder!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +A CRIME. + + +What was done that night? + +At the very hour of that fine August morning that Mr. Charles Marsh and +Miss Cherrie Nettleby had the surgery of Dr. Leach so comfortably to +themselves, that medical gentleman up at Redmon, helping its mistress to +fight out a battle with death. Yes, on that hot summer morning Lady +Leroy was likely to die, stood even within the portal of the Valley of +the Shadow, and Redmon and all earthly possessions seem about to slip +from her forever. Good-natured Miss Jo, in the early morning, had sent +up a present of a basket of cucumbers and lettuce, of both of which +specimens of the vegetable kingdom Mrs. Leroy had partaken, well soaked +in vinegar, as a sharpener to breakfast appetite. The consequence was, +that before that repast was well down, she was seized with such +convulsive cramps as only cholera patients ever know. Brandy applied +inwardly, and hot flannel and severe rubbing applied outwardly, being +without avail, Dr. Leach was sent for in hot haste. The old woman was in +agonies, and Nathalie frightened nearly out of her wits. Dr. Leach +looked grave, but did his best. For some hours it was quite uncertain +whether he or the grim Rider of the Pale Horse would gain the battle: +but victory seated herself at last on the medical banner of the +Speckport physician. Mrs. Leroy, totally exhausted with her fierce +sufferings, took an opiate and fell asleep, and the doctor took his hat +to leave. + +"She'll do well enough now, Miss Natty," he said, "only pitch the +cucumbers into the fire the first thing. She'll be all right to-morrow." + +Nathalie sat patiently down in the steaming and oppressive sick-room, to +keep watch. The house was as still as a tomb; Midge was buried in the +regions below, and the sick woman slept long and profoundly. + +Nathalie took a book, and, absorbed by it, did not notice when Lady +Leroy awoke. Awake she did, after some hours, and lay there quite still, +looking at the young girl, and thinking. Of what? Of the long and weary +months that young girl had in a manner buried herself alive in this +living tomb of a house, to minister to her, to arrange all her business, +to read to her, to talk to her, to do her all manner of good service, +and to bear patiently her querulousness and caprice. It had been a +lonely and eerie life for her, but when had she ever complained? and now +what was she to gain by it all! For one act of disobedience she was +disinherited--all these months and years wasted for nothing. She had +come there in the belief--implanted by Mrs. Leroy herself--that she was +to be the heiress of Redmon. Had she any right to go back from her +word--to make her memory accursed--to go into that shadowy and unknown +world opening before her with a lie on her soul? Dared she do it? She +had an awful fear of death, this miserly old woman--an awful fear of +what lay beyond death; and yet, with strange inconsistency, she felt +herself on the verge of the grave--a long life of sin lying behind her, +and making no effort to atone--only letting herself drift on. Yet is the +inconsistency strange? Are we not, every one of us, doing the same? We +are younger, perhaps, and fuller of life; yet do we not know the +terrible truth, that death and ourselves are divided but by a single +step? + +Nathalie, bending over her book, all her fair hair dropping loose about +her, saw not the eyes so closely watching her. How pale she looked. +Perhaps it was the fright, not yet over; perhaps the heat; but her face +was like a lily-leaf. While she watched her, Midge came softly in, and +Mrs. Leroy closed her eyes again. + +"Is she sleeping still?" Midge asked, looking toward the bed. + +"Yes," said Nathalie, glancing up. + +Midge bustled out, and presently returned with a cup of tea. + +"Who do you think was here this morning to say good-bye?" she asked, +while Nathalie was drinking it. + +"I don't know. Who?" + +"Cherrie Nettleby, no less. She wanted to come up here whether or no, to +see you and the missis, but I sent her to the right about quicker. The +flyaway good-for-nothing's off to Greentown in the cars this afternoon." + +"Indeed. And how long is she going to stay?" + +"I told her I was glad to hear it," said Midge, "and that I hoped she +wouldn't come bothering back in a hurry; and she laughed and shook back +them black curls of hers, and said perhaps she would stay all summer. +The place is well rid of her, and I told her so." + +Nathalie, reverting to Charley, perhaps, thought the same, but she did +not say so. Midge departed, refreshed by her bit of gossip, and Nathalie +resumed her book. The steaming sick-room was irksome enough to her, but +she would not leave Mrs. Leroy even for a moment in her present state. +That old lady opened her eyes again; and as she did so, Midge came +bolting back. + +"Miss Natty, here's Mr. Tom Oaks come to pay that there money, I expect. +Shall I send him off again?" + +Before Nathalie could reply, Lady Leroy half sat up in bed, feeble as +she was, the ruling passion strong in death. + +"No, no, no!" she shrilly cried, "don't send him away. Fetch him up +here--fetch him up!" + +Nathalie dropped her book and was bending over her directly. + +"Dear Mrs. Leroy, are you awake? How do you feel now?" + +"Better, Natty, better. Fetch him up, Midge--fetch him up." + +Midge trotted off, soliloquizing as she went: + +"Well, I never! I do think if she was dead and buried, the sound of +money jingling atop of her grave would bring her out of it. You're to +come up, Mr. Oaks. Missis is sick abed, but she'll see you." + +Mr. Tom Oaks, a dashing young fellow, well-looking of face, and free +and easy of manner, strolled in, hat in hand. Nathalie rose to receive +him. + +"Good day to you, Miss Nathalie. How are you, Mrs. Leroy? Nothing the +matter, I hope." + +"She is better, now," said Nathalie, placing a chair for him by the +bedside. + +"I suppose you've come up to pay the money?" Mrs. Leroy inquired, her +fingers beginning to work, as they always did when she was excited. + +Yes, Mr. Oaks had come to pay the money and obtain possession of the +documents that made him master of Partridge Farm. Sundry papers were +signed and handed over--a long roll of bank-bills, each for fifty +pounds, were presented to Lady Leroy and greedily counted by her, over +and over again. Then Nathalie had to go through the performance, and the +roll was found to be correct. Mr. Oaks, master of a magnificent farm, +bowed himself out, the perspiration streaming from every pore. + +When he was gone, the old woman counted the bills over again--once, +twice, three times; her eyes glittering with the true miser's delight. +It was not to make sure of their accuracy, but for the pure and +unalloyed pleasure it gave her to handle so much money and feel that it +was hers. + +A knock at the front door. Mrs. Leroy rolled the bills hastily up. + +"Give me the box, Natty; some one's coming, and it's not safe to let any +one know there's so much money in the house, and only three poor lone +women of us here." + +Nathalie handed her the large japanned tin box Cherrie had spoken of, +which always stood at the head of the bed, and the bills were placed in +it, the tin box relocked and replaced, before the visitor entered. It +proved to be Lawyer Darcy; and Nathalie, availing herself of his +presence, left the room for a few moments to breathe purer air. + +"I was very sorry to hear of your illness," the lawyer said, "and ran in +as I was going by, although I am in rather a hurry. By the way, I am +expecting every day to be summoned back here to alter that last unjust +will of yours. I hope you have begun to see its cruel injustice +yourself." + +"Yes," Lady Leroy gravely replied, "I have. There is no one living has +so good a right to whatever I possess as Nathalie Marsh. I did wrong to +take it from her, but it is not too late yet. Come up here to-morrow +morning and draw out another--my last will--she shall have everything I +own." + +The old lawyer grasped the sick woman's hand delightedly. + +"Thank heaven, my dear Mrs. Leroy, that you have been brought to see +matters in their true light. Natty's the best girl alive--ain't you, +Natty?" + +"What, sir?" Nathalie asked, as she re-entered the room. + +"The best and prettiest girl alive! There, don't blush. Good afternoon +to you both. I'll be up to-morrow morning without fail, Mrs. Leroy, and +I trust I shall find you quite restored." + +He went out. How little did he think that never again, this side of +eternity, should he meet that woman; how little did he think that with +those words he had bidden her an eternal farewell. + +Midge brought up some tea and toast to her mistress after the lawyer's +departure; and feeling more comfortable after it, the old woman lay back +among her pillows, and requested her ward to "read a piece for her." + +The book Nathalie was reading had been one of her father's, and she +loved it for his sake and for its own. It was not a novel, it was "At +the Foot of the Cross," by Faber; and seating herself by the bedside, +she read aloud in her sweet, grave voice. The touching story of Calvary +was most touchingly retold there; more than once the letters swam on the +page through a thick mist of tears, and more than once bright drops fell +on the page and blistered it. + +The long, sultry afternoon hours wore over, and in that shuttered room +it had grown too dark to see the words, before the girl ceased. There +was a silence; Nathalie's heart was full, and Mrs. Leroy was quiet, +looking unwontedly thoughtful. + +"It's a beautiful book," she said, at last, "a beautiful book, Natty; +and it does me good to hear it. I wish you had read to me out of that +book before!" + +"I will read it all through to you," Nathalie said; "but you are tired +now, and it is past seven. You had better have some tea, and take this +opiate and go to sleep. You will be quite well again to-morrow." + +Nathalie got the old woman's tea herself, and made the toast with her +own white hands. Mrs. Leroy wished her to share the meal, but Nathalie +could not eat there; the steaming and fetid atmosphere of that close +chamber made her sick and faint. She was longing for the old woman to go +to rest for the night, so that she might get out. She removed the +tea-tray, and turned to leave the room. + +"I am going out for a walk in the grounds," she said, "but I will be +back by eight to give you the sleeping draught; and, for fear you might +be taken ill again in the night, I will ask one of the Nettlebys to +sleep here." + +Without hat or mantle, she ran down-stairs and out into the hot +twilight. The brassy hue of the sky, and the greenish-yellow haze +filling the air, the ominous silence of nature, and the scudding black +clouds, gave her warning for the first time of the coming storm. + +She went down the avenue, through the gate, and along the dusty road to +the cottage. The roses about it were hanging their heavy heads, the +morning-glories and the scarlet-runners looked limp and wilted. She +found Ann washing the dishes, and the two young Nettlebys lying lazily +on the grass behind the cottage, smoking pipes. Nathalie proferred her +request, and Rob Nettleby at once volunteered. + +"I'll go up in half an hour, Miss Natty," he said, "and, if I'm wanted, +I can gallop into town in ten minutes." + +"Thank you, Rob!" + +She went back to the kitchen, lounging a minute before she left. + +"And so Cherrie's gone, Ann?" + +"Yes," said Ann; "and I'm glad of it. We will have some peace for a +while, which we don't have when she's here, with her gadding." + +Nathalie walked slowly back to the house, wondering and awed by the +weird and ghostly look of the sky. The evening was so close and +oppressive that no breath of air was to be had; yet still it was better +than the house, and she lingered in the grounds until the lightning shot +out like tongues of blue flame, and the first heavy raindrops began to +fall. + +Hurrying in out of the coming storm, followed by Bob Nettleby, who +opined it was going to be a "blazer of a night," she saw that all the +doors and windows were secured, and then returned to Mrs. Leroy's room +to administer the opiate. She found the old woman in a doze, from which +her entrance aroused her, and raised her with her right arm in bed, +while she held the glass to her lips with her left hand. + +"It will make you sleep, dear Mrs. Leroy," the girl said, "and you will +be as well as ever to-morrow." + +"I hope so, Natty.--Is that thunder?" + +"Yes; it is going to be a stormy night. Is there anything else I can do +for you before I go?" + +"Yes; turn down that lamp; I don't like so much light." + +A little kerosene lamp burned on the table. Nathalie lowered the light, +and turned to go. + +"Good-night," she said, "I will come in once or twice through the night +to see how you are. You are sure you do not want anything more?" + +The sleeping-potion was already taking effect. The old woman drowsily +opened her eyes: + +"No," she said; "nothing else. You're a good girl, Natty, and it was +wrong to do it; but I'll make it all right, Natty; I'll make it all +right!" + +They were the last words she ever spoke! Nathalie wondered what she +meant, as she went into her own room, and lit her lamp. + +The storm without was raging fast and furious; the blaze of the +lightning filled the room with a lurid blue glare, the dull and +ceaseless roll of the thunder was appalling, and the rain lashed the +windows in torrents. + +"Heaven help any poor wanderer exposed to such a tempest!" Nathalie +thought. + +If she had only known of him who cowered under the spruce bushes on +Redmon road, waiting for it to subside. + +Nathalie brushed out her long, shining, showering curls, bathed her +face, and said her prayers. The furious and short-lived tempest had +raged itself out by that time, and she blew out the lamp and sat down by +the window--it was too hot to go to bed. She made a pile of the pillows, +and leaned her head against them where she sat; and, with the rushing +rain for her lullaby, fell asleep. + +What was that? She awoke with a start. She knew she had not slept long, +but out of a disturbed dream some noise awoke her--a sharp metallic +sound. Her room was weirdly lighted by the faint rays of the wan and +spectral moon, and with her heart beating thick and fast she listened. +The old house was full of rats--she could hear them scampering over her +head, under her feet, and between the partitions. It was this noise that +had awoke her; the trees were writhing and groaning in the heavy wind, +and tossing their green arms wildly, as if in some dryad agony--perhaps +it was that. She listened, but save these noises all was still. Yes, it +was the rats, Nathalie thought, and settling back among the pillows once +more, she fell into another light slumber. + +No, Nathalie. Neither the wailing wind, nor the surging trees, nor the +scurrying rats made the noise you heard. In the corridor outside your +room a tall, dark figure, with a black crape mask on its face, is +standing. The figure wears a long overcoat and a slouched hat, and it is +fitting a skeleton key in the lock of Mrs. Leroy's door; for Nathalie +has locked that door. Like some dark and evil spirit of the night, it +glides into the chamber; the lamp on the table burns low, and the old +woman sleeps heavily. Softly it steals across the room, lays hold of the +japanned tin box, tries key after key from a bunch it carries, +and at last succeeds. The box is open--the treasure is found. +Fifty--fifty--fifty! they are all fifties--fifty-pound notes on good and +sound Speckport banks. The eyes behind the mask glitter--the eager hands +are thrusting the huge rolls into the deep pockets of the overcoat. But +he drops the last roll and stops in his work aghast, for there is an +awful sound from the bed. It is not a scream, it is not a cry; but +something more awful than ever came from the throat of woman in all the +history of woman's agony. It is like the death-rattle--hoarse and +horrible. He turns and sees the old woman sitting up in bed, one +flickering finger pointing at him, the face convulsed and livid, the +lips purple and foaming, the eyes starting. One cry, and all for which +he has risked so much will be lost! He is by the bedside like a flash; +he has seized one of the pillows, and hurled her back; he has grasped +her by the throat with one-powerful hand, while with the other he holds +the pillow over her face. Fear and fury distort his own--could you see +it behind the mask--and his teeth are set, and his eyeballs strained. +There is a struggle, a convulsive throe, another awful rattle in the +throat, and then he sees the limbs relax, and the palpitating throat +grow still. He need fear no cry now; no sound will ever again come from +those aged lips; the loss or gain of all the treasures in the wide earth +will never disturb her more. He loosens his grasp, removes the pillow, +and the lamplight falls on a horrible sight. He turns away with a +shudder from that blackened and convulsed visage, from the starting eyes +forced out of their sockets, and from the blood which trickles in a +slow, dreadful stream between purple lips. He dare not stop to look or +think what he has done; he thrusts the last roll into his pocket and +flies from the room. He is so furiously impatient now to get away from +that horrible thing on the bed, that he forgets caution. He flies down +the stairs, scarcely knowing that the noise he makes echoes from cellar +to attic of the silent old house. He takes the wrong turning, and swears +a furious oath, to find himself at a door instead of the window by which +he had entered. He hears a shriek, too; and, mad with terror, tears off +his mask and turns down another passage. Right at last! this is the +window! He leaps through it--he is out in the pale moonlight, tearing +through the trees like a madman. He has gained the road--a horse stands +tied to a tree, and he leaps on his back, drives his spurs furiously +into the beast's side, and is off like the wind. In ten minutes, at this +rate, he will be in Speckport, and safe. + + * * * * * + +The apartment in which Midge sought sleep after the fatigues of the day, +was the kitchen, and was on the first floor, directly under Lady Leroy's +room. She had quartered Rob Nettleby in the adjoining apartment--a big, +draughty place, where the rats held grand carnival all the year round. +Midge, like all honest folks in her station, who have plenty of hard +work, and employ their hands more than their heads, was a good sleeper. +But on this stormy August night Midge was destined to realize some of +the miseries of wakefulness. She had not dared to go to bed during the +first fury of the storm; for Midge was scared beyond everything by +lightning and thunder; but after that had subsided, she had ventured to +unrobe and retire. But Midge could not sleep. Whether it was the heat, +or that the tempest had made her nervous, or why or wherefore, Midge +could never afterward tell; but she tossed from side to side, and +listened to the didoes of the rats, and the whistling of the wind about +the old house, and the ghostly moonlight shimmering down through the +fluttering leaves of the trees, and groaned and fidgeted, and felt just +as miserable as lying awake when one wants to go asleep, can make any +one feel. There were all sorts of strange and weird noises and echoes in +the lonely old house; so when Midge fancied she heard one of the back +windows softly opened, and something on the stairs, she set it down to +the wind and the rats, as Nathalie had done. She heard the clock +overhead in Lady Leroy's room--the only timepiece in the house--strike +eleven, and thought it had come very soon; for it hardly seemed fifteen +minutes since it had struck ten. But she set this down to her +fidgetiness, too; for how was she to know that the black shadow in the +room above had moved the hands on the dial-plate before quitting? But +that other noise! this is no imagination, surely. Midge starts up with a +gasping cry of affright. A man's step is on the stairs--a man's hurried +tread is in the hall--she hears a smothered oath--hears him turn and +rush past her door--hears a leap--and then all is still. The momentary +spell that has made Midge speechless is broken. She springs to her +feet--yes, springs, for Midge forgets she is short and fat and given to +waddling, in her terror, throws on the red flannel undergarment you wot +of, and rushes out of her room and up-stairs, shrieking like mad. She +cannot conceive what is the matter, or where the danger lies, but she +bursts into Nathalie's room first. Nathalie, aroused by the wild screams +from a deep sleep, starts up with a bewildered face. Midge sees she is +safe, and still uttering the most appalling yells, flies to the next, to +Lady Leroy's room, Nathalie after her; and Mr. Rob Nettleby, with an +alarmed countenance and in a state of easy undress, making his toilet as +he comes, brings up the rear. + +"What is it? Is Mrs. Leroy worse?" he asked, staring at the shrieking +Midge. + +"There's been somebody here--robbing and murdering the house! +Ah--h--h----!" + +The shriek with which Midge recoiled was echoed this time by Nathalie. +They had entered the fatal room; the lamp still burned on the table, and +its light fell full on the livid and purple face of the dead woman. +Dead! Yes, there could be no doubt. Murdered! Yes, for there stood the +open and rifled box which had held the money. + +"She's killed, Rob Nettleby! She's murdered!" Midge cried, rushing +headlong from the room; "but he can't have got far. I heard him going +out. Come!" + +She was down the stairs with wonderful speed, followed by the horrified +Nettleby. Midge unlocked and flung open the hall-door, and rushed in the +same headlong way out. There was a man under the trees, and he was +running. With the spring of a tigress Midge was upon him, her hands +clutching his collar, and her dreadful yell of "Murder!" piercing the +stillness of the night. The grasp of those powerful hands was not to be +easily shaken off, and Rob Nettleby laid hold of him on the other side. +Their prisoner made no resistance; he was too utterly taken by surprise +to do other than stand and stare at them both. + +"You villain! you robber! you murderer!" screamed Midge, giving him a +furious shake. "You'll hang for this night's work, if anybody hung yet! +Hold him fast, Rob, while I go and send your brother to Speckport after +the p'lice." + +The address broke the spell that held their captive quiet. Indignantly +endeavoring to shake off the hands that held him, he angrily demanded +what they meant. + +Rob Nettleby, with a shout of astonishment, released his hold--he had +recognized the voice. Midge, too, loosed her grasp, and backed a step or +two, and Charley Marsh, stepping from under the shadow of the trees into +the moonlight, repeated his question with some asperity. + +"Charley!" Midge gasped, more horror-stricken by the recognition than +she had been by the murder. + +"What the deuce is the matter, Nettleby?" Charley demanded, impatiently. +"What is all this row about?" + +"There has been a murder done," said the young man, so confounded by the +discovery as to be scarcely able to speak. + +"Mrs. Leroy has been murdered!" + +Charley recoiled with a white face. + +"Murdered! Good heavens! When? By whom?" + +"To-night--just now." + +He did not answer the last query--he thought it superfluous. To his +mind, Charley Marsh was as good as caught in the act. + +"And Nathalie! Where is she? Is she safe?" + +"She is in Lady Leroy's room." + +Charley only waited for the answer, and made a precipitate rush for the +house. The other two followed, neither daring to look at the other or +speak--followed him up-stairs and into the chamber of the tragedy. All +was as it had been. The ghastly and discolored face of the murdered +woman was there, even the pillow, horrible to look at. But going partly +across a chair as she had fallen, all her golden hair tossed about in +loose disorder, and her face white, and fixed, and cold as marble, +Nathalie lay near the center of the room. There, by herself, where the +dreadful sight had first struck her, she had fainted entirely away. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +FOUND GUILTY. + + +Mr. Val Blake sat in his office, in that inner room sacred to his +privacy. He sat at that littered table, writing and scissoring, for they +went to press that day, and the editor of the Speckport Spouter was over +head-and-ears in work. He had just completed an item and was slowly +reperusing it. It begins in a startling manner enough: + + "Mysterious murder! The night before last a most shocking tragedy + occurred at Redmon House, being no less than the robbery and murder + of a lady well known in our town, Mrs. Leroy. The deceased owned + and occupied the house, together with her ward, Miss Nathalie + Marsh, and one female servant. About eleven o'clock on the night of + the 15th, this servant was alarmed by the sound of footsteps on the + stairs, and aroused a young man, Robert Nettleby, who chanced to be + staying in the house, and they proceeded together to discover the + cause. On entering the chamber occupied by Mrs. Leroy, they found + her dead; the protruding tongue and eyeballs, and purple visage, + telling plainly her death had been caused by strangulation. A box, + containing a large sum of money, eight thousand pounds, we believe, + was found broken open and rifled. The assassin escaped, and no + clue to him has as yet been discovered, but we trust the inquest + which is to be held on the premises this morning will throw some + light on the subject. It is a most inhuman affair, and, we are + sure, no effort will be wanting on the part of the officials + concerned to root out the heart of the matter, and punish the + barbarous perpetrator as he deserves!" + +Mr. Blake read this last neatly-rounded period with a complacent face, +and then pulled out his watch. + +"Ten o'clock!" he muttered, "and the inquest commences in half an hour. +Busy or not busy, I must be present." + +Speckport was in a state of unprecedented excitement. A murder--and +people did murder one another sometimes, even in Speckport--always set +the town wild for a week. Even the civic elections were nothing to it; +and there having been a dearth of bloodshed lately, the tragedy at +Redmon was greedily devoured in all its details. Like a rolling +snowball, small enough at first, but increasing as it goes along, the +story of the robbery and murder had grown, until, had Midge heard the +recital, as correctly received in the town, she would have stared +aghast. Crowds had flocked up Redmon Road the whole of that livelong day +following the murder, and gazed with open-mouthed awe on the gloomy and +lonely old house--gloomier and lonelier than ever now. Crowds were +pouring up still. One would think from their morbid curiosity they +expected the old house to have undergone some wonderful transformation. +The Speckport picnics were nothing to it. + +Mr. Blake, going along at his customary swinging pace, speedily reached +No. 14 Great St. Peter Street, and letting himself in with his +latch-key, went up-stairs to his sleeping-apartment, to make some +alteration in his toilet before proceeding to Redmon. There was no one +in the house; for Miss Blake had been absent on a visit to some friend +out of town for the past few days, and Val took his meals at a +restaurant. Thinking himself alone, therefore, Mr. Blake, standing +before the glass, adjusting an obstinate and painfully stiff collar, +was not a little surprised to hear the street-door open and shut with a +slam, then a rapid rush up-stairs, a strong rustling of silk in the +passage, and his own door flung violently open. Mr. Blake turned round +and beheld his sister, in a state of perspiration, her face red with +heat and haste, anger in her eyes and in every rustle of her silk gown. + +"It's not true, Val!" she burst out, before that gentleman could speak; +"it can't be true! They never can have been such a pack of fools!" + +"What can't be true? Who's a pack of fools?" + +"All Speckport! Do you mean to say they've really gone and taken up +Charley Marsh?" + +"Oh, is that it?" said Mr. Blake, returning to his toilet. "They haven't +taken him up that I know of. What brings you home? I thought you weren't +coming until Saturday." + +"And do you mean to say you thought I could stop one moment after I +heard that poor old thing was dead, and Charley Marsh taken up for it. +If you can be unfeeling and cold-blooded," said Miss Jo, turning from +deep pink to brightest scarlet, "I can't." + +"My dear Jo, don't make such a howling! Charley Marsh isn't taken up, I +tell you." + +"But he's suspected, isn't he? Doesn't all Speckport point at him as the +murderer? Isn't he held to appear at the inquest? Tell me that." + +"Yes," said Mr. Blake, looking critically at his cravat, "he is. Is that +collar straight, Jo?" + +Miss Jo's only answer was a withering look. + +"And he can talk of collars at such a time! And he pretended he used to +be a friend of that poor boy!" + +"Don't be a fool, Jo," said Val, testily. "What can I do? I don't accuse +him!" + +"You don't accuse him!" retorted Miss Jo, with sneering emphasis. +"That's very good of you, indeed, Mr. Blake! Oh no, you don't accuse, +but you stand up there, like--like a cold-blooded kangaroo" (Miss Blake +could think of no better simile in the heat of the moment) "fixing your +collar, while all Speckport's down on him, and no one to take his part! +You won't accuse him, indeed! Hadn't you better run up and do it now? +Where's Natty? Answer me that." + +Miss Jo turned so fiercely upon her brother with this query that Mr. +Blake wilted at once. + +"At home with her mother!" + +"Poor dear girl!" and here Miss Jo softened into tears; "poor dear +child! What a shock for her! How does she bear it?" + +"She has been ill and hysterical ever since. They don't suppose she will +be able to give evidence at the inquest." + +"Poor dear Natty! And how does Mrs. Marsh take it?" + +"Very hard. Betsy Ann had to run to the nearest druggist's for +fourpence-worth of smelling-salts, and she has been rocking, and +reading, and smelling at it ever since." + +"Ah, poor dear!" said sympathetic Miss Jo, whose first fury had +subsided. "Does she know they suspect Charley?" + +"Of course not. Who would tell her that? Oh, I say, Joanna, you haven't +heard that about Miss Rose, have you?" + +"What about Miss Rose? Nobody suspects her of the murder, do they?" + +"Not exactly! She is going away." + +"Going where?" + +"To England!--hand me that vest, Jo--with Mrs. Major Wheatly." + +Miss Jo sat agape at the tidings. + +"It is very sudden," said Val, getting into his Sunday waistcoat. "Miss +Rose had notice of it day before yesterday--it was that night, the night +of that terrible affair at Redmon, you know, that it was proposed to +her. She declined then, although the terms were double what she gets +now, and the work very much less; but yesterday afternoon she accepted." + +"She did! What made her change her mind?" + +"Well, Mrs. Marsh told her, I believe, that now Lady Leroy was gone, and +Nathalie come into her fortune, there would no longer be any need to +keep the school, and that, in point of fact, it would break up. Of +course, Miss Rose at once accepted the other offer, and leaves in a very +few days." + +"Direct for England?" + +"Yes, that is to say, by way of Quebec. Mrs. Major Wheatly is a very +great lady, and must have a companion for herself, and a governess for +her little girl, and Miss Rose suits to a T. It's a very good thing for +the little school-mistress, but she will be missed here. The poor looked +upon her as an angel sent direct from heaven, to make their clothes and +buy their blankets, and look after them when sick, and teach their young +ones for nothing." + +"Well, I am sure! I declare, Val, I'm sorry! She was the nicest little +thing!" + +"So she was," said Val, "and now I'm off! Don't you go howling about the +town, Jo, and making a fuss about Marsh; if he is innocent, he will come +out all square--don't you be afraid." + +"If!" screamed Miss Blake; but her brother was clattering down-stairs +half a dozen steps at a time, and already out of hearing. + +Droves of people were still flocking out the Redmon road, raising +blinding clouds of dust, and discussing the only subject proper to be +discussed then in Speckport. Val's long strides outstripped all +competitors; and arriving at the red brick house, presently ran the +blockade of a group of some two hundred idlers, and strode into the +house as one having authority. As Mr. Blake entered, Dr. Leach stepped +forward and joined him, with a very grave face. + +"How are they getting on?" Val asked. + +"They are getting on fast enough," the doctor answered, in a +dissatisfied tone. "They've been examining me. I had to describe that +last interview with her," jerking his thumb toward the ceiling, "and +prove to their satisfaction she came to her death by strangling, and in +no other way. They had Natty up there, too." + +"Oh, she is better, then." + +"Not much! but she had very little to tell, and Laura Blair has driven +her off again. They have detained Mrs. Marsh--she does not know for +what, though--and will examine her presently." + +"To find out the cause of Charley's absence from home that night! Do you +know, doctor, I begin to think things look black for Charley." + +"Ah! you might say so?" said Dr. Leach, with a significant nod, "if you +knew what I do." + +Val looked at him. + +"What you do! Do you mean or pretend to say----" + +"There! there! there! Don't speak so loud. I may tell you, Blake--you're +a friend of his and would do nothing against him. Read that." + +He handed him a note. Val read it with a blank face. It was the note +sent by Cherrie to Charley, which Ann had told him of, and a verbatim +copy of that given Cherrie by Captain Cavendish. + +"How did you get this?" Val asked, with a still whiter face. + +"It was sent by that gadfly, Cherrie, to the shop, the evening of the +murder. Her sister brought it, and, Marsh being out, gave it to the boy. +Now, what do you think the young rascal did? Why, sir, broke it open the +minute the girl's back was turned, and read it. As luck would have it, I +pounced in and caught him in the act. You ought to have seen his face, +Blake! I took the note from him and read it myself, not knowing it was +for Marsh, and I have it ever since. I meant to give it to him next day, +and tell him what I have told you; but next day came the news of the +murder, and underhand whispers of his guilt. Now, Val, what do you think +of it? Isn't the allusion to Lady Leroy's money plain enough?" + +"That bit of paper might hang him," Val emphatically said, handing it +back. "What do you mean to do with it?" + +"There is only one thing I can do with it, as a conscientious man--and +that is, hand it over to the coroner. I like the boy, but I like justice +more, and will do my duty. If we only had that Cherrie here, she might +throw some light on the business." + +"What can she mean by that allusion to state-rooms?" said Val. "Can they +have meant to run off together in the steamer, and was Greentown only a +ruse? I know Charley has been spooney about her this long time, and +would be capable of marrying her at a moment's notice." + +"Blake, do you know I have been thinking she is hiding somewhere not far +off, and has the money. The police should be set on her track at once." + +"They will, when that note is produced. But, doctor, you seem to take it +for granted that Charley is guilty." + +"How can I help it? Isn't the evidence strong enough?" + +"Circumstantial, doctor, circumstantial. It seems hard to believe +Charley Marsh a murderer." + +"So it does, but Scripture and history, ever since the times of King +David, are full of parallel cases. Think of the proof--think of this +note, and tell me what you infer candidly yourself." + +"The note is a staggerer, but still--Oh, hang it!" cried Mr. Blake, +impatiently, "I won't believe him guilty as long as I can help it. Does +he say nothing in is own defense?" + +"Not a syllable, and the coroner and jury are all in his favor, too. He +stands there like a sulky lion, and says nothing. They'll bring him in +guilty without a doubt." + +"Who have been examined?" + +"All who saw Lady Leroy that day--Miss Marsh, Midge, myself, Lawyer +Darcy, and Tom Oaks, who swore roundly when asked that Marsh knew of his +paying the money that day, for he had told him himself. He also swore +that he knew Charley to be over head and ears in debt--debts of honor, +he called them. Debts of dishonor, I should say." + +"I think I'll go in! Can we speak to Charley, I wonder?" + +"Of course. He is not held precisely as a prisoner, as yet. They have +Midge up again. I never knew her name was Priscilla Short, until +to-day." + +"What do they want with her a second time?" + +"She was the first to discover the murder. Her evidence goes clear +against Marsh, though she gives it with the greatest reluctance. Come, +I'll go in with you." + +The two gentlemen went in together, and found the assemblage smiling at +some rebut of Midge's. That witness, with a very red and defiant face, +was glaring at the coroner, who, in rather a subdued tone, told her that +would do, and proceeded to call the next witness, Robert Nettleby. + +Robert Nettleby took his place, and was sworn. In reply to the questions +put to him, he informed his hearers that he had heard nothing until the +yells of Midge aroused him from sleep, and, following her up-stairs, he +found her in Miss Marsh's room. + +"Had Miss Marsh retired?" the coroner wanted to know. + +Mr. Nettleby was not sure. If, by retiring, the coroner meant going to +bed, no; but if he meant going asleep, yes. She was sitting by the +window, dressed, but asleep, until Midge aroused her by her screams. +Then she started up, and followed them into the room of Mrs. Leroy, whom +they found dead, and black in the face, as if she had been choked. Midge +had run down stairs, and he had run after her, and they saw some one +running under the trees, when they got out. Midge had flown out and +collared him, and it proved to be Mr. Charley Marsh. + +Here the coroner struck in. + +"He was running, you say: in what direction?" + +Mr. Nettleby couldn't say positively--was inclined to think he was +running toward, not from them. Couldn't swear either way, for it was a +queer, shadowy kind of a night, half moonlight, half darkness. They had +all three gone back to the house, Mr. Marsh appearing very much shocked +at hearing of the murder; and on returning to the room of the deceased, +had found Miss Marsh in a fainting-fit. They brought her to with water, +and then her brother had taken her to her mother's house in Speckport, +in a gig. He and Midge had gone to his father's cottage, where they had +remained all night. Further than that Mr. Nettleby knew nothing, +except--and here he hesitated. + +"Except what, sir?" the coroner sharply inquired. "Remember you are upon +oath." + +"Well, sir," said Bob, "it isn't much, except that when we came back to +the room, I picked this up close to the bed. It looked as if it belonged +to a man, and I put it in my pocket. Here it is." + +He produced from his coat-pocket, as he spoke, a glove. A gentleman's +kid glove, pale-brown in color, and considerably soiled with wear. Val +started as he saw it, for those were the kind of gloves Charley Marsh +always wore--he had them made to order in one of the stores of the town. +The coroner examined it with a very grave face--there were two letters +inside, "C. M." + +"Do you know to whom this glove belongs?" the coroner asked. + +"I know I found it," said Nettleby, not looking at it, and speaking +sulkily, "that's all I know about it." + +"Does any one you know wear such gloves?" + +"Plenty of gentlemen I've seen wear brown kid gloves." + +"Have you seen the initials, 'C. M.,' inside this glove?" + +"I have." + +"And--on your oath, recollect--are you not morally certain you know its +owner?" + +Nettleby was silent. + +"Speak, witness," the coroner cried; "answer the question put to you. +Who do you suspect is the owner of this glove?" + +"Mr. Marsh! Them letters stands for his name, and he always wears them +kind of gloves." + +"Had Mr. Marsh been near the bed, after your return to the room +together, before you found this glove?" + +"No; I found it lying close by the bedside, and he had never been nearer +than the middle of the room, where he was trying to fetch his sister +to." + +Robert Nettleby was told he might stand down, and Mr. Marsh was called +upon to identify his property. Charley, who had been standing at one of +the windows listening, in gloomy silence, and closely watched by two +policemen, stepped forward, took the glove, examined it, handed it back, +and coldly owned it was his. + +How was he going to account for its being found by the bedside of the +murdered woman? + +Mr. Marsh was not going to account for it at all--he knew nothing about +it. He always had two or three such pairs of gloves at once, and had +never missed this. Amid an ominous silence, he resumed his place at the +window, staring out at the broad green fields and waving trees, bathed +in the golden August sunshine, and seeing them no more than if he had +been stone-blind. + +Mrs. Marsh was the next witness called, and came from an adjoining room, +dressed in black, and simpering at finding herself the cynosure of so +many eyes. Mrs. Marsh folded one black-kid-gloved hand over the other +after being sworn, with a mild sigh, and prepared to answer the +catechism about to be propounded. The coroner began wide of the mark, +and asked her a good many questions, that seemed to have little bearing +on the matter in hand, all of which the lady answered very minutely, and +at length. Presently, in a somewhat roundabout fashion, he inquired if +her son had been at home on the night of the murder. + +"No; he not been at home, at least not until he had come driving home +with Natty, both of them as pale as ghosts, and no wonder, though they +quite made her scream to look at them; but when she had heard the news, +she had such a turn, it was a mercy she hadn't fainted herself, and she +hadn't half got over it yet." + +Here Mrs. Marsh took a sniff at a smelling-bottle she carried, and the +ammonia being strong, brought a tear into each eye, which she wiped +away with a great show of pocket-handkerchief. + +"What time had her son left the house before returning with his sister?" + +"After tea. He had been home to tea, which in itself was so unusual a +circumstance, that she, Mrs. Marsh, felt sure something was going to +happen. She had had a feeling on her all day, and Charley's conduct had +increased that feeling until she was perfectly convinced something +dreadful was going to happen." + +"In what manner had her son's conduct augmented her presentiments?" + +"Well, she did not know exactly, but Charley had behaved odd. He had +come over and talked to her before going out, telling her he had been +bad, but meant to be good, and turn over a new leaf for the future; and, +bidding her take his part if ever she heard him run down, which she +meant to do, for Charley was a good boy as ever lived, in the main, only +he had been foolish lately; but mothers, it is well known, can forgive +anything, and she meant to do it; and if he, the coroner, was a mother, +she would do it herself." + +"Was her son in the habit of stopping out nights?" + +"Not until lately; that is, within the last two weeks, since when he +used to come home in a dreadful state of drink, worrying her nearly to +death, and letting all her advice go in one ear and out of the other." + +Mrs. Marsh was shown the glove, and asked if she knew it. Yes, of course +she did; it was one of Charley's; he always wore those kind, and his +initials were inside. The coroner examined her further, but only got +wordy repetitions of what she had already said. Everything was telling +terribly against Charley, who stood, like a dark ghost, still moodily +staring out of the window. Val Blake crossed over and laid his hand +heavily on his shoulder as Mrs. Marsh left the room. + +"Charley, old boy! have you nothing at all to say for yourself?" + +Charley lifted his gloomy eyes, but turned away again in sullen +silence. + +"You know they will charge you with this crime, and you know you are not +guilty. Can you not prove yourself innocent?" + +"How? Will they take my word for it?" + +"Explain why you were found in the grounds at that hour of the night." + +"They have already asked me to do so, and I have already declined." + +"But this is folly--this is madness! What motive could you possibly have +for being there at such an hour?" + +Charley was silent. Val laid his hand on his shoulder with a kindly +look. + +"Charley, will you not tell me?" + +"No." + +"You know I am your friend." + +"You will not be so long. Those fellows over there will settle the +matter shortly to their own satisfaction, and I am not going to spoil +their sport." + +"Charley," said Val, looking him steadily in the face, "where is +Cherrie?" + +Charley Marsh's face, white and haggard an instant previously, turned +scarlet, and from scarlet whiter than before. But he lifted his eyes +fearlessly to Val's face, roused to eagerness at last. + +"Where is she?" he repeated. "Do you know?" + +"No; but I think you do." + +"Why do you think so?" + +"That's not the question! Where is she?" + +"I don't know." + +"What!" + +"I don't know. I tell you I don't! She is a false-hearted, lying, +treacherous----" + +His face was white with fury. His name, called by the coroner, restored +him to himself. Turning round, he saw that gentleman holding out to him +a letter. It was Charley's fatal note, given to him by Dr. Leach, while +Val and Charley had been speaking. + +"Do you know this, Mr. Marsh?" the coroner asked. + +Charley glanced over the note, the coroner still holding it. It was all +written on the first page, in a pothook-and-hanger fist; and Charley +turned crimson for the second time, as he finished it and read the name +at the bottom. + +"Do you know anything of this, Mr. Marsh?" the coroner repeated. + +"No," Charley coldly and briefly said. + +"You recognize the writing and the name?" + +"Yes." + +"The writer of this, Cherrie Nettleby, alludes to money which she says +will do you and her more good than it ever did Lady Leroy. To what money +does she refer?" + +Charley thought of the bank-note he had taken from her through sheer +necessity, and once more the blood rushed in a scarlet tide to his face, +ebbing again, and leaving him white as ashes. + +Coroner, jury, and spectators saw his changing face, and set it down to +conscious guilt. + +"To what money does she refer?" reiterated the coroner. + +"Sir, I decline answering that question." + +"Indeed! Are you aware, Mr. Marsh, such a refusal tells very much +against you?" + +Charley smiled coldly, contemptuously. + +"I am quite aware, sir, every circumstance tells very much against me. +Nevertheless, I refuse to answer that and any other question I choose." + +"The boy is either mad," thought Val Blake, "or else guilty. In either +case, his doom is sealed!" + +The coroner now explained to his court how the letter came into the +hands of Doctor Leach, and read it aloud, handing it over to the jury +for their inspection when he had finished. The allusion to his taking +state-rooms for them both puzzled all who knew of the girl's departure +for Greentown; but was set down by them, as it had been by Val, as a +blind to deceive her friends. + +Ann Nettleby was next called, and, in a state of great trepidation, +related Charley's call at the cottage and inquiry for Cherrie. Informed +the coroner, in reply to his question, that Mr. Marsh was "after" +Cherrie, a constant visitor at their house, and had asked Cherrie not +long before to run away with him to the States. Had not heard from her +sister since her departure, but supposed she was up in Greentown. + +One or two other witnesses were called, who had nothing to relate +concerning the murder, but a good deal about Mr. Marsh's late dissipated +habits and gambling-debts. When these witnesses were gone, Mr. Marsh was +called upon, and requested, if he had anything to say in his own behalf, +to say it. + +Mr. Marsh had but little to say, and said that little with a +recklessness that quite shocked the assemblage. The secret of his bitter +tone and fiercely-scornful indifference they had no clue to, and they +set it down to the desperation of discovered guilt. He informed them, in +that reckless manner, flinging his words at them like a defiance, that +Ann Nettleby's testimony was correct, that he had called at the cottage +between eight and nine on the night of the murder, and on leaving her +had gone straight to the old house, and remained in the grounds until +discovered by Midge and Rob Nettleby. What had taken him there, what his +motive in lingering, was what Cherrie meant in her note, and all else +concerning his motives and actions he refused to answer. He was a +drunkard, he was a gambler, he was in debt--"his friends" with sneering +emphasis, "have given his character with perfect correctness. But for +all that, strange as it might seem, incredible as he knew they would +think it, he had neither robbed nor murdered his sister's benefactress. +Further than that he had nothing to say." + +He returned to the window again, flashing fierce defiance on every hand, +and the coroner summed up the evidence. He was an old man, and had known +Charley Marsh since he was a pretty little fair-haired, frolicsome boy, +and he would have given a good round sum in hard cash to be able to find +him innocent. But he could not, and justice must be done. He +recapitulated his irregular conduct on the evening of the murder, as +related by his own mother, his lingering in the grounds from dark until +discovered by Priscilla Short and Robert Nettleby, confessed by himself; +his glove found at the bedside, as if dropped in his haste and alarm; +his knowledge of the large sum of money paid the deceased that afternoon +by Mr. Oaks; his knowledge, also, of the house, as proved by his +entering the back-window, found open, and of its lonely and unprotected +state; and lastly, this note of Cherrie Nettleby's, with its distinct +allusion to the money of Mrs. Leroy, to benefit him. It was a pity this +girl was not here--but she soon would be found; meantime, the case was +perfectly clear without her. It was evident robbery, not murder, had +been the primary instigation; but the unfortunate woman awakening, +probably, had frightened him, and in the impulse of the moment he had +endeavored to stifle her cries, and so--strangled her. Perhaps, too, his +sister being her heiress, and inheritrix of all she possessed, he had +persuaded himself, with the sophistry of guilt, that he had some right +to this money, and that he was only defrauding his own sister, after +all. His debts were heavy and pressing, no way of paying them open, and +desperation had goaded him on. He (the coroner) trusted that the sad +case of this young man, once so promising, until he had fallen into evil +habits, would be a warning to others, and an inducement not to stray +away from the path of rectitude into that broad road whose end was +disgrace and ruin. The money stolen had not been found, but there had +been ample time given him to conceal it. He begged the jury to reflect +on the evidence they had heard, consult together, and return a verdict +according to their conscience. + +The jury retired from the room, and in the awful silence which followed, +you might have heard a pin drop. Charles Marsh, in this supreme crisis +of his life, still stood looking out of the window. He neither moved nor +spoke, nor looked at any one, nor betrayed the slightest sign of +agitation; but his teeth were rigidly locked, and the palm of his strong +right hand was bleeding where he had clenched it, in that silent agony, +until the nails had sunk deep into the flesh. He had been reckless and +defiant, and braved it out with a high hand; but Charles Marsh had had +the misfortune to be born with a keenly sensitive heart, and a pride +that had lain latent under all his careless life; and what he felt in +that hour of disgrace and degradation, branded as a thief and a murderer +before the friends who knew him all his life, was known only to Heaven +and himself. + +The jury were not long away. Evidently, his case had been settled in +their minds before they had left their seats. And in that dread silence +the foreman, Mr. Blair, with a grave, sad face, stood up to announce +their verdict. It was only one word--the terrible word, "Guilty." + +There was a swaying sound among the crowd, as if they had drawn breath +for the first time. That dismal word fled from lip to lip like wildfire, +until it passed from the room to the crowd in the hall, and from them to +the swaying mob without. It was quite a lively scene, in fact, out +there, where that big crowd of men stood broiling under the meridian +sun, when the verdict was announced, and the inquiries as to how "young +Marsh" behaved and looked were many and eager. The question was not very +easily answered. Young Marsh, standing by that sunny window, was so +screened by the towering figure of Mr. Valentine Blake, that the gaping +and exasperated throng craned their throats and stood on tip-toe for +nothing. They would see him, however, when he came out to enter the cab, +already in waiting, that was to convey him in the custody of the +constables into town, and it was worth while waiting even for that +fleeting glimpse. + +Five, ten, fifteen, twenty minutes passed. The expectant crowd were +getting angry and impatient; it was shameful, this dallying. But two or +three policemen are out now with their red batons and brass buttons of +authority, clearing a way for the gentlemen who are coming out, and for +the cab which is to draw up close to the front door. Still, the mob +press forward, the coroner and jury are departing; and now the +prisoner's coming. But a new disappointment is in store for them; for +when he comes, he has his hat pulled so far over his eyes, and springs +in so quickly, that they don't even get that fleeting glimpse of him +they are crushing each other to death to obtain. The constables follow; +it is pleasant even to see them; the blinds are pulled down; the cab +drives off rapidly, and the crowd go home, ravenous for their dinner. +And Charles Marsh is on his way to Speckport jail, to await his trial +for the willful murder of Jane Leroy! + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +THE DARKENING SKY. + + +The day after the inquest, the funeral took place. As the clock of +Speckport cathedral chimed in sonorous sweetness the hour of ten, all +that was earthly of Mrs. Leroy was placed in the hearse, and the gloomy +cortege started. A great many carriages followed the mistress of Redmon +to her last long home; and, in the foremost, two ladies, robed in sable, +and vailed in crape, rode. The outward mourning was for the dead, the +deeper _deuil_ of the heart for the living--for him who, on this +wretched August day, was a prisoner in Speckport jail, awaiting his +trial for the greatest crime man can commit, doomed to suffer, perhaps, +the greatest penalty man can inflict. + +Nobody in all the long line of carriages talked; they crouched into +corners, and shivered, and were silent, and sulky, and cross, and +uncomfortable, and gaped, and wished the thing was well over, or that +they had never come. + +They got their wish after a while. The last sod was beaten down, and the +carriages rattled back into the foggy town--all but three or four; and +they drove back to the eerie old house, never so lonely and desolate as +now. One ceremony was yet to be gone through--that ceremony the reading +of the last will and testament of Mrs. Leroy. Here, where it had been +written, in the ghostly reception-room, where the inquest had taken +place, and where the rats and black beetles had it all their own way, it +was to be read. It was this that brought Mrs. Marsh, who had been ill +and hysterical ever since she had heard the result of the inquest, to +the funeral at all. To her it was a great and joyful thing this wealth +that after to-day was to be theirs, and not even in her grief could she +forego the pleasure of being present. Heaven knows, it was nothing of +the sort brought her daughter--the silent agony she had endured since +yesterday can never be told; but she had hope yet. She had hope in this +very wealth that was to be hers to help him. Young as she was, she knew +enough of the power of money to be aware it can do almost anything in +this world, and smooth the road to the next; and she trusted in its +magic power to free her imprisoned brother. They all went into the +silent and forlorn house together; Mr. Darcy, who was to read the will, +and whose face was distressed and troubled to the last degree; Mr. +Blair, as an intimate friend of the family; Mr. McGregor, Senior, and +Dr. Leach; Mrs. McGregor and Mrs. Blair were with Mrs. Marsh, and Miss +McGregor and Miss Blair were deeply sympathetic with Miss Marsh--the +heiress!--and Mr. Val Blake, with his sister on his arm; and Midge, who +had been at the signing of the will, brought up the rear. + +The shutters of the closed rooms had all been opened, and the casements +raised, for the first time in many a day, and the pale light of the +foggy morning poured in. Lawyer Darcy took his seat at a table, and laid +out on it a legal-looking document tied with red tape. The others seated +themselves around the apartment; and Nathalie Marsh, in her deep +mourning-robes, and her thick black crape vail down over her face, took +her seat beside one of the open windows, and leaned her forehead on her +hand, as if it ached. + +Long afterward, when she was gone from them forever, they remembered +that drooping black figure and bowed young head, with one or two bright +curls, like lost sunbeams, shimmering out from under her crape bonnet. +Long afterward, they thought of how she had sat that dull and miserable +day, suffering as these patient womanly martyrs only suffer, and making +no sign. + +Lawyer Darcy seemed strangely reluctant to commence his task. He +lingered and lingered, his face pale and agitated, his lips twitching +nervously, and the fingers that untied the document before him, +trembling. His voice, too, when he spoke, was not quite steady. + +"I am afraid," said the lawyer, in that unsteady voice, "that the +reading of this will will be a shock--a disappointment! I know it must +astonish all, as it did me, and I should like to prepare you for it, +before it is read." + +There was a surprised and alarmed murmur, but no one spoke. + +"You are all aware," the lawyer went on, keeping his eyes resolutely +from that drooping figure at the window, "that when Mrs. Leroy made her +will after coming to Speckport she bequeathed all she possessed to her +ward, Miss Marsh. I drew up the will, and she made no secret of her +intentions." + +There was another painful pause. Val Blake broke it. + +"Of course," he said, impatiently, "we all know Mrs. Leroy left Miss +Marsh heiress of Redmon." + +"But you do not know," said Mr. Darcy, "that a short time ago--in fact, +a few days before her tragical death, she revoked that first will and +made a new one." + +"What?" the cry was from Val Blake, but no one heeded him; every eye was +strained upon the lawyer. + +"Made a new one," the lawyer repeated, still averting his eyes from the +black form at the window; "a new one, entirely different; leaving, I am +sorry to say, Redmon away from Miss Marsh--in point of fact, +disinheriting her." + +There were two little feminine shrieks from the Misses Blair and +McGregor, a hysterical cry from Mrs. Marsh, but the bowed figure at the +window never stirred. In the unnatural stillness of her attitude, her +face hidden behind her crape mask, there was something more fearful than +any outbursts of wild womanly distress. + +"The new will was made, as I told you," continued Mr. Darcy, "but a few +days before her death; made whilst smarting under a sense of anger, and +what she called ingratitude. Miss Marsh had offended her, disobeyed her +in a matter on which she had set her heart, and for this she was going +to disinherit her. I expostulated, entreated, did all I could, but in +vain. She was obstinate, and this new will was made, which I now hold in +my hand." + +Mrs. Marsh's face had turned as white as that of a dead woman, and great +beads of cold sweat stood on her forehead. But she sat rigidly still, +listening, and feeling as though she were in some dreadful dream. + +"I drew up the will," pursued Mr. Darcy, "and Midge yonder and old +Nettleby signed it. I fancied when her first resentment cooled, she +would see the injustice of her act, and retract it. I was right; the day +preceding the night of her death, hearing she was ill, I called to see +her, and she told me to come the next morning, and a third will should +be made, leaving all to Nathalie as at first. Next morning she was +dead." + +To the dark form, whose drooping face was pitifully hidden by the black +vail, did any memory come of the words spoken to her by the dead woman +that fatal night, and which had then been so mysterious: + +"I'll make it all right, Natty! I'll make it all right!" Did she know +what was meant now? + +"And do you mean to say, Mr. Darcy," Val Blake cried, astonished and +indignant, "that Nathalie Marsh is not the heiress of Redmon?" + +"I do! this will disinherits her! It is a crying wrong, but no fault of +mine." + +"And who, then, is the heir?" asked Mr. McGregor. + +"She bequeaths all she possesses, unconditionally, to her brother, +Philip Henderson, or, in case of his death, to his children. I will read +the will." + +Amid that profound and impressive stillness, the lawyer read the last +will and testament of Jane Leroy. It was concise enough, and left the +whole of her property, real and personal, without conditions, to her +brother, Philip Henderson, and his heirs, with the exception of five +pounds to Miss Nathalie Marsh, to buy a mourning-ring. + +Mr. Darcy hesitated over this last cruel passage, and felt inclined to +leave it out; but he did not, and there was a suppressed murmur of +indignation from every lip on hearing it. + +Poor Mrs. Marsh was catching her breath in hysterical gasps, and being +fanned and sprinkled with cold water, and the palms of her hands slapped +by Miss Jo and the two married ladies. And still the vailed figure at +the window sat rigidly there, uttering no cry, shedding no tears. + +There are griefs too deep for words, too intense for tears, when we can +only sit in mute and stony despair, while the world reels under our +feet, and the light of the sun is blackness. To Nathalie Marsh, the loss +of fortune was the loss of everything--brother, lover, home, +happiness--the loss of all to which she had looked forward so long, for +which she had endured so much. And now, she sat there, like a figure +carved in ebony; and only for the ghastly pallor of her face in the +indistinct glimpses of it they could catch through the vail, could they +tell that she even heard. + +It was Val Blake who again broke the silence that followed the reading +of the will. + +"I protest against this will!" he indignantly cried. "It is unjust and +ungrateful! You should never have produced it, Mr. Darcy. You should +have read the former will." + +"You are jesting, Mr. Blake! While regretting as much as you can +possibly do this unfortunate change, my duty is sacred, and by this will +we must abide. Mrs. Marsh seems very ill; I think she had better be +conveyed home." + +No one ventured to speak to Nathalie, her unnatural manner awed them; +but when her mother was supported from the room, and she arose to +follow, good natured Miss Jo was beginning a homily on resignation, and +on its being all for the best, perhaps, in the end. Her brother, +however, cut her short with very little ceremony, and handed Miss Marsh +in after her mother, and seating himself by the coachman, they started +off rapidly. He might have spared himself the trouble; good Miss Jo +might have preached for an hour, and Nathalie would not have heard one +word of it. She sat looking straight before her, seeing nothing, hearing +nothing, conscious of nothing, save only that dull and dark despair at +her heart. Midge, who had come with them in the carriage, waited on Mrs. +Marsh, and cried quietly all the way, bestowing anything but blessings +on the memory of her late mistress. + +Mr. Blake assisted both ladies into the house when they reached Cottage +Street. Mrs. Marsh, who was very ill and in a state of hysterics, he +carried in his arms and laid on the sofa. Nathalie entered the parlor, +closed the door, and, still wearing her bonnet and mantle, sat down by +the window that looked out on the blurred and misty street. She had +flung back her vail, and in her white and ghastly face and dilated +violet eyes you could read a waiting look. Nathalie was waiting for one, +who, by some secret prescience, she knew would soon come. + +Doctor Leach entered the cottage soon after their return, prescribed for +Mrs. Marsh, and departed again. Had he been able to minister to a mind +diseased, he might have prescribed for Nathalie, too; but that not +coming within his pharmacopoeia, he left without seeing her. + +It was dusk when he for whom she waited came. The dull wet day was +ending in a duller and wetter evening, and the tramp, tramp of the +long-roaring waves on the shore made a dull bass for the high, shrill +soprano shrieks of the wind. The lamps were flaring through the foggy +twilight in the bleak streets, when Captain Cavendish, in a loose +overcoat, and bearing an umbrella, wended his way to that house of +mourning. He had not been two hours in Speckport, but he had heard all +that had transpired. Was there one in the town, from the aristocratic +denizens of Golden Row and Park Lane to the miserable dwellers in filthy +back-alleys and noisome water-side streets, that did not know, and were +not discussing these unhappy events with equal gusto? The robbery and +murder of Mrs. Leroy, the inquest, the sentence and imprisonment of +Charley Marsh, the will, and the disinheriting of Nathalie, all were as +well known in the obscurest corner of Speckport as in that unhappy home +to which he was going. + +In the course of that long afternoon Midge had only once ventured into +the parlor, and that was in fear and trembling, to ask her young +mistress to take a cup of tea and some toast which she brought. + +Nathalie had tasted nothing since the day before; and poor Midge, with +tears in her fretful eyes, urged it upon her now. The girl looked at her +out of a pair of hollow eyes, unnaturally large and bright, in a vague +way, as if trying to comprehend what she said; and when she did +comprehend, refusing. Midge ventured to urge; and then Nathalie broke +out of her rigid, despairing stillness, into passionate impatience. + +"Take it away!" she cried, "and leave me alone! Leave me alone, I tell +you!" + +Midge could do nothing but obey. As she quitted the room with the tray, +there came a knock at the front door. She set down the tray and opened +it, and the tall form of the young English officer confronted her. Midge +had no especial love for Captain Cavendish, as we know; but she was +aware her young lady had, and was, for the first time in her life, glad +to see him. It was good of him to come, she thought, knowing what had +happened; and perhaps his presence might comfort her poor Miss Natty, +and restore her to herself. + +"Yes," Midge said, in answer to his inquiry; "Miss Marsh was at home, +and would see him, she thought. If he would wait one minute she would +ascertain." + +She returned to the parlor to ask. But Nathalie had already heard his +voice, and was sitting up, with a strained white face, and her poor +wasted hands pressed hard over her heart. She only made an assenting +motion to Midge's question, should she show him in, and a negative one +when she spoke of bringing a lamp. Through all her torpor of utter +misery, she was dimly conscious of a change in herself; that she was +haggard and ghastly, and the beauty which had won him first to her side, +utterly gone. That gloomy twilight hour was best befitting the scene so +soon to take place; for her prophetic heart told her, as surely as if +she had read it in the Book of Fate, that this meeting was to be their +last. + +Midge admitted him, and closing the door behind him, retired into a +distant corner of the hall, and throwing her apron over her head, cried +quietly, as she had done all day. She would have given a good deal if +the white painted panels of the parlor door had been clear glass, and +that she could have seen this man comforting her beloved young lady. +Much as she had disliked him, she could have knelt down in her +gratitude, and kissed the dust off his feet. + +Even in the pale, sickly half-twilight of the dark evening, Captain +Cavendish could see the haggard cheeks, the sunken eyes, and the +death-like livid pallor of the girl's face, and was shocked to see it. +He had expected to find her changed, but not like this; and there was +real pity for the moment in his eyes as he bent over her and took her +hand. He started to find it cold as ice, and it lay in his passive, and +like a bit of marble. + +"Nathalie," he said, "my darling! I am sorry; I cannot tell you how +sorry I am for you. You have suffered indeed since I saw you last." + +She did not speak. She had not looked at him once. Her dilated eyes were +fixed on the blackening night-sky. + +"I only reached Speckport an hour ago," he went on, "and I can never +tell you how deeply shocked I was to hear of the dreadful events that +have taken place since my departure. Is it all true?" + +"Yes--all!" she said. Her voice sounded strange and far-off, even to +herself, and she was aware it must sound hollow and unnatural to him. + +"All is true! My brother is in prison, accused of murder, and I am a +beggar!" + +Her hand felt so icily deathlike in his, that he dropped it with a +shiver. She still sat looking out into the deepening gloom, her white, +set face gleaming marble-white against her black dress and the darkening +room. + +Captain Cavendish rose up from the seat he had taken, and began pacing +rapidly up and down, heartily wishing the scene was over. + +"I know," said the hollow voice, so unlike--so unlike the melodious +voice of Nathalie, "that all between us must end now. Disgrace and +poverty must be my portion from henceforth, and you will hardly care to +marry so fallen and degraded a creature as I am. From all that binds you +to me, Captain Cavendish, I free you now!" + +In the depths of her heart, unseen in the darkness of despair even by +herself, did any feeble ray of hope--that great gift of a merciful +God--still linger? If so, the deep and prolonged silence that followed +her words must have extinguished the feeble glimmer forever. When +Captain Cavendish spoke, and it was some time before he did so, there +was a quiver of shame in his tones, all unusual there. Very few ever had +a better opinion of their own merits, or were less inclined to judge +hardly of themselves, than George Percy Cavendish, but she made him +despise himself now, and he almost hated her for it. + +"You are generous, Miss Marsh," he said--cold and cruel words, and even +he felt them so to be, "and I thank you for that generosity. Loss of +fortune would be nothing to me--that is to say, I could overlook +it--though I am not rich myself, but this other matter is different. As +you say, I could hardly marry into a family stained with--unjustly let +us hope--the brand of murder. I shall ever esteem and respect you, Miss +Marsh, as the best and bravest of women, and I trust that you will yet +make happy some one worthier of you than I am." + +Is murder, the murder of the body, when a man plunges a knife into his +fellow-man's breast, and leaves him stark and dead, the greatest of all +earthly crimes? Earthly tribunals consider it so, and inflict death on +the perpetrator. But is there not another murder--a murder of the +heart--committed every day, of which we hear nothing, and which man has +never made a law to punish. There are wounds which leave little outward +trace; but the patient bleeds inwardly, yet bleeds to death for all +that, and it is the same ultimatum, death, by a different means. But +there is a higher tribunal; and perhaps before that, the sins +over-looked by man shall be judged and condemned. + +Captain Cavendish took his hat and turned to depart. He felt exceedingly +uncomfortable, to say the least of it. He wished that black figure +would not sit so petrified and stone-like, he wished that white face +gazing out into the night would look a little less like the face of a +corpse. He wished she would flame up in some wrathful outburst of +womanly fury and insulted pride, and order him to depart, and never show +her his false face again. He wished she would do anything but sit there, +in that frozen rigidity, as if slowly turning to stone. + +"Nathalie!" he said, venturing to take her icy fingers again, "will you +not speak one word to me before I go?" + +She withdrew her fingers, not hastily or in anger, but never looked at +him. + +"I have nothing to say," her unnatural voice replied. + +"Then good-bye, Nathalie!" + +"Good-bye!" + +He opened and closed the parlor door, opened and closed the front door, +and was gone. He looked at the window of that dark room as he strode by, +and fancied he saw the white face gleaming on him menacingly through the +gloom. The white face was there, but not menacing. Whatever she might +feel in the time to come, when the first terrible shock of all this was +over, she could feel nothing so petty as resentment now. Her anguish was +too supreme in this first dreadful hour. The world to her stood still, +and the blackness of desolation filled the earth. "All for love, and the +world well lost!" had been her motto. It was for his sake she had risked +everything, and verily, she had her reward! + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +THE FLIGHT. + + +Mrs. Major Wheatly was a very fine lady, and lived in a very fine house +two or three miles out of town. Having secured a traveling companion and +a governess for her daughter, in the person of Miss Rose, the little +Speckport school-mistress, she had desired that young person to come out +to their place immediately, and assist in the packing and other +arrangements, preparatory to starting. Miss Rose had obeyed, and being +out of town had heard nothing of the inquest and the verdict until that +night, when the major drove in, after dusk, with the news. Mrs. Major +Wheatly, like any other fine lady, was greatly addicted to news, and +received a severe shock in her nervous system by the manner in which her +paid companion received the intelligence. They were all sitting at tea +when the major blurted out the story, and his conviction that "the young +scamp would be hung, and serve him right," and Miss Rose had fallen +suddenly back in her chair in a violent tremor and faintness. All the +next day she had gone about so pale and subdued that it gave Mrs. +Wheatly the fidgets to look at her; but whatever she felt, she had +wisely kept to herself, and made her moan inwardly, as dependents who +know their places always should. "Sufficient unto the day is the evil +thereof"--that day brought its own evil tidings. The major returning at +his usual hour of the evening from town, announced the astounding +intelligence that Miss Nathalie Marsh was disinherited, and the broad +lands of Redmon given to another. Mrs. Major Wheatly sipped her tea and +ate her buttered toast, and was deeply sympathetic. She had met the +pretty, golden-haired, violet-eyed heiress often in society, and had +admired and liked her, as most people did, and was as sorry for her as +was consistent with the dignity of so great a lady. + +"Of course Captain Cavendish must recede now," she said: "he paid her +very marked attentions, but of course he will not marry a penniless +bride. Were they engaged, I wonder?" + +"Cavendish is a fortune-hunter," said the major. "Miss Marsh is a very +nice girl, and a very pretty one, and altogether too good for him. No +fear of his marrying her, my dear; he wouldn't marry the Venus Celestis +herself, without a handsome dowry." + +"Mrs. Wheatly," Miss Rose said, "I must go into town to-morrow morning, +to see my friends and say good-bye." + +She was so pale and tremulous saying this, that the lady hastened to +assent, nervously, lest she should make another scene. + +"I am going in about nine o'clock," the major said, "and will drive you. +Harris will take you back." + +"And you must not stay long, Miss Rose," his lady languidly said; +"remember we start at half-past two, and there is so much to be done." + +The clock on the sitting-room mantel of that silent house on Cottage +Street was pointing to half-past nine, when Betsy Ann, with fuzzy hair +and sleepy face, hastened to answer a knock at the front door. She +stared sleepily at her visitor, who came hurriedly in. + +"Is she here, Betsy Ann?--Miss Marsh?" + +"Yes'm," Betsy Ann said, "she's up in your room, and Miss Laura Blair +and Midge, they've been and sot up with her all night, and me and Miss +Jo Blake we've been sitting up with Mrs. Marsh. Midge, she's gone to bed +now, and you'd better go up-stairs." + +Miss Rose ascended the stairs, and tapped at the door that had been her +own. It was opened by Laura Blair, looking pale and fagged. + +"Is it you, Miss Rose?" she said, in a low voice, kissing her. "I was +afraid you were not coming to say good-bye." + +"I could not come sooner, and can stay only an hour now. How is she?" + +"There is no change. She has lain all night as she lying now." + +Miss Rose looked at the bed, tears slowly swelling up and filling her +soft brown eyes. Nathalie lay among the white pillows, her amber tresses +trailing and falling loose all about, her hands clasped over her head, +her haggard face turned to the window overlooking the bay, her wide-open +blue eyes staring blankly at the dim gray sea melting away into the low +gray sky. + +"She lies like that," Laura softly said, "all the time. We sat up with +her all night, but she never slept, she hardly moved; whenever we went +near the bed, we found her eyes wide open and vacant, as they are now. +If she could only talk or cry, she would be better, but it makes one's +heart ache to look at her." + +"Does she not talk?" + +"She will answer you if you speak to her, but that is all. She is quite +conscious, but she seems to be in a sort of torpor. I will leave you +with her, and lie down for half an hour. She was very fond of you, and +perhaps you can do more with her than I could." + +Laura departed; and Miss Rose, going over to the bed, stooped down and +kissed the cold, white face, leaving two bright tears upon it. + +"Nathalie, dearest," she said, "do you know me?" + +Her large, melancholy eyes turned upon her sweet, tender face. + +"Yes," she said, in that voice so unlike her own, that it startled her +hearer. She seemed so unlike herself every way, that Miss Rose's tears +rained down far faster than they would have done at any outbreak of +grief. + +"You are ill, my darling," Miss Rose faltered through her tears. "I wish +I could stay and nurse you back to health, but I am going away +to-day--going, perhaps, never to come back." + +"Going away? Oh, yes. I remember!" + +She turned wearily on the pillow, still gazing out over the wide sea, as +if her thoughts were far away. + +"I am very sorry for you, dear, dear Nathalie! Very, very sorry for you! +It seems to me, sometimes, there is nothing in all this world but +suffering, and sorrow, and death." + +"Death!" Nathalie echoed, catching with sudden and startling vehemence +at the word. "Miss Rose, are you afraid to die?" + +The question was so sudden and so strange, that Miss Rose could not for +a moment answer. A wild gleam of light had leaped into the sick girl's +eyes, and irradiated her face so unnaturally, that it struck her +companion with terror. + +"Afraid to die?" she faltered. "To die, Nathalie?" + +"Yes," Nathalie repeated, that abrupt energy yet in her voice; "you are +good and charitable, better than any other girl I know, and you ought +not to be afraid to die. Tell me, are you?" + +She laid hold of Miss Rose's wrist, and looked wildly into her +frightened face. The girl tried to still her beating heart and answer. + +"I am not good, Nathalie. I am an erring and sinful creature; but, +trusting in the great mercy of God, I think I shall not be afraid to die +when it shall please him to call me. We must rely on his mercy, +Nathalie, on that infinite compassion for our misery that made him die +for us. If we thought of his justice, we might all despair." + +Nathalie turned away, and looked out again over the dark, tossing bay. +The sweet voice of Miss Rose broke the stillness. + +"To the just, Nathalie, there is no such word as death! To quit this +world, to them, is only passing from earth to Heaven in the arms of +angels. Why should we ever grow to love this world, when day after day +it is only passing from one new trouble and sorrow to another?" + +"Sorrow!" Nathalie repeated, in a voice sadder than any tears. "Yes, +sorrow, sorrow, sorrow! There is nothing left now but that." + +"Heaven is left, my darling," Miss Rose whispered, her fair face +radiant. "Oh, look up, Nathalie! When all the world deserts us, there +is One left who will never turn away when we cry out to him. We may turn +our backs upon him and forget him in the hour of our happiness and +prosperity, but when the world darkens around us, and all earthly love +fails, he will never leave us or forsake us, but will lead us lovingly +back to a better and purer bliss. Remember, Nathalie, the way to heaven +is the way of the Cross. It is a hard and thorny one, perhaps; but think +of the divine feet that have trodden it before us." + +"Stop, stop, stop!" Nathalie impatiently cried out, "why do you talk to +me like this! I am not good--I am only miserable and despairing, and I +want to die, only I am afraid!" + +She moved away her face; but Miss Rose, bending over her still, kissed +once more the averted face. + +"There was a time, Nathalie," she said softly, "when I was almost as +miserable as you are now, when, God forgive me, I prayed in my +passionate and wicked rebellion to die too. There was a time, Nathalie, +when I was rich and flattered, and beloved and happy--as happy as we can +ever be with the blind happiness of a lotus-eater when we never think or +thank the good God from whom that happiness comes. I thought myself an +heiress as you did, Nathalie; my father was looked upon as a rich and +honorable man, and his only daughter the most enviable girl in all the +city of Montreal. It was balls and parties, and the theater and the +opera, every night; and riding and driving, and dressing and shopping +all day long. I had my carriage to ride in, a fine house to live in, +servants to wait on me, and rich dresses and jewels to wear; and I +thought life was one long holiday, made for dancing and music, and +sunshine and joy. I had a lover, too, whom I thought loved me, and to +whom I had given my whole heart, and we were on the verge of being +married. Are you listening to me, Nathalie?" + +"Yes," Nathalie said. She had been listening intently, forgetting for +the first time her own sorrows, to hearken to the story, so like her +own. + +"Well, Nathalie, in one day, almost as you have done, I lost +all--father, lover, fortune, honor. My father went out from breakfast, +hale and well, and was carried home two hours afterward, struck dead. +Congestion of the brain they said it was. I was so frantic at first, I +could realize nothing but his death, but I was soon sternly compelled to +listen to other bitter facts. Instead of being an heiress, I was a +beggar. I was far poorer than you, for I was motherless and without a +home to shelter me. The creditors seized everything--house, furniture, +carriages, horses, plate, pictures--and turned me, in point of fact, +into the street. I had been educated in a convent, and the good nuns +gave me a home; but for that, I might have gone to the almshouse, for +the friends of prosperity are but frail reeds to lean upon in adversity. +He whom I was to have wedded, Nathalie, cast me off; he could never +disgrace his English friends by bringing to them as his wife the +daughter of a wretched defaulter. Dearest Nathalie, I need not tell you +what I suffered--you are feeling the same anguish now--and I was +rebellious and despairing, and wished impiously for nothing but death. +The nuns, with the sweetness and patience of angels, as they are, used +to sit by me for hours, telling me that blessed are they who mourn and +are chastened; but I could not listen. Oh! it was a miserable, miserable +time! and there seemed no light for me either in earth or heaven. If I +had been 'cursed with the curse of an accomplished evil prayer,' and +died then in my wicked despair, I shudder to think of what would have +been my fate. But that merciful and loving Father had pity on me in +spite of myself, and it is all over now, and I am happy. Yes, Nathalie, +happy, with a far better and more rational happiness than I ever felt in +the most joyous days of my prosperity; and I have learned to thank God +daily, now, for what I then thought the greatest misery that could ever +befall me. I wished to take the vail; but the nuns knew the wish +proceeded from no real vocation, but from that weary heart-sickness that +made me so disgusted with the world, and would not consent, at least not +then. I was to go out into the world again, and mingle in its ceaseless +strife once more; and if at the end of a year the desire was as strong +as ever, I was to go back to that peaceful haven, like the dove to the +ark, and be sheltered from the storms of life forever. So I came here, +Nathalie; and I am happy, as I say--happy, as with Heaven's help you +will one day be. I labor for a sacred cause, and until that is +accomplished, I shall enter no convent--it is to pay my father's debts. +They are not so very large now; and in three or four years, if life and +health be granted me, I hope to accomplish my task. + +"And now, Nathalie, you have heard my story; it is not a very romantic +one, but in many ways it is similar to your own. This fever of +wretchedness will pass, as mine has done, if you only pray. All the +secret lies there, pray; and he who has said 'Seek and ye shall find,' +will not refuse you peace." + +Her face was like the face of an angel. Nathalie looked into the +inspired eyes, and felt how sinful and lost she was beside this heroic +girl--this simple, womanly martyr, kissing meekly the rod which struck +her--this patient, humble soul, rebelling not, but thanking God alike +for the joy and suffering it pleased him to send. She felt, through all +the dull torpor of suffering, how unworthy she was beside her; but she +could not, in that first bitter hour, imitate her. She could not; she +only turned away again in gloomy silence. + +"You will think of all this, dearest Nathalie," the soft, tender voice +went on; "for all this pain, like every other earthly pain, must pass +away. The great lesson of life is endurance; and all, from the king to +the beggar, must learn it." + +She rose, as she spoke, to go, for more than an hour had passed, and +kissed the cold and averted face again. + +"I must leave you, Nathalie," she said, her tears falling on that +colorless face. "Good-bye, and God bless and comfort you." + +"Good-bye," was the only response; and Miss Rose left the room. Laura +Blair met her in the lower hall. + +"Are you going?" she asked; "the gig is waiting for you." + +"Yes; but I think I should like to see Mrs. Marsh, to say good-bye." + +"She is asleep, and so is Miss Blake. I will say it to both of them for +you. I am very sorry you are going, Miss Rose. Do you think you will +ever come back?" + +"Oh, yes, I hope so! If I send you my address, Miss Blair, will you +write and tell me how--how all my friends get on?" + +"Yes, with pleasure." + +Betsy Ann came out to bid farewell, and Laura kissed her, and watched +her as she entered her gig and was driven away. Miss Rose had no time to +bid good-bye to any one else; but when she reached the station early in +the afternoon, in the carriage, with Major and Mrs. and Miss Wheatly, +she found all her pupils assembled, in Sunday attire, waiting to say +farewell. Mrs. Wheatly shrugged her shoulders at the scene, and stared +through her eye-glass, and was relieved when they were all seated in the +car and the scene was over. As they took their place, a gentleman on the +platform leaned his elbow on the window, and lifted his hat in +salutation to the ladies. + +"Hallo, Blake!" said the major, nodding familiarly, "come to see us +off?" + +"No," said Val; "I've come to see myself off. I'm going to take a couple +of holidays and look at the country. Keep a place for me, Miss Rose; I +want to talk to you. I'll be in in a brace of shakes." + +It is probable a brace of shakes meant fifteen minutes, for at the +expiration of that period of time, and just as the train was in motion, +Mr. Blake lounged in, laden with oranges, peaches, and newspapers, which +he distributed promiscuously, and then took a seat beside Miss Rose. It +was pleasant to have Val for a traveling companion, for he knew every +inch of the country, and was so full of stories and anecdotes as to be +perfectly fascinating. He talked of the murder, asserted his belief in +Charley's innocence, in spite of any amount of circumstantial evidence, +and his firm conviction that the mystery would be speedily cleared up; +his present journey, he hinted, being taken to bring about that +desirable result. The fact was, Mr. Blake had of his own choice turned +amateur detective, and was on the track of Miss Cherrie Nettleby, and +positively resolved never to stop until he had hunted that young lady +down. A telegram had been dispatched to Greentown the day before, and +the answer Val had expected returned; Cherrie had never been near her +relations in Greentown at all. The reply threw the family at the cottage +into consternation, but Val reassured them by expressing his resolution +to find her, if she was above ground. From his inquiries at the station, +he had found out from the clerk, who knew her (who did not know +Cherrie?) that she had taken a through ticket to the terminus, thirty +miles beyond Greentown. The conductor remembered very well the pretty +girl with the dark eyes and curls, and rosy cheeks; had found her dozing +every time through the night he had passed in that car; remembered her +ticket was for S----, the terminus, but was positive she had got out +before they reached the final station. Where or when she had left, he +could not say; it was after night, and passengers were getting out and +coming in at every station, and she could easily depart among them +unnoticed. He did not know whether she had gone as far as Greentown; but +he did not remember seeing her after they passed that place. Val got out +at nearly every station where they made any stop, and inquired for the +pretty girl with the dark eyes and curls, but without success. At +Greentown, he bade Miss Rose farewell; told her to take care of herself +and not be sea-sick, and not to go and marry an Englishman before she +returned to them; and, carpet-bag in hand, and the address of Cousin +Ellen in his pocket, strolled along through the gray twilight to pursue +his inquiries. He found the farmhouse easily enough, but not Cherrie. +She had never been seen there, and no one who had been at the station +that night had seen any young lady whatever alight. + +Val remained in Greentown that night, and went on pursuing his inquiries +next day, but with the like result. He went on to S----; it was just +possible she had gone on there, and taken the steamer for Quebec. He +inquired at all the hotels, but no one answering to her description had +stopped at any of them, and her name was not on the list of passengers +by the last steamer. + +Mr. Blake spent three days in the search, and was then compelled by +business to return to town. Short as had been his absence, Speckport had +received a new shock--no less than the escape of the prisoner from jail. +Charley Marsh had broken prison and fled! How, could not very clearly be +ascertained, though the bars had been wrenched from his window and the +casement found wide open, his quilts torn into strips, and dangling from +it. But the window was high, and there was a wall to be got over +afterward, and how he had accomplished that last feat, puzzled +Speckport. He had accomplished it, however, and was flown; and the +police were after him, scouring the woods. Rewards were offered for his +capture. Mr. Blake put his hands in his pockets and whistled, when he +heard it. The recollection of a certain fact, not known to all Speckport +as it was to him, rushed upon his memory. In the days gone by, when the +late Mr. Marsh had been a wealthy man, and the jailer of the prison (not +jailer then) sued for a debt he could not pay, Mr. Marsh had come to his +relief, paid the debt, and freed him. It was hardly probable the man had +forgotten this obligation, and the bread cast then upon the waters had +returned after many days. But the jailer was not suspected, and he and +Val kept their own counsel. + +"I hope he'll get clear off," thought Val; "for if ever he's caught now, +unless the real criminal turns up, there will be nothing to save him. +This flight of his is enough to hang him, in itself." + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +"ONE MORE UNFORTUNATE." + + +The first person to tell Val Blake of Charley's flight was Captain +Cavendish. He found that officer killing time by lounging on the +platform, and staring at the passengers, as he alighted. Speckport, from +time immemorial, had had a great fancy for crowding steamboat wharves +and railway-platforms, to look at new arrivals; and strangers in the +place fell into the habits of the natives, unconsciously. + +"Poor devil!" said the captain, swinging his cane airily about, and +linking his arm in Val's; "I hope he'll dodge them, and escape Jack +Ketch. I never like to see any one I've been on friendly terms with +once, coming to that." + +"Are your friends in the habit of coming to it?" Mr. Blake asked, +innocently. + +"Bah! How did you enjoy your trip up the country?" + +"As well as I expected." + +"And did you find Cherrie?" + +"What?" + +"Did you find Cherrie?" serenely repeated Captain Cavendish. + +"No," said Val. "Do you know where she is!" + +The question might have disconcerted any other man, but it only made the +young officer stare. + +"I! My dear fellow, I don't understand you!" + +"Oh, yes, you do," said Mr. Blake. "I think you are about as apt to know +the hiding-place of little Cherrie as any other man in this province. +That she is in hiding I am positive; and I'll ferret her out yet, as +sure as my name's Blake." + +There was a certain determination in Mr. Blake's voice that the captain +by no means liked, but he only laughed indifferently. + +"Success to you! No one will be more rejoiced to see the little dear +back in Speckport than I! The place is a desert without her; but I give +you my word of honor, Blake, she might be in the moon for all I know to +the contrary." + +And in saying this, Captain Cavendish spoke the truth, for Cherrie had +not yet written. + +The notion had been vaguely floating through Val's mind, ever since the +robbery and murder and Cherrie's flight, that the English officer was in +some way connected with the affair. He might even have mentally +suspected him of the crime, but for one circumstance. It was at +precisely eleven o'clock Midge had first been alarmed by the flying +footsteps of the assassin; and at precisely eleven the Princess Royal +had left Speckport, with the captain on board. It was clear he could not +be in two places at once; so Val had acquitted him of the murder, but +not of knowing Cherrie's whereabouts. Even now, he was anything but +ready to take him at his word, but it was useless to press the question. + +"How do they get on in Cottage Street?" he asked. "I presume you are +there every day." + +"I call every day, of course," replied Captain Cavendish, a slight flush +coloring his nonchalant face; "but I never see any one except Midge, or +that other girl." + +"Betsy Ann?" + +"I suppose so. No one is permitted to enter, it appears, except your +sister and Miss Blair." + +"Indeed," said Val; "I should think you would have the entry above all +others. Have you not seen Nathalie since those melancholy changes have +occurred?" + +"Yes. Once." + +"Ah! At Cottage Street?" + +"Yes." + +"Well," said Val, who was never restrained by sentimental delicacy, +"what did she say?" + +"Not much, but what she did say was exceedingly to the point. She gave +me my _coup de conge_." + +"You don't say so! Did you take it?" + +"What could I do? She was inexorable! Of course, as a man of honor, I +should have made her my wife, in spite of all, but she was determined." + +A queer smile went wandering for a second or two round Mr. Blake's +mouth, but he instantly called his risible faculties to order, and +became grave again. + +"How are they? How do they take Charley's escape?" + +"Mrs. Marsh is poorly--confined to her bed, I believe, but Nathalie, +they tell me, appears better, and takes care of her mother. Your sister, +however, will be able to tell you all particulars." + +"I say, Cavendish," exclaimed Val, "you could go in for Jane McGregor, +now. She is nearly as rich as poor Natty was to be." + +"Bah! What do I care for her riches?" + +"Oh, yes, I understand; but just reflect that her papa will give her ten +thousand pounds on her wedding-day, and three times that much at his +death; and I am sure you will be brought to take pity on her." + +"Take pity on her?" + +"Tah! Tah! Tah!" cried Val; "don't play innocent. You know as well as I +do, she is dying for you." + +"But, my dear Blake," expostulated the captain, "she has red hair and +freckles." + +"Auburn hair--auburn! As for the freckles, her guineas will cover them. +Will you come in?" They were at the office door, but Captain Cavendish +declined. + +"I have to go to barracks," he said. "Good morning." + +Mr. Blake spent some two hours in his office, attending to business, and +then sallied forth again. His steps were bent in the direction of +Cottage Street, where he expected to find his sister. The house looked +as if some one were dead within--the blinds all down, the doors all +closed--and no one visible within or without. It was Midge who opened +the door, in answer to his loud knock. "How are you, Midge?" inquired +Mr. Blake, striding in, "and how are Mrs. and Miss Marsh?" + +Midge's reply was a prolonged and dismal narrative of the sufferings of +both. The elder lady was unable to leave her bed--she had fretted +herself into a low, nervous fever, and was so cross, and captious, and +quarrelsome, and peevish, that she made the lives of every one in the +house a misery to them. She did nothing but sigh, and cry, and moan, and +complain from morning till night, and from night till morning. Nothing +they did pleased her. + +Of Nathalie, Midge had the reverse of this story to tell--she never +complained at all. No, Midge wished she would; her mute despair was far +harder to bear than the weary complainings of her mother. She sat by +that petulant invalid mother's side the livelong day, holding cooling +drinks to her poor parched lips, bathing the hot brow and hands, and +smoothing the tossed pillow; rarely speaking, save to ask or answer some +question; never replying to the endless reproaches of the sick woman; +never uttering one complaint or shedding one tear. + +Mr. Val Blake was ushered by Midge into the darkened chamber of Mrs. +Marsh, and looked at Nathalie sitting by her bedside. In spite of what +he had heard, he was shocked at the change which the past week had made +in her--shocked at the wasted and shadowy form, the wan, transparent +hands, the hollow eyes and haggard cheeks. She was dressed in mourning, +and the crape and bombazine made her look quite ghastly by contrast. + +Mr. Blake's visit was not a long one. Nathalie scarcely spoke at all, +and his sister was not there. Mrs. Marsh, who had been asleep when he +entered, awoke presently, and poured her dreary wailings into his ear. +Val consoled her as well as he could; but there was no balm in Gilead +for her, and he was glad when he could with decency get out of the reach +of her querulous voice. Her time, of late, seemed pretty equally divided +between dozing and bewailings; and she fretted herself into another +slumber shortly after. + +Left alone, Nathalie Marsh sat by the window, while the dull afternoon +wore away, looking out over the gloomy bay, with a darkly brooding face. +Her desolation had never seemed so present to her as on this eerie +evening. She had been stunned and stupefied by the rapidly-falling +blows, but the after-pain was far more acute and keen than that first +dull sense of suffering. "Ruined and disgraced!" they were the two ugly +words on which all the changes of her thoughts rang. Ruined and +disgraced! Yes, she was that; and she who had once been the belle and +boast of the town could never hold up her head there any more. How those +who had envied and hated her for her beauty and her prosperity, would +exult over her now! What had she done that such misery should fall upon +her? What had she done? + +The little house in Cottage Street was very still. Mrs. Marsh yet dozed +fitfully; Midge had gone out to give herself an airing, and Betsy Ann +was standing in the open front door, looking drearily out at the rain, +which was beginning to fall with the night. Like Mariana, she was +"a-weary,"--though, not being quite so far gone in the blues as that +forlorn lady, she did not wish she was dead--and was staring dismally at +the slanting rain, when the rustle of a dress on the stairs made her +turn round, and become transfixed with amazement at beholding Miss +Marsh, in bonnet and shawl, arrayed to go out. Betsy Ann recoiled as if +she had seen a ghost, for the white face of the young lady looked +awfully corpse-like, in contrast with her sable wrappings. + +"Good gracious me! Miss Natty!" she gasped, "you're never going out in +this here rain! Ye'll get your death!" + +If Nathalie heard her, she did not heed, for she walked steadily out and +on through the wet evening, until she was lost to Betsy Ann's shivered +view. There were very few abroad that rainy evening, and those few +hurried along with bent heads and uplifted umbrellas, and saw not the +black figure flitting by them in the gloom. On she steadfastly went, +through the soaking rain, heeding it no more than if it were rays of +sunshine; on, with one purpose in her face, with her eyes ever turned in +one direction--toward the sea. + +Cottage Street wound away with a path that led directly to the shore. It +had been familiar to her all her life, and there was an old disused +wharf at the end, where she and Charley had used to play in the sunny +summer days long ago--a hundred years ago, it seemed, at the least. It +was a useless old wharf, rotten, and slippery, and dangerous, to which +boats were made fast, and where fishermen mended their nets. To this +wharf Nathalie made her way in the thickening darkness, the piteous rain +beating in her face, the sea-wind fluttering her black vail and soaking +dress. Heaven knows what purpose the poor half-delirious girl had in her +mind! Perhaps only to stand on the familiar spot, and listen to the +familiar voices of the wind and waves dashing against the rotten logs +and slimy planks of the old wharf, on which she had spent so many happy +hours. No one ever knew how it was; and we must only pity her in her +dumb agony of despair, and think as mercifully of the dark and +distracted soul as we can. The night was dark, the wharf dangerous and +slippery with the rain, and one might easily miss their footing and +fall. Who can say how it was? but there was a suppressed cry--the last +wail of that despairing soul--a sullen plunge, a struggle in the black +and dreadful waters, another smothered cry, and then the wharf was +empty, and the devouring waves had closed over the golden head of +Nathalie Marsh! + +In the roar of the surf on the shore, and the wailing cry of the night +wind, there was no voice to tell what had happened in the lonely gloom +of the rainy night. No, surely, or the faithful servant, who entered the +cottage dripping, after her constitutional, would have fled wildly to +the scene of the tragedy, instead of standing there in the kitchen, +talking to Betsy Ann, as she placed her wet umbrella in a corner to +drip. + +"I went up to Miss Jo's," said Midge, shaking herself, and giving Betsy +Ann an impromptu shower-bath, "and she made me stay for tea, and fetch +this umberel home. How's the Missis--asleep?" + +"Yes," said Betsy Ann, looking nervous and scared, for she was mortally +afraid of the dwarf; "but you didn't--I mean to say, was not Miss Natty +to Blake's?" + +"Miss--What!" screamed Midge; "how should Miss Natty get there, stupid! +Isn't she in her own room?" + +"No, she ain't," said Betsy Ann, looking still more scared; "and I don't +know where she is, neither! She came down stairs just afore dark, with +her things on, and went out in all the rain. She wouldn't tell me where +she was going, and she wouldn't stay in for me; and you needn't look so +mad about it, for I couldn't help it! There!" + +Midge's florid face turned ashen gray with terror; a vague, nameless, +dreadful fear, that brought cold beads of sweat out on her brow. Betsy +Ann had no need to back in alarm; it was not anger that blanched the +homely face, and her ears were in no danger of being boxed. + +"Which way did she take?" she asked, her very voice husky with that +creeping fear. + +"She went straight along," Betsy Ann replied, "as if a going to the +shore." + +It was the answer Midge had expected, but the hands fastening her shawl +shook so, as she heard it, that she could hardly finish that operation. + +"Go to Mr. Blake!" she said; "run for your life, and tell Mr. Val to +hurry to the beach, and fetch a lantern. Tell him I am afraid something +dreadful has happened." + +She hurried off herself, as she spoke, heedless of the invalid +up-stairs, of lashing rain, and driving wind, and black night. Heedless +of all but that terrible fear, Midge hurried through the storm to the +shore. + +In the next day's issue of the Speckport Spouter, the following item +appeared: + + "MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE!--Yesterday evening, about seven o'clock, + Miss Nathalie Marsh quitted her residence in Cottage Street, + without informing her friends where she was going, and has not + since been heard of. Upon the discovery of her absence, search was + made along the shore, in which direction she was seen to go, and a + crape vail, recognized as belonging to Miss Marsh, found on the old + wharf at the end of Cottage Street. The vail had been caught by a + spike projecting from the wharf, immediately above the water. It + is feared that a dreadful accident has happened, and the young lady + has been drowned. She had been ill and a little delirious some time + before, and we presume wandered down to the old wharf, a most + dangerous place at all times, and particularly so on a dark and + stormy night, such as last night was, and fell in. Any intelligence + of her will be thankfully received, and liberally rewarded, by her + afflicted friends. The young lady was dressed in deep mourning, and + might easily be recognized by the luxuriant abundance of her golden + hair." + +Speckport read this paragraph over its breakfast coffee and toast, and +was profoundly shocked thereby. And so poor Miss Marsh had drowned +herself! They had expected as much all along--she was not the girl to +survive such disgrace! But it was very dreadful; and they wouldn't +wonder to hear next that the poor bereaved mother had died of a broken +heart. They hoped the body would be recovered--it would be a melancholy +consolation to her friends, not to say to her enemies, who would then be +out of doubt as to her fate. People went past the house in Cottage +Street with the same morbid curiosity that had driven them to Redmon +after the murder, and stared at the closed blinds and muffled knocker, +and thought of the wretched mother lying within, whose footsteps were +even then crossing the Valley of the Shadow of Death. + +Two weeks passed, and these charitable wishes were not fulfilled. The +mother of Nathalie still lay ill unto death, and still faithfully waited +on by Midge and Miss Jo. It was toward the close of the second week that +Val received a note from the coroner of a fishing-village, some ten +miles up the coast, informing him that, the day previously, the body of +a woman answering the description of Miss Marsh had been washed ashore, +that an inquest had been held, and a verdict of "Found drowned" +returned. If the missing girl's friends would come immediately they +might be able to identify the corpse. + +Before noon, after the receipt of this missive, Mr. Val Blake was +bending over the corpse of the drowned woman, as it lay in its rough +deal coffin in the village dead-house. Before sunset he was back in +Speckport, and bore the deal coffin and its quiet contents to No. 16. +Great St. Peter Street. The slender girlish form, the mourning dress, +the long fair hair, were not to be mistaken, though what had been the +face was too horrible to look upon. Val turned away from what had once +been so beautiful, with a shudder; and thought of the Duke of Gandia, +made a saint by a similar sight. Before morning, the deal coffin was +inclosed in another of rosewood, and a grave dug in Speckport Cemetery. +The funeral was an unusually quiet and solemn one, though there was no +requiem mass for the soul of the departed offered up in the +cathedral--why should there for a wretched suicide, forever lost? + +Mr. Val Blake, with no sentimentality about him, and not over +straight-laced either, in some things, was yet a generous, good-hearted +fellow in the main, and placed a white marble cross over the dead girl's +grave. Some very good people were rather scandalized by the act. A cross +over the grave of a suicide!--it was sacrilege. But Mr. Blake did not +care much what good people or bad people thought or said of his actions; +and did just as he pleased, in spite of their teeth. So the white cross +remained gleaming palely in the spectral moonlight, and casting its +solemn shadow over the grave in the sunshine. It bore no +inscription--what inscription could be placed over such a grave?--only +the name "Nathalie." Her story was told, her life ended, the world went +on, and she was forgotten! O sublime lesson of life! told in three +words: Dead and forgotten! + +So, while Charley skulked in dark places, a hunted criminal, with a +price on his head, and his mother lay still hovering on that narrow +boundary that divides life and death, morning sunlight and noonday +shadows brightened and darkened around that pale cross in the cemetery, +and the night winds sighed over Nathalie's grave. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +MRS. BUTTERBY'S LODGINGS. + + +The bleak blasts of a raw March afternoon swept through the city +streets, cold and piercing, driving the dust in whirlwinds blindingly +into the eyes of all it encountered. + +In spite of the cold and the piercing wind, Broadway was not empty--Is +Broadway ever empty, I wonder?--and business-men, buttoned up to the +chin in overcoats, and with caps drawn over their frosty noses, tore +along like comets, to home and dinner; ladies in silks, and velvets, and +furs, swarm down the pave to meet them, and young and old, rich and +poor, jostled and elbowed, and pushed and trod on one another's heels +and toes, as usual in that thronged thoroughfare. + +Moving among the ceaseless sea of human life, continually ebbing and +flowing in Broadway, came a young woman, walking rapidly. I say "young +woman" advisedly, for she was not a lady. Her black dress was gray and +dingy, and frayed round the bottom; her black cloth mantle was of the +poorest texture and simplest make, and her black straw bonnet was as +plain and untrimmed as bonnet could be, and who could be a lady in such +array as that? To a good many of the Broadway loungers, who devote their +manly intellect to picking their teeth in front of first-class hotels, +and stare at society going by for a living, her face was well known. It +was a face not likely to pass unnoticed--not at all to be passed in a +crowd; and more than once some of these expensively-got-up loafers had +condescended to follow the young woman with the "deuced fine eyes;" but +the black figure flitted along as if shod with the shoes of swiftness, +and these languid admirers soon gave up the chase in despair. + +I don't think she ever was conscious of this attention; she walked +steadfastly on, looking straight before her, never to the right or +left, her shawl drawn closely around her tall, slight figure, as much +alone as if she had been on Peter Wilkins's desert island. To a +home-sick stranger in New York, I wonder if Broadway, at the fashionable +hour, is not the loneliest and dreariest of places? Hundreds of faces, +and not one familiar or friendly countenance among them; not one smile +or glance of recognition to the lonely and heart-weary brother or sister +jostled about in their midst. The men and women who passed might have +been a set of automatons, for all the interest the young person dressed +in shabby mourning appeared to take in them, as she hurried on with that +rapid step and that darkly-sullen face. For I am sorry to say this +heroine of mine (and she is that) wore a look of habitual sullenness +that was almost a scowl, and something fierce lay latent behind the +flashing of those brilliant eyes, and bitter and harsh in the compressed +lips. A passing physiognomist, not over-choice in his phrases, meeting +her once in the street, had carelessly observed to a friend walking with +him, that "there was a spice of the devil in that girl;" and perhaps the +girl herself might have agreed with him, had she heard it. + +Down town and west of Broadway, there is a certain unfashionable +locality, known as Minetta Street. The houses are tall and dingy, and +swarm with dirty children and noisy mothers; and it is dark and narrow, +and utterly unknown on Fifth Avenue and Madison Square. Among the tall +and dingy houses--all so much alike that they might have been cast in a +mold--there is one with a white board in the front window of the +ground-floor, bearing, in black letters, the name "Mrs. Butterby," and +beneath this legend, "Lodgings." And in this bleak, windy twilight of +this cold March day, the young woman dressed in black turns into Minetta +Street, and walks into Mrs. Butterby's with the air of one having the +right; for she is one of Mrs. Butterby's lodgers, this young person, and +a lodger of some consequence, not only to the house, but to the whole +street. And for this reason--she has a piano in her room! An old and +battered piano, it is true, for which she only pays four dollars per +month; but still it is a piano, and the wonderful harmonies her fingers +evoke from its yellow keys, transfix Minetta Street with amazement and +delight. She has the best room in Mrs. Butterby's house, the first floor +parlor, front, and there is the faded remains of a Brussels carpet on +the floor and a yellow-painted washstand in the corner, two cane-seated +chairs, with three legs between them, a little table, with an oilcloth +cover, and a sheet-iron stove; and these elegant luxuries all of which +she has for the stipend of three dollars per week. There is a bed, too, +and a small trunk, and the battered little high-backed piano, and there +is almost room to turn round in the space which they leave. There is +nothing like this elegant apartment in all Mrs. Butterby's house, and +the other lodgers look into it with envious and admiring eyes. They are +all young ladies, these lodgers--young factory-ladies, and young ladies +in the dressmaking, and pantmaking, and vestmaking, and capmaking, and +bookbinding lines of business, not to speak of an actress, a real +actress, who performed in a Broadway theater, and whom they look upon +with mingled awe and envy. But they like her better than they do the +first-floor lodger, whom they unite in hating with a cordial hatred that +would have delighted Dr. Johnson. They are all young ladies, but they +stigmatize her as "that young woman," "that stuck-up thing," and would +like to scratch those bright eyes of hers out of her head, though she +never did anything to them in her life. + +They knew very little about her, either Mrs. Butterby or her fair +lodgers, although she had been two months in the house, except that her +name was Miss Wade, that she earned her living as an embroideress, and +that she put on a great many unnecessary airs for a New York seamstress. +She embroidered slippers, that were pictures in themselves, on rich +velvets and silks, with floss and Berlin wool, and spangles, and beads; +and cobweb handkerchiefs, that might have been the wonder of a Brussels +lace-maker. She worked for a fashionable Broadway establishment, who +asked fabulous prices for these gems of needlework, and who doled out a +miserable pittance to the pale worker, whose light glimmered far into +the night, and who bent over the glistening fabric in the gray and +dismal dawn. They heard all this in the house, and nothing more; for, +except to the landlady, she had never, scarcely, exchanged a word with a +soul in it--with one exception--she had spoken to the actress, who +occupied the room above her own, and who was nearly as cold and +unsociable as herself. "Birds of a feather," the young ladies said, when +Mrs. Butterby told how Miss Wade had been in Miss Johnston's room (the +actress was Miss Johnston, in every-day life, and Miss St. John on the +bills), sewing spangles and gold braid on Miss Johnston's theatrical +robes, and how Miss Johnston had taken Miss Wade to the theater, and had +made her stay and take tea with her in her own room. No human being of +the "earth earthy," can quite live without any one to speak to; the +heart must turn to some one, let it be ever so proud and self-sustained, +and the actress was made of less coarse and rough clay than the young +factory-ladies, who went dirty and hoopless all the week, and flaunted +in gaudy silks on Sunday. + +Up in her own room, Miss Wade took off her bonnet, and sat down to work +with her mantle still on, for the fireless apartment was perishingly +cold. She had sat there for nearly an hour, and the cheerless March +gloaming was falling drearily on Minetta Street, when there was a +shambling footstep on the stairs, a shuffling, slip-shod, +down-at-the-heel tread in the hall, and a rap at her door. Miss Wade, +work in hand, opened it, and saw her portly landlady smiling in the +doorway. + +"Miss Johnston's compliments, Miss, and would you please to step up to +her room, she says. Bless my heart! ain't you got no fire on, this +perishing evening?" + +"It was too much trouble to light it," Miss Wade said, shutting and +locking her room-door, and going along the dark and dirty hall, up a +dark and dirty staircase, into another hall, darker and dirtier still, +and tapping at the first door she met. + +"Come in!" a feminine voice said, and Miss Wade went in accordingly. It +was a smaller chamber than her own, and far less sumptuously furnished, +with no fine fragments of Brussels on the bare floor, no piano in the +corner, no yellow washstand, or oilclothed table. Its one dim window +looked out on that melancholy sight, a New York backyard, and the gray +and eerie dusk stole palely in, and the wild spring wind rattled the +rickety casement. But it had a fire, this poor little room, in a little +ugly black stove, and, sitting in the one chair the apartment boasted +of, crouching over the heat, in a strange and wretched position, was the +room's mistress. A poor, faded, pallid creature, young, but not +youthful, with sharp cheekbones, and sunken eyes. She was wrapped in a +plaid shawl, but she looked miserable and shivery, and crouched so low +over the stove, that she nearly touched it. Sundry gaudy garments, all +tinsel and spangles and glitter, lay on the bed, with two or three wigs +keeping them company, a rouge-pot, and a powder-box. These were her +stage-dresses; but, looking at her, as she sat there, you would as soon +think of seeing a corpse tricked out in that ghostly grandeur as she. + +She rose up as her visitor entered, with a pale smile of welcome, and +placed the chair for her. There was a certain quiet grace about her that +stamped her, like Miss Wade herself, God help her! as "one who had seen +better days." But she was far more fragile than the seamstress. Whatever +she had once been, she was nothing but a poor, wasted shadow now. + +"Mrs. Butterby said you sent for me," Miss Wade remarked, taking the +chair, and looking with a certain eagerness in her great eyes. "You +spoke to the manager, I suppose?" + +Miss Johnston, who had seated herself on a wooden footstool, did not +look up to meet that eager, anxious gaze. + +"Yes," she said, "but, I am sorry to say, I have been disappointed. The +company was full, he said, and he wanted no more novices. He would not +have taken me, had it not been at the earnest solicitation of a friend, +and there was no room or need for any more." + +The sullen look that had left Miss Wade's face for a moment returned, +and a dark gloom with it. She did not speak; she sat with her brows +drawn into a moody form, staring at the ugly little black stove. + +"A friend of mine, though," the actress went on, "who has considerable +influence, has promised to try and get you a situation in some other +theater. I told him you would certainly be successful, and rise rapidly +in the profession. I know you possess all the elements of a splendid +tragic actress." + +If we might judge by the darkly-passionate face and fiercely-smoldering +eyes, the young woman who sat so gloomily staring straight before her, +was capable of acting a tragedy in real life, quite as fast as on the +stage. There was a certain recklessness about her, that might break out +at any moment, and which told fate and poverty had goaded her on to +desperation. When she spoke, her words showed she had neither heard nor +heeded the actress's last remark. + +"And so goes my last hope," she said, with slow, desperate bitterness; +"the last hope of being anything but a poor, starved, beggarly drudge +all the days of my life! I am a fool to feel disappointed. I might know +well enough by this time, that there is nothing but disappointment for +such a wretch as I!" + +The reckless bitterness of this speech jarred painfully on the hearer's +nerves. Miss Johnston looked at her half-pityingly. + +"There is no need to despair," she quietly said; "the friend of whom I +have spoken will be successful, and I am certain you will be a great +actress yet. With me it is different. I will never rise above +mediocrity." + +"You don't seem to care much," said Miss Wade, looking at her pale, +still face. + +"I don't," said the actress, in the same quiet way. + +"Have you no ambition at all, then?" + +"No!" + +She did not say it indifferently, but in a tone of hard endurance. Miss +Wade's large eyes were fixed curiously on her face. + +"I think," she said, "you have seen a great deal of trouble, and that it +has crushed the ambition out of you. You were never born to be one of +Mrs. Butterby's lodgers! Pardon me if I am impertinent." + +"You are not," the actress said, neither denying nor acknowledging the +charge. "Whatever I once was, I am Mrs. Butterby's lodger now, and a +poor actress, who must sew the spangles on her own dress." + +She took off the bed a short pink gauze skirt, and a bunch of tinsel +braid, and began the womanly work of sewing, with her swift fingers. + +"Are you to wear that to-night?" asked Miss Wade. + +"Yes; it is the dress of a flower-girl." + +"What is the play?" + +"I forget the name," said the actress, indifferently; "it is a French +vaudeville, written expressly for us. I am Ninon, a flower-girl, with +two or three songs to sing. Will you come?" + +"Thank you, I should like to go. It keeps me from thinking for a few +hours, and that in itself is a blessing. What a miserable, worthless +piece of business life is! I think I shall buy twenty cents worth of +laudanum, some of these days, in some apothecary-shop, and put an end to +it altogether." + +The jarring, reckless tone had returned, and was painful to hear. The +actress sewed, steadily on, replying not. + +"It is well enough for those girls," Miss Wade said; "those rough, +noisy, factory girls, brawny arms, and souls that never rise above a +beau or silk dresses; but for me and for you, who were born ladies--it +is enough to drive us mad! Look at me!" she cried, rising to her feet; +"look at me, Miss Johnston! Do I look like one born for a drudge? Do I +look like the women who fill this house?" + +Miss Johnston looked up at the speaker, doing a little private +theatrical tragedy, with her pale, quiet face, unmoved. Perhaps she had +grown so used to tragedy that it had become stale and wearisome to her; +and the regal figure drawn up to its full height, the white face, and +flaring eyes, disturb her no more in her poor room, than Lady Macbeth, +in black velvet, with blood on her hands, did on the theatrical boards. + +"No," she said, "you are not at all like the factory-hands, Miss Wade. +I never doubted you were born a lady." + +"And a lady, rich and happy, flattered and courted, I should have been +yet, but for the villainy of a man. My curse upon him, whether he be +living or dead." + +She began pacing up and down the floor, like any other tragedy-queen. +Miss Johnston, finding it too dark to sew, arose, lit a candle, stood it +on a wooden box that did service for a table, and composedly pursued her +work. + +"How was it?" she asked; "is it long ago?" + +"Long!" exclaimed Miss Wade; "it seems hundreds of years ago; though I +suppose scarcely seven have really passed since he fled, taking all he +possessed with him, and leaving my mother and I to beg, or starve, or +die, if we pleased. Of all the villains Heaven ever suffered to pollute +this earth, I think Philip Henderson was the worst!" + +"Philip Henderson!" Miss Johnston repeated, looking up from her work; +"was that the name of the man who defrauded you?" + +"He was my step-father--the villain! My own father I do not +recollect--he died in my infancy, leaving my mother wealthy--the +possessor of half a million nearly. She had married this man Henderson +before I was three years old; and I remember how pleased I was when he +first came, with the little baby-sister he brought me--for he was a +widower with a child not two years old. Shortly after my mother's second +marriage, we left Rochester, where I was born. Mr. Henderson purchased, +with my mother's money, of course, for he had none of his own, a +magnificent place up at Yonkers--a house like a castle, and magnificent +grounds. Everything was in keeping; the furniture, pictures, and plate +superb; a whole retinue of servants; the fastest horses and finest +carriages in the country. It is like a dream of fairy-land to me now to +look back upon. Olly and I (his daughter's name was Olive), as we grew +up, had a governess, and masters in the house, and played in bright silk +dresses among the pastures, and fountains, and graperies of our +palace-like home. The place was filled with company all the summer +through--nothing but balls and soirees, and dressing and dancing, and +fetes champetre; and in the winter, Mr. and Mrs. Henderson came down to +the city, leaving us in charge of the housekeeper and governess. It is a +very pleasant thing, no doubt, spending money as freely as if it were +water; but, unfortunately, even half a million of dollars will not last +forever. Mr. and Mrs. Henderson, and their two daughters--for I passed +as his child, too, and scarcely knew the difference myself--were all the +fashion for nearly ten years, and then the change began to come. I was +only thirteen, and not old enough to understand the stormy scenes +between Henderson and my mother--her passionate reproaches of his folly +and extravagance, his angry recrimination, and the ominous whisperings +of the servants. Suddenly the crash came--Henderson had fled, taking +Olly with him, and the few thousands that yet remained of our princely +fortune. He was over head and ears in debt; the creditors seized +everything--house, furniture, plate, and all--and my mother and I were +penniless. Miss Johnston, the shock killed her. She had always been +frail and delicate, and she never held up her head after. She was buried +before a month passed; and I, at the age of thirteen, was alone in the +world, and a pauper. But a child of that age cannot realize misery as we +can in after-years. I was fully conscious of present discomfort, but of +the future I never thought. My mother had left Yonkers immediately after +the creditors' seizure, too keenly sensitive to remain a beggar where +she had once reigned a queen, and came here to the city. She came here +to an old servant of hers, to whom she had been a kind friend in other +days, and the woman did not forget it. She was comfortable enough with +her husband and two children, and she kept me and sent me to learn the +business I now work at. I remained with her nearly six years, realizing +more and more every day what I had lost in losing wealth. She is dead +now. Her husband is married again and gone to California, and I am here, +the most miserable creature, I believe, in all this great desert of a +city." + +She had been walking up and down all the time, this impetuous Miss +Wade, with rapid, excited steps, speaking in a rapid, excited voice, a +fierce light flaring in her large angry eyes. The actress had finished +her work; it lay on her lap now, her quiet hands folded over it, her +quiet eyes following the passionate speaker. + +"Wade, I suppose," was her first remark, "was your own father's name. +When did you adopt it?" + +"Only when I came here. The name of Henderson had long been odious to +me, but the family I lived with was too accustomed to it to change." + +"And have you never heard from this man Henderson or his daughter +since?" + +"I have heard of them, which is as good; and, thank God! retribution has +found them out! They are both dead--he committed a forgery, and shot +himself to escape the consequences; and Olly--she was always a +miserable, puling, sickly thing--died in a hospital. They have been made +an example of, thank Heaven! as they deserved to be." + +She uttered the impious thanksgiving with a fierce joy that made the +actress recoil. But her mood changed a second after; she stopped in her +walk, the darkly-sullen look settling on her face again, and stared +blankly at the flaring candle, dripping tears of fat over the +candlestick. So long she stood that the actress rose and began folding +up the flower-girl's dresses, preparatory to starting for the theater. + +"Are you going?" Miss Wade asked, coming out of her moody reverie. + +"Yes, when I have had a cup of tea--it is drawing down stairs at Mrs. +Butterby's fire. Will you not take another?" + +"No, thank you; I can't eat. I will wait here while you take it." + +There was a newspaper on the bed. Miss Wade took it, and sat down to +read whilst she waited. The actress left the room, returning a moment or +two after, with a small snub-nosed teapot and a plate of buttered toast. +She was standing at a little open pantry pouring out the tea, when she +suddenly laid down the teapot, and turned round to look at her +companion. It was not an exclamation Miss Wade had uttered, it was a +sort of cry; and she was holding the paper before her, staring at it in +blank amaze. + +"What is the matter?" Miss Johnston inquired, in her calm voice. + +Miss Wade looked up, a sudden and strange flush passing over her +colorless face. + +"Nothing," she said, slowly. "That is--I mean I saw the--the death of a +person I knew, in this paper." + +She held it up before her face, and sat there while the actress drank +her tea and ate her toast, never moving or stirring. Miss Johnston left +the pantry, put on her bonnet and shawl, and took up her bundle as if to +go. + +"I beg your pardon, Miss Wade," she said, "but it is time for us to go." + +Miss Wade arose, with the paper still in her hand. Two bright spots, all +unusual there, and which strong excitement alone could bring, burned on +either cheek, and a strange dusky fire shone in her eyes. + +"I do not think I will go to the theater to-night, Miss Johnston," she +said. "My head aches. I will take this paper, if you will let me, and +read it in my room for a little while, and then go to bed." + +The actress assented, looking at her curiously, and Miss Wade passed +down the dark stairs to her own room. There was a lamp on the table, +which she lit, then she locked the door; and with that same red spot on +each cheek, and that same bright light in each eye, sat down with the +paper to read. But she only read one little paragraph among the +advertisements, and that she read over and over, and over again. The +paper was the Montreal True Witness, some two or three weeks old, and +the paragraph ran thus: + + "INFORMATION WANTED.--Of Philip Henderson or his heirs. When last + heard from he was in New York, but is supposed to have gone to + Canada. He or his descendants will hear of something to their great + advantage by applying to John Darcy, Barrister-at-Law, Speckport." + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +THE HEIRESS OF REDMON. + + +It is three days by steamer and rail-cars from New York to Speckport; +but as steam never traveled half as fast as story-tellers, we are back +there in three seconds. Dear, foggy Speckport, I salute thee! + +In a grimy office, its floor freshly sprinkled, its windows open to +admit the March-morning sunshine, in a leathern-covered armchair, before +a littered table, Mr. Darcy, barrister-at-law, sits reading the morning +paper. It is the "Daily Snorter," and pitches savagely into the "Weekly +Spouter," whose editor and proprietor, under the sarcastic title of +"Mickey," it mildly insinuates is an ignorant, blundering, bog-trotting +ignoramus, who ought still to be in the wilds of Connemara planting +potatoes, instead of undermining the liberty of this beloved province, +and trampling the laws of society under his ruthless feet, by asserting, +as he did yesterday, that a distinguished member of the Smasher party +had been found lying drunk in Golden Row, and conveyed in that unhappy +state to his residence in that aristocratic street, instead of to the +watch-house, as he should. Much more than this the "Daily Snorter," the +pet organ of the Smasher party, had to say, and the anathemas it +fulminated against "that filthy sheet," the "Spouter," and its vulgar, +blockheaded, addle-pated editor, was blood-curdling to peruse. Mr. Darcy +was deep in it when the office door opened, and Mr. Val Blake lounged +carelessly in. Mr. Darcy looked up with a nod and a laugh. + +"Good morning, Blake! Fine day, isn't it? I am just reading this eulogy +the 'Snorter' gives you." + +"Yes," said Mr. Blake, mounting the back of a chair as if it were the +back of a horse, and looking the picture of calm serenity. "Severe, is +it? Who do you suppose I had a letter from last night?" + +"How should I know?" + +"You won't faint, will you? It was from Charley Marsh!" + +Mr. Darcy dropped the "Snorter," and stared. + +"Char--ley Marsh! It's not possible, Blake?" + +"Yes, it is. I am on my way to Cottage Street at this present writing, +to tell his mother." + +"Well, this is an astonisher! And where is the boy?" + +"You'd never guess. A captain in the Southern army." + +"You don't say so! How did he ever get there?" + +"You see," said Val, "it's a long letter, and he explains everything. +After he broke jail that time (of course, Turnbull helped him off), he +skulked in the woods for two or three weeks, visited occasionally by a +friend (Turnbull again), and through him heard of Nathalie's death. At +last, he got the chance of a blockade-runner. The 'Stonewall Jackson' +was leaving here, and he got on board, ran the blockade, and found +himself in Dixie. There he was offered a captainship, if he would stay +and fight a little. He accepted, and that's the whole story. I must tell +the mother. It will do her more good than fifty novels and fifty +thousand blue pills. Jo went into hysterics of delight when she heard it +at breakfast, and I left her kicking when I came away." + +"Does he say anything at all about the murder?" + +"Oh, yes. I forgot that. He wants to know if Cherrie has turned up yet, +and says he may thank her for all his trouble. He was up at Redmon that +night to meet her. She had promised to elope with him, but she never +came. He protests his innocence of the deed, and I believe him." + +"Humph!" said Mr. Darcy, reflectingly. "It is most singular Cherrie does +not turn up. I dare say she could throw light on the subject, if she +chose." + +"I don't despair, yet," said Val. "I'll find her before I stop, if she's +above ground. No news yet, I suppose, from the heirs of Redmon?" + +"None; and I am sick and tired of advertising. Not a New York or +Canadian paper I have not tried, and all alike unsuccessfully. I believe +the man's dead, and it's of no use." + +"Well," said Mr. Blake, dismounting from the chair, "I'm off. I must get +back to the office after I've seen Mrs. Marsh, and give the 'Snorter' +such a flailing as it won't get over for a month of Sundays." + +Off went Mr. Blake like a long-legged steam-engine; and Mr. Darcy's +office boy entered with a handful of letters from the post-office. The +lawyer, laying down his paper, began to break the envelopes and read. +The first three were business communications, brief and legal, in big +buff envelopes. The fourth bore a different aspect. It was considerably +stouter. The envelope was white; the writing, a lady's delicate spidery +tracery; the postmark New York. The lawyer surveyed it for a moment in +grave surprise, then broke it open and began to read. The letter was a +long one--three sheets of note-paper closely written; and before he had +got to the end of the first, Mr. Darcy, with a sort of shout of +astonishment, began at the beginning again. Once, twice, three times, +and Mr. Darcy perused the letter; and then rising, with the rest +unopened, began pacing up and down the floor. The windows of the office +faced the street, and, glancing out, he saw Mr. Blake striding past +presently, as if shod with seven-league boots. Mr. Darcy put his head +out of the window and hailed him. + +"Hallo, Blake! Come up here a moment, will you?" + +Mr. Blake looked up, ran up-stairs, and entered the office. + +"You'll have to be quick, Mr. Darcy," he said. "Time's precious this +morning, and my conscience is uneasy until I give the 'Snorter' fits. +Anything up?" + +"Yes. The heir of Redmon has turned up at last!" + +"By Jove!" cried Val, "you don't say so? Where is he?" + +"It's not a he. I should have said the heiress of Redmon has come to +light. I have had a letter from Philip Henderson's daughter this +morning." + +"And where's Philip himself?" + +"Where Heaven pleases. The man's dead, and has been these three years. +No wonder he never answered our advertisements." + +"But it is a wonder this daughter of his did not?" + +"She never heard it until the day before she wrote, and then by the +merest chance, she says. She is very poor, I fancy, though she does not +exactly say so, and without the means to come on here." + +"Where is she?" + +"In New York. Mrs. Leroy told me her brother resided in Yonkers, with +his wife and two daughters, she believed, and the writer of this letter +corroborates that statement. They did live in Yonkers, she says, and +were in affluent circumstances for a number of years, until she, the +writer, was thirteen years old, when they became involved in debt, and +everything was seized by the creditors. Henderson, the father, went to +Canada. Mrs. Leroy told me she heard he had gone there, but they never +held any correspondence. He went to Canada and died there about three +years ago. The youngest daughter died about the same time, and the +mother shortly after their loss of fortune. The writer of this letter, +then, is the only survivor of the family, and the rightful heiress of +Mrs. Leroy's fortune. She speaks of Mrs. Leroy, too; says her father had +an only sister, who married a New York Jew of that name, for which low +alliance, her father ever afterwards refused to have anything to do with +her. She refers me to several persons in Yonkers, who can confirm her +story, if necessary; though, as she has not been there since she was a +child of thirteen, and is now a young lady of twenty, they would hardly +be able to identify her. She works for her living, she says--as a +teacher, I presume--and tells me to address my reply to 'Station G, +Broadway.' Her story bears truth on the face of it, I think. Here is the +letter--read it." + +Mr. Blake took the lady-like epistle, and, apparently forgetful of his +late haste, sat down and perused it from the date "New York, March 7th, +1862," to the signature, "Yours respectfully, Olive W. Henderson." He +laid it down with a thoughtful face. + +"Her statement is frank and clear, and coincides in every particular +with what Mrs. Leroy told you. I don't think there is any deception, but +you had better write to Yonkers and ascertain." + +"I shall do so: and if all is right, I will forward money to Miss +Henderson to come here at once. I am heartily glad to be rid of the +bother at last. What will Speckport say?" + +"Ah, what won't it say! It's an ill wind that blows nobody good; and +what killed poor Natty Marsh is the making of this girl. I wonder if +she's good-looking. I shouldn't mind making up to her myself, if she +is." + +"You might make down again, then. She wouldn't touch you with a pair of +tongs. How did Mrs. Marsh take the news?" + +"She cried a little," said Val, turning to go, "and then went back to +'Florinda the Forsaken,' I having disturbed her in the middle of the +ninety-eighth chapter." + +Nodding familiarly, Mr. Blake took his departure, and Mr. Darcy sat down +to write to Station G, Broadway, and to Yonkers. + +The very winds of heaven seemed to carry news in Speckport, and before +night everybody at all concerned knew that the heiress of Redmon had +turned up. + +Before the expiration of a fortnight, Mr. Darcy received an answer from +Yonkers. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Henderson had resided there with their two +daughters some years before, but he had absconded in debt, and his wife +had left the place, and died shortly after. Harriet and Olive, they +believed, were the names of the children; but they knew nothing whatever +of them, whether they were living or dead. Mr. Henderson, they had read +in the papers, had died very suddenly in Canada--committed suicide, they +believed, but they were not certain. + +Mr. Darcy, upon receipt of these letters, forwarded a hundred dollars to +Miss Henderson, desiring her to come on without delay to Speckport, and +take possession of her property. The hunt for the heirs had given Mr. +Darcy considerable trouble, and he was very glad to be rid of the bore. +He directed the young lady to come to his house immediately upon +landing, instead of a hotel; if she sent him word what day she would +come, he would be at the boat to meet her. + +Mr. Val Blake, among less noted people, went down to the wharf one +Tuesday afternoon, nearly a fortnight after Mr. Darcy had dispatched +that last letter containing the hundred dollars, to New York. It was +late in March now, a lovely, balmy, June-like day; for March, having +come in like a lion, was going peacefully out like a lamb. There was not +a shadow of fog in Speckport. The sky was as blue as your eyes, my dear +reader--unless your eyes happen to be black--with billowy white clouds +sailing like fairy ships through a fairy sea. The soft breezes and warm +sunshine rendered fans unnecessary, and the bay was a sheet of sapphire +and gold. The wharf, a superb wharf, by the way, and a delightful +promenade, was thronged. All the pretty girls in Speckport--and, oh! +what a lot of pretty girls there are in Speckport--were there; so were +the homely ones, and all the nice young men, and the officers with canes +under their arms, staring at the fair Speckportians. Young and old, rich +and poor, lined the wharf, sitting down, standing up, and walking about, +attracted by the beauty of the evening, and the report that the new +heiress was coming in that day's boat. + +Mr. Val Blake, with his hands in his trowsers' pockets as usual, and his +black Kossuth hat pushed far back on his forehead, not to obstruct his +view, also as usual, lounged down through the crowd, nodding right and +left, and joined a group near the end of the wharf, of whom Miss +Jeannette McGregor, Miss Laura Blair, Miss Catty Clowrie, and Captain +Cavendish formed prominent features. Two or three more officers and +civilians hovered around, and way was made for Mr. Blake. + +"Oh, Mr. Blake, do you suppose we'll know her when she lands?" eagerly +inquired Miss McGregor. "I am dying to see what she is like!" + +"Darcy's going on board after her," said Val, "you'll see him linking +her up the wharf. I say, Laura, Bill told me you had a letter from Miss +Rose." + +"Why, yes, didn't you know? And she is coming back with Mrs. Wheatly, +and I am so glad!" + +"Have you been corresponding with Miss Rose all this time, Laura?" +inquired Miss Clowrie. + +"No; this is the first letter I have received. I sent her the 'Spouter,' +containing Nathalie Marsh's death, to Quebec, and she wrote back in +reply. This is all I have heard of her until now. She says she has had +scarcely a moment to herself." + +"Do you know, Laura," said Miss McGregor, "I used to think she was half +in love with Charley Marsh before that terrible affair of his. He was a +handsome fellow, and she must have seen a great deal of him, living in +the same house." + +"One might fall in love with Charley without living in the same house +with him, mightn't they, Catty?" asked Mr. Blake, with a grin; "but it's +all nonsense in saying the little school-mistress cared about him. She +was too much of a saint to fall in love with any one." + +"There's the boat!" cried Captain Cavendish; "coming round Paradise +Island!" + +"And there goes Darcy down the floats," echoed Val. "Watch well, ladies, +and you will behold the heiress of Redmon in a jiffy." + +The steamer swept around the island and floated gracefully up the +harbor. In twenty minutes she was at the wharf; a little army of cabmen, +armed with whips, stood ready, as if to thrash the passengers as they +came up. A couple of M. P.'s, brass-buttoned, blue-coated, and +red-batoned, stood keeping order among the rabble of boys, ready to tear +each other's eyes out for the privilege of carrying somebody's luggage. +Our party flocked to the edge of the high wharf overlooking the floats, +up which the travelers must come, and strained their necks and eyes to +catch sight of the heiress. Mr. Darcy had gone on board the first moment +he could, and the passengers were flocking out and up the floats. Some +of them, who had been to Speckport before, or had heard from others that +it was one of the institutions of the place for the population of the +town to flock down on such occasions, passed on indifferently; but +others, more ignorant, looked, up in amazement, and wondered if all +those people expected friends. Most of the passengers had gone, when +there was an exclamation from more than one mouth of "Here she is!" +"There's the heiress with Mr. Darcy!" "Look, she's coming!" and all bent +forward more eagerly than before. Yes, Mr. Darcy was slowly ascending +the floats with a lady on his arm, a tall lady, very slender and +graceful of figure, wearing a black silk dress, a black cloth mantle +trimmed with purple, a plain dark traveling bonnet, and a thick brown +vail. The vail defied penetration--the eyes of Argus himself could not +have discovered the face behind it. + +"Oh, hang the vail!" cried Captain Cavendish; "they ought to be indicted +as public nuisances. The face belonging to such a figure should be +pretty!" + +"How tall she is!" exclaimed Miss McGregor, who was rather dumpy than +otherwise. "She is a perfect giantess!" + +"Five feet six, I should say, was mademoiselle's height," remarked Val, +with mathematical precision. "I like tall women. How stately she walks!" + +"I suppose she'll be putting on airs now," remarked Miss McGregor, with +true feminine dislike to hear another woman praised; "and forget she +ever had to work for her living in New York. Or perhaps she'll go back +there and take her fortune with her." + +"You wouldn't be sorry, Jeannette, would you?" said Laura. "She's a +terrible rival, I know, with her thirty thousand pounds, and her stately +stature. Val, I wish you would find out what she is like before you come +to our house this evening. You can do anything you please, and I am +dying to know." + +"All right," said Val; "shall I drop into Darcy's, and ask Miss +Henderson to stand up for inspection, in order that I may report to Miss +Blair?" + +"Oh, nonsense! you can go into Mr. Darcy's if you like, and see her, +without making a goose of yourself." + +"And I'll go with him, Miss Laura," said Mr. Tom Oaks, sauntering up. +"Blake has no more eye for beauty than a cow, or he would not have lived +in Speckport all these years, and be a single man to-day. We'll both +drop in to Darcy's on our way to you, Miss Blair, with a full, true, and +particular account of Miss Henderson's charms." + +"Oh, her charms are beyond dispute, already," said Captain Cavendish; +"she has thirty thousand, to our certain knowledge." + +"And of all charms," drawled Lieutenant the Honorable Blank, "we know +that golden ones are the most to your taste, Cavendish. You'd better be +careful and not put your foot in it with this heiress, as they tell me +you did with the last." + +Very few ever had the pleasure of seeing Captain Cavendish disconcerted. +He only stared icily at his brother-officer, and offered his arm to Miss +McGregor to lead her to her carriage, which was in waiting, while Mr. +Oaks did the same duty for Laura. Mr. Blake saw her led off under his +very nose, with sublimest unconcern, and lounged along the wharf, +watching the deck-hands getting out freight, with far more interest than +he could ever have felt in Laura's pretty tittle-tattle. If that lady +felt disappointed, she knew the proprieties a great deal too well to +betray it, and held a laughing flirtation all the way up the wharf with +Mr. Tom Oaks. + +"You will be sure to find out what the heiress is like," she said, +bounding into the carriage. "I shall never know a moment's peace until I +ascertain." + +"I will go to Darcy's with Blake," answered Tom; "that's all I can do. +If she shows it is all right; if she don't, a fellow can't very well +send word to her to come and exhibit herself. Adieu, mesdemoiselles!" + +The two gentlemen tipped their chapeaux gallantly as the carriage +rattled off up the hilly streets of Speckport; for every street in +Speckport is decidedly "the rocky road to Dublin." Mr. Oaks hunted up +Mr. Blake, and led him off from the fascinating spot, where the men were +noisily getting out barrels, and bales and boxes. + +"I'll call round for you, Blake," he said; "and we'll drop into Darcy's, +promiscuous, as it were, before going to Laura's. I want to see the +heiress myself, as much as the girls do." + +Mr. Blake was of much too easy a nature to refuse any common request; +and when, about seven o'clock, Mr. Oaks, magnificently got up in full +evening costume, partly concealed by a loose and stylish overcoat, +called at Great St. Peter's Street, he found the master of No. 16 +putting the finishing touches to a characteristically loose and careless +toilet. + +The two young men sallied forth into the brightly starlit March night, +lighting their cigars as they went, and conjecturing what Miss Henderson +might be like. At least Mr. Oaks was, Mr. Blake being constitutionally +indifferent on the subject. + +"What's the odds?" said Val; "let her be as pretty as Venus, or as ugly +as a blooming Hottentot, it makes no difference to you or I, does it?" + +"Perhaps not to you, you dry old Diogenes," said Tom; "but to me it's of +the utmost consequence, as I mean to marry her, should she turn out to +be handsome." + +Mr. Blake stared, for Mr. Oaks had delivered himself of this speech with +profoundest gravity; but as they were at the lawyer's door, there was no +time for friendly remonstrance on such precipitate rashness. Val rang, +and was shown by the young lady who answered the bell, and did general +housework for Mrs. Darcy, into the parlor. Mr. and Mrs. Darcy were +there, and so was the new heiress, to whom they were presented in form. +She still wore her black silk dress, and lay back in a cushioned rocker, +looking at the bright coal-fire, and talking very little. It was very +easy to look at her; had she been a tall statue, draped in black, it +could scarcely have been easier; and the two gentlemen took a mental +photograph of her, for Miss Blair's benefit and their own, before they +had been two minutes in the room. + +"We were on our way to Miss Blair's tea-splash," Mr. Blake explained, +"and dropped in. You're not coming, I suppose?" + +No, a note-apology had been sent. They were not going. Mrs. Darcy was +saying this when the young lady looked suddenly up. + +"I beg you will not stay on my account," she said. "I am rather +fatigued, and will retire. I shall be sorry if my arrival deprives you +of any pleasure." + +She had a most melodious voice, deep, but musical, and her smile lit up +her whole dark face with a luminous brightness, most fascinating, but +not easily described. You know the magnetic power some of these dark +faces have, of kindling into sudden light, and how bewitching it is. Mr. +Oaks seemed to find it so; for she was gazing with an entranced +absorption that rendered him utterly oblivious of all the rules of +polite breeding. + +Mr. and Mrs. Darcy hastened to disclaim the idea of her presence +depriving them of any pleasure whatever, as people always do on these +occasions, and repeated their intention of not going. Messrs. Blake and +Oaks accordingly took their leave, and sallied forth again under the +quiet stars for the residence of Miss Laura Blair. + +The pretty drawing-room of Laura's home was bright with gaslight and +flowers, and fine faces and charming toilets, and red coats, for the +officers were there when they entered. What Mr. Blake had denominated a +"tea-splash" was a grand birth-day ball. Miss Laura was just twenty-one +that night. She danced up to them as they entered, looking wonderfully +pretty in rose-silk, and floating white lace, white roses in her hair +and looping up her rich skirt. "So you have come at last!" was her cry, +addressing Tom Oaks, and quite ignoring Mr. Blake--the little hypocrite! +"Have you seen Miss Henderson?" + +"Yes," said Val, taking it upon himself to reply, "and she's homely. Her +nose turns up." + +There was a cry of consternation from a group of ladies, who came +fluttering around them, Miss Jo, tall and gaunt, and grand, in their +midst. + +"Homely!" shouted Mr. Oaks, glaring upon Val. "You lying villain, I'll +knock you down if you repeat such a slander. She is beautiful as an +angel! the loveliest girl I ever looked upon." + +Everybody stared, and there was a giggle and a flutter among the pretty +ones at this refreshingly frank confession. + +"Nonsense!" said Val. "You can't deny, Oaks, but her nose turns up!" + +"I don't care whether it turns up or down!" yelled Mr. Oaks, "or whether +she's got any nose at all! I know it's perfect, and her eyes are like +the stars of heaven, and her complexion the loveliest olive I ever +looked at!" + +"Olive!" said Mr. Blake. "I'll take my oath it's yellow, and she's as +skinny as our Jo there." + +"I'm obliged to you, Mr. Blake, for the compliment, I'm sure!" exclaimed +Miss Jo, flashing fire at the speaker; "and I think you might have a +little more politeness than running down the poor young lady, if her +nose does turn up. Sure, she is not to blame, poor creature! if she is +ugly!" + +"But, I tell you, ma'am," roared Mr. Oaks, growing scarlet in the face, +"she is not ugly! She's beautiful! She's divine! She's an angel!--that's +what she is!" + +"Well," said Mr. Blake, resignedly, "if she's an angel, all I've got to +say is, that angels ain't much to my taste. She is not half as pretty as +yourself, Laura; and now I want you to dance with me, after that." + +Miss Blair, with a radiant face, put her pretty white hand on Val's +coat-sleeve, and marched him off. A quadrille was just forming, and they +took their places. + +"So she's really not handsome, Val? What is she like?" + +"Oh, she's tall and thin, and straight as a poplar, and she has big, +flashing black eyes, and tar-black hair, all braided round her head, and +a haggard sort of look that I don't admire. I dare say, Lady Macbeth +looked something like her; but she is not the least like poor Nathalie +Marsh." + +"Ah! poor Nathalie! dear Nathalie!" Laura sighed. "It seems like +yesterday since that night last May, at Jeannette McGregor's, when she +was the belle and the heiress of Redmon, we all thought, and Captain +Cavendish came for the first time. I remember, too, Miss Rose arrived +that night, and we were asking Charley--poor Charley!--what she looked +like. And now to think of all the changes that have taken place! I +declare, it seems heartless of us to be dancing and enjoying ourselves +here, after all!" + +"So it is," said Val, "and we are a heartless lot, I expect; but, +meantime, the quadrille is commencing, and as you have not taken the +vail yet, Miss Blair, suppose you make me a bow, and let us have a whack +at it with the rest!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +THE HEIRESS OF REDMON ENTERS SOCIETY. + + +A pretty room--Brussels carpet on the floor, marble-topped table strewn +with gayly-bound books and photograph-albums, chairs and sofas cushioned +in green billiard-cloth, hangings of lace and damask on the windows, a +tall Psyche mirror, a dressing-table, strewn with ivory-backed brushes, +perfume bottles, kid gloves, and cambric handkerchiefs; and marble +mantel, adorned with delicate vases filled with flowers. You might have +thought it a lady's boudoir but for the pictures on the papered +walls--pictures of ballet-dancers and racehorses, with one or two Indian +scenes of pig-sticking, tiger and jackal hunts, and massacres of Sepoys, +and the pistols and riding-whips over the mantel, and the gentleman +standing at the window, looking out. He wore a captain's uniform, and +nothing could have set off his fine figure so well; and this lady-like +apartment was his, and told folios about the man's tastes and character. +He stood looking out on the lamp-lit street, with people passing +carelessly up and down, not looking at them, but thinking +deeply--thinking how the best-laid plans of his life had been defeated +by that invincible Fate, which was the only deity he believed in, and +laying fresh plans, so skillfully to be carried out as to baffle grim +Madam Fate herself. He was going to a party to-night--a party given by +Mrs. Darcy, to introduce the new heiress of Redmon to Speckportian +society. + +Captain George Percy Cavendish, standing at the window, looking +abstractedly out at the starlit and gaslit street, was thinking. No one +had wished more to see the heiress than he. She was the fashion, the +sensation, the notoriety of the day. What eclat for him, not to speak of +the solid advantages in the way of dollars and cents, to carry off this +heiress, in fair and open combat, from all competitors. Tom Oaks, the +most insensible of mankind, had seen her but once, and had gone raving +about her ever since. Then, she was the heiress of Redmon, and Captain +Cavendish had vowed a vow long ago, that Redmon and its thousands should +be his, in spite of the very old Diable himself. Did he think +remorsefully of that other heiress who had staked all for him, and lost +the game? I doubt it. + +A little toy of a clock on a Grecian bracket struck ten. There had been +a noisy mess-dinner to detain him, and he was late; but he did not mind +that. Mr. Johnson, his man, appeared, to assist him on with his +greatcoat, and Captain Cavendish started to behold his fate! + +The drawing-room of the lawyer's house was filled when he entered--he +being himself the latest arrival. He stood near the door for some time, +watching the figures passing and re-passing, gliding in and out of the +dance--for they were dancing--glancing from one to the other of those +pretty mantraps, baited in rainbow-silk, jewelry, and artificial +flowers, for the capture of such as he. He was looking for the heiress, +but all of those faces were familiar, and almost all deigned him their +sweetest smiles in passing--for was there another marriageable man in +all Speckport as handsome as he? While he waited, Lieutenant the +Honorable L. H. Blank, in a brilliant scarlet uniform, approached with a +lady on his arm, and Captain Cavendish knew that he was face to face +with the heiress of Redmon! She had been dancing, and the lieutenant led +her to a seat, and left her to fulfill some request of hers. Captain +Cavendish looked at her, with an electric thrill flashing through every +nerve. Tom Oaks was right when he had called this woman glorious. It was +the only word that seemed to fit her, with her dark Assyrian beauty, her +flaming black eye, and superb wealth of dead-black hair. Yes, she was +glorious, this black-eyed divinity, who was dressed like the heroine of +a novel, in spotless white, floating like a pale cloud of mist all about +her, and emblematic of virgin innocence, perhaps; only this dark +daughter of the earth would hardly do to sit to an artist for an ideal +Innocence. + +She was dressed with wonderful simplicity, with a coronal of vivid +scarlet berries and dark-green leaves in the shining braids of her black +hair, and a little diamond star, shining and scintillating on her +breast. Her nose might turn up, her forehead might be too broad and +high, her face too long and thin for classic beauty, but with all that +she was magnificent. There was a streaming light in her great black +eyes, a crimson glow on her thin cheeks, and a sort of subtle brilliant +electricity about her, not to be described, and not to be resisted. This +flashing-eyed girl was one of those women for whom worlds have been +lost--dark enchantresses not to be resisted by mortal man. + +While Captain Cavendish stood there, magnetized and fascinated, a +ringing laugh at his elbow made him look round. It was Miss Laura Blair, +of course; no one ever laughed like that, but herself. + +"Love at first sight, is it?" she asked, with a wicked look; "come +along, and I'll introduce you." + +A moment after he was bowing to the dark divinity, and asking her to +dance. Miss Henderson assented, with a bewitching smile, and turned that +dark entrancing face of hers to Laura. + +"Do you know I wanted you, and have sent my late partner off in search +of you. I suppose the poor fellow is scouring the house in vain. They +are going to take me to Redmon and around the town to-morrow, it seems, +and I want to know if you will come?" + +Come! Laura's sparkling face answered before her words. The enchantress +had fascinated her as well as the rest; and, in a superb and gracious +sort of way, she seemed to have taken a fancy in turn to the +laughter-loving Bluenose damsel. + +While Laura was speaking, Lieutenant Blank came up, looking dazed and +helpless after his search; and directly after him, Mr. Tom Oaks, who had +been hovering around Miss Henderson all the evening, like a moth round a +candle. Mr. Oaks wanted her to dance, and glared vindictively upon +Captain Cavendish on hearing she was engaged to that gentleman, who led +her off with a calm air of superiority, very galling to a jealous lover. + +The dance turned out to be a waltz, and Miss Henderson waltzed as if she +had indeed been the ballet-dancer envious people said she was. She +floated--it was not motion--and the young officer, who was an excellent +waltzer himself, thought he never had such a partner before in his life. +Long after the rest had ceased, they floated round and round, the +cynosure of all eyes, and the handsomest pair in the room. Tom Oaks, +looking on, ground his teeth, and could have strangled the handsome +Englishman without remorse. + +As he stood there glowering upon them, Mr. Darcy came along and slapped +him on the back. + +"It's no use, Oaks. You can't compete with Cavendish! Handsome couple, +are they not?" + +Mr. Oaks ground out something between his teeth, by way of reply, that +was very like an oath, and Mr. Darcy went on his way, laughing. Standing +there, scowling darkly, Mr. Oaks saw Captain Cavendish lead Miss +Henderson to the piano. + +Miss Henderson was a most brilliant pianiste, and quite electrified +Speckport that night. Her white hands swept over the ivory keys, and a +storm of music surged through the room, and held them spell-bound. + +Those who had stigmatized her as a ballet-dancer and a dress-maker were +staggered. Ballet-dancers and dressmakers, poor things! don't often play +the piano like that, or have Mendelssohn's and Beethoven's superbest +compositions at their finger-ends. In short, Miss Henderson bewitched +Speckport that night, even as she had bewitched poor Tom Oaks. Never had +a debut on the great stage of life been so successful. Where the +witchery lay, none could tell; she was not beautiful of feature or +complexion, yet half the people there thought her dazzlingly beautiful. + +In short, Olive Henderson was not the sort of woman fire-side fairies +and household angels and perfect wives are made of, but the kind men go +mad for, and rarely marry. She was so brightly beautiful that she defied +criticism; and she moved in their midst a young empress, crowned with +the scarlet coronal and jetty braids, her diamond-star scintillating +rays of rainbow fire, and that smiling face of hers alluring all. Even +that slow Val Blake felt the spell of the sorceress, recanted his former +heresy, and protested he was as near being in love with her as he had +ever been with any one in his life. + +The confession was made to Laura Blair, of all people in the world; but +the glamour was over her eyes, too, and she heard it without surprise, +almost without jealousy. + +"Oh, she's splendid, Val," the young lady enthusiastically cried. "I +never loved any one so much in my life as I do her! How could you say +she was ugly?" + +"Upon my word, I don't know," responded Mr. Blake helplessly; "I thought +she was at the time, but she don't seem like the same person. How that +Cavendish does stick to her, to be sure." + +The cold pale dawn of the April day was lifting a leaden eye over the +bay and the distant hill-top, when the assembly broke up. It was four +o'clock of a cold and winter morning before the lights were fled, the +garlands dead, and the banquet-halls deserted. Speckport was very quiet +as the tired pleasure-seekers went wearily home, the chill sweeping wind +penetrating to the bone. + +Leaning against a lamp-post, opposite Mr. Darcy's house, and gazing with +ludicrous earnestness at one particular window of that mansion, was a +gentleman, whom the cold and uncomfortable dawn appeared to affect but +very little. The gentleman was Mr. Tom Oaks, his face flushed, his hair +tumbled, and his shirt-bosom in a limp and wine-splashed state, and the +window was that of Miss Henderson's room. Heaven only knows how these +mad lovers find out things; perhaps the passion gives them some +mysterious indication; but he knew the window of her room, and stood +there watching her morning-lamp burn, with an absorption that rendered +him unconscious of cold and sleet and fatigue. While he was gazing at +the light, with his foolish heart in his eyes, a hand was laid on his +shoulder, and a familiar voice sounded in his ear: + +"I say, Oaks, old fellow! What are you doing here? You'll be laid up +with rheumatic fever, if you stand in this blast much longer." + +Tom turned round, and saw Captain Cavendish's laughing face. The young +officer was buttoned up to the chin, and was smoking a cigar. + +"It's no affair of yours, sir," cried Mr. Oaks, rather more fiercely +than the occasion seemed to warrant. "The street's free, I suppose!" + +"Oh, certainly," said the captain, turning carelessly away; "only Miss +Henderson might consider it rather impertinent if she knew her window +was watched, and there is a policeman coming this way who may possibly +take you up on suspicion of burglary." + +It is not improbable, if Captain Cavendish had not already been some +paces off, Tom's fist would have been in his face, and his manly length +measured on the pavement. Tom never knew afterward what it was kept him +from knocking the Englishman down, whom he already hated with the +cordial and savage hatred of a true lover. But the captain was not +knocked down, and walked home to his elegant rooms, a contemptuous smile +on his lips, but an annoyed feeling within. He was so confoundedly +good-looking, he thought, this big, blustering, noisy Tom Oaks, and so +immensely rich, and women had such remarkably bad taste sometimes that-- + +"Oh, pshaw!" he impatiently cried to himself, "what am I thinking of to +fear a rival in Tom Oaks--that overgrown, blundering idiot. What a +glorious creature she is! By Jove! If she were a beggar, those eyes of +hers might make her fortune!" + +Early in the afternoon of the next day, the plain dark carryall of the +lawyer, containing himself and Miss Henderson, drove up to Mr. Blair's +for Laura. + +Laura did not keep them long waiting; she ran down the steps, her pretty +face all smiles, and was helped in and driven off. Miss Henderson lay +back like a princess among the cushions, a black velvet mantle folded +around her, and looked languidly at the beauties of Speckport as Laura +pointed them out. Queen Street stared with all its eyes after the +heiress, and the young ladies envied Miss Blair her position, the +cynosure of all. The windows of Golden Row were luminous with eyes. If +the heiress of Redmon had been the pig-faced lady, she could hardly have +attracted more attention. But she might have been a duchess, instead of +an ex-seamstress, she was so unaffectedly and radically indifferent; she +looked at banks, and custom-houses, and churches, and squares, and men, +and women, with listless eyes, but never once kindled into interest. +Yes, once they did. It was when they reached the lower part of the town, +Cottage Street, in fact, and the bay, all alive with boats, and +schooners, and steamers, and ships, came in sight, its saline breath +sweeping up in their faces, and its deep, solemn, ceaseless roar +sounding in their ears. The heiress sat erect, and a vivid light kindled +in her wonderful eyes. + +"Oh, the sea!" she cried; "the great, grand, beautiful sea! Oh, Laura! I +should like to live where its voice would sound always, night and day, +in my ears!" + +She had grown so accustomed to hear every one the night before call Miss +Blair Laura, that the name came involuntarily, and Laura liked it best. + +"It is down here Nathalie Marsh used to live," Laura said; "there is the +house. Poor Nathalie!" + +"Mrs. Darcy was telling me of her. She was very pretty, was she not?" + +"She was beautiful! Not like you," said Laura, paying a compliment with +the utmost simplicity; "but fair, with dark blue eyes, and long golden +curls, and the loveliest singer you ever heard. Every one loved her. +Poor Natty!" + +Tears came into Laura's eyes as she spoke of the friend she had loved, +and through their mist she did not see how Olive Henderson's face was +darkening. + +"I never received such a shock as when I heard she was missing. I had +been with her a little before, and she had been talking so strangely and +wildly, asking me if I thought drowning was an easy death. It frightened +me; but I never thought she would do so dreadful a deed." + +"There can be no doubt, I suppose, but that it was suicide?" + +"Oh no! but she was delirious; she was not herself--my poor, poor Natty! +They talk of broken hearts--if ever any one's heart broke, it was hers!" + +The strange, dark gloom falling like a pall on the face of the heiress, +darkened, but Laura did not notice. + +"Was it," she hesitated, and averted her face; "was it the loss of this +fortune?" + +"That, among other things; but I think she felt most of all about poor +Charley. Ah! what a handsome fellow he was, and so fond of fun and +frolic--every one loved Charley! I suppose Mrs. Darcy told you all the +story?" + +"Yes. You are quite sure it wasn't he, after all, who committed the +murder?" + +"Sure!" Laura cried, indignantly. "I am certain! If everybody hadn't +been a pack of geese, they would never have suspected Charley Marsh, who +wouldn't hurt a fly! No, it was some one else, and Val--I mean Mr. +Blake--says if ever Cherrie Nettleby is found, it will be sure to come +out!" + +"And Mr. Blake supports Mrs. Marsh, Mrs. Darcy says. That is very good +of him." + +Laura's eyes sparkled. + +"Good! Val Blake's the best, the kindest-hearted, and most generous +fellow that ever lived. He has that off-hand, unpolished way, you know; +but at heart, he is as good, and kind, and tender as a woman!" + +She spoke with an eagerness--this impulsive Laura--that told her secret +plainly enough; but the heiress was thinking of other things. + +"She was engaged to Captain Cavendish--this Miss Marsh--was she not?" +she asked. + +"Yes, I believe so; but it never was so publicly given out. He was her +shadow; and every one said it would be a match after Mrs. Leroy's +death, for she detested him." + +"How did he act after she lost her fortune?" + +"Well, the time was so short between that and her dreadful death, that +he had very little opportunity of doing anything; but the general +opinion was, the engagement would be broken off. In fact, he told Val +himself that she broke off, immediately after--for Natty was proud. He +went to the house every day, I know, until--Oh! _quand on parle de +diable_--there he is himself!" + +Laura did not mean by this abrupt change that his Satanic Majesty was +coming, though it sounded like it. It was only one of his earthly +emissaries--Captain Cavendish, on horseback. Captain Cavendish looked +handsomer on horseback than anywhere else, a fact of which he was fully +convinced, and he rode up and lifted his hat to the ladies with gallant +grace. + +"Good day to you, mesdemoiselles! I called at your house, Mr. Darcy, but +found Miss Henderson out! I trust I find you well, ladies, after last +night's fatigue?" + +He addressed both, but he spoke only to one. That one lifted her dark +eyes and bowed distantly, almost coldly, and it was Laura who answered. + +"Seven or eight hours' incessant dancing have no effect on such +constitutions as ours, Captain Cavendish! We have been showing Miss +Henderson the lions of Speckport!" + +"And what does Miss Henderson think of those animals?" + +"I like Speckport," she said, scarcely taking the trouble to lift her +proud eyes; "this part of it particularly." + +She was in no mood for conversation, and took little pains to conceal +it. "Not at home to suitors," was printed plainly on those contracted +black brows, and in the somber depths of those gloomy eyes. Captain +Cavendish lifted his hat and rode on, and the distrait beauty just +deigned a formal bend of her regal head, and no more. + +Laura smiled a little maliciously to herself, not at all sorry to see +the irresistible Captain Cavendish rather snubbed than otherwise. There +was nowhere to go now but to Redmon, and they drove along the quiet +road, in the gathering twilight of the short March afternoon. A gray and +eerie twilight, too, the low flat sky, of uniform leaden tint, hanging +dark over the black fields and moaning sea. The trees, all along the +road, stretched out gaunt, bare arms, and the cries of the whirling +sea-gulls came up in the cold evening blasts. They had fallen into +silence, involuntarily--the gloom of the hour and the dreary scene +weighing down the spirits of all. Something of the gloominess of the +flat dull landscape lay shadowed on the face of the heiress, as she +shivered behind her wraps in the raw sea-gusts. + +Ann Nettleby stood at her own door as the party drove by. The cottage +looked forlorn and stripped, too, with only bare poles where the +scarlet-runners used to climb, and a dismal entanglement of broom +stalks, where the roses and sweetbrier used to flourish. Mr. Darcy drew +rein for a moment to nod to the girl. + +"How d'ye do, Ann! Any news from that runaway Cherrie yet?" + +"No, sir," said Ann, her eyes fixed curiously on the heiress. + +"Is this Redmon?" asked Miss Henderson, looking over the cottage at the +red brick house. "What a dismal place!" + +Dismal, surely, if house ever was! All the shutters were closed, all the +doors fastened, no smoke ascending from the broken chimneys, no sound of +life within or without; not even a dog, to humanize the ghostly solitude +of the place. Black, and grim, and ghostly, it reared its gloomy front +to the gloomy sky; the stripped and skeleton trees moaning weirdly about +it, an air of decay and desolation over all. Forlorn and deserted, it +looked like a haunted house, and such Speckport believed it to be. The +two young ladies leaning on Mr. Darcy's arms as they walked up the +bleak, bare avenue, between the leafless trees, drew closer to his side, +in voiceless awe. The rattling branches seemed to catch at the heiress +as she passed them, to catch savagely at this new mistress, out of whose +face every trace of color had slowly died away. + +"It's a dismal old barrack," Mr. Darcy said, trying to laugh; "but you +two girls needn't look like ghosts about it. If the sun was shining now, +I dare say you would be laughing at its grimness, both of you." + +"I don't know," said the heiress, "I cannot conceive this place anything +but ghostly and gloomy. I should be afraid of that murdered woman or +that drowned girl coming out from under those black trees in the dead of +night. I shall never like Redmon." + +"Oh, pooh!" said Mr. Darcy, "yes, you will. When the sun is shining and +the grass is green, and the birds singing in these old trees, you'll +sing a different tune, Miss Olive. We'll have a villa here, and this old +rookery out of the way, and fine doings up here, and, after a while, a +wedding, with Laura here, for bridesmaid, and myself to give you away. +Won't we, Laura?" + +"I'm sure I don't know, sir. Who do you want to give her away to?" + +"Well, I'm not certain. There's Tom Oaks looney about her; and there's +that good-looking Englishman, all you girls are dying for. You like +soldiers, don't you, Miss Olive?" + +"Not particularly. Especially soldiers who never smell powder except on +parade-day, and whose only battles are sham ones. I like those poor +fellows who are fighting and dying down South, but carpet-knights I +don't greatly affect. + +"That's a rap over the head, Mr. Darcy," cried Laura, with sparkling +eyes. "I wish he heard you, Miss Henderson." + +"He might if he liked," said the heiress, scornfully. + +"Well," said the lawyer, taking the "rap" good-humoredly, "he can make +whom he marries, 'my lady,' some day. Is not that an inducement, my +dear?" + +"Is he of the nobility, then?" asked Olive Henderson, indifferently, and +not replying to the question. + +"He is next heir to a baronetcy. Lady Olive Cavendish does not sound +badly, does it?" + +"He used to come here often enough in the old days," Laura said, +looking at the gloomy old mansion; "he was all devotion to poor +Nathalie." + +Miss Henderson's beautiful short upper-lip curled. + +"He seems to have got wonderfully well over it in so brief a time, for a +love so devoted." + +"It is man's nature, my dear," said Mr. Darcy; "here's the house, will +you go through?" + +Laura absolutely screamed at the idea. + +"Good gracious, Mr. Darcy! I would not go in for all the world. Don't +go, Olive--I mean Miss Henderson." + +"Oh, call me Olive! I hate Miss Henderson. No, I don't care for going +in--the place has given me the horrors already." + +As they walked back to the carriage, Laura asked her what she thought of +Mr. Darcy's plan of the villa. + +"I shall think about it," was the reply. "Meantime, Mr. Darcy, I wish +you would look out for a nice house for me, one with a garden attached, +and a stable, and in some nice street, with a view of the water." + +"But, dear me!" said Laura, "I should think it would be ever so much +nicer and handier to board. It will be such a bother, housekeeping and +looking after servants, and all that kind of thing. If I were you I +would board." + +She turned upon Laura Blair, her eyes, her face, her voice, so +passionate, that that young lady quite recoiled. + +"Laura!" she cried out, in that passionate voice, "I must have a home. A +home, do you hear, not a boarding-house. Heaven knows I have had enough +of them to last me my life, and the sound of the word is hateful to me. +I must have a home where I will be the mistress, free to do as I please, +to come and go as I like, to receive my friends and go to them as it +suits me, unasked and unquestioned. I must have a home of my own, or I +shall die." + +Mr. Darcy looked out a house for the heiress; and after a fortnight's +search, found one to suit. It belonged to a certain major, who was going +with his bride, a fair Speckportian, home to old England, on a prolonged +leave of absence. It was to be let, all ready furnished; it was situated +around the corner from Golden Row, commanding a fine view of the +harbor, and with two most essential requisites, a garden and a stable. +It was a pretty little cottage house, with a tiny drawing-room opening +into a library, and a parlor opening into a dining-room. There was a +wide hall between, with a delightful glass porch in front, a garden +fronting the street, and the door at the other end of the hall opening +into a grass-grown backyard. Altogether it was a pleasant little house, +and Miss Henderson took it at once, as it stood, on the major's own +terms, and made arrangements for removing there at once. + +"I must have a horse, Laura, you know," she said to Miss Blair, as they +inspected the cottage together, for the two girls had grown more and +more intimate, with every passing day. "I must have a horse, and a man +to take care of him; and besides, I shall feel safer with a man in the +house. Then I must have a housekeeper, some nice motherly old lady, who +will take all that trouble off my hands; and a chambermaid, who must be +pretty, for one likes to have pretty things about one; and I shall get +new curtains and pictures, and send to Boston for a piano and lots of +music, and oh, Laura! I shall be just as happy as a queen here all day +long." + +She waltzed round the room where they were alone, in her new glee, for +she was as fitful of temper as an April day--all things by turns, and +nothing long. Laura, who was lolling back in a stuffed rocker, looked at +her lazily. "A housekeeper, Olly! There's Mrs. Hill, that widow you told +me once you thought had such a pleasant face. She is the widow of a +pilot, and has no children. She lives with her brother-in-law, Mr. +Clowrie, and would be glad of the place." + +Miss Henderson gave a last whirl and wheeled breezily down upon a +lounge. + +"Would she? But perhaps she wouldn't suit. I want some one that can get +up dinners, and oversee everything when I have a party. I must have a +cook, too--I forgot that." + +Laura laughed. + +"If you went dinnerless one day, you would be apt to remember it +afterward. Mrs. Hill is quite competent to a dinner, or any other +emergency, for she was housekeeper in some very respectable English +family, before she married that pilot. I am sure she would suit, and I +know she would like to come." + +"And I know I would like to have her. I'll go down to Mr. Clowrie's +to-morrow, and make her hunt me up a cook and housemaid, and stableman. +I shall want a gardener, too--that's another thing I forgot." + +"Old Nettleby will do that. I say, Olly, you ought to give us a +house-warming." + +"I mean to; but they never can dance in these little rooms. Oh, how nice +it is to have a house of one's own!" + +Laura wondered at the morbid earnestness of Miss Henderson on this +subject. She knew very little of the prior history of the heiress, +beyond that from great wealth she had fallen to great poverty, and had +had unpleasant experience in New York boarding-houses; the probable +origin of this desperate heart-sick longing for a house of her own--a +home where she would be the mistress, the sovereign queen. + +Mrs. Hill, the pilot's widow, was very glad of Miss Henderson's offer, +and gratefully closed with it at once. Perhaps the bread of dependence, +never very sweet, was unusually bitter, when sliced by the fair hand of +Miss Catty. She was a tall, portly old lady, with a fair, pleasing, +unwrinkled face, and kindly blue eyes, that had a motherly tenderness in +them for the rich young orphan girl. + +"And I want you to find me a cook, and a groom, and a housemaid, Mrs. +Hill," Olive said; "and the girl must be pretty. I mean to have nothing +but pretty things about me. I am going to the cottage on Monday, and you +must have them all before then." + +Mrs. Hill was a treasure of a housekeeper. Before Saturday night she had +engaged a competent cook, whose husband knew all about horses, and took +the place of groom and coachman. She got, too, a chambermaid, with a +charmingly pretty face and form; and the new window-draperies of snowy +lace and purple satin were festooned from their gilded cornices; and the +new furniture was arranged; and the new pictures, lonely little +landscape-scenes, hung around the walls. It was a perfect little bijou +of a cottage, and the heiress danced from room to room on Monday morning +with the glee of a happy child delighted with its new toy, and hugged +Laura at least a dozen times over. + +"Oh, Laura, Laura, how happy I am! and how happy I am going to be here! +I feel as if this great big world were all sunshine and beauty, and I +were the happiest mortal in it!" + +"Yes, dear," said Laura, "but don't strangle me, if you can help it. The +rooms are beautiful, and your dear five hundred are dying to behold +them. When does that house-warming come off?" + +Miss Henderson was whirling round and round like a crazy teetotum, and +now stopped before Miss Blair with a sweeping courtesy that ballooned +her dress all out around her. + +"On Thursday night, mademoiselle, Miss Henderson is 'At Home'. The cards +will be issued to-day. Come and practice 'Come Where my Love Lies +Dreaming.' Captain Cavendish takes the tenor, and Lieutenant Blank the +bass. We must charm our friends with it that night." + +Miss Henderson did not invite all her dear five hundred friends that +Thursday night--the cottage-rooms would not have held them. As it was, +the pretty dining-room and parlor were well filled, and the heiress +stood receiving her guests with the air of a royal princess holding a +drawing-room. She looked brilliantly beautiful, in her dress of rich +mauve silk sweeping the carpet with its trailing folds, its flounces of +filmy black lace, a circlet of red gold in her dead black hair, twisted +in broad shining plaits around her graceful head, a diamond necklace and +cross blazing like a river of light around her swanlike throat, and a +diamond bracelet flashing on one rounded arm. Speckport, ah! +ever-envious Speckport, said these were but Australian brilliants, and +that the whole set had not cost three hundred dollars in New York; but +Speckport had nothing like them, and Speckport never looked on anything +so beautiful as Olive Henderson that night. She was no longer wan and +haggard; her dark cheeks had a scarlet suffusion under the brown skin, +and the majestic eye a radiance that seemed more and more glorious every +time you saw her. + +No one could complain that night of caprice or coquetry, or partiality; +all were treated alike; Tom Oaks, Lieutenant Blank, Mr. Val Blake, and +Captain Cavendish; she had enchanting smiles, and genial hostess-like +courtesies for all, love for none. Whatever beat in the heart throbbing +against the amber silk, the lace and the diamonds of her bodice, she +only knew--the beautiful dark face was a mask you could not read. + +Miss Henderson's reception was a grand success; Mrs. Hill's supper +something that immortalized her forever after in Speckport. The guests +went home in the gray morning light with a dazed feeling that they had +been under a spell all night, and were awakening uncomfortably from it +now. They were under the spell of those magical smiles, of that +entrancing face and voice--a spell they were powerless to withstand, +which fascinated all against their better judgment, which made poor Tom +Oaks wander up and down in the cold, before the cottage, until sunrise, +to the imminent risk of catching his death; which made half a score of +his young towns-men lose their sleep and their appetite, and which made +Captain George Percy Cavendish pace up and down his room in a sort of +fever for two mortal hours, thrilling with the remembrance of the +flashing light in those black eyes, in the bewildering touch of those +hands. For you see, Captain Cavendish, having set a net to entrap an +heiress, was getting hopelessly entangled in its meshes himself, and was +drunk with the draught he would have held to her lips. + +And so the reeling world went round, and she who wove the spell, who +turned the heads, and dazed the hot brains of these young men, lay +tossing on a sleepless pillow, sleepless with the excitement of the dead +hours, sleepless with something far worse than excitement--remorse! + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +THE SPELL OF THE ENCHANTRESS. + + +The changes which Mr. Darcy had prophesied were going on at Redmon. +Before the middle of May, the transformation had begun. The weird old +red-brick house, haunted by so many dismal associations, lay on the +ground a great heap of broken bricks and mortar, and the villa was going +up with a rapidity only surpassed by Aladdin's palace. Miss Henderson +had drawn out the plans herself, and superintended the works, with a +clear head and a bright eye for all shortcomings and deficiencies. She +rode over every day from the cottage, mounted on her black steed +Lightning, her black-velvet cap with its long scarlet-tipped plume +flashing in among the workmen, as, with gathered-up skirt, she inspected +the progress of the building. + +She entered with a true womanly interest into the erection and +beautifying of this new home, and had quite got over her superstitious +awe of the place. Perhaps this was owing to an artfully-laid plan of +that scheming lawyer, Mr. Darcy, who, being absurdly fond of the +dark-eyed heiress, and fearful of her depriving Speckport of the light +of her beautiful countenance, by flying off somewhere, resolved she +should like Redmon, and reside there. Accordingly, about a week after +Miss Henderson had gone to the cottage, he had gotten-up a picnic to +Redmon--a select picnic, with the military band and a platform for +dancing. + +The picnic day had dawned in cloudless splendor. Coquettish April, +finding she must yield in spite of all her tears and smiles to her +fairer sister, May, seemed resolved to put up with the inevitable with a +good grace; and the day was more like sunny June than early spring. +Before ten in the morning the party were on the grounds, swinging among +the trees, dancing on the shaded platform, wandering among the grand +old woods, or fishing in the clear streams running through them. The +string band, perched up in a gallery, played away merrily; and what with +sunshine and music, and gay laughter and bright faces, Redmon was a very +different-looking place from the Redmon of a few weeks before. Miss +Henderson had driven Laura Blair up in a little pony-carriage she had +purchased, and owned that Redmon was not so lifeless after all. But she +did not enter into the spirit of the thing with any great zest. Laura +whispered it was one of her "dark days" to those who noticed the silent, +abstracted, almost gloomy manner of the heiress. She danced very little, +and had walked moodily through the quadrille, chafing at its length, and +then had broken from her partner, and gone wandering off among the +trees. Laura Blair made up in herself for all that was wanting in her +friend. She was everywhere at once; now flying through a crazy cotillon; +now on the swings, flashing in and out among the trees; now +superintending the unpacking, and assisting Mrs. Hill and Catty Clowrie +to set the table. The cloth was laid on the grass; the cold hams and +fowls; the hot tea and coffee; the pies, and cakes, and sandwiches; the +hungry picnickers called, and great and mighty was the eating thereof. + +After dinner, the house was to be explored, the sight of ghosts, Mr. +Darcy considered, being unfavorable to digestion. Some weak-minded +persons declined with a shiver; they had no desire for cold horrors +then, or the nightmare when they went to bed; and among the number was +Captain Cavendish. He had no fancy for exploring ratty old buildings, he +said; he would lie on the grass, and smoke his cigar while they were +doing the house. Did any thought of unfortunate Nathalie Marsh obtrude +itself upon the selfish Sybarite as he lay there, smoking his cigar, on +the fresh spring grass, and looking up through the leafy arcades at the +serene April sky? Did any thought of the old days, and she who had loved +him so true and so well, darken for one moment that hard, handsome +mask--his face? Did any more terrible recollection of a ghostly midnight +scene that old house had witnessed, come back, terribly menacing? Who +can tell? The past is haunted for the whole of us; but we banish the +specter as speedily as possible, and no doubt Captain Cavendish did the +same. + +Miss Henderson, of course, was one of the party, leaning on Mr. Darcy's +arm; but her face was very pale, and her great eyes filled with a sort +of nameless fear, as she crossed its gloomy portal. Laura Blair clung +tightly, with little delightful shudders of apprehension, to the arm of +Mr. Val Blake, who took it all unconcernedly, as usual, and didn't put +himself out any to reassure Miss Blair. The house had a damp and earthy +odor, as of the grave; and their footsteps echoed with a dull, dismal +sound, as footsteps always do in a deserted house. Dark, dreary, and +forlorn, it looked, indeed, a haunted house, and every voice was silent +in awe; the gayest laugh hushed; the most fearless feeling a cold chill +creeping over him. Rats ran across their path; black beetles swarmed +everywhere; the walls were slimy, and fat bloated spiders swung from +vast cobwebs wherever they went. It was all dismal, but in the chamber +of the tragedy most dismal of all. They hurried out of it almost before +they had entered it, and went into the next room, the room that had been +Nathalie's. In the darkness, something caught Val Blake's eye in one +corner, he picked it up. It was "Paul and Virginia," bound in blue and +gold; and on the title-page was written, in a man's hand: "To Nathalie, +from hers in life and death--G. P. C." The book passed from hand to +hand. No one spoke, but all knew those initials, and all wondered what +the heiress thought of it. That young lady had not spoken one word since +they had entered the house, and her face was as white as the dress she +wore. But they had seen enough now, and they hurried out, heartily +thankful when the front door boomed slowly behind them, and they were in +the sunshine and fresh air once more. Every tongue was at once unloosed, +and ran with a vengeance, as if to make up for lost time. Captain +Cavendish started from the grass, flung away his cigar, and approached. + +"Well, ladies--well, Miss Laura," he asked, "have you seen the ghost?" + +"Yes," said Laura, gravely. "Here is a ghost we found in Nathalie's +room. I presume you have the best right to it!" + +She handed him the book before them all, and every eye was turned upon +him as he glanced at the title-page. His face changed, in spite of all +his self-control, turning nearly as colorless as Miss Henderson's. + +"I believe I did give Miss Marsh this once," he said, trying to be at +his ease. "I suppose you gave the rats a rare fright! There's the music. +Miss McGregor, I believe I have this dance?" + +The band was playing the "Aline Polka," and no mortal feet could resist +that. All the girls were soon whirling about like teetotums, and the +elderly folks sat down for a game of euchre on the grass. Olive +Henderson, declining, coldly, a dozen eager aspirants for the honor of +her hand in the polka, strolled off unsociably herself, as she had done +before. They were too busy enjoying themselves to notice her absence at +first, and only one followed her. That one was poor Tom Oaks; and to +him, in her absence, the sun was without light, the world empty, since +the universe held but her. She did not hear him--she was leaning against +a tree, looking out with that darkly-brooding face of hers, over the +spreading fields and wood, sloping down to the sea, and all her own. +Looking out over that wide sea, with a dreary stare, that told plainly +all the wealth she had inherited, all the love and admiration she had +won, had not the power to make her happy. Her white dress fluttered in +the spring breeze; her shawl, of rich gold-colored crape, fell in loose, +graceful folds, like sunlight-drapery, around her, held together with +one little brown hand. Her head was bare, and the shining profusion of +thick black hair was twisted in great serpent-like coils around her +head. She looked more sultana-like than ever, holding that mass of +glowing golden drapery around her, a woman to command a kingdom, not to +be wooed for a household-angel; but that poor Tom Oaks was down on the +grass at her feet, before she knew he was near, imploring her to take +pity upon him. Heaven only knows what he said--Tom never did; but he was +pouring out his whole heart in a vehement outburst of passionate +pleading. The man had chosen an unpropitious moment. + +"Get up, Mr. Oaks," the cold sweet voice said; "don't make such a scene! +Hush! some one will hear you." + +She might as well have told a rushing waterfall to hush. Tom got up, +pleading vehemently, passionately, wildly, for what seemed to him--poor, +foolish fellow!--more than life. + +"No, no, no!" she said, impatiently; "go away, Mr. Oaks. It is of no +use." + +It seemed like the old parable of asking for bread and receiving a +stone. Tom Oaks turned away, but something in his despairing face +touched her woman's heart. She laid her hand lightly on his arm, and +looked compassionately into his white face. + +"I am sorry," she said, in a voice that faltered a little, "I am sorry! +I did not think you cared for me like this, but I cannot help you! You +must forget me, Mr. Oaks!" + +There was one other witness to this little love-passage besides the +birds, singing their songs, in the green branches. Captain Cavendish had +seen Tom Oaks follow Olive Henderson off the grounds, and knew, by the +prescience of jealousy, as well what was going to happen, as he did +after the scene was over. He had followed the young man, and, in the +tangled green heart of the wood, had heard every word, and watched the +white and amber figure flit out of sight. He leaned against a tree now, +almost as pale as Tom Oaks had been. But if she should refuse him, too! +It was the first time in his life he had ever asked himself that +question; and he had made love, and offered marriage even, to more than +Winnifred Rose and Nathalie Marsh. What if she should refuse him like +this? Pride, love, ambition, all were at stake with Captain Cavendish +now, and what if he should lose her? He set his breath and clenched his +hand at the thought. + +"I will not lose her!" he said to himself. "I will not! I should go as +mad as that idiot on the grass there is, if I lost that glorious girl!" + +He might have gone after her, and proposed on the spot, had he not +possessed so fully that sixth sense, tact. Like the lady immortalized in +the Irish poem of "Paddy, Would You Now," she must be taken when she was +"in the humor," and that most decidedly was not to-day. So he strolled +back to the rest, and had the satisfaction of seeing her waltzing with +his superior officer, Major Marwood, who was unmarried, and rich, and +one of her most obedient very humble servants. + +The picnic was to wind up with what Mr. Blake called a "danceable tea," +at Mr. Darcy's, whither they all drove, in the pleasant April twilight, +and the handsome captain enjoyed the privilege of sitting beside the +heiress in the pony carriage, to the great envy of every one else. They +drove very slowly, watching the moon rise in a long glory of silvery +radiance over the sleeping sea, while he told her of Italian moon-rises, +and Alpine sunsets, he had gazed upon; and she listened, lying back with +half-vailed eyes, and a longing sensation of pleasure in it all at her +heart. Was she in love with Captain Cavendish? No; but she liked him +best of all her admirers; and there were few women who would not have +listened with pleased interest to those vivid word-pictures of far-off +lands, and looked with admiration, at least, into that pale, high-bred, +classically handsome face. + +Captain Cavendish retained his advantage all that evening, and left +competitors far behind. He sang duets with Miss Henderson, danced with +her, took her in to supper, and folded the shawl around her when they +were going home. She might be the veriest iceberg to-morrow, the +haughtiest and most imperious Cleopatra; but she was gentle, and +graceful, and all feminine sweetness to-night. His hopes were high, his +heart all in a glow of thrilling ecstasy, as he went home, under the +serene stars. The cup of bliss was almost at his lips, and the many +slips were quite forgotten. + +The afternoon following the picnic, Olive sat in her cottage +drawing-room entertaining some callers. The callers were Major Marwood, +Lieutenant Blank, and Captain Cavendish. Mrs. Darcy, who was spending +the day with her, sat at a window crotcheting, and playing propriety, +with Mrs. Hill and Mrs. Hill's niece, Miss Clowrie. Somehow this young +lady was very fond of dropping in to see her aunt, and staying for +dinner, and often all night. The heiress sat at the piano, playing some +exquisite "song without words," when a servant entered and ushered in +Miss Blair. The officers, who had been there some time, took their +departure, and Laura burst out into thanksgiving. + +"Now, thank goodness! they're gone. Run up and get your hat, Olly, and +come down to see the boat come in." + +"I don't care about seeing the boat come in," said the heiress, lazily, +lying back in a fauteuil. "I feel comfortable where I am." + +"But you must come, I tell you!" cried Laura, "there's a lot of +delegates coming from somewhere, about something, and everybody will be +there, and I want to see them." + +Miss Henderson laughed at this lucid explanation. + +"I shan't go," she said. + +Miss Blair changed from the imperative mood to the potential, exhorting, +entreating. + +"Now, Olly, don't be hateful, but go and put your things on, like a +darling. I am just dying to go, and I can't go without you, so do come, +there's a dear!" + +"But don't you see I have company," laughed Olive; "I can't be rude; I +can't leave them." + +"Nonsense, Olive, my love," cut in Mrs. Darcy; "you don't call Catty and +I strangers, I hope. Go down to the wharf; the sea-breeze will sharpen +your appetite for dinner." + +"A very romantic reason, certainly," said Olive, sauntering out of the +room, however. "You had better come too, Miss Clowrie." + +This was said for politeness' sake, for the attorney's daughter was no +favorite with the heiress. Catty, only too glad to be seen in public +with Miss Henderson, accepted at once, and went up to dress. + +"Is it true, Laura," asked Mrs. Darcy, "that Miss Rose came back last +night?" + +"Yes," said Laura, "she called this morning, and I was so glad to see +her. She looks extremely well. England must have agreed with her." + +"Where is she stopping? I should like to see her." + +"At ---- House, with Mrs. and Major Wheatly. She told me she would be at +the boat this afternoon, when she would see all the old faces, if +Speckport had not changed greatly in her absence." + +"Tell her to call and see me," said Mrs. Darcy; "I always liked Miss +Rose. I think she has the sweetest face I ever saw." + +"Now, then, Laura," exclaimed Olive, appearing at the door with Catty, +"I am ready, and I hear the steamer blowing." + +The three young ladies walked down to the wharf, which, as usual, was +crowded. One of the first persons they met was Val Blake, watching the +passengers, who were beginning to come up the floats, running the +gauntlet of all eyes. He was telling them something about Tom Oaks, who +had started off up the country, when he stopped in the middle of what he +was saying with a sort of shout of astonishment, and stared at a +gentleman coming up the floats, with a valise in one hand, and an +overcoat across his arm. + +"Now, of all the people coming and going on the face of the earth," +cried out Mr. Blake, in his amazement, "whatever has sent Paul Wyndham +to Speckport?" + +The next instant he was off, flinging the crowd right and left out of +his way, and arresting the traveler with a sledge-hammer tap on the +shoulder. The girls laughingly watched him, as he shook the stranger's +hand as vigorously as if he meant to wrench it off, crying out in a +voice that everybody heard: "Why, Wyndham, old fellow! what the deuce +drove you here?" + +Mr. Wyndham smiled quietly at his impetuous friend, and walked away with +him to a cab, which they both entered, and Olive Henderson, still +laughing at Mr. Blake, looked carelessly after them, and never dreamed +that she had met her fate. No; who ever does dream it, when they meet +that fate first! + +So Paul Wyndham passed Olive Henderson, and the curtain of the future +shrouded the web of life destiny was weaving. She forgot him as soon as +seen, and turned to Laura, who was speaking animatedly. + +"Look, Olly! there's the Miss Rose you have heard me speaking of so +often--that little girl with the black silk dress and mantle, and black +straw hat, talking to Miss Blake. Look! hasn't she the sweetest face! +I'll call her over." + +The crowd of men, women and children, thronging the wharf and floats, +were strangely startled a moment after, and every eye turned in one +direction. There had been a long, wild, woman's shriek, and some one had +reeled and fallen to the ground like a log. There was a rushing and +swaying, and startled talking among the people; and Dr. Leach, coming +along, took the Rev. Augustus Tod by the button, and wanted to know what +was the matter. + +"Miss Olive Henderson had fainted," the Rev. Augustus said, with a +startled face. "She had been standing on the wharf, apparently quite +well, only a second before, when she had suddenly screamed out and +fallen down in a fainting-fit. It was really quite shocking." + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +THE DOUBLE COMPACT. + + +Olive Henderson lay on a sofa in her bedroom, her face half buried among +the pillows, her cloud of tar-black hair all loose and disordered, +falling about her, and still wearing the out-door dress of yesterday. +Bright streaks of crimson glory, in the dull dawn sky, heralded the +rising of another sun, of another day to the restless, feverish little +planet below. Dressed in that uncomfortable attire for repose, Olive +Henderson, while the red morning broke, lay there and slept. Stuff! It +was more stupor than sleep, and she had only sank into it half an hour +before, from sheer physical exhaustion. Those in the cottage had been +disturbed all night long, by the sound of restless footsteps pacing up +and down the chamber where she now lay, up and down, up and down, +ceaselessly, the livelong night. When they had lifted her up, and +carried her home in that death-faint, and Dr. Leach had brought her to, +her first act had been to turn every soul of them out of her room, Laura +Blair included, to lock the door, and remain there alone by herself, +ever since. Everybody wondered; Catty Clowrie, most of all, and +tender-hearted Laura cried. That sympathizing confidante had gone to the +locked door, and humbly and lovingly entreated "Olly" to let her in; but +Olly turned a deaf ear to all her entreaties, and never even +condescended to reply. Mrs. Hill felt deeply on the subject of +refreshments--if her young lady would but partake of some weak tea and +dry toast, or even water-gruel, and go to bed comfortable, and sleep it +off, she would be all right to-morrow; but to shut herself up, and her +friends out, was enough to give her her death. Catty Clowrie said very +little, but she thought a good deal. She had remained all night at the +cottage, and had listened to that troubled footstep, and had mused +darkly, instead of sleeping. At day-dawn the restless pacing had ceased, +and Olive Henderson lay sleeping, a deep, stupor-like sleep. Her face, +lying among the pillows, contrasting with her black hair, looked ghastly +white in the pale dawn, and her brows were drawn, and her position +strangely wretched and unnatural. + +Mrs. Hill came to the door several times and tried to get in, but in +vain. Her feeble knocks failed to awake her young mistress from that +deep sleep, and the sun was high in the purple arch outside, before the +dark eyes slowly opened to this mortal life again. She sat up feeling +stiff, and cold, and cramped, and unrefreshed, and put the black cloud +of hair away from her face, while memory stepped back to its post. With +something like a groan she dropped her face once more among the pillows, +but this time not to sleep. She lay so still for nearly half an hour, +that not a hair of her head moved, thinking, thinking, thinking. A +terrible fear came upon her, a horrible danger threatened her, but she +was not one easily to yield to despair. She would battle with the rising +tide, battle fiercely to the last, and if the black waves engulfed her +at the end, she would die waging war against relentless doom, to the +close. + +Olive Henderson rose up, twisted her disordered tresses away from her +face, searched for her ink and paper, and sat down to a little rosewood +desk, to write. It was very short, the note she rapidly scrawled, but +the whole passionate heart of the girl was in it. + + "For God's sake come to me!" (this abrupt note began) "every second + is an age of agony till I see you. I thought you were dead--as + Heaven is my witness, I did, or I should never have come here! By + the memory of all the happy days we have spent together, by the + memory of your dead father, I conjure you be silent, and come to me + at once! + + "H." + +The note had neither date, address, nor signature, save that one capital +letter, but when it was folded and in the envelope, she wrote the +address:--"Miss W. Rose, ---- House, Queen Street, Speckport." + +Then, rising, she exchanged the crumpled robe in which she had slept for +one of plain black silk, hastily thrust her hair loose into a chenille +net, put on a long black silk mantle, a bonnet and thick brown vail, +placed the letter in her pocket, and went down stairs. There was no +possibility of leaving the house unseen; Mrs. Hill heard her opening the +front door and came out of the dining-room. Her eyes opened like full +moons at the sight of the street costume, and the young lady's white, +resolute face. + +"My patience, Miss Olive, you're never going out?" + +"Yes," Miss Henderson said, constraining herself to speak quietly. "My +head aches, and I think a walk in the air will do it good. I will be +back directly." + +"But, do take something before you go. Some tea, now, and a little bit +of toast." + +"No, no! not any, thank you, until I come back." + +She was gone even while she spoke; the thick vail drawn over her face, +her parasol up, screening her effectually. Catty Clowrie, watching her +from the window, would have given considerable to follow her, and see +where she went. She had little faith in that walk being taken for the +sake of walking; some covert meaning lay hidden beneath. + +"I declare to you, Catty," exclaimed Mrs. Hill, coming back, "she gave +me quite a turn! She was as white as a ghost, and those big black eyes +of hers looked bigger and blacker than ever. She is turning bilious, +that's what she's doing." + +Miss Henderson walked to Queen Street by the most retired streets, and +passed before the hotel, where Major and Mrs. Wheatly boarded. She had +some idea of putting the letter in the post-office when she started, but +in that case Miss Rose would not receive it until evening, and how could +she wait all that time, eating out her heart with mad impatience? There +was a man standing in the doorway of the ladies' entrance, a waiter, and +quite alone. With her vail closely drawn over her face, Miss Henderson +approached him, speaking in a low voice: + +"There is a young lady--a governess, called Miss Rose, stopping here--is +there not?" + +"Yes, ma'am." + +"Is she in now?" + +"Yes'm." + +"Will you please give her this letter! give it into her own hand, and at +once!" + +She gave him the letter, and a fee that made him stare, and was gone. +The man did not know her, and Olive reached home without once meeting +any one who recognized her. + +Miss Catty Clowrie did not leave the cottage all that day. She was +sewing for Mrs. Hill; and, seated at the dining-room window, she +watched Miss Henderson furtively, but incessantly, under her white +eyelashes. That young lady seemed possessed of the very spirit of +restlessness, since her return from her walk. It had not done her much +good, apparently, for it had neither brought back color nor appetite; +and she wandered from room to room, and up-stairs and down-stairs, with +a miserable feverish restlessness, that made one fidgety to look at her. +And all the time in her dark colorless face there was only one +expression, one of passionate, impatient waiting. Waiting, waiting, +waiting! For what? Catty Clowrie's greenish-gray eyes read the look +aright, but for what was she waiting? + +"I'll find it out, yet," Miss Clowrie said, inwardly. "She is a very +fine lady, this Miss Olive Henderson, but there is an old adage about +'All that glitters is not gold.' I'll wait and see." + +There were a great many callers in the course of the morning, but Miss +Henderson was too indisposed to see any of them. Even Miss Blair was +sent away with this answer, when she came; but Miss Henderson had left +word, Mrs. Hill said, that she would be glad to see Miss Laura +to-morrow. Miss Henderson herself, walking up and down the drawing-room, +heard the message given, and the door closed on her friend, and then +turned to go up-stairs. She stopped to say a word to her housekeeper as +she did so. + +"There is a person to call to-day, Mrs. Hill," she said, not looking at +the pilot's widow, "and you may send her up to my room when she comes. +It is Miss Rose, Mrs. Major Wheatly's governess!" + +Her foot was on the carpeted stair as she said this, and she ran up +without giving her housekeeper time to reply. Catty Clowrie, +industriously sewing away, listened, and compressed her thin lips. + +"Miss Rose coming to see her, and admitted to a private interview, when +every one else is excluded! Um--m--m! That is rather odd; and Miss Rose +is a stranger to her--or is supposed to be! I wonder why she fainted at +sight of Miss Rose, on the wharf, yesterday, and why Miss Rose's face +turned to pale amazement at sight of her. She did not ask any questions, +I noticed; but Miss Rose was always discreet; and no one observed her +but myself, in the hubbub. There is something odd about all this!" + +She threaded her needle afresh, and went on with her sewing, with the +patient perseverance of all such phlegmatic mortals. Mrs. Hill came in, +wondering what Miss Henderson could possibly want of Miss Rose, but her +niece could throw no light on the subject. + +"Perhaps she wants a companion," Miss Clowrie remarked; "fine ladies +like Miss Henderson are full of freaks, and perhaps she wants some one +to play and sing and read to her, when she feels too lazy to do it +herself." + +Catty Clowrie had read a good many novels in her life, full of all sorts +of mysteries, and secret crimes, and wicked concealments, and +conspiracies--very romantic and unlike every-day life--but still liable +to happen. She had never had the faintest shadow of romance, to cover +rosily her own drab-hued life--no secret or mystery of any sort to +happen to herself, or any of the people among whom she mingled. The most +romantic thing that had ever occurred within her personal knowledge was +the fact of this new heiress, this Olive Henderson, rising from the +offal of New York, from the most abject poverty, to sudden and great +wealth. + +Miss Clowrie sat until three o'clock, sewing at the dining-room window. +Luncheon-hour was two, but Miss Henderson would not descend, and asked +to have a cup of strong tea sent up, so Mrs. Hill and her niece partook +of that repast alone. As the clock was striking three, a young lady, +dressed in half-mourning, came down the street and rang the door-bell; +and Catty, dropping her work, ran to open it, and embrace with effusion +the visitor. She had not spoken to Miss Rose before since her return, +and kissed her now, as though she were really glad to see her. + +"I am so glad you are back again, dear Miss Rose!" the young lady cried, +holding both Miss Rose's hands in hers; "you cannot think how much we +have all missed you since you went away!" + +Now, it was rather unfortunate for Miss Clowrie, but nature, who will +always persist in being absurdly true to herself, had given an insincere +look to the thin, wide mouth, and a false glimmer to the greenish-gray +eyes, and a clammy, limp moistness to the cold hand, that made you feel +as if you had got hold of a dead fish, and wished to drop it again as +soon as possible. Miss Rose had taken an instinctive aversion to Miss +Clowrie the first time she had seen her, and had never been quite able +to get over it since, though she had conscientiously tried; but she +never betrayed it, and smiled now in her own gentle smile, and thanked +Miss Clowrie in her own sweet voice. She turned to Mrs. Hill, though, +when that lady appeared, with a far different feeling, and returned the +kiss that motherly old creature bestowed upon her. + +"It does my heart good to see you again, Miss Rose," the housekeeper +said. "I haven't forgotten all you did for me last year when poor, dear +Hill was lost, going after that horrid ship. You can't think how glad I +was when I heard you were come back." + +"Thank you, Mrs. Hill," the governess said. "It is worth while going +away for the sake of such a welcome back. Is Miss--" she hesitated a +moment, and then went on, with a sudden flush lighting her face; "is +Miss Henderson in?" + +"Yes, my dear; I will go and tell her you are here." + +The housekeeper went up-stairs, but reappeared almost immediately. + +"You are to go up-stairs, my dear," she said; "Miss Henderson is not +very well, and will see you in her own room." + +Miss Rose ascended the stairs, entered the chamber of the heiress, and +Catty heard the door closed and locked after her. As Mrs. Hill +re-entered the dining-room, she found her gathering up her work. + +"I left the yokes and wristbands in your room, aunt," she explained. "I +must go after them, and I'll just go up and finish this nightgown +there." + +There were four rooms up-stairs, with a hall running between each two. +The two on the left were occupied by Miss Henderson, one being her +bedroom, the other a bath-room. Mrs. Hill had the room opposite the +heiress, the other being used by Rosie, the chambermaid. + +Miss Clowrie (one hates to tell it, but what is to be done?) went +deliberately to Miss Henderson's door, and applied first her eye, then +her ear, to the key-hole. Applying her eye, she distinctly beheld Miss +Olive Henderson, the heiress of Redmon, the proudest woman she had ever +known, down upon her knees, before Miss Rose, the governess--the +ex-school-mistress; holding up her closed hands, in wild supplication, +her face like the face of a corpse, and all her black hair tumbled and +falling about her. + +To say that Miss Catty Clowrie was satisfied by this sight, would be +doing no sort of justice to the subject. The first words she caught were +not likely to lessen her astonishment--wild, strange words. + +"I thought you were dead! I thought you were dead!" in a passion of +consternation, that seemed to blot out every thought of prudence. "I +thought you were dead! As Heaven hears me, I thought you were dead, or I +never would have done it." + +Miss Rose was standing with her back to the door, and the eavesdropper +saw her trying to raise the heiress up. + +"Get up, Harriet," she distinctly heard her say, though she spoke in a +low voice; "I cannot bear to see you like this; and do not speak so +loud--some one may hear you." + +If they had only known of the pale listener at the door, hushing her +very heart-beating to hear the better. But Miss Henderson would not +rise; she only knelt there, white and wild, and holding up her clasped +hands. + +"I will never get up," she passionately cried. "I will never rise out of +this until you promise to keep my secret. It is not as a favor, it is as +a right I demand it! Your father robbed my mother and me. But for him I +would have never known poverty and misery--and God only knows the misery +that has been mine. But for him, I should never have known what it is to +suffer from cold and hunger, and misery and insult; but for him I would +have been rich to-day; but for him my mother might still be alive and +happy. He ruined us, and broke her heart, and I tell you it is only +justice I ask! I should never have come here had I not thought you dead; +but now that I have come, that wealth and comfort have been mine once +more, I will not go. I will not, I tell you! I will die before I yield, +and go back to that horrible life, and may my death rest forever on your +soul!" + +Catty Clowrie, crouching at the door, turned as cold as death, listening +to these dreadful words. Was she awake--was she dreaming? Was this Olive +Henderson--the proud, the beautiful, the queenly heiress--this mad +creature, uttering those passionate, despairing words. She could not see +into the room, her ear was at the keyhole--strained to a tension that +was painful, so absorbed was she in listening. But at this very instant +her strained hearing caught another sound--Rosie, the chambermaid, +coming along the lower hall, and up-stairs. Swift as a flash, Catty +Clowrie sprang up, and darted into her aunt's room. She did not dare to +close the door, lest the girl should hear her, and she set her teeth +with anger and suppressed fury at the disappointment. + +Rosie had come up to make her bed, and set her room to rights, and was +in no wise disposed to hurry over it. She sang at her work; but the +pale-faced attorney's daughter in the next room, furious with +disappointment, could have seen her choked at the moment with the +greatest pleasure. Half an hour passed--would the girl never go? +Yes--yes, there was Mrs. Hill, at the foot of the stairs, calling her, +and Rosie ran down. Quick as she had left it, Catty was back at her +post, airing her eye at the keyhole once more. + +The scene she beheld was not quite so tragic this time. The heiress and +the governess were seated opposite one another, an inlaid table between +them. There was paper and ink on the table; Miss Henderson held a pen in +her hand, as if about to write, and Miss Rose was speaking. Her voice +was sweet and low, as usual; but it had a firm cadence, that showed she +was gravely in earnest now. + +"You must write down these conditions, Harriet," she was saying, "to +make matters sure; but no one shall ever see the papers, and I pledge +you my solemn word, your secret shall be kept inviolable. Heaven knows +I have done all I could to atone for my dead father's acts, and I will +continue to do it to the end. He wronged your mother and you, I know, +and I am thankful it is in my power to do reparation. I ask nothing for +myself--but others have rights as well as you, Harriet, and as sacred. +Two hundred pounds will pay all the remaining debts of my father now. +You must give me that. And you must write down there a promise to pay +Mrs. Marsh one hundred pounds a year annuity, as long as she lives. Her +daughter should have had it all, Harriet, and neither you nor I; and the +least you can do, in justice, is to provide for her. You will do this?" + +"Yes--yes," Miss Henderson cried; "that is not much to do! I want to do +more. I want you to share with me, Olly." + +"No," said Miss Rose, "you may keep it all. I have as much as I want, +and I am very well contented. I have no desire for wealth. I should +hardly know what to do with it if I had possessed it." + +"But you will come and live with me," Miss Henderson said, in a voice +strangely subdued; "come and live with me, and let us share it together, +as sisters should." + +That detestable housemaid again! If Catty Clowrie had been a man, she +might have indulged in the manly relief of swearing, as she sprang up a +second time, and fled into Mrs. Hill's room. This time, Rosie was not +called away, and she sat for nearly an hour, singing, at her chamber +window, and mending her stockings. Catty Clowrie, on fire with impotent +fury, had to stay where she was. + +Staying there, she saw Miss Henderson's door opened at last; and, +peeping cautiously out, saw the two go down-stairs together. Miss Rose +looked as if she had been crying, and her face was very pale, but the +fierce crimson of excitement burned on the dark cheeks and flamed in the +black eyes of Miss Henderson. It was the heiress who let Miss Rose out, +and then she came back to her room, and resumed the old trick of walking +up and down, up and down, as on the preceding night. + +Catty wondered if she would never be tired. It was all true, then; and +there was a dark secret and mystery in Olive Henderson's life. "Olive!" +Was that her name, and if so, why had Miss Rose called her "Harriet." +And if the governess's name was Winnie, why did the heiress call her +"Olly?" + +Catty Clowrie sat thinking while the April day faded into misty +twilight, and the cold evening star glimmered down on the sea. She sat +there thinking while the sun went low, and dipped into the bay, and out +of sight. She sat thinking while the last little pink cloud of the +sunset paled to dull gray, and the round white moon came up, like a +shining shield. She sat there thinking till the dinner-bell rang, and +she remembered she was cold and hungry, and went slowly +down-stairs--still thinking. + +To her surprise, for she had been too absorbed to hear her come out of +her room, Miss Henderson was there, beautifully dressed, and in high +spirits. She had such a passion for luxury and costly dress, this young +lady, that she would array herself in velvets and brocades, even though +there were none to admire her but her own servants. + +On this evening, she had dressed herself in white, with ornaments of +gold and coral in her black braids, broad gold bracelets on her superb +arms, and a cluster of scarlet flowers on her breast. She looked so +beautiful with that fire in her eyes, that flush on her cheek, that +brilliant smile lighting up her gypsy face, that Mrs. Hill and Catty +were absolutely dazzled. She laughed--a clear, ringing laugh--at Mrs. +Hill's profuse congratulations on her magical recovery. + +"You dear old Mrs. Hill!" she said, "when you are better used to mo, you +will cease to wonder at my eccentricities! It is a woman's privilege to +change her mind sixty times an hour, if she chooses--and I choose to +assert all the privileges of my sex!" + +She rose from the table as she spoke, still laughing, and went into the +drawing-room. The gas burned low, but she turned it up to its full +flare, and, opening the piano, rattled off a stormy polka. She twirled +round presently, and called out: + +"Mrs. Hill!" + +Mrs. Hill came in. + +"Tell Sam to go up to Miss Blair's, and fetch her here. Let him tell her +I feel quite well again, and want her to spend the evening, if she is +not engaged. He can take the gig, and tell him to make haste, Mrs. +Hill." + +Mrs. Hill departed on her errand, and Miss Henderson's jeweled fingers +were flying over the polished keys once more. Presently she twirled +around again, and called out: "Miss Clowrie." + +"I wish Laura would come!" Miss Henderson said, pulling out her watch, +"and I wish she would fetch a dozen people with her. I feel just in the +humor for a ball to-night." + +She talked to Catty Clowrie vivaciously, and to Mrs. Hill, because she +was just in the mood for talking, and rattled off brilliant sonatas +between whiles. But she was impatient for Laura's coming, and kept +jerking out her watch every five minutes, to look at the hour. + +Miss Blair made her appearance at last, and not alone. There was a +gentleman in the background, but Miss B. rushed with such a frantic +little scream of delight into the arms of her "dear, darling Olly," and +so hugged and kissed her, that, for the first moment or two, it was not +very easy to see who it was. Extricating herself, laughing and +breathless, from the gushing Miss Blair, Olive looked at her companion, +and saw the amused and handsome face of Captain Cavendish. + +"I hope I am not an intruder," that young officer said, coming forward, +"but being at Mr. Blair's when your message arrived, and hearing you +were well again, I could not forbear the pleasure of congratulating you. +The Princess of Speckport can be ill dispensed with by her adoring +subjects." + +Some one of Miss Henderson's innumerable admirers had dubbed her +"Princess of Speckport," and the title was not out of place. She laughed +at his gallant speech, and held out her hand with frank grace. + +"My friends are always welcome," she said, and here she was interrupted +by a postman's knock at the door. + +"Dear me! who can this be?" said Mrs. Hill, looking up over her +spectacles, as Rosie opened the door. + +It proved to be Mr. Val Blake. That gentleman being very busy all day, +had found no time to inquire for Miss Henderson, until after tea, when, +strolling out, with his pipe in his mouth, for his evening +constitutional, he had stepped around to ask Mrs. Hill. Miss Henderson +appeared in person to answer his friendly inquiries, and Mr. Blake came +in, nothing loth, and joined the party. + +Some one proposed cards, after a while; and Mr. Blake, and Miss Blair, +and Mrs. Hill, and Miss Clowrie, gathered round a pretty little +card-table, but Miss Henderson retained her seat at the piano, singing, +and playing operatic overtures. Captain Cavendish stood beside her, +turning over her music, and looking down into the sparkling, beautiful +face, with passionately loving eyes. For the spell of the sorceress +burdened him more this night than ever before, and the man's heart was +going in great plunges against his side. He almost fancied she must hear +its tumultuous beating, as she sat there in her beauty and her pride, +the red gold gleaming in her black braids and on her brown arms. It had +always been so easy before for him to say what was choking him now, and +he had said it often enough, goodness knows, for the lesson to be easy. +But there was this difference--he loved this black-eyed sultana; and the +fever called love makes a coward of the bravest of men. He feared what +he had never feared before--a rejection; and a rejection from her, even +the thought of one, nearly sent him mad. + +And all this while Miss Olive Henderson sat on her piano-stool, and sang +"Hear me, Norma," serenely unconscious of the storm going on in the +English officer's breast. He had heard that very song a thousand times +better sung, by Nathalie Marsh. Ah! poor forgotten Nathalie!--but he was +not listening to the singing. For him, the circling sphere seemed +momentarily standing still, and the business of life suspended. He was +perfectly white in his agitation, and the hand that turned the leaves +shook. His time had come. The card-party were too much absorbed in +scoring their points to heed them, and now, or never, he must know his +fate. What he said he never afterward knew--but Miss Henderson looked +strangely startled by his white face and half incoherent sentences. The +magical words were spoken; but as the self-possessed George Cavendish +had never spoken thus before, and the supreme question, on which his +life's destiny hung, asked. + +The piano stood in a sort of recess, with a lace-draped window to the +right, looking out upon Golden Row. Miss Henderson sat, all the time he +was speaking, looking straight before her, out into the coldly moonlit +street. Not once did her color change--no tremor made the scarlet +flowers on her breast rise and fall--no flutter made the misty lace +about her tremble. She was only very grave, ominously grave, and the +man's heart turned sick with fear, as he watched her unchanging face and +the dark gravity of her eyes. She was a long time in replying--all the +while sitting there so very still, and looking steadfastly out at the +quiet street; not once at him. When she did reply, it was the strangest +answer he had ever received to such a declaration. The reply was another +question. + +"Captain Cavendish," she said, "I am an heiress, and you--pardon +me--have the name of a fortune-hunter. If I were penniless, as I was +before this wealth became mine--if by some accident I were to lose it +again--would you say to me what you have said now?" + +Would he? The answer was so vehement, so passionate, that the veriest +skeptic must have believed. His desperate earnestness was written in +every line of his agitated face. + +"I believe you," she said; "I believe you, Captain Cavendish. I think +you do love me; but I--I do not love you in return." + +He gave a sort of cry of despair, but she put up one hand to check him. + +"I do not love you," she steadily repeated, "and I have never loved any +one in this way. Perhaps it is not in me, and I do not care that it +should be: there is misery enough in the world, Heaven knows, without +that! I do not love you, Captain Cavendish, but I do not love any one +else. I esteem and respect you; more, I like you: and if you can be +content with this, I will be your wife. If you cannot, why, we will be +friends as before, and----" + +But he would not let her finish. He had caught her hand in his, and +broke out into a rhapsody of incoherent thanks and delight. + +"There, there!" she smilingly interposed, "that will do! Our friends at +the card-table will hear you. Of one thing you may be certain: I shall +be true to you until death. Your honor will be safe in my hands; and +this friendly liking may grow into a warmer feeling by-and-by. I am not +very romantic, Captain Cavendish, and you must not ask me for more than +I can give." + +But Captain Cavendish wanted no more. He was supremely blessed in what +he had received, and his handsome face was radiant. + +"My darling," he said, "I ask for no more! I shall think the devotion of +a whole life too little to repay you for this." + +"Very well," said Miss Henderson, rising; "and now, after that pretty +speech, I think we had better join our friends, or my duty as hostess +will be sadly neglected." + +She stood behind Miss Laura Blair for the rest of the evening, watching +the fluctuations of the game, and with no shadow of change in her +laughing face. She stood there until the little party broke up, which +was some time after ten, when Mr. Blair called around for Laura himself. +Miss Laura was not to say over and above obliged to her pa for this act +of paternal affection--since she would have infinitely preferred the +escort of Mr. Blake. That gentleman hooked his arm within that of +Captain Cavendish, and bade Miss Blair good-night, with seraphic +indifference. + +Miss Henderson's bedroom windows commanded an eastward view of the bay, +and when she went up to her room that night, she sat for a long time +gazing out over the shining track the full moon made for herself on the +tranquil sea. "Gaspereaux month" had come around again, and the whole +bay was dotted over with busy boats. She could see the fishermen +casting their nets, now in the shadow, now in the glittering moonlight, +and the peaceful beauty of the April night filled her heart with a deep, +sweet sense of happiness. Perhaps it was the first time since her +arrival in Speckport she had been really happy--a vague dread and +uncertainty had hung over her, like that fabled sword, suspended by a +single hair, and ready to fall at any moment. But the fear was gone, she +was safe now--her inheritance was secure, and she was the promised wife +of an honorable gentleman. Some day, perhaps, he might be a baronet, and +she "my lady," and her ambitious heart throbbed faster at the thought. +She sat there, dreaming and feeling very happy, thinking of the double +compact ratified that most eventful day, but she never once thanked +God--never gave one thought to him to whom she owed it all. She sat +there far into the night, thinking, and when she laid her head on the +pillow and fell asleep, it was to act it all over in dreamland again. + +Some one else lay awake a long time that night, thinking, too. Miss +Clowrie, in the opposite chamber, did not sit up by the window; Mrs. +Hill would, no doubt, not have permitted it, and Miss Clowrie was a +great deal too sensible a person to run the risk of catching cold. But, +though she lay with her eyes shut she was not asleep, and Olive +Henderson might not have dreamed quite such happy dreams had she known +how dark and ominous were the thoughts the attorney's pale daughter was +thinking. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +MR. PAUL WYNDHAM. + + +On the morning after the day fraught with so many events to the heiress +of Redmon, the mother of the late heiress sat in the sitting-room of her +pleasant seaside home, reading a novel. The firelight shone on her +mourning-dress, but the inward mourning was not very profound. She had +cried a good deal at first for the loss of her son and daughter; she +cried sometimes still when people talked to her about them; but she +cried quite as much over the woes of her pet heroes and heroines, bound +in paper and cloth, and slept just as soundly, and took her meals with +as good a relish as ever she had done in her life. Mrs. Marsh was not +greatly given to borrowed trouble; she took the goods the gods provided, +and let to-morrow take care of itself, so long as she had enough for +to-day. Mr. Val Blake paid the butcher's, and baker's, and grocer's +bills quarterly; settled with Betsy Ann, and Miss Jo saw that she was +well dressed; and Mrs. Marsh took all as a matter of course, and I don't +think even once thanked Mr. Blake for his kindness. + +On this sunny spring morning Mrs. Marsh sat comfortably reading, so +absorbed in her book as to be out of the reach of all mundane affairs. +The book had a bright yellow cover, with a striking engraving of one man +grasping another by the throat, and presenting a pistol at his head, and +was called the "Red Robber of the Rocky Mountains"--a sequel to the +"Black Brigand,"--when, just in the middle of a most thrilling chapter, +Mrs. Marsh was disturbed by a knock at the front door. Betsy Ann +answered the summons, and stood transfixed at the shining apparition she +beheld. A beautiful young lady, with big black eyes, that shone on Betsy +Ann like two black diamonds, arrayed in rustling silk, and a rich +creamy crape shawl, with a bonnet fine enough for the queen of England, +stood before her, asking, in a silvery voice, if Mrs. Marsh were at +home. Standing before the door was a small open carriage, drawn by two +milk-white ponies; and Miss Laura Blair sat within, nodding pleasantly +to her, Betsy Ann, and holding the reins. The girl, quite dazzled by the +splendor of this early visitor, ushered the radiant vision into the room +where her mistress sat, and Mrs. Marsh arose with an exclamation of +surprise she could not repress. They had met a few times before at the +houses of mutual friends, but this was the young lady's first call. + +"Miss Henderson," Mrs. Marsh stammered, utterly at a loss what to +say--"I am sure I am very glad to see you; I have not had many visitors +of late." + +Tears rose to her eyes as she spoke, with the thoughts of the pleasant +days gone by, when the friends of Nathalie and Charley, the friends of +their prosperity, had made the cottage more gay with laughter and music. +Miss Henderson was not looking at her, but into the red coal-fire. + +"I have come on a little matter of business, Mrs. Marsh," she said. "I +have come to fulfill a duty I owe to you. I know the story of the past, +and, I am afraid, you must feel in some degree as if I had taken from +you what should have been yours. Your--your daughter had no doubt a +prior claim to what I now possess, and common justice requires you +should not be defrauded. I am aware of Mr. Blake's great generosity, but +the duty--and, I assure you, it is a pleasure to me--lies with me, not +with him. I have, therefore, settled upon you, for life, an annuity of +one hundred pounds per annum, which will be paid to you at my banker's, +monthly or quarterly, as you may prefer. It was to say this I came so +early this morning, but, if you will permit me, this visit shall be but +the forerunner of many others." + +She was standing up as she finished, with a look of intense relief at +having accomplished her task, and Mrs. Marsh altogether too dazed and +bewildered to utter a word. + +"And I shall be very, very happy, my dear Mrs. Marsh," the heiress said, +bending over her, and taking her hand, "if you will sometimes come up +and see me. I have no mother, and I will look upon you as such, if you +will let me." + +Mrs. Marsh saw her go, feeling as though she were in a dream, or acting +a chapter out of one of her own romances. + +Miss Henderson took her place beside Laura in the pony carriage, and +they drove slowly along Cottage Street, looking at the broad blue bay, +sparkling in the sunshine, as if sown with stars. The beach, with its +warm, white sands, edged the sea like a silver streak; and the waves +sang their old music, as they crept up on its breast. + +"How beautiful it all is!" the heiress cried, her dark face lighting up +as it always did at sight of the ocean. "Let us get out, Laura; I could +stay here listening to those sailors singing forever." + +There were some idle boys at play on an old wharf, overgrown with moss +and slimy seaweed, its tarry planks rotting in the sun. + +Miss Henderson dropped a bright silver shilling into the dirty palm of +one, and asked him to hold the ponies for ten minutes; and the two girls +walked along the decaying and deserted old wharf together. + +"My solemn Laura!" the heiress said, looking at her friend's grave face; +"what a doleful countenance you wear! Of what are you thinking?" + +"I am thinking of poor Nathalie Marsh," Laura answered; "it was on this +very wharf she met her death, that wild, windy night. I have never been +near the place since." + +It is a remarkable trait of these swarthy faces that emotion does not +pale them as it does their blonde neighbors--they darken. Miss +Henderson's face darkened now--it always seemed to do so when the name +of the dead girl was mentioned. She turned away from her friend, and +stood staring moodily out to sea, until an exclamation from that young +lady caused her to turn round and perceive that either the sea-wind or +some other cause had very perceptibly heightened Miss Blair's color. + +"I declare if that's not Val," Laura cried, "and that strange gentleman +with him that came from New York the other day. There! they see us, and +are coming here." + +Miss Henderson looked indifferently as Mr. Blake and his friend +approached. Val introduced his companion to the ladies as Mr. Paul +Wyndham, of New York, and that gentleman was received graciously by Miss +Blair, and coldly, not to say haughtily, by Miss Henderson. + +The heiress did not like people from New York. She never talked about +that city, if she could help it, and rather avoided all persons coming +from it. She stood, looking vacantly out at the wide sea, and listening +to the sailors' song, taking very little part in the conversation. She +turned round, when the singing ceased, in the direction of her carriage, +with a listless yawn she was at little trouble to suppress, and a bored +look she took no pains to conceal. The gentlemen saw them safely off, +and then loitered back to the old wharf. + +"Well, Wyndham," Val asked, "and what do you think of the Princess of +Speckport?" + +Mr. Paul Wyndham did not immediately reply. He was leaning lazily +against a rotten beam, lighting a cigar, for he was an inveterate +smoker. + +Mr. Wyndham was not handsome, he was not dashing--he had neither +mustache nor whisker, nor an aquiline nose; and he could not dance or +sing, or do anything else like any other young Christian gentleman. He +was very slight and boyish of figure, with a pale, student-like face, a +high forehead, deep-set eyes, a characteristic nose, and a thin and +somewhat cynical mouth. There was character in everything about him, +even in the mathematical precision of his dress, faultlessly neat in the +smallest particular, and scrupulously simple. He looked like a gentleman +and a student, and he was both. More, he was an author, a Bohemian, with +a well-earned literary fame, at the age of seven-and-twenty. When he +was a lad of seventeen he had started with his "knapsack on his back," +containing a clean shirt, and a quire of foolscap, and had traveled +through Europe and Asia, and had written two charming books of travel, +that filled his pockets with dollars, and established his fame as an +author. Since then he had written some half-dozen delightful novels, +over which Laura Blair herself had cried and laughed alternately, +although she did not know now that Mr. Wyndham and ---- ---- were one +and the same. He had written plays that had run fifty nights at a time, +and his sketches were the chief charm of one or two of the best American +magazines. He was a poet, an author, a dramatist, sometimes an actor, +when he took the notion, and a successful man in all. He looked as those +inspired men who chain us with their wonderful word-painting should +look, albeit I reiterate he was not handsome. He stood now leaning +against the rotten beam, smoking his cigar, and looking dreamily over +the shining sea, while Mr. Blake repeated his question. + +"I say, Wyndham, how do you like her--the beauty, the belle, the +Princess of Speckport?" + +"She is a fine-looking girl," Mr. Wyndham quietly replied. "And those +big black eyes of hers are very handsome, indeed. It strikes me I should +like to marry that girl!" + +"Yes," said Mr. Blake, composedly, "I dare say. I know several other +gentlemen in Speckport who would like to do the same thing, only they +can't, unfortunately." + +"Can't they? Why?" + +"Because there is an absurd law against bigamy in this province, and the +young lady has promised to marry one man already." + +"Ah! who is he?" + +"Captain Cavendish. You met him yesterday, you remember. He proposed the +other night at the house, and told me about it coming home. She accepted +him; but the affair has not yet been made public, by the lady's express +desire." + +Mr. Wyndham took out his cigar, knocked off the ashes with the end of +his little finger, and replaced it. + +"Captain Cavendish is a lucky fellow," he said. "But yet I don't +despair. Until the wedding-ring actually slips over the lady's finger, +there is room for hope." + +"But, my dear fellow, she is engaged." + +"_C'est bien!_ There is many a slip. I don't believe she will ever be +Mrs. Cavendish." + +Mr. Blake stared at his friend; but that gentleman looked the very +picture of calm composure. + +"My dear Wyndham," Mr. Blake remarked, compassionately, "you are simply +talking nonsense. I know you are very clever, and famous, and all that +sort of thing, and brain is excellent in its way; but I tell you it has +no chance against beauty." + +"By which you would imply, I stand no chance against Captain Cavendish. +Now, if you'll believe me, I am not so sure of that. I generally manage +to accomplish whatever I set my heart upon; and I don't think--I really +don't, old boy--that I shall fail in this. Besides, if it does come to +beauty, I am not such a bad-looking fellow, in the main." + +To say that Mr. Blake stared after hearing this speech would be but a +feeble description of the open-mouthed-and-eyed gape with which he +favored its deliverer. To do Mr. Wyndham justice, he was that phenomenon +not often seen--a modest author. He never bored his enemy about "My last +book, sir!" he never alluded to his literary labors at all, unless +directly spoken to on the subject; and certainly had never before +displayed any vanity. Therefore, Mr. Blake stared, not quite decided +whether he had heard aright; and Mr. Wyndham, seeing the look, did what +he did not often do, burst out laughing. + +"My dear old Val," he cried, slapping him on the shoulder, "I have not +lost my senses; so there is no need of that look. I should like to have +a tall wife--small men always do, you know--with black eyes and two +hundred thousand dollars; and I shall enter the lists with this +fascinating Captain Cavendish, and bear off the prize if I can, in spite +of his sword, and uniform, and handsome face. I think, on the whole, I +shall make the young lady quite as good a husband as he." + +"Well," said Mr. Blake, drawing a long breath, and appealing to the +deep, "for cool impudence and self-conceit, Paul Wyndham hasn't his +match in broad America. Here he comes from New York; and before he is a +week in the place he talks of marrying the richest and handsomest girl +it contains, as coolly as if he were Sultan of all Turkey, and she a +Circassian slave. Yes, Mr. Wyndham, ask her, by all means, and when you +get your _conge_, let me know--it will be one of the happiest days of my +life." + +"But I don't think I shall get my _conge_" persisted Paul Wyndham. "Do +you know if she is in love with this Captain Cavendish?" + +"I never asked her," responded Mr. Blake. "I leave that for Mr. Wyndham +to ascertain." + +"Because I don't think she is," went on his friend. "When she stood here +a few minutes ago, you and the other young lady, Miss--what's her +name?--were talking of the gallant captain, and she listened with a face +of perfect indifference. I was watching her, and I don't think she cares +about him." + +"I saw you watching her," said Val, "and so did she, and I don't think +she liked it. I saw those black brows of hers contract once or twice, +and that is an ominous sign with Miss Henderson." + +"Miss Henderson could fly into a dickens of a passion, too, if she +liked. Your black-eyed, black-haired, brown-skinned women raise the very +old diable herself, if you stroke them the wrong way. They are something +like big black cats. I tell you, Blake, I don't believe she cares about +that military popinjay, Cavendish." + +"Don't you," said Mr. Blake, with his hands in his pockets. "Of course, +if you say so it must be so." + +"No; but I really think so. Are his family anything in England?" + +"It is currently believed he is next heir to a baronetcy. But the +baronet got married in his old days, and there is a little shaver in +petticoats to cut Master George out. Still, he lives in hope. The new +baronet has the measles and the mumps, and the whooping-cough, and the +scarlatina, and the chicken-pox, and a tribe of other diseases, his +teeth included, to struggle through, before he reaches man's estate. +There is no telling but Cavendish may be a baronet yet." + +"That is it, then!" said Wyndham. "It is for his prospective baronetcy +the girl has promised to marry him. Pride and ambition, the two sins +that hurled Lucifer from heaven to hell, are strong in that woman." + +"Oh, come now," said Val, starting up, "I think we had better get out of +this, and drop the subject. It strikes me your language is rather +forcible, Mr. Wyndham; and there is no telling what you may work +yourself up to, if you keep on. It wouldn't be healthy for you, I'm +thinking, if Miss Henderson heard you." + +"Nevertheless," Paul Wyndham persisted, flinging away his smoked-out +weed, "I shall marry Miss Henderson." + +The two friends walked away together to the office in Queen Street--Mr. +Blake disdaining all reply to the last remark. + +On their way they met Captain Cavendish, mounted on his favorite bay, +and looking the very beau ideal of a military rider, slowly cantering +beside the pretty pony-carriage where the Princess of Speckport sat in +state. The contrast between the handsome officer on horseback and the +young author on foot was great; but Mr. Wyndham bowed to the soldier and +his fair friends with undisturbed placidity. + +"You see!" said Mr. Blake, significantly. + +"I see," serenely answered Mr. Wyndham; "and I repeat. I shall marry +Miss Olive Henderson!" + +There was nothing at all of boasting in the tone of Mr. Paul Wyndham in +saying this--simply one of deep, quiet determination. You had only to +look at his face--that pale, steadfast face--if you were any judge of +physiognomy, to perceive that his assurance to Mr. Blake, of seldom +failing in any undertaking, was no idle bravado. He was one of those men +of iron inflexibility, of invincible daring, of over mastering strength +of will, bending all other wills to their own. Men of the Napoleon +Bonaparte stamp, made to sway empires, and move about other men, kings +and knights, queens and bishops, as they please, on the great chessboard +of life. Mr. Val Blake, knowing Paul Wyndham, had some dim perception of +this; but he knew, too, that Olive Henderson was no ordinary woman. He +had a strong will, and so had she; but it was only a woman's will after +all, and with it went womanly weakness, passion, and impulse, and the +calm, passionless man was the master-mind. + +"But I think she will baffle him here, after all," Mr. Blake said to +himself, as he ceased thinking about the matter. "I don't believe Olive +Henderson will ever marry Paul Wyndham, not but what he's a great deal +better fellow than Cavendish, after all!" + +It seemed as though he was right, for a whole week passed before Mr. +Wyndham and Miss Henderson met again. The engagement of the heiress with +Captain Cavendish, though not formally announced, was pretty generally +known; and it was rumored that the wedding was to take place early in +June. May had come in, draped in a sodden sheet of gray wet fog; but the +villa at Redmon went steadily up, despite of wind and weather. +Landscape-gardeners were turning the potato-patches and broad meadows +and turnip-fields into a little heaven below, and the place was to be +completed in July, when Mrs. Grundy said the happy pair would be +returning from their bridal-tour, and take up their abode therein. + +Mr. Paul Wyndham heard all this as he smoked his cigars and wrote away +placidly at his new novel, and was in nowise disturbed. Mr. Val Blake +heard it, and grinned as he thought of the egotistical young author +getting baffled for once. Miss Henderson's innumerable admirers heard +it, and gnashed their teeth with impotent, jealous fury, and, lastly, +Miss Henderson herself heard it, and frowned and laughed alternately. + +"This horrid gossiping town of yours, Laura!" she said impatiently; "how +do they find out everything as soon as one knows it one's self, I +wonder! I wish people would mind their own business and let me alone!" + +"Great people must pay the penalty of greatness, my dear," Miss Blair +answered, philosophically; "and, besides, it is only a question of time, +so don't get into a gale about it! It doesn't matter much whether it is +known this minute or the next." + +The conversation between the young ladies took place in Miss Henderson's +room, and while dressing for a ball. It was to be a very grand ball +indeed, given by the officers, and to which only the tiptop cream of the +cream of Speckport society was to be invited. Of course Miss Henderson +was the first lady thought of, and of course her friend Miss Blair came +next; but Mr. Val Blake, who didn't belong to the crême at all, was to +be there too. But Mr. Blake was such a good fellow, and hand and glove +with the whole barracks, and was so useful to puff their concerts and +theatricals in the "Spouter," and praise the bass of Lieutenant the +Honorable L. H. Blank, and the tenor-solo of Captain G. P. Cavendish, +etc., etc., that it would have been an unpardonable breach to have +omitted him. Mr. Paul Wyndham, whose fame as an author had by this time +reached Speckport, was also to be there; and the ball was expected to be +the most brilliant thing of the season. + +As far as weather went, it was rather a failure already. The dismal, +clammy fog had subsided at last into rain, and the rain lashed the +windows of Miss Henderson's room, and the wind shrieked about the +cottage, and roared out at sea as if bent on making a night of it. The +heiress, with Rosie, the maid, putting the finishing touches to her +toilette, stood listening to the storm, and drearily watching the +reflection of her own face and figure in the tall glass. She had taken a +fancy to be grandly somber to-night, and wore black velvet and the +diamonds Speckport talked so much of, ablaze on throat and arms. There +were blood-red flowers in her tar-black hair, and in her bouquet which +lay on the dressing table, but she looked more superb in her sable +splendor than ever. + +Was Miss Laura Blair, with her commonplace prettiness of fair skin, pink +cheeks, and waving brown hair, laying herself out as a foil to the +black-eyed siren? She was dressed in white moire antique, gemmed with +seed-pearls, and with a train of richness that swept half way across the +room. She had white roses in her hair, on her breast, and in her +bouquet. She wore pearl bracelets and necklace, and looked fair as a +lily--a vivid contrast to her black and crimson neighbor. + +Miss Henderson sent Rosie out of the room, and stood listening in +silence for a while to the raging of the storm. Presently she turned to +Laura, who was all absorbed settling her laces and jewels, with a rather +singular inquiry on her lips. + +"Laura," she said, abruptly, "what is the matter with me to-night? Why +am I afraid to go to the ball?" Miss Blair turned round and gazed aghast +at this question. The shadow that sometimes lay on her friend's face was +there now, like a dark vail. + +"Dear me, Olly! I'm sure I don't know what you mean! Afraid to go to the +ball?" + +"Yes," repeated Olive, "afraid! I feel as though something were going to +happen! I have a presentiment that some misfortune is before me! I have +had it all day!" + +"It's the weather, dear," said Laura, retiring to the toilet, "or else +it's indigestion. Don't be foolish!" + +Olive Henderson was in no laughing humor, but she did laugh, half +fretfully, though, at this reply. "It's not the weather, and it's not +the indigestion, Miss Blair," she said, "it is the moral barometer +giving warning of a coming storm--it is coming events casting their +shadows before. I have half a mind not to go to the ball to-night." + +"Nonsense, Olly!" exclaimed Laura, in some alarm, knowing very well +Olive was just the girl not to go if she took it in her head, "how +absurd you are. Presentiments! pooh! You've been reading some German +trash--that's what you've been doing, and you have caught some absurd +German silliness! I should like to see you try to stay away from the +ball, the last, the best, the brightest of the season, and you looking +divine, too, in that black velvet! What could possibly happen you at +the ball, I should like to know?" + +Miss Henderson and Miss Blair were rather late in arriving--nearly every +one was there before them. There were two gentlemen who came +considerably late, but no one noticed them much, being only Mr. Val +Blake and his New York friend, Mr. Paul Wyndham. Mr. Blake was fond of +dancing, and was captured by Miss Blair almost as soon as he entered, +and led off; for Miss Laura did make love to this big stupid Val in +pretty roundabout feminine fashion, as women have a way of doing all the +world over. Mr. Wyndham did not dance, and as he was not at liberty to +smoke, the ball was rather a bore than otherwise. He stood leaning +against a pillar, watching the dancers; his pale, grave, quiet face and +thoughtful gray eyes ever turned in one direction. A great many more +gentlemen's faces turned presently in the same quarter, for the +loadstone of the ball shone there, magnificent, in black velvet, and +with eyes that outshone her diamonds. Was there rapport between them? +Was it some inward magnetism that made the belle of the ball, in the +height of her triumph and power, aware of this fixed, steadfast gaze, +and uneasy under it? Flatterers and sycophants surrounded her on every +hand, but she had to turn restlessly away from them and look over every +now and then to that pale, watchful face, and those fixed, grave gray +eyes. + +Paul Wyndham still watched her. She grew nervously miserable at last, +and enraged with herself for becoming so. If this strange man stared +rudely, what was it to her? She would take no further notice of him, she +would not look at him; and saying this to herself, she floated away in +the waltz, with her eyes persistently fixed on her partner or on the +floor. + +The waltz concluded, and Miss Henderson, being tired and hot, her +partner led her to a seat, and left her to get an ice. It was the first +time all that evening she had been for a moment alone, and she lay back +among the cushions of her chair and listened to the raging of the storm +without. + +The seat was in the recess of a bay window, partly shut out from the +room by scarlet drapery, and she was glad to think she was alone. Alone! +No, for there opposite to her stood Paul Wyndham, his magnetic eyes +fixed with powerful intensity on her face. A cold thrill of fear, vague +and chilling, crept through every vein--she would have risen, in +undefined panic, but he was by her side directly, speaking quietly the +commonest of commonplace words. + +"Good evening, Miss Henderson. I trust I see you well and enjoying +yourself. It is the first time I have had the pleasure of approaching +you, you have been so surrounded all the evening." + +She did not speak; a cold bend of the head answered him, and she rose +up, haughty and pale. But he would not let her go; the power of his +fixed gaze held her there as surely as if she had been chained. + +"I fear," he said, in that quiet voice of his, "I fear you thought me +rude in watching you, as I must own to having done. But I assure you, +Miss Henderson, it was no intentional rudeness; neither was it my +admiration, which, pardon me, is great! I watched, Miss Henderson, +because I find you bear a most startling, a most wonderful resemblance +to a person--a young girl--I once knew in New York." + +She caught her breath, feeling the blood leaving her face, and herself +growing cold. Paul Wyndham never took his pitiless eyes off her charming +face. + +"In saying I knew this young girl," he slowly went on, "I am wrong; I +only saw her in the city streets. You came from New York, but you could +not have known her, Miss Henderson, for she was abjectly poor. She lived +in a mean and dirty thoroughfare called Minetta Street; she lodged in a +house filled with rough factory-women, and kept by one Mrs. Butterby; +and the young woman's name was Harriet Wade." + +A moment after Mr. Wyndham said this, he came out of the curtained +recess, and crossed the ballroom rapidly. On his way he met Laura Blair, +and paused to speak. + +"I am going for a glass of water," he said, "for Miss Henderson. I was +talking to her at that window when she was taken suddenly ill. You had +better go to her, Miss Blair. I am afraid she is going to faint." + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +MR. WYNDHAM'S WOOING. + + +A bleak and rainy morning in Speckport--a raw and windy morning, with a +sky all lead-color, except where it was inky black. A wild, wet, rainy +day, on which nobody wanted to stir out if they could help it. An +utterly black and miserable day, that which followed the officers' ball. + +On this wretchedly wet and windy day Olive Henderson sat at her chamber +window, and looked out over the black and foam-crested bay. The room +looked very cozy and pleasant, with its soft, warm, bright-hued Brussels +carpet, its cushioned easy-chairs and lounges, its white-draped bed, its +pretty pictures and tables, and bright coal fire burning in the +glittering steel grate, its costly window-draperies of lace and damask, +looking all the more pleasant and luxurious by contrast with the black, +bleak day outside. + +A delightful room this bad May morning, a room to bask and luxuriate in, +this chamber of Olive Henderson. But Olive Henderson herself, sitting by +the window, staring blankly out, seemed to take very little enjoyment in +its comfort and beauty. She wore a white loose muslin wrapper, tied +carelessly round the slender waist with a crimson cord, its every fold, +as it hung straight about her, telling how indifferently the simple +toilette had been made. All her profuse black hair was drawn away from +her face, haggard and worn in the gray morning light, and fastened in a +great careless knot behind. But, somehow, the stateliness that was a +part of herself characterized her as strikingly in this primitive +simplicity as when robed in velvet and diamonds last night. Perhaps +Semiramis, Queen of Assyria, when in trouble with foreign parts, wore +white muslin wrappers, and her black hair disheveled, before her +subjects, and managed to look Queen Semiramis withal. It isn't likely, +you know, but she may. + +Rain, rain, rain! How ceaselessly it lashed the windows, and how +piteously it beat on the heads of the poor little newsboys, passing up +and down Golden Row, and chanting, disconsolately, "Morning Snorter," +the "Sn-o-o-or-ter!" Perhaps, looking up at the curtained-window, where +the young lady sat, these newsboys thought it was a fine thing to be +Miss Olive Henderson, the heiress of Redmon, and live in a handsome +house, with servants to wait on her, and nothing to do but play the +piano, and drive about in her carriage all day long. But, I am pretty +sure, there was not a pug-nosed urchin coming there that particular +morning, who was not a thousand times happier than the heiress of +Redmon. + +Discovered--disgraced--in the power of this man--this stranger! Liable +to be exposed as a liar and a cheat to the world at any hour! Liable to +have all this wealth and luxury, for which she had done so much--for +which she had risked her very soul--torn from her at any instant, and +she herself thrust out to fight the battle of life, with poverty and +labor and misery once more. She seemed to have grown old in +four-and-twenty hours, with her haggard cheeks and great hollow eyes. +She had sat as she was sitting now for hours, her hands clasped loosely +in her lap, her vacant gaze fixed on the wretched day, but seeing +nothing. Only yesterday, and she had been so sure, so secure, so happy, +and now--and now! + +She had not fainted the night before. Laura Blair found her lying back +ghastly and white in her chair, but not insensible. The ballroom had +been filled with consternation, and she was so surrounded immediately +that Mr. Wyndham, returning with his glass of water, could find no +possibility of approaching her. They had led her into the ladies' +dressing-room, and Captain Cavendish had gone for a cab; and when she +was a little better, they took her home, and the rest went back to the +ballroom. People began to think that in spite of Miss Henderson's +apparent physical perfection, she was subject to fainting fits, and +pitied her very much, as they resumed their dancing. But the eclipsed +belles of Speckport rejoiced, I am afraid, in their wicked little +hearts, that the conqueress was gone, and held up their pretty heads, +which had drooped in the sunlight of her shining presence before. + +Once at home, Miss Henderson professed herself perfectly restored, and +insisted on Laura and her mamma, who had been their chaperone, and +Captain Cavendish, going back to the ball once more. + +"I shall do well enough now," she said, wearily. "I am very foolish, +but----" + +Her voice died away, and her head drooped forward on her arm. Captain +Cavendish bent tenderly over her, as she lay on a sofa, with a pale and +anxious face. + +"My darling," he said, "I am afraid you are very ill. Let me go for Dr. +Leach--this may be something serious." + +But Miss Henderson positively refused, and insisted on their returning +to the ball. + +"I shall lie down and go asleep," she said, "and I will be quite +restored to-morrow. Go at once." + +"I shall go," the captain said, holding her hands, "but not back to the +ball. Do you think there could be any pleasure for me there, and you +absent, Olive? Good night, my love--get rid of this white face before I +see you to-morrow." + +Olive Henderson slept that night, but it was more like stupor than +healthful sleep, and she awoke with a dully throbbing headache, and a +numbing sense of misery at her heart. She had arisen in the black and +wretched dawn of that miserable May morning, and had sat staring +vacantly out at the ceaseless rain, and dark and turbid sea. She was not +thinking--she was sitting there in a dull torpor of despair, waiting for +the end. + +There was a knock at the door. It had to be repeated two or three times +before she comprehended what it meant, and then she arose and opened the +door. It was Rosie, the housemaid; and the girl recoiled at sight of +her, as if she had seen a ghost. + +"My patience, Miss! how bad you do look! I am afraid you are worse than +you was last night." + +"No. What is it you want?" + +"It's a gentleman, Miss, that has called, and is in the drawing-room, +although it is raining cats and dogs." + +She presented a card to her mistress, and Olive read the name of "Paul +Wyndham." She turned sick at sight of that name--that name so lately +heard for the first time, but so terribly familiar now; and looked at +the girl with a sort of terror in her great black eyes. + +"Is this man--is this Mr. Wyndham here?" + +"Down in the drawing-room, Miss, and his overcoat and umbrella making +little streams of rain-water all along the hall. Will you go down, +Miss?" + +Olive Henderson's hand had closed on the pasteboard with so convulsive a +pressure, that the card was crushed into a shapeless mass. Her stupor +was ending in a sort of sullen desperation. Let the worst come, it was +Fate; and she was powerless to battle with so formidable a foe. Whatever +brought this man now, his coming was merciful; the most dreadful +certainty was better than this horrible suspense, which had made the +past night a century of misery. + +Rosie, the pretty housemaid, watched her young lady's changing face, as +she walked rapidly up and down, her eyes staring straight before her +with a fierce and feverish luster, and her lips so rigidly set. Rosie +saw all this, and greatly marveled thereat. A gentleman had called very +early on a very wet morning; but that was no reason why Miss Henderson +should be prancing up and down her room, with the look of an inmate of a +lunatic asylum. + +"Will I tell him you'll come down, Miss?" Rosie ventured to ask, when +she thought the silence had lasted long enough. + +The voice of the girl drew Olive out of her darkly-brooding fit, and she +turned to close her door. + +"Yes," she said. "Tell him I will be down in five minutes." + +She walked to the glass, and looked at herself. I dare say Lady Jane +Grey and Mary Queen of Scots did the same before they were led to the +block; and I doubt if either wore a more ghostly face at that horrible +moment than the girl standing there did now. She smiled in bitter scorn +of herself, as she saw the haggard face and the hollow, burning eyes. + +"I look as if I had grown old in a night," she said. "Where is the +beauty now that so many have praised since I came here?" + +She made no attempt to change her dress, but with the loose white muslin +wrapper trailing in long folds around her, and girdled with scarlet, she +descended the stairs, and entered the drawing-room. + +Mr. Paul Wyndham was sitting at a window, watching the ceaseless rain +beating against the glass. At that very window, looking out at the +silvery moonlight, she herself had sat a few nights before, while she +promised Captain Cavendish she would be his wife. Perhaps she thought of +this as she swept past, à la princesse, just deigning to acknowledge her +visitor's presence by her haughtiest bow. She could not have acted +otherwise, had a hundred fortunes depended on it, and she did not sit +down. + +She stood beside the mantel, her arm, from which the flowing white +sleeves dropped away, leaning on it, her eyes fixed steadily upon the +man before her, waiting in proud silence for what he had to say. Any one +else might have been disconcerted; but Mr. Wyndham did not look as if he +was. He looked pale and quiet and gentlemanly, and entirely +self-possessed. + +"You do not ask the object of my visit, Miss Henderson," he said, +"although the hour is unfashionably early, and the day not such as +callers usually select. But I presume you have been expecting me, and +are not surprised." + +"I am not surprised," she said, coldly. + +"I thought that at this hour I should be most certain of finding you at +home and alone. Therefore, I have come, knowing that after what passed +last night, the sooner we come to an understanding the better." + +"How have you found out my secret?" she abruptly demanded. "You never +knew me in New York?" + +"That is my secret, Miss Henderson--I presume you prefer being called by +that name--that is my secret, and you will pardon me if I do not reveal +it. I do know your secret, and it is that knowledge which has brought me +to this place." + +"And knowing it, what use do you intend to make of it?" + +He smiled slightly. + +"You are very straightforward, Miss Henderson. It is almost as easy +getting on with you as if you were a man. I foresee that we shall settle +this little matter pleasantly, after all." + +Olive Henderson contracted her black brows, and reiterated her question. + +"Knowing this secret, sir, what use do you intend making of it?" + +"That depends upon yourself, madam." + +"How?" + +"I shall keep your secret, Miss Henderson," Paul Wyndham said, "I shall +keep it inviolably; you shall still be Olive Henderson, heiress of +Redmon, the lady paramount of Speckport, on one condition." + +Her heart beat so fast and thick that she had to press her hands over it +to still its tumultuous throbbing. Her hollow, burning black eyes never +left his face, they were strained there in suspense too intense for +words. + +"You are aware, Miss Henderson," the cold, clear, yet melodious voice of +Paul Wyndham went on, "of the position in which you stand. You have +usurped the place of another--your stepsister--you have assumed a name +which does not belong to you, and you have come here to dupe the people +of this place, to pass yourself off for what you are not, and possess +yourself of wealth to which you have no shadow of claim. In doing this, +Miss Henderson, you must be aware you are guilty of a felony, punishable +by law, punishable by trial, imprisonment, and life-long disgrace. All +this you know, and knowing it, must be aware how entirely and +irrevocably you are in my power!" + +"Irrevocably and completely in my power," the pitiless voice went on, +"you see it yourself as well as I. You know also much better than I do, +the misery, the shame, the degradation exposure must bring. Your name +published, your crime published far and wide, yourself the scoff and +jeer of every boor in the town, the horrors of a jail, of a criminal +cell, of a public trial before gaping thousands, of----" + +Paul Wyndham stopped. It was not a cry she had uttered, but a gasping +sob, telling more of the unutterable agony, the intense misery she was +suffering, than any wild outbreak of womanly shrieks. She put out her +hands with a passionate cry. + +Paul Wyndham looked at the disturbed, crouching form, convulsed with +despairing agony, with Heaven only knows how much of pity in his face. + +"Miss Henderson! Miss Henderson!" he cried, "I did not mean--I did not +think what I said would affect you like this. I only told you what might +be, but it never will be, for you will listen to what I have yet to say, +and I never will reveal your secret to a living soul!" + +She lifted her head, and looked at him as a hunted stag might, with the +knife at its throat. + +"Mr. Wyndham," she said, with that dignity which is born of extreme +misery, "what have I ever done to you that you should come here and +torment me like this?" + +Paul Wyndham turned away from that reproachful face, with a dark shadow +on his own. + +"Heaven knows, Miss Henderson, I hate the necessity which compels me to +cause you this pain, but it is a necessity, and I must do it; you never +have wronged me--I have no wish to give you a moment's suffering, but a +fatality against which I am powerless, urges me on. I hate myself for +what I am doing--but what can I do--what can I do?" + +He seemed to ask himself the question, as he sprang up and took, like +herself, to walking excitedly up and down. His face was so darkly +troubled that Olive Henderson looked at him with searching, wondering +eyes. + +"I do not understand you," she said, chilled with a new fear, "does any +one but yourself know my secret?" + +She was still sitting, and never ceasing to watch him. Paul Wyndham +leaned against the mantel, as she had done a moment before, and looked +down at her. + +"Miss Henderson, I can tell you nothing but that your secret is safe +with me if you will comply with the condition I have to name. You may +trust me; I shall never reveal it!" + +"And that condition is----" + +There was a pause, during which Olive could have counted the raindrops +on the window or the loud beating of her heart. + +Paul Wyndham's large, clear, bright gray eyes steadily met her own. + +"The condition is, that you become my wife." + +She gave a cry, she was so utterly astonished, and sat staring at him, +speechless. + +"Your--wife!" she slowly said, when her returned senses enabled her to +speak. + +"Yes, Miss Henderson, my wife! I am no more insensible to the power of +wealth than you are. You have risked everything for the future; you can +only hold it now, on condition of becoming my wife!" + +Olive Henderson rose up, white and defiant, "I never will!" she said, "I +never will! I will lose every shilling of it, I will die before I +consent!" + +"Oh, no!" Mr. Wyndham said, quietly, "I do not think you will, when you +come to reflect, it is not pleasant to die when one is young and +handsome and prosperous, particularly if one has not been very good, and +not at all sure of going to Heaven. You will not die, Miss Henderson; +you will keep the fortune and marry me." + +"I never will!" she vehemently cried; "what if I told you my stepsister, +the real Olive Henderson, were alive, that I have seen her lately, and +that she has made over everything to me. What if I told you this?" + +He smiled incredulously. + +"You do not believe me, but I swear to you I state the truth. Olive +Henderson lives, though I thought her dead; and I have seen her, I tell +you, and she has consented to my keeping all." + +"Well," said Mr. Wyndham quietly, "supposing, for argument's sake, what +you say to be true, it does not alter your position in the least. Should +I go to a lawyer and tell him your story, the arrest, the exposure, the +disgrace all follow as inevitably as ever. The rightful heiress may, as +you say, be alive, and willing you should usurp her birthright, though +it does not sound very likely; but even if so, Harriet Wade is too proud +a woman to incur life-long disgrace and humiliation, when she can avert +it so easily." + +She turned away from him, dropped into her seat, and laid her hand on a +table near. The action, the attitude, told far more than words, of the +cold, dark despair thickening around her. + +She never lifted her head. She was suffering, as other women have +suffered, dumbly. + +"In asking you to be my wife, Miss Henderson," Mr. Wyndham still +continued, "I make no pretense of being in love with you myself. I am +not--I may as well tell you plainly--and I shall never ask love from +you. In becoming my wife, you will go through a legal ceremony that will +mean nothing. I shall never intrude upon you one single moment out of +all the twenty-four hours, unless you desire it, or when the presence of +others makes our being together unavoidable. We may dwell under the same +roof, and yet live as far apart as if hemispheres divided us. Believe +me, I shall not force myself upon you against your will; but for your +own sake, Miss Henderson, and to still the whispers of busy tongues, it +would be as well to keep your sentiments regarding me to yourself, as +well we should be apparently on cordial terms. Are you listening, Miss +Henderson?" + +He really thought she was not. She was lying so still, so rigid, with +her poor white face on the table, and the thick coils of her dead-black +hair unloosing themselves, and trailing and twining about her like +black snakes. She was not hysterical now; she was lying there in a sort +of dumb anguish, that none but very proud and sensitive hearts, crashed +to the very dust in shame and humiliation, can ever feel. + +"Miss Henderson," Mr. Wyndham repeated, looking at the drooping, girlish +figure, its very attitude speaking so much of supreme misery, "I am +waiting for my answer." + +She lifted her head and looked at him, with something the look of a deer +at bay. + +"Have you no pity?" she said. "Will you not spare me? I am only a girl, +alone in the world, and you might pity me and be merciful. I have done +wrong, I know, but Heaven alone knows what I have suffered from poverty, +and the degradation it inevitably entails. I was tempted, and I yielded; +but I think I never was so miserable in the worst days of my suffering +as I have been at times since I came here. I am not good, I know, but I +am not used to wickedness and plotting like this, and I think I am the +most miserable creature on the face of this wide earth. But I never +wronged you, sir; and you might pity me and spare me." + +Her head dropped down again with a sort of sob, and the pitiful pleading +was touching to hear from those proud lips. If Paul Wyndham had +possessed the hardest heart that ever beat in a man's breast since the +days of Nero, I think it must have been touched by the sight of that +haughty spirit so bowed and crushed before him. His face showed no sign +of whatever he might feel, but his clear voice shook a little as he +replied. + +"It is of little use, Miss Henderson, for me to say how deeply I do pity +you--how sorely against my will I wage this unequal warfare, since the +battle must go on all the same. It would only sound like mockery were I +to say how grieved I am to give you this pain, since I should still +remain inexorable." + +"Will nothing bribe you?" she asked. "Half the wealth I possess shall be +yours if----" + +She had lifted her face again in eager hopefulness, but he interrupted +with a gesture. + +"I said I was inexorable, Miss Henderson, and I must repeat it. +Besides," he added, with a slight smile, that showed how credulous he +was about the story, "the real heiress, though she might make over the +fortune to you, might object to your handing the half of it over to a +stranger. No, Miss Henderson, there is only the one alternative--be my +wife, or else----" + +"Or else you will tell all?" + +He did not speak. He stood, quietly waiting his answer--quiet, but very +inflexible. + +Olive rose up and stood before him. + +"Must you have your answer now?" she asked, "or will you not even give +me a few hours respite to think it over?" + +"As many as you please, Miss Henderson." + +"Then you shall have it to-night," she said, with strange, cold +calmness. "I promised Miss Blair to go to the theater--you will see me +there, and shall have your answer." + +Mr. Wyndham bowed, and with a simple "Good morning," walked out of the +room. As he shut the door behind him, he felt as though he were shutting +Olive Henderson in a living tomb, and he her jailer. + +"Poor girl! poor girl!" he was thinking, as he put on his overcoat; +"what a villain I must seem in her eyes, and what a villain I am, ever +to have consented to this. But it is only retribution after all--one ill +turn deserves another." + +Paul Wyndham walked to his hotel through the drenching rain and cold +sea-wind, and Olive Henderson listened to the tumult of the storm, with +another storm quite as tumultuous in her own breast. + +The play that night was the "Lady of Lyons." There is only one theater +in Speckport, so Mr. Wyndham was not likely to get bewildered in his +search. The first act was half over when he came in, and looked round +the dress circle, and down in the orchestra stalls. In the glare of the +gaslight Olive Henderson looked superb. Never had her magnificent black +eyes shone with such streaming luster as to-night, and a crimson glow, +quite foreign to her usual complexion, beamed on either cheek--the +crimson glow, rouge, worn for the first time in her life; and though she +was a New York lady, she had the grace to be ashamed of the paint, and +wear a thin black vail over her face. She took her eyes off Mademoiselle +Pauline for a moment, to fix them on Mr. Wyndham, who came along to pay +his respects, and to find a seat directly behind that of the heiress, +but she only bent her head in very distant acknowledgment of his +presence, and looked at Pauline again. + +The curtain fell on the first act. Miss Henderson was very thirsty--that +feverish thirst had not left her yet, and Captain Cavendish went out for +a glass of ice-water. Laura was busy chattering to Mr. Blake, and Paul +Wyndham bent forward and spoke to the heiress, who never turned her +head. + +"I have come for my answer, Miss Henderson," he said; "it is 'Yes,' I +know." + +"It is 'Yes,' Mr. Wyndham, and, with my consent, take the knowledge that +I hate and despise you more than any other creature on the face of the +earth." + +She never turned while saying this. She stared straight before her at +the row of gleaming footlights. The music was croaking out, every one +was talking busily, and not one of the young ladies who looked enviously +at the beautiful and brilliant heiress, nor the men who worshiped her at +a distance, and who hated the young New Yorker for the privilege he +enjoyed of talking to her--not one of them all dreamed ever so faintly +of that other play being enacted off the stage. + +Captain Cavendish came back with the water, the play went on, but I +doubt if Olive Henderson heard a word, or knew whether they were playing +"Othello" or the "Lady of Lyons," but none of the others knew that; that +serviceable mask, the human face, is a very good screen for the heart. + +The play was over, and they were all going out. Mr. Wyndham had not +addressed her since, but she knew he was behind her all the time, and +she knew nothing else. He was by her side as they descended the stairs, +and the cold night-wind struck them on the face. She was leaning on the +arm of Captain Cavendish, but how was that conquering hero to know it +was for the last time? + +"I will have the pleasure of calling on you to-morrow, Miss Henderson," +he distinctly said, as he bowed an adieu and was lost in the crowd. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +MR. WYNDHAM'S WEDDING. + + +Captain Cavendish, sitting at the window of his room in the hotel, +stared at the red sunset with a clouded face and a gloomy abstraction of +manner, that told how utterly its lurid glory was lost upon him. + +Captain Cavendish had been sitting there since four in the afternoon, +thinking this over and over again, and never able to get beyond it. His +day of retribution had come. He was feeling the torture he had so often +and so heartlessly made others feel; he was learning what it meant to be +jilted in cold blood. Olive Henderson had turned out the veriest, the +most capricious, the most heartless of flirts, and Captain Cavendish +found himself incontinently snubbed! He had asked for no explanation +yet, but the climax had come to-day. He had ridden over to escort the +heiress on her breezy morning gallop, and had found Mr. Wyndham just +assisting her into the saddle. She had bowed distantly to him, cut her +horse a stinging blow across the neck, and had galloped off, with Paul +Wyndham close beside her. Catty Clowrie looked out of the cottage +window, and laughed a voiceless laugh, to see the captain's blank +consternation. + +"Tit for tat!" Catty said; "you are getting paid back in your own coin, +Captain George Cavendish!" + +So, while the fierce red sun blazed itself out in the purple arch, and +the big round yellow moon rose up, like another Venus, out of the +bluish-black bay, Captain Cavendish sat at his window, telling the same +refrain over and over in his mind, as perseveringly as ever any holy +monk told the Ave Maria on his rosary:--"What has changed her? what has +changed her? what has changed her?" + +The moon was high in the sky before he roused himself from his long and +somber musing-fit, and, pulling out his watch, looked at the hour. + +"Half-past seven," he said; "they were to start at eight, and she +promised to go. I shall ask for an explanation to-night." + +He rang for his servant, and desired that young man, when he appeared, +to fetch him his overcoat. Mr. Johnston brought that garment, and +assisted his master into it, and the captain put on his hat and gloves, +and with his cane under his arm (for, of course, as an officer of the +British army, it was his duty at all times to carry a cane under his +arm), he set off for the cottage of my Lady Caprice. + +The whole front of the pretty cottage was in a state of illumination, as +he opened the little gate and walked up the gravel path, and men's +shadows moved on the curtained windows as he rang the bell. Rosie, with +pink ribbons in her hair, and her Sunday dress on, opened the door and +showed him into the drawing-room. + +"I'll tell Miss Olive you're here," she said; "she is engaged with +company just now." + +Captain Cavendish said nothing. He walked over to the low chimney-piece, +and leaned moodily against it, as Paul Wyndham had done that rainy +morning, little better than a week before. He had seen something as he +came in that had not tended to raise his spirits. The dining-room door +stood half-open, and glancing in as he passed, he perceived that Miss +Henderson had given a dinner-party, and that the company was still +lingering around the table. He saw the Rev. Augustus Tod and his +sister--and the Tods were the very cream of Speckport society--Major +and Mrs. Wheatly, and Mr. Paul Wyndham. That was all; but he, her +betrothed husband, her accepted suitor, had known nothing of it--had +never been invited! + +Captain Cavendish, leaning against the mantel, listened to the laughter, +and pleasant mingling of voices, and the jingling of glasses in the +dining-room, and he could plainly distinguish the musical laughter of +Olive, and her clear voice as she talked to her guests. He stood there +for upward of half an hour, raging with inward fury, all the more fierce +for having to be suppressed. Then he heard the dining-room door open, a +rustle of silk in the passage, an odor of delicate perfume in the air, +and then the drawing-room door opened. + +Miss Henderson swept into the room, bowing and smiling as she passed +him, and sinking gracefully into a low violet-velvet chair, her rosy +skirts and misty white lace floating all about her like pink and white +clouds, and she looked up at him with the same glance of inquiry she +might have given any lout of a fisherman in Speckport, had such a person +presumed to call. + +"I fear I intrude, Miss Henderson," he said, suppressing, as a gentleman +must, his rage. "I did not know there was a dinner-party at the +cottage." + +"Oh, it is of no consequence," Miss Henderson said, carelessly, toying +with her watch and chain; "my guests are all friends, who will readily +excuse me. Will you not take a seat, Captain Cavendish?" + +"No, Miss Henderson! in a house where I am made to feel I am an intruder +I must decline being seated. I believe you promised to join the +sailing-party on the bay to-night, but I suppose it is useless to ask +you if you are going now." + +"Why, yes," in the same careless way, "it is hardly probable I should +leave my friends, even for the moonlight excursion. Are you going? I am +sure you will have a very pleasant time; the night is lovely." + +"Yes," said Captain Cavendish, "I am likely to have a pleasant time, as +I have had, you must be aware, all through the past week. If you can +spare a few minutes from these very dear friends of yours, Miss +Henderson, I should be glad to have an explanation of your conduct." + +"Of my conduct?" still in that careless way. "How?" + +Captain Cavendish choked down an oath, but there was a subdued +fierceness in his voice when he spoke. + +"Miss Olive Henderson, has it quite escaped your memory that you are my +promised wife? It strikes me your conduct of late has not been +altogether in keeping with this fact. Will you have the goodness to +explain the contempt, the slights, the strangeness of your conduct?" + +"It is very easily explained," Miss Henderson answered, with supreme +indifference, which, whether real or assumed, was very natural. "I have +repented that rash promise, and now retract it. I have changed my mind; +it is a woman's privilege, Captain Cavendish, and here is your +engagement ring." + +She drew the little golden circlet off her finger and held it out to +him, as she might have returned it to some jeweler who had asked her to +purchase it. He did not take it--he only stood looking at her, stunned! + +"Olive!" + +"I am sorry to give you pain, Captain Cavendish," Miss Henderson replied +to that cry, still toying with her chain; "but you know I told you that +night I did not love you, so you ought not to be surprised. I suppose it +seems heartless, but then I am heartless; so what can you expect." + +She laughed to herself a little hard laugh, and looked up at him with +coldly-shining eyes. He was white, white even to his lips; for, +remember, he loved this woman--this cold-blooded and capricious +coquette. + +"Olive! Olive!" was all he could cry, and there was nothing but wild +astonishment and passionate reproach in his voice. There was no room for +anger now. He loved her, and it made him a coward, and he faltered and +broke down. + +Olive Henderson rose up as if to end the interview. + +"Better we should understand one another now, Captain Cavendish, than +later. Perhaps the day may come and sooner than you expect, when you +will thank me for this. I am not good, and I should not have made you a +good wife, and you have more cause for thankfulness than regret. Here is +your ring, and with it I renounce all claim to you! We are from +henceforth what we were before you spoke--friends! In that character I +shall at all times be happy to see you. Good evening, Captain +Cavendish!" + +Captain Cavendish walked back to his hotel in a stunned and stupefied +sort of way, much as a man might who had received a heavy blow on the +head, and was completely benumbed. He had received a blow, a most +unexpected and terrible blow; a blow so inconceivable, he could hardly +realize it had really fallen. His worst enemy could scarcely have wished +him a more miserable night than that which he spent, ceaselessly walking +his room, and acting over and over again the scene that had so lately +passed. O Nathalie Marsh! could you have risen up in spirit before him +then, surely you would have thought yourself completely avenged. + +Was Miss Olive Henderson, lying in luxurious ease among the satin +pillows of a lounge in the dining-room, next morning, wearing a most +becoming matin neglige, and listlessly turning over the leaves of a +novel, thinking of her rejected lover, I wonder? Catty Clowrie, sitting +sewing industriously at the window--for Catty was not above doing plain +sewing for the heiress--and watching her stealthily between the +stitches, wondered if she were really reading, or only thinking, as she +lay there, turning over the leaves with restless fingers, and jerking +out her pretty little watch perpetually to look at the hour. It was very +early, only nine o'clock, too soon for her to expect visitors--even that +indefatigable Mr. Wyndham, who came like clockwork every day, could +hardly have made his appearance so early. Catty, thinking this, stopped +suddenly, for a gentleman was ringing the door-bell--a gentleman with a +white, fierce face, and a look about him, altogether, Miss Clowrie had +never seen him wear before. Olive sat up and looked at Catty. + +"Who is it?" she asked. + +"Captain Cavendish." + +The black brow contracted suddenly, and Catty saw it. She, as well as +all Speckport, knew there was a breach between the two, and she and all +Speckport set Mr. Wyndham down as the cause. + +Olive Henderson rose up, with her brows still contracted, and walked +into the drawing-room. She shut the door behind her; and oh! what would +not Catty Clowrie have given had the painted panels of that door been +clear glass, that she might see what was going on. She could hear, not +their words, but the voice of the captain, passionate and then +reproachful, then pleading, then passionately angry again. Once she +crept to the door; it was after an unusually vehement outburst on his +part; and when her curiosity was excited beyond all bounds, she affixed +her ear to the keyhole. + +"It hardly becomes you, Captain Cavendish," she heard the voice say, in +a tone of cold disdain; "it does not become you to talk like this of +infidelity. If all tales be true, you have been rather faithless +yourself in your time. People who live in glass houses are always the +readiest to throw stones, I think!" + +Catty dared not stay, lest they should suddenly open the door, and went +back to her work. + +"She has refused him!" she thought. "What new mystery is this?" + +Had Miss Clowrie been able to look into the room, she would have seen +Captain Cavendish pacing it like a caged tiger, and Miss Henderson +standing up and leaning against the mantel, and looking icily at him out +of her great black eyes. He stopped abruptly before her, controlling his +passion, and steadfastly returned her gaze. + +"And is it for Mr. Paul Wyndham," he asked, with sneering emphasis, "the +little pitiful quill-driver, that I am rejected?" + +The black eyes of Olive Henderson flashed flame at the gibing tone. + +"Yes!" she flashed, impetuously, "it is for Mr. Paul Wyndham, whose name +is a household word in lands where he has never been--who will be +remembered by thousands when you are dead and forgotten!" + +If Captain Cavendish could, with any propriety, have knocked the defiant +young lady down at that moment, I think he would have done it. He set +his strong white teeth, and clenched his hands, in the impotence of his +fury. + +"And this insult, am I to understand, is your final answer?" + +"The answer is final," Olive said, frigidly. "The insult, if such it be, +you provoked yourself, by first insulting me. I wished to part friends +with you; if you prefer we should part enemies, it is immaterial to me. +I do not know why you have come to make this scene this morning, when +you received your answer last night." + +The morning sunshine was streaming brightly into the room; but, as she +spoke, it was suddenly darkened, and Paul Wyndham, riding past, strung +his horse at the door. An instant after, Catty Clowrie saw Captain +Cavendish leave the house, his hat slouched over his eyes, and stride +away as if shod with seven-league boots. Mr. Wyndham had come to escort +Miss Henderson on her customary morning-ride to Redmon, and Olive ran +up-stairs to put on her riding-habit. But not until Catty had seen how +haughtily cold her reception of Mr. Wyndham was, and how ghostly pale +she looked as she ran up-stairs. + +Catty Clowrie was not the only young lady in Speckport puzzled by Miss +Henderson's remarkable conduct. Laura Blair was bothering her poor +little brain with the enigma, and could not solve it, though she tried +ever so. + +"Olly, dear," she said, in a perplexed tone, when she came to the +cottage next day, and up in Olive's room seated herself for a +confidential chat, "have you quarreled with Captain Cavendish?" + +Olive was reclining in a vast Sleepy Hollow of an armchair, looking pale +and fagged; for she had been at a ball the previous night, and lay with +her hands folded listlessly in her lap, and the lazy lids hiding the +splendor of her eyes. She hardly took the trouble to lift these heavy +eyelids, as she replied: + +"No--yes. Why?" + +"Because, he's gone away, dear! I thought you knew it. He has gone off +on leave of absence to Canada, I believe." + +"Indeed!" Miss Henderson said, indifferently. "When did he go?" + +"He left in the steamer for Portland, Maine, this morning. Olly, +dearest, will you not tell me what it is all about?" + +"All what is about?" asked Olive, impatiently. + +Laura looked frightened; she always got scared when Miss Henderson's big +black eyes flashed. + +"You won't be angry, my darling Olly? but I thought--every one +thought--you were going to marry Captain Cavendish." + +"Did they? Then it's a pity 'every one' must be disappointed, for I am +not going to marry Captain Cavendish." + +Laura sat silent after this quencher. She was seated on a low stool at +her friend's feet, with her brown head lying on her lap. The heiress +bent down and kissed the pretty face. + +"My poor, silly, inquisitive little Laura!" she said, "you would like a +wedding, I know. You have a feminine love of bridal-vails and +orange-wreaths, and you would like to look pretty in white silk and +Honiton lace, as my bridemaid--wouldn't you, now?" + +"Yes," said Miss Blair. + +"Well, then, Laura, you shall!" + +Laura started up, and stared. + +"What?" + +"I say," repeated Olive, quietly, "you shall be gratified. You shall +wear the white silk and the Honiton lace, my dear, and be first +bridemaid, for I am going to be married!" + +Laura Blair clasped her hands. + +"Oh, Olly! and to Mr. Wyndham?" + +"Yes; to Mr. Wyndham." + +Laura sat like one transfixed, digesting the news. Somehow, she was not +so much surprised, but the suddenness of the intelligence stunned her. + +Olive Henderson laughed outright as she looked at her. + +"Well, Miss Blair," she said, "if I had told you I had committed a +murder, and was going to be hanged for it, you could hardly look more +aghast! Pray, is there anything so very terrible in my marrying Mr. +Wyndham?" + +"It's not that," said Laura, recovering herself slowly, "but the news +came so suddenly, so unexpectedly, that----" + +"Unexpectedly! Is it possible, Laura, Speckport has not decided before +now I should marry Mr. Wyndham?" + +"Speckport doesn't know what to think," said Laura; "it decided upon +your marriage with Captain Cavendish; it said that you were engaged, and +that all was settled, when, lo! this Mr. Wyndham appears, and presto! +all is changed. Captain Cavendish flies out of the country, and Mr. +Wyndham becomes the hero of the story. Speckport never was so pleased +before; you are as erratic as a comet, Miss Henderson, and it is as +useless trying to account for your vagaries." + +"I am glad Speckport has found that out. Well, Laura, you will be +bridemaid?" + +"Of course. Oh how strange it all seems! When is it to come off?" + +"What, the wedding? Oh, near the end of next month, I believe. Mr. +Wyndham, like any other ardent lover, objects to long engagements." + +She laughed, as she spoke, a little disdainful laugh, that made Laura +fix her brown eyes thoughtfully on her face. + +"Olly--don't be angry, please--do you love Mr. Wyndham?" + +"Of course, you silly child," the heiress laughed, carelessly, "if not, +should I marry him? You have read a great many novels, my Laura, of the +high-pressure school, and have formed your own ideas of lovers from the +rapturous proceedings therein recorded. But Mr. Wyndham and I are not +romantic; it is not in my nature to be, and all the romance in his he +reserves as his stock-in-trade for his books, and has none left for this +prosy every-day life. He is sufficiently well-looking, he is gentlemanly +and attentive, and he is famous, and he has asked me to marry him, and I +have said yes; and I will do it, too, if I don't change my mind before +the day comes." + +"Does Mr. Wyndham love you, Olly?" she asked, after a long, grave pause, +during which Olive had been humming an opera air. + +"Of course, my love! How can he help it?" + +"And you are really going to be married so soon, and to this stranger? +Oh, Olly! take care!" + +"You absurd Laura! Take care of what? Are you afraid Mr. Wyndham will +beat me after the magic words are spoken?" + +"I suppose it is the suddenness of it all that makes me feel so strange +about it. I like Mr. Wyndham very much, and I think his books are +lovely! I dare say you will be very happy with him, after all. How many +bridemaids are you going to have, and what are we to wear?" + +After this truly feminine turn to the conversation, love and happiness +were forgotten in the discussion of silks and moire antiques, and the +rival merits of pink or white for the bridemaids' bonnets. They were a +very long time deciding; for somehow Olive Henderson, with all her +inborn love of dress, did not seem to take much interest in the matter. + +"We'll settle it all again, Laura," she said, impatiently, "there's no +hurry--six weeks is a long time. Come, and let us have a drive." + +As the young ladies entered the little pony-carriage, Mr. Wyndham rode +up on his bay, looking his best, as good riders always do on horseback. +Laura, who was on very friendly, not to say familiar, terms with the +young author, held out her hand. + +"Accept my congratulations," she said, "I am to be bridemaid-in-chief on +the happy occasion; and, next to being married myself, there is nothing +we girls like better than that!" + +Mr. Wyndham smiled, lifted her hand to his lips gallantly, and made some +complimentary reply; but there was no rapture in his face, Laura +noticed, even although his bride-elect, in the dark splendor of her +beauty, sat before him among the rich cushions, like an Egyptian queen. + +"He does not love her," thought Laura; "he is like all the rest; he +wants to marry her because she is handsome, and the fashion, and the +heiress of Redmon. I wonder, if I were in her place, if that stupid Val +would ever come to the point. I know he likes me, but the tiresome +creature won't say so." + +Mr. Wyndham had but just left Mr. Blake's office, after having +bewildered that gentleman with the same news Olive had imparted to her +friend. + +Mr. Blake's hands were very deep in his pockets, and he was whistling a +dismally perplexed whistle, as the young author left his sanctum. + +"It's very odd!" Mr. Blake was thinking, "it's very odd, indeed! He said +he would do it, and I didn't believe him, and now it's done. It's very +odd! I know she doesn't care about him, rather the reverse; and then, +she was promised to Cavendish. What can she be marrying him for? +Wyndham, too, he isn't in love with her; it's not in him to be in love +with any one. What can he want marrying her? It can't be her money--at +least, it's not like Paul Wyndham, if it is. And then he's a sort of +novel-writing hermit, who would live on bread and water as fast as +turtle-soup, and doesn't care a button for society. It's odd--it's +uncommonly odd!" + +Speckport found it odd, too, and said so, which Mr. Blake did not, +except to himself. But then the heiress with the imperious beauty and +flashing eyes was a singular being, anyhow, and they put it down as the +last coquetry of my Lady Caprice. And while they talked of it, and +conjectured about it, and wondered if she would not jilt him for +somebody else before the day came round--while Speckport gossiped +ravenously, Mr. Wyndham was a daily visitor at the cottage, and +Speckport beheld the betrothed pair galloping together out along the +lovely country-roads and over the distant tree-clad hills, and saw the +new villa at Redmon going up with magical rapidity, and the once bleak +and dreary grounds being transformed into a fairy-land of beauty. All +the head dressmakers and milliners of the town were up to their eyes in +the wedding-splendors, and such a lot of Miss Henderson's dear five +hundred had been invited to the wedding that the miracle was how the +cottage was going to hold them all. Speckport knew all about the +arrangements beforehand; how they were to be married in Trinity Church, +being both High-Church people; how they were going on a bridal-tour +through the Canadas, and would return toward the close of August, when +the villa would be ready to receive them. + +Speckport talked of all this incessantly, and of the five bridemaids; of +whom Laura Blair, Jeannette McGregor and Miss Tod, were the chief; and +while they talked, the day came round. A dull and depressing day, with a +clammy yellow fog that stuck to everything, and a bleak wind that +reddened the pretty noses of the bridemaids, and made them shiver in +their white satin shoes. The old church was crowded. Young and old, +gentle and simple, all flocked to see the beautiful black-eyed heiress +who had set so many unhappy young men crazy, married at last to the man +of her choice. The dismal weather had no effect on her, it seemed; for +she swept up the aisle, leaning on the arm of Mr. Darcy, who was to play +papa, in a dress whose splendor electrified Speckport, and which had +been imported direct from Paris; all in white, an immense vail floating +all around her like a silvery mist, she didn't, as scandalized Speckport +said, for all, look a bit like a bride. Where was the drooping of the +long eye-lashes; where the paling and flushing cheek; where the shy and +timid graces of virginhood? Was it not the height of impropriety to walk +up the aisle with her head erect, her black eyes bright and defiant, her +lips compressed, and her color never varying? It was the vulgarity and +brazenness of the New York grisette breaking out, or the spangles and +sawdust of the circus-rider. But Speckport said all this under their +breath; and when it was all over, and the names down in the register, +kissed the bride, at least female Speckport did, the beings in +broadcloth and white vests only looking as if they would like to. And +then they drove back to the cottage; and Miss Henderson--no, it was Mrs. +Wyndham now--went to her room at once to put on her traveling-dress, for +the steamer started in half an hour. There was a great crowd on the +wharf to see them off; and the bride and bridegroom stood to be looked +at--he, pale, quiet, and calm; she, haughty and handsome, and uplifted +to the end. + +So it was all over, and the heiress of Redmon was safely married at +last! The news came out in next day's "Spouter," with a string of good +wishes from the editorial chair for the happy pair. Two young +men--Captain George P. Cavendish, in the reading-room of a Montreal +hotel, and Mr. Tom Oaks, in an Indian's tent up the country, where he +shot and fished--read it, and digested the bitter pill as best they +might. Some one else read it, too; Mr. Wyndham, with his own hands, +posted the first copy of that particular "Spouter" he received to a +young lady, who read it with strange eagerness in her own room in a +quaint New York hotel. A lady who read it over and over and over again, +as often and as eagerly as Miss Wade had read that advertisement long +before in the Canadian paper shown her in Mrs. Butterby's lodgings, by +the pale actress. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +MR. WYNDHAM'S MOTHER. + + +Mr. Wyndham and Miss Henderson had had but one confidential interview +after that first one, during the length of their brief engagement. It +was the day after the evening at the theater. Mr. Wyndham had called +early and found the heiress waiting for him in the drawing-room. There +was no terror, no humiliation in her manner now, nothing but reckless, +scornful defiance, and fierce pride, with which she seemed to dare him +and Fate to do their worst. + +"I was afraid of you yesterday, Mr. Paul Wyndham," she said, with an +unpleasant laugh. "I shall never be afraid of you again. I see that it +is of no use to struggle against Destiny--Providence, good people would +say, but I make no pretense of goodness. The French have a saying that +embodies the character of the nation: '_Couronnons nous des roses avant +qu'elles ne se fleurissent._' I take that for my motto from henceforth, +and crown myself with roses before they fade. I shall dress and spend +money and enjoy this fortune while I may--when it goes, why, let it +go,--I, shall know what to do when that time comes!" + +Mr. Wyndham bowed in grave silence, and waited to hear all she might +have to say. "To retain this wealth," she went on in the same reckless +tone, and with her black deriding eyes seeming to mock him, "I consent +to marry you; that is, I consent to go through a civil and religious +ceremony which the world will call a marriage, and which to us will +simply mean nothing but an empty form. It will give you a right to my +money, which is all you want; it will give you a right to dwell under +the same roof, but no right ever to intrude yourself upon me for one +second, except when others are present and it is necessary to avoid +suspicion. The world will call me by your name; but I shall still remain +Olive Henderson, free and unfettered--free to come and go and do as I +please, without interference or hindrance from you. Do I make myself +understood?" + +"Perfectly," Mr. Wyndham said, coolly, "and express my views entirely. I +am delighted with your good sense, Miss Henderson, and I foresee we +shall make a model couple, and get on together famously. Now, as to our +wedding arrangements. When is it to be?" + +"Whenever you please," she said, scornfully; "it is a matter of perfect +indifference to me." + +"I do not like to hurry you too much, but if the end of June----" + +Olive made a careless gesture with her ringed hand: + +"That will do! One tune is as good as another." + +"And our bridal tour? There must be a bridal tour, you know, or people +will talk." + +"I told you," she said, impatiently, "it was of no consequence to me! +Arrange it as you please--I shall make no objection." + +"Then suppose we go to Canada for a couple of months? The villa at +Redmon can be ready upon our return." + +And this tender tête-à-tête between the plighted pair settled the +matter. And in due time the solemn mockery was performed by the Rev. +Augustus Tod, and Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham departed on their wedding tour. +The upholsterer had received his orders, and the villa would be in +readiness upon their return, and there would be a famous house-warming, +to which half Speckport was to be invited. About three weeks after the +amicable adjustment of affairs between the author and the heiress, Mr. +Wyndham made a little investment in landed property on his own account. +There was a delightful little dwelling, known as "Rosebush Cottage," for +sale. A real bijou of a cottage, painted cream color, with vivid green +window-shutters and door, and with a garden in front that was a perfect +sea of roses--crimson roses, and monthly roses, and damask roses, and +bridal roses, all kinds bloomed here, until the air became faint with +perfume; and behind there was a gnarled old orchard, where apple-trees +and plum-trees nearly covered the creamy cottage with their long green +arms. This delicious Rosebush Cottage was for sale; and Mr. Wyndham, who +had for some time been quietly on the look-out for just such a place, +became its purchaser. When asked what he could possibly want of it, Mr. +Wyndham answered it was for his mother. + +"For your mother!" exclaimed Mr. Blake, when Mr. Wyndham first told him. +"You never mean to say, Wyndham, your mother is going to exchange the +genial and spicy breezes of Westchester County for our bleak +province--hey?" + +"Westchester County is a delightful place, no doubt," responded Mr. +Wyndham; "but in my absence, it is only vanity and vexation of spirit to +my poor mother. What are all the Westchester Counties in America to her +without her Paul, her only one! I shall send for her as soon as I return +from Canada, to come here." + +"Perhaps she won't come," said Val; "perhaps she will think of the old +adage, 'My son's my son till he gets him a wife,' and prefer remaining +where she is." + +"No," said Mr. Wyndham, "my mother knows her son will be her son all the +days of his life. She is very much changed, Blake, since you knew her; +she never was very fond of society, as you are aware; but of late she +has become a perfect recluse, shutting herself in and shutting the world +out. Rosebush Cottage will make her a very nice hermitage, I think, and +it is conveniently near Redmon. The next thing is to look out for a +competent and trustworthy servant--not a young girl, you know, giddy and +frivolous, but a quiet and sensible woman, who would not object to the +loneliness." + +Mr. Blake put on his considering-cap. + +"There's Midge," he said, "she's out of place, and stopping with us--you +saw her at our house last night, you remember; but I'm afraid she +mightn't suit." + +"That little dwarf, do you mean? She would do well enough, as far as +looks are concerned, if that is the only objection." + +"But that isn't the only objection," said Val; "more's the pity, for she +is perfectly trustworthy, and can work like a horse. As for the +loneliness, she would rather prefer it on that very account." + +"Then what is the objection?"' + +"Why, you see," said Mr. Blake, "we're none of us perfect in this lower +world, and Midge, though but one remove from an angel in a general point +of view, has yet her failings. For instance, there's her temper." + +"Bad?" inquired Mr. Wyndham. + +Mr. Blake nodded intelligently. + +"It never was of the best, you know; but after she lost Nathalie Marsh, +it became--well, she is never kept in any place over a week, and then +she comes to us and makes a purgatory of No. 16 Great St. Peter Street, +until she finds another situation. I'm afraid she wouldn't do." + +Mr. Blake, smelling audibly at the roses as he said this, did not see +the sudden change that had come over Mr. Wyndham's face nor the +eagerness hardly repressed in his voice when he spoke. + +"She was formerly a servant, then, of this Miss Nathalie Marsh, of whom +I have heard so many speak since I came here?" + +"Yes, for years, and devotedly attached to her. Poor Natty! I think +Midge felt her loss ten degrees more than her own mother; but grief, I +regret to say, hasn't a sweetening effect on Midge's temper." + +"Still I think I shall try her," said Paul Wyndham, carelessly. "My +mother is very quiet and easy, and I don't believe they will quarrel. I +will see Midge about it this very day." + +Which he did accordingly, sending her off at once to keep the cottage +until his mother's arrival. The upholsterer furnishing Redmon Villa had +his orders for Rosebush Cottage also, and both were to be in readiness +when September came round. + +Olive Henderson heard with extreme indifference of the expected arrival +of Mr. Wyndham's mother, from the lips of Miss Jo Blake, next day. + +"Ah! is she?" the heiress said, suppressing a yawn; "well, as she is to +reside a mile and a half from Redmon, I don't suppose she will be much +trouble to me. If the mistress be like the maid, Laura," said the +heiress, turning with a scornful laugh to her friend, "I am likely to +have a charming mamma-in-law." + +Good Miss Jo, who thought the motherless heiress would rejoice at the +tidings she brought her, was scandalized at the speech. Indeed, Miss +Jo--the best of women and old maids--did not approve of Miss Henderson's +capers at all. She had always thought her too proud; for Miss Jo's +simple Irish belief was, that we earthly worms have no business at all +with that sin which drove Lucifer, Star of the Morning, from Paradise, +and was sorry to see her favorite Laura so much taken up with the +queenly coquette. + +"Laura was such a nice little girl, Val," Miss Jo said, to the editor of +the "Speckport Spouter," across the tea-table that evening; "and now, I +am afraid, she will fall into the ways of that young girl, whom +everybody is running crazy after. If Miss Henderson was like poor Natty, +or that little angel, Miss Rose, now!" + +"How is Miss Rose, Jo?" asked Val; "I haven't seen her this month of +Sundays?" + +"She isn't out much," said Miss Blake; "Mrs. Wheatly keeps her busy; and +when she does come out, it's to Mrs. Marsh's she goes, or to see her +poor pensioners. Miss Henderson asked her to be one of her bridemaids, I +hear, but she refused." + +"Stuff!" said Val, politely. "Miss Henderson isn't the woman to ask a +governess to be her bridemaid. Not but that Miss Rose is as good as she +is!" + +"As good!" cried Miss Jo, in shrill indignation, "she's fifty thousand +times better. Miss Rose is a little pale-faced angel on the face of the +earth; and that rich young woman with the big black eyes is no more an +angel than I am!" + +Miss Jo manifested her disapprobation of the heiress by not going to see +her married, and by declining an invitation to the wedding-breakfast; +neither of which slights, had she known of them, which she didn't, would +have troubled the high-stepping young lady in the least. + +But Miss Jo was destined to become an heiress herself; for, a fortnight +after the great wedding, and just as Speckport was getting nicely round +after the shock, it received another staggerer in the news that a great +fortune had been left to Miss Jo Blake. Thirty thousand pounds, the +first startling announcement had it; thirteen, the second; and three, +the final and correct one. + +Yes; Miss Jo had been left the neat little sum of three thousand pounds +sterling, and was going home to take possession of the fortune. An old +maiden aunt, after whom Miss Joanna had been named, and from whom she +had long had expectations--as all Speckport had heard a million times, +more or less--had died at last, and left Miss Jo the three thousand and +her blessing. + +Upon receiving the tidings, Miss Blake was seized with a violent desire +to revisit the scenes of her infantile sports, and gave warning of her +intention of starting in the first vessel bound for Liverpool. + +"And it's not in one of them dirty steamboats I'll go," said Miss Jo, +decisively, "that's liable to blow up any minute; but I'll go an a ship +that's slow and sure, and not put a hand in my own life by trusting to +one of them new-fangled inventions!" + +Mr. Blake expostulated with his sister on the impropriety of leaving him +alone and unprotected to the mercies of heartless servant-girls. Miss Jo +was inexorable. + +"If you don't like keeping house and fighting with the servants," said +Miss Blake, "go and board. If you don't like boarding, why, go and get +married! it won't hurt your growth any, I'm sure!" + +As Mr. Blake was on the wrong side of thirty, and had probably done +growing, there was a great deal of sound truth in Miss Jo's remark. Mr. +Blake, however, only stood aghast at the proposal. + +"It's time you were getting married, Val," pursued Miss Jo, busily +packing; "particularly now, that I'm going to leave you. You're well +enough off, and there's lots of nice girls in Speckport who would be +glad to snap at you. Not that I should like to see you marry a +Bluenose--Lord forbid! if it could be helped; but there's Miss Rose, or +there's Laura Blair, both of them as nice girls as you will find. Now, +why can't you take and marry one of them?" + +Mr. Blake was beyond the power of replying. He could only stare in blank +and helpless consternation at his brisk, match-making sister. + +"I would rather you took Miss Rose," pursued Miss Blake, "she's the best +of the two, and a rock of sense; but Laura's very fond of you, +and--where are you going now?" + +For Mr. Blake had snatched up his hat and started out, banging the door +after him. The first person he met, turning the corner, was Mr. Blair. + +"So you're going to lose Jo, Blake," he said, taking his arm. "Laura +tells me she is off next week in the Ocean Star. What are you going to +do with yourself when you lose her?" + +"Become a monk, I think," said Mr. Blake, helplessly. "I don't know +anything else for it! Jo talks of boarding, but I hate boarding-houses, +and where else can I go?" + +"Come to us," cried Mr. Blair, heartily. "Mrs. B. thinks there's nobody +like you, and you and I will have a fine chance to talk things over +together. Come to us, old boy, and make our house your home!" + +Mr. Blake closed with this friendly offer at once, on condition that the +ladies of the house were satisfied. + +"No danger of that," said Laura's father; "they will be in transports. +Come up this evening and have a smoke with me, and see if they don't." + +Laura Blair's eyes danced in her head when her father told them the +news; but the little hypocrite affected to object. + +"It will make so much trouble, pa," the young lady said, in a +dissatisfied tone, "trouble for ma and me, I mean. I wish he wasn't +coming." + +Mr. Blair listened to the shocking fib with the greatest indifference. +He didn't care whether she liked it or not, and said so, with paternal +frankness. + +So Miss Jo kissed everybody and departed, and Val translated his Lares +and Penates to Mr. Blair's; at least, such of them as were not disposed +of by public auction. + +Speckport was just settling its nerves after this, when it was thrown +into another little flutter by the unexpected return of Captain +Cavendish. + +Yes, Captain Cavendish, the defeated conqueror, came back to the scene +of his defeat, rather swaggering than otherwise, and carrying things +with a high hand. Perhaps the gallant captain wanted to show Speckport +how little he cared for being jilted; perhaps he wanted to see what kind +of life Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham would lead together; perhaps he found +himself too well known as a roué and gambler in Montreal; or perhaps he +was not tired bleeding young Alick McGregor and young Speckport +generally, in that quiet house in Prince Street. He was back, anyway, +handsome, and nonchalant, and unprincipled as ever. + +Miss Blair received a letter from her friend three weeks after her +departure, dated Niagara. Mrs. Wyndham was not a good correspondent, it +seemed; her letter was very brief and unsatisfactory, and she only +mentioned her husband once, and then merely to say Mr. Wyndham was well. +She signed the letter simply, "Olive," not using her real name, and told +Laura that Montreal was tiresome and the Canadians stupid. Miss Blair +sent her half a quire of note-paper by way of answer, recording every +item of information, and every possible scrap of news, and imploring a +speedy reply. But Olive never replied, although August wore itself out +while Laura waited. On the last day of that month, Mrs. Hill received a +telegram from Portland, Me., from Mr. Wyndham, informing her her master +and mistress would arrive next day. + +It was a glorious September afternoon that on which the wedded pair +returned from their short bridal-tour. The steamer swept up to the +crowded wharf in a sort of sun-burst of glory, and the air was opaque +with amber mist, as if it were raining impalpable gold-dust. Not a sign +of fog in the cloudless blue sky; it might have been Venice instead of +Speckport, so luminously brilliant was sky and earth that afternoon. + +The passengers poured out of the steamer, and came up the bustling +floats, where cabmen, porters, hotel-runners and the steamer-hands were +making a Babel of discord, and the passengers wondered to see the crowd +of people looking curiously down upon them from the wharf above. Laura +Blair stood straining her eyes for a sight of her friend. Olive +Henderson, with her dangerous gift of fascination, had won the girl's +love as it had never been won before, and Laura had missed her sadly +during these two last months. As she stood impatiently waiting, she was +thinking of that pleasant March evening when Olive Henderson had first +come to Speckport, and they had watched her walk up these very floats, +stately and tall, leaning on Mr. Darcy's arm, and wearing a vail over +her face. And while Laura thought of it, and could scarcely believe it +was only six months ago, she saw the same Olive--Olive Wyndham +now--coming toward her on her husband's arm. She was not vailed this +time, although a long drab gossamer vail floated back from the pretty +jockey-hat she wore, and Laura saw how pale and fagged and spiritless +she looked. The next moment, she had thrown her arms impetuously around +her, and was kissing her rapturously. + +"My darling Olly! my darling Olly!" she was crying out. "Oh, how glad I +am to see you again!" + +Her darling Olly did not return the embrace very enthusiastically, +though her face lit up at sight of her friend. Laura shook hands with +Mr. Wyndham, who was smiling at her effusions, and then turned again to +the friend she loved. + +"Oh, Olly! how dull it has been since you went away, and how cruel of +you never to write to me! Why didn't you write?" + +"Writing is such a bore," Olive said, drearily. "I hate writing. Is that +the carriage waiting up there?" + +"Yes," said Laura; "and how did you enjoy your travel? You look pale and +tired." + +"I am tired to death," Mrs. Wyndham said, impatiently, "and I have not +enjoyed myself at all. Every place was stupid, and I am glad to be home! +Do let us get out of this mob, Mr. Wyndham!" + +Mr. Wyndham had paused for a moment to give some directions about the +baggage, and his wife addressed him so sharply that Laura stared. Laura +noticed during the homeward drive how seldom she spoke to her husband, +and how cold her tone always was when she addressed him. But Mr. Wyndham +did not seem to mind much. He talked to Laura--and Mr. Wyndham knew how +to talk--and told her about their travels, and the places they had +been, and the people they had met, and the adventures they had +encountered. + +"Olive reigned Lady Paramount wherever we went," he said, smiling (he +never called her Mrs. Wyndham or "my wife," always Olive). "Our tour was +a long succession of brilliant triumphs for her." + +Olive merely shrugged her shoulders disdainfully, and looked at the +swelling meadows as they drove along Redmon road. A beautiful road in +summer time, and the Nettleby cottage was quite lost in a sea of green +verdure, sprinkled with red stars of the scarlet-runners. Ann Nettleby +stood in the door as they drove by in a cloud of dust--in that doorway +where pretty Cherrie used to stand, pretty, flighty little Cherrie, whom +Speckport was fast learning to forget. + +And Redmon! Could Mrs. Leroy have risen from her grave and looked on +Redmon, she might well have stared aghast at the magical changes. A +lovely little villa, with miniature peaks and turrets, and a long piazza +running around it, and verdant with climbing roses and sweetbrier. A +sloping velvety lawn, on which the drawing-room and dining-rooms windows +opened, led from the house to the avenue; and fair flower-gardens, where +fountains played in marble basins, and bees and butterflies disported in +the September sunshine, spread away on all sides. Beyond them lay the +swelling meadows, the dark woods; and, beyond all, the shining sea +aglitter in the summer sunshine. The groom came up to lead away the +horse, and Mrs. Hill, in a black silk dress and new cap, stood in the +doorway to receive them. The dark, sunless face of Olive lit up and +became luminous for the first time as she saw all this. + +"How pretty it is, Laura!" she said. "I am glad I am home." + +The servants were gathered in the hall to welcome their master and +mistress as they entered arm-in-arm. The upholsterer had done his work +well, the drawing-room was one long vista of splendor, the dining-room +almost too beautiful for eating in, and there was a conservatory the +like of which Speckport had never seen before. Mrs. Wyndham had a suite +of rooms, too--sleeping-room, dressing-room, bath-room, and boudoir--all +opening into one another in a long vision of brightness and beauty, and +there was a library which was a library, and not a mockery and a +delusion, and was lined with books from floor to ceiling. Speckport had +been shown the house, and pronounced it perfection. + +Olive Wyndham forgot her languor and weariness, and broke out in her old +delighted way as she went through it. + +"How beautiful it all is!" she cried, "and it is all mine--my own! I am +going to be happy here--I will be happy here!" + +Her black eyes flashed strangely upon her husband walking by her side, +and the hand clenched, as if she defied Fate from henceforth. + +"I hope so," Paul Wyndham said, gravely. "I hope, with all my heart, you +may be happy here." + +Laura looked from one to the other in silent wonder. Mr. Wyndham turned +to her as they finished the tour of the house. + +"I suppose Rosebush Cottage is hardly equal to this, Miss Laura? Have +you been there lately?" + +"Yes," said Laura. "Val and I--he stops with us now, you know--went +through it last week. The rooms are very pretty, and the garden is one +wilderness of roses; and Midge reminds me of Eve in Eden, only there is +no Adam." + +"And Midge does not exactly correspond with our ideas of our fair first +mother," laughed Mr. Wyndham. "I must go there to-morrow and see the +place. Will you come, Olive?"' + +"No, thank you," she said, coldly. "Rosebush Cottage has very little +interest for me." + +Again Laura stared. + +"Why is she so cross?" she thought. "How can she be cross, when he seems +so kind? How soon do you expect your mother, Mr. Wyndham?" she said +aloud. + +"This is Friday--I shall leave on Monday morning for New York to fetch +her." + +There was an announcement that dinner was ready, and nothing more was +said of Mr. Wyndham's mother. He rode over to Rosebush Cottage early +next morning, attended only by a big Canadian wolf-hound, of which +animals he had brought two splendid specimens with him, and told Midge +he was going to leave him as guardian of the premises. Before he left +the cottage, he called Midge into the pretty drawing-room, and held a +very long and very confidential interview with her, from which she +emerged with her ruddy face blanched to the hue of a sheet. Whatever was +said in that long conversation, its effect was powerful on Midge; for +she remained in a dazed and bewildered state for the rest of the day, +capable of doing nothing but sitting with her arms folded on the +kitchen-table, staring very hard at vacancy with her little round eyes. + +Mr. Wyndham departed for New York on Monday morning, taking the other +big dog, Faust, with him. Mrs. Wyndham took his departure with superb +indifference--it was nothing to her. John, the coachman, was of as much +consequence in her eyes as the man she had promised to love, honor, and +obey. She did not ask him when he was coming back--what was it to her if +he never came?--but he volunteered the information. "I will be back next +week, Olive," he said. "Good-bye." And Olive had said good-bye, icily, +and swept past him in the hall, and never once cast a look after him, as +he drove down the long avenue in the hazy September sunshine. + +The house-warming at Redmon could not very well come off until Mr. +Wyndham's return; and the preparations for that great event being going +on in magnificent style, and Olive eager for it to take place, she was +not sorry when, toward the close of the following week, she learned her +husband had returned. It was Miss McGregor who drove up to the villa to +make a call, and related the news. + +"The boat got in about two o'clock, my dear Mrs. Wyndham," Jeannette +said, "and Mr. Wyndham and his mother came in her. I chanced to be on +the wharf, and I saw them go up together, and enter a cab and drive +off. I am surprised they are not here." + +"They drove to Rosebush Cottage, I presume," Olive said, rather +haughtily. "Everything is in readiness for Mrs. Wyndham there." + +"What is she like, Jeannette?" asked Laura, who was always at Redmon, +familiarly. "I suppose she was dressed in black?" + +"Yes," Miss McGregor said, "she was dressed in black, and wore a thick +black vail over her face, and they had driven off before any one had +time to speak to them. No doubt, she would be present at the +house-warming, and then they could call on her afterward." + +But Mrs. Wyndham, Senior, did not appear at the house-warming; and +society was given to understand, very quietly, by Mr. Wyndham, that his +mother would receive no callers. Her health forbade all exertion or +excitement, it appeared. She seldom, if ever, crossed her own threshold, +from week's end to week's end; and it was her habit to keep her room, +and she did not care to be disturbed by any one. Her health was not so +very poor as to require medical attendance; but Mr. Wyndham owned she +was somewhat eccentric, and he liked to humor her. Speckport was quite +disappointed, and said it thought Mr. Wyndham's mother was a very +singular person, indeed! + + + + +CHAPTER XXX. + +VERY MYSTERIOUS. + + +The house-warming at Redmon was such a house-warming as Speckport never +saw before; for, as Mr. Blake with his customary good sense remarked, +"When Mrs. P. Wyndham did that sort of thing, she did do it." In the +luminous darkness of the September evening, the carriages of the guests +drove through the tall iron gates up the back avenue, all aglow with +red, and blue, and green lamps, twinkling like tropical fireflies among +the trees. The whole front of the beautiful villa blazed with +illumination, and up in the gilded gallery the musicians were filling +the scented air with delicious melody. It was not Redmon, this; it was +fairy-land; it was a scene out of the Arabian Nights, and the +darkly-beautiful lady in ruby velvet and diamonds, welcoming her +friends, was the Princess Badelbradour, lovely enough to turn the heads +of a brigade of poor Aladdins. Society went through the house that +night, and had the eyes dazzled in their heads by the blinding radiance +of light, and the glowing coloring and richness of all. The ladies went +into raptures over Mrs. Wyndham's rooms, and the literary people cast +envious eyes over the book-lined library, with its busts of poets, and +pictures of great men, dead and gone. There was a little room opening +off this library that seemed out of keeping in its severe plainness with +the magnificence of the rest of the house--a bare, severe room, with +only one window, looking out upon the velvety sward of the lawn at the +back of the villa; a room that had no carpet on the floor, and very +little furniture, only two or three chairs, a baize-covered +writing-table, a leather-covered lounge under the window, a few pictures +of dogs and horses, a plaster head of John Milton, a selection of books +on swinging shelves, a bureau, a dressing-table, a lavatory, a +shaving-glass, and a sofa-bedstead. Except the servants' apartments, +there was nothing at all so plain as this in the whole house; and when +people asked what it was, they were told by Mrs. Hill, who showed the +house, that it was Mr. Wyndham's room. Yes, this was Mr. Wyndham's room, +the only room in that house he ever entered, save when he went to +dinner, or when visitors required his presence in the drawing-room or +library. His big dog Faust slept on a rug beside the table, his canaries +sung to him in their cages around the window, he wrote in that hard +leathern armchair beside the green-baize table, he lay on that lounge +under the open window in the golden breeze of the September weather, +and smoked endless cigars; late into the night his lamp glimmered in +that quiet room; and when it went out after midnight, he was sleeping +the sleep of the just on the sofa-bedstead. The servants at Redmon +talked, as servants will talk, about the palpable estrangement between +master and mistress, about their never meeting, except at dinner, when +there always was company; for Mrs. Wyndham breakfasted in the boudoir +and Mr. Wyndham never ate luncheon. He was quite hermit-like in his +habits, this pale, inscrutable young author--one glass of wine sufficed +for him--he was out of bed and at work before the stable-boys or +scullery-maids were stirring, and his only extravagance was in the way +of cigars. From the day he had married Olive Henderson until this, he +had never asked or received one stiver of her money; he had more than +sufficient of his own for his simple wants and his mother's, and had +Olive been the hardest virago of a landlady, she could hardly have +brought in a bill against him, even for board and lodging, for he more +than repaid her for both. He was always courteous, genial, and polite to +her--too polite for one spark of her affection; always deferring to her +wishes, and never attempting in the smallest iota to interfere with her +caprices, or thwart her desires, or use his husbandly authority. She was +in every way as much her own mistress as she had ever been; so much so +that sometimes she wondered, and found it impossible to realize that she +was really married. No, she was not married; these two had never been +united either in heart or desire; they were bound together by a compact +never mentioned now. What had he gained by this marriage? Olive +sometimes wonderingly asked herself. He told her, or as good as told +her, he wanted her for her money; but now that money was at his +disposal, and he never made use of it. What had he married her for? + +"How proud you must be of your husband, Mrs. Wyndham!" other women had +said to her, when abroad; and sometimes, in spite of herself, a sharp +pang cut to the center of her haughty heart at the words. Why, these +very women had as much right to be proud of him, to speak to him, to be +near him, as she had. Proud of him! She thought she had cause to hate +him, she was wicked enough to wish to hate him, but she could not. +Neither could she despise him; she might treat him as coldly as she +pleased, but she never could treat him with contempt. There was a +dignity about the man, the dignity of a gentleman and a scholar, that +asserted itself, and made her respect him, as she never had respected +any other man. Once or twice a strange thought had come across her; a +thought that if he would come to her and tell her he was growing to love +her, and ask her not to be so cruelly cold and repellent, she might lay +her hand on his shoulder with the humility of a little child, and trust +him, and yield herself to him as her friend and protector through life, +and be simply and honestly happy, like other women. But he never did +this; his manner never changed to her in the slightest degree. She had +nothing to complain of from him, she had every cause to be grateful for +his kindness and clemency. And so she shut herself up in her pride, and +silenced fiercely her mutinous heart, and sought happiness in costly +dress and jewelry, and womanly employment, and incessant visiting, and +party-giving, and receptions and money-spending--and failed miserably. +Was she never to be happy? She had everything her heart could desire--a +beautiful house, servants to attend her, rich garments to wear, and she +fared sumptuously every day; but for all that, she was wretched. I do +not suppose Dives was a happy man. There is only one receipt in this +wide world for happiness, believe me, and that is goodness. We may be +happy for a brief while, with the brief happiness of a lotus-eater; but +it cannot last--it cannot last! and the after-misery is worse than +anything we ever suffered before. Olive Henderson had said she would be +happy, she had tried to compel herself to be happy; and thought for a +few poor minutes, sometimes, when she found herself the belle of some +gay party, dancing and laughing, and reigning like a queen, that she had +succeeded. But "Oh, the lees are bitter, bitter!" Next day she would +know what a ghastly mockery it had all been, and she would watch Paul +Wyndham, mounted on his pony, with his dog behind him, riding away to +his mother's cottage, with a passionately rebellious and bitter heart, +and wonder if he or any one else in the wide world would really care if +they found her lying on the floor of her costly boudoir, stark and dead, +slain by her own hand. + +Paul Wyndham appeared to be very fond of his mother, if he was not of +his wife. He rode over to Rosebush Cottage every day, rain or shine, and +sometimes staid there two or three days together. + +Mr. Wyndham's mother, for all her age and her ill-health, could play the +piano, it seemed. People going past Rosebush Cottage had often heard the +piano going, and played, too, with masterly skill. At first, it was +thought to be Mr. Wyndham himself, who was quite a musician, but they +soon found out the piano-playing went on when he was known to be at +Redmon. Olive heard all this, and, like Speckport, would have given a +good deal to see Mr. Wyndham's mother; but she never saw her. She had +asked him, carelessly, if his mother would come to the house-warming, +and he had said "No, she never went out;" and so the house-warming had +come off without her. + +There was one person present on that occasion whom Speckport was +surprised to see, and that was Captain Cavendish. Captain Cavendish had +received a card of invitation, and, having arrayed himself in his +uniform, made his appearance as a guest, in the house he once hoped to +call his own. Those floating stories, whispered by the servants, and +current in the town, of the cold disunion between husband and wife, had +reached him, and delighted him more than words can tell. After all, +then, she had loved him! Doubtless she spent her nights in secret +weeping and mourning for his loss, fit to tear her black hair out by the +roots, in her anguish at having lost him. He was very late in arriving +at Redmon, purposely late; and he could imagine her straining her eyes +toward the drawing-room door, her heart throbbing at every fresh +announcement, and turning sick with disappointment when she found it was +not he. Would she betray any emotion when she met him? Would her voice +falter, her eyes droop, her color rise, or her hand turn cold in his +own? + +Oh, Captain Cavendish! you might have spared yourself the trouble of all +these conjectures. Not one poor thought had she ever given you; not once +had your image crossed her mind, until you stood bowing before her; and +then, when she spoke to you, every nerve was as steady as when, an +instant later, she welcomed old Squire Tod. Her eyes were following +furtively another form, nothing like so tall, or stately, or gallant as +your own, Captain Cavendish; another form that went in and out through +the crowd--the form of her husband, who welcomed every one with a face +infinitely kind and genial, who found partners for forlorn damsels, who +stopped to talk courteously to neglected wall-flowers, and who came to +where his wife stood every now and then, and addressed her as any other +gentleman in his own house might address his wife, showing no sign of +coldness or disunion on his part, at least. + +Captain Cavendish was disappointed, and all Speckport with him. Where +was the cold neglect on Mr. Wyndham's part, they had come prepared to +see and relish? where the haughty disdain of the neglected and resentful +wife? They were calmly polite to one another, and what more was +required? As long as Mr. Wyndham did not beat her, or Mrs. Wyndham +showed no sign of intending to elope with any other man, Speckport could +see no reason why it should set them down as other than a very +well-matched couple. + +It was noticeable that Mr. Wyndham that night paid rather marked +attention to one of the lady guests present; but as the lady wore black +bombazine and crape, a widow's cap, and was on the frosty side of fifty, +no scandal came of it. The lady was poor Mrs. Marsh, who had come, +nothing loth, and who simpered a good deal, and was fluttered and +flattered to find herself thus honored by the master of Redmon. + +"Her story is a very sad one, Olive," he said; "I am glad you settled +that annuity upon her; it does you credit." + +Olive said nothing; but a dark red streak flushed across her face--a +burning glow of shame. She was thinking of Mrs. Major Wheatly's +governess--what would Paul Wyndham say of that pale little girl if he +knew all? Mrs. Wyndham had repeatedly invited Miss Rose to Redmon; and +Miss Rose had come two or three times, but never when there was company. + +Mr. Wyndham led Mrs. Marsh in to supper, and sat beside her, and filled +her plate with good things, and talked to her all through that repast. +His wife, sitting between Major Wheatly and the Rev. Augustus Tod, still +watched him askance, and wondered what he could find to say to that +insipid and faded nonentity, who simpered like a school-girl as she +listened to him. But shortly after conducting Mrs. Marsh back to the +ballroom, and seeing her safely seated at a card-table, he disappeared, +and was nowhere to be seen. Every one was so busy dancing, and flirting, +and card-playing, that his absence was quite unnoticed--no, not quite, +his wife had observed it. It was strange the habit she had insensibly +contracted, of watching this man, for whom she did not care--or +persuaded herself she did not--of listening for his voice, his step, and +feeling better satisfied, somehow, to see him in the room. Where had he +gone to? What was he doing? How could he be so rude as to go and leave +their guests? She grew distrait, then fidgety, then feverishly and +foolishly anxious to know what he could be about, and who he was with; +and gliding unobserved from the crowded ballroom, she visited the +dining-room, the library, peeped into his own room, which she never +condescended to enter; all in vain. Mr. Wyndham was nowhere to be seen. + +"It is very strange!" said Mrs. Wyndham to herself, knitting her black +brow--always her habit when annoyed. "It is most extraordinary conduct! +I think he might show a little more attention to his guests." + +The library windows opened on the velvet lawn, and were opened now to +their widest extent, to admit the cool night air. She stepped out into +the pale starlit night, her rich ruby velvet dress and starry diamonds +glowing dimly in the luminous darkness. As she walked across the lawn, +glad to be alone for a moment, a figure all in white flew past her with +a rush, but not before she had recognized the frightened face of Laura +Blair. + +"Laura!" she said, "is it you? What is the matter?" + +Laura stopped, and passed her hands over her beating heart. + +"I have had such a scare! I came out of the conservatory five minutes +ago, on to the lawn to get cool, when I saw a figure that had been +standing under the trees dart behind one of them, as if to hide. The +person seemed to have been watching the house, and was trying to hide +from me. It frightened me, and I ran." + +Olive Wyndham was physically as brave as a man: she never screamed, or +ran, or went into hysterics, from palpable terror. Now, she drew Laura's +arm within her own, and turned in the direction that young lady had +come. + +"You little goose," she said, "it was some of the people here, out to +get cool like yourself. We will go and see who they are." + +"I don't believe it is any of the people here. I think it was a woman in +a long cloak, with the hood over her head. Oh, I had rather not go!" + +"Nonsense! it was some of the servants, or some curious, inquisitive +straggler, come to----" + +She stopped, for Laura had made a warning gesture, and whispered, "Look +there!" Olive looked. Directly opposite the house, and shrinking behind +a clump of cedar trees, on the edge of a thickly-wooded portion of the +grounds, she could see a figure indistinctly in the star-light--the +figure of a female it looked, wearing, as Laura said, a long cloak, with +the hood drawn over the head and shrouding the face. They were in deep +shadow themselves, and Laura hid her white dress behind some laurel +bushes. Olive's curiosity was excited by the steadfast manner in which +the shrouded figure watched the house--through those large, lighted +windows, Olive knew the person could distinctly see into the +drawing-room, if not distinguish the people there. + +"Laura," she whispered, "I must find out who that is. I can get round +without being seen--you remain and wait for me here." + +Keeping in the shadow, Olive skirted the lawn and round the cedar clump, +without being seen or heard by the watcher. She glided behind the +stunted trees; but though she was almost near enough to touch the +singular apparition, she could not see its face, it was so shrouded by +the cowl-like hood. While she stood waiting for it to turn round, a man +crossed the lawn hurriedly, excitedly, and, with a suppressed +exclamation, clasped the cloaked figure in his arms. Olive hardly +repressed a cry--the man was her husband, Paul Wyndham! + +"My darling!" she heard him say, in a voice she never forgot--a voice so +full of infinite love and tenderness, that it thrilled to her very +heart--"my darling, why have you done this? I have been searching for +you everywhere since I heard you were here. My love! my love! how could +you be so rash?" + +"I was so lonely, Paul, without you!" a woman's voice answered--a voice +that had a strangely-familiar sound, and Olive saw the cloaked figure +clinging to him, trustingly. "I was so lonely, and I wanted to see them +all. But I am very cold now, and I want to go home!" + +"I shall take you home at once, my darling! Your carriage is waiting at +the gate. Come, I know a path through this wood that will lead us +out--it will not do to go down the avenue. Oh, my dearest! never be so +rash again! You might have been seen." + +They were gone; disappearing into the black cedar woods, like two dark +specters, and Olive Wyndham came out from her place of concealment, and +stood an instant or two like one who has been stunned by a blow. Laura +Blair rose up at her approach with a startled face, and saw that she was +ghastly white. + +"Olly!" Laura said, in a scared voice, "wasn't that Mr. Wyndham who went +away with--with--that person?" + +Olive Wyndham turned suddenly upon her, and grasped her arm, with a +violence that made Laura cry out with pain. + +"Laura Blair!" she cried, with passionate fierceness in her voice, "if +ever you say a word of what you have seen to-night, I will kill you!" + +With which remark, Mrs. Wyndham walked away, stepped through the library +window, and into the house. She was in the drawing-room when poor Laura +ventured in, sitting at the piano, enchanting her guests with some new +and popular music, but with a face that had blanched to a sickly white. +She might play, she might talk, she might laugh and dance, but she could +not banish that frozen look from her face; and her friends, looking at +her, inquired anxiously if she was ill; no, she said she was not ill; +but she had been out in the grounds a short time before, and had got +chilled--that was all. + +Half an hour later, Mr. Wyndham re-appeared in the drawing-room, with a +calm face that hid his secret guilt well. Some of the people were +already beginning to depart, and his absence was unknown to all save +two. Once he spoke to his wife, remarking on her paleness, and telling +her she had fatigued herself dancing; and she had laughed strangely and +answered, yes, it had been a delightful evening all through, and she had +never enjoyed herself so much. And then she was animatedly bidding the +last of her guests good-night, and the lights were fled, the garlands +dead, and the banquet-hall deserted. And Paul Wyndham bade her good +night, and left her alone in her velvet robes and diamond necklace, and +splendid misery, and never dreamed that he was found out. + +Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham did not meet again until Sunday. The next day, +Friday, the young author had gone over to Rosebush Cottage with his MSS. +and fishing-rod, and there spent the rest of the week. The dissipation +at Redmon, the constant round of dressing, and visiting, and +party-giving, knocked him up, he told Val Blake, and unfitted him for +work; and, at the cottage, he could recruit, and smoke, and get on with +his writing. + +Speckport saw Mrs. Wyndham driving, and riding, and promenading through +its streets, that day and the next, beautifully dressed and looking +beautiful, but Speckport never once dreamed of the devouring jealousy +that had eaten its way to her inmost heart, and must hitherto be added +to her other tortures. Yes, Olive Wyndham was jealous, with the fierce +jealousy of such natures as hers--and your dark women can be jealous of +your fair women with a vengeance. And as real jealousy without love is +simply an impossibility, the slow truth broke upon Olive Wyndham that +she had grown to love her husband. + +How it had come about, Heaven only knows; she had honestly done her best +to hate him. But that mischievous little blind god, flying his arrows at +random, had shot one straight to her haughty heart. This, then, was the +secret of all her anxiety and watchfulness, though she had never +suspected it--she might have been a long time in suspecting it, but for +the discovery made in the grounds that night. She loved him who would +never love her. She knew him indifferent to herself; but while she +thought him equally indifferent to every one else, she had not cared +much; but now, but now! Who was this woman who had stepped between her +and the man to whom she was married? + +Who was she? who was she? she asked herself the miserable question a +hundred times a minute--she could think of nothing else--but she never +could answer it. In all Speckport she could not fix upon any one she +knew Paul Wyndham was likely to address such words as she had heard to. +How their memory thrilled her--those tones so full of passionate +love--it made her grind her teeth to think of them. + +"If I had her here, whoever she is," she thought, "I could tear the eyes +out of her head, and send her back to him streaming blood! Oh, who can +she be? who can she be?" + +It was Catty Clowrie who first changed the course of her ideas, and set +her off at a new tangent. Catty was sewing at the villa; and, as Mrs. +Wyndham, in her miserable restlessness, wandered from room to room, she +came at last to a pleasant vine-grown glass porch at the back of the +house, where Miss Clowrie sat stitching away in the afternoon sunshine. +An open book lay beside her, as if she had just been reading, and Olive +saw it was Mr. Wyndham's volume of travels. She took it up with a +strange contradictory feeling of tenderness for the insensate thing. + +"How do you like it?" she asked, looking at his portrait in front, the +deep, thoughtful eyes gazing back at her from the engraving, with the +same inscrutable look she knew so well. + +"I think it is lovely," said Catty. "I wish I could finish it, but I +must get on with my work. Mr. Wyndham must be wonderfully clever; his +descriptions set the places before you as if you saw them." + +Olive sat down, and began talking to this girl, whom she instinctively +disliked, about her husband and her husband's books. Catty, snapping off +her thread, asked at last: + +"Mr. Wyndham is not at home to-day, is he? I haven't seen him." + +"No," said his wife, carelessly, "he has gone over to Rosebush Cottage." + +Miss Clowrie gave an unpleasant little laugh. + +"Of course he is at Rosebush Cottage! Every one knows Mr. Wyndham never +goes anywhere else! If he had a Fair Rosamond shut up there, he could +not be fonder of going there. Mr. Wyndham must be very much attached to +his mother." + +There was a long blank pause after her cruel speech, during which the +mistress of Redmon never took the book from before her face. She felt +that she was deadly pale, and had sense enough left not to wish Catty +Clowrie to see it. She rose up presently, throwing the book on the +ground as she did so, and walked out of the porch with such fierce +rebellious bitterness in her heart, as never at her worst of misery had +she felt before. A Fair Rosamond! Yes, the secret was out! and what a +blind fool she must have been not to have seen it before! It was no +sickly old mother Paul Wyndham had shut up in Rosebush Cottage, but a +fair inamorata. It was she, too, whom they had seen in the grounds the +previous night; she who, wearied of her pretty prison without him, and +fall of curiosity, doubtless, had come to Redmon. "I was so lonely +without you, Paul!"--she remembered the sweet and strangely-familiar +voice that had said those words, and the tender caress which had +answered them; and she sank down in her jealous rage and despair in her +own room, hating herself and all the world. Oh, my poor Olive! Surely +retribution had overtaken you, surely judgment had fallen upon you even +in this life, for your sins of ambition and pride! + +Mrs. Wyndham was not much of a church-goer, but rather the reverse. She +had a heathenish way of lolling in her boudoir Sundays, and listening +with a dreamy sensuous pleasure to the clashing of bells, and falling +asleep when they ceased, and awakening to read novels until dinner-time. + +But sometimes she went to the fashionable Episcopal church, and yawned +in the face of the Rev. Augustus Tod, expounding the word rather +drawlingly in his white surplice, and sometimes she went to the +cathedral with Laura Blair. She took the same sensuous, dreamy pleasure +in going there that she did in listening to the bells, or in reading +Owen Meredith's poetry. She liked to watch the purple, and violet, and +ruby, and amber glows from the stained-glass windows on the heads of the +faithful; she liked to listen to the grand solemn music of the old +church, to inhale the floating incense, and listen to the chanting of +the robed priests. And best of all she liked to see the Sisters of +Charity glide noiselessly in through some side-door, with vailed faces +and bowed heads, and to weave romances about them all the time high mass +was going on. Matter-of-fact Catholics about her wondered why Mrs. +Wyndham stared so at the Sisters, and it is probable the Sisters +themselves would have laughed good-naturedly had they known of the tale +of romance with which the dark-eyed heiress invested them. But it was +not to look at the nuns--though she did look at them, almost wishing she +were one too, and at rest from the great world strife--it was not to +look at them she had come to the cathedral to-day, but to listen to a +celebrated preacher somewhere from the United States. Laura had told +her he was a Jesuit--those terrible Jesuits!--and Olive had almost as +much curiosity to see a Jesuit as a nun. So she drove to the cathedral +in her carriage, and sat in Mr. Blair's cushioned pew, and watched the +people filling the large building, and listened to the grand, solemn +strains of the organ touched by the masterly hand; and all listlessly +enough. But suddenly her heart gave a quick plunge, and all listlessness +was gone. There, coming up the aisle, behind the sexton, was a gentleman +and a lady; a gentleman whose step she would have known the wide world +over, and a lady she was more desirous of seeing than any other being on +earth. It was Mr. Wyndham and his mother, and dozens of heads turned in +surprise and curiosity, to look at that hitherto invisible mother. But +she was invisible still, at least her face was, for the long black crape +vail she wore was so impenetrably thick, no human eyes could pierce it. +They saw she was tall and very slender, although she wore a great double +black woolen shawl that would have made the slightest girlish form look +clumsy and stout. She bent forward slightly as she walked, but the stoop +was not the stoop of age--Olive Wyndham saw that. Mr. Wyndham, hat in +hand, his mother hanging on his arm, his pale face gravely reverent, +entered the pew the sexton indicated, after his mother. + +It was directly in front of Mr. Blair's, facing the grand altar, and the +jealous wife had an excellent chance of watching her husband and his +companion. + +Paul Wyndham was not a Catholic--he did not pretend to be anything in +particular, a favorite creed with his countrymen, I think--but he was a +gentleman; so he rose and sat and knelt as the worshipers about him did, +and never once turned his back to the altar to stare at the choir. + +Mrs. Wyndham, Senior, made no attempt to raise her vail during the whole +service. She knelt most of the time with her face lying on the front +rail of the pew, as if in prayer--a good deal to the surprise of those +who saw her and imagined her not of their faith. + +Olive never took her eyes off her--the Sisters of Charity, the swinging +censers, the mitred bishop, the robed priests, the solemn ceremonies, +the swelling music, were all unheard and unseen--that woman in front +absorbed every sense she possessed. Even when the Jesuit mounted to the +pulpit, she only gave him one glance, and saw that he was tall and thin +and sallow, and not a bit oily and Jesuit-like, and returned to her +watching of Mr. Wyndham's mother. That lady seemed to pay attention to +the sermon, if her daughter-in-law did not, and a very impressive sermon +it was, and one Olive Wyndham would have done well to heed. He took for +his text that solemn warning of our Lord, "What will it avail a man to +gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" and the hearts of his +hearers thrilled within them with wholesome fear as they listened to the +discourse which followed. "You are here to-day, but you may be gone +to-morrow. O my brethren!" the sonorous voice, which rang from aisle to +aisle, like the trump of the last angel, cried; "the riches you are +laboring so hard to amass you may never enjoy. The riches for which you +toil by day and by night mean nothing if your poor span of existence +permits you to accomplish them. Stop and think, oh, worldlings, while +time remains. Work while it is yet day, for the night is at hand, and +work for the glory which shall last for eternity. The road over which +you are walking leads nowhere, but ends abruptly in the yawning grave. +The fame for which you suffer and struggle and give up ease and rest, +will be when over but a hollow sound, heard for one poor, pitiful +moment, ere your ears are stilled in death, and your laurel crown dust +and ashes. The great of this world--who made kings their puppets, and +the nations of the earth their toys--have lived their brief space and +are gone, and what avails them now the glory and the greatness they won? +The fame of Shakespeare, of Alexander, of Napoleon of France, of a +Byron, and a Milton, and all other great men--great in this +life--remains to posterity, but what availed it all to them at the +judgment-seat of God. There, at that awful tribunal, where we all must +stand, nothing but their good works--if they ever did good works--could +soften the rigor of Divine Justice. The world is like an express-train, +rushing madly on, with a fathomless precipice at the end; and you laugh +and sing on your way to it, consoling yourself with the thought, 'At the +last moment I will repent, and all will be well.' But the Divine Justice +has answered you beforehand--terribly answered you--'You shall seek me +and you shall not find me, and you shall die in your sins!'" + +The sermon was a very long one, and a very terrible one, likely to stir +the dead souls of the most hardened sinner there. It was noticeable that +Mr. Wyndham's mother never lifted her head all the time, but that it lay +on the pew-rail, and that she was as immovable as a figure carved in +ebony. Olive Wyndham had to listen, and her cheek blanched as she did +so. Was this sermon preached for her? Was she bartering her immortal +soul for dross, so soon to be taken from her? And then a wild terror +took possession of her, and she dared think no longer. She could have +put her fingers to her ears to shut out the inexorable voice, thundering +awfully to her conscience: "You shall seek me and you shall not find me, +and you shall die in your sins." There was a dead silence of dumb fear +in the cathedral when the eloquent preacher descended, and very devout +were the hearers until the conclusion of mass. Then they poured out, a +good deal more subdued than when they had entered, and Olive had to go +with the rest. Mr. Wyndham and his mother showed no sign of stirring, +nor did they leave their pew until the last straggler of the +congregation was gone. The carriage from Rosebush Cottage was waiting +outside the gates, and Mr. Wyndham assisted his mother in, and they +drove off. + +Olive dined at Mr. Blair's that day, and heard them discussing the +sermon, and the unexpected appearance of Mr. Wyndham and his mother. +Olive said very little--the panic in her soul had not ceased. The +shortness of time, the length of eternity--that terrible eternity!--had +never been brought so vividly before her before. Was the express-train +in which she was flying through life near the end--near that awful chasm +where all was blackness and horror? Human things frittered +away--earthly troubles, gigantic before, looked puny and insignificant +seen in the light of eternity--so soon to begin, never to end! She had +been awakened--she never could sleep again the blind, heathenish sleep +that had been hers all her life, or woe to her if she could. + +Mr. Blake and Miss Blair walked home with her in the hazy September +moonlight. They found Mr. Wyndham sitting in one of the basket-chairs in +the glass porch, looking up at the moon as seen through the smoke of his +cigar, and Olive's inconsistent heart throbbed as if it would break from +its prison and fly to him. Oh, if all this miserable acting could end; +if he would only love her, and let her love him, she would yield forever +the wealth that had never brought her happiness, and be his true and +loving wife from henceforth, and try and atone for the sins of the past. +She might be a good woman yet, if her life could only be simple and true +like other women, and all this miserable secresy at an end. But, though +the silken skirt of her rich robe touched him, they could not have been +further apart if the wide world divided them. She could have laid her +head down on the table there, and wept passionate, scalding tears, so +utterly forlorn and wretched and lonely and unloved did she feel. She +could not talk--something rose in her throat and choked her--but she +listened to Mr. Wyndham telling in his quiet voice how he had persuaded +his mother to go out that day to hear the famous preacher, and how he +thought it had done her good. + +Val and Laura did not stay long, but set out on their moonlit homeward +way. Ann Nettleby sat in her own doorway, and Val paused to speak to +her. + +"No news of Cherrie, yet, Ann?" + +Ann made the usual reply, "No," and they walked on, talking of lost +Cherrie. + +"I'll find her out yet," Mr. Blake said, determinedly. "I don't despair, +even though--well, what's the matter?" + +Laura had uttered an exclamation, and clung suddenly to his arm. Redmon +road was lonely, as you know, and not a creature was to be seen; but +Laura was pointing to where, under the trees, in the moonlight, a woman +was standing still. A woman or a spirit, which? For it was robed in +white from head to foot, and a shower of pale hair drifted over its +shoulders. The face turned toward them as they approached, a face as +white as the dress, and Laura Blair uttered a loud shriek as she saw it, +reeled and would have fallen, had not Val caught her in his arms. + +Val had turned white himself, for the pale shadow under the trees had +worn the dead face of Nathalie Marsh! As Laura shrieked it had vanished, +in a ghostly manner enough, among the trees, and Val Blake was left +standing gaping in the middle of Redmon road, holding a fainting lady in +his arms. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI. + +VAL'S DISCOVERY. + + +Mr. Blake was in a predicament. Some men there are who would by no means +turn aghast at being obliged to hold a fair, fainting damsel in their +arms, but Mr. Blake was none of these. Should he lay her down on the +road while he went for help, or should he carry her to the Nettleby +Cottage? Yes, that was the idea; and Mr. Blake lifted the fair fainted +in his stalwart arms, and bore her off like a man. The cottage was very +near, and Mr. Blake was big and strong; but for all that he was in a +very red and panting state when he gave a thundering knock at the +cottage-door. One hundred and twenty pounds of female loveliness is no +joke to carry, even for a short distance; and he leaned Miss Blair up +against the door-post in such a way that she nearly toppled over on Miss +Ann Nettleby's head, when that young lady opened the door. Ann screamed +at the sight, but Mr. Blake pushed past her with very little ceremony. + +"She's only fainted, Ann! Don't make a howling. Get some water, or +hartshorn, or something, and bring her to." + +Miss Ann Nettleby was a young lady of considerable presence of mind, and +immediately began to apply restoratives. Whether it was that nature was +coming round of her own accord, or from the intrinsic merit of burnt +feathers held under her nose, and cold water doused in her face, Miss +Blair, with a long, shivering sigh, consented at last to come to, and +looked around her with a blank, bewildered stare. + +"Well, Laura," said Val, stooping over her, "how do you find yourself, +now?" + +At the sound of his voice, recollection seemed to flash vividly across +Laura's mind. She was lying on the couch in the front room; but she +started up with a scream, her eyes dilating, and, to Mr. Blake's dismay, +flung herself into his arms. + +"Oh, Val!" she cried, clinging wildly to him, "the ghost! the ghost! I +saw the ghost of Nathalie Marsh." + +Ann Nettleby's eyes grew as round as saucers. + +"The ghost of Nathalie Marsh!" she repeated. "Lor! Miss Laura, you +haven't seen her ghost, have you?" + +"Come, Laura, don't be frightened," said Val, soothingly, though sorely +perplexed himself. "There is no ghost here, at all events. Perhaps you +had better go back to Redmon, and stay with Mrs. Wyndham all night." + +But Laura, gasping and hysterical, protested she would not venture out +that night again for all the world, and ended the declaration by falling +back on the lounge in a violent fit of hysterics. Val seized his hat and +made for the door. + +"You look after her, Ann," he said, "and I'll run up to Redmon for Mrs. +Wyndham. She'll die before morning if she keeps on like this." + +Mr. Blake's long limbs never measured off the ground so rapidly before, +as they did now the distance between the cottage and the villa. In the +whole course of his life, Val Blake had never received such a staggerer +as he had this night. He did not believe in ghosts; he was as devoid of +imagination as a pig; he had not eaten a heavy supper, nor drank one +single glass of wine, yet he had seen the ghost of Nathalie Marsh! They +had not been talking of the dead girl; they had not been thinking of +her; yet she had stood before them, wearing the face, and looking at +them out of the blue eyes they knew so well. It was all very fine to +talk of the freaks of the sense of vision, of optical illusions, and all +that sort of thing. It was no illusion, optical or otherwise. Nathalie +Marsh was dead and buried, and they had seen her ghost on Redmon Road. + +The servant who answered Mr. Blake's ring looked rather surprised, but +showed him into the library, and went in search of his mistress. Olive +came in, wearing the dress in which they had left her, and Val told his +story with blunt straightforwardness. Olive's black eyes opened to their +widest extent. + +"Seen a ghost! My dear Mr. Blake, do I understand you aright?" + +Mr. Blake gave one of his nods. + +"Yes. It was a ghost, and it frightened Laura into a fit; and she's in +one still, down there at Nettleby's. It was a ghost, I'll take my oath +of it; for it had Nathalie Marsh's face, and Nathalie Marsh is dead and +buried." + +There was a slight noise at the door. Olive Wyndham's quick ear +recognized it, and she turned round. Mr. Blake followed her eyes, and +saw Paul Wyndham standing in the doorway. But what ailed him? His face +was always pale; but it looked ghastly at this moment, turning from its +natural hue to an awful ashen white. + +"Hallo, Wyndham!" cried Val, "what's gone wrong with you? You look as if +you had seen a ghost yourself." + +"There is nothing the matter with me," said Mr. Wyndham, coming quietly +forward. "What is that about ghosts, and where have you left Miss +Blair?" + +"At Nettleby's, fit to die of fright. We saw a woman who has been dead +for more than a year, on the road; and Laura screamed out, and dropped +down like a stone!" + +"My dear Blake!" + +"I wanted her to come up here," pursued Val, "and stay all night, but +she went off into strong hysterics in the middle of what I was saying; +so I left her with Ann Nettleby, and came up here for Mrs. Wyndham." + +"I will go to her at once," Olive said, ringing the bell; "but, Mr. +Blake, I don't understand this at all. Seen a ghost! It is +incomprehensible!" + +"Just so!" said Mr. Blake, with constitutional composure, "but it's +true, for all that. Nathalie Marsh is dead, and buried over there in the +cemetery; but, for all that, I saw her as plainly this night on Redmon +road as ever I saw her in my life!" + +There was something in Mr. Blake's manner that carried conviction with +it, and Mr. Blake was not the man to tell a cock-and-bull story, or let +himself be easily deceived. Had Laura Blair, a fanciful and romantic +girl, alone told the story, every one would have laughed incredulously, +but Val Blake was another story. Matter-of-fact Val had no fancies, +natural or supernatural, and told his story with a resolute air of +conviction now that perplexed his hearers. Mr. Wyndham affected to +laugh; but, somehow, the laugh was mirthless, and his face and lips +remained strangely colorless. + +"It was some one playing a practical joke, depend upon it," he said; +"perhaps that imp of mischief, Sam's brother. As to ghosts--why, Blake, +where have your wits gone to?" + +"All right," said Val; "I don't ask you to believe it, you know; but if +it wasn't Nathalie Marsh's spirit, then it was Nathalie Marsh in the +flesh, and we have all been deceived, and the woman buried in Speckport +cemetery is not the woman I took her to be." + +Paul Wyndham turned round suddenly, and walked to the window and looked +out. He turned round so suddenly that neither his wife nor his friend +saw the awful change that came over his face when these words were +said. A servant brought Mrs. Wyndham her hat and shawl, and he did not +turn round again until they were leaving the room. Olive's heart stood +still at sight of the white change in his face. + +"You are ill, Mr. Wyndham," she said, looking at him sharply and +wistfully. + +"You're as pale as a ghost," said Mr. Blake; "don't come with us--what's +the matter?" + +Mr. Wyndham gave them his former answer, "Nothing," and watched them +walking down the moonlit avenue together, until they were out of sight. +Then he left the room, put on his hat and overcoat, locked his own door, +and dropped the key in his pocket, and followed them. Half an hour +later, while Olive and Val were persuading Laura to come with them to +Redmon, he was knocking at the door of Rosebush Cottage, and being +admitted by Midge, whose ruddy face wore a look of blanched +consternation at sight of him. + +Mr. Val Blake walked home in the moonlight alone. As he passed the spot +where, under the tree, the ghostly-white figure with the hazy hair and +deathlike face had stood, he felt a cold thrill in spite of himself; but +the spot was vacant now--not a soul, in the flesh or out of it, was to +be seen on Redmon road. Mr. Blake, as I said, walked home in the +moonlight alone, and astounded the whole Blair family by the unearthly +tidings. For good Mrs. Blake's sake he omitted that part concerning +Laura's fainting-fits--merely saying she was frightened, and he had +thought it best to leave her at Redmon. Mrs. Blair turned pale, Master +Bill grinned, and Mr. Blair pooh-poohed the story incredulously. + +"A ghost! What nonsense, Blake! I always thought you a sensible man +before; but if you draw the long bow like that, I shall have to change +my opinion." + +"Very well," said Val, in nowise disturbed at having his veracity +doubted, "seeing's believing! You may think what you please, and so +shall I!" + +Before it took its breakfast next morning, Speckport had heard the +story--the astounding story--that the ghost of Nathalie Marsh had +appeared to Mr. Blake and Miss Blair on Redmon road, and had frightened +the young lady nearly to death. Speckport relished the story +amazingly--it was nothing more than they had expected. How could that +poor suicide be supposed to rest easy in her grave! Mrs. Marsh, over her +eternal novels, heard it, and cried a little, and wondered how Mr. Blake +could say such cruel things on purpose to worry her. Captain Cavendish +heard it, and laughed incredulously in Mr. Blake's face. + +"Why, Val," he cried, "are you going loony, or getting German, or taken +to eating cold pork before going to bed? Cold pork might account for it, +but nothing else could ever excuse you for telling such a +raw-head-and-bloody-bones story as that, and expecting sensible people +to believe it. As to Laura, any gatepost or white birch tree in the +moonlight would pass for a ghost with her." + +Mr. Blake was entirely too much of a philosopher to waste his time in +controversy with these unbelievers. He knew well enough it was no +gatepost or white birch he had seen, but the subject was full of mystery +and perplexity, and he was glad to let it drop. It could not be Nathalie +Marsh; he had seen her dead and buried; and ghosts were opposed to +reason and common sense, and all the beliefs of his life. It was better +to let the subject drop then; so he only whistled when people laughed at +him, or cross-questioned him, and told them if they didn't believe him +the less they said about it the better. + +But the strange story was not so soon to die out. Mr. Blake, about a +fortnight after, was suddenly and unexpectedly confirmed. The ghost of +Nathalie Marsh had been seen again--this time in Speckport Cemetery, +kneeling beside her own grave; and the person who saw it had fled away, +shrieking and falling in a fit at the sexton's door. It was the sexton's +nephew, a lad of fifteen or thereabouts, who, going at nightfall to +close the cemetery-gates, had seen some one kneeling on one of the +graves. This being nothing unusual, the boy had gone over, to desire the +person to leave, when, to his horror, it slowly turned round its +face--the face of one buried there a twelvemonth before. With an +unearthly yell, the boy turned tail and fled, and had been raving +delirious ever since. The alarmed sexton had gone out to prove the truth +of the incoherent story, but had found the cemetery deserted, and no +earthly or unearthly visitant near the grave of the doomed girl. + +Here was a staggerer for Speckport! People began to look blankly at each +other, and took a sudden aversion to being out after nightfall. The +"Snorter" and the "Bellower" and the "Puffer" reluctantly recorded this +new marvel, confirming, as it did, the truth of Mr. Blake's story; but +opined some evil person was playing off a practical joke, and hinted to +the police to be on the look-out, and pin the ghost the first +opportunity. It was the talk of the whole town--the boy was dangerously +ill, and young ladies grew nervous and hysterical, and would not stay a +moment in the dark, for untold gold. Laura Blair was worst of all; she +was hysterical to the last degree, and shrieked if a door shut loudly, +and fell into hysterics if they left her alone an instant night or day. +Olive Wyndham's dark face paled with terror as she listened. Was the +dead and defrauded heiress rising from her grave because her earthly +wrongs would not let her rest there? Would she appear to her next? + +Was it superstitious fear that had taken all the color--and he never at +best had much to spare--out of Paul Wyndham's face, and left him the +ghost of his former self. The servants at Redmon could have told you how +little he ate, and perhaps that accounted for his growing as thin as a +shadow. A dark look of settled gloom over-shadowed his pale face always +now. He spent more of his time than ever at his mother's cottage, and +when asked what was the matter--was he ill?--he answered no, but his +mother was. Why, then, did he not have medical advice, sympathizers +asked; and Mr. Wyndham replied that his mother declined--she was very +peculiar, and positively refused. What did he suppose was the matter +with her? and Mr. Wyndham had told them it was her nervous system--she +was hypochondriacal--in fact; and he made the admission very +reluctantly, and with a painful quivering about the mouth--she was not +quite herself--her mind had lost its balance. And the sympathizers going +their way, informed other sympathizers that all old Mrs. Wyndham's +oddities were accounted for--the woman was mad! + +Speckport pitied poor Mr. Wyndham, saddled with an insane mother, very +much, when they saw his pale, worn face, and that gloomy look that never +left it. Olive pitied him, too; and would have given the world, had it +been hers to give, to comfort him in his great trouble; but she was +nothing to him, and her heart turned to gall and bitterness, as she +thought of it. No, she was nothing to him, she scarcely ever saw him at +all now, and he seemed unconscious of her presence when they were +together. But it was a relief to know the secret of Rosebush +Cottage--however dreadful that secret was, it were better than the first +diabolical thought suggested by Catty Clowrie. Once Olive Wyndham, in +the humility born of this new love, had descended from the heights of +high and mightydom on which she dwelt, and ate humble pie at her cold +lord's feet. She might have left the unsavory dish alone--her humility +was no more to him than her pride, and she had been repulsed. Not +rudely, or unkindly. Mr. Wyndham was a gentleman, every inch of him, and +would not be harsh to a woman; but still she was repulsed, and her proud +heart quivered to its inmost core with the degradation. + +She had found him, one evening on entering the library, sitting alone +there, his forehead bowed on his hand, a look that was so like despair +on his face; but she forgot everything but that she loved him, and that +he was suffering a sorrow too great for words to tell. Had she not a +right to love him, to comfort him--was she not his wife? She would not +listen to her woman's nature, which revolted, and ordered her sternly +back. She only knew that she loved him; and she went over and touched +him lightly on the shoulder. It was the first time they had ever so +met--therefore the look of surprise which came into his eyes when he +looked up, was natural enough. He rose up, looking with that quiet air +of surprise on the downcast eyes and flushed face, and waited silently. + +"Mr. Wyndham," she said, her voice trembling so, her words were scarcely +intelligible. "I--I am sorry to see you in such trouble? Can--can I do +anything to alleviate it?" + +"Thank you!" he said, "No!" + +"If," still tremulously, "if I could do anything for your mother--visit +her----" + +She broke down entirely. In Mr. Wyndham's face there was nothing but +cold surprise. + +"You are very good," he said, "but you can do nothing." + +He bowed and left the room. And Olive, humbled, repulsed, mortified to +death, hating, for the moment, herself and him and all the world, flung +herself upon a sofa, and wept such a scalding rush of tears, as only +those proud, sensitive hearts can ever shed. They might have been tears +of blood, so torn and wounded was the poor heart from whence they +sprang; and when they dried, and she rose up, they had left her like a +stone. + +Between Nathalie Marsh's ghost and Mr. Wyndham's mad mother, Speckport +was kept so busy talking, it had scarcely time to canvas the movement, +when Captain George Cavendish announced his intention of selling out and +going home. Mr. Blake was the only one, with the exception of some +milk-and-water young ladies who were in love with the dashing Englisher, +whom the announcement bothered; and it was not for the captain's sake, +but for poor lost Cherrie's. Where was Cherrie? Val had vowed a vow to +find her out, but this turn of affairs knocked all his plans in the +head. + +"If he does go," said Val to himself, "I'll send him off with a flea in +his ear! I must find Cherrie, or Charley Marsh will be an exile +forever!" + +"But how?" Mr. Blake was at his wit's end thinking the matter over, and +trying to hit on some plan. He was still thinking about it, when he +sallied off to the post-office for his papers and letters, and +encountered Mr. Johnston, the captain's man, coming out with a handful +of letters. He was sorting them as he walked, and never noticed that he +dropped one as he passed Mr. Blake. Val picked it up to return it, +glancing carelessly at the superscription as he did so. His glance was +magical--a red flush crimsoned his sallow face, and he turned it over to +look at the postmark. Then he saw Mr. Johnston had missed it, and was +turning round--he dropped it again, and walked on, and the captain's +valet pounced upon it and walked off. + +Blake strode straight to his boarding-house, informed Mr. Blair sudden +business required him to go up the country for a week or so, scrawled +off a note to his foreman, flung a few things into a valise, and started +for the cars. He was just in time to take a through ticket to S----, +before the evening train started, and was whirled off in the amber haze +of a brilliant September sunset. + +It was past midnight when the train reached the terminus, but Mr. Blake +was not going to stop at S----. The steamer which started at eight next +morning for Charlottetown, Prince Edward's Island, lay at the wharf, and +Mr. Blake went on board immediately, and turned in. When the boat +started next morning, he was strolling about the deck, smoking a pipe +and watching the passengers come on board. There were not many, and he +knew none of them, which was just what he wanted. It was a long, +delightful day on the Gulf; and in the yellow glory of another sunset, +Mr. Blake landed in Charlottetown, and, valise in hand, sauntered up to +one of the principal hotels. + +Mr. Blake took his tea, and then set off for a ramble through the town. +A quiet town, with grass-grown red-clay streets, and only a few +stragglers abroad. A beautiful town, with a few quiet shops, and a +drowsiness pervading the air, and a general stillness and torpor +pervading everywhere. Val retired early; but he arose early also, and +was out with his hands in his pocket and a cigar in his mouth, wandering +about again, staring at the Government House and the Colonial Buildings, +and the fly-specked books in the stationers' shops, and the deserted +drygoods'-stores, and going into the cathedral where morning-service +was going on, and contemplating the pretty nuns of Notre Dame reading +their missals with devoutly downcast eyes, in their pew. He was out +again the moment he had swallowed his breakfast and made a few inquiries +of the clerk, traversing the town-streets once more. These inquiries of +his were concerning a lady, a young lady, he told the polite clerk, a +friend of his whom he was most anxious to find out, but whose precise +residence he was ignorant of. He was pretty certain she was in +Charlottetown, but he could not exactly tell where. Perhaps the clerk +had seen her--a black-eyed young lady with black curls and red cheeks, +and not tall? No!--the clerk did not remember; he had seen a good many +black-eyed young ladies in his time, but he did not know that he had +seen this particular one. Mr. Blake pursued these inquiries in other +places, chiefly in dry goods' or milliners' stores, and in one of these +latter, the lady in attendance informed him that she knew such a person, +a young lady, a Miss Smith, she believed, who used to shop there, and +generally walked by every afternoon. + +Mr. Blake never went home to dinner that day. It was a hot, sunshiny +day, and he lounged about the milliner's shop, attracting a good deal of +curiosity, and suspicion that he might have designs on the bonnets. But +Val did not care for their suspicions; he was looking out for some one +he felt sure would be along presently, if she were living and well. The +watch was a very long one, but he kept it patiently, and about three in +the afternoon he met with his reward. There, swinging along the street, +with the old jaunty step he remembered so well, was a black-eyed, +black-ringleted young lady, turban on head, parasol in hand. Mr. Blake +bounced up, walked forward, and accosted her with the simple +remark--sublime in its simplicity--"How are you, Cherrie?" + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII. + +CHERRIE TELLS THE TRUTH. + + +It was a fortunate thing, perhaps, that that quiet, grass-grown +Charlotte Street was almost deserted; else the scream and recoil with +which Cherrie--our old and long-lost-sight-of friend, Cherrie--received +this salutation, might have attracted unpleasant attention. + +Mr. Blake took the matter with constitutional phlegm. + +"Oh, come now, Cherrie, no hysterics! How have you been all these +everlasting ages?" + +"Mis-ter Blake?" Cherrie gasped, her eyes starting in her head with the +surprise. "Oh, my goodness! What a turn you gave me!" + +"Did I?" said Val. "Then I'll give you another; for I want you to turn +back with me, and take me to wherever you live, Mrs. Smith. That's the +name you go by here, isn't it?" + +"Who told you so?" + +"A little bird! I say, Cherrie, you've lost your red cheeks! Doesn't +Prince Edward's Island agree with you?" + +Cherrie had lost her bright bloom of color; but save that she was much +thinner and paler, and far less gaudily dressed, she was the same +Cherrie of old. + +"Agree with me!" exclaimed Cherrie, in rather a loudly-resentful tone, +considering that they were on the street. "I hate the place, and I am +nearly moped to death in it. I never was so miserable in all my life as +I have been since I came here!" + +"Then why didn't you leave it?" inquired Mr. Blake. + +"Leave it!" reiterated Cherrie, like an angry echo. "It's very easy to +say leave it; but when you have no money or nothing, it's not quite so +easy doing it. I've been used shamefully; and if ever I get back to +Speckport, I'll let some of the folks there know it, too! Did he send +you?" + +"Who?" + +"You know well enough! Captain Cavendish!" + +"He send me!" said Val. "I should think not. There isn't a soul in +Speckport knows whether you are alive or dead; and he takes care they +shan't, either. I have been trying to find you out ever since you left; +and I have asked Captain Cavendish scores of times, but he always vowed +he knew nothing about you--that you had run off after Charley Marsh. It +was only by chance I saw a letter from you to him the other day, posted +here, and I started off in a trice. Why didn't you write to your folks, +Cherrie?" + +"I daren't. He wouldn't let me. He told me, if I didn't stay here and +keep quiet, he never would have anything more to say to me. I have been +shamefully used!"--and here Cherrie began to cry on the street--"and I +wish I was dead. There!" + +"Perhaps you will before long," said Val, significantly. + +Cherrie looked at him. + +"What?" + +"Perhaps you won't be let live long! You'll have to stand your trial +when you go back, for helping in the murder of Mrs. Leroy; and maybe +they'll hang you! Now, don't go screaming out and making such an +infernal row on the street--will you?" + +Cherrie did not scream. She suppressed a rising cry, and turned ashen +white. + +"I had nothing to do with the murder of Mrs. Leroy," she said, with lips +that trembled. "You know I hadn't. You know I left Speckport the +afternoon it happened. You have no business saying such things to me, +Val Blake." + +She laid her hand on her heart while she spoke, as if to still its +clamor. Val saw by her white and parted lips how that poor, fluttering, +frightened heart was throbbing. + +"Oh, yes; I know you left Speckport that afternoon, Cherrie; but you and +Cavendish had it all made up beforehand. You were to write Charley that +note, and appoint a meeting in Redmon grounds, promising to run away +with him, and making him wait for you there, while Cavendish got in +through the window, and robbed the old woman. You never intended meeting +Charley, you know; and you are just as much accessory to the murder as +if you had stood by and held the lamp while he was choking Lady Leroy." + +They had left the dull streets of the town, and were out in a lovely +country road. Swelling meadows of golden grain and scented hay spread +away on either hand, until they melted into the azure arch; and the +long, dusty road wound its way under pleasant, shadowy trees, without a +living creature to be seen. Cherrie, listening to these terrible words, +spoken in the same tone Mr. Blake would have used had he been informing +her the day was uncommonly fine, sank down on a green hillock by the +roadside, and, covering her face with her hands, broke out in a passion +of tempestuous tears. He had taken her so by surprise--he had given her +no time to prepare--the sight of him had brought back the recollection +of the old pleasant days, and the wretched dullness of the present. She +was weak, and sick, and neglected, and miserable; and now this last turn +was coming to crush her. Poor Cherrie sat there and cried the bitterest +tears she had ever shed in her life; her whole frame shaking with her +convulsive sobs, her distress touched Val; for pretty Cherrie had always +been a favorite of his, despite her glaring faults and folly; and a +twinge of remorse smote his conscience at what he had done. + +"Oh, now, Cherrie, don't cry! People will be coming along, and what will +they think? Come, get up, like a good girl, and we'll talk it over when +we get to your house. Perhaps it may not be so bad after all." + +Cherrie looked up at him with piteous reproach through her tears. + +"Was it for this you wanted to find me out so bad, Mr. Blake? Was it to +make me a prisoner you came over here?" + +"Well," said Val, with another twinge of conscience, "ye-e-es, it was +partly. But you must recollect, Cherrie, you have done worse. You let +Charley Marsh--poor Charley! who loved you a thousand times better than +that scamp of an Englishman--be sentenced for a deed he never committed, +when you could have told the truth and freed him. Worse still, you +helped to inveigle him into as horrible a plot as ever was concocted." + +"I couldn't help it!" sobbed Cherrie. "I didn't want to do it, but he +made me! I wish I had ran away with Charley that night. He never would +have left me like this!" + +"No; that he wouldn't! Charley was as true as steel, poor fellow! and +loved you as no one ever will love you again, in this world! He is a +soldier now, fighting down South; and perhaps he's shot before this; and +if he is, his death lies at your door, Cherrie." + +Cherrie's tears flowed faster than ever. + +"As for Cavendish," went on Val, "he's the greatest villain unhung! Not +to speak of his other atrocities--his gambling, his robbing, his +murdering, his breaking the heart of Nathalie Marsh--he has been the +biggest rascal that ever lived, to you, my poor Cherrie." + +"Yes, he has!" wept Cherrie, all her wrongs bleeding afresh. "He's a +villain, and I hate him. Oh dear me, I wish I was dead!" + +"You don't know half the wrong he has done you and means to do," said +Val. "Come, Cherrie, get up, and I'll tell you about it as we go along. +Do you live far from this?" + +"No; it's the first house you meet; the dullest old place on the face of +the earth! He wouldn't let me leave it; and I know they despise me, and +think I'm no better than I ought to be. There never was a girl in this +world so ill-used as I have been! Why did he marry me, if he is ashamed +of me? Why can't he stay with me as he ought to stay with his wife?" + +"His wife!" repeated Val, staring at her as they walked along. "Why, +Cherrie, is that all you know about it? Hasn't he told you that you are +not his wife?" + +"Not his wife!" shrieked Cherrie. "Val Blake, what do you mean?" + +"Bless my soul!" cried Mr. Blake, appealing in dismay to the scarecrows +in the fields, "I thought he had told her. Why, you unfortunate Cherrie, +don't you know the marriage was a sham one?" + +Cherrie gasped for breath. The surprise struck her speechless. + +"I thought you knew all about it!" said Val; "I'll take my oath I did! +Why, you poor little simpleton, how could you ever be idiot enough to +think a fellow like Cavendish would marry the like of you! If you had +two grains of sense in your head," said Mr. Blake, politely, "you must +have seen through it. He planned the whole thing himself--a sham from +beginning to end!" + +"It isn't! it can't be! I don't believe it! I won't believe it!" panted +Cherrie, recovering her breath. "You helped him, and the minister was +there; and I am his wife, his lawful wedded wife. You are only trying to +frighten me to death." + +"No, I'm not," said Val; "and you're no more his wife than I am. The +minister wasn't a minister, but a fellow who played the part. If you +hadn't been the greatest goose that ever lived, Cherrie, you couldn't +have been so taken in!" + +Cherrie's breath went and came, and her tears seemed turned to sparks of +fire, as she turned her eyes upon her companion. + +"And you helped him to do this, Mr. Blake?" + +"Well, Cherrie, what could I do? If I hadn't helped him, some one else +would; and, anyhow, you would have run away with him, marriage or no +marriage. Now, don't deny it--you know you would!" + +"And you mean to say I'm not married to Captain Cavendish?" + +"Yes, I do. I only wonder he hasn't let you find it out long ago. He +came to me and persuaded me to help him, telling me you were ready to +run off with him any time he asked you, which I knew myself. I'm sorry +for it now, but it can't be helped." + +"Very well, Mr. Blake," said Cherrie, whose cheeks were red, and whose +eyes were flashing, "you may both be proud of your work. You are fine +gentlemen, both of you, to distress a poor girl like me, as you have +done. But I'll go back to Speckport, and I'll tell every soul in it how +I have been taken in; and I hope they'll tar and feather the two of you +for what you have done." + +"Well," said Mr. Blake, in a subdued tone, "we deserve it, I dare say, +but Cavendish is the worst after all. Why, Cherrie, my girl, you don't +know half the wrong he has done you. He would have been married three +mouths ago, if the lady had not changed her mind and married another +man." + +"Would he?" said Cherrie, vindictively, between her closed teeth. "Oh, +if ever I get a chance, won't I pay him off! Who was the lady?" + +"The new heiress of Redmon--Miss Henderson she was then, Mrs. Wyndham +she is now. He was crazy about her, as all Speckport can tell you; and +he asked her to marry him; and she consented first, and backed out +afterward. You never saw any one in the state he was in, Cherrie; and he +started off to Canada, because he couldn't bear to stay in the place and +see her married to another man." + +"But he's back, now," said Cherrie. "I had a letter from him two weeks +ago, with a couple of pounds in it. He's the meanest, stingiest miser on +the face of the earth, and I have to write and write, before I get +enough from him to pay my board. I haven't had a decent dress these six +months; and I can't leave the place, because I never have enough to pay +my way back. I'm the worst-treated and most unfortunate creature in the +whole world!" + +And here poor Cherrie's tears broke out afresh. + +"And that's not the worst, either," pursued Mr. Blake. "Do you know what +has brought him back to Speckport, as you say? Of course, you don't--you +are the last he would tell; but it is because he is selling out of the +army, and going back to England for good. He wants to be rid of you +entirely; and once he is there, and married to some one else with a +fortune, many a fine laugh he will have at you." + +"Never!" cried Cherrie, wrought up to the right pitch of indignation; +"never shall he leave Speckport, if I can help it! I'll tell all, if I +was to hang for it myself, sooner than let him get off like that, the +villain!" + +"But you won't hang for it, Cherrie, if you tell; it's only if you +refuse to tell, that you are in danger. Whoever turns Queen's evidence +gets off scot free, you know; and if you only do what is right, and take +my advice, which means the same thing, you may triumph over Captain +George Percy Cavendish yet." + +"I'll do it!" said Cherrie, her lips compressed and her eyes flashing, +and the memory of all her wrongs surging back upon her at once. "I'll do +it, and be revenged on the greatest scoundrel that ever called himself a +gentleman! But, mind, Val Blake, I must be sure that this is all true--I +must be sure that I am not his wife." + +"It will be very easy convincing you of that, once you are back in +Speckport. You shall hear it from his own lips, without his knowing you +are listening. Oh, is this the place?" + +For Cherrie had stopped before a little farmhouse, garnished with a +potato garden in front, and adorned with numerous pigsties on either +hand. She led the way to the front room of the establishment; which was +carpetless, and curtainless, and unfurnished, and impoverished-looking +enough. + +"Well," Val said, "this is rather different, Cherrie, from the days when +you used to dress in silks and sport gold chains, and do nothing but +flirt, and be petted and made love to from week's-end to week's-end. But +never mind--the worst's over, now that I've found you out, and you'll +have good times yet in Speckport." + +"If it hadn't been for you," sobbed Cherrie, "it never would have +happened. I hate you, Mr. Blake! There!" + +"Now, Cherrie, you know right well you would have run away with Captain +Cavendish that time, married or not married. Oh! you may deny it, and +perhaps you think so now; but I know better. But he's the greatest +rascal that ever went unhung, to use you as he has; and if you had the +spirit of a turnip, you would be revenged." + +"I will!" cried Cherrie, clenching her little fist resolutely; "I will! +I'll let him see I'm not the dirt under his feet! I've stood it long +enough! I'll stand it no longer!" + +Mr. Blake's eyes sparkled at the spirited declaration. + +"That's my brave Cherrie! I always knew you were spunky! You shall hear +from his own lips the avowal of his false marriage, and then you will go +before a magistrate and swear to all you know about that night of the +robbery and murder. There is a steamer to leave Charlottetown to-morrow, +at nine. Will you be ready if I drive up here for you?" + +"Yes," said Cherrie; "I haven't so much to pack, goodness knows! and I'm +sick and tired of this place. How's all our folks? It's time to ask." + +"They are all well, and will be very glad to get pretty Cherrie back +again. Speckport's been a dull place since you left it. Cheer up, +Cherrie! There's bright days in store for you yet." + +Cherrie did not reply, and she did not look very hopeful. She was crying +quietly; and Val's heart was touched as he looked at the pale, +tear-stained face, and thought how bright and pretty and rosy and +smiling it used to be. He bent over her, and--well, I shouldn't like +Miss Blair to know it--but Mr. Blake deliberately kissed her! + +"Keep up a good heart, little Cherrie; it will be all right yet, and +we'll fix the flint of Captain G. P. Cavendish. I'll drive up here for +you at eight to-morrow. Be all ready. Good-bye." + +Cherrie was all ready and waiting at the gate, next morning, when Mr. +Blake drove up through the slanting morning sunlight, dressed in her +best. She was in considerably better spirits than on the previous day, +and much more like the Cherrie of other days, glad to get home and eager +for the journey. The lady passengers, during the day, asked her if "the +tall gentleman" was her husband. That gentleman had a great deal to tell +her; of poor Nathalie's death, and Charley's flight; of the new +heiress, who had turned so many heads, and had given the worst turn of +all to Captain Cavendish; of that gentleman's despair when she married +Mr. Wyndham; of the changes and gay doings at Redmon; and lastly, of +Nathalie's ghost. This last rather scared Cherrie. What if Nathalie +should appear to her--to her, who had wronged her so deeply through her +brother. + +"Oh, no!" said Mr. Blake, to whom she imparted her fears; "I don't think +she will, if you tell the truth; or, at all events, she will be a most +unreasonable ghost if she does. You tell all, Cherrie, and Charley will +come back to Speckport; and by that time you'll have got your red cheeks +back again, and who knows what may happen?" + +Mr. Blake whistled as he threw out this artful insinuation; but Cherrie +caught at it eagerly, and her face lit up. Charley's handsome visage +rose before her--blue-eyed, fair-haired Charley--who had always loved +her, and never would have treated her as Captain Cavendish had done. Who +knew what might happen! Who, indeed! + +"I'll tell the whole truth," said Cherrie, aloud. "I'll tell everything, +Mr. Blake, when I'm once sure I'm not Captain Cavendish's real wife. I +know I did wrong to treat poor Charley as I did; but I will do all I can +now to make up for it." + +They reached S---- at dark, and remained there all night and the +following morning. They might have gone down to Speckport in the eight +P.M. train; but Val preferred to remain for the two A.M., for reasons of +his own. + +"If we land in Speckport at noon, Cherrie," he said, "we may be seen and +recognized. We will go down in the afternoon and get there about nine, +when it will be dark, and you can pass unnoticed. I don't want Captain +Cavendish to find out you are there, until I am ready." + +So Cherrie, thickly vailed, took her place in the car, after dinner; and +was whirled through the pleasant country, with its fields and forests +and villages, toward good old Speckport--that dull, foggy town that her +heart had grown sick with longing many a time to see. + +There were no lamps lit in the streets of Speckport that night. When the +waning September moon shone out in such brilliance, surrounded by such +a crowd of stars as persuaded one to believe all the constellations were +flaming at once, gas became superfluous, and the city fathers spared it. +The vailed lady was handed out by Mr. Blake; a proceeding which +considerably excited the curiosity of some of Mr. Blake's friends, +loafing around the platform. + +"Blake can't have got married up the country, can he?" drawled out +Lieutenant the Honorable L. H. Blank to young McGregor. "Who's the +woman?" + +"Blessed if I know," replied Alick. + +Val hurried his charge into a cab, sprang in after her, and gave the +order, "Wasson's Hotel." + +"It's a new place, and not much patronized," he explained to Cherrie. +"You won't be recognized there; and I'll tell them to fetch you your +meals up to your room. And to-morrow, Cherrie, I want you to come round +to my office at about eleven. Come in the back way off Brunswick street, +you know; so you won't have to pass through the outer office, and be +recognized by Clowrie and Gilcase, and the rest of 'em. I'll be waiting +for you; and if Cavendish doesn't drop in, which he does to kill time +about that hour every day, I'll send for him, and you'll hear his +confession without being seen." + +Mr. Blake walked home that night, chuckling inwardly all the way. + +"I said I would pay you off, Cavendish," he soliloquized, "for leading +Charley Marsh astray, and cutting up those other little cantrips of +yours; and I think the time has come at last--I really think, my dear +boy, the time has come!" + +It was some time after ten when Mr. Blake presented himself at Mr. +Blair's, and found the family about retiring for the night. Laura was +not at home, she was up at Redmon--Laura's mamma said--stopping with +Mrs. Wyndham, who seemed to be very unhappy. + +"What was she unhappy about?" Mr. Blake inquired. But Mrs. Blair only +sighed, and shook her head, and hinted darkly about hasty marriages. + +"Eh?" said Val, "Wyndham doesn't thrash her, does he? She's big and +buxom, and he's only a little fellow; and I think, on the whole, she +would be a match for him in a free fight!" + +Mr. Blair laughed, but Mrs. Blair looked displeased. + +"My dear Mr. Blake, how can you say such things? Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham +are not a happy couple, that is clear; but whose is the fault I cannot +undertake to say. He is greatly changed of late. I suppose he worries +about his mother." + +"Oh, his mother! Has anybody seen that most mysterious lady yet?" + +"Not that I am aware of! He has not even called in medical advice." + +"And the ghost," said Val, lighting his bedroom-lamp, "has it been +figuranting since?" + +"No," said Mr. Blair; "the ghost hasn't showed since you left. I say, +Blake, did you settle your country-business satisfactorily?" + +"Very!" replied Mr. Blake, with emphasis. "I never settled any business +more to my satisfaction in the whole course of my life!" + +Mr. Blake was in his office bright and early next morning, hard at work. +At about eleven he descended the stairs, and opened the back door, which +fronted on a dull little street, through which a closely-vailed female +figure was daintily picking her way. Val admitted the lady, and ran +before her up-stairs. + +"Up to time, Cherrie, there's nothing like it! I sent Bill Blair round +to Cavendish's rooms to tell him to look in before twelve, and I expect +them back every moment. By Jove! there's his voice outside now. Get in +here quick, and sit down! There's a crack in the partition, through +which you can see and hear. Not a chirp out of you, now. Come in!" + +Mr. Blake raised his voice; and in answer, the door opened, and Captain +Cavendish, smoking a cigar, lounged in. Val gave one glance at the +buttoned door of the little closet in which he had hidden Cherrie, and +nodded familiarly to his visitor. + +"Good-morning, captain! find a chair. Oh, pitch the books on the +floor--they're of no account. I'm to notice them all favorably in the +'Spouter'--the author sent a five-dollar bill for me to do it!" + +"Young Blair said you wanted to see me," remarked the captain, tilting +back his chair, and looking inquiringly through his cigar-smoke. + +"Why, so I did. I heard before I went up the country a rumor that you +were going to leave us--going to leave the army, in fact, and return to +England. Is it so?" + +"Yes. I'm confoundedly tired of Speckport, and this from-hand-to-mouth +life. It is time I retired on my fortune, and I am going to do it." + +"How?" + +"Well, I mean to return home--run down to Cumberland, and saddle myself +on my old uncle. He was always fond of me as a boy, and I know is yet, +in spite of his new wife and heir. Perhaps I may drop into a good thing +there--heiresses are plenty." + +"I should think you had got your heart-scald of that," said Val, +grinning. "You bait your hook for heiresses often enough, but the +gold-fish don't seem to bite." + +Captain Cavendish colored and frowned. + +"All heiresses are not Miss Hendersons," he said, with a cold sneer. "I +might know what to look for from your Bluenose and Quaker tradesmen's +daughters. I shall marry an English lady--one whose father did not make +his money selling butter or hawking fish." + +"Oh, come now, Cavendish! You have been in love in Speckport. Don't deny +it!" + +"I do deny it," said the captain, coldly. + +"Nonsense! You were in love with Nathalie Marsh." + +"Never! Azure-eyed and fair-haired wax dolls never were any more to my +taste than boiled chicken! I never cared a jot for Nathalie Marsh." + +"Well, you did for Olive Henderson--you can't deny that! She is not of +the boiled chicken order, and all Speckport knows you were mad about +her." + +"Speckport knows more than its prayers. I did admire Miss Henderson--I +don't deny it; but she had the temper of the old devil, and I am glad I +escaped her!" + +"And Cherrie--have you quite forgotten Cherrie? You were spooney enough +about her." + +"Bah!" said Captain Cavendish, with infinite contempt; "don't sicken me +by talking of Cherrie! I had almost forgotten there ever was such a +little fool in existence!" + +"And you never cared for Cherrie, either?" + +Captain Cavendish broke into a laugh. + +"You know how I cared for her. The woman a man can marry is another +thing altogether!" + +"Some far higher up in the world than Captain Cavendish have stooped to +fall in love and marry girls as poor as Cherrie. You never could, I +suppose?" + +"Never! The idea is absurd! I wouldn't marry a girl like Cherrie if she +had the beauty of the Venus de Medicis!" + +"Did you ever undeceive Cherrie about that marriage affair? Did you let +her know she was not your wife?" + +"Not I," said Captain Cavendish, coolly. "I never took so much trouble +about her! I was heartily sick of her before a week!" + +"Well, it seems hard," said Val. "Poor little thing! She was very fond +of you, too." + +"Stuff! She was as fond of me as she was, or would be, of any other +decently good-looking man. She was ready to rum off with any one who +asked her, whether it were I, or young Marsh, or any of the rest. I know +what Cherrie was made of." + +"And so she thinks she is still your wife?" + +"I don't know what she thinks!" exclaimed the young officer, +impatiently; "and what's more, I don't care! What do you talk to me of +Cherrie Nettleby for? I tell you I know nothing about her!" + +"And I tell you I don't believe it," said Val. "You have her hid away +somewhere, Cavendish; and if you are an honorable man, you will tell her +the truth, and provide for her before you leave Speckport." + +Captain Cavendish might have flown into a rage with any other man, but +he only burst into a loud laugh at Val. + +"Tell her the truth and provide for her! Why, you blessed innocent, do +you suppose Cherrie, wherever she is, has been constant to me all this +time? I tell you I know nothing of her, and care nothing! Make your mind +easy, old fellow! the girl is off with somebody else long before this! +What's that?" + +Captain Cavendish looked toward the buttoned door of the closet. There +had been a strange sound, between a gasp and a cry, but Mr. Blake took +no notice. + +"It's only the rats! So you will leave Speckport, and do nothing for +Cherrie? Cavendish, I am sorry I ever had a hand in that night's work!" + +"Too late now, my dear boy!" laughed the Englishman. "Make your mind +easy about Cherrie! She's just the girl can take care of herself! If +ever she comes back to Speckport, give her my regards!" + +He pulled out his watch, still laughing, and arose to go. + +"Half-past eleven--I have an engagement at twelve, and must be off. +By-by, Blake! don't fret about Cherrie!" + +Mr. Blake did not reply, and his face was very grave as he shut and +locked the door after his visitor. + +"You're a greater villain, Captain Cavendish," he said to himself, "than +even I took you to be! Come out, Cherrie--have you heard enough?" + +Yes, she had heard enough! She was crouching on the door, her hands +clenched, her eyes flashing. She leaped up like a little tigress as he +opened the door. + +"Take me to a magistrate!" she cried. "Let me tell all I know! I'll hang +him! I'll hang him, if I can!" + +"Sit down, Cherrie," said Val, "and compose yourself. It won't do to go +in such a gale as this before the authorities. Tell me first. By that +time you will be settled!" + +An hour afterward, Mr. Blake left his office by the back-door, +accompanied by the vailed lady. Cherrie had told all. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII. + +OVERTAKEN. + + +Mr. Blake had made little notes of Cherrie's discourse, and had the +whole story arranged in straightforward and business-like shape, for the +proper authorities. He did not lead his fair companion straight to those +authorities, as she vindictively desired, but back to her hotel. + +"I think I'll hand over the case to Darcy, Cherrie," he said; "and he is +out of town, and won't be back till to-morrow afternoon.--There's no +hurry--Cavendish won't leave Speckport yet awhile. We'll wait until +to-morrow, Cherrie." + +Cherrie had to obey orders; and passed the time watching the passers-by +under her window. There were plenty of passers-by, for the window +fronted on Queen Street, and Cherrie knew almost every one. It was hard +sometimes to hide behind the curtain instead of throwing open the +casement and hailing those old friends who brought back so vividly the +happy days when she had been the little black-eyed belle, and Captain +Cavendish was unknown. It seemed only like yesterday since she had +tripped down that sunlit street, in glittering silk, with all the men +bowing, and smiling, and tipping their hats jocosely to her; only +yesterday since the good-looking young drygoods clerks vaulted airily +over the counters to do her bidding. And now, and now! She never could +be what she had been again. And to this man, this false and treacherous +Englishman, for whom she had sacrificed noble-hearted Charley Marsh, she +owed it all. She set her teeth vindictively, and clenched her little +fist at the thought. + +"But I'll pay him for it! I'll teach him to despise me! I only hope they +may hang him--the villain! Hard labor for life would not be half +punishment enough for him!" + +They talk of presentiments! Surely, there never was such a thing, else +why had George Cavendish no dim foreshadowing of the doom darkening so +rapidly around him. He had told Val Blake he had an engagement. So he +had; it was in Prince Street, with Mr. Tom Oaks, who had returned to +Speckport, and who was going the road to ruin faster than any victim +Captain Cavendish had ever in hand before. It was growing dusk when they +left the gambling-hell; and Mr. Oaks was poorer and Captain Cavendish +richer by several hundred pounds than when they entered. The gorgeous +coloring of the sunset yet flared in the sky, though the crimson and +amber were flecked with sinister black. Captain Cavendish drew out a +gold hunting-watch, and looked at the hour. "Past six," he said, +carelessly; "I shall be late at Redmon, I fear. The hour is seven, I +believe. Do you drive there this evening?" + +"No," said Mr. Oaks, with a black scowl, "I hope my legs will be palsied +if ever they cross the threshold of that woman! I'm not a hound, to fawn +on people who kick me!" + +Captain Cavendish only smiled--he rarely lost his temper--and went off +to his hotel, whistling an opera air. He passed under Cherrie's window; +but no prescience of the flashing black eyes above troubled the serenity +of his mind. He was walking steadily to his fate, as we all +walk--blindly, unconsciously. + +Captain Cavendish was the last to arrive at Redmon--all the other guests +were assembled in the drawing-room when he entered, and they had been +discussing him and his departure for the last quarter of an hour. + +The dinner party at Redmon was a very pleasant one; and every one, +except, perhaps, the stately hostess herself, was very gay and animated. +Mr. Wyndham, despite the trouble he was in about his poor mad mother, +was the most entertaining and agreeable of hosts. The ladies, when they +flocked back to the drawing-room, enthusiastically pronounced Mr. +Wyndham "a perfect love!" and declared they quite envied Mrs. Wyndham a +husband who could tell such charming stories, and who was so +delightfully clever and talented. And Olive Wyndham smiled, and sat +down at the piano to do her share of the entertaining, with that dreary +pain at her beating and rebellious heart that never seemed to leave it +now. Yes, it was a very pleasant evening; and Captain Cavendish found it +so, and lingered strangely, talking to his hostess after all the rest +had gone. Lieutenant the Honorable L. H. Blank, who was waiting for him +on the graveled drive outside, grew savage as he pulled out his watch +and saw it wanted only a quarter of twelve. + +"Confound the fellow!" he muttered, "does he mean to stay all night +talking to Mrs. Wyndham, and I am sleepy. Oh, here he is at last! I say, +Cavendish, what the dickens kept you?" + +Captain Cavendish laughed, as he vaulted into his saddle. + +"What's your hurry, my dear fellow? I was talking to Mrs. Wyndham, and +common politeness forbade my cutting the conversation short." + +"Common bosh! Mrs. Wyndham was yawning in your face, I dare say! My +belief is, Cavendish, you are as much in love with that black-eyed +goddess now as ever." + +"Pooh! it was only a flirtation all through; and I would as soon flirt +with a married lady any day as a single one. She looked superb to-night, +did not she, in that dress that flashed as she walked--was it pink or +white--and that ivy crown on her head?" + +"She always looks superb! I should like to fetch such a wife as that +back to old England. A coronet would sit well on that stately head." + +A strangely-bitter regret for what he had lost smote the heart of +Captain Cavendish. It might have been. He might have brought that +black-eyed divinity as his wife to England, but for Paul Wyndham. Why +had she preferred that man to him? + +"I wonder if she loves him?" he said aloud. + +"Who?--her husband? Do you know, Cavendish, she puzzles me there. She +treats him with fearfully frigid politeness, but she never ceases to +watch him. If he were any kind of man but the kind he is, I should say +she was jealous of him. He is a capital fellow, anyhow, and I like him +immensely." + +They rode through the iron gates as he spoke, which clanged noisily +behind them. The night was not very bright, for the moon struggled +through ragged piles of black cloud, and only glimmered with a wan and +pallid light on the earth. The trees loomed up black against the clear +sky, and cast vivid and unearthly shadows across the dusty road. A +sighing wind moaned fitfully through the wood, and the trees surged and +groaned, and rocked to and fro restlessly. It was a spectral night +enough, and the young lieutenant shivered in the fitful blast. + +"I feel as if I had taken a shower-bath of ice-water," he said. "Wasn't +it somewhere near here that Val Blake saw the ghost? Good Heavens! +What's that?" + +As he spoke, there suddenly came forth from the shadow of the tree, as +if it took shape from the blackness, a figure--a woman's figure, with +long disordered fair hair, and a face white as snow. Captain Cavendish +gave an awful cry as he saw it; the cry startled his horse--only a +half-tamed thing at best--and, with a loud neigh, it started off like an +arrow from a bow. The horse of Lieutenant Blank, either taking this as a +challenge, or frightened by the sudden appearance of the woman, pricked +up its ears and fled after, with a velocity that nearly unseated his +rider. The lieutenant overtook his companion as they clattered through +the streets of the town, and the face of Captain Cavendish was livid. + +"For Heaven's sake, Cavendish!" cried the young man, "what was that? +What was that we saw?" + +"It was Nathalie Marsh!" Captain Cavendish said, in an awful voice. +"Don't speak to me, Blank! I am going mad!" + +He looked as if he was, as he galloped furiously out of sight, waking +the sleeping townsfolk with the thunder of his horse's hoofs. He had +heard the story of the ghost, and had laughed at it, with the rest; but +he had heard it in broad daylight, and the most timid of us can laugh at +ghost-stories then. He had not been thinking of her, and he had seen +her--he had seen her at midnight--true ghostly hour--on the lonesome +Redmon road, with her death-white face and streaming hair! He had seen +her--he had seen the ghost of Nathalie Marsh! + +Mr. Johnston, the sleepy valet, sitting up for his master, recoiled in +terror as that master crossed the threshold of the room. Captain +Cavendish only stared vaguely as the man spoke to him, and strode by him +and into his room, with an unearthly glare in his eyes and the horrible +lividness of death in his face. Mr. Johnston stood appalled outside the +door, wondering if his master had committed a murder on the way +home--nothing less could excuse his looking like that. Once, half an +hour after, Captain Cavendish opened his door, still "looking like +that," and ordered brandy, in a voice that did not sound like his own; +and Mr. Johnston brought it, and got the door slammed in his face +afterward. + +The usually peaceful slumbers of Mr. Johnston were very much disturbed +that night by this extraordinary conduct on the part of his master. He +lost at least three hours' sleep perplexing himself about it, for never +since he had had the honor of being the captain's man, had that +gentleman behaved so singularly, or exhibited so ghastly and deathlike a +face. When, in the early watches of the morning, he presented himself at +his master's door with towels and water, it was in a state of mingled +curiosity and terror; but he found there was no call for the latter +emotion. Beyond looking uncommonly pale and hollow-eyed (sure tokens of +a sleepless night), Captain Cavendish was perfectly himself again; and +whether this was owing to the brandy he had drank or the exhilarating +effect of the morning sunshine, Mr. Johnston could not tell, but he was +inclined to set it down to the brandy. Even the paleness and +hollow-eyedness was not noticeable after he had shaved and dressed, and +partaken of his breakfast, and sauntered out, swinging his cane and +smoking his cigar, to kill thought in the bustling streets of the town. +Val Blake, standing in his office-door, hailed him as he passed. + +"How are you, Cavendish? Heavenly morning, isn't it? Have you any +particular engagement for this afternoon?" + +"This afternoon? What hour?" + +"Oh, about three. You must postpone your engagements to accommodate me." + +"I have none so early. I dine with the mess at six. What is it?" + +"A little surprise that I have in store for you. Drop into Darcy's +office about five, and we'll give you a little surprise!" + +"A little surprise! Of what nature, pray?" + +"Honor bright!" said Val, turning to run up-stairs. "I won't tell. Will +you come?" + +"Oh, certainly! It will kill time as well as anything else." + +He sauntered on unsuspiciously, never dreaming he was sealing his own +fate, Val Blake had no compunctions about entrapping him. He was so +artful a villain he must be taken by surprise, or he might baffle them +yet. + +"So slippery an eel," argued Mr. Blake to himself, "must not be handled +with gloves. He may as well walk into Darcy's office himself, as be +brought there by a couple of police-officers." + +Captain Cavendish returned to his hotel early, and avoided all places +where he was likely to meet Lieutenant Blank. Of all people, he wanted +to shun him from henceforth; of all subjects, he never wanted to speak +of the terrible fright he had received the previous night. So he +returned to his rooms, and smoked and read, and wrote letters, and dined +at two, and as the town clock was striking five, he was opening the door +of Mr. Darcy's office. And still no presentiment of what was so near +dawned darkly upon him; no weird foreboding thrilled in nameless dread +through his breast; no dim and gloomy shadowing of the awful retribution +overtaking him so fast, made his step falter or his heart beat faster as +he opened that door. Perhaps it is only to good men that their +angel-guardians whisper in that "still small voice" those mystic +warnings, that tell us poor pilotless mariners on the sea of life of the +shoals and quicksands ahead. Perhaps it is only men like this man, +whose souls are stone-blind, that cannot see dimly the hidden shipwreck +at hand. He saw nothing, felt nothing; he walked in carelessly, and saw +Mr. Darcy, old Squire Tod, and Mr. Blake, sitting close together and +talking earnestly. He wondered why they all looked so grave, and why two +constables, who had been looking out of a window, should place +themselves one on each side of the door, as if on guard, as he came in. +He wondered, but nothing more. Mr. Darcy arose very gravely, very +gravely bowed, and presented him with a chair. + +"Good afternoon, gentlemen," he said, indifferently, "I have dropped in +on my way to the mess-room, at the request of Mr. Blake, who told me +there was a surprise in store for me here." + +"There is, sir," replied Mr. Darcy, in a strange tone. "There is a +surprise in there for you, and not a very pleasant one, either. Mr. +Blake was quite right." + +Something in his voice chilled Captain Cavendish, for the first time; +but he stared at him haughtily, and pulled out his gold hunting-watch. + +"I dine at six," he said coldly. "It is past five now. I beg you will +let me know what all this means, as fast as possible. I have no time to +spare." + +"You will make time for our business, Captain Cavendish; and as for the +mess-dinner, I think you must postpone that altogether to-day." + +"Sir," cried Captain Cavendish, rising; but Mr. Darcy returned his gaze +stonily. + +"Sit down, sir, sit down! The business that rendered your presence here +necessary is of so serious a nature--so very serious a nature, that all +other considerations must yield before it. You will not go to the +mess-dinner, I repeat. I do not think you will ever dine at the +mess-table again." + +The face of Captain Cavendish turned ghastly, in spite of every effort, +and he turned with a look of suppressed fury at Val Blake. + +"You traitor!" he said, "you have done this. Your invitation was only a +snare to entrap me." + +"Honest men, Captain Cavendish," said Mr. Blake, composedly, "fear no +snare, dread no trap. It is only criminals, living in daily dread of +detection, who need fear their fellow-men. I preferred you should enter +here of your own accord, to being brought here handcuffed by the +officials of the law." + +Every drop of blood had left the face of the Englishman; but he strove +manfully to brave it out. + +"I cannot comprehend what you mean by these insults," he said. "Who dare +talk to me, an English officer and a gentleman, of handcuffs and +crimes?" + +"We dare," replied Mr. Darcy. "We, in whom the laws of the land are +invested. These laws you have vilely broken, Mr. Cavendish--for I +understand you have sold out of the service, and have no longer claim to +military rank. In the name of the law, George Cavendish, I arrest you +for the willful murder of Jane Leroy!" + +It was an utter impossibility for the white face of the man to grow +whiter than it had been for the last ten minutes; but at the last words +he gave a sort of gasp, and caught at the arms of the chair on which he +sat. If they had wanted moral conviction before of his guilt, they +wanted it no longer--it was written in every line of his bloodless face, +in every quiver of his trembling lips, in every choking gasp of breath +he drew. They sat looking at him with solemn faces, but no one spoke. +They were waiting for him to recover from the shock, and break the +silence. He did break it at last; but in a voice that shook so, the +words seemed to fall to pieces in his mouth. + +"It is false!" he said, trying to steady his shaky voice. "I deny the +charge. Charley Marsh was tried and found guilty long ago. He is the +murderer!"' + +"Charley Marsh is an innocent man--you are the murderer. Your own face +is your accuser," said Mr. Darcy. "I never saw guilt betrayed more +plainly in all my life. You murdered Jane Leroy--yes, strangled her for +her pitiful wealth." + +"Who has told you this infernal story?" exclaimed the infuriated +captive, glaring upon the lawyer. "Has that d--d scoundrel found----" He +stopped suddenly, nearly choking himself with his own words, and the +phlegmatic lawyer finished the sentence. + +"Found Cherrie?--yes! You see there is no hope for you now. Here, +Cherrie, my girl, come out!" + +There was a door standing ajar opposite them, that looked as if it led +into some inner and smaller office. As the door opened wide, the +prisoner caught a glimpse of two men, only a glimpse; for the next +moment Cherrie stood before him. The last faint glimmer of hope died out +in his breast at sight of her with that vindictive look in her face. + +"Oh, you villain!" screamed Cherrie, shaking her fist at him, her black +eyes flashing fire. "You mean, lying, deceitful villain! I'll fix you +off for the way you have treated me! I'll tell everything--I have told +it, and I'll tell it again, and again, and again; and I hope they'll +hang you, and I'll go to see you hung with the greatest pleasure, I +will!" + +Here Cherrie, who had not drawn breath, and was scarlet in the face, had +to stop for a second, and Mr. Darcy struck in: + +"Hold your tongue, Cherrie! Not another word! Stick to facts--abuse is +superfluous. You see, Captain Cavendish, with the evidence of this +witness, nothing more is needed but drawing out a warrant for your +arrest. She is prepared to swear positively to your guilt." + +"I don't doubt it," said Captain Cavendish, with a bitter sneer; "such a +creature as she is would swear to anything, I dare say. We all know the +character of Cherrie Nettleby." + +"Silence, sir!" thundered Mr. Darcy; "you are the very last who should +cast a stone at her--you, who have deliberately led her to her ruin!" + +"He told me I was his wife," sobbed Cherrie, hysterically, "or I never +should have gone. I never knew it was a sham marriage, until Mr. Blake +told me so down in Charlottetown. We were married in the Methodist +meeting-house, and I thought it was a minister; and Mr. Blake was there, +and I thought it was all right! Oh, dear me!" sobbed Cherrie, the +hysterics growing alarming; "everybody was in a wicked plot against me, +and I was only a poor girl, and not up to them; and I wish I had never +been born--so there!" + +Squire Tod and Mr. Darcy turned with looks of stern inquiry upon Mr. +Blake. + +"What does this mean?" asked old Squire Tod. "You never said anything +about this, Blake." + +"No," said Val, perfectly undisturbed; "I only told you Cherrie had run +away with Captain Cavendish." + +"That is my irreproachable accuser, you see," said Captain Cavendish, +with sneering sarcasm. "What that woman says is true; I did inveigle her +into a sham marriage, but Mr. Val Blake managed the whole affair--got +the church and the sham clergyman, and deceived that crying fool there +fifty times more than I did; for she trusted him!" + +Squire Tod's face darkened into a look of stern severity as he turned +upon Val. + +"Mr. Blake," he said, "I am more astonished and shocked by this than +anything I have heard yet. That you should be guilty of so base and +unmanly an act--you, whom we all respected and trusted--as to entrap a +poor weak-minded child (for she was only a child) to misery and ruin! +Shame, shame on you, sir, for such a coward's act!" + +Very few people ever suspected Val Blake of dignity. One would have +thought he must have shrunk under these stern words, abashed. But he did +not--he held his head proudly erect--he rose with the occasion, and was +dignified. + +"One moment!" he said, "wait one moment, squire, before you condemn me! +Gentlemen," he rose up and threw wide the door of the room from which +Cherrie had emerged, "gentlemen, please to come out." + +Everybody looked, curious and expectant. Cherrie ceased the sobbing to +look, and even Captain Cavendish forgot for a moment his supreme peril, +in waiting for what was to come next. + +Two gentlemen, the Reverend Mr. Drone, of the Methodist persuasion, and +another clerical and white neck-clothed gentleman, came out and stood +before the company. Mr. Drone was well known, the other was a stranger, +a young man, with rather a dashing air, considering his calling, and a +pair of bright, roving dark eyes. Captain Cavendish had only seen him +once in his life before, but he recognized him instantaneously. + +"You all know Mr. Drone, gentlemen," said Val, "this other is the +Reverend Mr. Barrett, of Narraville. Mr. Barrett, it is a year since you +were in Speckport is it not?" + +"It is," replied Mr. Barrett, with the air of a witness under +cross-examination. + +"Will you relate what occurred on the last night of your stay in this +town, on the occasion of that visit?" + +"With pleasure, sir! I am a minister of the Gospel, gentlemen, as you +may see," said Mr. Barrett, bowing to the room, "and a cousin of Mr. +Drone's. I had been settled about two years up in Narraville last +summer, when I took it into my head to run down here for a week or so on +a visit to Mr. Drone. I had known Mr. Blake for years, and had a very +high respect for his uprightness and integrity, else I never should have +complied with the singular request he made me the day before I left." + +"What was the request?" asked Mr. Darcy, on whom a new light was +bursting. + +"He came to me," said Mr. Barrett, "and having drawn from me a promise +of strict secrecy, told me a somewhat singular story. A gentleman of +rank and position, an English officer, had fallen in love with a +gardener's pretty daughter, a young lady with more beauty than common +sense, and wanted to entrap her into a sham marriage. He had intrusted +the case to Mr. Blake, whose principles, he imagined, were as loose as +his own, and Mr. Blake told me he would inevitably succeed in his +diabolical plot if we did not frustrate him. Mr. Blake's proposal was, +that I should marry them in reality, while letting him think it was only +a mockery of a holy ordinance. He urged the case upon me strongly; he +said the man was a gambler, a libertine, and a fortune-hunter; that he +was striving to win for his wife a most estimable young lady--Miss +Marsh--for her fortune merely; that if he succeeded, she would be +miserable for life, and that this was the only way to prevent it. He +told me the man was so thoroughly bad, that all compunctions would be +thrown away on him; and at last I consented. To prevent a great crime, I +married them privately in Mr. Drone's church. Mr. Blake was the witness, +and the marriage is inserted in the register. I told Mr. Drone before I +left, and he consented to keep the matter secret until such time as it +was necessary to divulge it. I married George Percy Cavendish and +Charlotte Nettleby the night before I left Speckport, and took a copy of +the certificate with me; and I am ready to swear to the validity of the +marriage at any time and in any place. I recognize them both, and that +man and woman are lawfully husband and wife!" + +Mr. Barrett bowed and was silent. Poor Cherrie, with one glad cry, +sprang forward and fell on her knees before Mr. Val Blake, and did him +theatrical homage on the spot. Val lifted her up, and looked in calm +triumph at the baffled Englishman, and saw that that gentleman's face +was purple with furious rage. + +"Liar!" he half screamed, glaring with tigerish eyes as he heard Mr. +Barrett, "it is false! You never performed it--I never saw you before!" + +"You have forgotten me, I dare say," said Mr. Barrett, politely, "but I +had the pleasure of marrying you to this lady, nevertheless. It is +easily proved, and I am prepared to prove it on any occasion." + +"You may as well take it easy, Cavendish," said Val. "Cherrie is your +wife fast enough! Don't cry, Cherrie, it's all right now, and you're +Mrs. Cavendish as sure as Church and State can make you." + +"It's a most extraordinary story," said Squire Tod, "and I hardly know +what to say to you, Blake. How came you to let him get engaged to Miss +Henderson, knowing this?" + +"Oh," said Val, carelessly, "Miss Henderson never cared a snap about +him; and then Paul Wyndham came along and cut him out, just as I was +getting ready to tell the story. I meant to make him find Cherrie before +he left Speckport, and publish the marriage; only Providence let me find +her out myself, to clear the innocent, and bring this man's guilt home. +I had to keep Cherrie in the dark, as I never would have got that +confession out of her." + +"Well," said Mr. Darcy, rising, "it is growing dark, and I think there +is no more to be done this evening. Burke, call a cab. Captain +Cavendish, you will have to exchange the mess-room for the town-jail +to-night." + +Captain Cavendish said nothing. His fury had turned to black, bitter +sullenness, and his handsome face was disturbed by a savage scowl. + +"You, gentlemen, and you, Mrs. Cavendish," said Mr. Darcy, bowing to +Cherrie, and smiling slightly, "will hold yourselves in readiness to +give evidence at the trial. I think we will have no difficulty in +bringing out a clear case of willful murder." + +An awful picture came before the mind of the scowling and sullen +captain. A gaping crowd in the raw dawn of a cheerless morning, a +horrible gallows, the dangling rope, the hangman's hand adjusting it +round his neck, the drop, a convulsed figure quivering in the air in +ghastly agony, and then----Great beads of cold sweat broke out on his +forehead, and his livid face was contracted by a spasm of mortal agony. +Then he saw the two clergymen, Mr. Blake, and Cherrie standing up to go. + +"I think I'll take you home, Cherrie," said Val, "I'll get another cab +for you! Won't they open their eyes when they see you, though?" + +Mr. Blake and Cherrie departed, followed by the two clergymen; and no +one spoke to the ghastly-looking man, sitting, guarded by the constable, +staring at the floor, with that black, desperate scowl, that so changed +his face that his nearest friend would hardly have known it. Cherrie +trembled and shrank away as she passed him, and did not breathe freely +until she was safely seated in the cab beside Val, and rattling away +through the streets on her way home. + +Home! how poor Cherrie's heart longed for the peace of that little +cottage where those who loved her, and had mourned her, dwelt. She was +crying quietly, as she sat silently away in a corner, thinking what a +long, and wretched, and forlorn, and dreary year the last had been, and +what a foolish girl she had been, and how much she owed to Val Blake. + +Mr. Blake did not disturb her reflections; he was thinking of wronged +Charley Marsh, exiled from home, branded as a felon. + +The cab, for which Mr. Darcy had sent one of the constables, drew up at +the office door, as Mr. Blake's drove away; and the prisoner, between +the two officials, with Mr. Darcy following close behind, came +down-stairs. + +Captain Cavendish had gone down-stairs very quietly between his two +guards, neither speaking nor offering the slightest resistance; but his +eyes were furtively taking in everything, and the captive's instinct of +flight was strong upon him. One of the constables went forward to open +the cab-door, the other had but a slight grasp of his arm. The murky +darkness, the empty street, favored him. + +With the rapidity of lightning, he wheeled round, struck the constable a +blinding blow in the face with his fist, that forced him to release his +hold, and, like a flash, he sped off, turned sharp round a corner, and +was gone! The whole thing had been the work of two seconds. Before any +one among them could quite comprehend he had really gone, he was +entirely out of sight. + +The next instant, the still street was in an uproar, the two constables +and Mr. Darcy, shouting for assistance as they went, started in pursuit. +The corner round which Captain Cavendish had cut, and which they now +took, led to a dirty waterside street, branching off into numerous +wharves, crowded with hogsheads, bales, barrels, and piles of lumber, +affording a secure and handy hiding-place for any runaway. It was like +looking for a needle in a hay-stack even in daylight; and now, in the +thick fog and darkness, it was the wildest of wildgoose-chases. They ran +from one wharf to another, collecting a crowd about them wherever they +went; and all the time, he for whom they were searching was quietly +watching them in a black and filthy alley, that cut like a dirty vein of +black mud from that waterside street to the one above. + +Drawing his hat far down over his eyes, Captain Cavendish started up the +alley, and found himself again in the street he had left. The cab still +stood before the office door of Mr. Darcy; he gave it one derisive +glance as he strode rapidly along, and struck into another by-street. If +he could only make good his escape; if he could baffle them yet! Hope +sent his heart in mad plunges against his side--if he could only escape! + +Suddenly, a thought flashed upon him--the cars. There had been a picnic +that day, and an excursion-train, he knew, left at half-past seven to +fetch the picnickers home. If he could only get to the depot in time, he +might stay in hiding about the country until the first hue and cry was +over, then, in disguise, make his way to S----, and take the steamer for +Quebec. He had a large sum of money about him; he might do it--he might +escape yet. + +He pulled out his watch as he almost ran along, twenty-five minutes past +seven; only five minutes, and a long way off still. He fled through the +dark streets like a madman, but no one knew him, and reached the depot +at last, panting and breathless. A crowd lingered on the platform, a +bell was clanging, and the train was in motion. Desperation goaded him +on; he made a furious leap on board, and--there was a wild cry of horror +from the bystanders, an awful shriek of "O my God!" from a falling man, +and then all was uproar, and confusion, and horror, and dismay. Whether +in his blind haste he had missed his footing, whether the darkness of +the night deceived him, whether the train was moving faster than he had +supposed, no one ever knew; but he was down, and ground under the +remorseless wheels of the terrible Juggernaut. + +The train was stopped, and everybody flocked around in consternation. +Two of the brakemen lifted up something--something that had once been a +man, but which was crushed out of all semblance of humanity now. No one +there recognized him; they had only heard that one agonized cry wrung +from the unbelieving soul in that horrible moment--giving the lie to +his whole past life--but they had heard or knew nothing more. Some one +brought a door; and they laid the bloody and mangled mass upon it, and +now raised it reverentially on their shoulders, and carried it slowly to +the nearest house. A cloth was thrown over the white, staring face, the +only part of him, it seemed, not mangled into jelly; and so they carried +him away from the spot, a dreadful sight, which those who saw never +forgot. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV. + +THE VESPER HYMN. + + +He was not dead. He was not even insensible. While they carried him +carefully through the chill, black night, and when they carried him into +the nearest house, and laid him tenderly on a bed, the large, dark eyes +were wide open and fixed, but neither in death nor unconsciousness. It +was a hotel they had carried him to; and one of the pretty chambermaids, +who owned a sentimentally-tender heart, and read a great many novels, +cried as she looked at him. + +"Poor fellow!" she said, to another pretty chambermaid; "it's such a +pity, ain't it--and he so handsome?" + +"Who is he, I wonder?" the other chambermaid wanted to know; but no one +could tell her. + +"He looks like an officer," some one remarked; "I think I've seen him in +the town before, and I'm pretty sure he's one of the officers." + +"The doctor will know, maybe," suggested the land-lord. "Poor fellow! +I'm afraid it's all up with him. I don't think he can speak." + +He had never spoken but that once, when the soul of the infidel, in that +supreme moment of mortal agony, in spite of the infidel creed of his +life, had uttered that awful invocation--"O my God!" But the power of +speech was not gone, nor of hearing; he retained all his senses, and, +strangely enough, did not seem to suffer much. He lay quiescent, his +dark eyes wide open, and staring vacantly straight ahead, his dark hair, +dabbled with blood, falling loose on the pillow and around his bloodless +face. They had drawn a white spread over him; and he had a strangely +corpse-like look, with his white set face, and marble-like rigidity. But +life burned yet in the strained, wide-open eyes. + +The doctor came--it was Dr. Leach; and he knew him immediately, and told +the gaping and curious bystanders who he was. He was very much shocked, +and more shocked still when the white spread was drawn away, and the +terrible truth revealed. The eyes of the wounded man followed him as he +made his examination, but with no eagerness or hopefulness--only with a +dull and awful sort of apathy. + +"Do you know me, Captain Cavendish?" Dr. Leach asked, tenderly touching +the heavy, dark hair falling over his face. + +"Yes. How long----?" + +He did not finish the sentence, not because he was unable to do it, but +that he evidently thought he had finished it, and his eyes never once +left the physician's face. + +Dr. Leach looked very sadly down in the dark, inquiring eyes. + +"My poor fellow!" he said, "it is hard, I know, and for one so young and +so far from all your friends. It is hard to die like this; but it is +Heaven's will, and we must submit." + +"How long?" repeated the sufferer, as if he had not heard him, and with +that steady, inquiring gaze. + +"You mean, how long can you last? I am afraid--I am afraid, my poor boy, +but a short time; not over three hours at the most." + +The dark, searching eyes turned slowly away from his face, and fixed +themselves on vacancy as before; but he showed no signs of any emotion +whatever. Physical and mental sense of suffering and fearing seemed +alike to have forsaken him in this last dreadful hour. He had been a +bad man; the life that lay behind him was a shameful record. He had been +a gamester, a swindler, a libertine, a robber, and a murderer; and now +he was dying in his sins, in a dull stupor, without remorse for the past +or fear of the awful future. Dr. Leach stooped over him again, wondering +at his unnatural apathy. + +"Would you like a clergyman, my poor boy?" he said. + +"No!" + +"Is there any one you would like to see? Your time is very short, +remember." + +Captain Cavendish turned to him with something like human interest in +his glance, for the first time. + +"I should like to see Val Blake," he said, "and Mr. Darcy." + +"I'll send for them," said the doctor, going out, and dispatching a +couple of messengers in hot haste. "He wants to make his will, I +suppose," Dr. Leach thought, as he returned to the bedroom. "Poor +fellow; and Val Blake was his friend!" + +Dr. Leach had requested one of the messengers to go for the army-surgeon +before he came back. He knew the case was utterly hopeless, but still it +was better to have the surgeon there. He found his patient lying as he +had left him, staring blankly at a lamp flaring on a table under the +window, while the slow minutes trailed away, and his short span of life +wore away. His last night on earth! Did he think of it as he lay there, +never taking his eyes from the lamp-flame, even when the doctor came to +his bedside again and held something to his lips. + +"My dear," Dr. Leach said, feeling as though he were speaking to a +woman, and again stroking back his hair with a tender touch; "hadn't you +better see a clergyman? You are dying, you know." + +"Did you send for them?" said Captain Cavendish, looking at him. + +"For Blake and Darcy? Yes. But will I not send for a clergyman too?" + +"No." + +"Would you like me to read to you, then? There is a Bible on the table?" + +"No." + +He sank back into his lethargic indifference once more and looked at the +lamp again. Dr. Leach sighed as he sat down beside him, to watch and +wait for the coming of the others. + +They came at last--Val Blake and Mr. Darcy--knowing all beforehand. +Their presence seemed to rouse him. Dr. Leach would have left the room, +but the lawyer detained him. + +"You may as well stay," he said, "it can make no difference to him now +if all the world hears him. It is not his will--it is a confession he +has to make." + +Mr. Darcy was right. Strangely enough he wanted to do that one act of +justice before he went out of life, and he seemed to make an effort to +rally, and rouse himself to do it. The doctor gave him a stimulant, for +he was perceptibly sinking, and the lawyer sat down to write out the +broken sentences of that dying confession. It was not long; but it was +long enough to triumphantly vindicate Charley Marsh before any court in +the world, and just as it was completed the surgeon came. But a more +terrible visitor was there too, before whom they held their breath in +mute awe. Death stood terrible and invisible in their midst, and no word +was spoken. They stood around the bed, pale and silent, and watched him +go out of life with solemn awe at their hearts. There was no frightful +death struggles--he died peacefully as a little child, but it was a +fearful deathbed for all that. The soul of the unbeliever had gone to be +judged. "God be merciful to him!" Dr. Leach had said, and they had all +answered, "Amen." They drew the counterpane over the marble face, +beautiful in death, and left the room together. All were pale, but the +face of Val Blake was ghastly. He leaned against an open window, with a +feeling of deadly sickness at his heart. It was all so awful, so +suddenly awful; they, poor erring mortals, had judged and condemned him, +and now he had gone before the Great Judge of all mankind--and the dark +story had ended in the solemn wonder of the winding-sheet. + +"Speak nothing but good of the dead," a pitiful old proverb says. "We +were friends once," Val Blake thought. "I never want to speak of him +again." + +The body of the dead man was to be taken to his hotel. The surgeon and +Mr. Darcy volunteered to arrange it, and Dr. Leach and Val left. The +doctor had his patients to attend to, and Val was going to tell Cherrie. +She was his wife and ought to know, and Val remembered how she had loved +the dead man once. But that love had died out long ago, under his cruel +neglect; and though she cried when she heard the tragic end of the man +to whom she had been bound by the mysterious tie of marriage, they were +no very passionate tears. And before the Nettleby family had quite +learned to comprehend she was a wife they found that Mrs. Cherrie +Cavendish was a widow! + +Of all the shocks which Speckport had received within the last twenty +years, there was none to equal this. Charley Marsh innocent, Captain +Cavendish guilty! Cherrie Nettleby come back, his wife, his widow! And +still it spread, and "still the wonder grew;" and it was like a play or +a sensation novel, and the strange old proverb, "Truth is stranger than +fiction," was on the tongues of all the wiseacres in the town. + +And while the good people talked and exclaimed and wondered, and told +the story over and over and over again to one another, and found it ever +new, the dead man lay in his own elegant room in the hotel, and Cherrie, +his widow, sat at his bedhead, feeling she had become all at once a +heroine, and making the most of it. + +Among the visitors to that darkened room were Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham, Miss +Blair, and Mr. Blake. Olive Wyndham, stately and beautiful, as ever, but +paler and thinner, and less defiantly bright than of old, stood beside +the bed of death, and looked down on the white, beautiful face of the +dead man, with a strange, remorseful pang at her heart. How her soul +bowed down before the disembodied spirit, and how touching was the +marble beauty of that rigid face! If he had been old and ugly, perhaps +people would not have felt so sadly pitiful about his dreadful fate; but +he was so young and so handsome, that tears came into their eyes, and +they forgot he had been a villain in life, and went away shaking their +heads and saying, "Poor fellow! Poor fellow! It's such a pity!" + +Laura Blair--but Laura was always tender-hearted--cried as she looked at +him, and thought how much she had liked him, and what pleasant hours +they had spent together. He was very bad, of course, but still----Laura +never could get any further, for the tears came so fast they choked her +words. + +She actually kissed Cherrie, who cried from sympathy, and Val Blake +looked at her with a more tender glance than any one had ever seen in +Val's unsentimental eyes before. + +The pony-phaeton from Redmon was in waiting at the hotel door. Mr. +Wyndham assisted the ladies in, and touched his hat as if in +leave-taking. + +"Are you not going back?" his wife asked, with strange timidity. She was +in the habit now of speaking to him, and always in that +strangely-hurried tone so foreign to her character. + +"No," Mr. Wyndham said, "not just now. I shall return before dinner." + +The carriage drove off. Mr. Wyndham took Val's arm, lit a cigar, and +strolled with him down Queen Street. + +"It's a very sad business!" he said, thoughtfully. "I am sorry for him, +poor fellow!--one can't help it; but, after all, I don't know that it is +not a merciful deliverance. The public disgrace, the imprisonment, the +trial, the sentence, would have been to him far more terrible. There are +worse things than death!" + +He said the last words with a sudden bitterness that made Val look at +him. "It's his mother he is thinking of," said Mr. Blake to himself. +"Poor woman, she's mad!" + +"And it is really true that he confessed all before he died?" Mr. +Wyndham asked; "and exculpated, beyond all doubt, Charley Marsh?" + +"Yes," said Val; "Charley Marsh is free to return to Speckport whenever +he pleases now. I always knew he was innocent. I had a letter from him +last night, too, inclosing one to his mother." + +"Indeed!" Mr. Wyndham said, with a look of interest. "Is he well? Is he +still in the army?" + +"Yes; but his time is nearly up, it appears. I shall write to him +to-day, and tell him to come back to us. I have a note--she called it a +note, though it's four sheets of paper closely written, and she sat up +until three this morning to finish it--from Laura Blair, to inclose to +him. If he is proof against four sheets of entreaty from a lady, all I +can say to him will not avail much." + +"Laura is a good little girl," said Mr. Wyndham, "and very much in +earnest about all her friends. You ought to marry her, Blake." + +"Eh!" said Mr. Blake, aghast. + +"You ought to marry her," repeated Mr. Wyndham, as composedly as though +he were saying, "You ought to smoke another cigar." "I am sure you will +never come across one more suited to the purpose, if you live to be as +old as Methuselah's cat!" + +"My dear Wyndham," expostulated Mr. Blake, rather shocked than +otherwise, "what are you talking about? I give you my word I never +thought of such a thing in my life." + +"I don't doubt it, in the least; but you know the proverb, 'Better late +than never.'" + +"Nonsense! What do I want with a wife?" + +"A good deal, I should think; if only to save the trouble of boarding +out, and securing some one to darn your stockings and button your +shirt-collar. Have you never indulged in any vision, O most prosaic of +men! of a quiet domestic fireside, garnished on one side by yourself, +with your feet in slippers, and on the other by a docile cat and a Mrs. +Blake?" + +"Never!" responded Mr. Blake, emphatically. + +"Then it's time you did! Your hair's turning gray, man, and your sister +has left you! Come, rouse up, old fellow, and secure that little prize, +Laura Blair, before some more ardent wooer bears her off, and leaves you +in the lurch." + +Mr. Blair stared at him. + +"I say, Wyndham, what crotchet have you got in your head to-day? Marry +Laura Blair! What should I marry her for, more than any one else?" + +"Well, for pure artlessness, Mr. Blake," he said, "I'll back you against +the world! Why should you marry Laura Blair, indeed! Why you overgrown +infant, because you are in love with her! That's why!" + +"Am I?" responded Mr. Blake, helplessly. "I didn't know it. Is she in +love with me, too?" + +"Ask her," said Mr. Wyndham, still laughing. "Here we are at the office. +Good-morning to you." + +"Won't you come in?" + +"Not this morning; I am going to Rosebush Cottage." + +"Oh," said Val, hesitatingly, for it was an understood thing the subject +was very painful, "how is your mother?" + +"She is no better," said Mr. Wyndham, briefly. "Good-morning!" + +Mr. Blake went into his sanctum, and the first thing he did was to write +to Charley and tell him all. + +"Come back to Speckport, dear old boy," wrote Val, "everybody is in a +state of remorse, you know, and dying to see you. Come back for your +mother's sake, and we will give you such a reception as no man has had +since the Prince of Wales, long life to him! visited our town. Come +back, Charley, and cheer us again with the sight of your honest sonsie +face." + +It took some time for Speckport to recover thoroughly from the severe +shock its nervous system had received in the death of Captain Cavendish, +and the various wonderful facts that death brought to light. It was +fully a month before the wonder quite subsided, and people could talk of +other things over the tea-table. + +Cherrie, the bereaved, was safely back again in the parental nest. +Creditors had flocked in with the dead man's long bills; and when all +was settled, nothing was left for the widow. But some good men among +them made up two hundred pounds, and Mrs. Wyndham added another hundred, +and the three were presented to Mrs. Cavendish, with the sympathy of the +donors. It was a little fortune for Cherrie, though a pitiful ending of +the brilliant match she had made; and she took it, crying very much, and +was humbly thankful. Once more she tripped the streets of her native +town, and her crape, and bombazine, and widow's cap, were charmingly +becoming; and when the roses began to return to her cheeks, she was +prettier than ever. + +The town was quiet, and October was wearing away. The last week of that +month brought a letter from Charley Marsh--a letter that was not like +Charley, but was very grave, almost sad. + +"Under God, my dear Val," he wrote, "I owe the restoration of my good +name to you. I know all you have done for me and mine--my poor mother +has told me; but I cannot thank you. I am sure you do not want me to +thank you; but it is all written deep in my heart, and will be buried +with me. I am coming back to Speckport--ah! dear old Speckport! I never +thought it could be so dear! I shall be with you in November, and +perhaps I may say to you then what I cannot write now. I am coming back +a man, Val; I went away a hot-headed, passionate, unreasoning boy. I +have learned to be wise, I hope, and if the school has been a hard one, +I shall only remember its lessons the longer. I am coming back rich; +blessings as well as misfortunes do not come alone. I have been left a +fortune--you will see an account of it in the paper I send you. Our +colonel, a gallant fellow, and a rich Georgian planter, has remembered +me in his will. I saved his life shortly after I came here, almost at +the risk of my own, I believe. They promoted me for it at the time, and +I thought I had got my reward; but I was mistaken. He died last week of +a bayonet-thrust, and when his will was read, I found I was left thirty +thousand dollars. He was a childless widower, with no near relatives; so +no one is wronged. You see I shall not have to fall back upon Dr. +Leach's hand on my return, and my mother need depend no more on Mrs. +Wyndham's generosity. I am very grateful to that lady all the same." + +"I believe I'll show this letter to Father Lennard," said Val to +himself; "he asked me on Sunday if I had heard from Charley lately, and +told me to let him know when I did. Charley was always a favorite of +his, since the day when he was a little shaver and an acolyte on the +altar." + +Mr. Blake was not the man to let grass grow under his feet when he took +a notion in his head; so he started off at once, at a swinging pace, for +the cathedral. The October twilight was cold and gray. A dreary evening, +in which men went by with pinched noses and were buttoned up in +greatcoats, and women had vails over their faces, and shivered in the +street--a melancholy evening, speaking of desolation, and decay, and +death, and the end of all things earthly. + +Mr. Blake, to whom it was only a rawish evening, strode along, and +reached the cathedral in the bleak dusk. The principal entrances were +all closed, but he went in through a side door, and looked into the side +chapel for the priest. Not finding him, he entered the cathedral through +one of the transepts, but neither was Father Lennard there. The gray +twilight shone but dimly through the painted windows, and the long and +lofty aisles were very dim and shadowy. There was but one light in the +great church--a tiny lamp burning on the grand altar--a lamp that never +went out by night or day. Two or three shadowy female figures knelt +around the altar-rails in silent prayer, and Val thought one of them +looked like Miss Rose. He knew she was in the habit of coming in the +twilight here; but something else had caught his attention, and he +turned away and went on tiptoe down the echoing nave, staring up at the +choir. Some one was singing softly there--singing so softly that it +seemed but the sighing of the autumn-wind, and seemed to belong to it. +But Val had a quick ear, and the low melancholy cadences struck him with +a nameless thrill. What was there that sounded so strangely familiar in +that voice? It was a woman's voice--a sweet, full soprano, that could +rise to power at its owner's will. But what did it remind him of? A +thought flashed through him--a sudden and startling thought--that +brought the blood in a red gush to his face, and then left him cold and +white. He softly ascended the stairs, the low, mournful voice breaking +into a sweetly-plaintive vesper hymn as he went. + +Val Blake trembled from head to foot, and a cold sweat broke out on his +face. He paused a moment before he entered into the choir, his heart +beating faster than it ever had beat before. A woman sat before the +organ, not playing, but with her fingers wandering noiselessly over the +keys, her face upraised in the ghostly light. She looked like the +picture of St. Cecilia, with a cloud of tressed hazy golden hair falling +about that pale, earnest, upraised face. Her mantle had fallen back--a +white cashmere mantle, edged with ermine and lined with blue satin--and +she sung, unconscious, as it seemed, of all the world. Val Blake stood +like a man paralyzed--struck dumb and motionless--and the sweet voice +sang on: + + "Ave Maria! Oh, hear when we call, + Mother of Heaven, who is Saviour of all; + Feeble and fearing, we trust in thy might; + In doubting and darkness thy love be our light. + Let us sleep on thy breast while the night-taper burns. + And wake in thine arms when the morning returns! + Ave Maria! Ave Maria! Ave Maria! audi nos!" + +The singing ceased, the fingers were motionless, and the pale face +drooped and sunk down on the pale hands. And still Val Blake stood mute, +motionless, utterly confounded. For there before him, with only the +moonlight shadow of her former loveliness left, sat and sang, not the +dead, but the living, Nathalie Marsh! + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV. + +"QUOTH THE RAVEN, 'NEVERMORE!'" + + +How long Mr. Val Blake stood there, staring at that sight of wonder, +neither he nor I ever knew; but while it drooped in a strange, +heartbroken way over the instrument, and he stood looking at it, +powerless to speak or move, a hand was laid on his shoulder, and looking +round he saw the pale face of Paul Wyndham. Pale always, but deadly +white, Mr. Blake saw, in the spectral October gloaming. + +"Blake," he said, in a hoarse whisper, that did not sound like Paul +Wyndham's peculiarly clear and melodious voice, "if ever you were my +friend, be silent now! Help me to get away from here unseen." + +Some dim foreshadowing of the truth dawned on the slow mind of Val +Blake. The ghost of Nathalie Marsh--the invisible and mysterious woman +shut up in Rosebush Cottage--could they, after all, be connected, and +was the mad mother only a blind. The question passed through Val's mind +in a vague sort of way, while he watched Paul Wyndham bend over the +drooping figure, as tenderly as a mother over the cradle of her +first-born. His voice too, had changed when he spoke to her, and was +infinitely gentle and loving. + +"My darling," he said, "you must not stay here. I have come to fetch you +home." + +She lifted up her head at once, and held out her arms to him, like a +little child that wants to be taken. All the pale, misty hair floated +softly back from her wan face. Oh! how altered from the bright face Val +Blake once knew, and the blue eyes she lifted to his face had a strange, +meaningless light, that chilled the blood in the veins of the looker-on. + +"Yes, take me away," she said, wearily; but in Nathalie Marsh's own +voice. "I knew you would come. Where's Midge? I am cold here." + +"Midge is at home, my darling. Here is your mantle--stand up while I put +it on." + +She arose; and Val saw she was dressed in white--a sort of white +cashmere morning-gown, lined with quilted blue silk. Mr. Wyndham +arranged the long white mantle around the wasted figure, drawing the +hood over the head and face. Ghostly enough she looked, standing there +in the gloom; and Val knew she must have been dressed in the same manner +on the night she so startled him and Laura. But Mr. Wyndham, who wore a +long black cloak himself these chilly evenings, took it off and arranged +it over her white robes, effectually concealing them, as he drew her +forward. + +"Go down-stairs, Blake," he said, "a cab is waiting outside the gates. +Come with us, and I will tell you everything." + +Mr. Blake mechanically obeyed. He was not quite sure it was not all the +nightmare, and not at all certain he was not asleep in his own room, and +dreaming this singular little episode, and would awake presently to +smile at it all. He went down-stairs in silent bewilderment, never +speaking a word, and hardly able to think. Nathalie Marsh was dead--or +at least some one was dead, and buried out there in the cemetery, that +he had taken to be Nathalie Marsh--how then did she come to be walking +down-stairs behind him, supported by that extraordinary man, Paul +Wyndham? + +The cathedral was quite deserted when they got down, and the sexton was +just locking it up for the night. He stared a little at the three forms +going by him; but he was an old man, with sight not so good as it might +be, and he did not recognize them. They met no one within the inclosed +grounds. At the side gate a cab stood waiting; Mr. Blake opened the +door, and Mr. Wyndham helped in his silent companion, who yielded +herself, "passive to all changes." + +"Come with us, Blake," Mr. Wyndham said, as he entered and seated +himself by the lady. "Rosebush Cottage, driver. Make haste!" + +Not a word was spoken during the drive. The slight figure of the woman +lay back in a corner, her head drooping against the side of the +carriage. Paul Wyndham sat by her, looking at her often, but not +addressing her; and Mr. Blake, in a hopeless morass of doubt and +mystification, sat staring at the living ghost, and wondering when he +was going to wake from his dream. + +The distance was short. In ten minutes they stopped in front of the +pretty cottage, from whose curtained windows a bright light shone. The +roses in the garden were dead long ago, and only gaunt stalks and bare +vines twined themselves, like ugly brown snakes, where the climbing +roses grew. A queer figure stood at the gate--an ugly, dwarfed, and +unwieldy figure, with a big head set on no neck at all, and a broad, +florid face, and little pin-hole eyes. But the eyes were big enough to +express a great deal of anxiety; and she flung the gate open and rushed +out as the carriage door opened and Mr. Wyndham got out. + +"Have you found her?" she cried. "Oh, dear! oh, dear! Where was she, +now?" + +Mr. Wyndham did not notice her. + +"Get out, Blake," he said; and Midge recoiled with a cry of +consternation at sight of Val's towering form. The next instant, he had +lifted the lady out in his arms, as if she were a baby, and carried her +within the gate. "Take her into the house," he said, sternly. "I shall +talk to you about this again!" + +Midge obeyed meekly--Val wondered as much at that meekness as at +anything he had seen yet--and led the passive girlish creature into the +house. Mr. Wyndham paid and dismissed the cabman, and held the gate open +for Val. + +"Come in, Blake," he said gravely; "the time has come when my secret can +be no longer kept, and I would sooner tell it to you than to any other +human being in existence." + +"Tell me," said Val, finding voice for the first time, "is that really +Nathalie Marsh?" + +"She was Nathalie Marsh--she is Nathalie Wyndham now. She is my wife!" + +Mr. Blake fairly gasped for breath. + +"Your wife!" he exclaimed, "are you going mad, Mr. Wyndham? Olive is +your wife!" + +"No," said Paul Wyndham, with cold sternness, "she is not--she never has +been. The compact I made with her was a formal matter of business, which +gave me the right to dwell under the same roof with her, but never made +me her husband. She and I understand each other perfectly. Nathalie is +my wife--my dear and cherished wife, and was so before I ever came to +Speckport." + +"Then, Mr. Wyndham," said Val, with gravity, "you are a scoundrel!" + +"Perhaps so. Come in." + +Val Blake took off his hat and crossed the threshold of Rosebush Cottage +for the first time since it was inhabited. + +"And your mother was only a myth?" he asked, as Mr. Wyndham closed and +locked carefully the front door. + +"Only a myth. My mother is in Westchester County yet." + +Val asked no more questions, but looked around him. The hall was long, +with beautiful proof-engravings, and lit by pendant chandeliers. There +was a door to either hand--Midge came out of the one to the left, still +wearing that anxious face. + +"Now, then," said Mr. Wyndham, sternly, "how did this happen?" + +"It wasn't my fault," snapped Midge, her usual manner returning. "I did +my best, and she'd behaved herself for so long, I'd no idee she was +going to scud off again. The door wasn't open ten minutes, and I was out +in the kitchen bakin' the pies, and when I came back she was gone. I put +after her and met you, and I couldn't help it now; so talk's of no use. +Where did you find her?" + +"In the cathedral. She was speaking of it this morning, and asking me to +take her there, so I knew she would make for that." + +"What made you fetch him here?" inquired Midge, poking one stubby +index-finger at Mr. Blake. + +"He saw her and recognized her before I did. Get out of the way, Midge, +we are going in." + +Midge went away, snorting to herself, and Mr. Wyndham opened the door, +and preceded Mr. Blake into the drawing-room of the cottage. Such a +pretty drawing-room, lit by the rosy blaze of a clear coal-fire in a +grate of shining steel, and pendent chandeliers of glittering glass and +frosted silver. A small, high-ceilinged room, the walls hung with white +and gold paperhangings, and adorned with perfect gems of art. The +windows were draped in blue satin and white lace, and there was a +Brussels carpet on the floor, where violets, and bluebells, and +morning-glories ran wild on a white ground, and looked like pale spring +flowers blooming in a snow bank. The chairs were of white enameled +wood--the legs and back touched up with gold, and cushioned in blue +satin. There were inlaid tables, laden with superbly bound books of +beauty, annuals, albums, and portfolios of engravings; and a rosewood +piano stood in one corner, with the music scattered about. There was an +open door to the left, leading into a bed-room furnished in much the +same style; but Val scarcely looked at it--all his attention was taken +by the white girlish form lying back in a great carved and gilded chair +in front of the fire. What a wreck she was! The transparent skin, the +hollow cheeks, the sunken eyes, the wasted little hands, the shadowy +figure--what a wreck of the blonde loveliness of other days. Her head +lay back among the blue satin pillows, her hands dropped listless over +the arms of the chair, and her eyes were fixed on the leaping jets of +flame, in a meaningless stare. She never turned to look at them when +they came in; she did not even turn when Val Blake crossed over and bent +above her. + +"Nathalie," he said, a little tremor in his voice; "Nathalie, don't you +know me?" + +She lifted her blue eyes vacantly to his face, murmured an inarticulate +something, moved her head restlessly, and then went back to staring at +the fire. Val rose up, white even to his lips. + +"Wyndham, what is it?" he asked, afraid, while he spoke, to hear the +answer. "Why does she look like that?" + +Paul Wyndham was leaning against the mantel, his head drooping. Now he +lifted it, and Val saw the dark despair that filled his eyes. + +"Its meaning," he said, "has nearly broken my heart. If I have done +wrong, I have been terribly punished, and even you, Blake, might be +merciful now. My poor darling's mind is gone!" + +There was a pause, a pause of mute consternation on Val's part. Mr. +Wyndham bent over Nathalie, with that look of unspeakable tenderness +that made his face something new to Val--a face entirely new. + +"My darling, you are tired, I know," he said, "and want to go to bed. +Don't you, Natty?" + +The old name! It brought a pang to Val's heart to hear it. Paul Wyndham +spoke to her as he would have spoken to a child of three years; and Val +thought he would sooner she were indeed lying under the sods in the +cemetery than see her as he saw her now--dead in life. + +"Yes, Paul," she said, rising wearily, but at once. + +"Or, perhaps," Mr. Wyndham said, looking at her thoughtfully, "you would +like to sing before you go. You told me the other day, you know, you +always slept better if you sang before going to bed." + +"Oh, yes!" Nathalie said, her face lighting suddenly with animation. +"What shall I sing, Paul?" + +"Anything you like, my dearest." + +He led her to the piano, and opened it, while she took her seat on the +stool, and ran her fingers lightly over the keys at random. Val Blake +closed his eyes to listen. How long--how long ago it seemed since he had +heard Nathalie Marsh's melodious voice ringing through the +cathedral-aisles! The thin fingers wandered off into a plaintive little +prelude, that had something wild and melancholy in its wailing minor +key. The song was as sadly-sweet as the air, and the voice that sung was +full of pathos. + + * * * * * + +The song died out as mournfully as the last cadence of a funeral-hymn, +and the pale singer arose. + +"I am very tired, Paul," Nathalie said, in a spiritless sort of way, +"and I think my head is aching. Tell Midge to come." + +He rang the bell and put his arm round her to lead her away. + +"Say good night to Mr. Blake, Nathalie. You remember Val Blake, don't +you, my darling?" + +"Yes," she said; but the smile she turned upon him was meaningless, and +as cold as moonlight in snow. "Good-night!" + +Something was choking Val's voice, and his answering good-night was very +husky. Paul Wyndham led her into the inner room, and Midge bustled in +after the old fashion, and Nathalie was left in her charge to be +undressed for the night. Mr. Wyndham left the room and returned +presently, bearing wine and cigars. + +"If I am what you called me a while ago, Blake," Mr. Wyndham said, with +a smile that had very much of sadness in it, "there are extenuating +circumstances that may lighten my guilt." + +"Wrong is wrong," said Mr. Blake, gravely, "and no extenuating +circumstances can make it right. You are a bigamist, by your own +confession, and you know how the civil law punishes that." + +"Yes, Blake, I know it," said Mr. Wyndham, "and, knowing it, I have +risked all to win her, my poor lost darling within that room! Heaven +knows, I have hardly had a day's peace since. The broad road may be +strewn with roses, as preachers say it is, but the thorns in the flowers +sting very sharply sometimes, too." + +Mr. Blake made no reply to this aphorism, he was lighting his cigar, +with a listening face, waiting for the story his companion had to tell. +Midge came out of the bed-room while he waited, threw more coal on the +fire, and left the room. But still Paul Wyndham did not begin. He was +smoking, and looking thoughtfully into the red fire and the falling +cinders, and the ticking of an ormolu clock on the chimney-piece, and +the dreary sighing of the night-wind without alone broke the silence. +The clock struck eight, and Val lost patience. + +"Well, Wyndham, why wait? Go on. I am waiting to hear this most +extraordinary affair explained." + +"You all here in Speckport thought Nathalie Marsh committed suicide--did +you not?" said Mr. Wyndham, looking up. "It is such a charitable place +this town of yours, and your good people are so wonderfully ready to +place the worst construction on everything, that you never thought she +might have fallen in by accident--did you? + +"It looked very suspicious," said Val. "Heaven knows how some of us +pitied her, poor girl! but still----" + +"But still you gave her credit for suicide. Let me restore her +character. She never for a moment thought of self-destruction. I have +her own solemn word for it. She was heart-broken,--despairing--my own +injured darling!--but all the teachings of her life told her suicide was +the only crime for which God has no mercy. She never thought of suicide +on the night she wandered down to the old wharf. Most miserable she was. +Perhaps the wretched night was in harmony with her great trouble; but +she did not go there to look for death. She missed her footing on the +slimy, rotten plank, and fell in, and from that moment her story--as far +as you know it--ends." + +Val nodded. He was smoking, and it was too much trouble to remove the +cigar to speak. + +"She was saved almost by a miracle. A passing boat heard the splash and +her cry for help, and rowed to the spot. They saw her as she arose, and +saved her, and one man on board recognized her. The man's name was +Captain Locksley. Do you remember it?" + +"Locksley!" cried Val. "Captain Frank Locksley of the 'Southern Cross?' +Know him? Yes, as well as I know you! He was over head and ears in love +with Nathalie, himself." + +"Yes, I know. He recognized her, and would have returned with her to the +shore; but she positively refused to go. She would die, she cried out, +if she did not get away from this horrible place. Captain Locksley took +her on board of his ship. There was a woman there, the wife of the +steward, and she took charge of the poor, deranged girl. Captain +Locksley sailed that night. He was off on a three-years' voyage; but on +his way he was to touch at New York. The evening before they reached +that city, he made an offer of his hand to the poor girl he had saved. +He knew her story. He loved her and pitied her; but she refused. She +only wanted to be away from Speckport. She would remain in New York. One +place was as good as another, and a great city the best of all; but her +lot was dust and ashes. She would never marry, she told him. Captain +Locksley had a cousin, the wealthy manager of a fashionable Broadway +theater, and, as a favor, the manager consented to receive Nathalie into +his corps. Her rôle was a very simple one--walking lady at first, coming +on only to stare at the audience at first. But my poor girl's beauty, +though the shadow only of the brightness that had been, made her rise. +She took minor parts, and they made her sing when they found what a +superb voice she possessed. Her voice, the manager told me once, might +make her fortune--at least it would have made the fortune of any other +woman; but my darling had lost life, and with it all ambition. She never +would be a good actress, but the audience looked at her a great deal; +and the mournful melody of her voice, whether she talked or sang, had a +charm for all. It paid the manager; so he kept her, and doled out her +weekly pittance, and she took it uncomplainingly. I have sometimes +wondered since how it was no one from Speckport ever saw and recognized +her; but, I dare say, if they did, they would merely set it down as an +odd chance resemblance. They were all so certain of her death, and then +the false name and the disguising stage-dresses helped to baffle them. +It was at the theater I first met her. They took my dramas when I +turned dramatist, and I was always there. She attracted me from the +beginning. She interested me strongly the first time I saw her, and I +found myself pitying her somehow without knowing anything about her. I +could not cease thinking of her after. The pale face and mournful blue +eyes haunted me wherever I went. I found out she was called Miss +Johnson, and that she lodged in a shabby house in a shabby street; and +that was all any one heard. But of my own knowledge I knew she was good +and fair, and that great sorrow, not sin, had darkened her young life. +Why it was I loved her, I never could tell. It way my fate, I suppose; +for my struggles were vain, and only left me more helplessly entangled. +The manager laughed at me; my friends talked of acts of lunacy and +genteel private lunatic asylums for me; but it was all useless. I loved +her, and was not to be laughed out of it, and one night the truth broke +from me. I begged her to tell me who she was and to become my wife; but +she refused. She refused, Blake, to do either; but she was very gentle +and womanly saying the cruel words. She was very grateful to me, she +said, my poor dear! but she could not be unjust enough to take me at my +word. The fancy for her would soon leave me. She was not worthy to be +the wife of any good man. I must forget her. I must never speak to her +like this again. Blake, I went home that night in a sort of despair. I +hated and despised myself for my pitiful weakness. I tried to conquer +myself, and failed miserably. I could not stay away from the theater. I +could not forget her. I could not do anything I ought to do. I went to +the house where she lodged, and found out all they knew about her there. +It was very little; but it was all good. I made the manager tell me +again what his cousin, Captain Locksley, had told him of her, and I +ascertained that Captain Locksley was an honorable and truthful man. He +had said she had undergone a great deal of trouble, and had met with +heavy reverse of fortune, but that she was the best and purest of +beings, and he trusted his cousin would always be her true friend. He +told him he had long loved her, and that he had asked her to be his +wife, and she had refused. I knew, therefore, there was nothing worse +than worldly misfortune in the past life of the woman I had loved. Once +again I sought her out, and implored her to leave her hard life and be +my wife, keeping her past life secret if she chose; and once again I was +refused. + +"After that second refusal," Mr. Wyndham said, throwing his smoked-out +cigar in the fire, and lighting another, "I gave up hope entirely. There +was such a steady, inflexible resolution on her poor, pale, worn face, +that a despairing conviction of the uselessness of all further attempts +came upon me. Still I could not go away--I despised myself for my +pitiful weakness--but I could not, Blake, I could not! I loved her, and +I was a weak, irresolute coward, and lingered about the theater only to +get a word from her, a look at her, as she went past, or follow her at a +distance through the city streets, to see that she got safely home. I +despaired, but I could not fly. And one cold March morning, as I sat at +the window of my hotel, staring dreamily out, she passed by; trying to +fix my thoughts on the manuscript before me, and unable to think of +anything but the pale actress, a waiter came in and handed me a letter. +It was a very large letter, in a strange female hand I had never seen +before; but I knew it was from her--my darling! I tore off the envelope; +it contained half a dozen closely-written sheets, and was signed +"Nathalie Marsh." I knew the actress only as Miss Johnson; but I never +thought it was her real name. I knew now what it was. It was a very long +letter; she told me where she came from, and why she was here, an +actress. She told me her whole story; her sad, pitiful story of wrong +and suffering; the fortune she had lost; the brother wrongfully +condemned; and the treachery--the false, cruel, shameful treachery--of +the man she had loved and trusted. She told me all, in a simple, +truthful, earnest way that went to my heart; and then she told me her +reasons for telling it. I was her only friend, she said. I had always +been good and kind to her--my poor, little, forlorn lamb!--and she +trusted and believed in me. She did not love me; she never could love +any one again; but she honored and esteemed me, and if I could be +content with that, she would be my wife--faithful and true until +death--on one condition." + +Paul Wyndham paused. He had been gazing dreamily into the fire whilst +talking, but now he looked hesitatingly at Val Blake. + +"I hardly know how to go on," he said, "without involving others, whom I +have no right to name, but I must, I suppose; there is no alternative +after the discovery you have made to-night. Another had become possessed +of the fortune that should have been hers; a fortune that was hers by +every law of right and justice. Another, who had no claim upon it, +except, perhaps, that of mere chance--and the new heiress had been a +fellow-lodger of hers in Minetta street. She was young and handsome, and +had been a lady. I knew her by sight, for she had accompanied my darling +often to the theater. She would go to Speckport; she would possess the +thousands that should have been my Nathalie's--the fatal thousands for +which her heart had been broken, her young life ruined. She would be +honored and flattered and happy; she would marry, perhaps, the very man +who had so wronged herself. He was a notorious fortune-hunter; she was +sure he would be at her feet in a month, and was almost equally sure he +would be accepted. She could not endure the thought--not that she loved +him now--that had all gone long ago; but she wanted to baffle him, to +make him suffer as he had made her suffer, and to possess after all a +portion of the wealth which should have been all hers. She would be my +wife, she said, if I would bring this about. She knew a secret in the +life of this new heiress that placed her completely in her power, and +she confided that secret to me. She would be my wife as soon as I +pleased, if I would only help her in this scheme--if, after our +marriage, I would go to Speckport, compel the heiress into a formal +union with myself that should mean nothing but a business compact on +either side, and so battle Captain Cavendish, and win for my lawful wife +after all the fortune that was hers by right. You stare, Blake; it +sounds very extraordinary and improbable, but it is the simple truth, +nevertheless, and I saw no reason to see why it could not be carried +out. The secret I held placed the heiress utterly in my power and would +force her to comply with my every wish. Mind, Blake, it was not the sort +of secret that causes divorce cases; it was a crime committed, no doubt; +a crime of falsehood and ambition, not of shame, else that woman at +Redmon would never for one poor instant, under any temptation whatever, +have borne my name. + +"I read the strange letter over a half a dozen times, and Val, old boy, +I consented. You don't need to tell me how miserably weak and despicable +it was. I know it all, and knew it then just as well. But I want you to +think of me at my best. If the heiress had been a good woman, I would +have lain down and died sooner than disturb her; but I knew she was not. +I knew she was a bad, bold, crafty, ambitious creature, without a heart; +with only a cold, calculating brain, capable of committing a great crime +for her own ends; and I had no pity for her. I consented, for I loved my +poor, pale girl with a passionate devotion you never can realize, and +felt all her wrongs burning in my own breast, and longed to take them +upon myself and go forth and avenge her. I did not know then, as I do +now, that it was a diseased brain that prompted that letter. I did not +know that reason had left her throne, with that constant brooding on one +theme, and that my love was mad when she asked me to commit a crime. I +did not know. I wrote her a long answer, promising anything, everything, +if she would be my wife. My poor girl! My poor, poor Nathalie!" + +Mr. Blake sat staring stoically at the coals, making no comment whatever +on anything he heard, even when Paul Wyndham made that pause, with a +face full of tender pity and love. + +"We were married, Val," he said, looking up again, "and the month that +followed was the happiest I ever knew. Our marriage was very recent, and +I took my darling on a Southern tour, hoping that would make her forget +the past and be happy. But it did not. Nothing could ever make her +happy, she said, but seeing retribution fall on the unjust, and +returning to her native town. Not openly, that was out of the +question--but in secret, where she could know for herself that her +wrongs had been avenged. So I left her in New York, and came here, and, +Blake, you know the rest. I did frustrate that bad man, of whom I do not +wish to speak since he is dead. I did marry the heiress, or we went +through the ceremony that our friends took to be such. We understood +each other perfectly from the first. I found her precisely what I had +thought her--a bold, ambitious woman, reveling in wealth that was the +birthright of another; ready to marry a man for whom she did not care a +jot, because she hoped he would some day place a coronet on her head. I +had little pity for such a woman, and besides, I was bound by a solemn +promise to my dear one, who never would see me again if I failed. I +married the heiress of Redmon, and had a legal right to share the wealth +that should have been all my own true wife's. I purchased this +cottage--I brought Nathalie here--I secured the services of her faithful +old servant, and Speckport thought it was my sick mother! + +"Very slowly some dim shadow of the truth came into my mind--very +slowly--for I turned cold with horror only at the thought. Her mind was +going--I saw it now--and the horror and anguish and despair of that +discovery is known only to Heaven and myself. I had been so happy in +spite of all--happy in this cottage with my darling wife--and now my +punishment was coming, and was heavier than I could bear. My own act +brought on the crisis. I was always urging her to let me take her out--I +knew it would do her good; but she had such a dread of discovery that I +never could persuade her. You remember the Sunday you saw us at the +cathedral. She had often said she would like to go there, and that day I +persuaded her to go, to hear the popular preacher. The sermon was a +fearful one--you recollect it--and it completed the work remorse and +suffering had begun. My wife was a hopeless lunatic from that day. O my +love! my love! surely your punishment was greater than your sin!" + +Val did not speak. The white anguish on Paul Wyndham's face was beyond +all wordy consolation. + +"It was after that she took to wandering out. She was haunted by one +idea now--the sin she had committed against Olive; and tormented by a +ceaseless desire to find her out, and kneel at her feet for forgiveness. +She wandered to the Redmon road on the night you saw her first, with +some such idea, and fled in terror at Laura's scream. Midge had followed +and found her, and led her home. From that time, Midge had to watch her +ceaselessly to keep her in; but sometimes, in spite of all, she would +make her way out. She went to the cemetery to see her own grave, poor +child! and Midge found her there, too; she went to the cathedral this +evening in the same way. All the old familiar places drew her to them +with an irresistible power of attraction, and I knew this discovery must +come, sooner or later. I am deeply thankful you were the first to make +it, for I can trust you, dear old Val! I dare not call in medical +service, but I know her case is quite hopeless. She is never otherwise +than gentle and patient--she is like a little child, and I know reason +has gone forever. Blake, I know I have done wrong. I know I have +deserved this, but it breaks my heart!" + +"And this is the end of your story," said Val, looking at him with a +stony face. + +"This is the end--a pitiful story of weakness and wrong-doing, isn't +it?" + +"Yes," said Val, rising, and flinging his smoked-out cigar in the fire, +"it is. A bad and cruel story as ever I heard. A story I never should +have given you the credit of being the hero of, Paul Wyndham. You have +profaned a holy rite--you have broken the laws of God and man--you have +committed a felony, for which life-long imprisonment is the penalty. You +are a bigamist, sir. The laws of this matter-of-fact land recognize no +romantic glossing over of facts. You have married two wives--that humbug +about one marriage meaning nothing, being only a business arrangement, +is only bosh. You are a bigamist, Mr. Wyndham, and you cannot expect me +to hoodwink your crime from the eyes of the land." + +"No," said Mr. Wyndham, bitterly, "I expect nothing. You will turn +Rhadamanthus, and have justice, though the heavens fall, I dare say. You +will publish my misdoings on the house-tops, and at the street-corners. +It will be a rare treat for Speckport, and Mr. Val Blake will awake all +at once, and find himself famous!" + +Mr. Blake listened with the same face of stone. + +"I will do what is right and above-board, Mr. Wyndham. I will have no +act or part in any plot as long as I live. The only one I ever had a +hand in was that affair of Cherrie's, and I was sorry enough for that +afterward. If Nathalie Marsh were my sister, I could scarcely care more +for her than I do; but I tell you I would sooner know she was dead and +buried out there, than living, and as she is. I am sorry for you, Mr. +Wyndham, for I had some faith in you; but it is out of all reason to ask +me to conceal such a crime as this." + +"I ask for nothing," Paul Wyndham said, more in sorrow than in anger. "I +am entirely at your mercy. Heaven knows it does not matter much what +becomes of me, but it is hard to think of her name--my poor +dear!--dragged through the slime of the streets." + +Perhaps Val Blake was sorry for him in his secret heart--for it was a +kindly heart, too, was Val's--but his face did not show it. He lifted +his hat, and turned to go. + +"I shall be as merciful as is compatible with justice," he said; "before +I make this matter known to the proper authorities, you shall be warned. +But there are others who must be told to-morrow. She must have medical +advice at once, for she is evidently dying by inches; her mother must +know, and--" His hand was on the lock of the door as he stopped, and +faced round--"and the woman you have wronged. As to your secret power +over her, you need not make such a mystery of it. I know what it is!" + +"You!" Paul Wyndham said, turning his powerful gray eyes upon him. "You, +Blake! Impossible!" + +Mr. Blake nodded intelligently. + +"She is not the true heiress! Ah! I see I am right! I have had reason +to think so for some time past; but I never was sure until to-night. Oh, +yes! I know the secret, and I know more. I think I can put my hand on +one who is the heiress, before to-morrow's sun goes down." + +There flashed through Paul Wyndham's mind what Olive had said, in that +first stormy interview they had held, about the true heiress, who had +made over to her the true estate. What if it had been true? + +"Who is it?" he asked. "You cannot! She is dead!" + +"Not a bit of it. She is worth half a dozen dead people yet! I shall see +her to-morrow, and find out if I am not right." + +"See her to-morrow! Then she is in Speckport?" + +"To be sure she is! I will visit the other one, too--Harriet, you know. +She must be told at once." + +"You know her name! Blake, who has told you all this?" + +"Not now!" said Val, opening the door; "some other time I will tell you. +You are at liberty to make what use of your time you please. You have +between this and to-morrow." + +"I shall not make use of it to fly," said Mr. Wyndham, coolly; "whatever +comes, I shall stay here and meet it. I have only one request to +make--be as tender with that poor girl at Redmon as you can. I do not +think she is happy, and I believe she is a far better woman than I took +her to be. I am sorry for the wrong I have done her, but it is too late +in the day for all that now. I do not ask you to spare me, but do spare +her?" + +"I shall not add to the truth--be sure of it. Good night!" + +"Good night!" Paul Wyndham said, locking and closing the door after him, +and returning to the room they had left. So it was all over, and the +discovery he had dreaded and foreseen all along, had come at last. It +was all over, and the scheme of his life was at an end. He had been +happy here--oh, very, very happy! with the wife he loved, and who had +trusted and clung to him, as a timid child does to a father. How often +he had sat in this very room, reading to her dreamy, misty Shelley, or +Byron, or Owen Meredith, and she had sat on a low stool at his feet, her +blue eyes looking up in his face, her hazy gold hair rippling loose +about her, like a cloud of sunlight, or with that golden head pillowed +on his knee, while she dropped asleep in the blue summer twilight, +listening. Yes, he had been unspeakably happy there, while some one had +sat unthought of at Redmon, eating out her own heart in her grand +miserable solitude. He had been very happy here; but it was all over +now, and his life seemed closing black around him, like a sort of iron +shroud. It would all pass, and he would exist for years, perhaps, yet, +and eat, and drink, and sleep, and go on with the dull routine of +existence, but his life was at an end. He had sinned, and the +retribution that always follows sin in this world, or the next, +had overtaken him. He had been happy here, but it was gone +forever--nevermore to be--nevermore--nevermore! + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI. + +DRIFTING OUT. + + +In Mrs. Major Wheatly's pretty drawing-room in their new house in Golden +Row sat Miss Winnie Rose, the governess. She is dressed in slight +mourning, very simple, as becomes a governess, but fitting the small, +light figure with exquisite neatness, and she is counting time for Miss +Wheatly, who sits strumming out her music-lesson at the piano. Mrs. +Wheatly lies on a sofa at the window, dawdling over a novel and looking +listlessly at the passers-by, and wishing some one would call. She +started up, thinking her mental prayer was granted, as a servant +entered with a card. But it was not for her. It was handed to the +governess. + +"Mr. Blake!" said Miss Rose, hesitatingly. "This cannot be for me, +Margaret." + +"O yes'm, it is! He requested particularly to see Miss Rose." + +"Is it Mr. Blake?" inquired Mrs. Wheatly. "What can he want with you, I +wonder?" + +Miss Rose smiled as she got up. + +"I am sure I don't know. I may go down, I suppose?" + +"Oh, certainly, my dear!" said Mrs. Wheatly, yawning. "And ask him if he +has heard from his sister lately. Stop your strumming, Louisa, it makes +my head ache." + +Mr. Blake was sitting in what was called the morning-room, and shook +hands with Miss Rose when she came in. But how strangely grave he was! +What could he want with her? Her heart fluttered a little as she looked +at him. + +"My dear young lady!" he began, with an ominously grave face, "it is +very serious business that brings me here this morning. Are you quite +sure no one can overhear us?" + +Awful beginning! The little governess turned pale as she listened. + +"No one," she faltered. "What is it you mean, Mr. Blake?" + +"My dear," said Mr. Blake, as if he were speaking to a young lady of ten +years, "don't look so frightened. I want to ask you a question, and you +must pardon me if it sounds impertinent. Is your name, your family-name, +really Rose?" + +The governess uttered a low cry, and covered her face with both hands. + +"I am answered," said Val. "Your name is Henderson--Olive Henderson; and +you should be heiress of Redmon, instead of--of the person whose name is +Harriet, and who reigns there now. Oh, my dear young lady, how is this? +Is there no one in the world to be trusted?" + +She rose from her seat suddenly, and sank on her knees at his feet with +a gushing sob. + +"I have done wrong," she cried, "for all deceit is wrong; and though +Rose is my name, it is not my father's. But oh, Mr. Blake! if you only +knew all, I don't think you would blame me so much. It was not I who +changed it. It has been the name by which I have gone for years, and I +could not resume my rightful one without suspicion and explanation that +involved the honor of the dead; and so I was silent. No one was wronged +by it--no one in the wide world; and I did not think it so very wrong." + +She sobbed out as she spoke, in a sudden outbreak of distress. Val +stooped kindly and raised her up. + +"My dear child, I only doubted you for a moment. You are too good to +willfully deceive any one to their harm. But you must calm yourself and +listen to me; for right must be done to all. Who is that woman at +Redmon? Is she your stepsister?" + +The governess's only reply was to clasp her hands piteously. + +"Oh, Mr. Blake, what have you done? How have you found this out? Oh, I +am so sorry, so very sorry; for you don't know the misery you will +make!" + +"Misery! Do you mean to yourself?" + +"No, no! but to her. Poor Harriet! Oh, Mr. Blake, who can have told you +this?" + +"Sit down and calm yourself, my dear Miss Rose, and you shall hear all. +Do you recollect one day, very shortly after your return here, visiting +Miss Henderson at her cottage down the street here?" + +"Yes, yes." + +"You and she had along conversation in her chamber that day, part of +which was overheard. Miss Catty Clowrie was in the house at the time, +and she overheard--how, I don't pretend to say; but she heard enough to +excite her suspicions that all was not as it should be. She heard you +addressed as 'Olly', and heard you call Miss Henderson 'Harriet.' She +saw her down on her knees before you, pleading desperately for +something, Miss Clowrie could not quite make out what; and she heard +you promise to comply with her request, on condition of her paying over +to Mrs. Marsh a certain annuity. All this looked very odd, you know; and +Miss Clowrie, who is a good deal of an attorney, they tell me, scented a +criminal case. She consulted with her father on the subject, and was +overheard by her brother Jacob, who is in my office. Jake communicated +the story next morning in confidence to Bill Blair, and Bill related it +in confidence to me. I cross-questioned Jake, and got out of him all he +knew, and then pooh-poohed the story, and told them Catty must have been +dreaming. But the annuity was paid, and I suspected the whole thing at +once. It was none of my business, however, so I held my tongue; and as +Mr. and Miss Clowrie hadn't facts enough to go upon, they held theirs, +too, and waited for something to turn up. There is the story to you, +Miss Rose; and now why on earth, if you are the true Olive Henderson, +have you slaved here as a governess, while you let another, who had no +right, usurp your place and wealth?" + +The governess lifted her head with some spirit. + +"It is no slavery, Mr. Blake! They are very kind to me here, Mr. Blake, +and I have every reason to be happy; and Harriet has a right, a strong +right, which I never mean to dispute, to possess whatever belongs to me. +She is no usurper, for I have made over to her fully and sincerely the +legacy bequeathed to Philip Henderson. + +"I understand. You are very generous and self-sacrificing, Miss +Rose--but still she has no right there, and--" But Miss Rose +interrupted, clasping her hands in passionate appeal. + +"Oh, Mr. Blake, what are you going to do? Oh, I entreat of you, if you +have any regard for me or poor Harriet, not to reveal what you know. +Indeed, indeed, I don't want it! What should I do with half that money? +I have everything I want, and am as happy as the day is long. Do you +think I could ever be happy again if I turned poor Harriet out; do you +think I could ever live in that grand place, knowing I had made her +miserable for life? Oh, no, Mr. Blake! You are good and kind-hearted, +and would not make any one unhappy, I know! Then let things go on as +they are; and don't say anything about this?" + +"But I cannot, my dear little martyr!" said Val, "and I must speak of it +to her, at least, because it is involved in another story she must +hear." + +"In another story?" + +"Yes, Miss Rose--for I suppose I must still call you by that name--in +another story, stranger than anything you ever heard out of a novel. A +cruel and shameful story of wrong and revenge, that I have come here to +tell you this morning, and to which all this has been but the preface." + +The governess lifted her pale, wondering face in mute inquiry, and Val +began the story Paul Wyndham had related the night before. The brown +eyes of the little governess dilated, and her lips parted as she +listened, but she never spoke or interrupted him until he had finished. +She sat with her clasped hands in her lap, her eyes never leaving his +face, her lips apart and breathless. + +"So you see, Miss Rose," Val wound up, "in telling that unfortunate girl +at Redmon that she is not, and never has been, legally the wife of Paul +Wyndham, it is of absolute impossibility to shirk the other story. Had +she never falsely possessed herself of that to which she had no claim, +this dishonor would have been saved her. She might have been poor, but +not disgraced, as she is now." + +"Oh, Mr. Blake! what have I heard? Nathalie Marsh alive and here?" + +"Not Nathalie Marsh--Nathalie Wyndham. Whatever your stepsister may be, +Nathalie at least is his lawful wife!" + +"Oh, my poor, poor, Nathalie! And is she really insane--hopelessly +insane?" + +"Hopelessly, I fear, but she does not look as if her life would last +long. She is only the shadow of what she was--a poor, thin, frail +shadow. + +"And Harriet, who is so proud, what will she say when this is told her? +Oh, how could Mr. Wyndham do her such a wrong? It was cruel! it was +unmanly!" + +"So it was," nodded Val, "and it's not like him, either; for Wyndham is +a pretty honorable fellow, as the world goes. But man, even at the +best," said Mr. Blake, modestly, thinking of his own short-comings, "is +weak, and temptation is strong. I think he is sorry enough for it +now--not selfishly sorry, either. And now, Miss Rose, what I want is +this. I know you are a sort of unprofessed Sister of Charity where the +sick are concerned, and you and poor Natty used to be friends. I want to +know if you will come and stay with her for awhile; she hasn't a soul of +the female kind but Midge. If Joanna were here, I wouldn't have to +trouble you; but in her absence you are the only one I can think of. Of +course, her mother must go; but poor Mrs. Marsh is of no more use in a +sick room than a big wax doll. She will play propriety while you stay." + +"Yes, yes; I will go at once!" exclaimed Miss Rose, starting up in +womanly impulsiveness. "Wait one moment while I run and tell Mrs. +Wheatly." + +"Oh, there's no such hurry! It will do this afternoon, when I will call +for you, with Mrs. Marsh. Don't tell Mrs. Wheatly who it is you are +going to see, mind--the secret will get out, of course, but we don't +want everybody to know it just yet." + +"I will not tell. What time will you call?" + +"About three. I am going to Redmon now. She ought to know at once!" + +"My poor, poor Harriet! Oh, Mr. Blake! She is so proud and sensitive. +You will spare her as much as you can?" + +Mr. Blake took the two little clasped hands between his own broad palms, +and looked down kindly in the pale, pleading face. + +"I think I could spare my worst enemy if you pleaded for him, my little +friend. Don't be afraid of me, Miss Winnie. I don't think it is in me to +strike a fallen foe--and that poor girl at Redmon never injured me. +Good-bye, until then!" + +Mr. Blake's composure, as we know, was not easily disturbed; but he rang +the bell at Redmon with much the same sensation a miserable sufferer +from toothache rings at a dentist's door. + +Yes, Mrs. Wyndham was in, the servant said, taking the visitor's card +and ushering him into the library, where a bright fire blazed, for the +lady of Redmon liked fires. Val sat and stared at it, wondering how he +would begin his disagreeable task, and how she would take it. + +"She's such a flarer anyway!" thought Mr. Blake, "that I dare say she'll +fly out at me like a wildcat! What a mess it is! I wish I never had got +into it!" + +The door opened while he was thinking, and Olive came in. She was +dressed in a loose morning negligee, every fold showing how +indifferently her toilet had been made. Val saw, too, how pale, and wan, +and weary her dark face looked; how hollow, and earthen, and melancholy +her large black eyes. She had had her own share of the suffering, and +her pride and haughty defiance seemed subdued now. + +"Does she know already?" wondered Val; "if not, why does she look like +that? Have you been ill, Mrs. Wyndham?" he asked, aloud. + +"Oh, no," she said, drearily; "but I have not been out much of late, and +so have got low-spirited, I suppose. This wretched autumn weather, too, +always makes me dismal." + +"How shall I begin?" thought Val, staring moodily in the fire. But the +cheering blaze gave forth no answer, and it was Olive herself who broke +the ice. + +"Has anything happened, Mr. Blake, to make you wear that serious face? +Mr. Wyndham----" + +She paused--her voice quivering a little. Val looked up. + +"Mr. Wyndham is at Rosebush Cottage," he said. "Did you know it?" + +"I thought he was. It is three days since he was here." + +The tremor was in her voice again. + +"What does it mean, at all?" thought Val; "it can't be that she cares +for the fellow, surely!" + +"Is his mother worse, do you know?" she asked, her spirit rebelling +against the question her torturing anxiety forced from her. + +"Now it is coming!" thought Val; "bless my soul! but it is hard to get +out! It sticks in my throat like Macbeth's amen! Madam," he said, aloud, +facing round and plunging into the icy shower-bath at once, "there has +been a terrible mistake, which only came to my knowledge last night. A +great wrong has been done you by Mr. Wyndham, and it is to inform you of +it I have come here to-day." + +Her pale face turned blood-red, and then ghastly white. + +"You need not tell me," she cried, "I know it! She is not his mother!" + +"She is not!" said Val, very much surprised; "but how in the world did +you find it out?" + +She did not speak. She sat looking at him with a dreadful fixed stare. + +"Tell me all," she said; "tell me all! Who is she?" + +"She is his wife! I don't think you can know that. He was a married man +before he ever saw you here." + +A low cry of despair broke from Olive's white lips. This was not what +she had expected--at the worst, she had never thought of this. + +"His wife!" she cried, "and what, then, am I?" + +Val sat dumb. It was not a very pleasant question to answer; and, to +tell the truth, he was more than a little afraid of the lightning +flashing from those midnight eyes. + +"What am I?" she repeated, in a voice almost piercing in its shrillness. +"What am I? If she is his wife, what am I?" + +"My dear madam, it is a most wicked affair from beginning to end, and +you have been most shamefully duped. Believe me, I pity you from the +very bottom of my heart." + +With a cry that Val Blake never forgot, in its broken-hearted anguish +and despair, she dropped down on the sofa, and buried her face among the +pillows, as if she would have shut out the world and its miseries, as +she did the sight of the man before her. + +Mr. Blake, not knowing any panacea for misery such as this, and fearing +to turn consoler, lest he should make a mess of it, did the very best +thing he could have done, let it alone, and began the story he had to +tell. So, lying there in her bitter humiliation, this woman heard that +her miserable secret was a secret no longer, and that the pale, silent +actress of Mrs. Butterby's lodgings had been Nathalie Marsh, and was now +Paul Wyndham's beloved wife. That was the misery--she scarcely heeded, +in the supreme suffering of that thought, the discovery of her own +trickery and deceit--she only knew that the man she had thought her +husband, and who, in spite of herself, she had learned to love, had +cruelly and shamefully deceived her. She had never for one poor moment +been his wife, never for an instant had a right to his name; she was +only the poor despised tool, whom he used at the bidding of the wife he +loved. The horrible agony she suffered lying there, and thinking of +those things, no human pen can tell--no heart conceive. + +Mr. Blake rose up when he finished his narrative, thankful it was over. +She had never moved or spoken all the time, but he knew she had heard +him, and he paused, with his hand on the door, to make a last remark. + +"I beg, my dear young lady, you will not be overcome by this unfortunate +affair. It will be kept as close as possible, and you need not be +disturbed in the possession of Redmon, since such is Miss Rose's wish. I +have done my duty in telling you, though the duty has been a very +unpleasant one, good-morning, madam." + +She never moved. Val looked at the prostrate figure with a vague +uneasiness, and remembered it was just such women as this that swallowed +poison, or went down to the river and drowned themselves. He thought of +it all the way to Mrs. Marsh's, growing more and more uneasy all the +time. + +"Oh, hang it," thought Mr. Blake, "I wish Paul Wyndham had been at +Jericho before I ever got mixed up in his dirty doings. If that +black-eyed young woman goes and does something desperate, I shall feel +as if I had a hand in her death. I am always getting into other people's +scrapes, somehow! I suppose it's my luck!" + +Val knocked at the cottage door, and was admitted to the pleased +presence of Mrs. Marsh. And to her, once again, the story of plot and +counterplot had to be told; but it was a long time before she could +quite comprehend it. She cried a good deal when she fully took in the +sense of the thing, said she wondered at Mr. Wyndham, and thought it was +dreadful to have Nathalie restored, only to find she was out of her +mind. She wanted to go to her at once, she said--poor dear Natty! and so +Mr. Blake went for a cab without more ado, and found Mrs. Marsh shawled +and bonneted, and all ready, upon his return. They drove up Golden Row +and stopped at Mrs. Wheatly's for Miss Rose, whom Val handed in, in a +few minutes, and then packed himself up beside the driver. + +Midge opened the door of Rosebush Cottage to the visitors, and stared +aghast upon seeing who they were. + +"Is Mr. Wyndham in?" asked Val. + +Midge nodded, and jerked her head toward the room he had been in the +preceding night, and, unconscious Val tapped at it, and then walked in, +followed by the two ladies. + +Paul Wyndham stood up as they entered, pale and quiet as ever. Nathalie, +wrapped in a loose white morning-dress, lay on a lounge, a pile of +pillows under her head, and a mingled odor of vinegar and cologne and a +number of saturated cloths showed he had been bathing her forehead when +they came in. Mrs. Marsh never noticed him, but fell down on her knees +beside the lounge, in an outburst of motherly grief and joy, raining +kisses on the feverish face. Alas! that now-flushed, feverish face! the +cheeks crimson, the forehead shining, and burning with raging fever, the +golden hair all tossed and disordered over the pillows, and the hot, +restless head turning ceaselessly from side to side, vainly trying to +cool its fire. The blue eyes shone with fever's luster; but no light of +recognition came into them at her mother's passionate words and kisses. +Miss Rose, throwing off her hat and mantle, knelt beside her and dipped +the cloths in vinegar and water, and laid them on the burning brow of +the poor stricken girl. Val looked inquiringly at Mr. Wyndham. + +"She must have taken cold last evening in the church," he answered, in a +low tone; "she became delirious in the night, and has continued so ever +since." + +"I'll be off for the doctor at once," said Val, briskly; "she's in a bad +way, I know. I'll fetch Dr. Leach, he was their family physician, and +won't tell." + +Energetic Mr. Blake stalked out of the room without more ado. Paul +Wyndham followed him to the door. + +"They know?" he inquired, motioning toward the room they had quitted. + +"All about it," said Val, "and so does that unhappy young woman at +Redmon, and if she doesn't commit suicide before night it will be a +mercy. And oh, Wyndham, by the way, you had better not show yourself. It +isn't a very creditable affair, you know, to any of the parties +concerned, and the best atonement you can make is to keep out of sight." + +He strode off, without waiting for a reply, in search of Dr. Leach, and +had the good fortune to find that gentleman taking his dinner. Mr. Blake +hurried him through that meal with little regard to calm digestion, and +on the road had to relate, for the fourth time, the story, of which he +was by this time heartily sick. + +Dr. Leach listened like a man who cannot believe his own ears. + +"Bless my soul!" he exclaimed, "is it a story out of the Arabian Nights +you are telling me? Nathalie Marsh alive, and Mr. Wyndham's wife! The +mother all a hoax, and the young woman at Redmon a--what is she, Blake?" + +"Blamed if I know!" replied Mr. Blake; "but, whatever she is, Nathalie +was the first wife. It's a very uncommon story, but it is true as +preaching for all that, only I am getting tired of telling it so often." + +"Well, well, well! Wonders will never cease! Natty returned to life, +Cherrie back in Speckport, and Charley coming! Why, Val, we will have +the old merry time all over again before long." + +"I am afraid not! I am afraid poor Nathalie is beyond even your skill, +doctor. She was almost at death's door before, and this fever will +finish her." + +Mr. Wyndham was not in the room when the doctor and Val returned. Mrs. +Marsh and Miss Rose were still keeping cooling applications to the hot +forehead, but nothing could cool the fever that consumed her. Val drew +Miss Rose aside as the doctor bent over his patient. + +"Where is Wyndham?" he asked. + +"I don't know. He has not been here since you left." + +"What do you think of her?" nodding toward the fever-stricken girl on +the lounge. + +The governess, whose experience among the sick poor made her no +unskillful leech, looked out of the window through a mist of tears. + +"We have found her to lose her again, I fear. Look at Dr. Leach's face! +Can you not read his verdict there?" + +The old physician certainly was looking seriously grave, and shook his +head at Mrs. Marsh's eager questioning. + +"We must hope for the best, ma'am, and do what we can. The result is in +the hands of Providence." + +"Then you think there is danger, doctor?" said Val, coming forward. + +"Imminent danger, sir! It is typhoid fever, and a very serious case, +too. A strong constitution would stand a chance, but she has no +constitution at all. Gone, sir! gone! she is as feeble as an infant." + +"Then there is no hope at all?" + +"None!" replied Dr. Leach, solemnly; "she will never leave this room +alive. And better so, better so than as she was." + +"Yes," said Val, sadly; "it is better as it is! My dear Mrs. Marsh, +don't distress yourself so. Think that her mind is entirely gone, and +never could be restored, I believe, and you will be thankful that her +earthly troubles are so nearly ended." + +Dr. Leach was giving directions in a low tone to Miss Rose, and Val, at +his desire, lifted the slight form of the sufferer in his strong arms, +carried her into the inner room, and laid her on the bed. + +"I will call in again before night," said the doctor. "Remember my +directions, Miss Rose. Come, Blake; you're going, I suppose?" + +"Yes; in a moment. I want to see Wyndham." + +Paul Wyndham was walking up and down the hall as they came out, his pale +face expressive of but one thing--intensest anxiety. Dr. Leach, with a +stiff bow, passed on and went out, but Val halted. + +"Well?" Mr. Wyndham asked, eagerly. + +"No hope," said Val; "no earthly power can save her. It's typhoid--the +most malignant kind. She will die, thank God!" + +Paul Wyndham leaned against the wall and covered his face, with a bitter +groan. + +"As to you," pursued Val, sternly, "you must leave this house at once, +and enter it no more. Do not forget that we are acting criminally in +screening you from the law, and that we can enforce our commands. Go at +once, and do not come here again until all is over!" + +He left the house as he spoke, and joined the doctor, who had gained the +highroad. Some people passing stared to see them coming from Rosebush +Cottage, and surmised Mr. Wyndham's mad mother must be worse than ever. + +"How long can she last, doctor?" Val asked, before they parted. + +"Not over two weeks, I fancy, at the most. This fever will carry her off +at once." + +Late in the evening Dr. Leach returned, and found Nathalie worse. Mr. +Wyndham had left the cottage, after taking one last look at the wife he +loved so passionately. The agony in his face had gone to Mrs. Marsh's +heart, and she cried now, as she spoke of it to the doctor. + +"Yes, I dare say," the old man returned, shortly, "he's very sorry, no +doubt, but he's a villain for all that; and, only for poor Natty's sake, +I'd have him arrested for bigamy this minute!" + +Miss Rose did not go home that night; she would never leave Nathalie +now. She sent a note to Mrs. Wheatly by the doctor, explaining that it +was a case of typhoid, and that she feared to bring the infection into +the family. All further explanation she left to the doctor, only +desiring that her clothes might be sent to her. Mrs. Marsh dispatched a +similar message to Betsy Ann, and before night everybody knew that Mr. +Wyndham's mother was very bad, that Dr. Leach and Val Blake had been +there, and that Mrs. Marsh and Miss Rose were staying to take care of +her. + +And what did Speckport say to all this? Oh, Speckport had a great deal +to say, and surmise, and inquire. How was it, Speckport wanted to know, +in the first place, that Mrs. Marsh and Miss Rose should be especially +selected as the sick woman's nurses? To which Dr. Leach replied that +Miss Rose, being such a capital hand at the business, and so fond of it +into the bargain, he thought that there was no one in the town so fitted +for the task; and Mrs. Marsh, having nothing else to do, could play +propriety and read novels there as well as in Cottage Street. What was +Mr. Wyndham's mother like, was she a violent lunatic, and was her +present disease infectious? Speckport further inquired. To which Dr. +Leach said, Mrs. Wyndham was the wreck of a very handsome woman, that +she was not violent, only imbecile, and that her fever was highly +infectious, and made it extremely dangerous for any one but the +physician and nurses to enter the house; on which account Mr. Wyndham +would absent himself from Redmon, and Mrs. Olive from Rosebush Cottage, +until all was over. After which ominous phrase the doctor would hurry +away, and Speckport was satisfied. + +Mr. Blake, to be consistent, took up his quarters elsewhere, and visited +the cottage every day to inquire. Paul Wyndham, who was stopping at the +Farmer's Hotel, very near the cottage, came two or three times a day to +ask, but no one invited him to enter, and a sense of honor forbade his +intruding. The answer to all inquiries was continually the same, "No +better." No, Nathalie was no better--never would be better in this +world! She lay tossing on her feverish bed, raving wildly, consumed with +burning heat, never resting night or day. All the scenes of her life +were acted over again in that burning chasm. Now she babbled of her +schoolgirl-days, her mathematics and her music, or berrying and nutting +frolics with Charley. Now she was with Captain Cavendish, loving and +trusting and happy; and now she was shrieking out again that she saw the +murdered woman, and covering her eyes to shut out the ghastly sight. Now +the days of her misery had come; now she was at sea with Captain +Locksley, and in the New York lodging-house; now on the stage, making +rambling, incoherent speeches, and singing stage-songs. Now she was with +Paul Wyndham, his wife; now she was in the cathedral listening to the +stern preacher. And here she would shriek out, and toss her arms wildly, +and ask them to take her to Redmon, that she must tell her all--she +must! she must! And Miss Rose and her mother would have to hold her down +by force to prevent her from rising from the bed in her excitement, and +soothe her with promises that she should go there--only to wait a little +while. And the poor sufferer would fall back exhausted, and perhaps go +back to the old days when she played with Charley, a child. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVII. + +DIES IRÆ, DIES ILLA. + + +The November day broke bleak and gloomy. The dismal dawn was laden with +thick, sodden fog, and wretched, drizzling rain. The wind, full of the +wail of coming winter, was cold and raw; and the sky, seen dimly through +the fog-bank, was of sullen lead, the earth black and dreary; and the +sea and the fog so mixed that you could hardly tell where one began and +the other ended. + +In the Farmers' Hotel, a rambling wooden building, standing by itself on +a quiet country road, all was still as the grave at this early hour of +the miserable November morning. Even in the kitchen and halls there was +as yet no step, and the servants slept the sleep of the just in their +own dormitories. Perhaps of all in the house the man who stood at his +chamber window, blurred and smeared with clammy wet, and stared +hopelessly out through the full blank of fog and mist, was the only one +astir in the house. + +In the murky dawn of this bad November morning, Paul Wyndham, with +hollow creases under his eyes, and deep plowshares of silent suffering +about his mouth and forehead, stood looking out of the stained window, +at the flat waste of desolation without. It was hardly two poor weeks, +but it seemed a lifetime; and a horrible numbness was coming over him +and blunting all sense of pain. Would it always go on like this--this +dull, dead blank in life--would it last forever? All things were +beginning to look unreal, and lose their significance, nothing seemed +palpable or as it used to be. He was conscious that the crisis had come; +that in the long, black, sluggish watches of that wet November night a +battle had been fought between life and death, in the cottage whose +lighted window he could see from his own; but only conscious in a dull, +numb sort of way, to which the sharpness of the torture had given force. + +The pale, cold dawn crept shining in while he stood there blankly +staring out at the hopeless dreariness, and he roused himself from his +torpor by a great effort at last. A loud-voiced clock somewhere in the +silent house struck six as he put on his overcoat and hat and went down +stairs. + +Paul Wyndham waded on through the sea of mud, in the cold morning rain, +not meeting a soul, until he stood before Rosebush Cottage. The red +light in the window burned still; but had that other light, that light +of a beloved life, gone out in the night? It had been the crisis of the +fever--that low, miserable, burning, delirious fever, in which for so +many weary days and endless nights, the poor, unconscious sufferer had +tossed. Ah! that dreary time of probation--when the faithful watchers +had seen her sink day by day; when they had to force her clenched teeth +apart to admit teaspoonfuls of beef-tea; when they had listened with +aching hearts to her meaningless babble, or the songs the weak voice +sang. But that sad time of waiting had dragged itself out, and the night +came which must end all suspense. Does hope ever entirely leave the +human heart, until the blank face actually grows rigid and the +death-rattle sounds? Those sad and silent watchers in that darkened room +hoped against hope through the slow lingering hours of that night. They +were all there--Dr. Leach, Val, Mrs. Marsh, Miss Rose, and Midge, all +mutely watching the pale shadow of Nathalie lying so still and white on +the bed. You might have thought her dead had you entered, and looked at +her lying with closed eyes, and no perceptible respiration. But she was +only sleeping, and a faint breath still came from the colorless +lips--sleeping a sleep from which the doctor, at least, knew she could +only awake to die. He had a strong hope she might awake free from fever, +and that reason might return before the last hour. He sat by the +bedside, holding her wrist in his fingers, never taking his eyes off her +face. Mrs. Marsh had fallen asleep quietly in her chair, and Mr. Blake +was dozing; so when, as the pale morning broke, and the blue eyes +opened to life once more, there was only the doctor and Miss Rose to +bend over her. + +"Nathalie, darling!" the governess said, with trembling lips, "don't you +know me?" + +The blue eyes turned upon the sweet face with the clear light of +restored reason, and a faint smile dawned on the wasted face. + +"Miss Rose," she said, in a voice so faint that it sounded scarcely +above a whisper. "You here?" + +"I am here, too, Natty," said the physician. "Don't you know the old +doctor?" + +Yes, she knew him--she knew them all when they came crowding around her, +and looked up at them with faint wonder in her fever-dimmed blue eyes. + +"I have been ill, haven't I?" she said, feebly, glancing at her poor, +transparent, wasted hands. "Have I been ill long?" + +"Not very long, Natty dear," her mother answered, kissing her, "only two +weeks, and you will be better soon now, won't she, doctor?" + +But Dr. Leach did not reply. How could he deceive that dying girl? She +looked into his grave, sad face, and a solemn shadow fell on her own, a +shadow of the dark truth. + +"Oh, doctor!" she cried out, "am I dying?" + +He bent over her, and stroked away tenderly the full dark hair off her +forehead. + +"My poor child! my dear child! God knows I would save you if I could; +but the power of life and death lies in higher hands. Has this world +been such a pleasant place to you that you should wish to stay in it? +Think of that better world, my poor little girl, that lies beyond the +grave. It would be cruel in me to deceive you now." + +She drew the hand he held out of his suddenly, and turned her face away +from them. Mrs. Marsh broke out into strong sobbing, but the doctor +sternly hushed her. But the dulled, dying ear caught the sound, and she +turned to them again. + +"How long have I to live?" she asked. + +He could not tell an untruth with those earnest eyes fixed on his face, +and his voice was husky as he replied: + +"Not long! not long, my poor girl! But long enough to prepare for the +world to which you are going." + +"Will I die to-day?" + +Her mother's sobs broke out again; but Nathalie looked only at the +doctor. + +"Yes, dear child, you will last to-day, I think; but try and be calm, +and not disturb yourself at the shortness of the time." + +Her hands dropped in a kind of collapse of despair. + +"So soon, so soon!" she said, "and so much to do--so much to atone for!" + +"Shall we send for a clergyman?" the doctor asked. + +"Shall I fetch you Father Lennard?" inquired Val, stooping over her. + +Her face brightened a little. The gray old priest had baptized her, an +infant, had confirmed her a young girl, rind she had loved and +reverenced him more than any one else on earth. + +"Yes, yes," she said, eagerly. "Bring Father Lennard. Oh, how short the +time is, and so much to be done." + +Mr. Blake found Father Lennard at home, and had to go over again the +weary story of wrong-doings and falsehood. He was a very old man; his +hair had grown gray in his holy calling, and he was long used to tales +of sorrow and sin--sorrow and sin, that go so surely hand in hand. He +had learned to listen to such recitals--as a pitiful doctor, who knows +all the ailments poor human nature is subject to, does to stories of +bodily suffering--tenderly, sadly, but with no surprise. He had known +Nathalie Marsh from babyhood; he had had a father's affection for the +pretty, gentle, blue-eyed little girl, who had knelt at his confessional +so often, lisping out her childish faults; he had moaned for her tragic +fate; and he had nothing but pity, and prayer, and sorrow for her now. + +Mrs. Marsh and Miss Rose were in the room with the dying girl when they +returned; Mrs. Marsh sitting at the foot of the bed, weeping +incessantly, and the pale governess kneeling beside the pillows, +holding the cold thin hands in hers, and reading prayers for the sick +out of a missal. Both arose when the Father entered, and the dying face +lit up with a sudden light of recognition and hope. + +"My poor child! my poor baby!" the old man said, tenderly, bending over +her. "Is it thus I find my little Natty again? Thank God that reason has +returned to you in your last hours." + +The mother and friend of the dying girl quitted the room, leaving the +old priest alone to prepare the departing soul for its last great +journey. Miss Rose knelt in silent, fervent prayer all the time; but +Mrs. Marsh--poor weak soul!--could do nothing but sit and cry. Val had +found Mr. Wyndham in the kitchen, leaning against the wooden +chimney-piece, with a white, despairing face; and, pitying him in spite +of his misdoings, turned comforter as best he could. He walked up and +down the hall restlessly between whiles, feeling in the solemn hush of +the house as if he were in the tomb. His watch, which he was perpetually +jerking out, pointed to ten; and he was thinking he would have to run +down to the office presently, when, opening the parlor-door to announce +that intention, he saw Father Lennard come out of the sick-room. + +"Well, Father?" Val said, anxiously. + +"All is well, thank God! She is quite resigned now; and if sincere +contrition ever atoned for sin, hers will surely be pardoned. Are you in +a hurry, Val?" + +"I should be very much hurried indeed, Father, if I could not do +anything you or she may desire! What is it?" + +"Will you go to Redmon, and fetch that unhappy young lady here. The poor +child says she cannot die until she has heard her pardon her." + +"I'll go," said Val, "but I'm not so sure Mrs. Wyndham will come. You +see, she is one of your proud and high-stepping people, and is in such +trouble herself that----" + +"Let me go with you, Mr. Blake," cried Miss Rose, starting up; "I think +she will come with me." + +"All right, then! Put your bonnet on while I run round and make Peter +get out the buggy." + +The buggy came round to the front door, and Val assisted the governess +in and drove off. + +Father Lennard returned to the sick-room, and sat there holding the hand +of the dying, whose sad, sunken blue eyes never left his face, and +talking of that merciful Redeemer, who once said to another poor sinful +creature, "Neither do I condemn thee!" Nathalie lay, clasping a crucifix +to her breast, her pale lips moving in ceaseless inward prayer, while +she listened, her face calm and beautiful in its holy hope. The hours +that intervened seemed very short, and then the carriage wheels crunched +over the gravel, and Nathalie caught her breath with a sort of gasp. + +"Oh, Father, do you think she has come?" + +"I trust so, dear child! I will go and see." + +As he entered the drawing-room, the front door opened. Val stalked in, +followed by Miss Rose and--yes, by a figure stately and tall, dressed +very plainly, and closely vailed. The priest knew that majestic figure, +although the face, seen dimly through the vail, was so changed that he +hardly knew it. + +"You may go in," he said, in reply to Miss Rose's appealing look; "she +is waiting for you." + +As the door closed upon the tall vailed form, and the two women, united +to the same man, were face to face, Father Lennard took his hat to go. + +"I shall return again in the afternoon," he said; "I would stay all day +if I could, but it is impossible." + +"I will drive you into town," said Val; "Peter can fetch the traps back. +Oh, here's the doctor!" + +Dr. Leach opened the garden-gate as they came out, and lifted his hat to +the clergyman. + +"How is she?" he asked. + +"Failing fast," said Father Lennard. "I do not think she will wear the +night through!" + +"You are coming back, I suppose?" + +"I shall endeavor to do so. I promised her I would, poor child!" + +The doctor went into the drawing-room, where Mrs. Marsh, through her +tears, told him who was with her. The old doctor looked dissatisfied. + +"They'll agitate her too much--I know they will, with their crying and +taking on. If they stay long, I will go and turn them out!" + +He waited for a quarter of an hour, watch in hand, frowning impatiently +at the dial-plate, and then the chamber-door reopened and the +half-sisters came out. The swollen eyes of the governess told how she +had been weeping, but the other had dropped her vail once more, and was +invisible. Dr. Leach bowed to her, but she passed on without seeming to +see him. Miss Rose followed her to the door, and looked wistfully out at +the wet, foggy November weather, and the hopeless slough of mud. + +"You cannot walk back, Harriet. I will send Peter to Redmon for the +carriage. You will get your death of cold to walk there, unused as you +are to walking." + +"What does it matter?" she said, in a strangely hollow voice, "the +sooner I get my death the better. If I could only die like her, I should +rejoice however soon it came!" + +"But, Harriet----" + +But Harriet was gone, even while she spoke, walking rapidly through the +drizzling rain and clammy mud--she, who had had a fastidious horror of +mud on her dainty boots--and knowing nothing of either. All that was +best in her nature had been roused into life by that dying-bed, but +still that utter sense of despair and desolation filled her soul. Her +life was done--there was no future for her--in all the wide universe +there was not such another miserable woman as herself, she +thought--desolate, unloved, and alone. + +There were not many people abroad that bad November day; but those who +were, and who recognized Mrs. Wyndham through her vail, and bowed +ceremoniously, felt themselves outraged at receiving the cut direct. She +never saw them--she walked straight forward to that stately home that +was hers no longer, as people walk in sleep, with eyes wide open and +staring straight before her, but seeing nothing. + +Dr. Leach went into the sick-room as the others left it; but he returned +presently, frowning again. + +"Where is the fellow to be found?" he asked, impatiently; "she will +excite herself in spite of all I can say. She must see him, she says, if +only for ten minutes." + +"Is it Mr. Wyndham?" asked Miss Rose; and the doctor nodded crossly. + +It was the first time that the dying girl had spoken of him; and Miss +Rose, who knew he was in the house, left the room without a word. + +"Oh, he is here, is he?" said Dr. Leach. "I might have known it! Hem! +Here he comes!" + +Paul Wyndham followed the governess into the parlor, looking so haggard +that even the old doctor pitied him. + +"Now, Mr. Wyndham," he said, "my patient is not to be unnecessarily +excited, remember! I give you just ten minutes, not a second more!" + +Mr. Wyndham bowed his head and passed into the chamber; and Dr. Leach, +watch in hand, planted himself at the door, and grimly counted the +minutes. When the ten had passed, he opened the door. + +"Time's up," he said; "say good-bye, Mr. Wyndham, and come out!" + +They were all merciful enough not to look at him as he obeyed. Dr. Leach +went in and found poor Nathalie lying with her eyes closed, clasping her +crucifix, her lips still moving in voiceless prayer. She looked up at +him with her poor, pleading eyes. + +The old doctor departed, and the two women were left alone with the +dying wife of Paul Wyndham. Miss Rose sat by the bedside, reading, in +her sweet, low voice, the consoling prayers for the sick, while poor, +weak, useless Mrs. Marsh only rocked backward and forward in the +rocking-chair, moaning and crying in feeble helplessness. And Paul +Wyndham, in the room on the other side of the hall, walking restlessly +up and down, or stopping to gaze out of the window, or running to Midge +every five minutes to go and inquire how she was--felt and suffered as +men only can feel and suffer once in a lifetime. + +The leaden hours of the twilight deepened into night--black, somber, +starless. With the night came the wind and fell the rain. The storm had +been gathering sullenly all day, and broke with the night fast and +furious. The rain lashed the windows, and the melancholy autumn winds +shrieked and wailed alternately around the cottage, waking a surging +roar in the black cedar woods beyond. The feeble hands still fold +themselves over the precious crucifix--that "sign of hope to man"--but +the power of speech has gone. She cannot move, either; her eyes and lips +are all that seem alive, but her sense of hearing remains. She hears the +sound of carriage-wheels outside, and hears when Father Lennard, Dr. +Leach, and faithful Val enter the drawing-room. The old priest takes +Miss Rose's place, to administer the last solemn rites to the dying, and +Nathalie smiles faintly up in his face and kisses the cross he holds to +her lips. Val Blake goes into the room where he knows Paul Wyndham must +be, and finds him lying as Midge found him a quarter of an hour before. +He stoops down and finds he is asleep--Ah! when had he slept night or +day before?--and his face looks so haggard and heart-broken in repose +that Val says "Poor fellow!" and goes softly out. + +And so, with death in their midst, the faithful watchers sit and keep +vigil, while the stormy night wore on. Ah! Heaven strengthen us all for +that dread death-watch, when we sit beside those we love, and watch and +wait for the soul to take its fight. No one spoke, except in hushed +whispers, and the roaring of the wild storm sounded awfully loud in the +stillness. They can hear the voice of the old priest as he reads, or +talks, or prays with that fluttering spirit, already in the shadow of +the valley of death. As the watch of Val points to eleven, Miss Rose +glides softly out, with a face like snow, and tells them to kneel, while +Father Lennard reads the prayers for the dying. So they kneel and bow +their heads with awe-struck spirits, while the solemn and beautiful +prayers of the old church are read, and thrill as they hear that awful +adjuration: "Depart, Christian soul, out of this world!" and then, as it +is finishing, there is a pause. What does it mean? The service for the +dying is not ended. A moment later and they know--Father Lennard goes +on, but it is prayers for the dead he renders now, and they know all is +over; and Val Blake leans his head on his arm and feels it grow wet, +while the sad and solemn voice of the old priest goes on. Then they all +arise, Father Lennard reverentially closes the blue eyes, that have +looked their last on this mortal life, and there is a wild outbreak of +motherly love from poor Mrs. Marsh; and Miss Rose, with her face buried +in the pillow, is crying as she has not cried for many a day; and Val +and the old doctor go softly in and look on the beautiful dead face, and +think of the bright, happy Nathalie Marsh of last year--for whom all the +world might have prophesied a long and happy life--and feel that neither +youth, nor health, nor beauty, nor all the glory of the world, can save +us one hour from death. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVIII. + +OUT OF THE CROOKED WAYS. + + +And so all was over; and Speckport found out that the poor, miserable +creature, Mr. Wyndham's mother, was dead. It must have been a merciful +release for her, poor soul! they said; but the fever was infectious, and +they sympathized at a respectful distance. But Mr. Wyndham's wife left +Redmon and went to the cottage as soon as she heard it, and staid there +through all the weary time that intervened between the death and the +burial. There had been a consultation about the funeral and the grave, +and it was decided that that other grave, marked with the white cross, +and bearing the name of Nathalie Marsh, should not be disturbed. +By-and-by, Val said, the name can be erased; to disturb it now would +involve the telling of the whole story. Let Mr. Wyndham erect what sort +of monument he pleases. So the grave was dug in a sunny inclosure, under +a tamarack tree, and the funeral-service was held in the cathedral, and +a long file of carriages followed the hearse to the cemetery. Paul +Wyndham, in his deep mourning, stood bareheaded in the cold November +sunlight while the coffin was being lowered and the sods rattled heavily +on the lid; and Speckport, as represented by the funeral cortege, +whispered that Mr. Wyndham looked ten years older since his mother's +death. + +So Rosebush Cottage was left once more to the sole care of Midge, and +Mr. Wyndham returned to his late quarters at the "Farmer's Hotel." Mrs. +Marsh was driven to Cottage Street, and Mr. Blake, having fumigated +himself thoroughly, delighted the home of Miss Laura Blair once more +with the light of his presence. Poor Laura had led rather a lonely life +of late; for her darling Olly, wrapped up in her own troubles, had no +time to attend to her, and Val had deserted them altogether. She was +sitting, pale and listless, turning over the leaves of a new and popular +novel, with an indifference not very flattering to the author, when the +opening of the door made her start up, with a flush on her pretty face +and a light in her bright eyes, to whose flattering interest even Mr. +Blake could not be insensible. + +"Yes, I've come back to poor Laura," Mr. Blake said, shaking hands with +more warmth than perhaps there was any real necessity for. "I find I +can't stay away from you somehow. How's everybody?" + +"Pa and ma are well, if you mean them by 'everybody.' So poor Mr. +Wyndham's mother has gone?" + +Mr. Blake nodded. + +"And what is Mr. Wyndham going to do with that love of a cottage now, I +wonder?" + +"I," said Mr. Blake, imperiously, "am going to purchase that love of a +cottage myself!" + +"You! Why, Val! What will you ever do with a house?" + +"Live in it, Miss Blair, like any other Christian!" + +"Oh, yes; of course; I suppose you will send for Miss Jo to keep house +for you again?" + +"Why, no," said Mr. Blake, thoughtfully. "I think not. Do you know, +Laura, what I have been thinking of lately?" + +"No; how should I?" + +"Well, then," said Val, in a confidential tone, "I have been thinking of +getting married! You need not mention it just yet, until I see more +about it. In fact, I have not asked the lady yet, and don't know what +she may say." + +"And who is the happy lady, pray?" + +"A particular friend of mine," nodded Val, sagely, "and of yours, too, +Laura. The nicest girl in Speckport." + +"It is Miss Rose," thought Laura, with a sudden sinking of the heart. +"He always admired her, and they have been so much together lately!" + +"I'll buy the cottage from Wyndham as it stands," pursued Val, serenely +unconscious of the turn Miss Blair's thoughts had taken, "and fetch my +wife there, and live in clover all the rest of my life. So hold yourself +in readiness, Miss Laura, to dance at the wedding." + +Miss Laura might have replied but for a sudden choking sensation in the +throat, and the entrance of her portly mamma. Under cover of that lady's +entrance, she made her exit, and going up to her room, flung herself, +face downward, on the bed, and cried until her eyes were as red as a +ferret's. And all the time Mr. Blake was in a state of serene +complacency at the artful way in which he had prepared her for what was +to come. + +"I couldn't speak much plainer," he thought, blandly. "How pretty she +looked, blushing and looking down. Of course I'll get married. I wonder +I never thought of it before. Dear little Laura! I'll never forget the +first time I heard her sing, 'We won't go home till morning!' I thought +her the jolliest girl then I ever met." + +Mr. Blake was a gentleman in the habit of striking while the iron was +hot. He called round at the office, rapped Master Bill Blair over the +head with the tongs for standing on his hands instead of his feet, and +then started off for the Farmer's Hotel, without more ado, and was +ushered by a waiter into Mr. Wyndham's room. + +"Blake, I owe you more than I can ever repay," he said; "you have been +my true friend through all this miserable time; and believe me, I feel +your goodness as much as a man can feel, even though I cannot express +it! Please God, this trouble of my life shall make me a better man, if I +can never be a happy one." + +"Oh, you'll be happy," said Mr. Blake. "Get into the straight path +again, Wyndham, and keep there. I don't set up for a preacher, goodness +knows! but you may depend there is nothing like it." + +"The straight path!" Paul Wyndham repeated, with a weary, regretful +sigh; "yes, I have been straying sadly out of the straight path of truth +and honor and rectitude into the crooked ways of falsehood and treachery +and deceit. Heaven help me, it never was with a contented heart! No one +on this earth could ever despise me half so much as I despised myself +all the time!" + +"All right," cried Val, cheerily, "it's never too late to mend. Keep +straight now, and we can all forgive and forget the past. I suppose you +will be for leaving us shortly now?" + +"Immediately. This is Tuesday--I shall depart in Thursday's boat." + +"Will you," said Val, lighting a cigar; "that soon? What are you going +to do with Rosebush Cottage?" + +"The cottage! Oh, I shall leave it as it is--that is, shut it up. In +time--a year or two, perhaps--I may return and sell it, if any one will +purchase." + +"Don't wait a year or two. Sell it now." + +"Who wants it?" + +"I do," said Val, with one of his nods. + +"You! What do you want of the place, may I ask." + +"Well, now, I don't see any just cause or impediment to my possessing a +house any more than the rest of mankind, that everybody should be so +surprised. I want the house to live in, of course--what else?" + +Paul Wyndham looked at him and smiled. The great trouble of his life had +changed him to a grave, sad man; but being only human, he could still +smile. + +"I wish you joy with all my heart! Laura has said yes, then?" + +"Why, no, not exactly--that is to say, I haven't asked her out-and-out +yet. I wanted to settle about the house first. But I gave her a pretty +broad hint, and I guess it's all right. I think I should like to live +there particularly, and now what will you take for it as it stands?" + +Mr. Wyndham arose, opened a desk, and took out a bundle of papers, which +he laid before Val. + +"Here is the deed and all the documents connected with the place. You +can see what it cost me yourself. Here is the upholsterer's bill, but +you must deduct from that, for it is only second-hand furniture now. I +leave the matter entirely to yourself." + +With such premises, bargaining was no very difficult matter; and half an +hour after, Val had the deed in his pocket, and was the happy owner of +Rosebush Cottage. + +"You stay here, I suppose, until Thursday," he said, rising to go. + +"Yes." + +"And how about that poor girl at Redmon? What is to become of her?" + +Mr. Wyndham laid his hand on Val's shoulder, and looked very gravely up +in his face. + +"Val, before she died, in that last brief interview, she spoke of +Harriet, and I gave her a promise then which I shall faithfully keep. +The devotion of a whole life can scarcely atone to her for the wrong I +have done her; but if she will accept that atonement, Heaven knows it +will make me happier now than anything else on earth. If she does not +utterly loathe and hate me--if she will be my wife in reality, as she +has hitherto been in name--we will leave this place together; and +whether my life be long or short, it shall be entirely devoted to her +alone." + +Val's face turned radiant. He seized Mr. Wyndham's other hand, and shook +it with crushing heartiness. + +"My dear Wyndham! My dear old boy! I always knew your heart was in the +right place, in spite of all your shortcomings. Oh, you'll be all right +now! You've got the stuff in you that men are made of!" + +With which Mr. Blake strode off, fairly beaming with delight, and +whistling all the way home. He sprang up the outer steps at a bound, +rang the bell with emphasis, and shooting past the astonished servant, +bolted whirlwind-fashion into the dining-room. At first he thought there +was no one there, but, disturbed by the noisy entrance, from a sofa +before the fire, and from out a heaving sea of pillows, Laura lifted up +her head and looked at him. Poor Laura! That feminine luxury, a "real +good cry," had brought on a raging headache, and now her face was +flushed, her eyes dim and heavy, and her head throbbing and hot. She +dropped that poor but aching head again as she saw who it was, with a +rebellious choking in the throat, and a sudden filling of the eyes. + +"Oh, I say, Laura," cried Mr. Blake, in considerable consternation, +"you're not sick, are you? What's the matter?" + +"My head aches," Laura got out, through her tears. + +"Poor little head!" Mr. Blake piteously remarked, and Laura sobbed +outright; "don't cry, Laura, it will be better before you are twice +married. Look, here's a plaster I've brought you for it!" + +He put the deed of Rosebush Cottage in her feverish hand. Laura stayed +her tears, and looked at it, blankly. + +"What is it?" she asked. + +"Can't you see? It's the deed of Rosebush Cottage. I've bought it, +furniture and all--and the furniture is very pretty, Laura--from Paul +Wyndham. I'll let you keep that paper, if you'll promise to take good +care of it." + +"I don't understand you! Oh, Val!" cried Miss Blair, her heart beginning +to flutter wildly again, "what is it you mean?" + +"Why, didn't I tell you this morning? I'm going to be married--that is, +if you will have me, Laura!" + +Happy Laura! Such a rosy tide swept over her fair face, and dyed it +radiant red to the roots of her hair. + +"Oh, Val! I thought it was Miss Rose." + +Val stared. + +"Miss Rose! What the dickens put that in your head? I never thought of +Miss Rose--I meant you all the time. Is it all right, Laura?" + +All right! He need hardly have asked that question, seeing the radiant +face before him. Laura laughed and cried, and blushed, and forgot all +about her headache, and for the next fifteen minutes was completely and +perfectly happy. It was one of those little glimpses of Eden that we +poor pilgrims of the desert sometimes catch fleetingly as we wander +wearily through long dreary wastes of sand, of sluggish marshes, or +briery roads. Transient gleams of perfect joy, when we forget the past, +and ask nothing of the future--when we hold the overflowing cup of bliss +to our lips and drink to our heart's content. + +"Dinner on the table!" Somebody made this announcement in a stentorian +voice, and Val insisted on Laura's taking his arm, and accompanying him +to the dining-room. Papa and Mamma Blair and Master Bill were waiting +there; and Mr. Blake, ever prompt and business-like, led the blushing +and shrinking fair one to the parental side, and boldly demanded their +blessing. To say that Mr. and Mrs. Blair were astonished, would be doing +no sort of justice to the subject; to say they were delighted, would be +doing still less; and Miss Laura was formally made over to Mr. Blake +before grace was said. Dinner was only a matter of form that day with +Miss Blair--her appetite was effectually gone; and even +Val--matter-of-fact, unromantic, unsentimental Val--ate considerably +less underdone roast-beef than usual, and looked a good deal more across +the table at the rosy, smiling face of his vis-a-vis than at the +contents of his plate. But dinner was over at last, and an extra bottle +of crusty old port drank to the happy event; and then Papa Blair +buttoned up his overcoat and set off to business again, and Master Bill +started full gallop for the office, to retail the news to Mr. Clowrie; +and Mamma Blair went about her domestic concerns, and the lovers were +alone together. But Mr. Blake was not at all "up" in the rôle of Romeo, +and stood beside Laura at the window, looking at the pale moon rising, +and using his toothpick. + +"What a lovely night!" Laura said; for all the world, so lately a +howling wilderness, was moonlight and couleur de rose to her now, with +plain Val Blake standing by her side. "How beautifully the moon is +rising over the bay!" + +"Yes," said Mr. Blake, eying it with the glance of a connoisseur in +moonshine. "It's rather a neat thing in the way of moonrise. What +whistle's that?" + +"It's the American boat getting in. Suppose we go down, Val, and see +who's coming?" + +"All right!" said Val. "Run and put your things on, and don't be an hour +about it, if you can help it." + +Laura ran off, and reappeared in a quarter of the allotted time, +turbaned and mantled, and furred, and tripped along through the moonlit +and gaslit streets, with her new fiancé down to the wharf. The fine +night had, as usual, drawn crowds down there, and the wharf was all +bustle, and excitement, and uproar. Miss Blair, clinging confidingly to +Mr. Blake's arm, watched the passengers making their way through the +tumult to where the cabs were waiting, when all of a sudden she dropped +the arm she held, with a little shrill feminine scream, and darting +forward, plumped head foremost into the arms of a gentleman coming up +the wharf, valise in hand. To say that Mr. Blake stared aghast would be +a mild way of putting it; but stare he undoubtedly did, with might and +main. The gentleman wore a long, loose overcoat, heavily furred, and his +face was partially shaded by a big, black, California hat; but Val saw +the handsome, sun-browned face beneath for all that, with its thick, +dark mustache and beard. Could it be? surely not, with all those +whiskers and that brown skin; and yet--and yet, it did look like: but by +this time Laura had got out of the mustached stranger's coat-sleeves, +and was back, breathless with excitement, beside the staring editor. + +"Oh, Val! it's Charley!--it's Charley Marsh! Charley Marsh!" Charley, +sure enough, in spite of the whiskers and the sun-brown. Val was beside +him in two strides, shaking both hands as if he meant to wrench the arms +from their sockets. + +"My dear boy! my dear boy! my dear boy!" was all Mr. Blake could get +out, while he spoke, and shook poor Charley's hands; and Laura performed +a little jig of ecstasy around them, to the great delight of sundry +small boys looking on. As for Charley himself, there were tears in his +blue eyes, even while he laughed at Val. + +"Dear old Val!" he said, "it is a sight for sair een to look at your +honest face again! Dear old boy! there is no place like home!" + +"Come along," cried Val, hooking his arm in Charley's. "The people are +gaping as if we had two heads on us! Here's a cab; get in, Laura; jump +after her, Charley. Now, then, driver, No. 12 Golden Row!" + +"Hold on!" exclaimed Charley, laughing at his phlegmatic friend's sudden +excitement, "I cannot permit myself to be abducted in this manner. I +must go to Cottage Street." + +"Come home with us first," said Val, gravely. "I have something to tell +you--something you ought to know before you go to Cottage Street." + +"My mother!" Charley cried, in sudden alarm; "she is ill--something is +wrong." + +"No, she's not! Your mother is well, and nothing is wrong. Be patient +for ten minutes, and you'll find out what I mean!" + +The cab stopped with a jerk in front of Mr. Blair's; and, as they got +out, a gentleman galloped past on horseback, and turned round to look at +them. Val nodded, and the rider, touching his hat to Laura, rode on. + +"Where is Mr. Wyndham going, I wonder?" said Laura. + +"To Redmon, I think," Val answered. "Come in, Charley! Won't the old +folks stare, though, when they see you?" + +Miss Rose--her name is Rose, you know--had gone from Rosebush Cottage to +Redmon, at the earnest entreaties of her half-sister. She had wished to +return to Mrs. Wheatly's, and let things go on as before; but Harriet +Wade--the only name to which she had any right--had opposed it so +violently, and pleaded so passionately, that she had to have her way. + +"Stay with me, Olive, stay with me while I am here!" had been the +vehement cry. "I shall die if I am left alone!" + +"Very well, I will stay," her sister said, kissing her; "but, please, +Harriet, don't call me Olive, call me Winnie. I like it best, and it is +the name by which they know me here." + +So Winnie Rose Henderson went to Redmon--her own rightful home, and hers +alone--and on the night of Charley Marsh's return, when Paul Wyndham +entered the house, her small, light figure crossing the hall was the +first object he saw. She came forward with a little womanly cry at sight +of him. + +"Oh, Mr. Wyndham, I am so glad you have come! I want you to talk to +Harriet. She is going away." + +"Going away! Where?" + +"Back to New York, she says--anywhere out of this. Back to the old life +of trouble and toil. Oh, Mr. Wyndham, talk to her. All I say is useless. +But you have influence over her, I know." + +"Have I?" Mr. Wyndham said, with a sad, incredulous smile. "What is it +you want her to do, Miss Henderson?" + +"I want you to make her stay here. I want you to persuade her to let +everything go on as before. I mean," the governess said, coloring +slightly, "as regards myself and her, of course." + +Mr. Wyndham took her hand and looked down at her, with that grave, sad +smile still on his face. + +"My dear Miss Henderson," he said, "--for by that name I must call +you--you are the best and noblest woman in the world, and I shall +venerate all womankind henceforth for your sake. But we would be as +selfish as you are noble did we accept the sacrifice you are so willing +to make. I have come to offer the only atonement it is in my power to +make for the wrong I have done her. On the result depends what her +future life shall be." + +The governess understood him, and the color deepened on her face. + +"She is in the library," she said, withdrawing her hand and moving away. +"You have my best wishes." + +Paul Wyndham tapped at the library-door, and the familiar voice of the +woman he sought called "Come in!" She was lying on a lounge, drawn up +before a glowing coal-fire, listlessly lying there, its ruddy glow +falling on her face, and showing how wan and worn it was. At sight of +him, that pale face turned even paler, and she rose up and looked at +him, as some poor criminal under trial for her life might look at her +judge. + +"Have I frightened you?" he said, noticing that startled glance. "Pray +resume your seat. You hardly look well enough to stand up." + +She sank back on the lounge, holding one hand over her throbbing heart. +Paul Wyndham stood leaning against the marble mantel, looking down at +the fire, and thinking of that other interview he had held with this +woman, when he had to tell her she must be his wife. How few months had +intervened since then, but what a lifetime of trouble, and secrecy, and +suspicion, and guilt it seemed; and how she must hate and despise him! +She had told him so once. How useless, then, it seemed, for him to +approach her again! But, whether refused or not, that way duty lay; and +he had deserved the humiliation. She sat before him, but not looking at +him. He could not see her face, for she held up a dainty little toy of a +hand-screen between it and the firelight; but he could see that the hand +which held it shook, and that the lace on her breast fluttered, as if +with the beating of the heart beneath. And seeing it, he took courage. + +"I scarcely know," he began, "how I can say to you what I have come here +to-night to say. I scarcely know how I dare speak to you at all. Believe +me, no man could be more penitent for the wrong I have done you than I +am. If my life could atone for it, I would give it, and think the +atonement cheaply purchased. But my death cannot repair the sin of the +past. I have wronged you--deeply, cruelly wronged you--and I have only +your woman's pity and clemency to look to now. I can scarcely hope any +feeling can remain for me in your heart but one of abhorrence, and that +abhorrence I have deserved; but I owe it to you to say what I have come +here to utter. You know all the story of the past. You heard it from the +lips that are cold in death now, and those dying lips encouraged me to +make this poor reparation. Harriet, my poor, wronged girl, if you will +take her place, if you will be to me what the world here has for so many +months thought you--what she really was--if you will be my wife, my dear +and cherished wife, I will try what a lifetime of devotion will do to +atone for the sorrowful past. Perhaps, my poor dear, you will be able to +care for me enough in time to forgive me--almost to love me--and Heaven +knows I will do my best to be all to you a husband should be to a +beloved wife!" + +He stopped, looking at her; but she did not stir, only the hand holding +the screen trembled violently, and the fluttering breast rose and fell +faster than ever. + +"Harriet," he said, gently, "am I so hateful to you that you will not +even look at me? Can you never forgive me for what I have done?" + +She dropped the screen and rose up, her face all wet with a rain of +happy tears, and held out both hands to him--all pride gone forever now. + +"I do not forgive you," she said. "I love you, and love never has +anything to forgive. O Paul, I have loved you ever since you made me +your wife!" + +So Paul Wyndham found out at last what others had known so long, and +took his poor, forlorn wife to his arms with a strange, remorseful sort +of tenderness, that, if not love, was near akin to it. So, while the +fire burned low, and cast weird shadows on the dusky, book-lined walls, +and the November wind wailed without, these two, never united before, +sat side by side, and talked of a future that was to be theirs, far from +Speckport and those who had heard the sinful and sorrowful story of the +past. + +By and by, a servant coming in to replenish the fire found them sitting +peacefully together, as he had never seen his master and mistress sit +before, and was sent to find Miss Rose and bring her to them. And I +think Harriet herself was hardly happier in her new bliss than her +gentle stepsister in witnessing it. + +So, while Charley Marsh, up in Val Blake's room, that cold November +night, listened in strange amazement to all that had been going on of +late--to the romance-like story in which his unhappy sister had played +so prominent a part--the two sat in the luxurious library at Redmon in +this new happiness that had come to them from Nathalie Marsh's grave! + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIX. + +IN HOPE. + + +In the pale November sunlight of the next morning, in the plain, dark +traveling-carriage from Redmon, a little party of four persons drove +rapidly along the country-roads to a quiet little out-of-the-way church, +some fifteen miles out of town. They were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wyndham, Mr. +Blake, and Miss Rose Henderson; and in the quiet church a quiet ceremony +was performed by special license, which made Paul Wyndham and Harriet +Wade man and wife, beyond the power of earthly tribunals to dispute. The +clergyman was quite young, and the parties were all strangers to him, +and he had a private opinion of his own that it was a runaway match. +There were no witnesses but the two, and when it was over they drove +back again to Redmon, and Harriet's heart was at peace at last. She had +a trial to undergo that day--a great humiliation to endure--but it was a +voluntary humiliation; and with her husband--hers now--she could undergo +anything. The old, fierce, unbending pride, too, that had been her sin +and misfortune all her life, had been chastened and subdued, and she +owed to the society she had deceived the penance self-inflicted. + +Val Blake had all the talking to himself on the way home, and, to do him +justice, there wasn't much silence during the drive. He was talking of +Charley Marsh, who had come home a far finer fellow than he had gone +away, a brave and good and rich man. + +They were all to meet that evening at a quiet dinner-party at Redmon--a +farewell dinner party, it was understood, given by Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham, +before their departure from Speckport to parts unknown. The invited +guests were Mrs. Marsh and her son, Dr. Leach, Mr. Blake, and Miss +Blair, Father Lennard (the old priest), and Mr. Darcy (the lawyer). A +very select few, indeed, and all but Mr. Darcy acquainted with the story +of the woman who had died at Rosebush Cottage, and the other story of +the true and false heiress. He, too, was to be enlightened this evening, +and Harriet Wyndham was publicly to renounce and hand over to her +half-sister, Winnifred Rose Henderson, the fortune to which she never +had possessed a claim. That was her humiliation; but with her husband by +her side, she was great enough for that or anything else. + +So the wedding-day passed very quietly at Redmon, and in the pale early +twilight the guests began to arrive. Among the first to arrive was Mrs. +Marsh and her son; the next to appear was Val, with Laura tucked under +his arm; and Laura, with a little feminine scream of delight, dropped +into Mrs. Wyndham's arms, and rained upon that lady a shower of gushing +tears. + +"Oh, what an age it is since I have seen my darling Olly before!" Miss +Blair cried, "and I have been fairly dying for this hour to arrive." + +Mrs. Paul Wyndham kissed the rosy rapturous face, with that subdued and +chastened tenderness that had come to her through much sorrow; and her +dark eyes filled with tears, as she thought, perhaps, loving little +Laura might leave Redmon that night with all this pretty girlish love +gone, and nothing but contempt in its place. + +Half an hour after, all the guests had arrived, and were seated around +the dinner table; but the party was not a very gay one, somehow. The +knowledge of what had passed was in every mind; but Mr. Darcy was yet in +ignorance, and he set the dullness down to the recent death of Mr. +Wyndham's mother. Once, too, there was a little awkwardness--Wyndham, +speaking to Miss Rose, had addressed her as Miss Henderson, and Mr. +Darcy stared. + +"Henderson!" he exclaimed, "you are talking to Miss Rose, Wyndham! Are +you thinking of your courting days and Miss Olive Henderson?" + +But Mrs. Wyndham and her half-sister colored, and everybody looked +suddenly down at their plates. Mr. Darcy stared the more; but Paul +Wyndham, looking very grave, came to the rescue. + +"Miss Rose is Miss Rose Henderson! Eat your dinner, Mr. Darcy; we will +tell you all about it after." + +So, when all returned to the drawing-room, Val Blake told Mr. Darcy how +he had been outwitted by a girl. Not that Mr. Blake put it in any such +barbarous way, but glossed over ugly facts with a politeness that was +quite unusual in straightforward Val. But Mrs. Paul Wyndham herself rose +up, very white, with lips that trembled, and was brave enough and strong +enough to openly confess her sin and her sister's goodness. She looked +up, with pitiful supplication, in the face of her husband, as she +finished, with the imploring appeal of a little child for pardon; and he +put his protecting arm around her, and smiled tenderly down in the +mournful black eyes, once so defiantly bright to him. Mr. Darcy's +amazement was beyond everything. + +"Bless my soul!" was his cry, "and little Miss Rose is Miss Henderson, +after all, and the heiress of Redmon." + +Miss Henderson, on whom all eyes were admiringly bent, was painfully +confused, and shrank so palpably, that the old lawyer spared her, and no +one was sacrilegious enough to tell the little heroine what they thought +of her noble conduct. And when Mrs. Marsh burst unexpectedly out in a +glowing eulogy on all her goodness, not only to herself and Nathalie, +but to all who were poor and friendless in the town, the little heiress +broke down and cried. So no more was said in her hearing, and the +gentlemen gathered together, and talked the matter over apart from the +ladies, and settled how the news was to be taken to Speckport. + +It was late when the party broke up, and good-night and good-bye was +said to Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham, who were to leave to-morrow at eight. Val +and Laura promised to be at the boat to see them off; and they were down +true to their word, before the Redmon carriage arrived. Charley was +there, too, and so was Cherrie, in crape to the eyes, looking very +pretty in her widow's weeds, and all in a flutter at the thought of +seeing Charley again. But this bearded and mustached and grave-looking +young man was not the hot-headed, thoughtless Charley her pretty face +had nearly ruined for life; and as he held out his hand to her, with a +grave, almost sad smile, Cherrie suddenly recollected all the evil she +had caused him, and had the grace to burst into tears, much to the +horror of Mr. Blake, who had a true masculine dread of scenes. + +"Don't cry, Cherrie," Charley said, "it's all over now, and it has done +me good." + +If any lingering hope remained that the old time might be renewed, that +question and the smile that accompanied it banished forever from poor +Cherrie's foolish heart and her punishment that moment was bitterer than +all that had gone before. + +Miss Henderson was in the carriage with Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham, and went +on board with them, as did the rest of their friends, and lingered until +the last bell rang. Then, as Mrs. Wyndham threw back her vail for a +parting kiss, they all saw that her eyes were swollen with crying. Paul +Wyndham held both the little hands of the heiress in his own, and looked +down in the gentle face with tender reverence. + +"Good-bye, little sister," he said; "good-bye, and God bless you!" + +The others were crowding around, and hasty farewells were spoken; and +then the steamer was moving away from the wharf, and Charley led Miss +Henderson, who was crying behind her vail, ashore; and they stood on the +wharf to watch the steamer out of sight. They saw Paul Wyndham with his +wife on his arm, waving a last farewell from the deck; and then the +steamer was down the bay, and all the people on the wharf were going +home. Charley Marsh assisted Miss Henderson into her carriage, and she +was driven away to her new home. + +Speckport knew everything--the murder was out, and Speckport, from one +end to the other, was agape at the news. There was one thing about the +affair they could not understand, and that was, how the rightful +heiress, knowing herself to be so, and perfectly able to prove it, could +wear out her life as a pitiful governess, and leave a princely fortune +in the hands of a usurping stepsister. Speckport could not understand +this--never could understand it, and set her down as an insipid little +nonentity, with no will of her own, and easily twisted around the finger +of that bold, bad, ambitious woman, Mrs. Paul Wyndham. Speckport did not +spare its late enchantress, and for all their contempt of that "insipid +thing" the present heiress, were very well satisfied to be noticed by +her in public, and only too happy to call at Redmon. It was in her +favor, they said, that she put on no airs in consequence of her sudden +rise in the world, but was as gentle, and humble, and patient, and +sweet, as heiress of Redmon as she had been when Mrs. Wheatly's +governess. A few there were who understood and appreciated her; and when +old Father Lennard laid his hand on her drooping head and fervently +exclaimed, "God bless you, my child!" her eyes filled, and she felt more +than repaid for any sacrifice she had ever made. Speckport said--but +Speckport was always given to say a good deal more than its +prayers--Speckport said Mr. Charles Marsh appreciated her, too, and that +the estate of Redmon would eventually go, in spite of Mrs. Leroy's +unjust will, to the Marsh family. But it was only gossip, this, and +nobody knew for certain, and Mrs. Marsh and Miss Rose Henderson had +always been the best of friends. + +And just about this time, too, Speckport found something else to talk +about--no less a matter, indeed, than the marriage of Valentine Blake, +Esq., to Miss Laura Amelia Blair. Such a snapper of a day as the +wedding-day was--cold enough to freeze the leg off an iron pot--but for +all that, the big cathedral was half filled with curious +Speckportonians, straining their necks to see the bride and bridegroom, +and their aiders and abettors. Mr. Blake stood it like a man, and looked +almost good-looking in his neatly-fitting wedding suit; and Charley +Marsh by his side looked like a young prince--handsomer than any prince +that ever wore a crown, poor Cherrie thought, as she made eyes at him +from her pew. + +There was a wedding-breakfast to be eaten at Mr. Blair's, and a very +jolly breakfast it was. And then Mrs. V. Blake exchanged her bridal-gear +for a traveling-dress, and was handed into the carriage that was to +convey her to the railway station, by her husband; and the bridemaids +were kissed all round by the bride, and good-bye was said, and the happy +pair were fairly started on their bridal tour. + +It took Speckport a week to fairly digest this matter, and by the end of +that time it got another delectable morsel of gossip to swallow. Charley +Marsh was going away. He was a rich man, now; but for all that he was +going to be a doctor, and was off to New York right away, to finish his +medical studies and get his diploma. + +It was a miserably wet and windy day, that which preceded the young +man's departure. A depressing day, that lowered the spirits of the most +sanguine, and made them feel life was a cheat, and not what it is +cracked up to be, and wonder how they could ever laugh and enjoy +themselves at all. A dreary day to say good-bye; but Charley, buttoned +up in his overcoat, and making sunshine with his bright blue eyes and +pleasant smile, went through with it bravely, and had bidden his dear +five hundred adieu in the course of two brisk hours. There was only one +friend remaining to whom he had yet to say "that dear old word +good-bye;" and in the rainy twilight he drove up the long avenue of +Redmon, black and ghastly now, and was admitted by Mrs. Hill herself. + +"Oh, Mr. Charley, is it you?" the good woman said. "You're going away, +they tell me. Dear me, we'll miss you so much!" + +"That's right, Mrs. Hill! I like my friends to miss me; but I don't mean +to stay away forever. Is Miss Henderson at home?" + +"She is in the library. Walk right in!" + +Charley was quite at home in Redmon Villa. The library door stood ajar. +Some one was playing, and he entered unheard. The rain lashed and +blustered at the windows; and the wail of the wind, and sea, and woods +made a dull, roaring sound of dreariness without; but a coal-fire glowed +red and cheery in the steel grate; and curtained, and close, and warm, +the library was a very cozy place that bad January day. The twilight +shadows lurked in the corners; but, despite their deepening gloom, the +visitor saw a little, slender, girlish shape sitting before a small +cottage-piano and softly touching the keys. Old, sad memories seemed to +be at work in her heart; for the chords she struck were mournful, and +she broke softly into singing at last--a song as sad as a funeral-hymn: + + "Rain! rain! rain! + On the cold autumnal night! + Like tears we weep o'er the banished hope + That fled with the summer light. + + "O rain! rain! rain! + You mourn for the flowers dead; + But hearts there are, in their hopeless woe, + That not even tears may shed! + + "O rain! rain! rain! + You fall on the new-made grave + Where the loved one sleeps that our bitter prayers + Were powerless to save! + + "O fall! fall! fall! + Thou dreary and cheerless rain! + But the voice that sang with your summer-chime + Will never be heard again!" + +The song died away like a sigh; and she arose from the instrument, +looking like a little, pale spirit of the twilight, in her flowing white +cashmere dress. The red firelight, flickering uncertainly, fell on a +young man's figure leaning against the mantel, and the girl recoiled +with a faint cry. Charley started up. + +"I beg your pardon, Miss Henderson--Winnie" (they had all grown to call +her Winnie of late). "I am afraid I have startled you; but you were +singing when I came in, and the song was too sweet to be broken. I am +rather late, but I wanted to say good-bye here last." + +"Then you really go to-morrow?" she said, not looking at him. "How much +your mother will miss you!" + +"Yes, poor mother! but," smiling slightly, "I shall send her a box full +of all the new novels when I get to New York, and that will console her. +I wish somebody else would miss me, Winnie." + +Is a woman ever taken by surprise, I wonder, in these cases? Does she +not always know beforehand when that all-important revelation is made +that it is coming, particularly if she loves the narrator? I am pretty +sure of it, though she may feign surprise ever so well. She can tell the +instant he crosses the threshold what he has come to say. So Winnifred +Rose Henderson knew what Charles Marsh had come to tell her from the +moment she looked at him; and sitting down on a low chair before the +glowing fire, she listened for a second time in her life to the old, old +story. What a gulf lay between that time and this--a girl then, a woman +now! And how different the two men who had told it! + +Worthy Mrs. Hill, trotting up-stairs and down-stairs, seeing to fires +and bed-rooms, and everything proper to be seen to by a good +housekeeper, suddenly remembered the fire in the library must be getting +low, and that it would be just like the young people saying good-bye to +one another to forget all about it, rapped to the door some half an hour +after. "Come in!" the sweet voice of Miss Henderson said, and Mrs. Hill +went in and found the young lady and Mr. Marsh sitting side by side on a +sofa, and both wearing such radiant faces, that the dear old lady saw at +once through her spectacles how matters stood, and kissed Miss Henderson +on the spot, and shook hands with Mister Charley, and wished him joy +with all her honest heart. So the momentous question had been asked and +answered, and on Miss Henderson's finger glittered an engagement-ring, +and Charley Marsh, in the bleak dawn of the next morning, left Speckport +once more, the happiest fellow in the universe. + + * * * * * + +The story is told, the play played out, the actors off the stage, and +high time for the curtain to fall. But the audience are dissatisfied +yet, and have some questions to ask. "How did Val Blake and Laura get +on, and Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham? What became of Cherrie and Catty Clowrie? +and have Charley and Miss Henderson got married yet? and who was at the +wedding? and who were the bridemaids? and what did the bride wear?" +Well, let me see. I'll answer as they come. It is six months after, +red-hot July--not a sign of fog in Speckport, picnics and jollifications +every day, and the blessed little city (it is a city, though I have +stigmatized it as a town) out in its gala-dress. Do you see that +handsome house in Golden Row? There is a shining door-plate on the front +door, and you can read the name--"V. Blake." Yes, that is Mr. Blake's +house, and inside it is sumptuous to behold; for the "Spouter" increases +its circulation every day, and Mr. B. keeps his carriage and pair now, +and is a rising man--I mean out of doors. In his own single nook, I +regret to say, he is hen-pecked--unmercifully hen-pecked. The gray mare +is the better horse; and Mr. Blake submits to petticoat-government with +that sublime good-nature your big man always manifests, and knocks +meekly under at the first flash of Mistress Laura's bright eye--not that +that lady is any less fond of Mr. Val than of yore. Oh, no! She thinks +there is nobody like him in this little planet of ours; only she +believes in husbands keeping their proper place, and acts up to this +belief. She is becoming more and more literary every day--fearfully +literary, I may say; and the first two fingers of the right hand are +daily steeped to the bone in ink. + +Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham are in New York, and are very busy. Charley Marsh +was a frequent visitor at their house last winter, and says he never saw +a happier and more loving husband and wife. Mr. Wyndham is high in the +literary world; and Mrs. Wyndham is very much admired in society, as +much, perhaps, for her gentleness and goodness as for her beauty. They +are happy and at peace; and so we leave them. + +Cherrie Nettleby (nobody thinks of calling her Mrs. Cavendish) is going +to be married next week. The happy man is Sergeant O'Shaughnessy, a big +Irishman, six feet four in his stockings, with a laugh like distant +thunder, rosy cheeks, and curly hair. A fine-looking fellow, Sergeant +O'Shaughnessy, with a heart as big as his body, who adores the ground +Cherrie walks on. + +And Charley is married, and happier than I can ever tell. He is rich and +honored, and does a great deal of good, and is a great man in +Speckport--a great and good man. And his wife--but you know her--and she +is the same to-day, and will be the same unto death, as you have known +her. Mrs. Marsh, Senior, lives with them, and reads as much as ever; and +is waited on by Midge, who lives a life of luxurious leisure in Redmon +kitchen, and queens it over the household generally. + +There is a quiet little grave out in the country which Charles Marsh and +his wife visit very often, and which they never leave without loving +each other better, and feeling more resolute, with God's help, to walk +down to the grave in the straight and narrow path that leads to +salvation. They are only human. They have all erred, and sinned, and +repented; and in that saving repentance they have found the truth of the +holy promise: "There shall be light at the eventide." + + +THE END. + + * * * * * + +[Transcriber's Note: Hyphen variations left as printed. + +page 136 We go press to to-morrow ==> We go to press to-morrow] + + * * * * * + + + + + POPULAR NOVELS. + + BY MAY AGNES FLEMING. + + + 1.--GUY EARLSCOURT'S WIFE. + + 2.--A WONDERFUL WOMAN. + + 3.--A TERRIBLE SECRET. + + 4.--NORINE'S REVENGE. + + 5.--A MAD MARRIAGE. + + 6.--ONE NIGHT'S MYSTERY. + + 7.--KATE DANTON. + + 8.--SILENT AND TRUE. + + 9.--HEIR OF CHARLTON. + + 10.--CARRIED BY STORM. + + 11.--LOST FOR A WOMAN. + + 12.--A WIFE'S TRAGEDY. + + 13.--A CHANGED HEART. + + 14.--PRIDE AND PASSION. + + 15.--SHARING HER CRIME. + + 16.--A WRONGED WIFE (_New_). + + "Mrs. Fleming's stories are growing more and more popular every day. + Their delineations of character, life-like conversations, flashes of + wit, constantly varying scenes, and deeply interacting plots, + combine to place their author in the very front rank of Modern + Novelists." + + All published uniform with this volume. Price, $1.50 each, and sent + _free_ by mail on receipt of price, + + BY + G. W. CARLETON & CO., Publishers, + New York. + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Changed Heart, by May Agnes Fleming + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41672 *** |
