summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/68274-0.txt8972
-rw-r--r--old/68274-0.zipbin174113 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68274-h.zipbin696809 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68274-h/68274-h.htm11291
-rw-r--r--old/68274-h/images/cover.jpgbin433736 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68274-h/images/cover_illo.jpgbin44544 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68274-h/images/i003.jpgbin34875 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68274-h/images/publishers_icon.jpgbin3804 -> 0 bytes
11 files changed, 17 insertions, 20263 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..952eebb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68274 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68274)
diff --git a/old/68274-0.txt b/old/68274-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 94e1ec8..0000000
--- a/old/68274-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8972 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Neva's three lovers, by Harriet Lewis
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Neva's three lovers
-
-Author: Harriet Lewis
-
-Release Date: June 9, 2022 [eBook #68274]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Demian Katz, Craig Kirkwood, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (Images courtesy
- of the Digital Library@Villanova University.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEVA'S THREE LOVERS ***
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_), and text
-enclosed by equal signs is in bold (=bold=).
-
-Additional Transcriber’s Notes are at the end.
-
- * * * * *
-
-SELECT LIBRARY No. 231
-
-NEVA’S THREE LOVERS
-
-_BY_
-
-MRS. HARRIET LEWIS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-Neva’s Three Lovers
-
-
- _A NOVEL_
-
- BY
-
- MRS. HARRIET LEWIS
-
- AUTHOR OF
-
- “Adrift in the World,” “The Bailiff’s Scheme,” “The Belle of the
- Season,” “Cecil Rosse,” “The Haunted Husband,” “Sundered
- Hearts,” and numerous other books published in the
- EAGLE, NEW EAGLE, and SELECT Libraries.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- STREET & SMITH CORPORATION
- PUBLISHERS
- 79-89 Seventh Avenue, New York
-
- * * * * *
-
- Copyright, 1871 and 1892
- By Robert Bonner’s Sons
-
- Neva’s Three Lovers
-
- * * * * *
-
-NEVA’S THREE LOVERS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I. THE GAME WELL BEGUN.
-
-
-Sir Harold Wynde, Baronet, was standing upon the pier head at Brighton,
-looking idly seaward, and watching the play of the sunset rays on the
-waters, the tossing white-capped waves, and the white sails in the
-distance against the blue sky.
-
-He was not yet fifty years of age, tall and handsome and stately, with
-fair complexion, fair hair, and keen blue eyes, which at times beamed
-with a warm and genial radiance that seemed to emanate from his soul.
-The rare nobility of that soul expressed itself in his features. His
-commanding intellect betrayed itself in his square, massive brows. His
-grand nature was patent in every look and smile. He was a widower with
-two children, the elder a son, who was a captain in a fine regiment in
-India, the younger a daughter still at boarding-school. He possessed a
-magnificent estate in Kent, a house in town, and a marine villa, and
-rejoiced in a clear income of seventy thousand pounds a year.
-
-As might be expected from his rare personal and material advantages,
-he was a lion at Brighton, even though the season was at its height,
-and peers and peeresses abounded at that fashionable resort. Titled
-ladies--to use a well-worn phrase--“set their caps” for him; manœuvring
-mammas smiled upon him; portly papas with their “quivers full of
-daughters,” and with groaning purses, urged him to dine at their houses
-or hotels; and widows of every age looked sweetly at him, and thought
-how divine it would be to be chosen to reign as mistress over the
-baronet’s estate of Hawkhurst.
-
-But Sir Harold went his ways quietly, seeming oblivious of the hopes
-and schemes of these manœuverers. He had had a good wife, and he had
-no intention of marrying again. And so, as he stood carelessly leaning
-against the railing on the pier head, under the gay awning, his
-thoughts were far away from the gaily dressed promenaders sauntering
-down the chain pier or pacing with slow steps to and fro behind him.
-
-The sunset glow slowly faded. The long gray English twilight began to
-fall slowly upon promenaders, beach, chain pier, and waters. The music
-of the band swallowed up all other sounds, the murmur of waters, the
-hum of gay voices, the sweetness of laughter.
-
-But suddenly, in one of the interludes of the music, and in the midst
-of Sir Harold’s reverie, an incident occurred which was the beginning
-of a chain of events destined to change the whole future course of the
-baronet’s life, and to exercise no slight degree of influence upon the
-lives of others.
-
-Yet the incident was simple. A little pleasure-boat, occupied by two
-ladies and a boatman, had been sailing leisurely about the pier head
-for some time. The boatman, one of the ordinary pleasure boatmen who
-make a living at Brighton, as at other maritime resorts, by letting
-their crafts and services to chance customers, had been busy with
-his sail. One of the ladies, a hired companion apparently, sat at
-one side of the boat, with a parasol on her knee. The other lady, as
-evidently the employer, half reclined upon the plush cushions, and
-an Indian shawl of vivid scarlet lavishly embroidered with gold was
-thrown carelessly about her figure. One cheek of this lady rested upon
-her jewelled hand, and her eyes were fixed with a singular intentness,
-a peculiar speculativeness, upon the tall and stalwart figure of Sir
-Harold Wynde.
-
-There was a world of meaning in that long furtive gaze, and had the
-baronet been able to read and comprehend it, the tragical history we
-are about to narrate would never have happened. But he, wrapped in his
-own thoughts, saw neither the boat nor its occupants.
-
-The little craft crept in quite near to the pier head--so near as to
-be but a few rods distant--when the boatman shifted his helm to go
-about and stand upon the other tack. The small vessel gave a lurch,
-the wind blowing freshly; the lady with the Indian shawl started up,
-with a shriek; there was an instant of terrible confusion; and then the
-sail-boat had capsized, and her late occupants were struggling in the
-waters.
-
-In a moment the promenaders of the chain pier had thronged upon
-the pier head. Cries and ejaculations filled the air. No one could
-comprehend how the accident had occurred, but one man who had been
-watching the boat averred that the lady with the shawl had deliberately
-and purposely capsized it. _And this was the actual fact!_
-
-Sir Harold Wynde was startled from the trance-like musings by the
-lady’s shriek. He looked down upon the waters and beheld the result of
-the catastrophe. The boat’s sail lay half under water. The boatman had
-seized the lady’s companion and was clinging to the upturned boat. The
-companion had fainted in his arms, and he could not loosen his hold
-upon her unless he would have her drown before his eyes. The lady, at
-a little distance from her companions in peril, tangled in her mass of
-scarlet and gold drapery, her hat lost, her long hair trailing on the
-waves, seemed drowning.
-
-Her peril was imminent. No other boats were near, although one or two
-were coming up swiftly from a distance.
-
-The lady threw up her white arms with an anguished cry. Her glance
-sought the thronged pier head in wild appealing. Who, looking at her,
-would have dreamed that the disaster was part of a well-contrived
-plan--a trap to catch the unwary baronet?
-
-As she had expected from his well-known chivalrous character, he fell
-into the trap. His keen eyes flashed a rapid glance over beach and
-waters. The lady was likely to drown before help could come from the
-speeding boats. Sir Harold pulled off his coat and made a dive into the
-sea. He was an expert swimmer, and reached the lady as she was sinking.
-He caught her in his arms and struck out for the boat. The lady became
-a dead weight, and when he reached the capsized craft her head lay back
-on his breast, her long wet tresses of hair coiled around him like
-Medusean locks, and her pale face was like the face of a dead woman.
-
-Sir Harold clung to the side of the boat opposite that on which the
-boatman supported his burden. And thus he awaited the coming of the
-boats.
-
-Among the eager thronging watchers on the pier head above was a tall,
-fair-faced man, with a long, waxed mustache, sinister eyes and a
-cynical smile. He alone of the throng seemed unmoved by the tragic
-incident.
-
-“It was pretty well done,” he muttered, under his breath--“a little
-transparent, perhaps, and a trifle awkward as well, but pretty well
-done! The baronet fell into the trap too, exactly as was hoped. Your
-campaign opens finely, my beautiful Octavia. Let us see if the result
-is to be what we desire. In short, will the baronet be as unsuspicious
-all the way through?”
-
-Sir Harold certainly was unsuspicious at that moment. The helpless
-woman in his arms aroused into activity all the chivalry of his
-chivalric nature. He held her head above the creeping waves until the
-foremost boat had reached him. His burden was the first to be lifted
-into the rescuing craft; the lady’s companion followed; the baronet and
-the boatman climbing into the boat last, in the order in which they are
-named.
-
-The capsized boat was righted and its owner took possession of her. The
-rescuing craft transported the baronet and the two ladies to the beach.
-The lady companion had recovered her senses and self-possession, but
-the lady employer lay on the cushions pale and motionless.
-
-On reaching the landing, a cab was found to be in waiting, having
-been summoned by some sympathizing spectator. The companion, uttering
-protestations of gratitude, entered the vehicle, and her mistress was
-assisted in after her. The former gathered her employer in her arms,
-crying out:
-
-“She is dead! She is dead! I have lost my best friend--”
-
-“Not so, madam,” said Sir Harold, in kindly sympathy. “The lady has
-only fainted, I think. To what place shall I tell the cabman to drive?”
-
-“To the Albion Hotel. Oh, my poor, poor lady! To die so young! It is
-terrible!”
-
-Sir Harold made some soothing response, but being chilled and wet, did
-not find it necessary to accompany to their hotel the heroines of the
-adventure. He gave their address to the cabman, watched the cab as it
-rolled away, and then breaking loose from the crowd of friends who
-gathered around him with anxious interrogatories, he secured his coat
-and procured a cab for himself and proceeded to his own hotel.
-
-It was not until he had had a comfortable bath, and was seated in dry
-attire in his private parlor, that Sir Harold remembered that he did
-not know the name of the lady he had served, or that he had not even
-seen her face distinctly.
-
-“She is as ignorant of my name and identity,” he thought, “as I am of
-hers. If the incident could be kept out of the papers, I need never be
-troubled with the thanks of her husband, father, or brother.”
-
-But the incident was not kept out of the papers. Sir Harold Wynde,
-being a lion, had to bear the penalty of popularity. The next morning’s
-paper, brought in to him as he sat at his solitary breakfast, contained
-a glowing account of the previous evening’s adventure, under the
-flaming head line of “Heroic Action by a Baronet,” with the sub-lines:
-“Sir Harold Wynde saves a lady’s life at the risk of his own. Chivalry
-not yet dead in our commonplace England.” And there followed a highly
-imaginative description of the lady’s adventure, her name being as yet
-unknown, and a warm eulogy upon Sir Harold’s bravery and presence of
-mind.
-
-The baronet’s lip curled as he read impatiently the fulsome article.
-He had scarcely finished it when a waiter entered, bringing in upon a
-silver tray a large squarely enveloped letter. It was addressed to Sir
-Harold Wynde, was stamped with an unintelligible monogram, and sealed
-with a dainty device in pale green wax. As the baronet’s only lady
-correspondent was his daughter at school, and this missive was clearly
-not from her, he experienced a slight surprise at its reception.
-
-The waiter having departed, Sir Harold cut open the letter with his
-pocket knife, and glanced over its contents.
-
-They were written upon the daintiest, thickest vellum paper unlined,
-and duly tinted and monogrammed, and were as follows:
-
- ALBION HOTEL, Tuesday Morning.
-
- “SIR HAROLD WYNDE: The lady who writes this letter is the lady whom
- you so gallantly rescued from a death by drowning last evening.
- I have read the accounts of your daring bravery in the morning’s
- papers, and hasten to offer my grateful thanks for your noble and
- gallant kindness to an utter stranger. Life has not been so sweet
- to me that I cling to it, but yet it is very horrible to go in one
- moment from the glow and heartiness of health and life down to the
- very gates of death. It was your hand that drew me back at the
- moment when those gates opened to admit me, and again I bless you--a
- thousand thousand times, I bless you. Alas, that I have to write to
- you myself. I have neither father, lover, nor husband, to rejoice in
- the life you have saved. I am a widow, and alone in the wide world.
- Will you not call upon me at my hotel and permit me to thank you far
- more effectively in person? I shall be waiting for your coming in my
- private parlor at eleven this morning.
-
- “Gratefully yours,
- “OCTAVIA HATHAWAY.”
-
-The baronet read the letter again and again. His generous soul was
-touched by its sorrowful tone.
-
-“A widow and alone in the world!” he thought. “Poor woman! What
-sentence could be sadder than that? She is elderly, I am sure, and
-has lost all her children. I do not want to hear her expressions of
-gratitude, but if I can make the poor soul happier by calling on her I
-will go.”
-
-Accordingly, at eleven o’clock that morning, attired in a gentleman’s
-unexceptionable morning dress, Sir Harold Wynde, having sent up his
-card, presented himself at the door of Mrs. Hathaway’s private parlor
-at the Albion Hotel, and knocked for admittance.
-
-The door was opened to him by the lady’s companion, who greeted him
-with effusiveness, and begged him to be seated.
-
-She was a tall, angular woman, with sharp features, whose
-characteristic expression was one of peculiar hardness and severity.
-Her lips were thin, and were usually compressed. Her eyes were a light
-gray, furtive and sly, like a cat’s eyes. Her pointed chin gave a
-treacherous cast to her countenance. Her complexion was of a pale,
-opaque gray; her hair, of a fawn color, was worn in three puffs on each
-side of her face, and her dress was of a tint to match her hair. Sir
-Harold conceived an instinctive aversion to her.
-
-“Mrs. Hathaway?” he said politely, with interrogative accent.
-
-“No, I am not Mrs. Hathaway,” was the reply, in a subdued voice, and
-the furtive eyes scanned the visitor’s face. “I am only Mrs. Hathaway’s
-companion--Mrs. Artress. Mrs. Hathaway has just received your card. She
-will be out directly.”
-
-The words were scarcely spoken when the door of an inner room opened,
-and Mrs. Hathaway made her appearance.
-
-Sir Harold stood up, bowing.
-
-The lady was by no means the elderly, melancholy personage he had
-expected to see. She was about thirty years of age, and looked
-younger. She had a tall, statuesque figure, well-rounded and inclined
-to _embonpoint_. She carried her head with a certain stateliness.
-Her hair was dressed with the inevitable chignon, crimped waves, and
-long, floating curl, and despite the monstrosity of the fashion, it
-was decidedly and undeniably picturesque. Her face, with its clear
-brunette complexion, liquid black eyes, Grecian nose, low brows, and
-faultless mouth, was very handsome. There was a fascination in her
-manners that was felt by the baronet even before she had spoken.
-
-She was not dressed in mourning, and it was probable, therefore, that
-her widowhood was not of recent beginning. She was clothed in an
-exquisitely embroidered morning dress of white, which trailed on the
-floor, and was relieved with ornaments of pale pink coral, and a broad
-coral-colored sash at her waist.
-
-“_This_ is Mrs. Hathaway, Sir Harold,” said the gray looking lady’s
-companion.
-
-The lady sprang forward after an impulsive fashion, and clasped the
-baronet’s hands in both her own. Her black eyes flooded with tears.
-And then, in a broken voice, she thanked her preserver for his gallant
-conduct on the previous evening assuring him that her gratitude would
-outlast her life. Her protestations and gratitude were not overdone,
-and unsuspecting Sir Harold accepted them as genuine, even while they
-embarrassed him.
-
-He remained an hour, finding Mrs. Hathaway charming company and
-thoroughly fascinating. The companion sat apart, silent, busy with
-embroidery, a mere gray shadow; but her presence gave an easy
-unconstraint to both the baronet and the lady. When Sir Harold took his
-departure, sauntering down to the German Spa, he carried with him the
-abiding memory of Mrs. Hathaway’s handsome brunette face and liquid
-black eyes, and thought himself that she was the most charming woman he
-had met for years.
-
-From that day, throughout the season, the baronet was a frequent
-visitor at Mrs. Hathaway’s private parlor. The gray companion was
-always at hand to play propriety, and the tongues of gossips, though
-busy, had no malevolence in them. Sir Harold had his own horses
-at Brighton, and placed one at Mrs. Hathaway’s disposal. The widow
-accepted it, procured a bewitching costume from town, and had daily
-rides with the baronet. She also drove with him in his open, low
-carriage, and bowed right and left to her acquaintances upon such
-occasions with the gracious condescension of a princess. She sailed
-with him in his graceful yacht, upon day’s excursions, her companion
-always accompanying, and rumor at length declared that the pair were
-engaged to be married.
-
-Sir Harold heard the reports, and they set him thinking. The society of
-Mrs. Hathaway had become necessary to him. She understood his tastes,
-studying them with a flattery so delicate that he was pleased without
-understanding it. She read his favorite books, played his favorite
-music, and displayed talents of no mean order. She was fitted to adorn
-any position, however high, and Sir Harold thought with a pleasant
-thrill at his heart, how royally she would reign over his beautiful
-home.
-
-In short, questioning his own heart, he found that he had worshiped
-his dead wife, who would be to him always young, as when he had buried
-her--but with the passion of later manhood, an exacting, jealous
-yearning affection, which gives all and demands all. With his children
-far from him, his life had been lonely, and he had known many desolate
-hours, when he would have given half his wealth for sympathy and love.
-
-“I shall find both in Octavia,” he thought, his noble face brightening.
-“I shall not wrong my children in marrying her. My son will be my heir.
-My daughter’s fortune will not be imperilled by my second marriage.
-Neva is sixteen, and in two years more will come home. How can I do
-better for her than to give her a beautiful mother, young enough to
-win her confidence, old enough to be her guide? Octavia would love my
-girl, and would be her best chaperon in society, to which Neva must be
-by and by introduced. I should find in Octavia then a mother for my
-daughter, and a gentle loving wife and companion for myself. But will
-she accept me?”
-
-He put the question to the test that very evening. He found the
-handsome widow alone in her parlor, the gray companion being for once
-absent, and he told her his love with a tremulous ardor and passion
-that it would have been the glory of a good woman to have evoked from a
-nature so grand as Sir Harold’s.
-
-The fascinating widow blushed and smiled assent, and her black-tressed
-head drooped to his shoulder, and Sir Harold clasped her in his arms as
-his betrothed wife.
-
-With a lover’s impetuosity he begged her to marry him at an early day.
-She hesitated coyly, as if for months she had not been striving and
-praying for this hour, and then was won to consent to marry him a month
-thence.
-
-“I am alone in the world, and have no one to consult,” she sighed. “I
-have an old aunt, a perfect miser, who lives in Bloomsbury Square,
-in London. She will permit me to be married from her house, as I was
-before. The marriage will have to be very quiet, for she is averse
-to display and expense. However, what she saves will come to me some
-day, so I need not complain. I shall want to keep Artress with me,
-Sir Harold. I can see that you don’t like her, but she has been a
-faithful friend to me in all my troubles, and I cannot abandon her when
-prosperity smiles so splendidly upon me. I may keep her, may I not?”
-
-Thus appealed to, Sir Harold smothered his dislike of the gray
-companion, and consented that she should become an inmate of his house.
-
-Mrs. Hathaway proceeded to explain the causes of her friendlessness.
-She was an orphan, and had early married the Honorable Charles
-Hathaway, the younger son of a Viscount, who had died five years
-before. The Honorable Charles had been a dissipated spendthrift, and
-had left his wife the meagre income of some three hundred pounds a
-year. Her elegant clothing was, for the most part, relics of better
-days. As to the expensive style in which she lived, keeping a companion
-and maid, no one knew, save herself and one other, how she managed to
-support it. Her name and reputation were unblemished, and the most
-censorious tongue had nothing to say against her.
-
-And yet she was none the less an unscrupulous, unprincipled adventuress.
-
-This was the woman, the noble, gallant baronet proposed to take to
-his bosom as his wife, to endow with his name and wealth, to make the
-mother and guide of his pure young daughter. Would the sacrifice of the
-generous, unsuspected lover be permitted?
-
-It _was_ permitted. A month later their modest bridal train swept
-beneath the portals of St. George’s Church, Hanover Square. The bride,
-radiant in pearl-colored moire, with point lace overdress, wore a
-magnificent parure of diamonds, presented to her by Sir Harold. The
-baronet looked the picture of happiness. The miserly aunt of Mrs.
-Hathaway, a skinny old lady in a low-necked and short-sleeved dress
-of pink silk, that, by its unsuitability, made her seem absolutely
-hideous, attended by a male friend, who gave away the bride, was
-prominent among the group that surrounded the altar.
-
-Sir Harold’s son and heir was in India, and his daughter had not been
-summoned from her boarding-school in Paris. The baronet’s tender father
-soul yearned for his daughter’s presence at his second marriage; but
-Lady Wynde had urged that Neva’s studies should not be interrupted,
-and had begged, as a personal favor, that her meeting with her young
-step-daughter might be delayed until her ladyship had become used to
-her new position. She professed to be timid and shrinking in regard
-to the meeting with Neva, and Sir Harold, in his passionate love for
-Octavia, put aside his own wishes, yielding to her request. But he had
-written to his daughter, announcing his intended second marriage, and
-had received in reply a tender, loving letter full of earnest prayers
-for his happiness, and expressing the kindest feelings toward the
-expected step-mother.
-
-The words were spoken that made the strangely assorted pair one flesh.
-As the bride arose from her knees the wife of a wealthy baronet, the
-wearer of a title, the handsome face was lighted by a triumphant glow,
-her black eyes emitted a singular, exultant gleam, and a conscious
-triumph pervaded her manner.
-
-She had played the first part of a daring game--and she had won!
-
-As she passed into the vestry to sign the marriage register, leaning
-proudly upon the arm of her newly made husband, and followed by her few
-attending personal friends, a man who had witnessed the ceremony from
-behind a clustered pillar in the church, stole out into the square, his
-face lighted by a lurid smile, his eyes emitting the same peculiar,
-exultant gleam as the bride’s had done.
-
-This man was the tall, fair-haired gentleman, with waxed mustaches,
-sinister eyes and cynical smile, who, nearly three months before, had
-witnessed from the pier head at Brighton the rescue of Mrs. Hathaway
-from the sea by Sir Harold Wynde. And now this man muttered:
-
-“The game prospers. Octavia is Lady Wynde. The first act is played.
-The next act requires more time, deliberation, caution. Every move must
-be considered carefully. We are bound to win the entire game.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II. A DECISIVE MOVE COMMANDED.
-
-
-Sir Harold and Lady Wynde ate their wedding breakfast in Bloomsbury
-Square, at the house of Lady Wynde’s miserly aunt, Mrs. Hyde. A few of
-the baronet’s choice friends were present. The absence of Sir Harold’s
-daughter was not especially remarked save by the father, who longed
-with an anxious longing to see her face smiling upon him, and to hear
-her young voice whispering congratulations upon his second marriage.
-Neva had been especially near and dear to him. Her mother had died in
-her babyhood, and he had been both father and mother to his girl. He
-had early sent his son to school, but Neva he had kept with him until,
-a year before, his first wife’s relatives had urged him to send her to
-a “finishing school” at Paris, and he had reluctantly yielded. Not even
-his passionate love for his bride could overcome or lessen the fatherly
-love and tenderness of years.
-
-Immediately after the breakfast the newly married pair proceeded to
-Canterbury by special train. The gray companion and Lady Wynde’s maid
-traveled in another compartment of the same coach. The Hawkhurst
-carriage was in waiting for the bridal pair at the station. Sir Harold
-assisted his wife into it, addressed a few kindly words to the old
-coachman on the box, and entered the vehicle. The gray companion and
-the maid entered a dog-cart, also in waiting. Hawkhurst was several
-miles distant, but the country between it and Canterbury was a
-charming one, and Lady Wynde found sufficient enjoyment in looking at
-the handsome seats, the trim hedges, and thrifty hop-gardens, and in
-wondering if Hawkhurst would realize her expectations. She found indeed
-more enjoyment in her own speculations than in the society of her
-husband.
-
-About five o’clock of the afternoon, the bridal pair came in sight of
-the ancestral home of the Wynde’s. The top of the low barouche was
-lowered and Sir Harold pointed out her future home to his bride with
-pardonable pride, and she surveyed it with eager eyes.
-
-It was, as we have said, a magnificent estate, divided into numerous
-farms of goodly size. The home grounds of Hawkhurst proper, including
-the fields, pastures, meadows, parks, woods, plantations and gardens,
-comprised about four hundred acres. The mansion stood upon a ridge of
-ground some half a mile wide, and was seen from several points at a
-distance of three or four miles. It was a grand old building of gray
-stone, with a long facade, and was three stories in height. Its turrets
-and chimneys were noted for their picturesqueness. Its carved stone
-porches, its quaint wide windows, its steep roof, from which pert
-dormer-windows, saucily projected, were remarkable for their beauty or
-oddity. Despite its age, and its air of grandeur and stateliness, there
-was a home-like look about the great mansion that Lady Wynde did not
-fail to perceive at the first glance.
-
-The house was flanked on either side by glass pineries, grape houses,
-hothouses, greenhouses and similar buildings. Further to the left of
-the dwelling, beyond the sunny gardens, was the great park, intersected
-with walks and drives, having a lake somewhere in the umbrageous
-depths, and herds of fallow-deer browsing on its herbage. In the rear
-of the house, built in the form of a quadrangle, of gray stone, were
-the handsome stables and offices of various descriptions. The mansion
-with its dependencies covered a great deal of ground, and presented an
-imposing appearance.
-
-The house was approached by a shaded drive a half mile or more in
-length, which traversed a smooth green lawn dotted here and there with
-trees. A pair of bronze gates, protected and attended by a picturesque
-gray stone lodge, gave ingress to the grounds.
-
-These gates swung open at the approach of Sir Harold Wynde and his
-bride, and the gate-keeper and his family came out bowing and smiling,
-to welcome home the future lady of Hawkhurst. Lady Wynde returned
-their greetings with graceful condescension, and then, as the carriage
-entered the drive, she fixed her eager eyes upon the long gray facade
-of the mansion, and said:
-
-“It is beautiful--magnificent! You never did justice to its grandeurs,
-Harold, in describing Hawkhurst. It is strange that a house so large,
-and of such architectural pretension, should have such a bright and
-sunny appearance. The sunlight must flood every room in that glorious
-front. I should like to live all my days at Hawkhurst!”
-
-“Your dower house will be as pleasant a home as this although not
-so pretentious,” said Sir Harold, smiling gravely. “It is probable
-that you being twenty years my junior, will survive me, Octavia, and
-therefore I have settled upon you for your life use in your possible
-widowhood one of my prettiest places, and one which has served for many
-generations as the residence of the dowager widows of our family.”
-
-The glow on Lady Wynde’s face faded a little, and her lips slightly
-compressed themselves, as they were wont to do when she was ill pleased.
-
-“I have never asked you about your property, Harold,” she remarked,
-“but your wife need be restrained from doing so by no sense of
-delicacy. I suppose your property is entailed?”
-
-“Hawkhurst is entailed, but it will fall to the female line in case
-of the dying out of heirs male,” replied the baronet, not marking his
-bride’s scarcely suppressed eagerness. “It has belonged to our family
-from time immemorial, and was a royal grant to one of our ancestors
-who saved his monarch’s life at risk of his own. Thus, at my death,
-Hawkhurst will go, with the title, to my son. If George should die,
-without issue, Hawkhurst--without the title, which is a separate
-affair--will go to my daughter.”
-
-“A weighty inheritance for a girl,” remarked Lady Wynde. “And--and if
-she should die without issue?”
-
-“The estate would go to distant cousins of mine.”
-
-Lady Wynde started. This was evidently an unexpected reply, and she
-could not repress her looks of disappointment.
-
-“I--I should think your wife would come before your cousins,” she
-murmured.
-
-“How little you know about law, Octavia,” said the baronet, with a
-grave, gentle smile. “The property must go to those of our blood. If
-our union is blessed with children, the eldest of them would inherit
-Hawkhurst before my cousins. But although the law has proclaimed us
-one flesh, yet it does not allow you to become the heir of my entailed
-property. It is singular even that a daughter is permitted to inherit
-before male cousins, but there was a clause in the royal deed of gift
-of Hawkhurst to my ancestors that gave the property to females in
-the direct line, in default of male heirs, but there has never been a
-female proprietor of the estate. I hope there never may be. I should
-hate to have the old name die out of the old place. But here we are at
-the house. Welcome home, my beautiful wife!”
-
-The carriage stopped in the porch, and Sir Harold alighted and assisted
-out his bride. He drew her arm through his and led her up the lofty
-flight of stone steps, and in at the arched and open door-way. The
-servants were assembled to welcome home their lady, and the baronet
-uttered the necessary words of introduction and conducted his bride to
-the drawing-room.
-
-This was an immensely long apartment, with nine wide windows on its
-eastern side looking out upon gardens and park. Sculptured arches,
-supported by slender columns of alabaster, relieved the long vista,
-and curtains depending from them were capable of dividing the grand
-room into three handsome ones. The drawing-room was furnished in modern
-style, and was all gayety, brightness and beauty. The furniture, of
-daintiest satin-wood, was upholstered in pale blue silk. The carpet, of
-softest gray hue, was bordered with blue.
-
-“It is very lovely,” commented the bride. “And that is a conservatory
-at the end? I shall be very happy here, Harold.”
-
-“I hope so,” was the earnest response. “But let me take you up to your
-own rooms, Octavia. They have been newly furnished for your occupancy.”
-
-He gave her his arm and conducted her out into the wide hall, with its
-tesselated floor, up the wide marble staircase, to a suit of rooms
-directly over the drawing-room.
-
-This suit comprised sitting-room, bedroom, dressing-room and bath-room.
-Their upholstery was of a vivid crimson hue. A faultless taste had
-guided the selection of the various adornments, and Lady Wynde’s eyes
-kindled with appreciation as she marked the costliness and beauty of
-everything around her.
-
-“Your trunks have arrived in the wagon, Octavia,” said her husband,
-well pleased with her commendations. “Mrs. Artress and your maid, who
-came on in the dog-cart, have also arrived. Dinner has been ordered at
-seven. I will leave you to dress. And, by the way, should you have need
-of me, my dressing-room adjoins your own.”
-
-He went out. Lady Wynde rang for her maid and her gray companion, and
-dressed for dinner. When her toilet was made, the baronet’s bride
-dismissed her maid and came out into her warm-hued sitting room, where
-Mrs. Artress sat by a window looking out into the leafy shadows of the
-park.
-
-“Well?” said the beauty interrogatively. “What do you think? Have I not
-been successful?”
-
-“So far, yes,” said the grim, ashen-faced companion, raising her light,
-hay-colored eyes in a meaning expression. “But the end is not yet. The
-game, you know, is only fairly begun.”
-
-“Yes, I know,” said the bride thoughtfully. “But it is well begun. But
-hush, Artress. Here comes my happy bridegroom!”
-
-There was a mocking smile on her lips as she bade Sir Harold enter. The
-wedded pair had a few minutes’ conversation in the sitting-room, her
-ladyship’s companion sitting in the deep window seat mute as a shadow,
-and they then descended to the drawing-room. Mrs. Artress meekly
-followed. She remained near Lady Wynde, in attendance upon her until
-after dinner, and then went up to her own room, which was in convenient
-proximity to the apartments of Lady Wynde.
-
-The bride and bridegroom were left to themselves.
-
-The former played a little upon the grand piano, and then approached
-her husband, sitting down beside him upon the same sofa. His noble face
-beamed love upon her. But her countenance grew hard with speculative
-thoughts.
-
-“Let me see,” said she, speaking with well-assumed lightness. “What
-were we talking about when we arrived, Harold? Oh, about your property!
-So, this dear old Hawkhurst will belong to George? And what will Neva
-have?”
-
-“Her mother’s fortune, and several estates which are not entailed. Neva
-will be a very rich woman without Hawkhurst. You also, Octavia, will be
-handsomely provided for, without detriment to my children.”
-
-“Oh, yes, of course,” said Lady Wynde. “But if the estates are not
-entailed which you intend to give to Neva, you must leave them to her
-by will. Have--have you made your will?”
-
-“Yes; but since I have contracted a new marriage, I shall have to make
-a new will. I shall attend to that at my leisure.”
-
-Lady Wynde became thoughtful, but did not press the subject. She
-excused her questionings on the plea of interest in her husband’s
-children, and Sir Harold gave no thought to them.
-
-The days went by; the weeks and months followed. Neva Wynde had not
-been summoned home, her step-mother finding plenty of excuses for
-deferring the return of her step-daughter. Perhaps she feared that a
-pair of keen young eyes, unvailed by glamor, would see how morally
-hideous she was--how base and scheming, and unworthy of her husband.
-
-Sir Harold’s infatuation with his wife deepened as the time wore on.
-His love for her became a species of worship. All that she did was good
-in his eyes.
-
-Lady Wynde went into society, visited the first county families,
-and received them at Hawkhurst. She gave a ball, dancing and dinner
-parties, “tea-fights,” and fetes champetres, without number. She
-promoted festivities of every sort, and became one of the most popular
-ladies in the county. She was a leader of fashion too, and withal was
-so gracious, so circumspect, so full of delicate flattery to every one,
-that even venomous tongued gossip had naught but good to say of her.
-Her position at Hawkhurst was thus firmly established, and she might be
-called a happy woman.
-
-As the months went on, an air of expectancy began to be apparent in
-her manner. The gray companion shared it, moving with a suppressed
-eagerness and nervousness, as if waiting for something. And that which
-she waited for came at last.
-
-It was one February evening, more than a year after the bride’s coming
-home to Hawkhurst. Outside the night was wild. Within Lady Wynde’s
-dressing-room the fire glowed behind its silvered bars, and its rays
-danced in bright gleams upon the crimson furniture. The lamps burned
-with mellow radiance. In the centre of the room stood the lady of
-Hawkhurst. She had dismissed her maid, and was surveying her reflection
-in a full-length mirror with a complacent smile.
-
-She was attired in a long robe of crimson silk, and wore her ruby
-ornaments. Her neck and arms were bare. Her liquid black eyes were full
-of light; her face was aglow.
-
-In the midst of her self-admiration, her gray companion entered
-abruptly, bearing in her hand a letter. Lady Wynde turned toward her
-with a startled look.
-
-“What have you there, Artress?” she demanded.
-
-“A letter addressed to me,” was the reply. “I have read it. I have a
-question to ask you, Octavia, before I show the letter to you. Sir
-Harold Wynde adores you. He loads you with gifts. He lays his heart
-under your feet. You are his world, his life, his very soul. And now I
-want to ask you--do you love him?”
-
-The ashen eyes shot a piercing glance into the handsome brunette face,
-but the black eyes met hers boldly and the full lips curled in a
-contemptuous smile.
-
-“Love him?” repeated Lady Wynde. “You know I do not. Love him? You know
-that I love another even as Sir Harold loves me! Love him? Bah!”
-
-The gray woman smiled a strange mirthless smile.
-
-“It is well,” she said. “Now read the letter. The message has come at
-last!”
-
-Lady Wynde seized the letter eagerly. It contained only these words,
-without date or signature:
-
-“_The time has come to get rid of him!_ Now!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III. A FATEFUL MOVE DECIDED UPON.
-
-
-Notwithstanding that the sinister message, contained in the single line
-of the mysterious missive brought to Lady Wynde by her gray companion,
-had been long expected, it brought with it none the less a shock when
-it came.
-
-The paper fluttered slowly from the unloosed fingers of the baronet’s
-wife to the floor, and into the liquid black eyes stole a look half
-of horror and half of eagerness. Unconsciously her voice repeated the
-words of the message, in a hoarse whisper:
-
-“_It is time to get rid of him._ Now!”
-
-Lady Wynde shuddered at the sound of her own voice, and she stared at
-her gray companion, her eyes full of shrinking and terror. Those ashen
-orbs returned her stare with one that was bold, evil, and encouraging.
-
-“I--I haven’t the courage I thought, Artress,” faltered her ladyship.
-“It is a terrible thing to do!”
-
-“You love Sir Harold, after all?” taunted the companion, as she picked
-up the sinister slip of paper and burned it.
-
-“No, no, but he trusts me; he loves me. There was a time, Artress, when
-I could not have harmed a dog that licked my hand or fawned upon me.
-And now--but I am not so bad as you think. I am base, unscrupulous,
-manœuvring, I know. My marriage was but part of a wicked plan, the
-fruit of a conspiracy against Sir Harold Wynde, but I shrink from the
-crowning evil we have planned. To play the viper and sting the hand
-that has warmed me--to wound to the core the heart that beats so fondly
-and proudly for me--to--to cut short the noble, beneficent, happy life
-of Sir Harold--oh, I cannot! I cannot!”
-
-Her ladyship swept forward impetuously toward the hearth and knelt down
-before a quaint crimson-cushioned chair, crossing her arms upon it, and
-laying her head on her bare white arms. The firelight played upon the
-ruddy waves of her long robe, upon the gems at her throat and wrists,
-upon her picturesquely dishevelled hair, and upon her stormy, handsome
-face. She stared into the fire with her great black terrified eyes, as
-if seeking in those dancing flames some mystic meaning.
-
-Her gray companion flitted across the floor to her side like an evil
-shadow.
-
-“How very tragic you are, my lady,” she said, with a sneer. “It almost
-seems as if you were doing a scene out of a melodrama. No one can force
-you to any step against your will. You can do whatever you please. Sir
-Harold dotes upon you, and you can continue his seemingly affectionate
-wife, can receive his caresses, can preside over his household, and
-can soothe his declining years. He is not yet fifty-eight years old,
-vigorous and healthy, and, as he comes of a long-lived race, he will
-live to be ninety, I doubt not. You will, should you survive him,
-then be seventy. You can play the tender step-mother to his children.
-His daughter is sure to dislike you, and she may cause her father to
-distrust you. All this will no doubt be pleasant to you--”
-
-“Hush, hush!” breathed Lady Wynde, with a tempestuous look in her eyes.
-“Let me alone, Artress. You always stir up the demon within me. Forty
-years of a dull, staid, respectable existence, when I might be a queen
-of society in London, might be married to one I have loved for years!
-Forty years! Why, one year seems to me an eternity. It seems a lifetime
-since I was married to Sir Harold. I--I will act upon the letter.”
-
-The gray companion smiled.
-
-“I was sure you would,” she said.
-
-“But Sir Harold has not made a new will since our marriage,” urged
-Lady Wynde. “By our marriage settlements, I am to have the use of the
-dower house, Wynde Heights, during my lifetime, and a life income of
-four thousand pounds a year. At my death, both house and income revert
-to the family of Wynde. I have nothing absolutely my own, nothing left
-to me by will to do with as I please. Craven expected that I would
-have the dowry of a princess, I suppose, out of Sir Harold’s splendid
-property.”
-
-“It is not too late to acquire it,” said the companion, significantly.
-“Sir Harold is clay in your hands. You can mould him to any shape you
-will. He has no child here to counteract your influence. He has money
-and estates which he intends to leave by will to his daughter Neva.
-If you are clever, you can divert into your own coffers all of Miss
-Wynde’s property that is not settled upon her already from her mother’s
-estate. It will do no harm to delay acting upon the message for a day
-or two, since something of so much importance remains to be transacted.”
-
-“I am thankful for even a day’s respite,” murmured Lady Wynde. “I have
-been eager to receive the message, intending to act upon it promptly.
-But I am not all bad, Artress, and I shrink from the consummation of
-our plans. If Sir Harold would only die naturally! If something would
-only occur to remove him from my path!”
-
-She breathed heavily as she arose, shook out the folds of her dress,
-and moved toward the door.
-
-“The phial I had when we came here I found was broken yesterday,” said
-Artress. “I shall have to go up to London to-morrow for more of that
-fluid, so that there must be a day’s delay in any case. We must be very
-cautious, for people will wonder at the sudden death of one so hale and
-strong, and should suspicion arise, it must find no foundation to build
-upon.”
-
-Lady Wynde nodded assent, and opened the door and went out with a weary
-step. She descended the broad staircase, crossed the great hall, and
-entered the drawing-room.
-
-Sir Harold was seated near the fire, in a thoughtful reverie, but arose
-at her entrance with a beaming face and a tender smile.
-
-“It’s a wild night, Octavia,” he said. “Come forward to the fire my
-darling. How pale you are! And you are shivering with the cold.”
-
-He gently forced her into the easy-chair he had vacated, bent over her
-with lover-like devotion, patting her head softly with his hand.
-
-“You look unhappy, dear,” resumed the baronet, after a pause. “Is there
-anything you want--a ball, jewels, a trip to the Continent? You know my
-purse is yours, and I am ready to go where you may wish to lead.”
-
-“You are very good!” said Lady Wynde, her black eyes fixed in a gaze
-upon the fire, and again she shivered. “I--I am not worthy of all your
-kindness, Harold. Hark! There is the dinner-bell. Thank fortune for the
-interruption, for I believe I was growing really sentimental!”
-
-She forced a laugh as she arose and took her husband’s arm, and was
-conducted to the dining-room, but there was something in her laughter
-that jarred upon Sir Harold, although the unpleasant impression it
-produced upon him was evanescent.
-
-At the dinner Lady Wynde was herself again, bright and fascinating,
-only now and then, in some pause of the conversation, there came again
-into her eyes that horrified stare which they had worn up stairs,
-and which testified how her soul shrank from the awful crime she
-contemplated.
-
-After dinner the pair returned to the drawing-room. Sir Harold drew a
-sofa toward the corner of the hearth and sat down upon it, calling his
-wife to him. She obeyed, taking a seat beside him. Her face was all
-brightness at this moment, and Sir Harold forgot his late anxieties
-about her.
-
-“I believe I am the happiest man in the world, Octavia,” he said
-thoughtfully, caressing one of her jewelled hands he had lifted from
-her knee, “but my cup of joy lacks a drop or two of sweetness still.
-You are all the world to me, my wife, and yet I want something more.”
-
-“What is it you want, Harold?”
-
-“I have been thinking about my children,” said the baronet. “It is
-over a month since I heard from George, and he does not intend to leave
-India this year, although I have urged him to sell his commission and
-come home. The boy has a passion for a military life, and he went out
-to India against my better judgment. I cannot have George home again
-this year, but there is Neva near me. I long to see her, Octavia.”
-
-“You are the most devoted of fathers,” laughed Lady Wynde. “We have
-been married but little over a year, and yet you have made two trips
-alone to Paris to see Neva. She must be a very paragon of daughters to
-cause her father to forget his bride.”
-
-Sir Harold’s fair cheeks flushed a little.
-
-“You forget,” he said, “that Neva was my especial charge from the hour
-of her mother’s death till I sent her to that Paris school. My love for
-you, Octavia, cannot lessen my love for her. I begin to think that I
-have done wrong in not bringing you two together before. I had a most
-pathetic letter from Neva before the holidays, begging to be allowed to
-come home, but at your request, Octavia, I denied her natural entreaty
-and compelled her to remain at her school. Even Madame Da-Caret, the
-head of the establishment, thought it singular that Miss Wynde should,
-alone of all the English pupils, spend her holidays at the deserted
-institution. And now to-day I received a letter from Neva asking if
-she was to come home for the Easter holidays. I am afraid I have not
-rightly treated my motherless child, Octavia. She has never seen you;
-never been at home since you became mistress here. I fear that the poor
-child will think her exile due to your influence, to speak frankly,
-dear, and that she will regard you with dislike and bitterness, instead
-of the trust and confidence I want her to feel in you. You are both so
-dear to me that I shall be unhappy if you do not love each other.”
-
-“There is time enough to form the acquaintance after Neva leaves
-school,” said Lady Wynde. “She is but a child yet.”
-
-“She is seventeen years old, Octavia. I have decided to have her home
-at Easter, and I hope you will take some pains to win her trust and
-affection. She will meet you half-way, dear.”
-
-“I am not fond of bread-and-butter school-girls,” said Lady Wynde, half
-frowning. “The neighborhood will be agape to see how I play the role
-of step-mother. And, to own the truth, Harold, I have no fancy to be
-called mother by a tall, overgrown girl, with her hair hanging down her
-back in two braids, and her dresses reaching to her ankles. I shall
-feel as old as Methuselah.”
-
-Sir Harold sighed, and a grave shadow settled down upon his square
-massive brows.
-
-“I hope that Neva will win her way to your heart, Octavia,” he remarked
-gently. “I thought it would look better if my daughter were to call her
-father’s wife by the endearing name of mother, but teach her to call
-you what you will. I have faith in your goodness of heart, my wife.”
-
-“Perhaps I am a little jealous of her,” returned Lady Wynde, with a
-forced smile. “You fairly idolize her--”
-
-“Have I not made her second to you?” interposed the baronet. “Has she
-not been banished from her home to please you since you entered it?
-When I think of her dull, dreary holidays in her school--holidays!
-the name was a mockery--my soul yearns for my child. Jealous of her,
-Octavia? What further proofs do you need that I prefer my wife in all
-things above my child?”
-
-“Why,” said Lady Wynde tremulously, a hectic flush burning on either
-cheek, “look at the magnificent fortune she will have! While, if you
-should die I have only the pitiful income of four thousand pounds a
-year.”
-
-“Pitiful, Octavia!”
-
-“Yes, it _is_ pitiful, compared to Neva’s. You have estates which
-you can convey away absolutely by will. Why should you not make me
-independently rich, with property that I can sell if I choose? What you
-leave to me is to be mine _for life_. What you leave to Neva is hers
-absolutely. This is monstrous, hateful, unjust!”
-
-The baronet regarded his wife in amazement.
-
-“You were satisfied with your marriage settlements when they were drawn
-up, Octavia,” he said.
-
-“I was not satisfied even then, but I had no male relatives to speak to
-you about the matter, and it would have been indelicate for me to have
-said what I thought. But I hoped you would make things right in a will,
-as you can easily do. It is _not_ right that such a distinction should
-be made between a daughter and a wife!”
-
-“I am surprised at you, Octavia,” declared the baronet. “Neva inherits
-her mother’s fortune with something from me, but I cannot undertake to
-alter my intentions in regard to her. The provisions that were made for
-my mother are the same as those that have been made for you, and she
-found them ample. I can promise you nothing more; but, Octavia,” and he
-smiled faintly, “I have no intention of dying soon, and while I live
-your income need not to be limited to any certain sum. Let no jealousy
-of my Neva warp your noble nature, Octavia. I shall love you all the
-better if you love her.”
-
-“Then you decline to make a new will, with further provision for me?”
-demanded the wife, her eyes downcast, the hectic spot burning fiercely
-on both cheeks.
-
-“You surprise me, Octavia. Why are you so persistent about a subject of
-which I never dreamed you even thought? I _do_ decline to make further
-provision for you, but not because I do not love and appreciate you,
-for I do both. So long as there is no issue to our marriage, the
-sum settled on you is ample for your own wants. If Providence sends
-us children, they will be provided for separately. We will let the
-discussion end here, Octavia, with the understanding that Neva will
-spend her Easter at Hawkhurst.”
-
-Lady Wynde compressed her lips and looked sullen, but, as Sir Harold
-suggested, the discussion was dropped. The baronet was troubled, and
-disappointed in the wife he had believed faultless. The first shadow of
-their married life, the first suspicion of distrust of Lady Wynde in
-her husband’s mind had come at last, and they were hard to bear. Lady
-Wynde went to the piano and executed a dashing fantasia, all storm and
-violence, expressive of her mental condition. Sir Harold moved back
-from the fire and took up a book, but his grave, saddened face, his
-steady, intent gaze, and anxious mouth, showed that he was not reading,
-and that his thoughts were sorrowful.
-
-When Lady Wynde had become tired of music, she went up to her rooms
-without a word to her husband. She entered her sitting-room, made
-beautiful by her husband’s taste, and going to the fire, knelt down
-before it on the hearth-rug. Artress and her maid were neither of them
-to be seen, and the baronet’s wife communed in solitude with her own
-deformed soul.
-
-The winds tore through the trees in the park and on the lawn with a
-melancholy soughing, and the sound came to the ears of the kneeling
-woman. Her room was warm and bright with firelight, lamplight, and the
-glowing hue of crimson furniture. Every luxury was gathered within
-those walls dedicated to her use. Silken couches and fauteuils,
-portfolios of choice engravings, rare bronzes on the low marble
-mantel-piece, exquisite statuettes on carved brackets, albums of scenes
-in every hand done in water-colors, a beautiful cottage piano, and
-a hundred other articles made the room a very temple of comfort and
-beauty, yet in the spot where only loving thoughts of her husband
-should have had place she dared to harbor thoughts of crime! And that
-crime the most hideous that can be named--the crime of _murder_!
-
-While she was kneeling there, the gray companion stole in softly and
-silently.
-
-Lady Wynde slowly turned her head, recognized the intruder, and stared
-again with wide eyes into the flames.
-
-“You look like a tragedy queen,” said Artress, with a soft laugh
-like the gurgling of waters. “You look as if you cast away all your
-scruples, and were ready to carry out the game.”
-
-“I am,” said Lady Wynde, in a hard, suppressed voice.
-
-“I thought you would come to it. Will Sir Harold make a new will?”
-
-“No; he absolutely refuses.”
-
-“Well, four thousand pounds a year need not be despised. And perhaps,”
-added Artress significantly, “we can make the sum larger. Am I to go to
-town to-morrow?”
-
-“Yes, by the morning train. Go to Craven, and tell him the phial he
-gave you is broken and the contents spilled, and ask him for more of
-the--the preparation. I will find occasion to administer it. I have
-worked myself up to the necessary point, and would not scruple at any
-crime so long as I need not fear discovery. You will be back before
-dinner,” added Lady Wynde, her brunette complexion turning as gray as
-that of her companion, “and to-morrow night at this time I shall be a
-widow!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV. A DOOR OPENED TO WICKEDNESS.
-
-
-Soon after daybreak, upon the morning following the occurrence of the
-incidents related in the preceding chapter, Lady Wynde’s gray companion
-departed from Hawkhurst for Canterbury in a dog-cart which, with
-its driver, the baronet’s wife had ordered to be always at Artress’
-disposal. She took the early train up to London, her business a secret
-between her mistress and herself.
-
-At the usual breakfast hour, eight o’clock, Lady Wynde descended to
-the breakfast room. Sir Harold was already there, and greeted her with
-his usual tender smile, although he looked somewhat careworn. Their
-greetings were scarcely over, and the couple had taken their places at
-the table, when the butler appeared, bringing in the morning mail bag.
-
-Sir Harold produced his key and unlocked it. There were a few
-newspapers for himself, some packets of silk samples, and a letter from
-Madame Elise, her dressmaker, for Lady Wynde. There were two letters
-for the baronet, one quite unimportant, which he tossed aside. The
-other bore the Indian post-mark.
-
-“A letter from George,” said Sir Harold, his eyes brightening. “No,
-it’s not from George. The address is not in his hand. Who can have
-written to me in his stead?”
-
-He tore open the letter hastily, his countenance falling.
-
-His first glance was at the date; his second at the signature. An
-exclamation broke from his lips as he read aloud the name appended to
-the letter: “Cooper Graham, Regimental Surgeon.”
-
-“What can this mean?” he exclaimed, in sudden agitation. “Can George be
-ill? Octavia, read the letter to me. The words seem all blurred.”
-
-Lady Wynde took the letter, reading it aloud.
-
-It was long, too long to transcribe here, and its import was terrible
-to the baronet. It opened with the announcement that the writer was
-the surgeon of Captain Wynde’s regiment, and that Captain Wynde was a
-patient under his care. It went on to say that Captain Wynde was the
-victim of a terrible and incurable disease under which he had been
-suffering for months, and the surgeon had learned that the poor young
-man had not written home to his friends the fact of his peril. His
-disease was a cancer, which was preying upon his vitals. Captain Wynde
-had been relieved of his regimental duties, and sent up into the hill
-country, where he now was. The young man’s thoughts by day and night
-were of his home--his one longing was to see his father before he died.
-Surgeon Graham went on to say that Captain Wynde could not possibly
-survive a sea journey; that he could not bear the bracing sea air, nor
-the fatigues of the overland route, and he would assuredly die on his
-way home. But, he added, that in the cool and quiet seclusion of his
-upcountry bungalow, his life could probably be prolonged for some three
-months.
-
-Surgeon Graham concluded his startling letter with a further reference
-to Captain Wynde’s anxiety to look once more on his father’s face
-before he died. He said that the poor young man had desired that the
-letter should not be written to Sir Harold, and that the baronet should
-be informed of his son’s illness only in the letter which should
-announce that son’s death.
-
-This terrible news was a fearful shock to Sir Harold. His son George,
-the heir of his name and estates, was dying in a far, foreign land,
-with a frightful disease, with no relative nor friend about him to
-smooth his pillow in his last agony, or to wipe the death-damp from his
-brows. The father sobbed aloud in his agony.
-
-“My boy! my poor boy!” he cried, in a broken voice. “My poor dying boy!”
-
-“It is very sad,” said Lady Wynde, wondering in her own heart if George
-Wynde’s death could be made to benefit her pecuniarily. “The surgeon
-seems a very kind-hearted person, and he says that George has an
-excellent native nurse, George’s man-servant--”
-
-Sir Harold interrupted his wife by a gesture of impatience.
-
-“The man is a Hindoo,” he said. “What consolation can he offer George
-in the hour of his death, when his eyes should rest on a tender, loving
-face--when his dying hands should grasp the hands of a friend? My poor
-brave boy! How could I ever consent to his going out to India? All his
-bright, military genius, all his longings to distinguish himself in the
-army, must end in an early Indian grave! But he shall not die with not
-one of his kindred beside him. We must go to him, Octavia. We shall
-reach him in time.”
-
-Sir Harold seized upon his unopened _Times_, and glanced over the
-advertisements.
-
-“A steamer sails from Marseilles two days hence,” he announced. “We
-must be off to-day, immediately, to catch it. I will have a bag packed
-at once. Order your maid to pack your trunks, Octavia--”
-
-He paused, not comprehending the surprised stare in her ladyship’s bold
-black eyes.
-
-“You seem to be laboring under a mistake Sir Harold,” said Lady Wynde,
-coolly. “If you choose to go out to India, you can do so. George is
-your son and heir, and I suppose it would really look better if you
-were to go. But as to my hurrying by sea and land, by day and night,
-to witness the death of a young man I never saw, the idea is simply
-preposterous. My health could never endure the strain of such a
-fatigue. You would have two graves to make instead of one.”
-
-The lines in Sir Harold’s face contracted as in a sudden spasm.
-
-“I--I was selfish to think of your going, Octavia,” he said
-sorrowfully. “It is true that we should have to travel day and night to
-reach Marseilles in time to catch the steamer. The passage of the Red
-Sea would also be hard for you. But I was thinking of my poor brave boy
-dying there among strangers, with no woman beside him. If--if you could
-have gone to him, my wife, and let him feel that he was going from one
-mother here to another mother _there_--”
-
-“I should like to go, if only my health would permit,” sighed Lady
-Wynde. “But why do you not take your daughter with you?”
-
-The father shook his head.
-
-“She is so young,” he said. “She is so fond of poor George. I cannot
-cast so heavy a shadow over her future life as that visit to her
-brother’s death-bed would be. No, Octavia, I will go alone.”
-
-He arose and went out, leaving his breakfast untouched. Lady Wynde
-sipped her coffee leisurely, and ate her breakfast with untroubled
-appetite. Then she proceeded to her own private sitting-room and took
-her place at one of the windows, watching the whirling snow-flakes of
-the February storm.
-
-Sir Harold found her here when he came in, dressed for his journey.
-He had ordered a carriage, which was ready. His travelling bag was
-packed, and had been taken below. He had come in to say good-bye to his
-wife.
-
-“What a great change a single hour has wrought in our lives!” he said,
-as he came up to Lady Wynde and put his arms around her. “Octavia, my
-darling, it wrings my heart to leave you. Write to me by every post. I
-shall remain with my boy until all is over. Tell me all the home news.
-You will have Neva home at Easter, and love her for my sake! She will
-be our only child soon!”
-
-He embraced his wife with passionate affection, and murmured words of
-anguished farewell. He tore himself from her, but at the door he turned
-back, and spoke to her with a solemnity she had never seen in him
-before.
-
-“Octavia,” he said, “at this moment a strange presentiment comes over
-me--a sudden horror--a chill as of death! Perhaps I am to die out there
-in India! If--if anything happens to me, Octavia, promise me to be good
-to my Neva.”
-
-“It is not necessary to promise,” said Lady Wynde, “but to please you,
-I promise!”
-
-Sir Harold’s keen blue eyes, full of anguish, rested in a long
-steady gaze upon that false handsome face, and the solemnity of his
-countenance increased.
-
-“You will be Neva’s guardian, if I die,” he said, in a broken voice.
-“I trust you absolutely. God do unto you, Octavia, as you do unto my
-orphan child!”
-
-How those words rang in the ears of Lady Wynde long afterward!
-
-Sir Harold gave her a last embrace, and dashed down the stairs and
-sprang into the carriage. Lady Wynde watched him with tearless eyes as
-he drove down the avenue.
-
-When he had disappeared from her sight, she said to herself:
-
-“Of course I could have done nothing to put an end to Sir Harold’s life
-this morning. I only hope he will die in India--to save me the trouble
-of--of doing anything when he gets back!”
-
-Sir Harold proceeded to Canterbury with all speed. On arriving, he
-proceeded directly to his solicitor’s, had a new will drawn up,
-constituting Lady Wynde his daughter’s personal guardian, and making
-Neva his sole heiress in the event of her brother’s death, Lady Wynde
-having been sufficiently provided for by her marriage settlements. The
-will duly signed and witnessed, Sir Harold hastened to the station,
-catching the train for Dover.
-
-He crossed to Calais by the first boat, and went on to Marseilles, by
-way of Paris, without stopping even to see his daughter. He was not
-only in time to get passage by the _Messageries Imperiales_ steamer,
-but had an hour to spare. In this hour he wrote a long and very
-tender letter to his daughter, telling her of her brother’s illness,
-and hinting of the gloom that had settled down upon his own soul. He
-begged her if anything happened to him on this journey, to love her
-step-mother, and to obey her in all things, regarding Lady Wynde’s
-utterances as if they came from Sir Harold.
-
-He also wrote a note to his wife, and sent the two ashore to be posted
-by one of the agents of the company, just as the vessel weighed anchor
-for Suez.
-
-In thirty-five days after leaving home he was in the Indian hill
-country, and beside his dying son.
-
-Lady Wynde went out very little after her husband’s departure. She gave
-no more dinner parties, and behaved with such admirable discretion that
-her neighbors were full of praises of her. Although young, handsome
-and admired, presiding over one of the finest places in the county,
-with no one to direct or thwart her movements, the most censorious
-tongue could find nothing to condemn in her.
-
-The only recreation she allowed herself were her weekly visits to
-London, ostensibly to see Madame Elise, but as the ashen-eyed Artress
-always accompanied her, they excited no comment even in her own
-household.
-
-Easter drew near, and Lady Wynde wrote to her step-daughter that it
-would not be convenient to have her at Hawkhurst during the holidays,
-and ordered her to remain at her school.
-
-The spring months passed slowly. Lady Wynde wrote by every post to her
-husband, and received letters as frequently. George’s minutest symptoms
-were described to her by the anxious father, and George himself,
-looking at his step-mother through his father’s eyes, sent her loving
-and pathetic messages, to which she duly responded.
-
-Thus the time wore on until the midsummer.
-
-About the middle of July, Lady Wynde received a black-bordered letter
-from her husband stating that his son and heir was dead. He had died
-at his up-country bungalow, after an illness which had been protracted
-considerably beyond the anticipations of his surgeon. Sir Harold wrote
-that he was exhausted by long nursing, and that he should remain a
-fortnight longer at his son’s bungalow to recruit his own health, and
-that he should then start for home.
-
-“I wish he would come,” said Lady Wynde discontentedly, to her gray
-companion. “I am tired of this dull existence. I am anxious to rid
-myself of the trammels of my present marriage, and to be free to marry
-again.”
-
-“You can be free within a week after Sir Harold’s return,” said
-Artress. “And he will be here in September.”
-
-“I shall be free in September,” mused Lady Wynde, with sparkling eyes.
-“A widow with four thousand a year! Ah, if only some good demon would
-bring about that happy fact, leaving _my_ hands unstained with crime?”
-
-It seemed as if her familiar demon had anticipated her prayer.
-
-Some two weeks later, a second black-bordered letter was brought to
-Lady Wynde. It was in an unfamiliar handwriting, and proved to be from
-Surgeon Graham.
-
-It announced the death of Sir Harold Wynde!
-
-The surgeon stated that the baronet had made all arrangements for
-returning to England, and that he had gone for a last ride among the
-hills. He had taken a jungle path, but being well armed and attended by
-a Hindoo servant, had anticipated no trouble. Some hours after he had
-set out on his ride, about the time the surgeon looked for his return,
-the Hindoo servant, covered with dust, rode up alone in a very panic
-of terror. With difficulty he told his story. Sir Harold Wynde had
-been attacked by a tiger that had leaped upon him from the jungle, and
-before his terrified servant could come to his aid, he had been dragged
-from his saddle, with the life-blood welling from his torn throat and
-breast. The servant, appalled, had not dared to fire, knowing that no
-human power could help Sir Harold in his extremity, and the baronet had
-been killed before his eyes. The Hindoo had then fled homeward to tell
-the awful story.
-
-The surgeon added, that a party had been made up to visit the scene
-of the tragedy. A pool of blood, fragments of Sir Harold’s garments,
-the bones of his horse, and the foot-prints of a tiger, all tended to
-the confirmation of the Hindoo’s story. A hunt was organized for the
-tiger, and he was found near the same spot on the following day and
-killed.
-
-We have given a brief epitome of the letter that declared to Lady Wynde
-that her prayer was answered, and that she was a widow.
-
-She was sitting in the drawing-room at Hawkhurst when the letter was
-brought in to her. She was still sitting there, the letter lying on her
-lap, twice read, when her gray companion stole into the room.
-
-“A letter from Sir Harold, Octavia?” said Artress, glancing at the
-black-bordered missive.
-
-“No, it is from that Surgeon Graham,” answered her ladyship, with an
-exultant thrill in her low, soft voice. “You cannot guess the news,
-Artress. Sir Harold is dead!”
-
-“Dead?”
-
-“Yes,” cried Lady Wynde, “and I am a widow. Is it not glorious? A
-widow, well-jointured and free to marry again! Ha, ha! Tell the
-household the sad news, Artress, and tell them all that I am too
-overcome with grief to speak to them. Let the bell at the village be
-set tolling. Send a notice of the death to the _Times_. I am a widow,
-and the guardian of the heiress of Hawkhurst! You must write to my
-step-daughter of her bereavement, and also drop a note to Craven. A
-widow, and without crime. The heiress of Hawkhurst in my hands to do
-with as I please! Your future is to be linked with mine, my young Neva,
-and a fate your father never destined for you shall be yours. I stand
-upon the pinnacle of success at last.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V. SETTLING INTO HER PLACE.
-
-
-The announcement of Sir Harold Wynde’s death in India, so soon too
-after the death of his son and heir, produced a shock throughout his
-native county of Kent, and even throughout England; for, although the
-baronet had been no politician, he had been one of the best known men
-in the kingdom, and there were many who had known and esteemed him, who
-mourned deeply at his tragic fate.
-
-The London papers, the _Times_, the _Morning Post_, and others, came
-out with glowing eulogies of the grand-souled baronet whose life had
-been so noble and beneficent. The local papers of Kent copied these
-long obituaries, and added thereto accounts of the pedigree of the
-Wynde family, and a description of the young heiress upon whom, by the
-untimely deaths of both father and brother, the great family estates
-and possessions, all excepting the bare title, now devolved.
-
-The retainers of the family, the farmers and servants--those who had
-known Sir Harold best--mourned for him, refusing to be comforted.
-They would never know again a landlord so genial, nor a master so
-kindly: and although they hoped for much from his daughter, yet, as
-they mournfully said to each other, Miss Neva would marry some day,
-and the chances were even that she would give to Hawkhurst a harsh and
-tyrannical master.
-
-The little village of Wyndham, near Hawkhurst, the very ideal of a
-Kentish village, had been mostly owned by Sir Harold Wynde. To him
-had belonged the row of shops, the old inn with its creaking sign,
-and most of the neat houses that stood in gardens along the single
-street. It was Sir Harold who had caused to be built the little new
-stone church, with its slender spire, and in this church the mourning
-villagers gathered to listen to the sermon that was preached in
-commemoration of the baronet’s death.
-
-Lady Wynde was not present to listen to this sermon. Her gray
-companion, attired in deep mourning, with the entire household of
-Hawkhurst, was there, and the young clergyman made a feeling allusion
-to “the bereaved young widow, sitting alone in her darkened chamber and
-weeping for her dead, refusing like Rachel of old, to be comforted.”
-Many of the kindly women present shed tears at this picture, but
-Artress smiled behind her double mourning vail. She knew that Lady
-Wynde was lying upon a sofa in her luxurious sitting-room at Hawkhurst,
-busy with a French novel, and she knew also that not one tear had
-dimmed her ladyship’s black eyes since the news had come of Sir
-Harold’s horrible fate.
-
-Neighbors and friends thronged to Hawkhurst to offer their condolences
-to the young widow. For the first week she was reported inconsolable,
-and refused to see any one; but a box of the most elegant and
-fashionable mourning having come down from London, Lady Wynde began
-to receive her visitors. She affected to be quite broken down by her
-bereavement, and for weeks did not go out of doors. And when, finally,
-being urged to take care of her health and to become resigned to her
-loss, she took morning drives, her equipage looked like a funeral one,
-her carriage and horses being alike black, and her own face being
-shrouded in double folds of sombre crape.
-
-Artress had written to Sir Harold’s daughter immediately upon the
-arrival of the news of Sir Harold’s death, but the letter had been
-cold and practical, and contained merely the terrible announcement,
-without one line to soften its horror. About a week later, no letter
-having been received from Neva, Lady Wynde wrote a very pathetic
-letter, full of protestations of sympathy, and setting forth her own
-mock sorrow as something genuinely heart-rending, and declaring herself
-utterly prostrated in both body and mind. Her ladyship offered her
-condolences to the bereaved daughter, assuring her that henceforth they
-“must be all the world to each other,” and concluded her letter by
-the false statement that it had been the late Sir Harold’s wish that
-his daughter should remain at her Paris school a year longer, and, as
-the wishes of the dead are sacred, Lady Wynde had sacrificed her own
-personal feelings in the matter, and had consented that Neva should
-remain another year “under the care of her excellent French teachers.”
-
-“That disposes of the girl for a year,” commented Lady Wynde, as she
-sealed the missive. “I won’t have her here to spy upon me until the
-year of mourning is over, and I am free to do just as I please.”
-
-So the letter was dispatched, and the baronet’s daughter was condemned
-to continue her school tasks, even though her heart might be breaking.
-There was no leisure for her in which to weep for the fate of her noble
-father; no one who had known him with whom she might talk of him; and
-only in the long and lonely night times was she free to weep for him,
-and then indeed her pillow was wetted with her tears.
-
-About three weeks after the receipt of the letter from India announcing
-Sir Harold’s death, the baronet’s solicitor at Canterbury received
-a note from the widow, requesting him to call at Hawkhurst on the
-following day. He obeyed the summons, bringing with him a copy of
-Sir Harold’s will, made, as will be remembered, upon the day of the
-baronet’s departure from England. Lady Wynde, clad in the deepest
-weeds of woe, and attended by Artress, also in mourning, received the
-solicitor in the library, a grand apartment with vaulted ceiling, and
-lofty walls lined with books in uniform Russia leather bindings.
-
-“I have sent for you, Mr. Atkins,” said Lady Wynde, when the customary
-greetings had been exchanged, “to learn if poor Sir Harold left a will.
-I had his desk searched, and no document of the sort can be found. If
-he made no will, I am anxious to know how I am to be affected by the
-omission.”
-
-Mr. Atkins, a thin, small man, with a large, bald head, looked
-surprised at the simple directness of this speech. He had expected to
-find her ladyship overcome with grief, as report portrayed her; but
-her eyes were as bright and tearless, her cheeks as red, her features
-as composed, as if the business in hand were of the most trivial and
-unimportant description. Atkins, who had appreciated Sir Harold’s grand
-nature, felt an aversion to Lady Wynde from this moment.
-
-“She didn’t care for him,” he mentally decided on the instant. “She’s
-an arrant humbug, and poor Sir Harold’s love was wasted on her. Upon
-my soul, I believe all she cared about him was for the title and his
-money.”
-
-Lady Wynde’s sharp eyes did not fail to perceive the unfavorable
-impression she had made. She bit her lip fiercely, and her cheeks
-flushed hotly. Her brows arched themselves superciliously, and Mr.
-Atkins, marking her impatience, hastened to answer:
-
-“Sir Harold left a will, my lady. It was drawn up at my office at
-Canterbury upon the day on which he left England for India. You will
-remember that he left Hawkhurst in the morning and drove to Canterbury.
-He came direct to my office, and dictated and signed his will. He
-then proceeded directly to the station and went by train to Dover, and
-crossed to Calais. The will was left in my keeping and is, there can be
-no question, the last will and testament of Sir Harold Wynde.”
-
-“I presume no one will care to question the will,” said Lady Wynde
-coldly, “although Sir Harold was in a very excited frame of mind that
-morning, on account of the news of his son’s illness, and the pain
-of leaving his home and me. Nevertheless, I dare say he was quite
-competent to dictate a will. I sent you the particulars of Sir Harold’s
-death, with some of the letters detailing the sad event which I have
-received from India. There being no possible doubt of his awful fate,
-it is time to prove his will. I wish you to give me some idea of its
-contents.”
-
-The solicitor drew out a long leathern pocket-book and took from it a
-neatly folded paper.
-
-“I have here a copy of the will,” he said briefly. “Is it your
-ladyship’s wish to have the will formally read, in the presence of
-witnesses?”
-
-“No, that is unnecessary. Leave out the usual useless preamble and
-tell me what disposition my husband made of his property--the freehold
-farms, the money in bank, the consols, the bonds and mortgages? All
-these he was free to leave to whom he pleased. I desire to know to whom
-he did leave them.”
-
-There was a greediness in the looks and tones of Lady Wynde that
-chilled Atkins. In her anxiety to learn the contents of the will, her
-ladyship half dropped her mask and displayed something of her true
-character, and he was quick to read it.
-
-“Sir Harold Wynde, in expectation of the death of his son and heir,”
-replied Atkins, in his most formal tones, “bequeathed all the property
-you have mentioned, all his real and personal property, to his
-daughter, Miss Neva Wynde.”
-
-“All to her?” muttered Lady Wynde. “_All_, you say?”
-
-“All, my lady. Miss Wynde also inherits Hawkhurst and the entailed
-property. She is one of the richest heiresses in England.”
-
-“And--and my name is not mentioned?”
-
-“Sir Harold declares that you are provided for by the terms of the
-marriage settlement. You have Wynde Heights for your dower house and
-four thousand pounds a year during your life, with no restrictions in
-regard to a second marriage--a very liberal provision I consider it.”
-
-“And a very shabby one I consider it,” cried Lady Wynde, with a black
-frown. “Sir Harold’s daughter seventy thousand pounds a year, and I
-have a paltry four. It is a shame, a miserable, burning shame!”
-
-“It is unjust, scandalous!” muttered Artress.
-
-“Sir Harold thought the sum sufficient, and I must say I agree with
-him,” declared Atkins. “Your ladyship was contented with the provision
-at your marriage. If the allowance was unsatisfactory, why did you not
-expostulate with Sir Harold at that time? Why wait until he is dead to
-accuse him of injustice?”
-
-“We will not argue the matter,” said Lady Wynde superciliously. “I
-shall not contest the will. And now about my rich young step-daughter.
-Who are her appointed guardians?”
-
-There was a perceptible anxiety in her manner, which Atkins noticed
-with some wonder. He referred to his copy of the will, which was open
-in his hands.
-
-“Sir Harold appointed yourself, my lady, the personal guardian of his
-daughter,” he said slowly. “Miss Wynde is to reside at Hawkhurst under
-your care until she becomes of age or marries. Upon the occurrence of
-either of those events your ladyship is to retire to Wynde Heights,
-or to whatsoever place you may prefer, leaving Miss Wynde absolute
-mistress of Hawkhurst. Of course if Miss Wynde desires you to remain
-after her marriage, or the attainment of her majority, you are at
-liberty to do as you please. I think you comprehend Sir Harold’s
-meaning. If it is not precisely clear, I will read the will--”
-
-“Do not!” interrupted Lady Wynde impatiently. “I abhor all that
-tedious phraseology. I understand that I am Miss Wynde’s sole personal
-guardian, that I am to direct her actions, introduce her into society,
-and that she is to give me the simple, unhesitating obedience of a
-daughter. Is this not so?”
-
-“It is,” assented Atkins, rather hesitatingly. “Sir Harold expresses
-the hope that his widow and his daughter will love each other; and that
-your ladyship will give to his orphan child a mother’s tenderness and
-affection.”
-
-“Sir Harold knew that he could depend upon my kindness to his child,”
-said Lady Wynde hypocritically. “I promised him before he went away to
-be a mother to her, although I shall be but a young mother, to be sure.
-I shall be very good to the poor girl, whom I love already. I don’t
-know anything about law, Mr. Atkins, but is not some other guardian
-also necessary--some one to see to the property, you know?”
-
-“There are three trustees appointed to look after the estate during
-Miss Wynde’s minority,” answered Atkins. “Sir John Freise is one.
-You know him well, my lady, and a more incorruptible, honest-souled
-gentleman than he does not exist. He is a man of fine business
-capacity, and Sir Harold could not have chosen better. I am also a
-trustee, and I can answer for my own probity, and for my great devotion
-to the interests of Miss Wynde.”
-
-“And the third trustee--who is he?”
-
-“The young Earl Towyn. He is the son of one of Sir Harold’s dearest
-friends, as you probably know, and his youth admirably balances Sir
-John’s age.”
-
-Lady Wynde looked thoughtful. Her gray companion bent over her work,
-embroidering a black monogram upon a black-bordered handkerchief, and
-did not look up. Her ashen-hued lashes lay on her ashen cheeks, and she
-looked dull, spiritless, a mere gray shadow, as we have called her, but
-Atkins, studying her face, had an uncomfortable impression that under
-all that coldness a fire was burning.
-
-“She’s more than she looks to be,” he thought keenly. “I wonder Sir
-Harold tolerated her in his house. How singularly she resembles a cat!”
-
-Lady Wynde presently broke the silence.
-
-“I understand the situation of affairs,” she said, “and I am obliged
-to you for your prompt attendance upon my summons, Mr. Atkins. I shall
-leave my money affairs in your hands. I desire my jointure to be paid
-into the bank and placed to my credit, so that I may draw upon it when
-I please. There is nothing more, I think.”
-
-“I would like to make a few inquiries about Miss Wynde, if you please,
-my lady,” said Atkins, with quiet firmness. “I understand that she
-is not at home. Has she not been summoned from her school since her
-father’s death?”
-
-“She has not,” answered Lady Wynde haughtily.
-
-“Pardon me, madam, but are you not about to summon her?”
-
-“I am not. Miss Wynde will remain this year at school. Her studies must
-be interrupted upon no account at this time.”
-
-“Not even by her father’s death?” asked Atkins bitterly. “Sir Harold
-mentioned to me his desire to have her at home--”
-
-“Sir Harold Wynde is no longer master of Hawkhurst,” interposed Lady
-Wynde, with increased superciliousness. “I believe, by the terms of
-the will, that I am mistress here during Neva’s minority. Let me tell
-you, Mr. Atkins, that I am my step-daughter’s sole personal guardian,
-and that I will submit to no dictation whatever in my treatment of the
-girl. If my husband had sufficient confidence in me to make me his
-daughter’s guardian, the trustees whom he himself appointed have no
-need nor right to comment upon my actions or interfere in my plans.
-Permit me to assure you that I will brook no interference, and if you
-try to sow dissension between Neva and me you are proving unfaithful to
-Sir Harold--as well as oblivious of your own interests.”
-
-Mr. Atkins sighed, and murmured an apology. He soon after took his
-leave, and drove away in the chaise in which he had come. His heart
-was very heavy and his face overcast as he emerged from the Hawkhurst
-grounds into the highway, and journeyed toward Canterbury.
-
-“It was a sorry day for Neva Wynde when her father died,” he murmured,
-looking back at the grand old seat--“a sorry day! This handsome
-black-eyed Lady Wynde, that everybody is praising for an angel of love
-and devotion to her husband, is at heart a demon! She means mischief,
-though I can’t see how. Poor Neva is booked for trouble!”
-
-Enough of honest Mr. Atkins’ sentiments had been apparent in his
-countenance to prejudice Lady Wynde against him, and to warn her that
-he comprehended something of her real character. As may be supposed,
-therefore, she did not again summon him to Hawkhurst.
-
-The days and weeks and months of Lady Wynde’s widowhood passed on
-without event. She carried herself circumspectly in the eyes of the
-world. No visitors were invited to Hawkhurst, and her ladyship’s visits
-to London were few and far between. She seldom went to Canterbury, and
-her drives about the neighborhood of Hawkhurst were always of the most
-funereal description, with black coach, black horses and black attire,
-and a slow gait. Her ladyship was found every Sunday in the baronet’s
-great square pew in the little Wyndham church, and as she always sat
-with the silken curtains drawn, no one could know that she was not
-absorbed in the church services. In short, during the year she had
-determined to devote to mourning for her dead husband, the conduct of
-Lady Wynde was such as to deepen her popularity throughout the county.
-Sir John Freise enthusiastically declared her an angel, her neighbors
-praised her, and only honest Mr. Atkins shook his head doubtfully when
-her virtues were lauded, and dared to suggest that she might not be all
-she seemed.
-
-The year slowly wore away, and midsummer had come again. The languor
-of Lady Wynde’s dull existence had begun to give place to a strange
-restlessness. Her deep mourning had grown odious in her sight, and
-was replaced by the lovely combinations of white and black, the
-delicate lavenders and soft gray hues which are supposed to indicate a
-mitigated grief. The hideous widow’s cap, not at all becoming to her
-ladyship, was exchanged for lavender ribbons in her hair, and jewels
-took the place of the orthodox mourning ornaments of jet. In her “half
-mourning,” Lady Wynde appeared more than ever a strikingly handsome
-woman.
-
-“Artress,” she said one morning to her gray companion, as she looked
-out of her sitting-room window upon the fair domain of Hawkhurst, “this
-dreaded year is over at last. I have satisfied the demands of society;
-I have hoodwinked the jealous and envious eyes of neighbors, and am
-free at last. If I were to marry to-morrow, no one could say that I
-had not treated the memory of Sir Harold Wynde with respect. With the
-sacrifice of but little over two years of my life, I have won a fine
-income, a splendid home during Neva’s minority, and the guardianship of
-one of the greatest heiresses in England. That office is worth three
-thousand a year to me while I hold it. Surely I have played my part
-well.”
-
-“You have indeed,” echoed Artress.
-
-“Neva must come home soon, but my own business must be settled before
-her advent on the scene. I shall write to Craven immediately. I will
-have no further delay.”
-
-She went to a small, beautifully inlaid writing desk, which stood in a
-recessed window, and sitting down by it, wrote upon heavy velvet paper
-the following words:
-
- “CRAVEN: You may come to me at last. There is no further obstacle
- between us.
-
- “OCTAVIA.”
-
-This brief missive she inclosed in a square envelope, and stamped with
-pale green wax and her favorite device.
-
-The letter she addressed to The Hon. Craven Black, The Albany, London,
-W.
-
-She then touched her bell. To the servant who came at her summons she
-gave the letter, ordering it to be posted at Wyndham village without
-delay. When her messenger had gone, her ladyship gave a sigh of
-consent, and murmured:
-
-“I am about to reap the reward of all my schemes. Craven will be here
-to-morrow!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI. HER LADYSHIP’S ACCOMPLICE.
-
-
-The morrow to which Lady Wynde looked forward with feverish expectation
-dawned at last, bright and clear, and deepened into a sultry afternoon.
-The baronet’s widow spent hours at her toilet, and the effect of her
-labors was satisfactory to her. She surveyed her reflection in a
-full-length mirror in her dressing-room with a smile of complacency.
-Her black hair was arranged in braids, curls, and finely crimpled
-waves, after the fashion of the day, and in the midst of its prodigal
-luxuriance, above her forehead, a jeweled spray flashed and glittered.
-Her dress, made low in the neck and short in the sleeves, to display
-her finely rounded shoulders and arms, was of lustrous silk of lavender
-hue, and was draped with a black lace overskirt. A necklace and
-bracelets incrusted with diamonds added brilliancy to her appearance.
-Her liquid black eyes shone and glittered; her cheeks were red as
-damask roses; she had never looked half so handsome in the days when
-she had fascinated Sir Harold Wynde and made him adore her.
-
-She had dismissed her maid, and was giving a last touch to the short
-curls that dropped over her forehead, while she talked with Artress,
-when wheels were heard coming up the drive. The gray companion flitted
-to a shuttered window and peeped out. A cab was approaching the house,
-and a man’s head was protruded from the window. His face was half
-averted, as he apparently studied the exterior of the dwelling, but
-Artress knew him. She glided back to Lady Wynde with the words:
-
-“He has come!”
-
-A sudden agitation seemed to convulse the soul of the baronet’s widow.
-A sudden paleness swept over her face. She leaned heavily upon the
-back of a chair, and stood there motionless until a servant brought up
-a silver tray on which lay a large square card with the inscription,
-“The Honorable Craven Black,” and announced that the gentleman had been
-shown into the drawing-room. Then her ladyship started abruptly, the
-color returning to her face in ruddy waves.
-
-“Come, Artress,” she said, “we will go below. Yet stay. You may delay
-your coming for half an hour. Surely no one can find fault with me for
-seeing him alone a little while. Since I became a widow for the second
-time, I have felt as if I lived in a glass lantern with the eyes of all
-Kent upon me. Yet there is no need of carrying my caution too far.”
-
-She gave a last glance at her reflection in the mirror, a last deft
-touch to her attire, and then swept from the room down the stairs, and
-slowly entered the drawing-room.
-
-A gentleman within arose from his seat, and came forward with
-outstretched hands and eager face. He was tall, handsome, fair-haired,
-with light eyes full of sinister gleams, and his full, sensual lips
-wore even now a cynical smile that appeared habitual to them.
-
-He was the same man who had watched, from the pier head at Brighton,
-the rescue of Octavia Hathaway from the sea by Sir Harold Wynde--the
-same man who had witnessed the marriage of the baronet and the widow
-from behind a clustered pillar in the church, and whose sinister
-comments, as he emerged into Hanover Square, we have chronicled.
-
-His quick glance swept the form and face of Lady Wynde; a look of
-admiration burned in his eyes. He held out his arms. With a joyous
-cry, the handsome widow sprang forward, and was clasped in his embrace.
-
-“At last! At last!” she murmured.
-
-“Yes, at last!” echoed Mr. Black, in tones of exultation. “Nothing
-stands between us now, Octavia! We have lost nothing by waiting.
-We have been guilty of no crime, and fate itself has played into
-our hands. And you, Octavia, in the prime of your beauty, are more
-magnificent than ever.”
-
-He drew her to a sofa and clasped an arm around her waist. Her head
-drooped to his shoulder. The flush of intense joy mantled her face.
-With all her soul Lady Wynde loved this man, and her voice trembled as
-she murmured:
-
-“Oh, Craven, I am glad that my life of hypocrisy is over at last, that
-there is no longer fear of discovery, and that we are free to enjoy
-our reward. How long ago it seems since you and I formed and entered
-upon our conspiracy which has placed me where I am! I was a widow with
-a meager income and expensive tastes. You were a widower with a son to
-educate, and a beggarly home and a beggarly income, so that you could
-not afford to marry. How well I remember that night in London, when you
-told me that if I had courage and boldness proportionate to my beauty,
-I could make our fortunes and our happiness. I eagerly asked how I
-could do this, and you showed me a copy of a Court Journal in which
-was a paragraph to the effect that ‘Sir Harold Wynde had gone down
-to Brighton, and that his presence there had created quite a flutter
-among marriageable ladies.’ And then you told me of his wealth and
-generosity, and urged me to try my fascinations upon him, to win him,
-to marry him--and to succeed in good time to a handsome fortune upon
-which you and I could marry. How long ago all that seems!”
-
-“Was it not a clever idea, and cleverly executed?” said Mr. Black
-triumphantly. “It was a successful conspiracy, Octavia, and to you
-belongs the credit of its success. You went down to Brighton; you
-introduced yourself in a novel manner to Sir Harold Wynde; and you
-followed up the acquaintance with such effect that he offered you
-marriage. And as that was what you wanted, you married him. You would
-have made yourself a widow, but that fate saved you the trouble.
-Two years and six months ago you were a poor widow, unable to marry
-me because of our mutual poverty. Now you are again a widow, rich,
-respected, honored throughout Kent, and can marry whom you please. I
-am as poor as I was three years ago, and yet, Octavia, I know that you
-prefer me to all other men. Is it not so?”
-
-Lady Wynde blushed as she murmured assent. She was essentially bad,
-being unprincipled and unscrupulous, but she loved Craven Black with
-her whole heart, and with a fervor that astonished herself.
-
-After the death of her first husband, Lady Wynde had first met Craven
-Black. They had fallen in love with each other, as the phrase goes, at
-their first meeting. He was a gambler, dissolute--an adventurer, in
-fact, although his respectable birth and connections prevented the name
-from attaching to him. He was a widower, and possessed but a scanty
-settled income; yet, from his nefarious gains at the gambling table,
-and in other ways, he managed to keep up the appearance of a man of
-fashion, to keep a private cab and a tiger, chambers at the Albany,
-and to educate his only son, now a man grown. His gains were, however,
-precarious, and he declined entering upon marriage with a person even
-poorer than himself.
-
-Lady Wynde, in the days of her first widowhood, had been but little
-better than an adventuress. It is true that she had a respectable
-name, high connections, and a home in her aunt’s house in Bloomsbury
-Square; but she was ambitious of social position, she chafed at her
-poverty, and had too much worldly wisdom to marry Craven Black in the
-then state of their fortunes, even had he desired it.
-
-When his fertile brain, therefore, formed a scheme by which she could
-enrich them both by imposing upon a high-minded gentleman, marrying,
-and then putting him out of her way as if his life were valueless, she
-hesitated, and finally consented. How she had carried out her share in
-the foul conspiracy against Sir Harold, the reader knows.
-
-“Four thousand pounds a year and a good house are worth serving for,”
-said Mr. Black meditatively. “I think, however, that we have waited
-long enough, Octavia. When are you going to marry me?”
-
-“Not before September,” declared Lady Wynde decisively. “I must have
-a magnificent wardrobe. I am so tired of dowdy black. And as I shall
-have to give up the Wynde family diamonds to the heiress, I must order
-some jewels for myself. Let us appoint our marriage to take place in
-October. People will talk if it occurs sooner.”
-
-Craven Black smiled cynically.
-
-“Shall you care what people say?” he inquired. “I thought you were a
-law unto yourself.”
-
-“Indeed I am not. No woman in the world has a greater regard for ‘they
-say’ than I have,” returned Lady Wynde emphatically. “You see I cannot
-afford to turn my back upon Mrs. Grundy. I am ambitious to be a social
-leader, and to become so, I must give people faith in my knowledge of
-the proprieties of life. I occupy a high position here as the widow of
-Sir Harold Wynde, and he was a sort of idol here, so that, I dare say,
-people will be jealous of my marrying at all. And then, again, I desire
-to gain the love and confidence of my step-daughter before I remarry.
-Her guardianship is worth three thousand a year to me. I shall have
-that sum annually as a recompense for chaperoning her.”
-
-“I would be willing to chaperon several young ladies on such terms,”
-said Mr. Black. “How old is she?”
-
-“About eighteen.”
-
-“And how large an income has she?”
-
-“Seventy thousand a year.”
-
-An eager light came into Craven Black’s eyes, and an eager glow mounted
-to his fair face.
-
-“A handsome sum,” he ejaculated. “She has a glorious inheritance. What
-sort of girl is she?”
-
-“A bread-and-butter school-girl, I suppose. I have never met her. She
-was Sir Harold’s idol, and he was always wanting her to come home, but
-I did not want her jealous eyes spying on me, so I contrived to keep
-her away. She has not been at Hawkhurst since my coming.”
-
-“You correspond with her?”
-
-“I write to her now and then, and she sends me a duty letter, as I call
-it, once a month. I generally read a line or two and throw them aside.”
-
-“Has she any love affair?” inquired Mr. Black thoughtfully.
-
-“Of course not. A girl in a French boarding-school might as well be in
-a convent, as far as love affairs are concerned. What are you thinking
-of, Craven?” and Lady Wynde looked at him jealously.
-
-The glow on Craven Black’s face deepened, as he hastened to answer:
-
-“I was thinking what if this girl were to take a liking to my son
-Rufus? If we could bring about a marriage between her and Rufus, we
-should retain her fortune in the family, and Rufus should agree to
-allow us ten thousand a year for using our influence with her. What do
-you think?”
-
-Lady Wynde looked startled--pleased.
-
-“The very thing!” she exclaimed. “I have been thinking that I should
-not long be allowed to remain mistress of Hawkhurst after Neva’s
-return. An heiress like her will not want for suitors, and she will
-marry, and I cannot prevent it. The proper way is to direct her
-marriage for our own benefit. Is Rufus likely to please a romantic
-school-girl?”
-
-“I think he cannot fail to please her. He is not yet one and twenty,
-well-looking, accomplished, well educated, rather weak-willed and
-easily governed, and like clay in my hands. He has romantic notions
-about love and marriage, and if he is on the ground first I am sure he
-will win the girl’s heart. I had a quarrel with him some weeks ago, and
-he went away from me at my command, and has taken cheap rooms somewhere
-and is trying to live by painting cheap pictures, or some such thing.
-I’ll send for him, and have him up at Wyndham directly.”
-
-“Why did you quarrel with him, Craven? I thought you were so fond of
-him.”
-
-“I was--I am. But he dared oppose his will to mine, and I turned him
-adrift, to let him try how he could get along without me. He is not
-long out of his university, and is perfectly helpless about earning
-money, but he has some high-flown notions which hardship will cure. To
-be frank, our quarrel was about a little music teacher that the boy
-thought himself in love with. He has given her up, and will be glad
-enough to be summoned to me. When will Miss Wynde be here?”
-
-“I had a letter to-day from Madame Dalaut, Neva’s preceptress,
-inquiring my wishes in regard to the girl. Neva has completed her
-studies, and Madame Dalaut insinuates that she ought to be removed
-from school and be allowed to enter society. Moreover, the midsummer
-holidays have commenced, and the other pupils are gone to their homes.
-I have concluded to send Artress over to Paris to-night to bring Neva
-home.”
-
-“Do so. My son shall also be at Wyndham to-morrow, and shall be
-introduced to the heiress the day after her return. I will engage rooms
-for Rufus and myself at the Wyndham inn, so that I can be near you
-until our marriage. Is this plan agreeable to you?”
-
-“Perfectly. We must be prompt in our actions. Neva must become engaged
-to Rufus before she actually enters society here. Her marriage can
-take place at the same time with our own in October. Elise can do the
-two trousseaux at the same time. It is an admirable plan, and a worthy
-continuation of our little game.”
-
-They talked further, disclosing to each other their nefarious plans of
-self-aggrandizement. Craven Black talked in lover-like fashion, and
-even the exacting Lady Wynde was persuaded that his passion for her had
-received a new impulse, and that he loved her as she loved him--with an
-utter devotion.
-
-As the dinner hour drew near Mr. Black took his departure, not caring
-to excite the gossip of the household upon his first visit to Lady
-Wynde. Directly after dinner, Artress, attired in gray travelling suit,
-set out in a carriage for Canterbury, on her way to Paris, whence she
-was to bring to her own home the heiress of Hawkhurst.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII. NEVA’S FIRST LOVER.
-
-
-The dingy little packet-boat from Calais to Dover, carrying the mails,
-bore her usual complement of passengers upon the bright midsummer day
-upon which young Neva Wynde returned after years of absence to her own
-country.
-
-A few tall, mustached Frenchmen, with cigars in their mouths; a
-German or two with the inevitable pipe; a few students returning from
-foreign universities; a few pedestrian tourists with hobnailed shoes,
-preposterous alpenstocks, and a proudly displayed Bradshaw or Murray;
-several stout and puffy Englishmen, with singularly pale faces, and the
-usual number of rotund ill-dressed English women, with flimsy muslin
-dresses and fur tippets in odd contrast--a conjunction much affected
-by the average British lady--made up the majority of the passengers.
-Some of these people walked about, affecting to enjoy the fresh breeze;
-others studied the now useless guide-book, recalling their adventures;
-and others scanned the blue shores of France alternately with the
-chalk cliffs of England through the tourist glasses slung from their
-shoulders, and wondered aloud if the passage would be accomplished in
-the usual ninety minutes.
-
-An odd feature of a Channel packet is the total disregard of
-appearances manifested by the passengers upon it.
-
-Very few, if any, persons go below into the stuffy little cabins, and
-doubting souls provide themselves with ominous white bowls at the
-outset of the voyage, and should illness come upon them they proceed
-to make themselves comfortable upon the deck, or moan, or swear,
-according to the sex of the sufferer, totally unmindful and oblivious
-of lookers on.
-
-In a corner by herself, at one side of the boat, her thick green vail
-over her face shrouding a bowl that filled her lap, sat Artress, Lady
-Wynde’s gray companion, in a condition of abject misery. She had no
-thought of any one but herself in that crisis of her physical career,
-and gave no heed to her young charge, the one great desire of her soul
-being to find herself once more upon solid land.
-
-At the opposite side of the boat, leaning lightly upon the rail, and
-looking back with wistful, longing eyes upon the fading blue of the
-French shores, stood a young girl who was strangely lovely. She was
-slender and graceful as a swaying reed, and her lithe, light figure
-carried itself with a slight hauteur that was inexpressibly charming.
-Her high-bred manner, her evident gentleness and sweetness, betrayed
-thorough culture of heart and mind. Her face was a rare poem. The
-features were slightly irregular, and even in repose, with a grave
-shadow upon her fair brows, her countenance had a bright, piquant
-witchery. Her complexion was very pure and fair, her lips a vivid
-scarlet, and under her broad forehead a pair of wondrous red-brown eyes
-sparkled and glowed with strange brilliancy. Her hair, very abundant,
-and of a reddish-brown tint as rare as beautiful, was gathered into
-braids at the back of her small, noble head.
-
-She was dressed in a traveling suit of black cashmere, and wore a black
-hat surmounted with a scarlet wing.
-
-She was Neva Wynde, the owner of Hawkhurst, one of the greatest
-heiresses in England, and now the object of the sinister machinations
-of her handsome step-mother and Craven Black.
-
-Her school-days were over, and she was on her way to a home she had not
-visited for years, and to a guardian whom she did not know, and who
-was secretly her enemy. She had emerged from the pleasant security of
-the school-room into a region of perils. A premonition of the dangers
-before her seemed almost to come upon her now, and into her glowing
-eyes crept a look of sorrowful yearning, and of passionate protest
-against the friendlessness of her lot.
-
-A few feet distant from her, also leaning upon the railing, stood a
-young man, whose gaze, ostensibly fixed upon the French coast, now and
-then rested upon the girl’s speaking face with an expression of keen
-admiration and interest. He thought in his own soul that he had never
-seen a being so fresh, so dainty, so pure, so rarely beautiful. She
-seemed utterly alone. No one inquired how she felt, nor offered her a
-seat, nor looked after her, and her young admirer wondered if she were
-all alone in the world, as she seemed.
-
-He was speculating upon the subject when a sudden lurch of the boat
-upon the short, chopping Channel waves, caused Neva to involuntarily
-loosen her hold upon the railing, and pitched her abruptly along the
-deck toward him. He sprang forward and caught her in his arms. She
-recovered her equilibrium upon the instant, and again grasped the
-railing, blushing, confused, and murmuring her thanks for his civility.
-
-“The Channel is rough to-day,” remarked the young gentleman. “Shall I
-not find you a seat?”
-
-“Thank you, no,” returned Neva, in her sweet, low, cultured voice. “I
-prefer standing.”
-
-The words were simple enough, and her manner was quiet and reserved,
-but her voice went to the young man’s heart, thrilling it with a
-strange sensation. He did not attempt a retreat, and Neva looked up at
-him with something of surprise in her glorious red-brown eyes.
-
-As he encountered her full gaze, his face flushed, his eyes glowed, and
-a warm smile curved his mouth.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” he said, “but are you not Miss Wynde of Hawkhurst?”
-
-Neva bowed assent, with an increasing surprise.
-
-“I was sure, when I met your full glance, that you were Neva Wynde,”
-cried the young gentleman. “You do not remember me, I see; and yet,
-when you went away to that odious Paris school you and I parted with
-tears, and you promised to be true to me, little Neva. And you have
-forgotten me--”
-
-“No, no,” cried the young girl, an answering glow in her face, and
-her eyes shining like suns. “Is it really you, Arthur? How you have
-changed!”
-
-She held out her hand to him, and he clasped it with a warm, lingering
-pressure. Her eyes scanned his face in an earnest scrutiny, and she
-blushed again when she saw how handsome he was, and how like he was to
-an ideal she had long cherished in the very depths of her young soul.
-
-He was fair, with warm blue eyes, golden hair, and a mustache of
-tawny gold. He had a frank, noble face, and his sunny eyes betrayed
-a generous soul. One who ran might read in his countenance a brave,
-dauntless soul, a grand, unselfish nature, an enlightened spirit, quick
-sympathies, and an honest, truthful, resolute character. Neva thought,
-as she shyly regarded him, that he was very like a hero of romance.
-
-“I can hardly believe that it is Arthur,” she said, smiling, her face
-softly flushing. “You are not at all like the Arthur Towyn I knew, and
-yet I can see the old boyish gayety and brightness of spirit. Your
-mustache has changed your looks greatly, Lord Towyn.”
-
-“It makes me look older perhaps,” said Lord Towyn gravely, “and as I
-am but three and twenty, and have a ward who is eighteen years old, it
-becomes me to produce as venerable an appearance as possible. Of course
-you are aware Neva, that I am one of the three trustees or guardians of
-your entire property, appointed by your father in his will?”
-
-“Yes, I knew it a year ago,” replied Neva, the brightness fading a
-little from her face. “Mr. Atkins wrote me about papa’s will. Mr.
-Atkins and Sir John Freise are the two other executors. You are very
-young for such an appointment, are you not, Lord Towyn?”
-
-“That is a fault that time will mend,” said his lordship, smiling. “I
-am young for the post, but Sir Harold Wynde knew that he could trust
-me, especially with two older heads to direct me. I am only the least
-of three, you know, and my youth was meant to balance Sir John Freise’s
-age. Your school life is over, is it not, Miss Wynde?”
-
-“Yes, it is over,” and Neva sighed. “I am on my way to a new sort of
-life, and to new acquaintances and friends. I feel a sort of terror of
-my future, Lord Towyn. I am foolish, I know, but a dread comes over
-me when I look forward to going home. Home! Ah, all that made the old
-house home has vanished. My poor brother George lies in an Indian
-grave. Papa--poor papa--”
-
-Her voice broke down, and she averted her head.
-
-Young Lord Towyn came nearer to her. He longed to press her hand and
-to offer her his sympathy. He comprehended her desolation, and the
-unhealed wound caused by Sir Harold’s fate. His heart bled for her.
-
-He had known Neva Wynde from her earliest childhood. They had played
-together in the woods and gardens of Hawkhurst and before Neva had been
-sent to her foreign school the child pair had betrothed themselves
-and vowed an eternal fidelity to each other. The late Earl Towyn, the
-father of Arthur, and Sir Harold Wynde had been college-mates, and it
-had been their dearest wish to unite their families in the persons of
-their children, but they had been too wise to broach the idea to the
-young couple. They had, however, encouraged the affection of Arthur
-and Neva for each other, and had looked forward hopefully to the time
-when that childish affection should possibly ripen into the love of
-manhood and womanhood. Soon after Neva’s departure for school Lord
-Towyn had died, and his son, then at college, had become earl in his
-stead. A mysterious fate had also removed Sir Harold Wynde, and Neva’s
-step-mother, as is known to the reader, had schemes of her own in
-regard to Neva’s marriage.
-
-The young earl’s mute sympathy seemed to penetrate to Neva’s heart,
-for presently she turned her face again to him, and although her mouth
-quivered her eyes were brave, as she said brokenly:
-
-“You will think me unchristian, Lord Towyn, but I cannot become
-reconciled to the manner of papa’s death. If he had but died as George
-died, peacefully in his bed; but his fate was so horrible--so awful! I
-sometimes fancy in the night that I can hear his cries and moans. In my
-own imagination I have witnessed his awful death a thousand times. The
-horror of it is as fresh to me now as when the news first came. Shall
-I ever get used to my sorrow? Will the time ever come, do you think,
-when I can think of papa with the calmness and resignation with which I
-think of my poor brother?”
-
-“It was horrible, even to me, beyond all words to describe,” said the
-young earl softly. “I loved Sir Harold only less than my own father,
-and I have mourned for him as if I had been his son. All ordinary words
-of consolation seem a mockery to one who mourns a friend who perished
-as he did. He was vigorous and young for his years, noble and true and
-good. Let us hope that his pangs and terrors were but brief, Neva.
-Perhaps his death was not so terrible to him as it seems to us. It were
-better so to die than to languish for years a prey to some excruciating
-disease. And let us remember ‘whatever is, is right.’ Instead of
-dwelling on the manner of his death, let us remember that his death was
-but the opening to him of the gates of life eternal.”
-
-Neva did not answer, but her face was very grave and tender, and her
-sun-like eyes glowed with a softer radiance. There was a brief silence
-between them, and finally Neva said, with an abrupt change of the
-subject:
-
-“Do you know Lady Wynde, Lord Towyn?”
-
-“I have met her several times, but not since Sir Harold’s death,” was
-the reply. “Is she traveling with you?” and the young earl glanced
-around the deck.
-
-“No, she sent her companion for me. That is Artress, on the other side
-of the boat. I have never seen Lady Wynde.”
-
-Lord Towyn looked his astonishment.
-
-“Have you not been home since your father’s marriage, nor since his
-death, Miss Wynde?” he asked.
-
-“No. Papa came once to see me at my school after his marriage, but he
-did not bring his wife. I have a picture of her which papa sent me. He
-must have adored her. His letters were full of loving praises of her,
-and in the last letter he wrote he told me that he desired me to love
-and obey her as if she were my own mother. His wishes are sacred to me
-now, and I shall try to love her. Is she very handsome?”
-
-“She is considered handsome,” replied Lord Towyn. “She is dark almost
-to swarthiness, and has a gypsy’s black eyes. Sir Harold almost
-worshiped her.”
-
-“Then she must be good?”
-
-Lord Towyn hesitated. He knew little of the handsome Lady Wynde, but he
-had an instinctive distrust of her.
-
-“She must be good,” he answered thoughtfully. “Had she not been good,
-Sir Harold would not have loved her.”
-
-“Ah, yes, I have thought that a hundred times,” said Neva. “I shall try
-to win her love. She is to stay at Hawkhurst as my personal guardian
-during my minority, and there can be no indifference between us. It
-must be peace or war. I intend it shall be peace. You see, Lord Towyn,
-that I shall be almost completely dependent upon her for society and
-friendship. I am coming back a stranger to my childhood’s home. Years
-of absence have estranged me from the friends I knew, and I have no one
-outside of Hawkhurst to look to, save Mr. Atkins and Sir John Freise.”
-
-“And me,” said Lord Towyn earnestly. “I am associated with them, you
-know. But you will not be so utterly friendless as you think. The
-old county families will hasten to call upon you, and you can select
-your own friends among them. The Lady of Hawkhurst will be feted and
-welcomed, and made much of. Your trouble will soon be that you will
-have no time to yourself. I desire to add myself to your list of
-visitors. I am staying this summer at a place of mine on the Kentish
-coast. But here is the Dover pier straight ahead, Miss Wynde. We have
-made the voyage in good time, despite the roughness of the Channel.”
-
-There was no time for further conversation. The suggestive bowls were
-being hidden under benches by the late sufferers, and bundles, boxes
-and bags were being sought after with reviving energies. Artress
-arose, found her traveling bag and umbrellas, and then sought for her
-charge. As her gaze encountered Neva’s piquant face upturned to the
-admiring glances of a handsome young gentleman, she looked shocked and
-horrified, and her sharp, ashen-hued features became vinegary in their
-expression. She approached the young lady with unseemly haste, and
-exclaimed:
-
-“Miss Wynde, I am surprised--”
-
-“Pardon me,” said Neva, quietly interposing, although her face flushed
-haughtily, “but I desire to introduce to you, Mrs. Artress, my old
-friend Lord Towyn.”
-
-The young earl bowed, and Mrs. Artress did the same, divided between
-her desire to be polite to a nobleman and her anger that Neva should
-have renewed his acquaintance while under her charge. Artress was deep
-in the confidence of Lady Wynde and Craven Black, and her interests
-were identical with theirs. She had a keen scent for danger, and in the
-attitude of Lord Towyn toward Neva she recognized an admiration which
-might easily deepen into love.
-
-“Come, my dear,” said Mrs. Artress anxiously. “The boat is at the pier,
-and we must hasten ashore. Give me your dressing bag--”
-
-She paused, seeing that Lord Towyn had already possessed himself of it.
-The young earl offered his arm to Neva, and she placed her hand lightly
-upon it, and was conducted along the boat to the place of landing. Mrs.
-Artress followed, biting her lips with chagrin.
-
-The landing and examination of baggage were duly accomplished, and
-Lord Towyn conducted his charges to a first-class coach of the waiting
-train, seated them, and took his place beside Neva.
-
-“Are you going to Hawkhurst also, my lord?” inquired Mrs. Artress
-sourly, as he fed the guard handsomely, in order that no other
-travelers might be ushered into their compartment.
-
-“No, madam, not to-day,” answered the young earl pleasantly. “I am on
-my way to Canterbury to consult with Sir John Freise and Mr. Atkins
-concerning some business relative to the Hawkhurst property, and I
-shall probably do myself the honor to call with them upon Miss Wynde in
-a day or two.”
-
-“Lady Wynde will be happy to see you and to consult with you,” said
-Mrs. Artress, with ill-concealed annoyance. “Miss Wynde is too young,
-I should judge, to understand anything about business. Besides, her
-friends should spare her all trouble of that description.”
-
-“I shall be always ready to consult with you about business, Lord
-Towyn,” said Neva in her clear, low voice. “I desire to fit myself
-for my position as owner and dispenser of a large income. I regard
-the money intrusted to me as a talent for which I shall be called to
-account, and I want to learn to manage my affairs properly, and with
-prudence and discretion. I think,” she added lightly, “that I shall
-take Miss Burdett Coutts as my exemplar in this matter. She is a
-business woman, I understand, and I should like to be like her.”
-
-Mrs. Artress was silenced, but she thought within herself:
-
-“Our young lady has opinions of her own, and has the courage to express
-them. I am afraid that she is not the bread and butter school-girl we
-expected. I am afraid that we shall have trouble with her.”
-
-The journey to Canterbury was accomplished only too quickly for Lord
-Towyn and Neva. They talked of their childhood, but no allusion was
-made to their childish betrothal, although both doubtless thought of
-it. The young earl explained that he had been over to Brussels for a
-week, and had no thought of meeting her on his way home, and his face
-as well as his tones told how glad he was of that meeting.
-
-The Hawkhurst carriage with its liveried servants was in waiting at the
-Canterbury station when they alighted. Lord Towyn assisted the ladies
-into the vehicle, bade them adieu, and as they drove away followed them
-with a lingering gaze.
-
-“How beautiful Neva is!” he murmured to himself. “And so pure and
-sweet and tender, yet spirited! I wonder if she remembers our childish
-betrothal? I don’t like that Artress, and I do not quite like Lady
-Wynde. I hardly think Neva will be happy with her, their natures
-being so dissimilar. I must go out to Hawkhurst to-morrow, and judge
-whether they are likely to get on together. If Neva does not like her
-step-mother, she has but one avenue of escape from her dominion before
-she becomes of age, and that avenue is marriage. If she would only
-marry me. I love her already. Love her! I could adore her.”
-
-A passionate flush arose to his fair cheek, and a tender glowing light
-to his warm blue eyes, and he descended the steps and strode out of
-the station, his heart thrilling with the strange and new sensation
-which he now knew was love. And as he walked along the street, he vowed
-within himself that he would woo and, if he could, would win young Neva
-Wynde to be his wife.
-
-Ah, he little knew the gulfs that would arise between him and her--the
-dangers, the perils, the sorrows, they two must taste. And even as he
-strode along, acknowledging to his own soul that he was Neva’s lover,
-Neva was speeding across the pleasant country toward the home where
-her enemy awaited her with schemes perfected, and an evil heart hidden
-under a smiling face.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII. THE SON OF THE HONORABLE CRAVEN BLACK.
-
-
-Upon the morning of the day on which Neva Wynde and Lord Towyn so
-strangely encountered each other upon the dingy packet-boat--an
-encounter that was destined to be fateful--a scene transpired in one of
-the London suburbs to which we would call the attention of the reader.
-
-In an upper room, in one of the dingiest houses of one of the dingiest
-crescents at New Brompton, a young man, a mere youth, was engaged in
-painting a picture. The room was bare and comfortless, with threadbare
-carpet, decrepit and worn-out furniture, and springless sofa-bed--one
-of the poorest rooms, in fact, a lodging-house of the fourth rate can
-furnish. There were two windows without curtains, and provided only
-with torn and faded blue paper shades, rolled up and confined with
-cotton cord. A few ashes were in the grate, showing that although the
-season was summer, a fire had lately burned there.
-
-The picture which the youth was painting stood upon an easel before
-one of the windows, and was but little better than a daub. It had been
-sketched by a bold and vigorous hand, but was faulty in conception and
-ill-colored. The light upon it was bad, and the hand that wielded the
-brush was trembling and impatient, weakened by fasting and emotions.
-
-The painter looked a mere boy, although he was full twenty years of
-age. His complexion was florid, his eyes hazel in hue, and he wore his
-brown hair long, artist fashion, and tossed back from his high white
-forehead. He was handsome, with an honest look in his eyes, and a
-pleasant mouth, but his chin was short, and weak in its expression, and
-his countenance betrayed a character full of good and noble impulses,
-yet with a weakness, indecision, and irresolution that might yet prove
-fatal to him.
-
-He was dressed in a shabby velveteen jacket, daubed with paints and out
-at the elbows. His garments, like his lodging, betrayed poverty of the
-most unmitigated description.
-
-This young man was Rufus Black, the only son of Craven Black who was
-Lady Wynde’s lover. And it was Rufus Black whom his father and Lady
-Wynde had planned should marry Neva Wynde, and thus play into their
-hands, enabling them to possess themselves of a portion of Neva’s noble
-fortune.
-
-As Mr. Black had said, he had quarrelled with his son some weeks
-before, and cast him off, penniless and destitute of friends, to shift
-for himself. He had drifted to his present lodgings, and was trying to
-keep soul and body together by painting wretched pictures, which he
-sold to a general dealer for wretched pay.
-
-“The picture don’t suit me,” he said, pushing back his chair, that he
-might get a better view of the painting. “It’s only a daub, but it’s as
-good as the pay. I’ve been three days at it, and it won’t bring me in
-even the fifteen shillings I got for the last. It will do to stop up a
-chimney-place, I suppose--and I had such grand ideas of my art, and of
-my talents! I meant to achieve fame and fortune, and here I am without
-food or fuel, with the rent due, and with my soul so fettered by these
-cares, so borne down by despair and remorse, that I am incapable of
-work. I am gone to the dogs, as my father told me to go--but, oh, why
-did I not travel the downward road alone? Why must I drag _her_ down
-with me?”
-
-A despairing look gathered on his face; the tears filled his eyes; a
-sob escaped him. He looked haggard, worn and despairing. He was in no
-condition for work, yet he resumed his task with blinded eyes, and
-painted on at random with feverish haste.
-
-He had grown somewhat calmer, with the calmness of an utter despair,
-when the door opened, and a girl came in bearing a large basket heavily
-loaded. She was a slender young creature, not more than seventeen
-years old, and her pale face and narrow chest betrayed a tendency to
-consumption. Her complexion was of a clear olive tint; her hair was
-of a blue-black color, and was worn in braids; her eyes were dark
-and loving, with an appealing expression in them; and, despite the
-circumstances of her lot, she maintained a hopeful, sunshiny spirit and
-a sunshiny countenance.
-
-She was the young music-teacher for whose sake Rufus Black had
-quarrelled with his father. She was the last member of a large family
-who had all died of consumption. She had lost her situation in a
-ladies’ school about the time that Rufus had separated himself from
-his father; and after the young man had abandoned his parent, he had
-hastened to her and begged her to marry him. He was full of hope,
-ambitious, determined to achieve fame and fortune by his painter’s
-brush, and she was weak and worn, sorrowful and nearly ill, and quite
-penniless. Believing in his talents and ability to support them both,
-she had accepted the refuge he offered her, and one week after Craven
-Black had turned his son adrift, the young pair were married, and moved
-into their present dingy quarters.
-
-They had joined their poverty together, and soon discovered that the
-achievement of fame and wealth was uphill work. Rufus was fresh from
-his university, unused to work for his bread, and he had overrated
-his talent for painting, as he presently discovered. He found it hard
-work to sell his poor efforts, and he could not paint enough at first
-to bring him in twenty shillings a week. It was now three months
-since his marriage, and one by one his books, his better articles of
-clothing, his watch, and other trinkets, had been sold or pledged to
-buy necessaries or pay the rent. Upon this morning they had had no
-breakfast.
-
-“How big your eyes are, Rufus!” laughed the young wife, throwing
-off her battered little hat. “You look as if I had brought you some
-priceless treasure; but you well may, for I have the nicest little
-breakfast we have had for a week.”
-
-“Where did you get it?” inquired the young artist, his thin cheeks
-flushing with an eagerness he would have concealed. “Have you prevailed
-on the grocer to give us credit?”
-
-“No, I could not do that,” and the young wife shook her head. “I’m
-afraid his heart is as hard as the nether mill-stone we read about.
-He thinks I’m a humbug--a cheat! But our landlady, Mrs. McKellar,
-you know, has faith in your picture, and I borrowed two shillings of
-her. See what a sumptuous repast we shall have,” and she proceeded to
-display the contents of her basket, unpacking them swiftly. “Here’s
-two-pence worth of coffee, a pennyworth of milk, a threepenny loaf,
-and a superb rasher of ham of the kind described by the Irishman as ‘a
-strake of fat and a strake of lane.’ And here’s a bundle of wood to
-boil the coffee; and I’ve gone to the extravagance of a sixpenny pot of
-jam, your appetite is so delicate. And now for breakfast.”
-
-She piled her wood skillfully in the grate, put on her coffee-pot and
-frying pan, and lighted her fire.
-
-Then while her breakfast was cooking, she laid her table with her
-scanty ware, and bustled about like an incarnate sunbeam, and no one
-would have suspected that she too was weak and hungry, and that she was
-sick at heart and full of dread for the future.
-
-“So breakfast is provided for,” murmured Rufus Black, in a tone in
-which it would have been hard to tell which predominated, relief
-or bitterness. “I began to fear we should fast to-day, as we did
-yesterday.”
-
-The young wife turned her rasher of ham in the pan, and put her small
-allowance of coffee in the pot, before she answered gravely:
-
-“Rufus, I think I might get another situation to teach music. I have
-good references, you know. I don’t like being so utterly dependent upon
-you. You have not been used to work. I’m afraid we did very wrong in
-getting married.”
-
-“What else could we do?” demanded Rufus Black. “I could not see you
-working yourself to death, Lally, when a little care would save you.
-You had to go out of doors in all weathers, and you were going into
-a galloping consumption. I expected to be able to support you, but
-I’m only a useless fellow, after all. I thought I had talent, but it
-has turned out like the fairy money--it has turned to dead leaves at
-the moment of using it. I have a university education, and would be
-thankful for a situation as usher in a dame’s school. I am willing to
-dig ditches, only I’m not strong enough. Oh, Lally, little wife, what
-is to become of us?”
-
-Lally Black--she had been christened Lalla by her romantic mother,
-after the heroine of Moore’s poem, but her name had lost its romantic
-sound through years of every-day use--approached her young husband, and
-softly laid her cheek against his. She stroked his hand gently as she
-said:
-
-“It is I who am useless, Rufus. You ought to have married a rich wife
-instead of a poor little music-teacher. I’m afraid you’ll reproach me
-in your heart some day for marrying you--there, there, dear boy! I did
-not mean it. I know you will never regret our marriage, let what will
-be the result!”
-
-She caressed him tenderly, and then hurried to the fire intent upon
-her breakfast. The coffee was steaming, and the ham was cooked. The
-busy little housewife made a round of toast, and then announced that
-breakfast was ready. Rufus drew up his chair to the table, and Lally
-waited upon him, and was so gay and bright and hopeful that he became
-infected with her spirit.
-
-But when the delicious breakfast was over he became grave and haggard
-again, and bowed his face on his hand and sat in silence, while she
-washed the dishes and carefully put away the remnants of the meal. Then
-she came to him and sat on his knee, and drew his hand from his face,
-and whispered:
-
-“Rufus, is your father rich?”
-
-“He has some three or four hundred pounds a year--that’s all,” answered
-Rufus. “Why do you ask?”
-
-“Could he not assist us a little, if he wished?” ventured Lally. “I
-have no relative to apply to. I had a great-aunt who married a rich
-man, and I think she lives in London, but I don’t know her name, and
-she probably never heard of me, so I can’t write or go to her. Let us
-humble ourselves to your father, dear--”
-
-“To what purpose?” interposed Rufus half fiercely. “My father is a
-mercenary, villainous--Don’t stop me, Lally. I am telling the truth, if
-he _is_ my father. Thank God, I took after my poor mother. My father
-does not know we are married, and I dare not tell him. If I fear
-anybody in this world, I fear my father.”
-
-“But he must know some time of our marriage,” urged the young wife.
-“You make me afraid, dear, that we did wrong in marrying. We are too
-young, and I had to work for my living. Your father could never forgive
-me, and accept me as his daughter. My family is of no account, and
-yours is good. People think of all these things, and you will be looked
-down upon for your unfortunate, ill-starred marriage. Oh, Rufus, if we
-could undo what we have done, it might be well for us.”
-
-The young husband endeavored to console his wife, and he had brought
-back her bright hopefulness, when the postman’s knock was heard on
-the street door. A sudden hope thrilled them both. They listened
-breathlessly, and not in vain. Presently the housemaid’s heavy tread
-was heard on the stairs, and she entered the room, bringing a letter.
-
-When she had departed, Rufus opened the letter, and the young couple
-perused it together. It was dated Wyndham village, and had been written
-by Craven Black, and contained simply an announcement that the father
-desired to be reconciled to his son; that he saw a way in which he
-could make Rufus a rich man; and he begged his son, if he also desired
-a reconciliation and wealth, and was willing to submit himself to his
-father’s will, to come to him at once by the earliest train. Between
-the leaves of the letter was a ten-pound note.
-
-“You will go, of course?” cried the young wife excitedly.
-
-“I wish I knew what he meant,” muttered Rufus irresolutely.
-
-“He is your father, dear, and you will go,” urged Lally. “For my sake,
-you will go. And Rufus, I beg you to yield to his wishes. They will not
-be unreasonable, I am sure. Say you will go!”
-
-Rufus hesitated. He knew that when with his father, he was a coward
-without a will of his own. What if he should be driven into some act
-he should hereafter repent? Yet at last he consented to go to his
-father, and an hour later he divided his money with his wife, giving
-her the larger share, and took his departure. At that last moment a
-horrible misgiving came over him, and he ran back and kissed the little
-sunshiny face he loved, and then he went out again and made his way to
-the station, with a death-like pall upon his soul.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX. A KNOT SUMMARILY SEVERED.
-
-
-Rufus Black’s heart grew heavier still, and his sense of dread
-deepened, as he steamed down to Canterbury in the express train. He
-had a seat by a window in a second-class compartment in which were
-four other passengers, but he was as much alone as if he had had the
-compartment to himself. His travelling companions chatted and laughed
-and jested among themselves, while he looked from his window upon
-hop-gardens, green fields, and clustering hamlets, with sad, unseeing
-eyes, and thought of his poverty, his friendlessness, and the slow
-starvation that lay before him and his young wife.
-
-“I could bear it for myself,” he thought bitterly. “But it is hard to
-see Lally suffer, and I know she does suffer, although she seems so
-light-hearted and brave. My poor little wife! Ah, what place have I in
-the world of gay idlers and strong workers? I am neither the one nor
-the other. What is to be the end of it all?”
-
-He looked enviously at the workers in a brick-yard the train was
-passing at that moment. There were men there, coarse and ignorant, but
-brawny of limb and broad of chest; and there were children too, boys
-and girls of tender years, working steadily for scanty pay; but they
-were all workers, and they looked stolidly contented with their lot.
-
-“With all my university education,” thought the boy artist bitterly,
-“I am less capable of self-support than those ignorant brick-makers.
-Why did my father bring me up with expensive tastes and like the heir
-of fine estates, only to cast me off to starve at the first moment
-I displeased him? What is the empty name of gentleman worth, if one
-cannot keep it and be a worker? If he had put me to some trade, I
-should not have been half so miserable to-day. I am only twenty years
-old, and my life is a failure at the outset.”
-
-The train swept on through new scenes, and the course of the young
-man’s musings was changed, but their bitterness remained in full
-strength.
-
-“I wonder what my father can want of me,” he said to himself presently.
-“How can he put me in the way of a fortune? He promised that I should
-study law, but he has forgotten the promise. With a profession to
-depend upon, I know I could win a competence. Perhaps it is to speak of
-this he has sent for me this morning. He surely cannot mean for me,”
-and the young man’s brow darkened, “to become a gambler, as he has
-been? I shall refuse, if he proposes it. For my innocent Lally’s sake,
-I will keep myself pure of his vices.”
-
-This resolution was strong within him when he alighted from the train
-at Canterbury and took a hansom cab to Wyndham village. The drive of
-several miles was occupied with speculations as to what his father
-wanted of him, and with thoughts of his young wife in her dingy
-lodgings at New Brompton, and he did not even notice the houses, farms
-and villas they passed, nor any feature of the scenery, until the horse
-slackened his speed to a walk, and the driver opened his small trap in
-the roof, and said:
-
-“The house yonder on the ridge, sir, is Hawkhurst, the seat of the
-Wynde family. Sir Harold Wynde died in India a year ago, you know, sir,
-and the property belongs to his only child, a daughter. A mile or so
-beyond is Wyndham village.”
-
-Rufus Black turned his gaze upon the fair domain of the Wyndes. It lay
-on both sides of the highway, stretching as far as his eye could reach.
-The grand old mansion of gray stone, with outlying houses of glass
-glittering in the summer sunshine like immense jewels, the great lawns,
-the gardens, the park, the cool woods, all these made up one of the
-fairest pictures the eyes of Rufus Black had ever rested upon.
-
-“How glorious!” he said involuntarily. “And it all belongs to a lady!”
-
-“Yes, sir, a mere girl,” replied the cabman. “She is at school in
-France. It’s a great place, is Hawkhurst.”
-
-He dropped the trap and urged on his horse, but Rufus continued to look
-upon the house and estate with great, envious eyes. Why should all this
-belong to one, and that one a mere girl, while he wanted for bread? His
-soul was convulsed with bitterness and repining, and the shadow of his
-trouble rested upon his face.
-
-A few minutes of brisk driving brought them to Wyndham village, which
-consisted merely of one long straggling street, lined with houses and
-gardens. In the very centre of the street, upon four corners formed
-by the intersection of a country road, was gathered the business
-portion of the hamlet. Upon the corner was the village smithy, from
-whose open door came the ringing sound of hammer upon anvil. A group
-of countrymen were gathered about the door of the smithy, and a few
-carts stood before it on the paved street. Upon a second corner was a
-general shop and postoffice in one. Upon a third corner was a rival
-establishment, of the same description, but without the advantage and
-prestige of the postoffice, and on the fourth corner stood the Wyndham
-Inn, with its swinging sign, ample court-yard and hospitable look.
-
-It was an old stone building, with a wide portico in front, on which
-were tables and chairs. Rufus Black was driven into the court, and
-sprang out of the cab, at the same moment that the portly, rubicund
-landlord came out to receive him. The young man inquired for his
-father, and was informed that he was in his rooms at the inn. Rufus
-paid and dismissed the cabman, and followed the landlord into the inn.
-
-He was conducted up a flight of uncarpeted stairs, and the landlord
-pointed out to him the door of a front chamber as the one at which he
-was to knock. Rufus quietly lifted the latch and ushered himself into
-the room, closing the door behind him.
-
-The room was a pleasant little country parlor, with three casement
-windows, a faded carpet on the floor, cane-seated furniture, and a
-jug of flowers on the mantel-shelf. The sunlight streamed in, but its
-heat was tempered by the delicious breeze. The Honorable Craven Black
-was not in the room, but there were vestiges of his occupancy on every
-side. Upon a small table stood his massive dressing case with mirror
-and brushes mounted in exquisitely carved ivory, and with boxes and
-bottle-stoppers of finely chased and solid gold. All the appointments
-of the large case were luxurious in the extreme, and Rufus thought
-bitterly that the sum which that Sybaritic affair had cost would be a
-fortune to him in his own present destitution.
-
-A beautiful inlaid writing case, a tobacco jar of the finest Sevres
-porcelain, a Turkish pipe mounted in gold and amber, a liqueur case,
-and various other costly trifles, were scattered lavishly about. The
-Honorable Craven Black had never denied himself a luxury in his life,
-and these things he carried with him wherever he went, as necessary to
-his comfort and happiness.
-
-Rufus Black’s lips curled as he looked on these luxuries and mentally
-calculated their cost. He was in the midst of his calculation when the
-door of the adjoining bedroom was opened from within, and his father
-came out, habited in slippers and dressing-gown, and with an Indian
-embroidered cap of scarlet and gold poised lightly on his fair head.
-
-His light eyes opened a little wider than usual as he beheld his son,
-and his usual cynical smile showed itself disagreeably around his white
-teeth.
-
-“So you’ve come at last, have you?” he exclaimed. “I expected you
-yesterday.”
-
-“I received your letter this morning, soon after breakfast, sir,”
-answered Rufus, “and I came on at once in the express train. I have
-changed my lodgings from the one you knew, and the letter was sent on
-from my old to my new address.”
-
-Mr. Black eyed his son critically, his cynical smile deepening.
-
-“You have a general out-at-the-elbows look,” he observed. “You’ve gone
-down hill since I threw you over. You look hungry and desperate!”
-
-“I am both,” was the reply, in a reckless tone. “And I have reason to
-be. I am starving!”
-
-Mr. Black flung himself into the only easy chair the room afforded, and
-made a gesture to his son to be seated upon the couch. Rufus obeyed.
-
-“You are in the mood I hoped to find you,” declared the father, with
-a disagreeable laugh. “Desperate--starving! That is better than I
-expected. What has become of all your fine anticipations of wealth and
-fortune achieved with your brush? You do not find it easy to paint
-famous pictures?”
-
-“I mistook my desires for ability,” cried Rufus, his eyes darkening
-with the pain of his confession. “I have a liking for painting, and
-I fancied that liking was genius. I find myself crippled by not
-knowing how to do anything well. My pictures bring me in fifteen
-shillings apiece, and cost me three days’ work. I could earn more at
-brick-making--if I only knew how to make bricks. When you sent me to
-the university, father, you said I should study a profession. I demand
-of you the fulfilment of that promise. I want some way to earn my
-living!”
-
-“Better get a living without work,” said Mr. Black coolly. “I don’t
-like work, and I don’t believe you do. You want to study law, but your
-talents are not transcendent, my son--you will never sit upon the
-woolsack.”
-
-“If I can earn two hundred pounds a year, I will ask nothing more,”
-said Rufus bitterly. “I have discovered for myself that my abilities
-are mediocre. I shall never be great as anything--unless as a failure!
-But if I can only glide along in the great stream of mediocre people,
-and be nothing above or below them, I shall be content!”
-
-“And you say this at twenty years old?” cried his father mockingly.
-“You talk like one of double your years. Where have your hopefulness,
-your bright dreams, your glowing anticipations, gone? You must have had
-a hard experience in the last three months, to be willing to settle
-down into a hard-working drudge!”
-
-“My experience _has_ been hard.”
-
-“I believe you. You look beaten out, worn out, discouraged. Now,
-Rufus, I have sent for you that I may make your fortune as well as
-mine. There is a grand prospect opening before you, and you can be one
-of the richest men in England, if you choose to be sensible. But you
-must obey my orders.”
-
-“I cannot promise that before knowing what you demand,” said the son,
-his face clouding. “I have no sympathy with your manner of life,
-father. If you had not the advantage of titled connections, and did not
-bear the title of ‘Honorable,’ you would be called an adventurer. You
-know you would. I want nothing to do with your ways of life. I will not
-be a gambler--not for all the wealth in England!”
-
-“Don’t refuse till you are asked,” said Mr. Black harshly. “Don’t
-imagine that I want to corrupt your fine principles by making a gambler
-of you. I am no gamester, even though I play at cards. I play only as
-gentlemen play. The game I have in hand for you is easily played, if
-you have but ordinary skill. I can make you master of one of the finest
-estates in England, if you but say the word!”
-
-“Honorably? Can you do it honorably?” cried Rufus eagerly.
-
-“Certainly. I would not propose anything dishonorable to one of your
-nice sense of honor,” said Mr. Black, with sarcastic emphasis.
-
-“What is it you would have me do?”
-
-“You are young, enthusiastic, well looking and well educated,” said
-Mr. Black, without paying heed to his son’s questions. “In short, you
-are fitted to the business I have in hand. I intended to give you a
-professional education, but if you obey me you won’t want it, and if
-you do not obey me you may go to the dogs. I suppose your poverty has
-driven that little low-born music teacher out of your head?”
-
-“What has she to do with this business?”
-
-“Nothing whatever. I want to make sure that you are well rid of her,
-but perhaps it would be as well to leave her name out of the question.
-You say you are starving. Now, if you will solemnly promise to obey me,
-I will advance you fifty pounds to-day, with which you can fit up your
-wardrobe and gratify any luxurious desires you may have.”
-
-Rufus Black’s eyes sparkled.
-
-“Speak,” he said impatiently. “I am desperately poor. I would do almost
-anything for fifty pounds. What do you want done?”
-
-Again Craven Black laughed softly, well pleased with his son’s mood.
-
-“Did you see Hawkhurst as you came?” he asked, with seeming
-irrelevancy. “It’s one of the grandest places in Kent.”
-
-“I saw it. The driver pointed it out to me.”
-
-“How did it look to you?”
-
-“Like heaven.”
-
-“How would you like to be master of that heaven?”
-
-Rufus stared at his father with wide, incredulous eyes.
-
-“You are chaffing me,” said the young man, his countenance falling.
-
-“I am in serious earnest. The owner of Hawkhurst is a young girl, who
-is expected home from school to-day. She has lived the life of a nun in
-her French school, and does not know one young man from another. She
-will be beset with suitors immediately, and the one who comes first
-stands the best chance of winning her. I want you to make love to her
-and marry her.”
-
-Rufus Black’s face paled. The suggestion nearly overcame him. The
-project looked stupendous, chimerical.
-
-“I wondered that you should be down here at Wyndham, father,” he said,
-“and I suppose you are here because you had formed some design upon
-this young heiress. Do you know her?”
-
-“No, but I know her step-mother, who is her personal guardian,”
-explained Craven Black. “Do you remember the handsome widow, Mrs.
-Hathaway, whom you saw once at the theatre in my charge? She
-married Sir Harold Wynde. He died in India last year, leaving her
-well-jointured. I came down to see her the other day, and it seems she
-remembers me with her old affection. In short, Rufus, I am engaged to
-marry Lady Wynde, and the wedding is to take place in October. She
-is her step-daughter’s guardian, as I said, and will have unbounded
-influence to back up your suit. The field is clear before you. Go in
-and win!”
-
-Rufus grew yet paler, and his voice was hoarse as he asked:
-
-“And this is your scheme for making me rich?”
-
-“It is. The girl has a clear income of seventy thousand pounds a year.
-As her husband, you will be a man of consequence. She owns a house in
-town, a hunting box in the Scottish Highlands, and other houses in
-England. You will have horses and hounds; a yacht, if you wish it,
-at your marine villa, and a bottomless purse. You can paint wretched
-pictures, and hear the fashionable world praise them as divine. You can
-become a member of Parliament. All careers are open to the fortunate
-suitor of Neva Wynde.”
-
-The picture was dazzling enough to the half-starved and desperate
-boy. He liked all these things his father enumerated--the houses, the
-horses, the luxuries, the money, and the luxurious ease and the honors.
-He had found it hard to work, and harder to dispose of his work. All
-the bitterness and hardness of his lot arose before him in black
-contrast with the brightness and beauty that would mark the destiny of
-the favored lover of young Neva Wynde.
-
-He arose and walked the floor with an impetuous tread, an expression
-of keen anguish and keener longing in his eyes. His father watched him
-with a furtive gaze, as a cat watches a mouse. It was necessary to his
-plans that his son should marry Neva Wynde, and he was sanguine that he
-would be able to bring about the match.
-
-“Well?” he said, tiring of the quick, impetuous walk of his son. “What
-do you say?”
-
-“It is impossible!” returned Rufus abruptly. “Utterly impossible.”
-
-“And why, if I may be allowed to ask?” inquired Mr. Black blandly,
-although a scowl began to gather on his fair forehead.
-
-“Because--because--the young lady may have other designs for herself--I
-can’t marry her for her money--I can’t give up Lally!”
-
-“The--the young person who taught music? I understood you to say that
-she was a corn-chandler’s daughter. And you prefer a low-born, low-bred
-creature to a wealthy young lady like Miss Wynde? For a young man
-educated as you have been, your good taste is remarkable. You have a
-predilection for high-class society, I must say. What is the charm of
-this not-to-be-given-up ‘Lally?’ Is she beautiful?”
-
-“She is beautiful to me.”
-
-“Which means that she is beautiful to no one else. The beauty which
-requires love’s spectacles to distinguish, is ugliness to every one but
-the lover. Low-born and low-bred,” repeated Mr. Black, dwelling upon
-the words as if they pleased him, “with a pack of poor and ignorant
-relations tacked to her skirts, ugly by your own confession, what a
-brilliant match she would be for the son of the Honorable Craven Black!”
-
-“She has no poor relations,” said Rufus hotly. “She has no relations
-except a great-aunt, whose name she does not know, and who very likely
-does not dream of her existence. It is true that Lally’s father was a
-corn-chandler, but he was an honest one, and more than that, he was
-an intelligent, upright gentlemen. You arch your brows, as if a man
-could not be a tradesman and a gentleman. If the word gentleman has any
-meaning, he was a gentleman.”
-
-“I do not care to discuss the subtle meaning of words; I am willing to
-accept them at the valuation society puts upon them. The pedigree of
-‘Lally’ is of no interest to me. I merely want to know if you mean to
-marry Neva Wynde and be rich, or marry your ‘Lally’ and starve. And if
-you are willing to starve yourself, are you willing to have ‘Lally’
-starve also? With your fine ideas of honor, I wonder you can wish to
-drag that girl into a marriage that will be to her but a slow death.”
-
-A groan burst from the youth’s lips. He wrung his hands weakly, while
-the secret of his marriage trembled on his tongue. But he dared not
-tell it. He was afraid of his father with a deadly fear, and more than
-that, he had yet some hope of receiving assistance from his parent.
-
-“I cannot give her up, father,” he said hoarsely. “I beg you to help
-me in some way, and let me go. You are not rich, I know, but you have
-influence. You could get me a situation under government, in the Home
-office, Somerset House, or as secretary to some nobleman. If you will
-do this for me, I will bless you while I live. Oh, father, be merciful
-to me. Give me a little help, and let me go my ways.”
-
-“By Heaven, I will not. If you cling to that girl, you shall have not
-one penny from me, not one word of recommendation. You can drift to the
-hospital, or the alms-house, and I will not raise a finger to help you!
-I will not even give one farthing to save you from a pauper’s burial. I
-swear it!”
-
-Craven Black uttered the oath in a tone of utter implacability, and
-Rufus knew that the heavens would sooner fall than his father would
-relent. A despair seized upon him, and again he wrung his hands, as he
-cried out recklessly:
-
-“I _must_ cling to her, father. Cast me off if you will, curse me as
-you choose--but Lally is my wife!”
-
-Craven Black was stupefied for the moment. An apoplectic redness
-suffused his face, and his eyes gleamed dangerously.
-
-“Your wife? Your wife?” he muttered, scarcely knowing that he spoke.
-
-“Yes, she is my wife,” declared Rufus, his voice gathering firmness.
-“I married her three months ago. We have been starving together in a
-garret at New Brompton. Oh, father--”
-
-“Not one word! Married to that girl? I will not believe it. Have you a
-marriage certificate?”
-
-“I have. Here it is,” and Rufus drew from his pocket-book a slender
-folded paper. “Read it, and you will see that I tell the truth. Lally
-Bird is my wife!”
-
-Craven Black took the paper and perused it with strange deliberation,
-the apoplectic redness still suffusing his face. When he had finished,
-he deliberately tore the marriage certificate into shreds. Rufus
-uttered a cry, and sprang forward to seize the precious document, but
-his father waved him back with a gesture of stern command.
-
-“Poor fool!” said the elder man. “The destruction of this paper would
-not affect the validity of your marriage, if it were valid. But it is
-not valid.”
-
-“Not valid.”
-
-“No; you and the girl are both minors. A marriage of minors without
-consent of parents and guardians is not binding. The girl is not your
-wife!”
-
-“But she is my wife. We were married in church--”
-
-“That won’t make the marriage binding. You are a minor, and so is she.
-She had no one to consult, but you married without my consent, and
-that fact will render the marriage null and void. More than this,”
-and Mr. Black’s eyes sparkled wickedly, “you have committed perjury.
-You obtained your marriage license by declaring yourself of age, and
-you will not become of age under some months. Do you know what the
-punishment is for perjury. It is imprisonment, disgrace, a striped
-suit, and prison fare.”
-
-The young man looked appalled.
-
-“Who would prosecute me?” he asked.
-
-“_I_ would. You have got yourself in a tight box, young man. Your
-marriage is null and void, and you have committed perjury. Now I will
-offer you your choice between two alternatives. You can make love to
-Miss Wynde and marry her, and be somebody. Or, if you refuse, I will
-prosecute you for perjury, will have you sent to prison, and will brand
-that girl with a name that will fix her social station for life. Take
-your choice.”
-
-Craven Black meant every word he said, and Rufus knew that he meant it.
-The young fellow shuddered and trembled, and then broke into a wild
-appeal for mercy, but his father turned a deaf ear to his anguished cry.
-
-“You have my decision,” he said coldly. “I shall not reconsider it. The
-girl is not your wife, and when she knows her position she will fly
-from you.”
-
-Rufus groaned in his anguish. He knew well the pure soul of his young
-wife, and he felt that she would not remain in any position that
-was equivocal, even though to leave him might break her heart. The
-disgrace, the terror, the poverty of his lot, nearly crushed him to the
-earth.
-
-“What is your answer to be?” demanded Mr. Black.
-
-The poor young fellow sat down and covered his face with his hands. He
-was terribly frightened, and the inherent weakness and cowardice of his
-character, otherwise full of noble traits, proved fatal to him now. He
-gasped out:
-
-“I--I don’t know. I must have time to think. It is all so strange--so
-terrible.”
-
-“You can have all day in which to consider the matter. I have engaged
-a bedroom for you on the opposite side of the hall. I will show you to
-it, and you can think the matter over in solitude.”
-
-Mr. Black arose and conducted his son across the hall to a bedroom
-overlooking the street and the four corners, and here, with a last
-repetition of the two alternatives offered him, he left him.
-
-Poor Rufus, weak and despairing, locked the door and dropped upon his
-knees, sobbing aloud in the extremity of his anguish.
-
-“What shall I do? What can I do?” he moaned. “She is not my wife. My
-poor Lally! And I am helpless in my father’s hands. I shall have to
-yield--I feel it--I know it. I wish I were dead. Oh, my poor wronged
-Lally!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X. NEVA AT HOME AGAIN.
-
-
-The home coming of the heiress of Hawkhurst was far different from
-that which her father had once lovingly planned for her when looking
-forward to her emancipation from school. There was no sign of festivity
-about the estate, no gathering of tenants to a feast, no dancing on the
-lawn, no floral arches, no music, no gladness of welcome. The carriage
-containing Neva Wynde and Mrs. Artress, and attended by liveried
-servants, turned quietly into the lodge gates, halted a moment while
-Neva spoke to the lodge keepers, whom she well remembered, and then
-slowly ascended the long shaded drive toward the house.
-
-Neva looked around her with kindling eyes. The fair green lawn with its
-patches of sunshine and shade, the close lying park with the shy deer
-browsing near the invisible wire fence that separated the park from the
-lawn, the odors of the flower gardens, all these were inexpressibly
-sweet to her after her years of absence from her home.
-
-“Home again!” she murmured softly. “Although those who made it the
-dearest spot in all the world to me are gone, yet still it is home. No
-place has charms for me like this.”
-
-The carriage swept up under the high-pointed arch of the lime trees,
-and drew up in the porch, where the ladies alighted. Artress led the
-way into the house, and Neva followed with a springing step and a
-wildly beating heart.
-
-The great baronial hall was not brightened with flowers or green
-boughs. The oaken floor, black as ebony, was polished like jet. The
-black, wainscoted walls, hung with ancient pictures, glittering
-shields, a few fowling pieces, a stag’s head with antlers, an ancient
-boar’s head, and other treasures, was wide, cool and hospitable. No
-servants were gathered here, although Neva looked for them and was
-disappointed in not seeing them. Most of the servants had been at
-Hawkhurst for many years, and Neva regarded them as old friends.
-
-It had been the wish of the butler and housekeeper to marshal their
-subordinates in the great hall to welcome their young mistress, but
-Lady Wynde, hearing of their design, had peremptorily forbidden it,
-with the remark that until she came of age, Miss Wynde would not be
-mistress of Hawkhurst. And therefore no alternative had remained for
-the butler and housekeeper but to smother their indignation and submit
-to Lady Wynde’s decree.
-
-Mrs. Artress flung open the door of the drawing-room with an excessive
-politeness and said:
-
-“Be kind enough to enter, Miss Wynde, and make yourself comfortable
-while I inform Lady Wynde of your arrival.”
-
-“I am not a guest in my own home, and I decline to be treated as one,”
-said Neva quietly. “I presume my rooms are ready, and I will go up to
-them immediately.”
-
-“I am not positive,” said Artress hesitatingly, “as to the rooms Lady
-Wynde has ordered to be made ready for your use. I will ring and see.”
-
-“Thank you, but I won’t put you to the trouble. I shall resume
-possession of my old rooms, whatever rooms may have been made ready,”
-said Neva half haughtily.
-
-Her cheeks burned with a sense of indignation and annoyance at the
-strangeness of her reception. She had not wished for the rejoicings
-her father had once planned for her, but she had entered her own house
-precisely as some hireling might have done, with no one to receive or
-greet her, no one to care if she had come. She turned away to ascend
-the stairs, but paused with her foot on the lowest step as a door at
-the further end of the hall opened, and the housekeeper, rosy and
-rotund, with cap ribbons flying, came rushing forward with outstretched
-arms.
-
-“Oh, my dear Miss Neva,” cried the good woman, who had known and loved
-the baronet’s daughter from her birth. “Welcome home, my sweet lamb!
-How you have grown--so tall, so beautiful, so bright and sweet!”
-
-“You dear old Hopper!” exclaimed Neva, springing forward and embracing
-the good woman with girlish fervor. “I began to think I must have
-entered a strange house. I am so glad to see you!”
-
-Mrs. Artress looked upon this little scene with an air of disgust, and
-with a little sniff hastened up the stairs to the apartments of Lady
-Wynde.
-
-“Your rooms are ready, Miss Neva,” said Mrs. Hopper--“your old rooms. I
-made sure you wanted them again, because poor Sir Harold furnished them
-new for you only four years ago. I will go with you up stairs.”
-
-Neva led the way, tripping lightly up the broad steps, and flitting
-along the wide upper hall.
-
-Her rooms comprised a suit opposite those of Lady Wynde. Neva opened
-the door of her sitting-room and went in. The portly old butler was
-arranging wreaths of flowers about the pictures and statuettes, but
-turned as the young girl came in, and welcomed her with an admixture
-of warmth and respectfulness that were pleasant to witness. Then he
-took his basket of cuttings and withdrew, the tears of joy flooding his
-honest eyes.
-
-The girl’s sitting-room had been transformed by the loving forethought
-of the butler into a very bower of beauty. The carpet was of a pale
-azure hue starred with arbutus blossoms, and the furniture was
-upholstered in blue silk of the same delicate tint. The pictures
-on the walls were all choice and framed in gilt, and with their
-wreaths of odorous blossoms, gave a fairy brightness to the room.
-The silvermounted grate was crowded thickly with choice flowers from
-the conservatory, whose colors of white and blue were here and there
-relieved with scarlet blossoms like living coals. The wide French
-windows, opening upon a balcony, were open.
-
-“Ah, this is home!” said Neva, sinking down upon a silken couch, and
-looking out of one of the windows upon the lawn. “I am glad to be back
-again, Hopper, but it’s a sad home coming. Poor Papa!”
-
-“Poor Sir Harold!” echoed the housekeeper, wiping her eyes. “If he
-could only have lived to see you grown up, Miss Neva. It was dreadful
-that he should have been taken as he was. I can’t somehow get over the
-shock of his death.”
-
-“I shall never get over it!” murmured Neva softly.
-
-“I am making you cry the first thing after your return,” exclaimed
-Mrs. Hopper, in self-reproach. “I hope those tears are not a bad omen
-for you, Miss Neva. I have arranged your rooms,” she added, “as they
-used to be, and if they are not right you have only to say so. You are
-mistress of Hawkhurst now. Did you bring a maid from Paris, Miss Neva?”
-
-“No, Mrs. Artress said it was not necessary, and my maid at school did
-not wish to leave France. Mrs. Artress said that Lady Wynde had engaged
-a maid for me.”
-
-“Her ladyship intended to give you her own maid, but I made bold to
-engage your old attendant, Meggy West, and she is in your bedroom
-now. She is wild with joy at the prospect of serving you again.”
-
-Neva remembered the girl Meggy with pleasure, and said so.
-
-“I had dreaded having a strange attendant,” she said. “You were
-very thoughtful, Hopper. I suppose I ought to dress at once. Since
-Lady Wynde did not meet me at the door, she evidently means to be
-ceremonious, and I must conform to her wishes. I am impatient to see my
-step-mother, Hopper. Is she as good as she is handsome?”
-
-“I am not fond of Lady Wynde, Miss Neva,” replied the housekeeper,
-coloring. “Her ways are different from any I have been accustomed to,
-but you must judge of her for yourself. Sir Harold just worshiped the
-ground she walked on.”
-
-Neva did not pursue her questioning, comprehending that Lady Wynde was
-not adored by the housekeeper, whoever else might admire her. The young
-girl was not one to gossip with servants, nor even with Mrs. Hopper,
-who was lady by birth and education, and she dropped the subject. Soon
-after Mrs. Hopper withdrew, and Neva went into her bedroom.
-
-She found here the maid who had attended her before she had left home,
-and who was now to resume service with her. The girl was about her own
-age, bright-eyed and red-cheeked, hearty and wholesome, the daughter of
-one of the Hawkhurst tenants. Neva greeted her so kindly as to revive
-the girl’s old affection for her with added fervor, and, Neva’s trunks
-having arrived, the process of the toilet was at once entered upon.
-
-The dress of the heiress of Hawkhurst was exceedingly simple, but she
-looked very lovely when fully attired. She wore a dress and overskirt
-of white Swiss muslin, trimmed with puffs and ruffles. A broad black
-sash was tied around her waist, with a big bow and ends at the back.
-Ear-rings, bracelets, and brooch of jet, were her ornaments.
-
-The housekeeper sent up a tempting lunch, and after partaking of it
-Neva went down stairs to the great drawing-room, but it was untenanted.
-She stood in the large circular window and looked out upon the cool
-depths of the park, and became absorbed in thought. More than half an
-hour thus passed, and Neva was beginning to wonder that no one came to
-her, when the rustling of silk outside the door was heard, and Lady
-Wynde came sweeping into the room.
-
-Her ladyship presented a decidedly striking appearance. She had laid
-aside the last vestige of her mourning garments, and wore a long
-maize-colored robe of heavy silk, with ornaments of rubies. Her
-brunette beauty was admirably enhanced by her attire, and Neva thought
-she had never seen a woman more handsome or more imposing.
-
-Behind Lady Wynde came Artress, clad in soft gray garb, as usual, and
-making an excellent foil to her employer.
-
-“Lady Wynde, this is Miss Wynde,” said the gray companion, in her soft,
-cloying voice.
-
-Neva came forward, frank and sweet, offering her hand to her
-step-mother. Lady Wynde touched it with two fingers, and stooping,
-kissed the girl’s forehead.
-
-“You are welcome home, Neva,” she said graciously. “I am glad to see
-you, my dear. I began to think we should never meet. Why, how tall you
-are--not at all the little girl I expected to see.”
-
-“I am eighteen, you may remember, Lady Wynde,” returned Neva quietly.
-“One is not usually very small at that age.”
-
-Her ladyship surveyed her step-daughter with keen scrutiny. She had
-already heard Artress’ account of the voyage home from Calais, and of
-Neva’s meeting with Lord Towyn, and she was anxious to form some idea
-of the girl’s character.
-
-She saw in the first moment that here was not the insipid,
-“bread-and-butter school girl” she had expected. The frank, lovely
-face, so bright and piquant, was full of character, and the red-brown
-eyes bravely uplifted betrayed a soul awake and resolute. Neva’s
-glances were as keen as her own, and Lady Wynde had an uncomfortable
-impression that her step-daughter was reading her true character.
-
-“Sit down, my dear,” she said, somewhat disconcerted. “Artress has been
-telling me about your voyage. Artress is my friend and companion, as I
-wrote you, and has lived with me so many years that I have learned to
-regard her as a sister. I hope you will be friends with her. She is an
-excellent mentor to thoughtless youth.”
-
-Neva bowed, but the smile that played for an instant on her saucy lips
-was not encouraging to the would-be “mentor.”
-
-“I shall try not to trouble her,” she said, smiling, “although I shall
-always be glad to receive advice from my father’s wife. I trust that
-you and I will be friends, Lady Wynde, for poor papa’s sake.”
-
-Lady Wynde sat down beside her step-daughter. Artress retreated to a
-recessed window, and took up her usual embroidery. Neva exerted herself
-to converse with her step-mother, and was soon conscious of a feeling
-of disappointment in her. She felt that Lady Wynde was insincere,
-a hypocrite, and a double-dealer, and she experienced a sense of
-uneasiness in her presence. Could this be the wife her father had
-adored? she asked herself. And then she accused herself of injustice
-and harsh judgment, believing that her father could not have been
-so mistaken in the character of his wife, and in atonement for her
-unfavorable opinion she was very gentle, and full of deference. Lady
-Wynde congratulated herself upon having won her step-daughter’s good
-opinion after all.
-
-“I must acquire a thorough control and unbounded influence over her,”
-she thought. “But how can I do it? If her father had only left her
-stronger injunctions to sacrifice everything to my wishes, I think she
-would obey the injunctions as if a voice spoke to her from the grave.
-She will obey in all things reasonable--I can see that. But if she has
-formed a liking for Lord Towyn, how am I to compel her to marry Rufus
-Black?”
-
-The question occupied her attention even while she talked with Neva. It
-made her thoughtful through the dinner hour, and silent afterward. Neva
-was tired, and went to her own rooms for the night soon after dinner,
-and Lady Wynde and Artress talked together for a long time in low tones.
-
-“I have it!” said her ladyship exultantly, at last. “I have a brilliant
-idea, Artress, that will make this girl my bond-slave. But I shall need
-the cooperation of Craven. I must see him this very evening. It is
-strange he does not come--”
-
-“He is here,” said the gray companion, as the house door clanged and
-heavily shut. “I will go to my room.”
-
-She slipped like a shadow down the long triple drawing-room and out
-at one door, as the Honorable Craven Black was ushered in at the
-other. Lady Wynde rose to receive him, welcoming him with smiles,
-and presently she unfolded to him the scheme she had just conceived,
-and the two conspirators proceeded to discuss it and amplify it, and
-prepare it for the ensnarement of the baronet’s daughter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI. LADY WYNDE’S IDEA ACTED UPON.
-
-
-It was still early upon the evening of Neva’s return to Hawkhurst when
-Craven Black took his leave of the handsome widow and set out upon his
-walk to Wyndham. The summer night was filled with a light, pleasant
-gloom; and the songs of the nightingales, the chirping and drumming of
-insects in the Hawkhurst park and plantations, made the air musical.
-But Craven Black gave no heed to these things as he strode along
-over the hilly road. His mind was busy with the scheme that had been
-suggested to him that evening by Lady Wynde, and as he hurried along,
-he muttered:
-
-“It’s a good idea, if well worked out. But there’s no finesse in it.
-It’s too simple, if it has any fault. And the girl may see through it,
-although that’s not likely. People who are guileless themselves are not
-apt to suspect guile in others. We shall have no difficulty with her.
-The only one who can balk our plans is that obstinate boy of mine, whom
-I have not seen since he shut himself up in his chamber. I must know
-his decision before I move a step further in this business. Of course
-he will yield to me; he has never dared pit his will against mine, and
-say to my face that he would not obey me. Poor weak coward! If he dares
-cling to that girl he married, I’ll risk the exposure and disgrace, and
-have the marriage legally set aside on the ground of his minority. By
-Heaven, if he dares to beard me, he shall find me a very tiger!”
-
-He set his teeth together and his breath came hissingly between them as
-he strode heavily along the village street and approached the Wyndham
-inn. He saw that his own rooms were lighted, and that the room that
-he had assigned his son was dark. The fear came to him that Rufus had
-stolen away and returned to his young wife with the mad idea of flying
-with her, and, with a muttered curse upon the boy, he hurried into the
-inn and sped swiftly up the stairs, halting at his son’s door, with his
-hand on the knob.
-
-It did not yield to his touch. The door was locked from within. Rufus
-must be within that darkened chamber, and as this conviction came to
-him Craven Black recovered all his coolness and self-possession. He
-crossed the hall into his own room and procured a lighted lamp, and
-then returned and knocked loudly on his son’s door. No voice answered
-him. No sound came from within the room.
-
-“Can he have committed suicide?” Craven Black asked himself, with a
-sudden fluttering at his heart. “He was desperate enough, but I hardly
-think he could have been such a fool as that.”
-
-He shook the door loudly, but eliciting no reply, he stooped to the
-key-hole, and cried, in a clear, hissing whisper:
-
-“Rufus, open this door, or I’ll break it in! I’ll arouse the whole
-house. Quick, I say! Be lively!”
-
-There was a faint stir within the room, as if a tortured wild beast
-were sluggishly turning in his cage, and then an unsteady step crossed
-the floor, and an unsteady hand groped feebly about the door, seeking
-the key. The bolt suddenly shot back, and then the unsteady steps
-retreated a few paces.
-
-Craven Black opened the door and entered the room, closing the portal
-behind him. He set down his lamp, and his light eyes then sought out
-the form of his son.
-
-Rufus stood in the centre of the room, his eyes covered with one hand
-to shade them from the sudden light, his figure drooping and abject,
-his head bowed to his breast, his mouth white and drawn with lines of
-pain. It seemed as if years had passed over his head since the morning.
-It would have been scarcely possible to trace in this spiritless,
-slouching figure, in this white, haggard face, the boy artist who had
-left his young wife that morning. All the brightness, elasticity and
-youth seemed gone from him, leaving only a poor broken wreck.
-
-The cynical smile that was so characteristic of Craven Black’s
-countenance came back to his lips as he looked upon his son. He read in
-the changed aspect of the boy that he had achieved a victory over Rufus.
-
-“I have come for your decision, Rufus,” he said. “What is it to be?
-Disgrace, imprisonment, a blasted name? Or will you turn from your
-low-born adventuress and accept the career I have marked out for you?
-Speak!”
-
-The hand that shaded the artist’s eyes dropped, and he looked at his
-father with a countenance so wan, so woeful, so despairing, that a very
-demon might have pitied him. Yet his father only smiled at what he
-deemed the evidence of the lad’s weakness.
-
-“Oh, father,” said the young man hollowly, “will you not have mercy
-upon me--upon _her_?”
-
-“None!” replied Craven Black curtly. “Again I demand your choice!”
-
-Rufus wrung his hands in wild despair.
-
-“If I abandon her, what will become of her?” he moaned. “She will die
-of starvation! My poor little wife!”
-
-“Do not call her again by that title!” cried Craven Black frowning.
-“Can you not comprehend that the marriage is illegal--is null and
-void--that she is not your wife? When she hears the truth, she will
-turn from you in loathing. As to her support, I will provide for her.
-She shall not starve, as she will do if you are sent to prison for
-perjury. For the last time I demand your decision. Will you give up the
-girl peaceably, or will you be forced to?”
-
-There was a moment of dead silence. Then the answer came brokenly from
-the young man’s lips.
-
-“I--I give her up!” he muttered. “God help us both!”
-
-“It is well,” declared Craven Black, more kindly. “You could not do
-otherwise. You like the girl now, but a year hence you will smile at
-your present folly. Why should you fling away all your possibilities of
-wealth and honor for a silly boyish fancy? Cheer up, Rufus. Throw aside
-all that despair, and accept the goods the gods provide you. The girl
-will marry some one else, as you must do. Your future bride has arrived
-at Hawkhurst, and to-morrow evening I shall take you to call upon her.
-I suppose you have eaten nothing since the morning, and your first need
-is supper.”
-
-He rang the bell vigorously, and to the servant who came up gave an
-order for supper--to be served in his own parlor. Taking up his lamp,
-and drawing his son’s arm through his, he conducted Rufus to his own
-rooms, and seated him in an easy-chair. The young man’s head fell
-forward on his breast and he sat in silence, but Craven Black, rendered
-good-natured by the success of his schemes, talked at considerable
-length of the revenues of Hawkhurst, and the perfections of Lady Wynde,
-and of Neva, whom he had not yet seen.
-
-The supper of cold game was brought up, and Mr. Black ordered two
-bottles of wine. Rufus refused to eat, having, as he declared, no
-appetite, but he drank an entire bottle of wine with a recklessness he
-had never before displayed, and was finally prevailed upon to take
-food. When he had finished, he arose abruptly and retired to his own
-chamber.
-
-The waiter removed the remains of the supper, and Craven Black was left
-alone. He sat a little while in his chair, with a complacent smile
-on his fair visage, and then arose and locked his door, and brought
-forward his small inlaid writing-desk and deposited it upon the table.
-
-He produced from his pocket a small packet which Lady Wynde had given
-him that evening, and opened it. It contained a dozen sheets of note
-paper, of the style Sir Harold had liked and had habitually used. It
-was a heavy cream-colored vellum paper, unlined, and very thick and
-smooth. Upon the upper half of the first page was engraven in black and
-gold the baronet’s monogram and crest, and below these to the right,
-in quaint black and gold letters, were stamped the words, “Hawkhurst,
-Kent.” It was upon paper like this that nearly all of Sir Harold’s
-letters to his daughter had been written.
-
-A dozen square envelopes similarly adorned with crest and monogram
-accompanied the paper; and a tiny vial of a peculiar black ink, a half
-stick of bronze wax, Sir Harold’s seal, and a half dozen letters,
-comprised the remaining contents of the packet.
-
-The curtains were drawn across the windows, and Mr. Black had carefully
-vailed the keyhole of his door, so he leaned back in his chair, with a
-pleasant feeling of security, and engaged in the study of the letters.
-Five of them had been written by Sir Harold to his wife during the
-early part of his visit to India, and bore the Indian postmark. The
-sixth letter had been an enclosure in one of those to Lady Wynde,
-and was addressed to Neva. It had evidently been thus inclosed by
-Sir Harold under the impression that Neva would spend her midsummer
-holidays at Hawkhurst in the absence of her father. The letter had been
-opened by Lady Wynde and read, and she had thrown it aside, without
-thought of delivering it to its rightful owner.
-
-“How the baronet adored his wife!” thought Craven Black, as he
-carefully perused the letters. “What a depth of passion these letters
-show. It is strange that Octavia should not have been touched and
-pleased by his devotion, and learned to return it. But she had an equal
-passion for me, and thought of him only as an obstacle to be removed
-from her path. I never loved a woman as Sir Harold loved her. I do not
-think I am capable of such intense devotion. I am fond of Octavia--more
-fond of her than I ever was of woman before. She is handsome, stately
-and keen-witted. Her tastes and mine are similar. She will make me a
-rich man, and consequently a happy one. Four thousand a year from her,
-and ten thousand a year from Rufus when he marries Miss Wynde. That
-won’t be bad. I could have married an African with prospects such as
-these!”
-
-He studied the style of the composition, the peculiar expression,
-and the penmanship, at great length, and then took up Sir Harold’s
-intercepted letter to his daughter. It was very tender and loving,
-and was written in a deep gloom after the death of the baronet’s son
-in India. It declared that the father felt a strange conviction that
-he should never see again his home, his wife, or his daughter, and he
-conjured Neva by her love for him to be gentle, loving and obedient to
-her step-mother, to soothe Lady Wynde in the anguish his death would
-cause her, if his forebodings proved true, and he should die in India.
-
-“Women are mostly fools!” muttered Craven Black impatiently. “Why
-didn’t Octavia send the girl this letter? Probably because Sir Harold
-mentions in it her probable anguish at his loss, and she was waiting
-impatiently for the hour of her third marriage. And Sir Harold writes
-as if he had expected his daughter to spend her summer’s holidays at
-Hawkhurst, and Octavia did not want her here at that time. The girl
-must have the letter. It will strengthen Octavia’s influence over her
-immensely.”
-
-After an hour’s keen study, Craven Black seized pen and ink and
-carefully imitated upon scraps of paper the peculiar and characteristic
-handwriting of Sir Harold. He had a singular aptitude for this sort of
-forgery, and devoted himself to his task with genuine zeal. He wrote
-out a letter with careful deliberation, studying the effect of every
-line, incorporating some of the favorite expressions of the baronet,
-and this he proceeded to copy upon a sheet of the paper Lady Wynde
-had given him, and in a curiously exact imitation of Sir Harold’s
-penmanship.
-
-He worked for hours upon the letter, finishing it to his satisfaction
-only at daybreak of the following morning. His nefarious composition
-purported to be a last letter from Sir Harold Wynde to his daughter,
-written the night before his tragic death in India, and under a
-terrible gloom and foreboding of approaching death!
-
-The forger began the letter with a declaration of the most tender,
-paternal love for Neva on the part of the father in whose name he
-wrote, and declared that he believed himself standing upon the brink
-of eternity, and therefore wrote a few last lines to Neva, which he
-desired her to receive as an addenda to his last will and testament.
-
-The letter went on to state that Sir Harold adored his beautiful wife,
-but that as she was still young, it was not his wish that she should
-spend the remainder of her life in mourning for him. He desired her to
-marry again, to form new ties, to take a fresh lease of life, and to
-make another as happy as she had made him happy!
-
-This message he wished to be delivered to Lady Wynde from his
-daughter’s lips, as his last message to the wife he had worshiped.
-
-And now came in the subtle point of the forged missive. As from the
-pen and heart of Sir Harold Wynde, the letter went on to say that
-the father was full of anxieties in regard to his daughter’s future.
-She was young, an heiress, and would perhaps become a prey to a
-fortune-hunter. From this fate he desired with all his soul to save her.
-
-“I think I should rise in my grave, if my loving, tender little Neva
-were to marry a man who sought her for her wealth,” the forged letter
-said. “If I die here, I have a last request to make of you, my child,
-and I know that your father’s last wish will be held sacred by you.
-If I do not die, this letter will never be delivered to you. I shall
-send it to the care of Octavia, to be given to you in the case of my
-death. I know not why this strange gloom has come upon me, but I have a
-premonition that my death is near. I shall not see you again in life,
-my child, my poor little Neva, but if you obey my last request I shall
-know it in heaven.
-
-“My request is this. I have long taken a keen interest in the character
-and career of a young man now at Oxford. His talents are good, his
-character noble and elevated, his principles excellent. His name is
-Rufus Black. He comes of a fine old family, but he is not rich. There
-is not a man in the world to whom I would give you so readily as to
-Rufus Black. He will come to see you at Hawkhurst some day when the
-edge of your grief for me has worn away, and for my sake treat him
-kindly. If he asks you to marry him, consent. I shall rest easier in my
-grave if you are his wife.
-
-“My child, your father’s voice speaks to you from the grave; your
-father’s arm is stretched out to protect you in your desolation and
-helplessness. I lay upon you no commands, but I pray you, by your love
-for me, to marry Rufus Black if he comes to woo you. And as you heed
-this, my last request, so may you be happy.”
-
-There was a further page or two of similar purport, and then the letter
-closed with a few last tender words, and the name of Sir Harold Wynde.
-
-“It will do, I think,” said Craven Black exultantly. “I might have
-made it stronger, ordered her to marry Rufus under penalty of a
-father’s curse, but that would not have been like Sir Harold Wynde,
-and she might have suspected the letter to be a forgery. As it is, Sir
-Harold himself would hardly dare to deny the letter as his own, should
-his spirit walk in here. I’ve managed the letter with the requisite
-delicacy and caution, and there can be no doubt of the result. The
-handwriting is perfect.”
-
-He inclosed the letter, and addressed it to Miss Neva Wynde, sealing it
-with the bronze wax, and Sir Harold’s private seal. Then he inclosed
-the sealed letter in a larger envelope, that which had inclosed the
-baronet’s last letter to his wife from India. The letter which had come
-in this envelope was written upon three pages, and contained nothing
-at variance with his forged missive. Upon the fourth and blank page of
-Sir Harold’s last letter he forged a postscript, enjoining Lady Wynde
-to give the inclosure--the forgery--to Neva, in case of his death in
-India, but to keep it one year, until her school-days were ended, and
-the first bitterness of grief at her father’s death was past.
-
-Craven Black made up the double letter into a thick packet resembling
-a book, and addressed it to Lady Wynde. He gathered together all his
-scraps of paper and the envelopes remaining and burned them, and
-cleared away the evidences of his night’s work. He extinguished his
-lights, drew back his curtains, opened his windows to the summer
-morning breeze, and flung himself on a sofa and went to sleep.
-
-He was awakened about eight o’clock by the waiter at the door with his
-breakfast. He arose yawning, gave the waiter admittance, and summoned a
-messenger, whom he dispatched to Hawkhurst, early as was the hour, with
-orders to give the packet he had made into the hands of Lady Wynde or
-Mrs. Artress, Lady Wynde’s companion.
-
-“Artress will be on the look-out for him,” thought Craven Black. “She
-will meet the messenger at the lodge gates, and carry the packet
-herself to Octavia. So that is arranged!”
-
-He summoned his son to breakfast, and presently Rufus came in, worn and
-haggard, having evidently passed a sleepless night. The two men ate
-their breakfast without speaking. After the meal, when the tray had
-been removed, Rufus would have withdrawn, but his father commanded him
-to remain.
-
-“I want you to write a letter to that girl in Brompton,” said Craven
-Black, in the tone that always compelled the abject obedience of
-his son. “Tell her it is all up between you--that she is not your
-wife--that you shall never see her again!”
-
-“I cannot--I cannot! I must see her again. I must break the news to her
-tenderly--”
-
-“Do as I say. There are writing materials on my desk. Write the letter
-I have ordered, or, by Heaven, I’ll summon a constable on the spot!”
-
-Rufus sobbed pitifully, and turned away to hide his weakness. He was
-but a boy, a poor, weak, cowardly boy, afraid of his father, unable to
-earn a living for himself and Lally, unable even to support himself,
-and he had actually gained his marriage license by committing
-perjury--swearing that he was of age, and his own master. He had laid
-a snare for himself in that wrong act, and was now entangled in that
-snare.
-
-He felt himself helpless in his father’s hands, and sat down at the
-desk, and with tear-blinded eyes and unsteady hand, dashed off a wild,
-incoherent letter to his poor young wife, telling her that their
-marriage was null and void--that she was not his wife--and that they
-two must never meet again. When he had appended his name, he bowed his
-head on his arms and wept aloud.
-
-Craven Black coolly perused the letter and approved it. He folded it,
-and put it in his pocket-book.
-
-“I will take it to her,” he said quietly. “My cab is at the door, and
-I am ready to start to London. I shall take the half-past ten express,
-if I can reach Canterbury in time. You will await my return here. I
-shall be back before evening. Reconcile yourself to your fate, Rufus,
-and don’t look so woe-begone. I shall expect to find you in a better
-frame of mind when I return. As to the girl, I will provide for her
-liberally. Fortunately I am in funds just now. I shall send her away
-somewhere where she will never cross your path again!”
-
-Without another glance at his son, he took up his hat and went out. The
-rumbling of the carriage wheels, as it bore Craven Black on his way to
-Canterbury, aroused Rufus from his stupor. That sound was to him the
-knell of his happiness!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII. BLACK CONTINUES HIS CONSPIRACY.
-
-
-As the hours wore on after Rufus Black’s departure from the dingy
-little lodging he had called home, poor Lally became anxious and
-troubled. Her young husband had inspired her with a great awe for his
-father, as well as terror of him, but she was a brave little soul and
-prayed with all her heart that Rufus would have courage to confess his
-marriage, let the consequences of that confession be what they would.
-She had a horror of concealment or deception, and she believed that
-Craven Black would relent toward his son when he should discover that
-he was really married.
-
-As the afternoon of that first day of solitude wore on, and the hour
-for Rufus’ return drew near, she swept and dusted and garnished the
-dreary little room as well as she could, put the shining tin kettle on
-the grate, and made her simple toilet, putting on her best dress, a
-cheap pink lawn that contrasted well with her berry-brown complexion,
-and winding a pink ribbon in her hair. She looked very pretty and fresh
-and bright when she had finished, and she stood by the window, her
-face pressed to the glass, all hopefulness and expectancy, and looked
-out upon the opposite side of the crescent until long after the hour
-appointed for her husband’s return. But when evening came on and the
-gas lamps were lighted in the streets, her expectancy was changed to a
-terrible anxiety and she put on her shabby little hat and hurried out
-to a little newsstand, investing a penny in an evening paper, with a
-vague idea that there must have been an accident on the line and that
-her husband had perhaps been killed.
-
-But no accident being reported, she returned to her poor little home,
-and waited for him with what patience she could summon. But he came
-not, and no message, letter, or telegram came to allay her fears. She
-waited for him until midnight, hearkening to every step in the street,
-and then lay down without undressing, consoling herself with the
-thought that Rufus would be home in the morning.
-
-But morning came, and Rufus did not come. Poor Lally was too anxious
-to prepare her breakfast, and sustained her strength by eating a piece
-of bread while she watched from the window. She assured herself that
-it was all right, that Rufus’ prolonged absence was a sign that he had
-reconciled himself with his father, and that probably he would return
-in company with his parent. This idea prompted her to brush her tangled
-waves of hair, and to press out her tumbled dress and otherwise make
-herself presentable.
-
-As the day deepened a conviction that something had happened that was
-adverse to her happiness dawned upon her. It was not like Rufus to
-leave her in such suspense, and she was sure that some harm had come to
-him.
-
-“Perhaps he has been murdered and thrown out of the railway coach,” she
-thought, her round eyes growing big with horror. “I will go to Wyndham
-by the next train.”
-
-She was about to put on her hat when her landlady, a coarse, ill-bred
-woman, opened the door unceremoniously, and entered her presence.
-
-“Going out, Mrs. Black?” she demanded, with a sniff of suspicion. “I
-hope you are not going off, like the last lodger I had in this ’ere
-blessed room, without paying of the rent? I hope you don’t intend to
-give me the slip, Mrs. Black, which you’ve got no clothes nor furniture
-to pay the rent, and you owing ten and sixpence!”
-
-“I have the money for the rent, Mrs. McKellar,” answered Lally,
-producing her pocket-book, while her childish face flushed. “I have no
-intention of giving you the slip, as you call it. I--I am going down
-into the country to look for my husband. Here is your pay.”
-
-The landlady took her money with an air of relief. Her greed satisfied,
-her curiosity became ascendant.
-
-“Where is Mr. Black, if I may be so bold?” she inquired. “It’s not like
-him to be away over night. But young men will be young men, Mrs. Black,
-whether they are young gentlemen or otherwise, and they will have their
-sprees, you know, Mrs. Black, although I _would_ say that Mr. Black
-seemed as steady a young gentlemen as one could wish to see.”
-
-“He _is_ steady,” asserted the young wife, half indignantly. “He never
-goes on a spree. He--he went to see his father, and said he would be
-back last night. And, oh, I am so anxious!” she cried, her terrors
-getting the better of her reserve. “I am sure he would never have
-stayed away like this if something had not happened to him.”
-
-“Perhaps he’s deserted you?” suggested her Job’s comforter. “Men desert
-their wives every day. Lawks! What is that?” the landlady ejaculated,
-as a loud double knock was heard on the street door. “It’s not the
-postman. Perhaps Mr. Black has been killed, and they’re bringing home
-his body.”
-
-The poor young wife uttered a wild shriek and flew to the head of
-the stairs, the ponderous landlady hurrying after her, and reaching
-her side just as the slipshod maid-servant opened the door, giving
-admittance to Craven Black.
-
-The landlady descended the stairs noisily, and Lally retreated to her
-room. She had hardly gained it when Mr. Black came up the stairs alone
-and knocked at the door. She gave him admittance, her big round eyes
-full of questioning terror, her pale lips framing the words:
-
-“My husband?”
-
-Mr. Black, holding his hat in his hand, closed the door behind him. He
-bowed politely to the scared young creature, and demanded:
-
-“You are Miss Lally Bird?”
-
-The slight, childish figure drew itself up proudly, and the quivering
-voice tried to answer calmly:
-
-“No, sir; I am Mrs. Rufus Black. My name used to be Lally Bird. Do--do
-you come from my husband?”
-
-“I come from Mr. Rufus Black,” replied Craven Black politely. “I am
-the bearer of a note from him, but must precede its delivery with an
-explanation. Mr. Black is now in Kent, and will remain there for the
-summer.”
-
-“I--I don’t understand you, sir,” said poor Lally, bewildered.
-
-There was a rustling outside the door, as the landlady settled herself
-at the keyhole, in an attitude to listen to the conversation between
-Lally and her visitor. Mrs. McKellar was convinced that there was some
-mystery connected with her fourth floor lodgers, and she deemed this a
-favorable opportunity of solving it.
-
-“Permit me to introduce myself to you, Miss Bird,” said her visitor,
-still courteously. “I am Craven Black, the father of Rufus.”
-
-The young wife gasped with surprise, and her face whitened suddenly.
-She sat down abruptly, with her hand upon her heart.
-
-“His father?” she murmured.
-
-Craven Black bowed, while he regarded her and her surroundings
-curiously. The dingy, poverty-stricken little room, with its meagre
-plenishing and no luxuries, struck him as being but one remove from an
-alms-house. The young wife, in her wretchedly poor attire, with her
-big black eyes and brown face, from which all color had been stricken
-by his announcement, seemed to him a very commonplace young person,
-quite of the lower orders, and he wondered that his university bred son
-could have loved her, and that he still desired to cling to her and his
-poverty, rather than to leave her and wed an heiress.
-
-For a moment or more Lally remained motionless and stupefied, and then
-the color flashed back to her cheeks and lips, and the brightness to
-her eyes. She could interpret the visit of Craven Black in but one
-manner--as a token of his reconciliation with his son.
-
-“Ah, sir, I beg your pardon,” she said, arising to her feet, “but I was
-sorely frightened. I have been so anxious about Rufus. I expected him
-home last night. And I could not dream that you would come to our poor
-home.”
-
-She placed a chair for him, but he continued standing, hat in hand, and
-leaned carelessly upon the chair back. He was the picture of elegance
-and cool serenity, while Lally, flushed and excited, glanced down at
-her own attire in dismay.
-
-“I understand that Rufus has remained in Kent,” she said, all
-breathless and joyous, “and I suppose you have been kind enough to
-come to take me to him. I fear I am hardly fit to accompany you, Mr.
-Black. We have been so poor, so terribly poor. But I will be ready in
-a moment. Oh, I am so grateful to you, sir, for your goodness to us.
-Poor Rufus feared your anger more than all things else. I know I am no
-fit match for your son, but--but I love him so,” and the bright face
-drooped shyly. “I will be a good wife to him, sir, and a good daughter
-to you.”
-
-“Stay,” said Mr. Black, in a cold, metallic voice. “You are laboring
-under a misapprehension, Miss Bird. I am not come to take you down into
-Kent. You will never look upon the face of Rufus Black again.”
-
-“_Sir!_”
-
-“I mean it, madam. I pity you from my soul; I do, indeed. It were
-better for you if you had never seen Rufus Black. You fancy yourself
-his wife. You are not so.”
-
-“Not his wife? Oh, sir, then you do not know? Why, we were married
-at St. Mary’s Church, in the parish of Newington. Our marriage is
-registered there, and Rufus has a certificate of the marriage.”
-
-“But still you are not married,” said the pitiless visitor, his keen
-eyes lancing the soul of the tortured girl. “Permit me to explain. My
-son procured a marriage license, and he made oath that you and he were
-both of age, and legally your own masters. He swore to a lie. Now that
-is perjury. A marriage of minors without consent of parents is null and
-void, and my consent was not given. Your marriage is illegal, is no
-marriage at all. You are as free and Rufus is as free as if this little
-episode had not been.”
-
-“Oh, Heaven!” moaned the young girl, in a wild strained voice, sinking
-back into a chair. “Not married--not his wife!”
-
-“You are not his wife,” declared Craven Black mercilessly. “I cannot
-comprehend by what fascination you lured my son into this connection
-with you, but no doubt he was equally to blame. He is well born and
-well connected. You are neither. A marriage between you and him is
-something preposterous. I have no fancy for an alliance with the family
-of a tallow-chandler. I speak plainly, because delicacy is out of
-place in handling this affair. You are of one grade in life, we of
-another. I recognize your ambition and desire to rise in the world, but
-it must not be done at my expense.”
-
-“Ambition?” repeated poor Lally, putting her hand to her forehead. “I
-never thought of rising in the world when I married Rufus. I loved
-him, and he loved me. And we meant to work together, and we have been
-so happy. Oh, I am married to him! Do not say that I am not. I am his
-wife, Mr. Black--I am his own wife!”
-
-“And I repeat that you are not,” said Mr. Black harshly. “The law will
-not recognize such a marriage. And if you persist in clinging to the
-prize you fancy you have hooked, I will have Rufus arrested on the
-charge of perjury and sent to prison.”
-
-Lally uttered a cry of horror. Her eyes dilated, her thin chest heaved,
-her black eyes burned with the fires that raged in her young soul.
-
-“Rufus has recognized the stern necessity of the case, and full of
-fears for his own safety he has given you up,” continued Lally’s
-persecutor. “He will never see you again, and desires you, if you have
-any regard for him and his safety, to quietly give him up, and glide
-back into your own proper sphere.”
-
-“I will not give him up!” cried Lally--“never! never! Not until his own
-lips tell me so! You are cruel, but you cannot deceive me. I am his own
-wife, and I will never give him up!”
-
-“Read that!” said Mr. Black, producing the note his son had written. “I
-presume you know his handwriting?”
-
-He tossed to Lally the folded paper. She seized it and read it eagerly,
-her face growing white and rigid like stone. She knew the handwriting
-only too well. And in this letter Rufus confirmed his father’s words,
-and utterly renounced her. A conviction of the truth settled down like
-a funeral pall upon her young soul.
-
-“You begin to believe me, I see,” said Mr. Black, growing uncomfortable
-under the awful stare of her horrified eyes. “You comprehend at last
-that you are no wife?”
-
-“What am I then?” the pale lips whispered.
-
-“Don’t look at me in that way, Miss Bird. Really you frighten me. Don’t
-take this thing too much to heart. Of course it’s a disappointment and
-all that, but the affair won’t hurt you as if you belonged to a higher
-class in life. It’s a mere episode, and people will forget it. You can
-resume your maiden name and occupations and marry some one in your own
-class, and some day you will smile at this adventure!”
-
-“Smile? Ah, God!”
-
-Poor Lally cowered in her chair, her small wan face so full of woe and
-despair that even Craven Black, villain as he was, grew uneasy. There
-was an appalled look in her eyes, too, that scared him.
-
-“You take the thing too hardly, Miss Bird,” he said. “I will provide
-for you. Rufus must not see you again, and I must have your promise to
-leave him unmolested. Give me that promise and I will deal liberally
-with you. You must not follow him into Kent. Should you meet him in the
-street or elsewhere, you must not speak to him. Do you understand? If
-you do, he will suffer in prison for your contumacy!”
-
-“Oh, Heaven be merciful to me!” wailed the poor disowned young wife.
-“See him, and not speak to him? Meet him and pass him by, when I love
-him better than my life? Oh, Mr. Black, in the name of Heaven, I beg
-you to have pity upon us. I know I am poor and humble. But I love your
-son. We are of equal station in the sight of God, and my love for
-Rufus makes me his equal. He loves me still--he loves me--”
-
-“Do not deceive yourself with false hopes,” interposed Craven Black.
-“My son recognizes the invalidity of his marriage, and has succumbed to
-my will. If you know him well, you know his weak, cowardly nature. He
-has agreed never to speak to you again, and, moreover, he has promised
-to marry a young lady for whom I have long intended him--”
-
-A sharp, shrill cry of doubt and horror broke from poor, wronged Lally.
-
-“It is true,” affirmed Craven Black.
-
-The girl uttered no further moan, nor sob. Her wild eyes were tearless;
-her white lips were set in a rigid and awful smile.
-
-“I--I feel as if I were going mad!” she murmured.
-
-“You will not go mad,” said Craven Black, with an attempt at airiness.
-“You are not the first woman who has tried to rise above her proper
-sphere and fallen back to her own detriment. But, Miss Bird, I must
-have your promise to leave Rufus alone. You must resume your maiden
-name, and let this episode be as if it had not been.”
-
-“I shall not trouble Rufus,” the poor girl said, her voice quivering.
-“If I am not his wife, and he cannot marry me, why should I?”
-
-“That is right and sensible. Here are fifty pounds which may prove
-serviceable if you should ever marry,” and Mr. Black handed her a crisp
-new Bank of England note.
-
-The girl crumpled it in her hand and flung it back to him, her eyes
-flashing.
-
-“You have taken away my husband--my love--my good name!” she panted.
-“How dare you offer me money? I will not take it if I starve!”
-
-Mr. Black coolly picked up the note and restored it to his pocket.
-
-He was about to speak further when the door was burst violently open,
-and the landlady, flushed with excitement, came rushing in like an
-incarnate tornado. The rejection of the money by Lally had incensed her
-beyond all that had gone before.
-
-“I keep a respectable house, I hope, Miss,” snapped the woman. “I’ve
-heard all that’s been said here, as is right I should, being a lone
-widow and a dependent upon the reputation of my lodging-’us for a
-living. And being as you an’t married, though a pretending of it, I
-can’t shelter you no longer. Out you go, without a minute’s warning.
-There’s your hat, and there’s your sack. Take ’em, and start!”
-
-Lally obeyed the words literally. She caught up her out-door apparel,
-and with one wild, wailing cry, dashed out of the room, down the stairs
-and into the street.
-
-Mr. Black and the landlady regarded each other in a mutual alarm.
-
-“You have driven her to her death, Madam,” said Craven Black excitedly.
-“She has gone out to destroy herself, and you have murdered her.”
-
-He put on his hat and left the house. The girl’s flying figure had
-already disappeared, and the villain’s conscience cried out to him that
-she would perish, and that it was _he_, and none other, who had killed
-her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII. HOW NEVA RECEIVED THE FORGERIES.
-
-
-While Craven Black was successfully pursuing his machinations to
-destroy the happiness of two young lives, Lady Wynde had been active
-in carrying out her part in the infamous plot against Neva. The little
-packet of forged letters which had cost Lady Wynde’s fellow-conspirator
-a night of toil, and which had been sent to Hawkhurst by a special
-messenger, had been safely delivered into the hands of Mrs. Artress,
-who had been waiting at the gate lodge to receive it. It had so
-happened that not even the lodge keeper had witnessed the reception
-of the packet, and she had dismissed the messenger, and carefully
-concealed the packet upon her person, and returned to the house and to
-the presence of her mistress.
-
-Lady Wynde had not yet risen. She lay in the midst of her white bed,
-with her black hair tossing upon her ruffled pillow, one white and
-rounded arm lying upon the scarlet satin coverlet, and with a profusion
-of dainty frills and laces upon her person. A small inlaid table stood
-at her bedside, supporting a round silver tray, upon which gleamed
-a silver _tete-a-tete_ set of the daintiest proportions, and at the
-moment of her companion’s entrance her ladyship was sipping her usual
-morning cup of black coffee, which was expected to tone and strengthen
-her nerves for the day.
-
-She dropped her tiny gold spoon, and looked up eagerly and expectantly,
-and Artress, closing the door, drew forth the packet with an air of
-triumph.
-
-“I have received it,” said the gray companion, “and no one is the
-wiser for it. The messenger thinks it a book, and the people at
-the lodge did not even see it. We are in the usual luck, Octavia.
-Everything goes well with us.”
-
-“I am glad that Craven did not fail me,” murmured Lady Wynde. “I feared
-he might find the task too heavy for him. But he is always prompt. Open
-the packet, Artress.”
-
-The companion obeyed, bringing to light the double letter, the one
-Craven Black had forged being securely lodged within the last letter
-Sir Harold Wynde had written to his wife from India.
-
-Lady Wynde saw that the inner letter, addressed to Neva, was securely
-sealed, read the forged postscript to the letter addressed to her, and
-placed both under her pillow, with a complacent smile.
-
-“Craven is a clever fellow,” she muttered. “And how much he loves
-me, Artress. Not many men could have seen the woman they loved marry
-another, but Craven and I have been worldly wise, and we shall reap
-the reward of our self-denial. If we had married three years ago,
-we should have been poor now, mere hangers on upon the outskirts of
-society, tolerated for the sake of our connections, but nothing more.
-But we determined to play a daring game, and behold our success. I am
-again a widow, with four thousand a year and a good house while I live,
-and I can lay up money if I choose while I continue the chaperon of
-my husband’s daughter. And if our game continues to prosper, and Neva
-marries Rufus Black, Craven and I will make ten thousand a year more
-for the remainder of our lives. Rufus will have to sign an agreement
-giving us that amount out of Neva’s income. Think of it Artress;
-fourteen thousand a year!”
-
-“Of which if you win it, I am to have five hundred,” said Artress, her
-gray face flushing. “And if you do not win the ten thousand, I am to
-have two hundred pounds a year settled upon me for life. Is not that
-our bargain?”
-
-Lady Wynde nodded assent.
-
-“And,” continued Artress, “I am to enter society with you, to remain
-with you as your guest instead of companion. I have been necessary to
-you in playing this game. I have lived with you some three years now,
-and though people know that I am a lady born, no one suspects that I
-am own cousin to Craven Black, and soon to be your cousin by marriage.
-We have joined our forces and wits together in this game, and we shall
-enjoy our success together.”
-
-This, then, was the secret of the connection between the two women so
-unlike each other, yet so in unison in their schemes. Mrs. Artress was
-the cousin of Craven Black, and being poor as well as unscrupulous,
-she was his most faithful ally in his stupendously wicked schemes. The
-interests of the three conspirators were indeed identical.
-
-“I believe I will rise,” said Lady Wynde. “I am impatient to give this
-letter to Neva, and to see how she receives it. Do you suppose she is
-up?”
-
-“She has been up these two hours,” answered Artress. “She has been
-all over the house, has talked with the butler and the servants, has
-visited the stable and gardens, and has even been into the park. She
-means to assert her dignity as mistress of Hawkhurst, and to win the
-hearts of her dependents, so that in case she disagrees with you they
-will support her.”
-
-Lady Wynde frowned darkly.
-
-“Miss Neva is not yet of age, and so, although she owns Hawkhurst,
-there may be a question whether she is its mistress, or whether I, who
-am her guardian and her father’s widow, am mistress here.”
-
-Her ladyship pulled the bell cord at her bed head, summoning her maid.
-Artress retired into Lady Wynde’s sitting-room, and upon the appearance
-of her attendant, the widow arose and attired herself in a white
-morning wrapper with crimson trimmings, and put upon her head a small
-square of white lace adorned with crimson bows. She had some time since
-discarded her widow’s cap, as “too horribly unbecoming.”
-
-She ascertained that Neva was now in her own rooms, and took her way
-thither, the forged letters in her hand. Neva was alone when her
-step-mother, after a preliminary knock upon the door, entered her
-sitting-room, and she greeted Lady Wynde with a smile and look of
-welcome.
-
-Neva was looking very lovely this morning, flushed with her early
-exercise, her red-brown eyes strangely brilliant, her red-brown hair
-arranged in crimps and braids. She wore a simple dress of white lawn,
-made short to escape the ground, and her ribbons and ornaments were
-of black. Lady Wynde fancied that Neva’s half-mourning attire was a
-reproach to her, and this fancied reproach, coupled with Neva’s bright,
-spirited beauty, gave an impulse to her incipient dislike to the girl.
-
-A vague jealousy of Neva’s youth and loveliness had found place in her
-heart on the previous evening. Now that faint spark became fanned into
-a burning flame. She aspired to be a social queen, and here under her
-very roof, and under her chaperonage, was a girl whom she felt sure
-would eclipse her. She would not be known in society as the handsome
-Mrs. Black, but as the chaperon of the beautiful Miss Wynde.
-
-But, despite her anger and jealousy, nothing could have been more
-bland and affectionate than the greeting of Lady Wynde to her
-step-daughter. She kissed her with seeming tenderness, and caressed her
-bright hair as she said:
-
-“How animated you look, my dear--fairly sparkling! I should fancy that
-you have an electric sort of temperament--all fire and glow. Is it not
-so? You remind me of your father, Neva. It will be very sweet to have
-you with me, but my grief at my husband’s awful death has been so great
-that until now I could never bear to look upon his daughter’s face. I
-fancied you would look even more like him, and I could not have borne
-the resemblance in my first grief.”
-
-Lady Wynde sighed deeply, and sat down upon the blue silken couch,
-drawing Neva to a seat beside her.
-
-“I have come in to have a long confidential talk with you, my child,”
-resumed her ladyship. “There should be between you and me strangely
-tender relations. Your poor dear father desired us to be all the world
-to each other, and for his sake, as well as your own, I intend to be a
-true and good mother to you.”
-
-“Thank you, madam,” said Neva, gravely, yet gratefully. “I will try to
-deserve your kindness, and to be a daughter to you.”
-
-“You do not call me mother,” suggested Lady Wynde, reproachfully.
-
-The young girl colored, and her brilliant eyes were suddenly shadowed.
-Her scarlet lips quivered an instant, as she said gently:
-
-“Pardon me, dear Lady Wynde, but one has but one mother. I love my dead
-mother as if she were living, even though I know her only through my
-dear father’s description of her. I cannot give you her name, and I
-think it would hardly be appropriate. You are too young to be called
-mother by a grown-up girl. Does it not seem so to you?”
-
-“Possibly you are right. Suit yourself, my dear. I seek only your
-happiness. I can be a mother to you, even if you decline to give me the
-name.”
-
-“And I can equally be a daughter to you, dear Lady Wynde,” said Neva.
-“We shall be like sisters, I trust. And I desire to say that I hope you
-will consider yourself as fully mistress of Hawkhurst as when poor papa
-was here. I shall not interfere with your rule here, even if I may,
-until I attain my majority. While I live, my home shall be a home to my
-father’s widow.”
-
-“You are very kind, my dear. All these things will settle themselves
-hereafter. I have now to deliver to you a last message from your dear
-father--a message, as I might say, from the grave. Your father’s voice
-speaks to you from the other world, my dear Neva, and I know that you
-will heed its call.”
-
-Her ladyship drew forth the packet of letters, and laid them on Neva’s
-knee.
-
-“You have there,” continued Lady Wynde, putting her handkerchief to her
-eyes, “the last letter I ever received from my dear husband. You may
-read it. You will see that he had a presentiment of his approaching
-death; that a gloom hung upon him that he could not shake off. That
-letter was written the night before his tragic death.”
-
-Neva opened the letter with trembling hands and read it, even to the
-postscript upon the last page which had been forged by the cunning hand
-of Craven Black. Her tears fell as she read it.
-
-“The inclosure--ah, you have not seen it,” said Lady Wynde--“is the
-letter alluded to in that last page of the letter to me. You see that
-it has never been opened. It is a sealed document to me in every sense,
-although, as poor Sir Harold often told me of his secret wishes in
-regard to your future, I have some suspicion of its contents. Your
-father requested me should he die in India, to give you this letter one
-year after his death. The appointed time has now arrived, and I deliver
-into your hands the last letter your father ever wrote, and which
-contains his last sacred wishes in regard to you. You are to receive it
-as an addendum to his will, as a sacred charge, as if his voice were
-speaking to you from his home in Heaven!”
-
-She lifted the sealed letter, laying it in Neva’s hands.
-
-The young girl received it with an uncontrollable agitation.
-
-“I--I must read it alone,” she said brokenly.
-
-“Very well, dear. Go into your dressing-room with it, and when you have
-finished reading it come back to me. I have more to say to you.”
-
-Neva departed without a word, and went into the adjoining room. As the
-door closed behind her, Lady Wynde softly arose, crossed the floor, and
-peeped in upon the young girl’s privacy through the key-hole of the
-door.
-
-Neva was alone in her dressing-room, and was kneeling down before a
-low chair upon which she had laid the forged letter, as yet unopened.
-The baronet’s widow watched the girl as she examined the address and
-the seal, and then cut open the top of the letter with a pocket-knife.
-Neva unfolded the closely written sheet, all stamped with her father’s
-monogram, and with low sobs and tear-blinded eyes began to read the
-letter, accepting it without doubt or question as her father’s last
-letter to her.
-
-Lady Wynde’s eyes gleamed, and a mocking smile played about her full,
-sensual lips, as Neva read slowly page after page, still upon her
-knees, now and then pausing to kiss the handwriting she believed to be
-her father’s. The forger’s work had been well done. The tender pet
-names by which Sir Harold had loved to call his daughter were often
-repeated, with such protestations of affection as would most stir a
-loving daughter’s heart when receiving them long after the death of her
-father, and believing them to have been written by that father’s hand.
-
-“Oh, papa! poor, poor, papa!” the girl sobbed. “He foresaw my
-loneliness and desolation, and left these last words to cheer me. I
-will remember your wishes so often expressed in this and other letters.
-I will be kind and gentle and obedient to Lady Wynde. I will try to
-love her for your sake.”
-
-When she had grown calmer, Neva read on. As she read that her father
-had a last request to make of her, she smiled through her tears, and
-murmured:
-
-“I am glad that he has left me something to do--whatever it may be.
-I should like to feel that I am obeying him still, although he is in
-Heaven. Dear papa!--your ‘request’ is to me a sacred command, and I
-shall so consider it.”
-
-Lady Wynde’s eyes glittered like balls of jet. She had estimated
-rightly the childlike trust of Neva in her father’s love and devotion
-to her.
-
-“She accepts the whole thing as gospel!” thought the delighted schemer.
-“Our success is certain. But let me see how she takes it, when she
-finds what the ‘request’ is.”
-
-Neva perused the letter slowly, and again and again, with careful
-deliberation. Her surprise became apparent on her features, but there
-was no disbelief, no distrust, betrayed on her truthful face. But a wan
-whiteness overspread her cheeks and lips, and a weary look came into
-her eyes, as she folded the letter at last and hid it in her bosom. She
-bent her head as if in prayer, and murmured words which Lady Wynde
-tried in vain to hear. They were simple--only these:
-
-“It is very strange--very strange; but papa meant it for the best. He
-feared to leave me unprotected, and a prey to fortune-hunters. Who is
-this Rufus Black? Oh, if papa had only mentioned Lord--Lord Towyn!”
-
-The very thought brought a vivid scarlet to Neva’s face in place of her
-strange pallor, and as if frightened at her own thought, she arose and
-went to the open window, and leaned upon the casement.
-
-Lady Wynde stole back to her couch, and she was sitting upon it the
-picture of languor when Neva returned, very pale now and subdued, and
-with a shadow of trouble in her eyes.
-
-“Have you finished your letter so soon, dear?” asked the step-mother,
-sweetly. “I believe I can guess what were the last injunctions to you
-of your dear father. He often told me of his plans for you. Shall you
-do as he desired?”
-
-Again the glowing scarlet flush covered Neva’s cheeks, lips, even her
-slender throat.
-
-“My father’s last wishes are a command to me,” she said, slowly, yet
-as if her mind were quite made up to obey the supposed wishes of her
-father.
-
-“It was Sir Harold’s request that you should marry a young man in whom
-he took considerable interest--one Rufus Black, was it not?” asked Lady
-Wynde.
-
-Neva uttered a low assent.
-
-“And you will marry this young fellow?”
-
-“My father liked him well enough to make him my--my husband,” said
-Neva. “I can trust my father’s judgment in all things. I never
-disobeyed papa in his life, and I cannot disobey him now that he seems
-to speak to me from Heaven. If--if Rufus Black ever proposes marriage
-to me, and if he is still worthy of the good opinion papa formed of
-him, I--I--”
-
-Her voice broke down, as she remembered the fair, boyish face, the warm
-blue eyes, the tawny hair and noble air of Lord Towyn, and again with
-inward shame the question framed itself in her mind--why could not her
-father have recommended to her affection young Arthur Towyn, whom her
-father had loved next to his own son? Why must he desire her to marry a
-man she had never seen?
-
-“You will marry Rufus!” demanded Lady Wynde, as the girl’s pause became
-protracted.
-
-Neva bowed her head--she could not speak.
-
-Lady Wynde’s face glowed, and an evil light gleamed in her eyes. Her
-heart throbbed wildly with her evil triumph.
-
-“You are indeed a good and faithful daughter, Neva,” she said
-caressingly. “In accordance with your father’s wishes, I must give Mr.
-Black every chance to woo you. I believe he knows something of what Sir
-Harold designed for you and him, and he is at this moment at Wyndham
-village. He is staying at the inn with his father, and both will call
-upon you this evening.”
-
-“So soon?”
-
-“The sooner the better. I have not seen Rufus Black, but his father
-called here last evening. The father knew poor Sir Harold intimately.
-And, Neva, dear, in honor of your guests, and in deference to my
-wishes, you ought to lay aside all vestige of your mourning to-day. You
-have worn black a year, and that is all that modern society demands.”
-
-“The outward garb does not always indicate the feelings of the heart,”
-said Neva. “I will change my manner of dress, since you desire it, but
-I shall mourn for papa all my days.”
-
-As Neva became thoughtful and abstracted, Lady Wynde soon took her
-leave. She found Artress in her sitting-room and the gray companion had
-no need to ask of her success.
-
-“Our silly little fish has swallowed the bait,” said Lady Wynde. “She
-is ready to immolate herself ‘for dear papa’s sake,’ although I could
-see that she is already interested in Lord Towyn. I am impatient for
-evening. I want to see how young Rufus Black will proceed in his task
-of winning the heiress of Hawkhurst.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV. THE MEETING OF NEVA AND RUFUS.
-
-
-The hours of his father’s absence in London were full of an
-insupportable suspense to Rufus Black. He was tempted to hurry up to
-town by the next train, and only his weakness and cowardice prevented
-him from flying to the succor of his wronged young wife. His terror
-of his father was a lion in his way. And the act of perjury he had
-committed in declaring himself of age when obtaining his marriage
-license--an act more of thoughtlessness and boyish ardor than of
-deliberate lying--arose now between him and poor Lally like a wall of
-iron. He had erred, and must accept the consequences, but he thought to
-himself that he would give all his hopes of heaven if Lally might have
-been spared his punishment.
-
-Anguished and despairing, he put on his hat and hurried out into the
-street, eager for fresh air and for action. He passed out of the little
-hamlet, seeing no one, and wandered into the open country, where a
-noble park bordered one side of the road, and fair green fields
-stretched far away upon the other. Both park and fields belonged to the
-domain of Hawkhurst, but Rufus Black was unconscious of the fact until
-he came out in full view of the great gray stone house throned upon the
-broad ridge of ground, and set in its parks and gardens like some rare
-jewel in its setting.
-
-Then he recognized the place, and muttered moodily:
-
-“So, this is what I am to sell my soul for? A goodly price, no doubt,
-and more than it is worth. The owner of all this wealth cannot go
-begging for a husband, be she ugly as Medusa. Perhaps, after all, I
-have been troubling myself for nothing. She may not choose to accept
-a shabby young man, without a penny in his pocket, and with a gloomy
-face. If she refuses me, I dare say that father will let me go back to
-Lally.”
-
-This thought afforded him some comfort, and he plodded on, seeking
-relief from his troubles in exertion. He cared not whither he went, and
-his surprise was great when at last, arousing from his abstraction, he
-found himself in the streets of Canterbury.
-
-He was near an inn of the humbler sort, and, with a sudden recklessness
-as to what became of him, he turned into the low barroom and demanded a
-private parlor. A bare little apartment on the upper floor, overlooking
-the inn stables, was assigned him. The floor was uncovered, and a deal
-table, rush-bottomed chair and rickety lounge made up the sum of the
-furniture.
-
-Rufus called for brandy and water, tossing a shilling to the frowsy
-waiter. A decanter of brandy and a bottle of water were brought to him,
-and he entered upon a solitary orgie. He had not been used to drink,
-and the fiery liquid mounted to his brain, inducing stupidity and
-drunkenness. For an hour or two he drank with brief intermission, but
-sleep overpowered him, and his head fell upon the table and he snored
-heavily. With his red face, dishevelled hair and stertorous breathing,
-his unmistakable aspect of drunkenness, he presented a terrible
-contrast to the hopeful boy artist with his honest eyes and loving
-soul, who had made the dingy lodging in New Brompton a very paradise to
-poor Lally.
-
-The day wore on. A waiter looked in upon the poor wreck, once or twice,
-and went away each time chuckling. In the latter part of the afternoon
-Rufus awakened, and came to himself. Ashamed and conscience-stricken,
-his first thought being of what Lally would think of him, he summoned a
-waiter and demanded strong coffee and food. These were furnished him,
-and having partaken of them he settled his bill, and set out to walk
-back to Wyndham.
-
-“It makes no difference what becomes of me now,” he said to himself, as
-he strode along the return route. “I have started down hill, and I may
-as well keep on descending.”
-
-He had accomplished half the distance between Canterbury and his
-destination, when a four-wheeled cab, traveling briskly, came up behind
-him, compelling him to take to the side path. The next moment the cab
-stopped, and Craven Black’s head was protruded from the open window,
-and Craven Black’s smooth voice called:
-
-“Is that you, Rufus? What are you doing away out here? Jump in! jump
-in!”
-
-Rufus obeyed, entering the vehicle, and the cabman drove on.
-
-“Where have you been?” demanded the elder Black, as the son settled
-himself upon the front seat and opposite his father.
-
-“I have spent the day in Canterbury,” returned Rufus sullenly.
-
-“What have you been doing there?”
-
-“Getting drunk,” was the dogged answer.
-
-The young man’s face testified to his truthfulness. His eyes, wild in
-their glances, were bloodshot and watery, and he had a reckless air, as
-if he had thrown off all restraints of virtue and decency.
-
-Craven Black experienced a sense of alarm. He began to fear lest his
-son would defeat all his plans by his obstinacy and recklessness.
-
-“You do not ask me about the girl,” said the father, with more
-gentleness than was usual to him. “I have seen her.”
-
-“I supposed you had,” was the reply. “I gave you her address.”
-
-“I told her the truth,” said Craven Black, puzzled by his son’s strange
-mood. “I explained to her kindly enough that her marriage with you was
-no marriage at all. She readily accepted the situation. She cried a
-little, to be sure, but she said herself that she was of lower rank
-than you, and that the match was too unequal. She--she said that of
-course all was over between you, and it was best you and she should
-never meet again. And in fact, to render any such meeting impossible,
-she left her lodging while I was there.”
-
-Rufus fixed a burning gaze upon his father.
-
-“I don’t believe a word you say,” he cried. “The news you carried to
-her broke my darling’s heart. Do you suppose I do not know how much she
-loved me? I was all she had in the wide world--her only friend. Think
-of that, sir! Her only friend--and you have torn me from her. If she
-dies of grief, you are her murderer.”
-
-Craven Black shuddered involuntarily, remembering poor Lally’s flight,
-and his conviction that she had gone to destroy herself. His emotion
-did not pass unnoticed by his son.
-
-“Poor Lally!” said Rufus, his voice trembling. “It’s all over between
-us forever. I have blighted her life, ruined her good name, and made
-her an outcast. Yet it was not I who did this. It was you. Her blood be
-upon your head. If I could find her and were free to woo her, she would
-never take me back, now that I have proved myself a liar, perjurer and
-pitiful wretched coward. It is indeed all over between us. You can do
-what you like with the wreck you have made me. You might have given me
-a chance to redeem myself; you might have let me be true to her, but
-you would make me perjure myself doubly. I hope you are pleased with
-your work.”
-
-“Let there be an end of these silly boyish reproaches,” exclaimed Mr.
-Black harshly. “You have done with the girl, and are about to enter
-upon a new life. I have generously forgiven your errors and crimes.
-If you repeat the drunkenness of to-day, I’ll send you to prison.
-Try me, and see if I do not. I have brought you a trunk from London,
-filled with new clothing from your tailor, shirt-maker, boot-maker
-and jeweller. I have spared no expense to make you look as my son
-should look. And now, by Heaven, if you disgrace me to-night by any
-recklessness and folly, any mock despair, I’ll prosecute you on that
-charge of perjury.”
-
-“You need not fear that I shall disgrace myself, or insult my hostess,”
-said Rufus doggedly. “You think no one has the instincts of a gentleman
-save yourself.”
-
-With such recriminations as these, the pair beguiled their drive to
-Wyndham; nor did they cease from them after their arrival in Mr.
-Black’s private parlor. A sullen silence succeeded in good time, and
-reigned throughout the dinner, of which they partook together. After
-dinner, they retired to their several rooms to dress.
-
-The trunk Mr. Black had brought from London had been deposited in his
-son’s chamber. Rufus had the key, and unlocked the receptacle, bringing
-to light an ample supply of fine garments, perfume cases, a dressing
-case, and a set of jewelled shirt studs in a little velvet case.
-
-He arrayed his boyish figure in his new black garments, noticing
-even in his despair that they fitted him as if he had been measured
-for them. He waited in his room until his father came for him, and
-submitted sullenly to his father’s careful inspection.
-
-“You’ll do,” commented Craven Black. “If you act as well as you look, I
-shall be satisfied. Mind, if you mention to Miss Wynde one word about
-the girl Lally, it’s all up with you. The cab is waiting. Come on!”
-
-They descended together to the cab, and were conveyed to Hawkhurst.
-On arriving at the mansion, they alighted, and entered the great
-baronial hall, sending in their cards to Lady Wynde by the footman. The
-baronet’s widow having signified to her domestic that she was “always
-at home” to Mr. Black and his son, the visitors was ushered into the
-drawing-room.
-
-Lady Wynde and Artress arose to receive them. Craven Black presented
-his son, and the baronet’s widow welcomed the young man graciously. She
-was looking unusually well this evening in a robe of pale amber silk,
-with a row of short locks trimmed squarely, nursery fashion, across her
-low polished forehead, a long black curl trailing over each shoulder,
-and her cheeks glowing with suppressed excitement. Rufus remembered
-having seen her before her marriage to Sir Harold Wynde, and his face
-brightened as at the sight of a friend.
-
-He was acquainted, although slightly, with his father’s cousin, Mrs.
-Artress, and as he held out his hand to her, he looked his surprise at
-seeing her at the house of Lady Wynde.
-
-“I am her ladyship’s hired companion,” said Artress, explainingly. “My
-husband left me very poor, you know, Rufus, and I have been in dear
-Lady Wynde’s employ for some three years. I beg you not to recognize
-me as a relative, nor to mention the fact to any one. I have my family
-pride, you know, Rufus, and it is hard to be obliged to earn one’s own
-living when one has not been brought up to it.”
-
-Her reasons for concealment of the relationship existing between them
-seemed to Rufus no reasons at all, but he could not gainsay her wishes,
-and muttered that he would obey her.
-
-“Miss Wynde has gone out for a solitary stroll in the park,” observed
-Lady Wynde, as Mr. Black’s eyes wandered about the room. “I sent her
-out for the fresh air. She is not looking well, I regret to say. Mr.
-Rufus, if you will be kind enough to go down the wide park avenue, you
-cannot fail to find her. I beg you will introduce yourself to her, and
-bring her back to the house.”
-
-Rufus bowed, and stepping lightly out of the open window, moved
-leisurely toward the park.
-
-“There is nothing like an informal meeting,” said Lady Wynde, looking
-after the young man. “I planned to have the meeting occur in this way,
-so that neither should be embarrassed by the presence of a third party.”
-
-“I should have preferred to keep my eye upon Rufus,” remarked Mr. Black
-uneasily. “Did you give the letter to the young lady?”
-
-“Yes, and she received it exactly as I had expected she would. She is
-not at all the style of girl I looked for, Craven, and it is fortunate
-for our plans that she cared so much for her father.”
-
-While the conspirators were thus conversing, Rufus crossed the lawn
-and entered the park by a small gate. The wide avenue, a fine carriage
-drive, was readily found, and Rufus walked for some distance upon
-it, keeping a vigilant look-out for Miss Wynde. He was beginning to
-meditate upon a return to the house without the young lady, when a
-flutter of white garments among the dusky shadows of a side path caught
-his gaze. He plunged into the path without hesitation, and presently
-overtook the wearer of the garments, who was of course Miss Wynde.
-
-Hearing his swift approach, she halted and turned her face toward him.
-Rufus also halted, strangely embarrassed under her brave full glance.
-She had laid aside her mourning garments, and wore rose-colored ribbons
-and a profusion of frills and puffs and lace, in which she looked very
-fair and dainty and sweet. Her wine-brown eyes were all aglow, but her
-cheeks were pale, and her face was very grave, even to sadness.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” said Rufus awkwardly, raising his hat. “I am
-looking for Miss Wynde.”
-
-“I am Miss Wynde,” said Neva, with gentle courtesy.
-
-The young man’s embarrassment was not lessened by this announcement.
-
-“Lady Wynde sent me to look for you,” he declared. “I--I am Rufus
-Black!”
-
-Neva started and looked at him with her grave, serious eyes. He
-appeared to advantage in his new garments, and his face was pale and
-worn by the day’s dissipation. His sorrows and his sickness had given
-him a refined look to which he was not fully and fairly entitled, and
-his eyes met hers frankly and honestly, with a real admiration in their
-gaze.
-
-Neva’s cheeks flushed slightly, and her heart fluttered. Clearly Rufus
-Black had not made an unfavorable impression upon her in that first
-glance.
-
-They turned and walked slowly up the path together, entering the
-avenue. Rufus tried to conquer his unwonted awkwardness, and singularly
-impressed with Neva’s beauty, exerted himself to please her. They
-sauntered on, stopping now and then to gather ferns or flowers, and
-when they emerged from the park upon the lawn, they were chatting
-gayly, and on the best of terms with each other.
-
-And yet the heart of each was strangely sore. Neva thought of what
-“might have been,” and sighed in her inmost soul that the husband her
-father was supposed by her to have chosen for her was not the one
-her heart most longed for. And Rufus mourned as bitterly as ever in
-his soul for his lost young wife, and felt that he should never be
-comforted.
-
-Craven Black and Lady Wynde watched them as they approached the house,
-and the lip of the former curled, as he muttered:
-
-“So fade the griefs of the young! Unstable as water, Rufus is already
-this girl’s lover!”
-
-“They are mutually pleased,” murmured Lady Wynde. “Her father’s
-supposed wishes and this young man’s interesting melancholy will
-soon efface Lord Towyn’s image from Neva’s mind, if it has made any
-impression there.”
-
-It seemed indeed as if the opinion of the worldly-wise conspirators
-would be justified.
-
-The young couple halted upon the lawn, and Neva’s gravity and the
-melancholy of Rufus began to disappear, when the lodge gates swung
-open, and three gentleman came riding up the avenue.
-
-The long twilight had begun, and even Neva’s keen eyes could not
-recognize the new-comers at that distance, and she chatted merrily to
-Rufus, who answered as lightly. But as the horsemen came nearer, and
-Neva regarded them more closely, a sudden silence fell upon her, and a
-strange shyness seized her.
-
-It was a critical movement in the progress of the game which Craven
-Black and Lady Wynde were playing, and these new-comers had arrived in
-time to give a new turn to it.
-
-For Neva recognized them as the three guardians of her property--Sir
-John Freies, Mr. Atkins, and the young Lord Towyn!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV. MR. BLACK GETS A NEW IDEA.
-
-
-As Neva recognized the youngest of her three guardians, as they rode up
-the avenue of Hawkhurst at a leisurely pace, a strange embarrassment
-seized upon her. The horsemen had not yet seen her in the twilight and
-the shadow of shrubbery, and she proposed a return to the drawing-room.
-Rufus Black assented, and they passed in at the open French window
-which gave directly upon the marble terrace.
-
-The drawing-room was full of shadows. Artress sat in a recessed window,
-silent and immovable, and Lady Wynde and Craven Black were in the
-second portion of the triple arched apartment, completely hidden from
-view, and their low whispers barely penetrated to the outer room. Lady
-Wynde, hearing her step-daughter’s return, came forth, rang for lights,
-and ordered the lace curtains to be dropped.
-
-A score of wax candles were presently glowing in their polished silver
-sconces, and a couple of moon-like lamps dispensed a mellow radiance
-that penetrated to every corner of the triple room. The curtains,
-fluttering in the soft night breeze, shut out all insects, but admitted
-the perfumed air. Craven Black, satisfied that his _tete-a-tete_ with
-Lady Wynde was over for the present, sauntered into the outer room to
-make the acquaintance of the young heiress.
-
-He had thought of Neva as an insipid, affected, weak-headed young lady,
-who would be a mere puppet in his hands and those of Lady Wynde. His
-surprise may be imagined when he beheld a slender, spirited girl, with
-eyes of red gloom, brown hair tinted with the sunshine, scarlet lips,
-and a piquant face, full of an irresistible witchery and sauciness--a
-girl so bright and keen of intellect, so resolute and strong in
-herself, that he wondered that she could ever have been imposed upon by
-even his skilfully forged letter.
-
-“Neva, my dear,” said Lady Wynde, “allow me to present to you
-the Honorable Craven Black--one of your dear papa’s friends, and
-consequently yours and mine.”
-
-Neva acknowledged the introduction by a bow of her haughty little head,
-and a smile so warm and sweet that Craven Black was captivated by
-it. Any friend of her late father’s had a peculiar claim upon Neva’s
-friendship, and Craven Black resolved to elaborate the small fiction,
-and coin agreeable little anecdotes of his relations to her father, so
-that the heiress would be inspired with a liking for him.
-
-Before time had been granted for more than the usual commonplaces
-incident to an introduction, the three guardians of Miss Wynde were
-announced by the footman, and were ushered into the drawing-room.
-
-Sir John Freise came first--a tall, stately old gentleman, with white
-hair and closely cropped whiskers, distinguished for his old-fashioned
-courtliness of bearing, and noted throughout Kent for his unswerving
-integrity.
-
-Mr. Atkins, the attorney, came next, looking more than ordinarily
-insignificant of person, his bald head shining, his honest face flushed
-to redness. He was not fine looking, nor well shaped, but, like Sir
-John, he was a man of invincible integrity and honesty of character,
-and many years of service to Sir Harold Wynde had inspired him with a
-genuine affection for the family, and given him, as one might say, a
-personal interest in its prosperity.
-
-Lastly, and because he preferred to come last, was young Lord Towyn, as
-handsome as any knight of chivalry, his golden hair tossed back from
-his noble forehead, his blue eyes glowing, and a warm smile playing
-about his tawny mustached lips.
-
-Neva recognized her guardians, and welcomed them all in turn with
-handshakings and quiet greetings. Lady Wynde introduced the Blacks,
-father and son, to the new-comers.
-
-“This is scarcely a business visit, Miss Neva,” said Sir John Freise,
-leading his young hostess to a sofa with old-fashioned gallantry. “Lord
-Towyn and Mr. Atkins have been closeted with me to-day, discussing your
-affairs in the way of rents and leases, but it is our business to spare
-you these details, and it is your province to enjoy the fruits of our
-labors,” and he smiled paternally upon her. “We are come to welcome you
-back to the home of your fathers, and to express the hope that you will
-fill worthily the place your father has resigned to you.”
-
-“I will try to walk in papa’s steps,” returned Neva, lowly and gravely.
-
-“Lady Freise and my girls will call upon you to-morrow,” said Sir John.
-“They sent their love to you, and would have come to-day, but that I
-begged them to allow you a day to rest in after your journey. You will
-be inundated with visitors, Miss Neva. The Lady of Hawkhurst will not
-be permitted to hide her light under a bushel! Lady Freise has already
-projected no end of fetes, balls and dinners in your honor, and she has
-persuaded our young friend Lord Towyn to spend a month with us, so that
-you will not lack an escort, should you desire one.”
-
-“You are very thoughtful, Sir John,” said Lady Wynde, with a curl of
-the lip. “Miss Wynde, however, can never lack for an escort. I fancied,
-when I saw you three gentlemen enter in such formidable array, that
-some horrid red-tape business was about to be transacted. I did not
-know indeed but that you had come with some official suggestions as to
-the management of the household, or to discuss the matter of pin-money.”
-
-“All that is settled by Sir Harold’s will,” said Mr. Atkins quietly.
-“The baronet was very explicit in his directions, and assigned to Miss
-Wynde an extraordinarily liberal allowance until she comes of age,
-when, of course she comes into full possession of her magnificent
-revenues. Your residence at Hawkhurst was also provided for, Lady Wynde
-with a very handsome allowance in recognition of your services to Miss
-Wynde as friend and chaperon.”
-
-“And are we compelled to remain at Hawkhurst, whether we will or not?”
-demanded the baronet’s widow.
-
-“Certainly not,” replied Atkins. “You and Miss Wynde are free to reside
-where you please, but it is natural to suppose you will prefer for a
-stated residence the seat of the family grandeur.”
-
-Lady Wynde made no reply, but her glittering eyes became speculative.
-
-The visitors, while courteous to her ladyship, bestowed the larger
-share of their attention upon the young heiress to whom their visit
-was directed. They had intended to make but a brief call, but the time
-flew by as if on wings. Neva talked with them with cheerful gayety or
-gravity, as the subject rendered befitting, and at Sir John’s request
-played and sang for him. Lord Towyn leaned over the piano, turning the
-music leaves, a rapt expression on his face, and there was not one
-present, save Neva, who failed to see that he was already the lover of
-the beautiful young heiress.
-
-Rufus Black recognized the fact with an actual jealousy. He said to
-himself with a furious bitterness that his happiness and Lally’s had
-been ruined for the sake of Neva Wynde, and he would not be cheated of
-fortune and bride by the young earl.
-
-Craven Black sat apart, his forehead shaded by his hand, his light
-eyes fairly devouring the glowing loveliness of Neva’s face. He was a
-world-worn, base, dissolute man, incapable of honor and fidelity, even
-to the woman who had sinned and perilled so much for him. As he sat
-there, he contrasted Neva’s spirited and dainty beauty with the maturer
-and lesser charms of Lady Wynde, and strange thoughts and hopes awoke
-to life within his breast.
-
-“My fate is not so settled as to be irrevocable,” he thought within
-himself. “I wish I had seen the girl before I forged that letter. Why
-should I throw myself away upon four thousand a year and a woman of the
-world when, by skillful manœuvring, I might gain seventy thousand per
-annum and a bride like an houri? I will study my chances. If there is a
-chance for me with Neva, I will run the race with these others and win
-the prize.”
-
-And so, all unknown and unsuspected by Neva, she had three aspirants
-to her hand among those who listened to her music.
-
-And of these three lovers, one only was pure and true and altogether
-worthy of her love. Only one loved her without a shadow of greed, and
-that one was the young Lord Towyn.
-
-But which, should she choose among these three, would she prefer? To
-whose fate, of these three, would she link her own? Would a regard for
-the supposed wishes of her dead father outweigh the desires of her own
-heart? These were problems which time alone could solve.
-
-After the music, Lady Wynde rang for coffee, which was brought in and
-dispensed to the guests. Sir John Freise, waxing eloquent upon the
-degeneracy of modern society, held Lady Wynde captive. Rufus Black
-wandered down the length of the drawing-rooms, looking with an artist’s
-eye at the glorious pictures upon the walls. Mr. Atkins and Craven
-Black engaged in conversation, and Artress sat apart, silent and
-observing, as usual.
-
-Lord Towyn and Neva also looked at the pictures and talked of their
-childhood days, growing animated over their pleasant reminiscences.
-The young earl gradually drew his hostess into the great conservatory,
-a huge glass dome at the bottom of the drawing-room. Here the air was
-heavy with fragrance. Stalks of white lilies sprang from the side
-walls, bearing pistils of red and dancing light. Aisles of tropical
-shrubbery, thick with golden fruitage or snowy blossoms, or both at
-once, stretched on either side. A feathery palm reared its plumed head
-in the very centre of the dome. Vines trailed and festooned themselves
-from floor to roof, dropping perfume from fiery chalices. And through
-the light foliage of a well-trimmed jungle of flowers and leaves,
-gleamed a great mellow moon of light, reminding one of a Brazilian
-forest on a moonlit summer night.
-
-“Do you remember when we were here last, Neva?” asked Lord Towyn, as
-they paused beside the marble basin of a great fountain, and Neva idly
-dropped rose petals upon the crystal waters. “We were standing upon
-this very spot, with only that marble Naiad to hear us, and you and I
-were but children when we entered upon our childish betrothal. How long
-ago that seems! Do you remember it, Neva?”
-
-The rose petals in the girl’s white fingers were not brighter than her
-cheeks.
-
-“Yes, I remember,” she said, dropping her head over the bright waters.
-“What precocious children we were, Lord Towyn.”
-
-The young earl sighed.
-
-“The utterance of my title shows the great gulf between the now and the
-then,” he said. “I was no lord in those days, and you called me Arthur.
-Now when your name comes instinctively to my lips, I must remember that
-you are no longer Neva, but Miss Wynde. Why will you not call me by
-the old name, and let us take up our old friendship where we left off,
-instead of beginning anew as strangers?”
-
-“I am willing,” said Neva frankly, yet shyly. “I--I look upon you as a
-brother, Arthur, and you may call me Neva.”
-
-Strange to say, the permission thus granted did not seem to delight
-Lord Towyn. His warm blue eyes clouded over with a singular discontent,
-and a pained expression gathered about his mouth.
-
-“I don’t want to be considered as your brother, Neva,” he declared,
-after a minute’s struggle with himself. “I would prefer to begin again
-as your merest acquaintance. A fraternal relation toward you would be
-insupportable. For years I have dreamed and hoped that I might some
-time win your love. I am no longer a boy, Neva, and I love you with a
-man’s love. I have carried your picture for years next my heart. I have
-worshiped you in secret ever since our childhood. I do not know how I
-have been betrayed into this confession, Neva,” he added. “I did not
-intend to be so premature. I do not yet ask you to love or to marry me,
-but I do ask you to allow me to become your suitor.”
-
-Neva’s heart thrilled under this ardent and impassioned declaration as
-under an angel’s touch. Then a leaden pall seemed to descend upon her
-soul, and her face grew white, as she faltered:
-
-“It cannot be, Arthur.”
-
-Lord Towyn shivered with sudden pain.
-
-“You--you are not promised to another, Neva?”
-
-“N-no!”
-
-“You love another then?”
-
-“Oh, no, no!”
-
-“It is that I have startled you by my premature confession, Neva?” he
-cried tremulously. “Dolt that I am! I have thought and dreamed of you
-so much, that I had forgotten how perfect a stranger I must seem to you
-after all these years of separation. You cannot take up the old life
-where we dropped it. I was foolish to have expected it. Do not let my
-undue haste prejudice you against me. It will not, Neva?”
-
-“No, Arthur,” answered the girl lowly and hesitatingly.
-
-“And you will give me a chance to reprieve my error?” he demanded
-eagerly. “Perhaps in time you may grow to love me, Neva--”
-
-“Arthur,” said the young girl, nerving herself to tell him of her
-father’s supposed last wishes, “I have something to say to you. Papa--”
-
-Her voice died out in a half sob.
-
-“Well, darling?” said the young earl, bending nearer to her, his eyes
-burning with the love that filled his being. “What of Sir Harold? Did
-you fancy that he would not have approved of our love?”
-
-Neva nodded a dumb assent.
-
-“And if Sir Harold had approved, do you think you could learn to love
-me?” whispered the young earl softly, his eager breath fanning the
-girl’s cheek.
-
-Neva’s silence was interpreted as a favorable answer.
-
-“Before my father died,” said Lord Towyn gently, “he told me that
-it had long been his wish and that of Sir Harold to unite the two
-families in our marriage. Sir Harold was in India at the time of my
-father’s death, and was not likely, at that distance from home, to have
-contracted an aversion to me, or to have formed other plans for your
-future. You see, I am right, Neva, and now I claim to be considered as
-your suitor. May it not be?”
-
-“Oh, Arthur,” the girl murmured, sorely perplexed, “I--”
-
-The story trembled on her lips, but she did not give utterance to it,
-for at that critical moment Rufus Black entered the conservatory, and
-came up the flower-bordered aisle, with an unmistakable displeasure
-upon his melancholy face.
-
-Neva started guiltily at his approach, as if she had been wronging
-him or her dead father in listening to Lord Towyn’s avowals of love.
-But although she moved away from the young earl, she paused under a
-tropical rose-tree, and began to gather roses, and her two suitors
-hovered about her, each recognizing in the other a rival.
-
-They were presently joined by Neva’s third lover, Craven Black. The
-last-named looked moodily and jealously at his son and the young earl,
-and devoted himself so closely to the heiress that, with a feeling of
-annoyance, Neva presently proposed a return to the drawing-room.
-
-A glance of jealous anger from the eyes of Lady Wynde greeted Craven
-Black as he reentered the presence of his betrothed. The baronet’s
-widow began to entertain a suspicion of the disaffection of her lover.
-
-Sir John Freise was the first to propose a departure, and the horses
-were ordered, and he, with Mr. Atkins and Lord Towyn, took their leave.
-
-Craven Black exchanged a few whispered words with Lady Wynde,
-appointing an interview for the next morning, and then also departed
-with his son.
-
-They were to walk to Wyndham, and not a word was spoken by either as
-they strode down the wide avenue, and passed out at the lodge gates.
-Once out upon the highway, Craven Black broke the silence, saying:
-
-“Well, Rufus, how do you like Miss Wynde?”
-
-“She is beautiful--lovely beyond comparison,” answered Rufus
-enthusiastically. “I never saw a being so witching, so bright, so
-sweet!”
-
-“You talk like a lover,” sneered Craven Black. “One would not believe
-that you had been lying drunk all day at a low inn through love for
-another woman.”
-
-“You will drive me mad!” ejaculated Rufus, his voice choking suddenly.
-“How dare you taunt me with my misery and degradation? I did love
-Lally--I do love her, God knows. But you have separated us. She
-despises me, and I am thrown upon myself. Why grudge me the little
-comfort Miss Wynde’s presence and smiles give me? If I had never met
-Lally, I should have idolized Miss Wynde. And as Lally can never be
-mine again--my poor wronged girl--and I shall go to perdition unless
-some hand pulls me back, I turn to Miss Wynde as a drowning man might
-turn to any frail support and cling to it. I--I like her. I could
-almost say I love her.”
-
-“Enviable elasticity of youthful affections!” sighed Craven Black,
-still sneeringly, and speaking in a stilted voice. “You remind me of a
-child, Rufus, whose doll is smashed to-day, but who is equally content
-with a new one to-morrow. You remind me also of the old maid’s prayer.
-She wanted one man and another, but as the years went on and she grew
-old, she ceased to pray for the affections of any man in particular,
-but cried out, ‘Any, O Lord, _any_!’ And so, I judge, one woman is to
-you the same as another. It is ‘Lalla Rookh’ one day, and Miss Wynde
-the next. ‘Extremes meet.’”
-
-Rufus grew terribly angry.
-
-“You talk as if you were dissatisfied with me for obeying your own
-orders to make myself agreeable to Miss Wynde,” he ejaculated. “Do you
-want her now for yourself?”
-
-Mr. Black hastened to disclaim any such desire.
-
-“As to me,” said Rufus, with unwonted decision, “I will not be much
-longer dependent upon you. I will win Miss Wynde and her fortune, or
-I’ll blow my brains out. Lally is lost to me, but all is not lost, as
-I thought this morning. I like Miss Wynde. I even love her already,
-strange as it may seem, but I do not and cannot love her as I love poor
-Lally. But I shall marry her and make her happy. I am desperate, but by
-no means helpless and hopeless.”
-
-Mr. Black maintained a dogged silence during the remainder of the walk.
-He bade his son good-night coldly upon the inn stairs, and locked
-himself in his own rooms, muttering:
-
-“The girl has three lovers, for my fickle son really loves her. I must
-watch my chances, and not loosen my hold upon Octavia until I have
-made sure of Neva. In default of the greater prize, I must not lose
-the lesser. It requires some skill to sit upon two stools and not fall
-between them. I wish I could have foreseen the turn affairs would take,
-and had inserted my name in that forged letter in place of my son’s
-name. I shall have to be pretty keen to do away with the effect of that
-letter. I would give all I own in the world at present to know which of
-her three lovers will win the heiress of Hawkhurst.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI. RUFUS ASKS THE MOMENTOUS QUESTION.
-
-
-Craven Black and his son met at their late breakfast in the private
-parlor of the former. The father was himself again, cold, polite, and
-cynical. The son was sullen and irritable, at war with himself and all
-mankind. His grief for the loss of his young wife had lost none of its
-poignancy, although he had avowed himself the suitor of another. His
-thoughts during the night just passed had been all of Lally, and not of
-Neva. In his dreams at least, he was still true to the loving heart he
-had broken.
-
-The pair were sipping their coffee when a waiter brought in Mr. Black’s
-morning paper, just arrived from London. Craven Black unfolded the
-sheet and scanned its contents lazily.
-
-“Any news?” inquired Rufus.
-
-“Nothing particular. It’s all about a war in prospect between Prussia
-and France. I never read politics, so I’ll skip the French letter and
-alarming head lines. I prefer to read the smaller items. Ah, what is
-this?”
-
-Craven Black started and changed color as his eye rested upon a
-familiar name in an obscure paragraph, under a startling title. His
-agitation increased as he glanced over the paragraph, taking in its
-meaning.
-
-“What’s the matter?” demanded Rufus. “Any of your acquaintance dead?
-Any one left you a fortune?”
-
-“It is terrible,” said Craven Black, shuddering, and regarding the
-paper with horrified eyes. “How could she have been so utterly foolish
-and insane? It was not I who killed her.”
-
-“Killed whom? Then some one is dead?”
-
-“Poor girl!” muttered Craven Black, still staring at the paper with
-wide eyes, as if he read there an accusation of wilful murder. “Poor
-Lally--”
-
-“_Who?_”
-
-Rufus leaped to his feet with a shriek on his lips, bounded to his
-father’s side, and snatched the paper in his trembling hands.
-
-“I--I see nothing,” he cried. “You shocked me cruelly. I--I thought
-that Lally-- Oh, my God!”
-
-He stood as if suddenly frozen, staring as his father had done at an
-item in a lower corner of the paper--an item which bore the title:
-“Distressing Case of Suicide. Another unfortunate gone to her death!”
-
-From the midst of this paragraph the name of Lalla Bird stood out with
-startling distinctness.
-
-Unconsciously to himself, Rufus Black read the brief paragraph aloud in
-a hoarse, strained, breathless sort of voice, and his father listened
-with head bent forward, and with a horrified look graven on his face,
-as upon stone.
-
-“Last evening,” the notice read, “as officer Rice was pursuing his
-usual beat, a young woman dashed past him, bonnetless, her hair
-flying, and ran out upon Waterloo Bridge. She was muttering wildly to
-herself, and her aspect was that of one beside herself. The officer,
-comprehending her purpose, rushed after her, but he was too late to
-arrest her in her dread purpose. She looked back at him, sprang up to
-the parapet like a flash, and with a last cry upon her lips--a name the
-officer could not make out--she precipitated herself into the river. In
-falling, her head struck a passing boat, mutilating her features beyond
-all semblance of humanity. She was dead when taken from the water, and
-will have a pauper’s burial unless some one comes forward to claim her
-remains. No token of her identity was found upon her person, but her
-handkerchief, floating on the water and picked up immediately by a
-boatman, bore the name of Lalla Bird. The girl, for she was very young,
-was pretty, and without doubt belonged to that frail class which more
-than any other furnishes us suicides.”
-
-Rufus Black read this paragraph to the very end, and then the paper
-fell from his nerveless hands.
-
-“Dead!” he said hollowly. “Dead!”
-
-“Dead!” echoed his father hoarsely.
-
-“_Dead!_” said Rufus Black, turning his burning, terrible eyes upon his
-father’s face. “And it was you who killed her! I loved her--I would
-have been true to her all her days, but you tore us asunder, and drove
-her to despair, madness and death. You are her murderer!”
-
-Craven Black started, nervously, and looked around him.
-
-“Don’t, Rufus--don’t,” he ejaculated uneasily. “Some one might hear
-you. The girl is to blame for killing herself, and no one else can be
-held accountable for it. I offered her money but she would not take it.
-It was the landlady who drove her to the--the rash act. The old woman
-listened at the door, and suddenly burst in upon us and called the girl
-some foul name and ordered her out of her house. The girl fled as if
-pursued by demons. I thought then she meant to kill herself--just as
-she has done!”
-
-A groan burst from Rufus Black’s lips.
-
-“My poor, poor wife!” he moaned. “She _was_ my wife, and she shall not
-lie in a pauper’s grave. I am going up to London--”
-
-“To make a fool of yourself,” interrupted Craven Black, recovering from
-his shock. “And to-morrow morning the papers will all come out with the
-romantic story that this girl was your wife, and the story will stick
-to you all your days. People will say that you drove her to her death.
-Your chance of becoming master of Hawkhurst will end on the spot. You
-will be cast out and abhorred. Others as pretty and as good as this
-girl have been buried at the public expense. Leave her alone.”
-
-“I cannot--”
-
-“Suppose you go then? What will you say to the coroner, or police
-justice? What excuse will you have for abandoning your wife, as you
-persist in calling the girl? Shall you confess your perjury? Can you
-stand the cross-questioning, the badgering, the prying into your life
-and motives?”
-
-Rufus shrank within himself in a sort of terror. The besetting weakness
-and cowardice of his nature now paralyzed him.
-
-“I cannot go,” he muttered. “Oh, Lally, my lost wronged wife!”
-
-He dashed from the room, and entered his own, locking his door, and was
-not visible again that day.
-
-Craven Black attired himself in morning costume and walked over to
-Hawkhurst. Neva was in the park, and he had a long private interview
-with Lady Wynde. In returning to his inn, he crossed the park,
-ostensibly to cut short his walk, but really to exchange a few words
-with the heiress.
-
-He found her in one of the wide shaded paths, but she was not alone.
-Lord Towyn, on his way to the house, had just encountered her, and they
-were talking to each other, in utter forgetfulness of any supposed
-obstacles to their mutual love. Craven Black accosted them, and
-lingered a few moments, and then pursued his way homeward, while the
-young couple slowly proceeded toward the house.
-
-Craven Black called at Hawkhurst the next day, and the next, but alone,
-Rufus remaining obstinately sequestered in his darkened chamber. Neva
-was busy with visitors, Lady Freise and her daughters, and other
-friends and neighbors, hastening to call upon the returned heiress.
-Lord Towyn found excuses to call nearly every day. He was devoting all
-his energies to the task of wooing and winning Neva, and he pushed his
-suit with an ardor that brought a cynical smile to Craven Black’s lips
-continually.
-
-There were fetes given at Freise Hall in Neva’s honor; breakfast and
-lawn parties at other houses; and the young girl found herself in a
-whirl of gayety in strong contrast with her late life of seclusion.
-
-During the week that followed the publication of the announcement of
-Lally Bird’s suicide, Rufus Black did not cross his threshold. He
-meditated suicide, and wept and bemoaned his lost darling with genuine
-anguish. During this week, Craven Black made various overtures to
-Miss Wynde, uttered graceful compliments to her when Lady Wynde was
-not within hearing, and threw a lover-like ardor into his tones and
-countenance when addressing her. But he could not see that he was
-regarded by her with any favor, and grew anxious that his son should
-again enter the lists, and win her from Lord Towyn, who seemed to be
-having the field nearly to himself.
-
-After an energetic talk with his son, Craven Black persuaded Rufus to
-emerge from his retirement and to again visit Hawkhurst. There is a
-refining influence about grief, and Rufus had never looked so well as
-when, habited in black, his face pale, thin, and sharp-featured, his
-eyes full of melancholy and vain regret, he again called upon Neva. The
-impression he had made upon her upon the occasion of his first visit
-had been favorable, and it became still more favorable upon this second
-visit. Neva received the impression, from his steady melancholy and
-the occasional wildness of his eyes, that he was a genius, and became
-deeply interested in him.
-
-Add to this interest the influence of the forged letter, which she
-devoutly believed to have been written by her father now dead, and one
-will see that even Lord Towyn had in the boy artist a dangerous rival.
-
-Lady Wynde steadily pursued her preparations for her marriage,
-keeping a keen watch upon her lover, whom she more than suspected of
-faithlessness to her. She loved him with all her wicked soul, and was
-anxious to secure him in matrimonial chains, but her engagement to him
-had not yet been announced, and even Neva did not know of it.
-
-By the exercise of Lady Wynde’s influence, the Blacks, father and son,
-were invited to all the parties given in Neva’s honor, and Rufus Black
-and Lord Towyn were ever at the side of the young heiress. Lady Wynde
-hinted judiciously to a few of her chosen friends that Neva and young
-Black were informally betrothed, but that the betrothal was still a
-secret.
-
-As the summer passed and September came, bringing near at hand the
-time appointed for the marriage of Lady Wynde and Craven Black, both
-the Blacks, father and son, became uneasy and restless. The former
-was anxious to try his fate with Neva before committing himself beyond
-retrieval with her step-mother. Rufus had learned to love the heiress
-with a genuine love, not as he had loved Lally, but still with so much
-of fervor that he believed he could not live without her. His grief for
-his young wife had not lessened, but time had robbed the blow of its
-sharpest sting, and he thought of Lally in heaven, while he coveted
-Neva on earth. He grew anxious to put his faith to the test.
-
-A favorable opportunity was afforded him.
-
-Neva was fond of walking, and frequently took long walks, despite the
-fact that she had carriages and horses at command. One mild September
-evening, after her seven o’clock dinner, she walked over to Wyndham
-village to purchase at the general dealer’s some Berlin wool urgently
-required for the completion of a sofa pillow, or some such trifle, and
-sauntered slowly homeward in the gloaming.
-
-Rufus Black, who was idly wandering in the streets at the time, hurried
-after her and offered his escort, and took charge of her parcel. They
-walked on together.
-
-As they emerged from the village into the open country, Rufus felt
-that the hour had come in which to learn his fate from Neva’s lips. He
-revolved in his mind a dozen ways of putting the momentous question,
-but the manner still remained undecided when Neva sat down to rest upon
-a way-side bank in the very shadow of Hawkhurst park.
-
-This bank was her favorite halting-place when going on foot to or from
-Wyndham. It was shaded by a giant oak, and clothed in the softest and
-greenest turf. Here the earliest primroses blossomed and hearts-ease
-starred the ground. Near the bank a small private gate opened into the
-park. Rufus decided in his own mind that this was the spot, and this
-soft, deepening twilight the hour for the avowal of his love.
-
-There was no one within the park within view to interrupt him; no one
-coming along the road. With a slight sense of nervousness he even
-surveyed a way-side thicket that flanked the bank upon one side, as if
-fearing some way-side tramp might be lurking there within hearing, but
-he saw nothing to discountenance his projects.
-
-“It’s a lovely evening,” said Neva softly, looking up at the shadowing
-sky and around her at the shadowed earth. “The air is full of balm!”
-
-“Yes, it is lovely,” said Rufus, fixing his gaze upon the young girl,
-as if he meant his remark to apply to her face. “How the time has
-sped since I first saw you, Miss Neva. Life was very dark to me in
-those July days, but you have given it a glow and brightness I did not
-dream that it could ever possess. It seems to me that I never existed
-until--until I knew you. You cannot fail to know that I love you. I
-have often thought that you have purposely encouraged my suit. But be
-that as it may, I love you more than all the world, Miss Neva. Will you
-be my wife?”
-
-He waited in a breathless suspense for her reply.
-
-Neva’s face did not flush with joy, as it might have done had the
-speaker been Lord Towyn. She looked very grave, and into her eyes of
-red gloom came a sadness that was terrible to see.
-
-“I like you, Rufus,” she said gently, looking beyond him with
-a strange, far-seeing gaze. “I believe you to be good and
-honorable--would to God I did not--for then--then--Rufus, I do not know
-what to say to you. What shall I answer you?”
-
-“Say Yes,” pleaded Rufus, with the energy of a gathering terror. “Do
-not refuse me, Neva, I implore you. I am not handsome and titled like
-Lord Towyn; I am plain and awkward, but I love you with all my soul.
-I place my fate in your hands. I have it in me to become great and
-good, and if you will be my wife I will be noble for your sake. But if
-you cast me off, I shall perish. In you are centred all my hopes. Oh,
-Neva, I beseech you to be merciful to me, and to save me from the utter
-misery of a life without you. I cannot--cannot live if you cast me off!”
-
-He spoke with an earnestness that went to Neva’s soul. She trembled,
-as if the burden of responsibility laid upon her were too heavy to be
-borne. In her uplifted eyes was a wild, beseeching look, as if she
-called upon her father from his home in heaven to aid her now.
-
-“Remember,” said Rufus desperately, “you are deciding upon my life or
-death--mortal and physical!”
-
-Neva read in the declaration an awful sincerity that made her shudder.
-
-“I must think,” she faltered. “I cannot decide so suddenly. Give me a
-week, Rufus--only a week in which to decide. Oh,” she added, under her
-breath, with a passionate emphasis, “if papa only knew! He would have
-spared me this.”
-
-Rufus assented to the delay with a beaming face. If she had intended
-to refuse him, he thought, she would have done so on the spot. But she
-had not refused him, and there was hope. She should be his wife, and he
-would be master of Hawkhurst yet.
-
-In the midst of his self-gratulations, Neva arose and walked slowly
-onward, grave and sorrowful. Rufus walked beside her with a joyous
-tread.
-
-When they had passed on into the thickening shadows, and the primrose
-bank had been left far behind, a ragged, childish figure stirred itself
-from the further shadow of the thicket, and a childish face, wan and
-thin and haggard, with a woman’s woe in the great dark eyes, looked
-after the young pair with an awful horror and despair.
-
-That face belonged to the disowned young wife whom Rufus mourned as
-dead! The wild and woful eyes were the eyes of Lally Bird!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII. THE YOUNG WIFE’S DESOLATION.
-
-
-It was indeed poor Lally Bird, the wronged young wife, whom her husband
-mourned as dead, who, crouching in the shelter of the way-side thicket,
-stared after Neva Wynde and Rufus Black with eyes full of a burning woe
-and despair.
-
-“He loves her! He loves her!” the poor young creature moaned, in the
-utter abandonment of her terrible anguish. “He said her answer meant
-life and death to him! And I am so soon forgotten? Oh, he never loved
-me--never--never! And he does love her with all his soul--O Heaven!”
-
-She sank back into the deeper shadow of the thicket, moaning and
-wringing her hands.
-
-Her hat had fallen off, and her face was upturned to the gray evening
-sky. That face, still childlike in its outlines and in its innocence,
-yet sharp of feature, wan, thin and haggard, was full of wild
-beseeching. The great hungry black eyes were upraised to Heaven in
-agonized appeal.
-
-How terribly alone in all the wide world she was! Alone and friendless,
-with no roof to shelter her, no food to break a long fast, no
-money. She was ragged and forlorn, her feet peeping from their frail
-coverings, her sharpened elbows protruding through her sleeves. And now
-her last hope had been dashed from her, and it seemed as if nothing
-remained to her but to die.
-
-The story of her life from the moment in which she had fled from
-her dingy lodgings at New Brompton, had been one of bitterness and
-privation.
-
-When she had escaped from her only shelter, half maddened and wholly
-despairing, with the voices of Craven Black and Mrs. McKellar yet
-ringing in her ears, her first impulse had been self-destruction. She
-had sped along the streets until, by a circuitous route, she had gained
-the river and a jutting pier, but it was daylight, and people were
-in waiting for the boats, so her dread purpose was checked, and she
-wandered on, wild of face and half distraught, keeping the river ever
-in sight, as if the view of its waters soothed her mad despair.
-
-Wandering aimlessly onward, she passed through foul river streets,
-where the vile of every sort congregated, but no one spoke to her or
-molested her. The shield of a watchful Providence interposed between
-her and all harm. Once or twice some ruffian would have accosted
-and stayed her, but a glance into her white and rigid face and wild
-unseeing eyes made him shrink back abashed, and she sped on as if
-pursued, not knowing the dangers she had escaped.
-
-She grew weary of foot, and to the wildness of her anguish succeeded
-a merciful apathy, which steeped her senses. The night came on; the
-gas lamps were lighted in the streets; the warehouses and shops were
-closed, there were fewer women in the streets; and in happy homes in
-the suburbs, at the north and south and east and west of the great
-teeming city, wives and daughters were gathered into pleasant homes.
-But she had no home, no refuge, no shelter. She had--oh, saddest of
-words, and saddest of meaning--she had nowhere to go!
-
-And so she plodded on, slowly and wearily now. She had traversed miles
-since leaving her lodgings, and it seemed as if her march, like that of
-the fabled Wandering Jew, must be eternal.
-
-At last, still wandering without aim, she staggered through the
-turn-gate and out upon the Waterloo Bridge, in the wake of a party of
-returning play-goers. No one noticed her, and she passed half-way over
-the bridge and sank down upon one of the stone benches, while the party
-she had followed went on and were soon lost to view in the Waterloo
-Road.
-
-She was alone on the bridge, in the night and darkness. Below her lay
-the dark river, with the small steamers puffing and glancing through
-the gloom with their tiny eyes of fire, and lowering their stack-pipes
-as they passed under the bridge. A few people stood at the landing
-below. Somerset House, dark and silent, like some gigantic mausoleum,
-lay to her left. Along the river banks were the great warehouses, long
-since closed for the night, and in the distance the dome of St. Paul’s
-reared its head, faint and shadowy, among the deeper shadows.
-
-The glancing lights of the river boats, the lamps at the landing and
-along the shores looked strangely unreal to Lally’s dazed eyes. She
-crouched in a corner of the seat and peered over the parapet and tried
-to think, but her brain seemed paralyzed. The only thought that came
-to her was that she was no wife, that Rufus had abandoned and disowned
-her, and that he was to marry another.
-
-People crossed the bridge in laughing groups as the Strand theatres
-and concert-halls closed, but no one paid heed to, even if they saw,
-the slender, crouching figure with its wild, fearing eyes. Sometimes,
-for many minutes together, Lally was alone upon that portion of the
-bridge--alone with her desperate soul and her terrible temptation to
-end her sorrows in one fatal plunge.
-
-She arose in one of these intervals to her feet upon the bench and
-leaned over the parapet, a prayer upon her lips that Heaven would
-forgive the deed she meditated. And, as she stood poised for the leap
-into eternity, there came back to her, though years had passed since
-she heard it, the voice of her mother, as she had once listened to it,
-denouncing the self-murderer as one who destroys his soul as well as
-his body. The remembrance of the words, and the thought of her mother,
-caused her to drop again into the corner of her bench sobbing, and
-weeping a storm of tears that saved her reason.
-
-The wild outburst of her anguish had been succeeded by a strange
-dullness and apathy, when a woman--a mere girl--“bonnetless, and her
-hair flying,”--as the Blacks had read in the paper--came running upon
-the bridge with moans upon her lips. Lally was as pure and innocent
-as a little child, yet she knew at a glance that this poor creature
-belonged to that class which is often termed “unfortunate”--as Heaven
-knows they are indeed, in every sense of the sad word. This girl came
-up to the very niche where Lally was hidden, and sprang upon the bench.
-She gave one wild look over her shoulder, at the officer who pursued
-her, and then, with the name of some man upon her lips, tossed up her
-arms, and sprang over the parapet--into eternity!
-
-Lally uttered a cry of horror.
-
-“It might have been me!” was her first thought, and trembling and
-terrified, she looked over at the whirling figure as it struck heavily
-upon the passing boat.
-
-And in the same instant Lally’s handkerchief, upon which her name
-was marked, and which she had held in her hand, dropped over the
-parapet upon the body of the woman. That accident it was that changed
-poor Lally’s destiny. For the poor suicide was she of whose death
-Rufus Black read in the paper of the following morning, and Lally’s
-handkerchief found upon the water beside the dead girl gave the
-impression that the suicide was Lally Bird.
-
-The presence of Lally upon the bridge escaped the notice of the
-officer, who turned and ran along the bridge to the end, and hurried
-down to the pier, whither the rescued body of the suicide was being
-carried.
-
-People began to gather upon the bridge, seeming almost to spring
-up miraculously, and Lally, fearing questioning, or detention as
-witness of the suicide, arose and went back by the way she had come,
-up Wellington street, into the Strand. She was sufficiently herself
-by this time to know that she must seek shelter for the night; but
-where could she go? What respectable inn would give shelter to one so
-forlorn of aspect, so utterly alone as she? She would be driven forth
-as something disreputable and unclean, should she demand lodgings at
-such an inn. She had money in her pocket--the share Rufus had given her
-of the ten pounds his father had sent him--but she might almost as well
-have been penniless, since her money could not procure her respectable
-shelter for the night.
-
-There might be some home for friendly wanderers, some asylum for
-respectable women, where she could pass the dangerous hours of
-darkness, but she knew of none. Such asylums are generally for
-reclaimed women, not for those who have never gone astray. The
-omnibuses were still running, it not being yet midnight, and Lally
-being too tired to walk further, signalled an empty one and took her
-seat in it.
-
-A long ride followed over rough pavements, past dingy rows of shops
-and houses, past small villas in small gardens, looking like toy
-establishments, and through a more sparsely settled region. Lally,
-overcome with fatigue, dozed most of the time, and was rudely awakened
-from her slumbers by the stopping of the omnibus and the rough voice of
-the driver bidding her alight.
-
-She got out, feeling quite dazed, and saw that the omnibus had stopped
-at the end of its route, and that the horses were already unhitched and
-being led into the stable. She crept away, not knowing where to go, not
-even knowing where she was.
-
-Plodding on wearily, now and then clinging to some way-side fence or
-wall for a moment’s rest, she came out upon a wide, deserted heath,
-open to whoever might choose to camp upon it. This was Hampstead Heath.
-She walked out upon the turf for some distance, and lay down in the
-shelter of a furze patch, thinking she was going to die. The skies were
-dark above her, and all around her the black gloom brooded, covering
-her from the sight of any tramps who might be taking their sleep that
-summer night on that same broad common.
-
-And here Lally slept the sleep of utter weariness. She awakened at the
-dawn of the new day, and started up, with a wild look around her.
-
-There were donkeys of diminutive breed grazing around her, a few tramps
-rising lazily from the ground, and a score of industrious people, men,
-women, boys and girls, digging up groundsel, chickweed and other green
-weeds, to sell in the great city for the sustenance of birds.
-
-Lally wonderingly surveyed this species of industry of which she
-had not previously suspected the existence, and then hastily took
-her departure, not even tempted to prolong her stay by the offer of
-some bread and cheese from an old, blackened chimney-sweep, who had
-evidently also slept upon the heath.
-
-All thoughts of self-destruction had gone from her mind, and the
-question as to her future course now presented itself. The school with
-which she had formerly been connected as music teacher was broken up,
-and among the few people she had known there was one only to whom she
-was tempted to go in her distress. That one was an old, consumptive
-woman who had been “wardrobe mistress” at the seminary during Lally’s
-stay there--that is, the old woman had mended and darned the garments
-of the pupils, and had supported herself on her meagre pay. She lived
-at Notting Hill, the school having been located in that neighborhood,
-and Lally knew her address. The old woman had been kind to her, and
-Lally resolved to seek her.
-
-She walked a portion of the distance, and availed herself of the aid
-of omnibuses when she could. Yet the morning was well on when the girl
-climbed the rickety stairs to the garret of her old friend, and timidly
-knocked for admittance.
-
-The old woman was at home, busy with her needle, and gave Lally
-admittance. More--when she heard her pitiful story--she gave the girl
-sympathy and the tenderest kindness. She was very near her grave, and
-very poor, but she offered Lally a share of her home, and the girl
-gratefully accepted it. Here she ate breakfast. During the day her
-old friend borrowed a copy of the morning’s paper, as was her daily
-custom, and Lally read in it the account of the suicide on Waterloo
-Bridge, her name being given--to her utter amazement--as that of the
-self-murderess.
-
-Having a conviction that Rufus would see the same notice, as indeed he
-had done, she visited the coroner’s office with a yearning to see her
-young husband as he should bend over the poor mutilated body believing
-it to be her own, and to relieve his anguish and remorse. But Rufus
-came not, and the suicide was buried in a pauper’s grave.
-
-Lally went back to the garret at Notting Hill, with a strange gloom
-on her face, and shared the labors of the old seamstress, gradually
-assuming the entire support of her friend, as the old woman’s strength
-failed. She did all the sewing her friend--who was now wardrobe
-mistress at a boys’ school--had engaged to do, and nursed her with a
-daughter’s tenderness, actually starving herself to nourish her only
-friend, watching by day and night at her side, denying herself food,
-clothes, and needed rest, to take care of the one who had befriended
-her; but with all her care and kindness the old woman faded day by day,
-and early in September died, invoking with her last breath blessings on
-Lally’s name.
-
-The few sticks of furniture were sold to give the old woman a decent
-burial. Lally was out of money--out of everything. The superintendent
-of the boys’ school refused to allow her to continue the duties she had
-performed in the old woman’s name, alleging that she was too young.
-And as a last blow, she was turned out of her lodgings because of her
-inability to pay the rent.
-
-At this crisis of her history, when as it seemed only death presented
-an open door to her, she resolved to go down to Wyndham and look once
-more on her husband’s face.
-
-To think, with our desperate Lally, was to act. She set out to walk
-to Wyndham, working in the hop-fields for sustenance as she went.
-Thus she did three full days of work before she arrived near her
-destination, and she had crept into the way-side thicket to rest before
-continuing her journey to Wyndham, when she chanced to overhear the
-conversation between Neva Wynde and Rufus Black.
-
-Her despair, as she listened to the words of her young husband in
-declaring his love for Neva, may be imagined. She did not dream how
-bitterly he had mourned for his lost young wife; she did not dream that
-she was dearer to him still than Neva could ever be. How could she
-tell, when listening to his passionate vows of love to Miss Wynde, that
-the young wife who had slept in his bosom was in his thoughts by day
-and by night, and was regarded by him as a holy, precious memory?
-
-“It’s all over!” she sobbed, pressing her face down upon the dewy turf.
-“I am forgotten--but why should I not be? I never was his wife. He said
-so himself in his letter to me that I carry still next my heart. Not
-his wife--but _she_ will be! How beautiful she is! How lovely her face
-was, how clear her voice. She would pity me if she knew, but she is an
-heiress, I dare say, while I am only the poor outcast Rufus has made
-me! Oh, Rufus, Rufus!”
-
-She wailed aloud, but she had learned to bear her griefs in silence,
-and presently she struggled to her feet and walked in the direction in
-which the heiress and her lover had gone--the same way by which Lally
-had recently come.
-
-There was no need for her to go to Wyndham now. Her presence there, or
-her appearance to Rufus, might embarrass his relations to his newer
-love, and possibly interfere with his marriage. He thought her dead,
-and had not even come forward to claim the body he supposed to be hers.
-Ah, yes, she had never been his wife, and she was forgotten. She would
-never cross his path again.
-
-She staggered wearily along the road, in and out of the beaten
-foot-path, with the twilight deepening around her, and with a deeper
-twilight settling down upon her heart and brain. She passed the
-Hawkhurst park, the picturesque stone lodge guarding the great bronze
-gates, and here she paused.
-
-The lodge was closed, and a faint light streamed out through the dotted
-white curtains. Lally crept close to the great gates formed of bronze
-spears tipped with gilt, like the gates of the Tuileries gardens at
-Paris, and pressing her face against the cool rods, looked up the
-avenue.
-
-At the distance of half a mile or more, the great gray stone mansion
-sat throned upon a broad ridge of land, and lights flared from the wide
-uncurtained windows far upon the terrace, and the glass dome of flowers
-was all alight, and the stately old house looked to the homeless
-wanderer down by the gates like Paradise.
-
-Her eager eyes searched the terrace, and then, inch by inch, the great
-tree-arched avenue.
-
-Midway up the avenue, walking slowly, as lovers walk, she saw her young
-husband and Neva Wynde. With great jealous eyes she watched their
-progress through the shadows, and, when they paused in the stream of
-light upon the terrace, and Rufus Black bent low toward the heiress, a
-great flame leaped into poor Lally’s sombre eyes, and she caught her
-breath sharply.
-
-The heiress and her suitor stood for some moments upon the terrace,
-unconscious of the eyes upon them. Rufus declined to go into the house
-that evening, alleging his agitation as an excuse. Neva took her
-small parcel which he had carried, and he seized her hand, uttering
-passionate words of love, and begging her to look favorably upon his
-suit. Then not waiting for an answer, he pressed her hand to his lips,
-and dashed down the avenue toward the gates, while Neva entered the
-house.
-
-And all this the jealous, disowned wife saw, with her face growing
-death-like, and the flame burning yet more brightly in her sombre eyes.
-
-“She has accepted him,” she muttered. “She will not take the week to
-consider his suit. They are betrothed. I was sure she lived here.
-Perhaps she owns the place, and he will be its master. They will both
-be rich and happy and beloved, while I--Ah, how swiftly he comes! He
-walked like that the night _I_ accepted him. But I am not his wife; I
-never was, even when I thought myself so. He must not see me. No shadow
-from the past must darken his happy life--his and hers. It is all
-over--all over--and I shall never see his face again!”
-
-With one last, long lingering look, and a sob that came from her very
-soul, she turned and sped down the road like a mad creature--away from
-Wyndham, and Rufus, and all her hopes--going, ah, where?
-
-And Rufus, with his new love-dream glowing in his soul, came out of the
-Hawkhurst grounds, and hurried toward his inn, never dreaming how near
-he had been to his lost wife, nor how surely he had lost her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII. ONE OF NEVA’S LOVERS DISPOSED OF.
-
-
-Upon his return to the Wyndham inn, Rufus Black found his father
-awaiting him in their private parlor. The elder Black arched his brows
-inquiringly as his son came in, and Rufus bowed to him gayly, as he
-said:
-
-“Well, father, you ought to be pleased with me now. I have offered
-myself to Miss Wynde.”
-
-Craven Black started.
-
-“She has accepted you?” he demanded.
-
-“Not yet. She wants to think the matter over, and I have consented to
-let the thing rest where it is for a week. I take it as a good sign
-that she did not refuse me at once. Her hesitation implies a regard for
-me--”
-
-“Or a sense of duty toward some one else,” muttered Craven Black.
-“Curse that letter. If I had seen the girl, I would never have written
-it.”
-
-“What is it you say, father? I did not catch your words.”
-
-“They were not meant for your ears. So, Miss Wynde demands a week in
-which to consider your offer? It would be proper for you to refrain
-from going to Hawkhurst to-morrow. I’ll explain to her that you
-remained away from motives of delicacy.”
-
-“Which I shall not do,” said Rufus doggedly. “I shall go to Hawkhurst
-to-morrow evening. I will not leave the field clear to Lord Towyn. He’s
-an earl, rich, handsome, and intellectual, the very man to capture a
-girl’s heart, and if I know myself, I am not going to give him a clear
-field. Why, he loves her better than I do even, and I can only come out
-ahead of him by dint of sheer persistency. It’s a mystery to me how
-she refrained from saying No to me, when she can have Lord Towyn if she
-chooses. There is something behind her hesitation--some hidden cause--”
-
-“Which you will do well to let alone,” interposed his father. “‘Take
-the goods the gods provide’ without questioning.”
-
-Rufus was not satisfied, but concluded to act upon this advice.
-
-The next morning Craven Black attired himself with unusual care, and
-mounted his piebald horse, a new purchase, and set out alone, at a
-slow canter, for Hawkhurst. He knew that the heiress usually took a
-morning ride, attended only by her groom, and he knew in what direction
-these rides usually lay. It was impossible for him to demand a private
-interview with her at her home without exciting the suspicions and
-jealousy of Lady Wynde, and he was determined to see the heiress alone,
-and discover in what estimation she held him. He was also determined
-not to accept quietly the four thousand a year of the baronet’s widow
-until he knew, beyond all peradventure, that he could not obtain the
-seventy thousand per annum of the baronet’s daughter.
-
-He rode up to Hawkhurst lodge, slackening his speed, but not pausing.
-As it happened, a little boy, a son of the lodge keeper, was playing in
-the road, and Craven Black tossed him a sixpence, and demanded if Miss
-Wynde were out riding, and which way she had gone.
-
-“Dingle Farm way,” said the urchin, scrambling in the dust for the
-shining coin. “She’s been gone a long time.”
-
-“Who is with her?” asked Craven Black.
-
-“Jim, the groom--that be all.”
-
-Black put spurs to his horse and dashed on. He knew where the Dingle
-Farm was, it having been pointed out to him by Lady Wynde, as a portion
-of the Hawkhurst property. The ride was a favorite one with Neva, being
-unusually diversified. The road led through the Dingle wood, across a
-common, and skirted a chalk-pit of unusual size and depth.
-
-Craven Black turned off from the main road into a narrower one that
-led across the country, and pursued this course until he entered into
-the cool shadows of the Dingle wood. Still riding briskly, he came
-out a little later upon the Dingle common, a square mile of unfenced
-heath, covered with furze bushes. At the further edge of the common
-was the chalk-pit, now disused. The road ran dangerously near to the
-precipitous side of the pit, and there was no railing or fence to serve
-as a safeguard. Beyond the chalk-pit lay the Dingle Farm, a cozy, red
-brick farm-house, embowered with trees.
-
-The morning was clear and bright, and the sun was shining. As Craven
-Black emerged from the shadow of the wood he swept a keen glance over
-the level common, and beheld a mile or more away, beyond the chalk-pit,
-but approaching it, the figure of Miss Wynde.
-
-She was superbly mounted upon a thoroughbred horse, and was followed at
-a little distance by her groom.
-
-Even at that distance, Craven Black noticed how well Neva sat her
-horse; how erectly she carried her lithe, light figure; how proudly the
-little head was poised upon her shoulders. She was coming on toward him
-at a sweeping gait, her long green robe fluttering in the swift breeze
-she made.
-
-“She will be a wife to be proud of,” thought Craven Black, with a
-strange stirring at his heart. “How fearless she is. One would think
-she would pass the chalk-pit at a walk, but it is evident she does not
-intend to.”
-
-He dashed on to meet her. Neva saw him coming, recognized him, and
-the close grasp upon her bridle rein relaxed, and the fierce gallop
-subsided into a quiet canter.
-
-She was past the chalk-pit when he came up to her, and she bowed to him
-coldly, but courteously.
-
-“Good-morning, Miss Wynde,” said Mr. Black. “You were having a mad ride
-here. I fairly shuddered when I saw you coming. A single sheer on the
-part of your horse would have sent you over the precipice.”
-
-“Oh, Badjour and I understand each other,” said Neva lightly, patting
-the horse’s proudly arched neck. “I never ride a horse, Mr. Black, if I
-have not confidence in my ability to control him.”
-
-“But the road is so narrow and dangerous at this point,” said Craven
-Black, wheeling and riding slowly at her side.
-
-“You are right, Mr. Black. The road must be fenced in. I will speak to
-Lord Towyn about it.”
-
-“And why not to Sir John Freise or Mr. Atkins, who are equally your
-guardians?” asked Craven Black, with an attempt at playfulness.
-
-“Because I presume I shall see Lord Towyn first,” replied Neva,
-gravely. “What do you say to a race, Mr. Black? I see that you are
-returning with me.”
-
-Craven Black looked over his shoulder. The discreet groom had fallen
-behind out of earshot. Now was the time to make his declaration of
-love. Such an opportunity might not again occur.
-
-“The truth is, Miss Wynde,” he exclaimed, “I came out to meet you. I
-want to have a quiet talk with you, if you will hear me.”
-
-Neva bowed her head gravely, and her reins fell loosely in her
-gauntleted hand. They were out upon the wide common now, the Dingle
-farm behind them. The Dingle wood ahead.
-
-“You may guess the nature of the communication I have to make to you,
-Miss Wynde,” said her elderly lover, with an appearance of agitation, a
-portion of which was genuine. “That which I have to say would be more
-fittingly said in some other position perhaps. I should prefer to say
-it on my knees to you, as the knights made love in olden times.”
-
-“Oh!” said Neva. “Hadn’t we better move on faster, Mr. Black?”
-
-“Coquettish like all of your sex!” said Craven Black, drawing nearer to
-her. “You understand my meaning, Neva? You know that I love you--I who
-never loved before--”
-
-“Surely,” cried Neva, with an arch sparkle in her red-brown eyes, “you
-did not perjure yourself when you married the mother of your son?”
-
-Craven Black bit his lips fiercely, but said smilingly:
-
-“That marriage was one of convenience. No love entered into it, on
-my side, at least. I never loved till I met you, fair Neva. You have
-younger suitors, but not one among them all who will be to you what I
-would be--your slave, your minister, your subject.”
-
-“And I should want my husband to be my king,” murmured Neva softly.
-“And I would be his queen.”
-
-“That arrangement would suit me perfectly,” declared Craven Black,
-feeling a little awkward at his love-making, not altogether sure
-Neva was not secretly laughing at him, yet eagerly catching at the
-assistance her words afforded him. “I would be your king, Miss Neva--”
-
-He paused in anger, as the girl’s light laugh made music in his ears
-that he by no means appreciated. His anger deepened, as Neva looked at
-him with a bright sauciness, a piquant witchery of eyes and mouth.
-
-“You are very kind,” the girl laughed, “but I do not think--pardon me,
-Mr. Black--that you are of the stuff of which kings of the kind I meant
-are made!”
-
-Craven Black’s fair face flushed. He tugged at his light beard with
-nervous fingers. An angry light glowered in his light eyes.
-
-“I may not know the full meaning of your words, Miss Neva,” he said,
-forcing himself to speak calmly. “A romantic young girl like you
-is sure to have many fancies which time will prune. A young girl’s
-fancy is like the overflowing of some graceful rose-tree. When time
-shall have picked off a bud here, a leaf there, or a half-blown rose
-elsewhere, the remainder of the blossoming will be more perfect. I
-am no knight of romance, but I am not aware that there is anything
-ridiculous in my face or figure. Ladies of the world have smiled
-graciously upon me, and more than one peeress would have taken my name
-had I but asked her. My heart is fresh and young, full of romantic
-visions like yours. My love is honest, and a king could offer no
-better. Miss Wynde, I ask you to be my wife!”
-
-Neva’s face was grave now, but the sparkle was still in her eyes, as
-she said:
-
-“I am sure I beg your pardon, Mr. Black, but I thought you were a
-suitor of Mrs. Artress. I never had an idea that your visits were
-directed to me. I am deeply grateful for the honor you have done me--I
-suppose that is the proper remark to make under the circumstances; the
-ladies in novels always say it--but I must decline it.”
-
-“And why, if I may be allowed to ask?” demanded Craven Black, his face
-deepening in hue nearly to purple. “Why this insulting refusal of an
-honest offer of marriage, Miss Wynde?”
-
-Neva regarded her angry suitor with cool gravity.
-
-“I beg your pardon if the manner of my refusal seemed insulting,” she
-said gently, “but the idea seems so singular--so preposterous! At the
-risk of offending you again, Mr. Black, I must suggest that a union
-with Mrs. Artress would be more suitable. I am only a girl, and young
-still, as you know, and it is proper that youth should mate with youth.”
-
-“You prefer my son then?”
-
-“To you? I do.”
-
-“And you will marry him?”
-
-The lovely face shadowed, but Neva answered quietly:
-
-“Mr. Rufus has asked me that question, sir, and I prefer to have him
-receive his answer from my lips. Whatever my feelings toward him, I
-have no indecision in regard to you.”
-
-“And you actually and decidedly refuse me?”
-
-“Actually and decidedly, Mr. Black!”
-
-“Is there no hope that you may change your mind Miss Wynde? Will no
-devotion upon my part affect your resolution?”
-
-“None whatever. I cannot even give your proposal serious consideration,
-Mr. Black. I am willing to regard you as a friend. As a lover, pardon
-me, you would be intolerable to me.”
-
-Neva spoke with an honest frankness that increased Craven Black’s
-anger. He saw that he had no chance of winning her love or her fortune,
-and it behooved him not to lose the lesser fortune and lesser charms of
-her step-mother. He tried to take his failure philosophically, but in
-refusing his love, Neva had made him her bitter and unscrupulous enemy.
-
-“I accept my defeat, Miss Wynde,” he said bitterly, “and resign all my
-pretensions to your hand. Pardon my folly, and forget it. I hope my son
-will meet with better success in his suit. And may I ask as a favor
-that you will keep my proposal secret, not even telling it to your
-step-mother?”
-
-“I am not in the habit of boasting of such things, even to Lady Wynde,”
-said Neva, coldly. “Your proposal, Mr. Black, is already forgotten.”
-
-They were in Dingle wood now, and the heiress struck her horse sharply
-and dashed away at a canter. Craven Black kept pace with her, and at a
-discreet distance behind followed the liveried groom.
-
-Neither spoke again until they were out of the wood, and had traversed
-the cross-road and gained the highway. When the gray towers of
-Hawkhurst loomed up in full view, their speed slackened, and Craven
-Black said hastily:
-
-“One word, Miss Wynde. I have your solemn promise, have I not, that you
-will never betray the fact that I have proposed marriage to you?”
-
-Neva bowed haughtily.
-
-“Since you have not confidence in my delicacy,” she said, “I will give
-the promise.”
-
-Craven Black’s face flushed with something of triumph. He was still
-smarting with his anger and disappointment, still secretly foaming
-with a bitter rage, but he desired to show Neva that he was not at all
-crushed or humiliated.
-
-“Thank you,” he said. “I shall rely upon that promise. The truth is,
-Miss Neva, a betrayal of my secret would cause me serious trouble.
-Ladies never pardon even a slight and temporary disaffection like mine.
-I am engaged to be married, and my promised bride is the most exacting
-of women. She would rage if she knew that I had looked with love upon
-one so many years her junior.”
-
-“Indeed! You will marry Artress then?”
-
-“Artress?” ejaculated Black, in well-counterfeited amazement. “What,
-marry the companion when I can have the mistress? No, indeed, Miss
-Neva. I am engaged to Lady Wynde!”
-
-“To Lady Wynde--to my father’s widow?”
-
-Black bowed assent.
-
-Neva was astounded. She had been too busy with her friends since her
-return to Hawkhurst to detect the real object of Craven Black’s visits,
-and both Lady Wynde and Black had conspired to hoodwink her. She had
-never contemplated the possibility of Lady Wynde marrying for the third
-time. The idea almost seemed sacrilegious. Her father had seemed to
-her so grand and noble, so above other men, that she had not deemed it
-possible for a woman who had once been honored with his love to marry
-another.
-
-“It is like Marie Louise, who married her chamberlain after having been
-the wife of Napoleon,” she thought. “It is incredible. I refuse to
-believe it!”
-
-Her incredulity betrayed itself in her face.
-
-“You don’t believe it?” said Black, with a mocking smile. “It is true,
-I assure you. Lady Wynde and I became engaged before your return from
-school. We are to be married next month. Her trousseau is secretly
-preparing in London.”
-
-His manner convinced Neva that he spoke the truth.
-
-“And so,” she said, her lip curling, “when your wedding-day is so near,
-and the woman you have won is making ready for your marriage, you amuse
-yourself in talking love to me! And that is your idea of honor, Mr.
-Black? You are well named. Craven by name, and Craven by nature!”
-
-She inclined her head haughtily and dashed on. Black, choking with
-rage, hurried in close pursuit. The lodge gates swung open at their
-approach, and they galloped up the avenue. Lady Wynde came out upon
-the terrace to meet them. Neva dismounted at the carriage porch, the
-terrace being only upon one side of the mansion, and with a haughty
-little bow to Lady Wynde passed into the house.
-
-Black dismounted and gave his horse in charge of the stable lad who
-had taken in hand the horse of Neva, and then walked toward the open
-drawing-room window with his betrothed wife.
-
-“What is the matter between you and Neva, Craven?” asked Lady Wynde
-jealously. “You look as black as a thundercloud, and she looked like an
-insulted queen. What have you been saying to her?”
-
-“I thought it time to divulge our secret to her, my darling,” said
-Black hypocritically. “Our wedding-day is so near that I deemed it best
-to inform her. I met her out riding, and seized upon the occasion to
-declare the truth.”
-
-“And what did she say?”
-
-“She fairly withered me with her scorn; recommended me to marry Matilda
-Artress; and seemed to regard my marriage with her father’s widow as a
-species of sacrilege. I hate her!” he hissed between his clenched teeth.
-
-Lady Wynde smiled, well-pleased.
-
-“And so do I,” she acknowledged frankly. “But it is for our interest to
-counterfeit friendship for her. Be patient, Craven. Some day you and I
-may bring down her haughty pride to the dust.”
-
-“Suppose she refuses Rufus?”
-
-“You and I will soon be married, Craven, and in our union is strength.
-Tell Rufus to write to Neva, delaying her answer to his suit for
-a month. By that time we shall be married. If she refuses then to
-accept your son as her husband, we can contrive some way to compel her
-obedience. I am her step-mother and guardian, and have authority which
-I shall use if I am pushed to the wall. I promise you, Craven, that we
-shall secure our ten thousand a year out of Neva’s fortune, and that we
-shall compel the girl to marry your son. Leave it all to me. Only wait
-and see!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX. NEVA’S CHOICE FORESHADOWED.
-
-
-In accordance with the advice of his scheming father, Rufus Black
-wrote a letter to Neva Wynde entreating her to take a month or six
-weeks, instead of the single week for which she had stipulated,
-for the consideration of his suit. And Neva, struggling between
-conflicting feelings, whose nature the reader already knows, and glad
-to be relieved of the necessity for an immediate decision, gratefully
-accepted the offered reprieve.
-
-The engagement of Craven Black and Lady Wynde, now that it had been
-declared to Neva, was no longer kept a secret from the world. Mr.
-Black, in a moment of good-natured condescension, informed his host at
-the Wyndham inn, and the amazed landlord bruited the story through the
-village. The engagement was publicly announced in the court papers,
-Craven Black himself writing the paragraph and procuring its insertion,
-and this announcement was copied into the Kentish journals.
-
-As may be imagined, the news of Lady Wynde’s intended marriage produced
-quite a sensation in the neighborhood of Hawkhurst. Sir Harold Wynde’s
-former friends were scandalized that he should have been so soon
-forgotten by the wife he had idolized, and that a man so palpably
-inferior to the baronet in character and attributes should have been
-chosen to take his place. Others, the three guardians of Neva’s
-property among the number, were ill-pleased that Craven Black should
-take his place during Neva’s minority as nominal master of Hawkhurst,
-and accordingly one morning, a fortnight after the publication of the
-engagement, Sir John Freise, Mr. Atkins, and Lord Towyn, rode over to
-Hawkhurst, and demanded an interview with Lady Wynde and Neva.
-
-Miss Wynde appeared first in the drawing-room, simply dressed in
-white, and fresh from a ramble in the park. She looked a little worn
-and troubled, as if her nights were spent more in anxious thoughts
-than in slumbers, but the radiance of her wonderful red-brown eyes was
-undimmed, and her face had lost nothing of the piquant witchery which
-was its chiefest charm.
-
-Before time had been granted Neva to more than exchange greetings with
-her guardians, Lady Wynde entered the room with an indolent languor of
-motion, and welcomed her visitors with effusion.
-
-“This is an unexpected pleasure, gentlemen,” said her ladyship, her
-black eyes glancing from one to another. “You have come to congratulate
-me upon the change in my prospects, I dare say. I have been overwhelmed
-with calls during the past week, and begin to find my connection with
-an old county family decidedly onerous,” and she laughed softly. “All
-of Sir Harold’s friends have been to see me, and really I believe that
-some of them have felt it their duty to condole with Neva upon the
-misfortune of so soon possessing a step-papa.”
-
-The three gentlemen had called for the purpose of discussing with Lady
-Wynde and Neva the expected change in the prospects of her ladyship,
-but the quiet audacity of the handsome widow’s speech and manner
-half-confounded them.
-
-Sir John Freise, being the eldest of the party, took upon himself the
-office of spokesman.
-
-“I was an old friend of Sir Harold, Lady Wynde,” he said, a little
-stiffly. “I was a man when Sir Harold was a boy, but I knew him well,
-and I loved him. I know how deeply he was attached to you, and it is
-for his sake that I have now intruded upon you. You are still young,
-and with your attractions and your fortune you are peculiarly liable
-to be beset by fortune-hunters. As your late husband’s most intimate
-friend, I desire to ask you if you have well considered this step you
-are about to take?”
-
-Lady Wynde bowed a cold assent.
-
-“Your knowledge of the character of Mr. Black can be but slight,”
-persisted Sir John Freise, leaning his chin upon the gold knob of his
-walking-stick, and regarding the handsome widow with troubled eyes. “He
-has been at Wyndham but a few months. I grant that he is of attractive
-exterior, Lady Wynde, but what do you know of his character? I have not
-come here to make any charges against Mr. Black but those I am prepared
-to substantiate. These gentlemen who have accompanied me will bear me
-out in the statement that I have no personal prejudices in the matter,
-and that I am actuated only by a desire for your ladyship’s happiness
-and that of Miss Wynde. I have written to London since hearing the
-report of your engagement, and yesterday received a reply of so much
-moment that I summoned Lord Towyn from his marine villa and Mr. Atkins
-from Canterbury to accompany me into your presence, and assist me to
-impart to you the unpleasant news. Lady Wynde, this Craven Black,
-your accepted lover, is a scoundrel, a gamester, a man unworthy your
-consideration for a moment.”
-
-“Indeed!” said Lady Wynde, with a slight sneer. “Mr. Black, to my
-knowledge, goes in the first society. He visited at the Duke of
-Cheltenham’s last year, and the duke is a perfect Puritan, as every one
-knows.”
-
-“The Duke of Cheltenham is a distant connection of Mr. Black, and
-invited him to his house with the hope of winning him into better
-courses,” said Sir John gravely. “But it is not Mr. Black’s high
-connections, but the man himself, with whom your destiny is to be
-linked, Lady Wynde. I implore you to consider your decision. Better to
-remain for ever the honored widow of Sir Harold Wynde than to become
-the wife of Mr. Craven Black.”
-
-“I do not think so,” said her ladyship, her sneer deepening. “I
-believe I am competent to choose for myself, Sir John, and it is _my_
-happiness, you will be pleased to remember, which is at stake. I resent
-your interference, as uncalled for and intrusive. I shall marry Mr.
-Craven Black in two weeks from to-day, and if you do not approve the
-marriage I presume you will be able to testify your disapproval by
-remaining away from the wedding.”
-
-Sir John looked deeply pained; Mr. Atkins looked disgusted. Lord
-Towyn’s warm blue eyes were directed toward Neva rather than toward
-Lady Wynde, but he lost nothing of the conversation.
-
-“I have performed only my duty in warning you, Lady Wynde,” said Sir
-John, after a pause. “You are bent upon this marriage with a man who
-was a stranger to you three months since, and so soon after the tragic
-death of Sir Harold Wynde in India?”
-
-“I have waited a year and three months before marrying again,” declared
-Lady Wynde, impatiently. “Why should I wait longer? Surely a year of
-mourning is all that custom requires. And as to not knowing Mr. Black,
-permit me to say that I know him well. I knew him before I ever met Sir
-Harold. Frequenting the same circles in town, and meeting more than
-once at the same houses in the country, it is impossible that I should
-not have known him. And here I beg you will drop the subject. I am in
-no mood to hear your aspersions of an honorable man, and your jealousy
-for the memory of Sir Harold Wynde need not blind you to the fact that
-virtue and honor did not die with him.”
-
-Sir John looked shocked and amazed. Neva’s face paled, and a sudden
-indignation flamed in her eyes, but she remained silent.
-
-“I think, with all deference to your opinion, Sir John,” said Mr.
-Atkins, “that, as Lady Wynde suggests, we would better drop the subject
-of Mr. Black. It is difficult to convey unpleasant information in a
-case like this without giving offence. We have done our duty, and that
-must content us. Let us now come to the actual business in hand. Allow
-me to ask you, Lady Wynde, if you intend to continue your residence at
-Hawkhurst after becoming Mrs. Craven Black?”
-
-A flash of defiance shot from her ladyship’s black eyes.
-
-“Certainly, I intend to reside here with my husband during the minority
-of my step-daughter,” she declared boldly. “I am Neva’s guardian, and
-my residence as such was assigned at Hawkhurst.”
-
-“Sir Harold never contemplated a state of affairs such as you propose
-Madam,” said Mr. Atkins doggedly. “To make this Mr. Craven Black
-nominal master of the home of the Wyndes is something utterly unlooked
-for.”
-
-“Where I am mistress, my husband will be master!” asserted Lady Wynde,
-with temper.
-
-“It should be so,” declared Mr. Atkins, “but you see how inappropriate
-it would be to make Mr. Black master of Hawkhurst. Good taste--pardon
-my plainness--would dictate your ladyship’s retirement from Hawkhurst
-upon the occasion of your third marriage, and we have come to propose
-that Hawkhurst be closed, Miss Neva transferred to the guardianship of
-Sir John Freise and Lady Freise, and that you and your new husband take
-up your abode at Wynde Heights, your dower house, or at any other place
-you may prefer.”
-
-Lady Wynde frowned her anger and defiance.
-
-“I shall remain at Hawkhurst,” she exclaimed haughtily. “If you desire
-to remove me, you must do so by process of law. If you think her
-father’s wife an unfit personal guardian for Miss Wynde, you can have
-Sir Harold’s will set aside, or take legal proceedings to obtain for
-her another guardian. I shall not relinquish my post, or the charge my
-dead husband reposed in me, until I am compelled to do so.”
-
-The young Lord Towyn’s face flushed, and he addressed Neva, in his
-clear ringing voice:
-
-“Miss Wynde, this matter concerns you above all others, and it is
-for you to have a voice in it. The proposed marriage of Lady Wynde
-completely vitiates your present relations to her. In becoming Mrs.
-Craven Black, I consider that Lady Wynde throws off all allegiance to
-Sir Harold Wynde, and ceases to be your step-mother. It is for you to
-decide if you will choose a new personal guardian in her stead.”
-
-All eyes turned upon the fair young girl. The young earl awaited her
-reply with a breathless anxiety. Sir John Freise and Mr. Atkins fixed
-their eager gaze upon her, and Lady Wynde regarded her sharply and with
-some uneasiness.
-
-“Before Neva comes to a decision,” said her ladyship hastily, “I have
-a word to say to her. Have I not treated you with all kindness and
-tenderness, Neva, since you came under this roof? Have I been guilty of
-one act of neglect, of step-motherly cruelty, or want of consideration?
-Have not your wishes been considered in all things?”
-
-Neva could not answer these questions in the negative.
-
-“There is no stipulation in Sir Harold’s will that I should not
-again marry,” continued Lady Wynde. “Sir Harold, without mention of
-the contingency of another marriage on my part, constituted me his
-daughter’s personal guardian, with the request that I make Hawkhurst
-my home until Neva marries or attains her majority. Not one word is
-said about or against my marriage, you will observe; and certainly
-Sir Harold Wynde was too sensible to expect me to remain a widow
-long--at my age too. My marriage, therefore, does not interfere with
-my relations toward Neva as her step-mother and personal guardian. Any
-court of law will confirm this decision. If you choose, Neva, to apply
-for a change of guardians, and to make a scandal, and to make your name
-common on every lip, I can only regret your ill-taste, and that you
-have yielded to such ill-guidance.”
-
-Mr. Atkins felt a sentiment of admiration mingle with his dislike for
-Lady Wynde.
-
-“She ought to have been a lawyer,” he thought. “She’s a mighty sharp
-woman, and we are sure to get the worst of it in a battle with her.
-Pity we made the attack, if it is only to put her on her guard.”
-
-Neva was still considering the matter intently. She had a thorough
-contempt for Craven Black, and disliked the prospect of being under
-the same roof with him, but she dreaded still more the publicity
-that would be given to her application for change of guardians. She
-remembered her father’s many injunctions to cling to Lady Wynde until
-her own marriage, or the attainment of her majority. Lady Wynde had not
-been unkind to her, nor illy fulfilled her duties as chaperon. Neva
-had actually nothing of which to complain, save Lady Wynde’s proposed
-marriage. She was a conscientious girl, and she could not decide to
-throw off the yoke her father had placed upon her shoulders, simply
-because Lady Wynde had chosen to enter into new relations which were
-not likely to affect the old. She felt that she was placed in a cruel
-position, but her duty, she thought, was plain to her.
-
-“Well, what is your decision, my child?” asked Sir John Freise
-paternally.
-
-“You are very kind to me, Sir John, and you also, Lord Towyn and Mr.
-Atkins,” said the young girl tremulously, “and I cannot properly
-express my gratitude to you for your concern for me. I appreciate all
-you have said, all that you mean. I own that Lady Wynde’s intended
-marriage is repugnant to me, and that I cannot understand how her
-ladyship can take Mr. Craven Black into papa’s place, but I have tried
-to reconcile myself to the change. And I think,” added Neva, her tones
-gathering firmness, and a brave look shining in her eyes of red gloom,
-“that I have not sufficient excuse for appealing to the law to give me
-a change of guardians. I shall have little to do or say to Mr. Craven
-Black, and Hawkhurst is large enough for us both. It was papa’s wish
-that I should remain for a certain period under the care of Lady Wynde,
-and I cannot forget that she was papa’s wife, and that he loved her.
-And more,” concluded Neva very gently, “if Lady Wynde is about to
-contract an imprudent marriage, and if she is likely to know sorrow
-because of her false step, she will need my friendship when the truth
-comes home to her. I thank you again, Sir John, Lord Towyn, Mr. Atkins,
-but I do not think I should be justified in taking the decided step you
-advise.”
-
-“I don’t know but you are right, Neva,” said Sir John. “At any rate,
-give your ideas of duty a fair trial, and if you change your mind
-let us know. It is not as if you were going away from us. Mr. Black,
-finding himself in a quiet, decorous neighborhood, may choose to settle
-down, and become a better man. We shall see you frequently, and my
-house will always be open to you, my dear, and my wife and girls will
-always be glad to receive you as an inmate of our family.”
-
-“I shall not forget your kindness, Sir John,” said Neva gratefully.
-
-“Miss Neva has always a way of escape from an unpleasant situation,”
-said the practical Mr. Atkins. “Her marriage will free her from Lady
-Wynde’s guardianship without publicity of an unpleasant description.”
-
-Neva reddened vividly.
-
-The frankness with which the conversation had been distinguished had
-considerably surprised the young earl. No one seemed to require the use
-of diplomacy in making plain an unpleasant meaning, and even Lady Wynde
-did not seem offended at the utterance of home truths from the lips of
-Mr. Atkins. It was an hour for plain-dealing, which was freely indulged
-in.
-
-The visitors, finding their errand fruitless, offered Lady Wynde their
-best wishes for her future, and bade her good-morning. At the door, Sir
-John Freise looked back with a smile and said:
-
-“You look pale, Neva. Come down the avenue for a walk. I have a message
-for you from the girls which I forgot to deliver.”
-
-Neva procured her hat, and followed Sir John out of the house. The
-horses were in waiting, and Mr. Atkins mounted. Sir John and Lord Towyn
-took their bridles on their arms, and walked slowly down the long
-arched avenue with the young heiress.
-
-Lady Wynde watched them jealously from the window.
-
-“I am afraid, my dear,” said the kindly baronet, “that you have made
-a romantic decision to-day, but you must decide in this matter for
-yourself. If you remain unmarried, these Blacks will fairly riot
-at Hawkhurst for the next three years. Craven Black will fill your
-father’s house with dissolute company, and you will be brought in
-contact with men whom your father would never have allowed to cross his
-threshold.”
-
-“Should such an event arise,” said Neva, her lovely face growing
-resolute and stern, “I will then consider your proposition, Sir John,
-to seek a change of guardians. But I dread the publicity such a
-proceeding would cause.”
-
-“Why don’t you take into consideration Atkins’ idea then?” demanded Sir
-John, smiling, yet earnest. “You must marry some day, Neva; why not
-marry soon? You have plenty of suitors. Only choose some one worthy to
-stand in your father’s place, and you will be happy. Your marriage will
-be the best way out of the difficulty--the best and the easiest. It
-would be a great load off my mind to see you happily married, my dear
-child. Wait a moment, Atkins?” added the baronet, raising his voice.
-“Why go so fast? I have a word to say to you.”
-
-The kindly old man hurried on to speak to his coadjutor, leading his
-horse as he went, and Neva and Lord Towyn were left to themselves--an
-opportunity specially planned by Sir John, who regarded his manœuvres
-as decidedly Machiavellian, and who consequently plumed himself upon
-their success.
-
-The young earl’s visit at Freise Hall had long since terminated, and
-he was now stopping at his marine villa on the coast, a dozen miles or
-more away. The distance was not so great that he could not ride over to
-Hawkhurst every pleasant day, and he did so with an utter disregard of
-distance or exertion. His suit with Neva, however, had never progressed
-beyond his early declaration of love, Neva’s reserve having chilled him
-whenever he had attempted to renew the subject.
-
-He recognized his present favorable opportunity, and hastened to
-improve it.
-
-“I am afraid we took you by storm to-day, Neva,” said the young
-earl, as they slowly walked down the avenue, considerably behind Mr.
-Atkins and Sir John, who had now mounted. “But Sir John Freise was
-determined to make an effort to save Lady Wynde from a union which she
-is likely to regret. Her ladyship is too pure and true to comprehend
-the character of her suitor, and she will cling to him all the more
-determinedly because of our well-meant warning.”
-
-By this it will be seen that Lord Towyn, with his frank nature, and
-honest soul, had not the slightest suspicion of the real character of
-Lady Wynde. If Craven Black was bad, she was also bad. She could never
-have loved or been wholly at ease in the society of a good man.
-
-“I am sorry for her,” said Neva, sighing.
-
-“She must ‘go her own gait,’” said Lord Towyn, “but you must not be
-involved in her unhappiness. Neva, darling Neva, I would almost die
-to spare you one pang of sorrow, one shadow of grief. I love you,
-and each day only adds to that love,” and his voice grew unsteady and
-impassioned. “You have held me off at arms’ length ever since that
-evening in which I told you so prematurely how dear you were to me. Do
-not repulse me now. Tell me honestly, my darling, whether you could be
-happy with me--whether I am dearer to you than another?”
-
-His blue eyes, radiant with the warmth of his glowing soul, flashed an
-electric light into hers. His passionate face, so fair and handsome, so
-noble in expression and feature, looked love upon hers. Neva’s eyelids
-trembled and drooped. An answering thrill convulsed her heart, and she
-knew in that moment that, come what would, she loved Arthur Towyn with
-all her soul, even as he loved her, and that she would know perfect
-happiness only as his wife.
-
-Yet the conviction came upon her as a painful shock, and in that
-instant the struggle between her love and her duty of obedience to the
-supposed wishes of her dead father began in her heart.
-
-“You love me?” whispered the young earl ardently, and with a passionate
-tremor of his voice. “Neva, with all my soul I love you, and I never
-loved before. Do I love in vain?”
-
-The shy, red-brown eyes were upraised for a brief glance, but in their
-swift flash Lord Towyn read his answer, and knew himself beloved.
-
-There was a brief silence between them full of rapture. They exchanged
-no betrothal kiss, no embrace, but Lord Towyn held Neva’s hand in his,
-and in his fervent pressure his soul spoke to hers.
-
-“I may tell Sir John and Mr. Atkins that we are betrothed, may I not,
-my darling?” said the young earl softly, as they walked on yet more
-slowly.
-
-“Not yet, Arthur--not yet. I love you,” and the girl’s voice sank to
-a whisper her lover’s ears could scarcely catch, “but I want a little
-time to decide. Don’t look surprised, Arthur; I do love you better than
-all the world, but it is all so new and strange, and--and--”
-
-“I understand,” said the earl, his face beaming. “Our love is too
-sacred to be proclaimed on the instant we acknowledge it ourselves.
-We will keep it secret until after Lady Wynde’s marriage; but we are
-promised, darling! Our happiness would be complete if we could know
-beyond all doubt that Sir Harold smiles upon our union. And why should
-he not smile upon our marriage from his home in Heaven? He loved me,
-Neva, and he desired our marriage. My father told me this on his
-death-bed.”
-
-“If I could think so!” breathed Neva. “I know papa loved you, Arthur.
-Do you think he would really approve our marriage?”
-
-“What an anxious little face! I know he would approve it, Neva. My
-blessed little darling, mine own, whom no one can take from me!” cried
-Lord Towyn passionately. “I am going home to dine with Sir John, and
-I will call upon you this evening. I am going to exact a lover’s
-privilege of seeing you when I please, without the cold, prying eyes of
-Mrs. Artress devouring me. I will be prudent and secret, Neva, since
-you insist upon it, but oh, if my month of probation were over and I
-might proclaim my happiness to the world!”
-
-They parted near the lodge gates, and Neva returned slowly toward the
-house, while her young lover vaulted into his saddle and rejoined his
-friends with a countenance so rapturous that they could not avoid
-knowing that he had confessed his love to Neva and had not been
-rejected.
-
-While they overwhelmed him with congratulations, which he tried to
-disclaim as altogether premature, Neva’s mind was divided between joy
-and grief, and she murmured:
-
-“What shall I do? What is right for me to do? I love Arthur, and
-life will not be complete without him. Shall I, for the sake of that
-love, disregard papa’s last wishes which I vowed to accept as sacred
-commands? Oh, if I only knew what to do!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX. WAS IT A DREAM?
-
-
-As the time appointed for the marriage of Lady Wynde and Craven Black
-drew near, great preparations were entered upon for its celebration.
-One would have thought, from the scale of the arrangements on foot,
-that the heiress of Hawkhurst was to be the bride, rather than the
-baronet’s widow. Dress-makers came down from London, boxes were sent to
-and fro, new jewels from Emanuel’s or Ryder’s, were selected to replace
-the Wynde family jewels, which Mr. Atkins had compelled the handsome
-widow to yield up to her step-daughter, and Artress made a special
-trip to Brussels for laces, and to Paris for delicate and sumptuous
-novelties in attire. One or two of Madame Elise’s best work women spent
-several days at Hawkhurst in fitting robes, and Lady Wynde, with Neva,
-Artress and two maids, spent a week in London at the long-closed town
-house of Sir Harold.
-
-The eventful day came at last, and was one of the mellowest of all that
-mellow October. The sun flooded the little village of Wyndham in waves
-of golden light. The pretty little stone church in which the marriage
-ceremony was to be performed was beautifully decorated with flowers.
-A floral arch vailed the door-way. A carpet of red roses, from the
-glass-houses at Hawkhurst, strewed the path the bride must traverse in
-going from her carriage to the church door.
-
-Inside the church, myrtles and red roses festooned the walls, and were
-suspended above the spot where the bride and groom would stand, in
-the form of a marriage bell. The breath of roses filled the air with
-perfume sweeter than “gales from Araby.”
-
-Long before eleven o’clock, the villagers and the tenants of Hawkhurst
-began to assemble at the church. They were all in gala attire, for
-Lady Wynde, with an insatiable vanity, had decreed that her third
-marriage-day was to be a gala-day for the retainers of the Wynde
-family. The villagers and tenants were all invited to a grand out-door
-feast at Hawkhurst, where a hogshead of ale, it was said, was to
-be broached, and deers and pigs roasted whole. A brass band from
-Canterbury had been engaged for the evening, and there would be colored
-lanterns suspended from the trees, and dancing on the terrace and on
-the lawn.
-
-Soon after eleven, the carriages of various county families began
-to arrive at the church. Sir John and Lady Freise, with their seven
-blooming daughters whose ages ranged from eighteen to thirty-five, were
-among the first comers. One of the white-gloved ushers, with a bridal
-favor pinned to his coat, showed them into a reserved seat. Other
-acquaintances and friends, some curious, some full of condemnation,
-made their appearance, and were similarly accommodated. Lord Towyn and
-Mr. Atkins came in together.
-
-It was nearly twelve o’clock when two carriages rolled up to the
-church door, bringing the bridal party from Hawkhurst. From the first
-of these alighted Neva and Rufus Black. The heiress was attired in
-white, with pink ribbon at her waist and pink roses securing the frill
-of lace at her throat, and Rufus wore the prescribed dress suit of
-black. They walked up the aisle side by side, and more than one noticed
-how pale the young girl was. They took their places in the Wynde family
-pew, for Neva had resolutely declined to enact the part of bride’s-maid
-to her father’s widow, and would have declined to appear at the
-wedding had not she realized that her absence would be more marked and
-conspicuous than her presence.
-
-The young heiress had scarcely sank into her seat, when a fluttering
-at the door declared to the assembly that the hero and heroine of the
-occasion were at hand. In defiance of the custom of meeting at the
-altar, Craven Black and Lady Wynde came in together, she leaning upon
-his arm.
-
-Her ladyship was dressed in a pink moire, with sweeping court train of
-pink velvet. She had worn white at her first marriage, pearl color at
-her second; and for the third, and most satisfactorily to her, had put
-on the color of love. A diadem set with flashing diamonds starred her
-black, fashionably dishevelled hair, above her low forehead. Her arms
-and neck were bare, and glittered with gems. Her face was flushed with
-triumph; her black eyes shone with a perfect self-content.
-
-The bridal pair took their places before the altar, and the clergyman
-and his assistants began their office. The usual questions were asked
-and answered; the usual appeal made to any one who knew “any just
-cause or impediment why these two should not be united,” but which, of
-course, received no response; and her third marriage ring was slipped
-upon Lady Wynde’s finger, and for the third time she was a wife.
-
-If any regret mingled with her present happiness, it was that by her
-third marriage she lost the title her second alliance had conferred
-upon her. But as there was a prospect that Craven Black would inherit
-a title some day, and that she would then be a peeress, she easily
-contented herself with her present untitled condition.
-
-After the ceremony, the newly married pair proceeded to the vestry
-and signed the marriage register. Friends and curious acquaintances
-thronged in upon them with congratulations, and soon after, when the
-church bell began peeling merrily, the bride and groom reentered their
-carriage, and drove home to Hawkhurst.
-
-Neva and Rufus Black followed in the second carriage.
-
-The guests invited to the wedding breakfast entered their carriages,
-and followed in the wake of the bridal pair.
-
-The villagers and tenants, in a great, straggling crowd, proceeded
-on foot along the dusty road, to take their part in the out-door
-festivities.
-
-A magnificent green arch had been erected over the great gates, with
-the monogram of the bride and groom curiously intertwisted, and
-lettered in red roses upon the green ground. Three similar arches
-intersected at regular distances the long avenue. The marble terrace
-was bordered with orange trees, oleanders, lemon-trees, and tropical
-shrubs, all in wooden tubs, and the front porch was a very bower of
-myrtles and red roses.
-
-“It is all in singularly bad taste,” was Sir John Freise’s exclamation,
-as he surveyed the scene. “It’s very fine, girls, and would do very
-well if it was all for Neva’s marriage, but it is worse than tomfoolery
-to invite Sir Harold Wynde’s tenantry and friends to rejoice at the
-wedding of Sir Harold’s widow to a man not worthy to tie his shoes. I
-must repeat that it is in singularly bad taste. The tenantry are not
-Lady Wynde’s; the house is not Lady Wynde’s. What can be done to give
-distinction to the marriage-day of the heiress, if all this display is
-made for Lady Wynde?”
-
-Sir John’s sentiment was the general one among the house guests. Some
-were disgusted, and others privately sneered, but there were some to
-whom the proceedings of the baronet’s widow seemed eminently proper,
-and these fawned upon her now.
-
-The wedding breakfast was eaten in the grand old dining-hall, among
-flowers which, by a rare refinement of taste, had been chosen for this
-room without perfume. The tables were resplendent with gold and silver
-plate. Fruits of rare species and delicious flavor, fresh from the
-hot-houses of Hawkhurst, were nestled among blossoms or green leaves. A
-noted French cook from London had charge of the commissary department,
-and the rare old wines from Sir Harold’s cellar were unequalled.
-
-While toasts were offered and drank to the newly married pair in
-the banquet hall, the tenantry were amusing themselves with their
-barbecue and ale out of doors, and their hilarity corresponded to the
-lower-toned merriment within the house.
-
-After the breakfast, Sir John Freise and his family, and several
-others, all of whom had come out of respect to Neva rather than to
-compliment Lady Wynde, took their departure. Many guests remained for
-the ball. Lord Towyn took his leave toward evening, and Neva retired to
-her own room, whence she did not emerge again that night.
-
-She had tried hard to dissuade Lady Wynde from giving the ball, but
-her persuasions had not availed. Neva had declined to attend the
-ball, and Lady Freise had supported her in her refusal. How could she
-dance in honor of the third marriage of her father’s widow? All day
-her thoughts had been of India and of her father, and remembering his
-tragical fate, how could she rejoice at a union which could never have
-taken place but for his death?
-
-Her step-mother was angry at what she deemed Neva’s obstinacy, and came
-to her and commanded her to descend to the ball-room. The young girl
-was sternly resolute in her refusal, and the bride went away muttering
-her anger and annoyance, but powerless to compel obedience.
-
-There was dancing until a late hour that night in the old baronial hall
-that traversed the centre of the great mansion, and there was dancing
-outside upon the terrace and lawn to the music of a brass band. Mrs.
-Craven Black--Lady Wynde no longer--was the belle of the occasion, full
-of gayety and brightness. Mrs. Artress, to the amazement of everybody
-who had known her as the gray companion of Lady Wynde, flashed forth
-in the sudden splendor of jewels and a trained dress of crimson silk,
-and Craven Black danced one set with her, and saw her supplied with
-numerous partners. Mrs. Artress considered that her day of servitude
-was over, and that it was quite possible that she might make a “good
-match” with some wealthy country gentleman, for whom, during all the
-evening, she kept a diligent look-out.
-
-Among the guests were two or three reporters of society papers from
-London, whom Craven Black, with an eye to the publicity of his glory,
-had invited down to Hawkhurst. These gentlemen danced and supped
-and wined, and in the pauses of these exercises wrote down glowing
-descriptions of the festivities, elaborate details of the ladies’
-dresses, and ecstatic little eulogies of the bride’s beauty and
-connection with the Wynde family, and of the groom’s pedigree, stating
-the precise value of Craven Black’s prospects of a succession to his
-cousin, Viscount Torrimore.
-
-The aunt of the bride, Mrs. Hyde of Bloomsbury Square, was not present.
-She lay indeed at the point of death, a fact which Mrs. Craven Black
-judiciously confined to her own breast, the news having reached her
-that morning as she was dressing for her bridal.
-
-At twelve o’clock, midnight, fire-works were displayed on the lawn.
-They lasted over half an hour, and were very creditable. After they had
-finished, carriages were ordered, and the house guests departed in a
-steady stream until all were gone. The tenantry and villagers departed
-to their homes on foot or in wagons, as they had come. The colored
-lanterns were taken down from the trees; the musicians went away, and
-the lights one by one died out of the great mansion.
-
-The bridal pair were to remain a week at Hawkhurst, and were then to go
-to Wynde Heights, the dower house of the baronet’s widow, and it had
-been arranged that Neva should accompany her step-mother. Rufus Black
-was to be a member of the party also, and much was hoped by Mr. and
-Mrs. Craven Black from the enforced propinquity of the young couple.
-
-Silence succeeded to the late noise, confusion and merriment--a
-silence the more profound by contrast with what had preceded. The
-household had retired. Neva had long since dismissed her maid and gone
-to bed, thinking sadly of her father. Even before the last carriage
-had rolled away, Neva had fallen asleep, not-withstanding her wrapt
-musings concerning her father, and as the hours went on, and darkness
-and silence fell, that sleep had deepened into a strange and almost
-breathless slumber.
-
-But suddenly she sprang up, broad awake, her eyes starting, a cold dew
-on her forehead, a wild cry upon her lips.
-
-She stared around her with a look of terror. The white curtains of her
-bed were fluttering in the breeze from her open window, and around her
-lay the thick gloom of her chamber.
-
-Her voice called through the darkness in a wild, piercing wail:
-
-“Oh, papa, papa! I dreamed--ah, was it a dream?--that he still lives! I
-saw him, pale and ghastly, at the door of a hut among the Indian hills,
-and I heard his voice calling the names: ‘Octavia! Neva!’ He is not
-dead--he is not dead! So surely as I live, I believe that papa too is
-alive! Oh, my father, my father!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI. A SCENE IN INDIA.
-
-
-Neva Wynde had retired to her bed, as will be remembered, upon the
-marriage night of Lady Wynde and Craven Black, her thoughts all of her
-father and of his tragic fate in India. All day long she had thought
-of him with tender yearning, pity and regret, recalling to mind his
-goodness, nobleness, and grandeur of soul; and when night came, and
-she lay in her bed with the noise of revellers in the drawing-rooms
-and on the lawn coming faintly to her ears, she had sobbed aloud at
-the thought that her father had been so soon forgotten, and that his
-friends and tenantry were now making merry over the marriage of his
-widow to a man unworthy to cross the threshold of Hawkhurst.
-
-And thus sobbing and thinking, she had slept, and in her sleep had
-dreamed that her father still lived, and that she saw him standing at
-the door of a hut among the far-off Indian hills, and that she heard
-his voice calling “Octavia! Neva!” And thus dreaming, she had awakened
-with a cry of terror, to ask of herself if it was only a dream.
-
-It was not strange that she had thus dreamed, since all the day and all
-the evening her mind had been fixed upon her father. It would have been
-strange if she had not dreamed of him. Her dream had had the clearness
-of a vision, but Neva was not romantic, and although she slept no
-more that night, but walked her floor with noiseless steps and wildly
-questioning eyes, yet she convinced herself long before the morning
-that she had been the victim of her excited imagination, and that her
-dream was “only a dream.”
-
-But was it so? There is a philosophy in dreams which not the wisest of
-us can fathom. And although the cause of Neva’s dream can be simply
-and naturally explained as the result of her agitated thoughts of her
-father, yet might one not also think, with less of this world’s wisdom,
-perhaps, and more of tenderness, that the girl’s guardian angel had
-placed that picture before her in her sleep, and so made recompense, in
-the joy of her dream, for her day of anguish and unrest?
-
-Be this as it may, our story has to deal with actual facts, and has now
-to take a startling turn, perhaps not anticipated by the reader.
-
-It was about one o’clock of the morning when Neva awakened from her
-dream.
-
-It was then about seven o’clock--there being six hours difference in
-time--in India.
-
-Among the cool shadows of the glorious Himalayas are many country
-seats, or “bungalows,” occupied at certain seasons by exhausted English
-merchants from Calcutta, with their families, by army officers, and by
-others of foreign birth, enervated or rendered sickly by the scorching
-heats of the sea-coast or more level regions. They find “among the
-hills” the fresh air, and consequent health, for which otherwise they
-would have to undertake, at all inconvenience and expense, a voyage
-home to England or Holland.
-
-These bungalows, for the most part, are cheaply built of bamboo, with
-thatched roofs, and are encircled with broad and shaded verandas,
-always roofed, and sometimes latticed at the sides and grown with
-vines, to form a cool and leafy arcade, which serves all the purposes
-of promenade, sitting-room, music-room, dining-room, and even sleeping
-room, for there are usually bamboo couches scattered about, upon which
-the indolent resident takes his siesta at midday.
-
-To one of these bungalows, a fair type of the rest, we will now direct
-the attention of the reader.
-
-It stood upon an elevated plateau, with the tall mountains crested
-with snow in the distance. It was surrounded at the distance of a few
-miles by a range of hills, and between it and them lay miles of forest,
-which was an impenetrable jungle. Around the bungalow was a clearing
-of limited extent, and which was dotted with plumed palms, bamboo, and
-banyan trees.
-
-The dwelling, frail like all of its class, was sufficiently well built
-for the climate. It was constructed of bamboo, was a single story in
-height, and was thatched with the broad leaves of the palm. A veranda,
-twelve feet wide, surrounded it. Its interior consisted of a broad
-hall, extending from front to rear, with two rooms opening from each
-side of it. The central hall, containing no staircase, was a long and
-wide apartment, which served as dining-room, sitting-room, and parlor,
-when required.
-
-A little in the rear of this dwelling were two others, one of which
-served as the kitchen of the establishment, and the other as the
-quarters of the half-dozen native servants belonging to the place.
-
-The bungalow which we have thus briefly described belonged to a Major
-Archer, H. M. A., and it was under its roof that George Wynde had
-breathed his last. It was from its broad veranda that Sir Harold Wynde
-had rode away for a last morning ride in India, upon that fatal day on
-which he had encountered the tiger of the jungle, in which encounter he
-was said to have perished.
-
-At about seven o’clock of the morning then, as we have said, and about
-the moment when Neva awakened from her dream, Major Archer reclined
-lazily upon a bamboo couch in the shadow of his veranda. He was dressed
-in a suit of white linen, and wore a broad-brimmed straw-hat, which was
-tipped carelessly upon the back part of his head. He was reading an
-English paper, received that morning at the hands of his messenger, and
-indolently smoking a cigar as he read.
-
-The major was a short, stout, choleric man, with a warm heart and a
-ready tongue. He had greatly loved young Captain Wynde, and still
-mourned his death, and he mourned also the tragic fate of Sir Harold.
-
-“Not much news by this mail,” the major muttered, as he withdrew his
-cigar and emitted a cloud of smoke from his pursed lips.
-
-“And no hope whatever of our regiment being ordered back to England!
-We shall get gray out here in this heathenish climate, while the fancy
-regiments play the heroes at balls in country towns at home. The good
-things of life are pretty unevenly distributed any how.”
-
-He replaced his cigar and clapped his hands sonorously. A light-footed
-native, clad in loose white trousers and white turban, and having his
-copper-colored waist naked, glided around an angle of the veranda and
-approached him with a salaam.
-
-“Sherbet,” said the major sententiously.
-
-The servant muttering, “Yes, Sahib,” glided away as he had come.
-
-The major let fall his paper and reclined his head upon a bamboo rest,
-continuing to smoke. He had arisen hours before, had taken his usual
-morning ride to the house of a friend, his nearest neighbor, three
-miles distant, and had returned to breakfast with his wife and family,
-who were now occupied in one of the four rooms of the dwelling. The
-major’s duties for the day were now to be suspended until sunset,
-the intervening hours being spent in smoking, reading, sleeping and
-partaking frequently of light and cooling refreshments.
-
-The sherbet was presently brought to the major in a crystal jug upon a
-salver. He laid down his cigar and sipped the beverage with an air of
-enjoyment, yet lazily, as he did everything.
-
-“I don’t see how I should get along without you, Karrah,” said the
-major. “And you know it too, you dog. I pay you big wages as it is,
-and now I want to know how much extra you will take, and forego your
-present practice of stealing. I think I’d better commute. Mrs. Archer
-says you are robbing us right and left. What do you say?”
-
-The native, a slim, lithe, sinewy fellow with oblong black eyes, full
-of slyness and wickedness, a mouth indicative of a cruel disposition,
-and with movements like a cat, grinned at the major’s speech, but did
-not deny the charge. He had formerly been George Wynde’s servant and
-nurse, then Sir Harold’s attendant, and was now Major Archer’s most
-valued servant. He had made himself necessary to the officer by his
-knowledge of all his master’s requirements, and his exact fulfillment
-of them; by his skill in concocting sherbets and other cooling drinks;
-by his apparent devotion, and in other ways. Being so highly valued, he
-had every opportunity, in that loosely ordered household, of robbing
-his employer, and he was maintaining a steady drain upon the major’s
-purse which that officer now purposed to abolish.
-
-“Come, you coppery rascal,” said the major good-humoredly, “what will
-you take to let the sugar and tea and coffee and the rest of the things
-alone, except when you find them on the table?”
-
-“Karrah no make bargain, Sahib,” said the native, rolling up his eyes.
-“Karrah do better as it is.”
-
-“No doubt; but I’m afraid, my worthy copper, that we shall have to part
-unless you and I can commute your stealings. Yesterday, for instance, I
-left five gold sovereigns in my other coat pocket, and last night when
-I happened to think of them and look for them they were gone. You took
-them--”
-
-“No prove, Sahib--no prove!” said the native stolidly.
-
-“I can prove that no one but you went into that room yesterday except
-me,” declared the major coolly. “You needn’t deny the theft, even if
-you purpose taking that trouble. I know you took the money. You are a
-thief, Karrah,” continued his master placidly and indolently, “and a
-liar, Karrah, and a scoundrel, Karrah; but your race is all tarred with
-the same stick, and I might as well have you as another. By the way my
-fine Buddhist, if that is what you are, did you use to steal right and
-left from Captain Wynde?”
-
-“Karrah honest man; Karrah no steal, but Karrah always same.”
-
-“Always the same! Poor George! Poor fellow! No wonder he died!”
-muttered the major compassionately. “It was a consumption of the lungs
-by disease, and a consumption of means by a scoundrel. And did you take
-in Sir Harold in the same way?”
-
-The Hindoo’s face darkened, and an odd gleam shone in his eyes.
-
-“Sir Harold no ’count gen’leman,” he said briefly. “Karrah no like him.
-Three days ’fore tiger eat him, Karrah look into Sir Harold’s purse and
-take out gold, only few miserable pieces, and Karrah look into Captain
-Wynde’s trunk and take a few letters and diamond pin. Sir Harold come
-in sudden, see it all; he eyes fire up; he seize Karrah by waistband
-and kick he out doors. Karrah hate Sir Harold--_hate--hate_!”
-
-The indolent officer shrank before the sudden blaze of his servant’s
-eyes, with a sudden realization of the possibilities of that ignorant,
-untaught and vicious nature.
-
-“Why, you’re a perfect demon, Karrah,” exclaimed the major. “You’re a
-firebrand--a--a devil! If you hated Sir Harold to such an extent, how
-did it happen that you continued in his service, and were even his
-attendant upon that last ride?”
-
-The Hindoo smiled slowly, a strange, cruel smile.
-
-“Oh,” he said softly, “Karrah go back; Karrah say sorry; know no
-better. Sir Harold smile sad, say been hasty, and forgive. Karrah say
-he love Sir Harold. That night Karrah send messenger up country--”
-
-He paused abruptly, as if he had said more than he intended.
-
-“Well, what did you send a messenger up country for, you rascal?”
-
-“To Karrah’s people, many miles away, to say that Karrah not come
-home,” declared the Hindoo more guardedly. “Makes no difference why
-Karrah sent. Karrah stay with Sahib Sir Harold three days, and see him
-die. Then Karrah live with Sahib Major.”
-
-“I hope you don’t hate me,” said the major, with a shudder. “I have
-a fancy that your hatred would be as deadly as a cobra’s. If it were
-not for the tiger, I might think--But, pshaw! And yet--I say, Karrah,
-did you know that there was a tiger in that part of the jungle that
-morning?”
-
-“Karrah know nothing,” returned the Hindoo. “Karrah good fellow. He has
-enemies--they happen die, that’s all. Karrah no set a tiger on Sahib.
-Karrah no friend tigers. Sahib have more sherbet?”
-
-“No, nothing more. You may go, Karrah.”
-
-The Hindoo glided away around the angle of the veranda.
-
-“I believe I’ll have to let the fellow go,” muttered the major,
-uneasily. “His looks and words give me a strangely unpleasant
-sensation. I shall take care not to offend him, or he may season my
-sherbet with a snake’s venom. How he glared in that one unguarded
-moment when he said he hated Sir Harold! There was murder in his look.
-I declare I had a hundred little shivers down my spine. If Sir Harold
-had not been killed so unmistakably by a tiger, and if Doctor Graham
-and I had not seen the fresh tracks and the marks of the struggle, and
-if the tiger had not been afterward killed, I should think--I should be
-sure--”
-
-An anxious look gathered on his face, and he ended his sentence by a
-heavy sigh.
-
-“Strange!” he said presently, giving utterance to his secret thoughts;
-“my wife never liked this fellow, although I could see no difference
-between him and the rest. She insists that he is treacherous and cruel.
-I’ll dismiss him, and tell her that I do so out of deference to her
-judgment. But the truth is, since I’ve seen the fellow’s soul glaring
-out of his eyes, I sha’n’t dare to sleep nights for fear I may have
-offended his High Mightiness. I think it better for me that he should
-travel out of this.”
-
-He had just announced to himself this decision, when raising his eyes
-carelessly and looking out from the cool shadows of the pleasant
-veranda, he beheld a horseman approaching his bungalow, riding at great
-speed.
-
-“It may be Doctor Graham coming up for a month, as I invited him,”
-thought the major, too indolent to feel more than a trivial curiosity
-at the sight of a coming stranger. “But the doctor’s too sensible to
-ride like that. It is either a green Englishman, with orders from
-headquarters for me, or it’s some reckless native. In either case the
-fellow’s preparing for a first-class sunstroke or fever, or something
-of that nature. But that’s his look-out. I’ve troubles enough of my own
-without worrying about him. It might be as well to finish my sherbet
-before losing my appetite under an order to return to my post. Oh,
-bother the army!”
-
-He sipped his sherbet leisurely, not even looking again at the
-horseman, who came on swiftly, urging his horse to a last burst of
-speed. That the horse was jaded, his jerking, convulsive mode of going
-plainly showed. He was wet with sweat, and his head hung low, and he
-frequently stumbled. The horseman urged him on with spur and whip, now
-and then looking behind him as if he feared pursuit.
-
-The major did not look up until the horseman drew rein before the
-bungalow, and alighted at a huge stone which served as a horse-block.
-The stranger came slowly and falteringly toward the veranda, and then
-the Sybaritic major set down his empty cup and glanced at him.
-
-The glance became a fixed gaze, full of wildness and affright.
-
-The stranger slowly entered the shade of the veranda and there
-halted, his features working, his form trembling. He looked weary and
-travel-stained. His haggard eyes spoke to the owner of the bungalow in
-a wild appeal.
-
-With the peculiar movement of an automaton, the major slowly arose
-to his feet and came forward, his face white, his eyes dilating, a
-tremulous quiver on his lips.
-
-“Don’t you know me, major?” asked the stranger wearily.
-
-“Great heaven!” cried the major, even his lips growing white. “It is
-not a ghost! I am not dreaming! Have the dead come to life? It is--_it
-is--Sir Harold Wynde_!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII. BACK AS FROM THE DEAD.
-
-
-The stranger who stood upon the veranda of Major Archer’s bungalow was
-tall and thin, with a haggard face, worn and sharp of feature, and full
-of deeply cut lines, such as a long-continued anguish never fails to
-graven on the features. His weary eyes were deeply sunken under his
-brows, and were outlined with dark circles. His hair was streaked with
-gray, and his long ragged beard was half gray also. His face was white
-like death, and unutterably wan. His garments were torn, and hung about
-his lank body in rags, save where they were ill-patched with bits of
-rags and vegetable fibres.
-
-Was Major Archer right? Could this haggard and pitiable being be Sir
-Harold Wynde of Hawkhurst, one of the richest baronets in England, who
-was supposed to have perished in the clutches of a tiger?
-
-It seemed incredible--impossible.
-
-And yet when the heavy eyelids lifted from the thin white cheeks, and
-looked upon the major, it was Sir Harold’s soul that looked through
-them. They were the keen blue eyes the major remembered so well, so
-capable of sternness or of tenderness, so expressive of the grand and
-noble soul, the pure and lofty character, which had distinguished the
-baronet.
-
-Yes, the stranger was Sir Harold Wynde--alive and well!
-
-“You know me then, Major?” he said. “I am not changed, as I thought,
-beyond all recognition!”
-
-He held out his hand. The major grasped it in a mixture of bewilderment
-and amazement, and not without a thrill of superstitious terror.
-
-“I--I thought you were dead, Sir Harold,” he stammered. “We all thought
-so, Graham and all. We thought you were killed by a tiger. I--I don’t
-know what to make of this!”
-
-Sir Harold let go the major’s hand and staggered to the bamboo couch
-upon which he sank wearily.
-
-“He’s not dead--but dying,” muttered the major. “Lord bless my soul!
-What am I to do?”
-
-He clapped his hands vigorously. A moment later his Hindoo servant
-Karrah glided around upon the front veranda.
-
-“Bring brandy--sherbet--anything!” gasped the major, pointing at his
-guest. “He’s fainting, Karrah--”
-
-Sir Harold lifted his weary head and gazed upon the Hindoo. The sight
-seemed to endue him with new life. He leaped to his feet, and his blue
-eyes blazed with an awful lightning, as he pointed one long and bony
-finger at the native, and cried:
-
-“Traitor! Viper! Arrest him, Major. I accuse him--”
-
-The Hindoo stood for a second appalled, but as the last words struck
-his hearing he flung at the baronet a glance of deadly hatred, and then
-turned in silence and fled from the bungalow, making toward the jungle.
-
-Something of the truth flashed upon the major’s mind. He routed up his
-household in a moment, and dispatched them in pursuit of the fugitive.
-
-Aroused by the tumult, Mrs. Archer came forth from her chamber. She was
-a portly woman, and was dressed in a light print, and wore a cap. Her
-husband met her in the hall and told her what had occurred. Restraining
-her curiosity, she hastened to prepare food and drink for the returned
-baronet.
-
-Meanwhile Sir Harold had sank down again upon the couch. The major
-approached him, and said:
-
-“You look worn out, Sir Harold. Let me show you to a room, where I will
-attend upon you. My men will capture that scoundrel--never fear. Come
-with me.”
-
-The baronet arose and took the major’s arm and was led into the central
-hall of the house, and into one of the four rooms the house contained.
-It was the room in which his son had died. The windows were closely
-shuttered, but admitted the air at the top. The floor was of wood and
-bare. A bedstead, couch, and chairs of bamboo comprised the furniture.
-
-At one side of the room were two spacious closets. One of these
-contained a portable bath-tub, a rack of fresh white towels, and plenty
-of water. The other contained clothes depending from hooks.
-
-“You’ll find your own suit of clothes there, Sir Harold,” said the
-major. “I intended to send them to England, but I am as fond of
-procrastination as ever. It’s just as well though, now. You can take
-them home yourself.”
-
-Sir Harold sat down in the nearest chair.
-
-“Home!” he whispered. “How are they--Octavia? Neva?”
-
-“All well--or they were when I heard last.”
-
-“Tell me what you know of them?” And Sir Harold’s great hungry eyes
-searched the major’s face. “They believe me dead?”
-
-“Certainly, Sir Harold. Everybody believes you dead. And I am dying to
-know how it is that you are alive. Where have you been these fifteen
-months? How did you escape the tiger?”
-
-The desired explanation was delayed by the appearance at the door of
-Mrs. Archer, who brought a jug of warm spiced drink and a plate of
-food. The major took the tray, and shut his wife out, returning to his
-guest.
-
-Sir Harold was nearly famished, and ate and drank like one starving.
-When his hunger was appeased, and a faint color began to dawn in his
-face, he pushed the tray from him, and spoke in a firmer voice than he
-had before employed.
-
-“I have imagined terrible things about my wife and Neva,” he said. “My
-poor wife! I have thought of her a thousand times as dead of grief. Do
-you know, major, how she took the report of my death?”
-
-“I have heard,” said the major, “she nearly died of grief. For a long
-time she shut herself up, and was inconsolable, and when she did
-venture out at last, it was in a funereal coach, and dressed in the
-deepest mourning. There are few wives who mourn as she did.”
-
-Sir Harold’s lips quivered.
-
-“My poor darling!” he muttered inaudibly. “My precious wife! I shall
-come back to you from the dead.”
-
-“Lady Wynde is heart-broken, they say,” said the major. “One of the men
-in our mess, a lieutenant, is from Canterbury and hears all the Kentish
-gossip, and he says people were afraid that Lady Wynde would go into a
-decline.”
-
-“My poor wife!” said Sir Harold, with a sobbing breath. “I knew how she
-loved me. We were all the world to each other, Major. I must be careful
-how she hears the news that I am living. The sudden shock may kill her.
-Have you any news of my daughter also?”
-
-“She was still at school when I last heard of her,” answered the
-major. “There is no more news of your home, Sir Harold. Your family
-are mourning for you and you will bring back their lost happiness. You
-ought to have seen your obituaries in the London papers. Some of them
-were a yard long, and I’d be willing to die to-day if I could only read
-such notices about myself. That sounds a little Hibernian, but it’s
-true. And your tenantry put on mourning, and they had funeral sermons
-and so on. By all the rules, you ought to have been dead, and, by the
-Lord Harry, I can’t understand why you are not.”
-
-Sir Harold smiled wanly.
-
-“Let me explain why I am not,” he said. “You remember that I was taking
-my last ride in India, and was about to start for Calcutta, to embark
-for England, when I disappeared? Some three days before that I had a
-quarrel, if I might call it so, with the Hindoo Karrah--”
-
-“I know it. He told me about it for the first time this morning.”
-
-“You understand then that I had incurred his enmity by kicking him out
-of this house? I found him stealing the effects of my dead son. He had
-also stolen from me. The letters he was stealing he was acute enough
-to know were precious to me, and there was George’s diary, for which I
-would not have taken any amount of money. The scoundrel meant to get
-away with these, and then sell them to me at his own terms. I took back
-my property, and punished him as he deserved. I have now reason to
-believe he went away that night to his friends among the hills--”
-
-“He did. He told me he did. But what did he go for?” cried the major
-excitedly.
-
-“You can soon guess. The next morning Karrah came back, professing
-repentance,” said Sir Harold. “I reproached myself for having been too
-harsh upon the poor untaught heathen, and took him back. He accompanied
-me upon that last ride, and was so humble, so deprecating, so gentle,
-that I even felt kindly toward him. We rode out into the jungle. I
-was in advance, riding slowly, and thinking of home, when suddenly a
-monstrous tiger leaped out of a thicket and fastened his claws in the
-neck of my horse. I fought the monster desperately, for he had pinned
-my leg to the side of my horse, and I could not escape from him. We
-had a frightful struggle, and I must have succumbed but for Karrah,
-who shot at the tiger, wounding him, I think, in the shoulder, and
-frightening him into retreat.”
-
-“And so you escaped, when we all thought you killed?” cried the major.
-
-“My horse was dying,” said the baronet, “and I was wounded and
-bleeding. I thought I was dying. I fell from my saddle to the ground,
-groaning with pain. Karrah came up, and bent over me, with a devilish
-smile and moistened my lips with brandy from a flask he carried. Then,
-muttering words in his own language which I could not understand, he
-carried me to his own horse, mounted, with me in his arms, and rode
-off in the direction in which we had been going, and away from your
-bungalow.”
-
-“The scoundrel! What was that for?”
-
-“After a half-hour’s ride, we came to a hollow, where three natives
-were camped. Karrah halted, and addressed them. They gathered around
-us, and then Karrah said to me, in English, that he hated me, that he
-would not kill me, but meant me to suffer, and that these men were his
-brothers, who lived a score of miles away up among the mountains. I
-was to be their slave. He transferred me to their care, disregarding
-my pleas and offered bribes, and rode away on his return to you. I was
-carried on horseback, securely bound, a score of miles to the north and
-westward. How I suffered on that horrible journey, wounded as I was, I
-can never tell you. A dozen times I thought myself dying.”
-
-“It is a wonder you did not die!”
-
-“It is,” said Sir Harold. “We went through savage jungles, and forded
-mountain torrents. We went up hill and down, and more than once leaped
-precipices. I was in a dead faint when we reached the home of the
-three Hindoos, but afterward I found how wild and secluded the spot
-was, and that there were no neighbors for miles around. Their cabin
-was niched in a cleft in a mountain, and hidden from the eye of any
-but the closest searcher. Had you searched for me, you would never
-have found me. It was in a rear hut, small and dark, with a mud floor,
-and windowless walls, that I have been a prisoner for fifteen months,
-major. My enemies, for the most part, left me to myself, and I have
-dragged out my weary captivity with futile plans of escape. Ah, I have
-known more than the bitterness of death!”
-
-“If we had only known it, we’d have scoured all India for you, Sir
-Harold,” said the major hotly. “We’d have strung up every native until
-we got the right ones. But that episode of the tiger--for it seems
-that the tiger was only an episode, coming into the affair by accident,
-but greatly assisting Karrah’s foul treachery--threw us off the scent,
-and made us think you dead. Why did we not suspect the truth?”
-
-“How could you? Don’t reproach yourself, major. My chiefest sufferings
-during these horrible fifteen months have been on account of my wife
-and my daughter. To feel myself helpless, a slave to those Hindoo
-pariahs, bound continually and in chains, while Octavia and Neva were
-weeping for me and crying out in their anguish, and perhaps needing
-me--ah, that was almost too hard to bear! Now and then Karrah came to
-taunt me in my prison, and to tell me how he hated me, and how sweet
-was his revenge. He told me that you had heard through a friend that my
-poor wife was dying of her grief. After that I tried, with increased
-ingenuity, to find some way of escape. Last night the three Hindoos
-went away--upon a marauding expedition, I think. After they had gone,
-one of the women brought me my usual evening meal of boiled rice. I
-pleaded to her to release me, but she laughed at me. She went out,
-leaving the door open, intending to return soon for the dish. The sight
-of the sky and of the green earth without nerved me to desperation.
-I was confined by a belt around my waist, to which an iron chain was
-attached, the other end of the chain being secured to a ring in the
-wall. I had wrenched my belt and the chain a thousand times, but last
-night when I pulled at it with the strength of a madman, it gave way. I
-fell to the floor--unfettered!”
-
-“You bounded up like an India rubber ball, I dare swear?” cried the
-major, wiping his eyes sympathetically.
-
-“I leaped up, and darted out of the door. There was a horse tethered
-near the hut. I bounded on his back and sped away, as the woman came
-hurrying out in wild pursuit. I knew the general direction in which
-your bungalow lay. I rode all night, going out of my road, but being
-set straight again by some kindly Hindoos; and here I am, weary, worn,
-but Oh, how thankful and blest!”
-
-The baronet bowed his head on his hands, and his tears of joy fell
-thickly.
-
-“You’re safe now, Sir Harold,” cried the major. “I hear a hubbub
-outside. My fellows have got back, with Karrah, no doubt. I want to
-superintend the skinning him, and while I am gone, you can refresh
-yourself with a bath, and put on a suit of Christian garments. My
-wife is dying to see you. I hear her pacing the hall like a caged
-leopardess. Get ready, and I’ll come back to you as soon as you have
-had a little sleep. You’re among friends, my dear Sir Harold; and, by
-Jove, I’m glad to see you again!”
-
-He pressed Sir Harold’s hand, catching his breath with a peculiar
-sobbing, and hurried out.
-
-His servants had returned, but Karrah had escaped. The major indulged
-in some peculiar profanity, as he listened to this report, and then
-withdrew to his wife’s cool room, and told her Sir Harold’s story.
-
-The baronet, meanwhile, took a bath and went to bed. He slept for
-hours, awakening after noon. He shaved and trimmed his beard, dressed
-himself in the suit of clothes he had formerly worn, and which were now
-much too large for him, and came forth into the central hall of the
-dwelling. Major Archer was lounging here, and came forward hastily,
-with both hands outstretched, and with a beaming face.
-
-“You look more like yourself, Sir Harold!” he exclaimed. “Mrs. Archer
-is out on the veranda, and is full of impatience to see you.”
-
-He linked his arm in the baronet’s and conducted him out to the
-veranda, presenting him to Mrs. Archer, who greeted him with a certain
-awe and kindliness, as one would welcome a hero.
-
-The little Archers were playing about under the charge of an ayah, and
-they also came forward timidly to welcome their father’s guest.
-
-Tiffin--the India luncheon--was served on the veranda, and after it was
-over, and the young people had dispersed, Sir Harold said to his host:
-
-“When does the next steamer leave for England?”
-
-“Three days hence. You will have time to catch the mail if you write
-to-day,” said Major Archer.
-
-“Write! Why, I shall go in her, Major!”
-
-“Impossible, Sir Harold. You are not fit for the voyage,” said Mrs.
-Archer.
-
-“I must go,” persisted the baronet, in a tone no one could dispute.
-“Think of my wife--of my daughter. Every day that keeps me from them
-seems an eternity. Major, I was robbed by Karrah of every penny I
-possessed. Plunder was a part of his motive, as well as desire for
-revenge. I shall have to draw upon you for a sufficient sum for my
-expenses.”
-
-“It’s fortunate, and quite an unprecedented thing with me, that I have
-a couple of hundred pounds in bank in Calcutta,” said the major. “I
-wish it were a thousand, but you’re quite welcome to it, Sir Harold--a
-thousand times welcome. I appreciate your impatience to be on your way
-home. If it were I, and your wife was my Molly, I’d travel day and
-night--but there, I’ve said enough. I’ll go to Calcutta with you, and
-see you off on the _Mongolian_. I wish I could do more for you.”
-
-“You can, Major. You can keep silence concerning my reappearance,”
-declared Sir Harold thoughtfully. “My wife is reported to be dying
-of grief. If she hears too abruptly that I still live, the shock may
-destroy her. Major, I am going home under a name not my own, that
-the story of my adventures may not be bruited about before she sees
-me. I will not reveal myself to any one in Calcutta, nor to any one
-in England, before reaching home. I will go quietly and unknown to
-Hawkhurst, and reveal myself with all care and caution to Neva, who
-will break the news to my wife.”
-
-“Sir Harold is right,” said Mrs. Archer. “Lady Wynde and Miss Wynde
-should not first hear the news by telegraph, or letter, or through the
-newspapers. Their impatience, anxiety, and suspense, after hearing that
-Sir Harold still lives, and before they can see him, will be terrible.
-The shock, as Sir Harold suggests, might almost be fatal to Lady Wynde.”
-
-“My wife is always right,” said the burly major, with a glance of
-admiration at his spouse. “Sir Harold, you cannot do better than to
-follow your instincts and my Molly’s counsels. It is settled then, that
-you return to England under an assumed name, and see your own family
-before you proclaim your adventures to the world. What name shall you
-adopt as a ‘name of voyage,’ to translate from the French?”
-
-“I will call myself Harold Hunlow,” said the baronet. “Hunlow was my
-mother’s name. I am rested, Major, and if you can give me a mount,
-we’ll be off at sunset on our way to Calcutta.”
-
-It was thus agreed. That very evening Sir Harold Wynde and Major Archer
-set out for Calcutta on horseback, arriving in time to secure passage
-in the _Mongolian_. And on the third day after leaving Major Archer’s
-bungalow, Sir Harold Wynde was at sea, and on his way to England. Ah,
-what a reception awaited him!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII. NEVA’S DECISION ABOUT RUFUS.
-
-
-Could her guardian angel have whispered to Neva that her father did
-indeed still live, and that at the very moment of her vivid dream he
-stood upon the veranda of Major Archer’s Indian bungalow, weak, wasted
-and weary, but with the principle of life strong within him, what agony
-she might have been spared in the near future! what terrors and perils
-she might perhaps have escaped!
-
-But she did not know it--she could not guess that life held for her a
-joy so rare, so pure, so sweet, as that of welcoming back to his home
-her father so long and bitterly mourned as dead.
-
-As we have said, she remained awake during the remainder of the night,
-walking her floor in her white gown and slippered feet, now and then
-wringing her hands, or sobbing softly, or crying silently; and thus the
-weary hours dragged by.
-
-Before the clear sunlight of the soft September morning, which stole
-at last into her pleasant rooms, Neva’s dream lost its vividness and
-semblance of reality, and the conviction settled down upon her soul
-that it was indeed “only a dream.”
-
-She dressed herself for breakfast in a morning robe of white, with
-cherry-colored ribbons, but her face was very pale, and there was a
-look of unrest in her red-brown eyes when she descended slowly and
-wearily to the breakfast-room at a later hour than usual.
-
-This room faced the morning sun, and was octagon shaped, one half of
-the octagon projecting from the house wall, and being set with sashes
-of French plate-glass, like a gigantic bay-window. One of the glazed
-sections opened like a door upon the eastern marble terrace, with its
-broad surface, its carved balustrade, and its rows of rare trees and
-shrubs in portable tubs.
-
-There was no one in the room when Neva entered it. The large table
-was laid with covers for five persons. The glazed door was ajar, and
-the windows were all open, giving ingress to the fresh morning air.
-The room was all brightness and cheerfulness, the soft gray carpet
-having a border of scarlet and gold, the massive antique chairs being
-upholstered in scarlet leather, and the sombreness of the dainty buffet
-of ebony wood being relieved by delicate tracery of gold, drawn by a
-sparing hand.
-
-Neva crossed the floor and passed out upon the terrace, where a gaudy
-peacock strutted, spreading his fan in the sunlight, and giving
-utterance to his harsh notes of self-satisfaction. Neva paced slowly up
-and down the terrace, shading her face with her hand. A little later
-she heard some one emerge from the breakfast room upon the terrace, and
-come behind her with an irregular and unsteady tread.
-
-“Good-morning, Miss Neva,” said Rufus Black, as he gained her side. “A
-lovely morning, is it not?”
-
-Neva returned his salutation gravely. She knew that Rufus Black had
-slept under the same roof with herself the preceding night, after the
-ball, and that a room at Hawkhurst had been specially assigned him by
-Lady Wynde, now Mrs. Craven Black.
-
-“You ought to have sacrificed your scruples, and come down to the
-drawing-rooms last night,” said Rufus Black. “I assure you we had
-a delightful time, but you would have been the star of the ball. I
-watched the door for your appearance until the people began to go
-home, and I never danced, although there was no end of pretty girls,
-but they were not pretty for me,” added Rufus, sighing. “There is for
-me _now_ only one beautiful girl in the whole world, and you are she,
-sweet Neva.”
-
-“Did you ever love any one before you loved me?” asked Neva, with a
-quiet frankness and straightforwardness, looking up at him with her
-clear eyes full of dusky glow.
-
-“Ye--no!” stammered Rufus, turning suddenly pale, and his honest eyes
-blenching. “Almost every man has had his boyish fancies, Miss Neva.
-Whatever mine may have been, my life has been pure, and my heart is all
-your own. You believe me?”
-
-“Yes, I believe you. Mr. and Mrs. Black have come down to breakfast,
-Mr. Rufus. Let us go in.”
-
-She led the way back to the breakfast room, Rufus following. They
-found the bride and bridegroom and Mrs. Artress waiting for them. Neva
-greeted Lady Wynde by her new name, and bowed quietly to Craven Black
-and Mrs. Artress. The little party took seats at the table, and the
-portly butler, with a mute protest in his heart against the new master
-of Hawkhurst, waited upon them, assisted by skillful subordinates.
-
-Mrs. Craven Black, dressed in white, looked the incarnation of
-satisfaction. She had so far succeeded in the daring game she had been
-playing, and her jet-black eyes glittered, and her dark cheeks were
-flushed to crimson, and her manner was full of feverish gayety, as she
-did the honors of the Hawkhurst breakfast table to her new husband.
-
-Three years before she had been a poor adventuress, unable to
-marry the man she loved. Now, through the success of a daring and
-terrible conspiracy, she was wealthy, the real and nominal mistress
-of one of the grandest seats in England; the personal guardian of
-one of the richest heiresses in the kingdom; and the wife of her
-fellow-conspirator, to obey whose behests, and to marry whom, she had
-been willing to peril her soul’s salvation.
-
-Only one thing remained to render her triumph perfect, her fortune
-magnificent, and her success assured. Only one move remained to be
-played, and her game would be fully played.
-
-That move comprehended the marriage of Neva Wynde to Rufus Black, and
-Mrs. Craven Black, from the moment of her third marriage, resolved to
-devote all her energies to the task of bringing about the union upon
-which she was determined.
-
-The breakfast was eaten by Neva almost in silence. When the meal was
-over Mr. and Mrs. Craven Black strolled out into the gardens, arm in
-arm. Mrs. Artress, who had fully emerged from her gray chrysalis,
-and who was now dressed in pale blue, hideously unbecoming to her
-ashen-hued complexion, retired to her own room to enjoy her triumph in
-solitude, and to count the first installment of the yearly allowance
-that had been promised her, and which had already been paid her, with
-remarkable promptness, by Lady Wynde.
-
-Neva went to the music-room, and began to play a weird, strange melody,
-in which her very soul seemed to find utterance. In the midst of her
-abstraction, the door opened, and Rufus Black came in softly.
-
-He was standing at her side when her wild music ceased abruptly, and
-she looked up from the ivory keys.
-
-“Your music sounds like a lament, or a dirge,” said Rufus, leaning upon
-the piano and regarding with admiration the pale, rapt face and glowing
-eyes.
-
-“I meant it so,” said Neva. “I was thinking of my father.”
-
-“Ah,” said Rufus, rather vacantly.
-
-“I dreamed of papa last night,” said Neva softly, resting her elbow on
-the crashing keys and laying one rounded cheek upon her pink palm. “I
-dreamed he was alive, Rufus, and that I saw him standing before the
-door of an Indian hut, or bungalow, or curious dwelling; and my dream
-was like a vision.”
-
-“A rather uncomfortable one,” suggested Rufus. “You were greatly
-excited yesterday, Neva, I could see that; and, as your mind was all
-stirred up concerning your father, you naturally dreamed of him. It
-would make a horrid row if your dream could only turn out true, and you
-ought to rejoice that it cannot. You have mourned for him, and the edge
-of your grief has worn off--”
-
-“No, no, it has not,” interrupted the girl’s passionate young voice.
-“If I had seen him die, I could have been reconciled to the will of
-God. But to lose him in that awful manner--never to know how much he
-suffered during the moments when he was struggling in the claws of that
-deadly tiger--oh, it seems at times more than I can bear. And to think
-how soon he has been forgotten!” and Neva’s voice trembled. “His wife
-whom he idolized has married another, and his friends and tenantry have
-danced and made merry at her wedding. Of all who knew and loved him,
-only his daughter still mourns at his awful fate!”
-
-“It is hard,” assented Rufus, “but it’s the way of the world, you know.
-If it will comfort you any, Neva, I will tell you that half the county
-families came to the wedding breakfast to support and cheer you by
-their presence, and the other half came out of sheer curiosity. But few
-of the best families remained to the ball.”
-
-“Papa thought much of you, did he not, Rufus?” asked Neva, thinking of
-that skilfully forged letter which was hidden in her bosom, and which
-purported to be her father’s last letter to her from India.
-
-Rufus Black had been warned by his father that Neva might some day thus
-question him, and Craven Black had told his son that he must answer
-the heiress in the affirmative. Rufus was weak of will, cowardly, and
-timid, but it was not in him to be deliberately dishonest. He could not
-lie to the young girl, whose truthful eyes sought his own.
-
-“I had no personal acquaintance with Sir Harold Wynde, Neva,” the young
-man said, inwardly quaking, yet daring to tell the truth.
-
-“But--but--papa said--I don’t really comprehend, Rufus. I thought that
-papa loved you.”
-
-“If Sir Harold ever saw me, I do not know it,” said Rufus, cruelly
-embarrassed, and wondering if his honesty would not prove his ruin. “I
-was at the University--Sir Harold may have seen me, and taken a liking
-to me--”
-
-Neva looked strangely perplexed and troubled. Certainly the awkward
-statement of Rufus did not agree with the supposed last declaration of
-her father.
-
-“There seems some mystery here which I cannot fathom,” she said. “I
-have a letter written by papa in India, under the terrible foreboding
-that he would die there, and in this letter papa speaks of you with
-affection, and says--and says--”
-
-She paused, her blushes amply completing the sentence.
-
-A cold shiver passed over the form of Rufus. He comprehended the
-cause of Neva’s blushes, and a portion of his father’s villainy. He
-understood that the letter of which Neva spoke had been forged by
-Craven Black, and that it commanded Neva’s marriage with Craven Black’s
-son. What could he say? What should he do? His innate cowardice
-prevented him from confessing the truth, and his awe of his father
-prevented him from betraying him, and he could only tremble and blush
-and pale alternately.
-
-“Papa might have taken an interest in you, without making himself known
-to you,” suggested Neva, after a brief pause. “Some act of yours might
-have made your name known to him, and he might secretly have watched
-your course without betraying to you his interest in you, might he not?”
-
-“He might,” said Rufus huskily.
-
-“I can explain the matter in no other way. It is singular. Perhaps poor
-papa might not have well known what he was writing, but the letter is
-so clearly written that that idea is not tenable. After all, so long as
-he wrote the letter, what does it matter?” said Neva wearily. “He must
-have known you, Rufus--or else the letter was forged!”
-
-Rufus averted his face, upon which a cold sweat was starting.
-
-“Who would have forged it?” he asked hoarsely.
-
-“That I do not know. I know no one base enough for such a deed. It
-could not have been forged, of course, Rufus, but the discrepancy
-between your statement and that in the letter makes me naturally
-doubt. Papa was the most truthful of men. He hated a lie, and was
-so punctilious in regard to the truth that he was always painfully
-exact in his statements. He trained me to scorn a lie, and was even
-particular about the slightest error in repeating a story. How then
-could he speak of knowing you? Perhaps, though, I am mistaken. I may
-find, on referring to the letter, that he speaks of liking you and
-taking an interest in you, without alluding to a personal acquaintance.”
-
-“If I had known Sir Harold, I should have tried to deserve his good
-opinion,” said Rufus, his voice trembling. “I have the greatest
-reverence for his character, and I wish I might be like him.”
-
-“There are few like papa,” said Neva, a sudden glow transfiguring her
-face.
-
-“How you loved him, Neva. If I had had such a father!” and Rufus
-sighed. “I would rather have an honorable, affectionate father whom I
-could revere and trust than to have a million of money!”
-
-Neva reached out her hand in sympathy, and the young man seized it
-eagerly, clinging to it.
-
-“Neva,” he exclaimed, with a sudden energy of passion, “it is more than
-a month since I asked you to be my wife, and you have not yet given me
-my answer. Will you give it to me now?”
-
-The girl withdrew her hand gently, and rested her cheek again on her
-hand.
-
-“I know I am not worthy of you,” said Rufus, beseechingly. “I am poor
-in fortune, weak of character, a piece of drift-wood blown hither and
-thither by adverse winds, and likely to be tossed on a rocky shore at
-last, if you do not have pity upon me. Neva, such as I am, I beseech
-you to save me!”
-
-“I am powerless to save any one,” said Neva gently. “Your help must
-come from above, Rufus.”
-
-“I want an earthly arm to cling to,” pleaded Rufus, his tones growing
-shrill with the sudden fear that she would reject him. “I have in me
-all noble impulses, Neva; I have in me the ability to become such a
-man as was your father. I would foster all noble enterprises; I would
-become great for your sake. I would study my art and make a name of
-which you should be proud. Will you stoop from your high estate, Neva,
-and have pity upon a weak, cowardly soul that longs to be strong and
-brave? Will you smile upon my great love for you, and let me devote my
-life to your happiness and comfort?”
-
-His wild eyes looked into hers with a prayerfulness that went to her
-soul. He seemed to regard her as his earthly saviour--and such indeed,
-if she accepted him, she would be, for she would bring him fortune,
-and, what he valued more, her affection, her pure life, her brave soul,
-on which his own weak nature might be stayed.
-
-“Poor Rufus!” said Neva, with a tenderness that a sister might have
-shown him. “My poor boy!” and her small face beamed with sisterly
-kindness upon the tall, awkward fellow, the words coming strangely from
-her lips. “I am sorry for you.”
-
-“And you will marry me?” he cried eagerly.
-
-The young face became grave almost to sternness. The lovely eyes
-gloomed over with a great shadow.
-
-“I want to obey papa’s wishes as if they were commands,” she said. “I
-have thought and prayed, day after day and night after night. I like
-you, Rufus, and I cannot hear your appeals unmoved. I believe I am not
-selfish, if I am true to my higher nature, and obey the instincts God
-has implanted in my soul. I must be untrue to God, to myself, and to
-my own instincts, or I must pay no heed to that last letter and to the
-last wishes of poor papa. Which shall I do? I have decided first one
-way, and then the other. The possibility that that letter was--was not
-written by papa--and there is such a possibility--I cannot now help but
-consider. Forgive me, Rufus, but I have decided, and I think papa, who
-has looked down from heaven upon my perplexity and my anguish, must
-approve my course. I feel that I am doing right, when I say,” and here
-her hand took his, “that--that I cannot marry you.”
-
-“Not marry me! Oh, Neva!”
-
-“It costs me much to say it, Rufus, but I must be true to myself, to
-my principles of honor. I do not love you as a wife should love her
-husband. I could not stand up before God’s altar and God’s minister,
-and perjure myself by saying that I thus loved you. No, Rufus, no; it
-may not be!”
-
-Rufus bowed his head upon the piano, and sobbed aloud.
-
-His weakness appealed to the girl’s strength. She had seldom seen a man
-in tears, and her own tears began to flow in sympathy.
-
-“I am so sorry, Rufus!” she whispered.
-
-“But you will not save me? You will not lift a hand to save me from
-perdition?”
-
-“I will be your sister, Rufus.”
-
-“Until you become some other man’s wife!” cried Rufus, full of jealous
-anguish. “You will marry some other man--Lord Towyn, perhaps?”
-
-The girl retreated a few steps, a red glory on her features. A strange
-sweet shyness shone in her eyes.
-
-“I see!” exclaimed Rufus, in a passion of grief and jealousy. “You will
-marry Lord Towyn? Oh, Neva! Neva!”
-
-“Rufus, it cannot matter to you whom I marry since I cannot marry you.
-Let us be friends--brother and sister--”
-
-“I will be all to you or nothing!” ejaculated Rufus violently. “I will
-marry you or die!”
-
-He broke from the grasp she laid upon him, and with a wild cry upon his
-lips, dashed from the room.
-
-In the hall he encountered Craven Black and his bride, just come in
-from the garden. He would have brushed past them unseeing, unheeding,
-but his father, seeing his excitement and agitation, grasped his arm
-forcibly, arresting his progress.
-
-“What’s the matter?” demanded Craven Black fiercely. “What’s up?”
-
-“I’m going to kill myself!” returned Rufus shrilly, trying to break
-loose from that strong, unyielding clasp. “It’s all over. Neva has
-refused me, and turned me adrift. She is going to marry Lord Towyn!”
-
-“Oh, is she?” said Craven Black mockingly. “We’ll see about that.”
-
-“We will see!” said Neva’s step-mother, with a cruel and fierce
-compression of her lips. “I am Miss Wynde’s guardian. We will see if
-she dares disobey her father’s often repeated injunctions to obey me!
-If she does refuse, she shall feel my power!”
-
-“Defer your suicide until you see how the thing turns out, my son,”
-said Craven Black, with a little sneer. “Go to your room and dry your
-tears, before the servants laugh at you.”
-
-Rufus Black slunk away, miserable, yet with reviving hope. Perhaps the
-matter was not ended yet? Perhaps Neva would reconsider her decision?
-
-As he disappeared up the staircase, Mrs. Craven Black laid her hand on
-her bridegroom’s arm, and whispered:
-
-“The girl will prove restive. We shall have trouble with her. If we
-mean to force her into this marriage, we must first of all get her away
-from her friends. Where shall we take her? How shall we deal with her?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV. LALLY FINDS A NEW HOME.
-
-
-Nearly six weeks had intervened between Rufus Black’s proposal of
-marriage to Neva Wynde on the road-side bank and his final rejection by
-her in the music-room at Hawkhurst.
-
-It will be remembered that there had been a hidden witness to the
-half-despairing, half-loving, proposal of Rufus, and that this hidden
-witness, seeing, but unseen, was no other than the wronged young wife
-whom Rufus Black mourned as dead, and whom in his soul he loved a
-thousand-fold better than the beautiful young heiress.
-
-During the six weeks that had passed, what had become of Lally--poor,
-heart-broken, despairing Lally?
-
-We have narrated how she staggered away in the night gloom, after
-seeing Rufus and Neva together in the square of light from the home
-windows upon the marble terrace, not knowing whither she went,
-but hurrying as swiftly as she might from her young husband, from
-happiness, and from hope itself.
-
-She had no thought of suicide. She had learned many lessons by the
-bedside of her old friend the seamstress, whose dying hours she had
-cheered. She had learned that life may be very bitter and hard to bear,
-but that it may not be thrown aside, or flung back in anger or despair
-to the Giver. Its burdens must be borne, and he who bears them with
-earnest patience, and in humble obedience to the divine will, shall
-some day exchange the cross of suffering for the crown of a great
-reward. No; Lally, weak and frail as she was, deserted by humanity,
-would never again seriously think of suicide.
-
-She wandered on in the soft starlight and moonlight, a helpless,
-homeless, hopeless creature, with nowhere to go, as we have said. She
-had no money in her pocket, no food, and her shoes were worn out, and
-her clothes were patched and darned and pitiably frayed and worn. The
-very angels must have pitied her in her utter forlornness.
-
-For an hour or two she tottered on, but at last wearied to exhaustion,
-she sank down in the shelter of a way-side hedge, and sobbed and moaned
-herself to sleep.
-
-She was awake again at daybreak, and hurried up and on, as if flying
-from pursuit. About eleven o’clock she came to a hop-garden, divided
-from the road by wooden palings. There were men and women, of the tramp
-species, busy at work here under the supervision of the hop farmer.
-Lally halted and clung to the palings with both hands, and looked
-through the interstices upon the busy groups with dilating eyes.
-
-She was worn with anguish, but even her mental sufferings could not
-still the demands of nature. She was so hungry that it seemed as if a
-vulture were gnawing at her vitals. She felt that she was starving.
-
-The hop-pickers, many of them tramps who lived in unions and
-alms-houses in the winter, and who stray down into Kent during the hop
-season, presently discovered the white and hungry face pressed against
-the palings, and jeered at the girl, and called her names she could not
-understand, making merry at her forlornness.
-
-The hop raiser heard them, and discovering the object of their rude
-merriment, came forward, opened a gate in the palings, and hailed the
-girl. He was short of hands, he said, and would give her sixpence a
-day, and food and drink, if she chose to help in the hop picking.
-
-Lally nodded assent, and crept into the gate, and into the presence of
-those who mocked at her. Her eyes were so wild, her manner so strange
-and still, that the workers stared at her in wonder, whispered among
-themselves, discovering that she was not of their kind, and turned
-their backs upon her.
-
-It was taken for granted that the new hand had had her breakfast,
-and not a crust was offered to her. The hop raiser had doubts about
-her sanity, and observed her narrowly, but a dozen times that day he
-mentally congratulated himself on his acquisition. Lally worked with
-feverish energy, trying--ah, how vainly--to escape from her thoughts,
-and she did the work of two persons. She had bread and cheese and a
-glass of ale at noon, and a similar allowance of food for supper.
-
-That night she slept in a barn with the women tramps, but chose
-a remote corner, where she buried herself in the hay, and slept
-peacefully.
-
-The next day she would have wandered on in her unrest, but the farmer,
-discovering her intention, offered her a shilling a day, and she
-consented to remain. That night she again slept in her remote corner of
-the barn, and no one spoke to her or molested her.
-
-She made no friends among the tramps, not even speaking to them. They
-were rude, vicious, quarrelsome. She was educated and refined, had been
-the teacher and companion of ladies, and was herself a lady at heart.
-She went among these rude companions by the soubriquet of “The Lady,”
-and this was the only name by which the hop farmer knew her.
-
-For a week Lally kept up this toil, laboring in the hop-fields by
-day, and sleeping in a barn at night. At the end of that period, the
-work being finished, she was no longer wanted, and she went her way,
-resuming her weary tramp, with six shillings and sixpence in her pocket.
-
-For the next fortnight she worked in various hop-fields, paying
-nothing for food or lodging. Her pay was better too, she earning a
-sovereign in the two weeks.
-
-Three weeks after overhearing Rufus solicit the hand of Miss Wynde in
-marriage, Lally found herself at Canterbury, shoeless and ragged, a
-very picture of destitution. Her first act was to purchase a pair of
-shoes, a ready-made print dress and a thin shawl. Her purchases were
-all of the cheapest description, not costing her over five shillings.
-She added to the list a round hat of coarse straw, around which she
-tied a dark blue ribbon.
-
-She found a cheap lodging in the town; and here put on her new clothes.
-The lodging was an attic room, with a dormer window, close up under the
-slates of a humble brick dwelling. There was no carpet on her floor,
-and the furniture comprised only an iron bed-stead, a chair and a
-table. The house was rented by a tailor, who used the ground floor for
-his shop and residence, and sub-let the upper rooms to a half dozen
-different families. The three attic rooms were let to women, Lally
-being one, and two thin, consumptive seamstresses occupying the others.
-
-It was necessary for Lally to find employment without delay, and she
-inserted an advertisement in one of the local papers, soliciting a
-position as nursery governess. She had the written recommendation of
-her former employers, the superintendents of a ladies’ school, and with
-this she hoped to secure a situation.
-
-Her advertisement was repeated for three days without result. Upon
-the fourth day, as she was counting her slender store of money, and
-wondering what she was to do when that was gone, the postman’s knock
-was heard on the private door below, and presently the tailor’s little
-boy came to Lally’s room bringing a letter.
-
-She tore it open eagerly. It was dated Sandy Lands, and was written in
-a painfully minute style of penmanship, with faint and spidery letters.
-The writer was a lady, signing herself Mrs. Blight. She stated that
-she had a family of nine children, five of whom were young enough to
-require the services of a nursery governess. If “L. B.”--the initials
-Lally had appended to her advertisement--could give satisfactory
-references, was an accomplished musician, spoke French and German, and
-was well versed in the English branches, she might call at Sandy Lands
-upon the following morning at ten o’clock.
-
-Accordingly the next morning Lally set out in a cab for Sandy Lands,
-whose location Mrs. Blight had described with sufficient accuracy. It
-was situated in one of the fashionable suburbs of the old cathedral
-town. Lally expected from the grandeur of its name to find a large and
-handsome estate, but found instead a pert little villa, close to the
-road, and separated from it by a high brick wall in which was a wooden
-gate. The domain of Sandy Lands comprised a half-acre of rather sterile
-soil, in which a few larches struggled for existence, and an acacia and
-a lime tree led a sickly life.
-
-The little villa, with plate-glass windows, green parlor shutters
-drawn half-way up, a gabled roof, from which three saucy little dormer
-windows protruded, was unmistakably the house of which Lally was in
-search, for on one side of the gate, over a slit in the wall required
-for the use of the proper letter-box, was the legend in bright gilt
-letters, “Sandy Lands.”
-
-The cabman alighted and rang the garden bell. A smart looking housemaid
-with white cap and white apron answered the call. Lally alighted and
-asked if Mrs. Blight were at home. The smart housemaid eyed the humbly
-clad stranger rather contemptuously, and remarked that she could not
-be sure; Mrs. Blight might be at home, and then again she might not.
-
-“I received a letter from her telling me to call at this hour,” said
-Lally, with what dignity she could summon. “I am seeking a situation as
-nursery governess.”
-
-“Oh, then Missus is at home,” replied the housemaid. “You can come in,
-Miss.”
-
-Bidding the cabman wait, Lally followed the servant across the garden
-to a rear porch and was ushered into a small over-furnished reception
-room.
-
-“What name shall I say, Miss?” asked the maid, pausing in the act of
-withdrawal.
-
-“Miss Bird,” answered poor Lally, who had relinquished her young
-husband’s name, believing that she had no longer any right to it.
-
-The maid went out, and was absent nearly twenty minutes. Lally began
-to think herself forgotten, and grew nervous, and engaged in a mental
-computation of her cabman’s probable charges. The maid finally
-appeared, however, and announced that “Missus was in her boudoir, and
-would see the young person.”
-
-Lally was conducted up stairs to a front room overlooking the road.
-This room, like the one below, was over-furnished. The wide window
-opened upon a balcony, and before it, half-reclining upon a silken
-couch, was a lady in a heavy purple silk gown, and a profusion of
-jewelry--a lady, short, stout, and red-visaged, with a nose much turned
-up at the end, and so ruddy as to induce one to think it in a state of
-inflammation.
-
-“Miss Bird!” announced the maid abruptly, flinging in the words like a
-discharge of shot, and retired precipitately.
-
-Mrs. Blight turned her gaze upon Lally in a languid curiosity, and
-waved her hand condescendingly, as an intimation that the “young
-person” might be seated.
-
-Lally sat down.
-
-Mrs. Blight then raised a pair of gold-mounted eye-glasses to her
-nose, and scrutinized Lally more closely, after what she deemed a very
-high-bred and _nonchalant_ fashion indeed.
-
-She beheld a humbly dressed girl, not past seventeen, but looking
-younger, with a face as brown as a berry and velvet-black eyes, which
-were strangely pathetic and sorrowful--a girl who had known trouble
-evidently, but who was pure and innocent as one might see at a glance.
-
-“Ah, is your name Bird?” asked Mrs. Blight languidly. “Seems as if I
-had heard the name somewhere, but I can’t be sure. Of course you have
-brought references, Miss Bird?”
-
-“I have only a recommendation signed by ladies in whose service I have
-been,” said Lally. “I have been a music-teacher, but I possess the
-other accomplishments you require.”
-
-She drew forth the little worn slip of paper which she had guarded as
-of more value to her than money, because it declared her respectable
-and a competent music-teacher, and gave it into the lady’s fat hands.
-
-“It is not dated very lately,” said Mrs. Blight. “How am I to know that
-this recommendation is not a forgery? People do forge such things, I
-hear. Why, a friend of mine took a footman on a forged recommendation,
-and he ran away and took all her silver.”
-
-Lally’s honest cheeks flushed, and her heart swelled. She would have
-arisen, but that the lady motioned to her to retain her seat, and so
-long as there was a prospect that she might secure the situation Lally
-would remain.
-
-“The recommendation looks all right,” continued Mrs. Blight, scanning
-it with her glass, while she held it afar off, and daintily between
-two fingers, as if it were a thing unclean. “You look honest too, but
-appearances are _so_ deceiving! I had a nurse girl once who looked like
-a Madonna, and as if butter wouldn’t melt in her mouth, but she turned
-out a perfect minx, artful as a cat. What salary do you expect?”
-
-“I--I don’t know, Madam. I have never been employed as nursery
-governess.”
-
-“My husband allows me forty pounds a year for the salary of the
-governess,” said Mrs. Blight. “But, of course, forty pounds ought
-to get a governess with the very best of references. You are
-inexperienced, as you confess. Now I will take the risk of you turning
-out bad, if you should decide to remain with me as governess to my
-five children, at a salary of twenty pounds a year, board and washing,
-lights and fuel, included.”
-
-It was “Hobson’s choice--that or none”--to poor Lally. Twenty pounds
-a year, and to be sheltered and fed and warmed besides, seemed very
-liberal after her recent terrible struggle with the vulture of
-starvation.
-
-“I will accept it, Mrs. Blight,” she said, her voice trembling--“that
-is, if you will take me when you know that I have only the clothes
-I stand in, and that for a few weeks I shall need my pay weekly to
-provide me with decent garments.”
-
-“Oh, as to that,” said Mrs. Blight, “your clothes are poor, beggarly,
-I might say. They will have to be improved at once. I will advance you
-a quarter’s salary, five pounds, if you are quite sure you will use it
-for clothes, and that you do not intend to cheat me out of my money.
-You see I always speak plainly. My governesses are not pampered. They
-have to earn their money, but that you probably expect to do. I don’t
-know of another lady in Canterbury who would do as I am doing, lending
-money to a perfect stranger, on a recommendation you may have written
-yourself. But I am different from other ladies. _I_ am a judge of
-physiognomy, and am not often deceived in my estimate of people. Why
-are you out of clothes?”
-
-“I have been out of a situation as a teacher for some time,” said
-Lally. “I have the present addresses of the ladies who signed my
-recommendation, and I beg you to write to them to assure yourself
-that I have spoken the truth. The addresses are written on the
-recommendation itself.”
-
-“I noticed them, and shall write this very morning,” declared Mrs.
-Blight. “Go now for your clothes, and be back to luncheon. I want to
-introduce you to the children, who are running wild.”
-
-She waved her hand, and Lally, with her five pounds in her hand,
-took her departure. She had found a new home, and one not likely to
-be pleasant, but it would afford her shelter, and she believed she
-could bear all things rather than to pass again through the poverty
-and misery she had known. She little knew that it was the hand of
-Providence that had brought her to Sandy Lands, and that the acceptance
-of her present situation was destined to change the entire future
-current of her existence, and even to affect that of her young husband.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV. LALLY IN HER NEW SITUATION.
-
-
-Lally returned to Canterbury in the cab that had brought her out to
-Sandy Lands, Mrs. Blight’s pert little villa in the suburbs, and
-entered upon the task of procuring a neat although necessarily scanty
-wardrobe. She bought a cheap box, which she had sent to her lodgings.
-A lady’s furnishing house yielded her a change of under garments,
-another print dress, and a gown of black alpaca, and a supply of
-collars and cuffs; her entire purchases amounting to three pounds ten
-shillings. She carried her effects to her attic lodgings, the rent of
-which she had paid in advance, packed her box, and set out again in the
-cab for Sandy Lands.
-
-It was noon when the vehicle stopped again before the little villa. The
-cabman rang the garden bell as before, and when the housemaid appeared
-he dumped down Lally’s box upon the gravelled walk, received his pay,
-and departed. The smart housemaid was as contemptuous as before of
-Lally’s humble garments, but spoke to her familiarly, as if the two
-were upon a social level, and conducted her toward the rear porch,
-saying:
-
-“Missus said you was to be shown up to your room, Miss, to make your
-twilet before seeing the children. If you please,” added the girl,
-with increasing familiarity, “you and I are to see a good deal of each
-other, and so I want to know what to call you.”
-
-Whatever the social rank of Lally’s parents, Lally herself was a lady
-by instinct and education. The housemaid’s easy patronage was offensive
-to her. She answered quietly:
-
-“You may call me Miss Bird.”
-
-“Oh,” said the housemaid, with a sniff and a toss of her head. “That’s
-the talk, is it? Well, then, Miss Bird, follow me up to your room. This
-way, Miss Bird. Up these stairs, Miss Bird.”
-
-Lally followed her guide up the stairs to the third and topmost story,
-and to a rear room.
-
-“This is the room of the nussery governess,” said the offended
-housemaid, her nose in the air. “The room on your right is the
-school-room, Miss Bird. That on the left is the nussery. You are to
-have your room to yourself, Miss Bird, which I hopes will suit you.
-There’s no petting of governesses in this here ’stablishment. You rises
-at seven, Miss Bird, and eats with the children. You begins lessons at
-nine o’clock, Miss Bird, and keeps ’em up till luncheon, and then comes
-music, langwidges, and them sort. Dinner in the school-room, Miss Bird,
-at five o’clock. Your evenings you has to yourself.”
-
-“I shall receive my list of duties from Mrs. Blight,” said Lally
-pleasantly, “but I am obliged to you all the same.”
-
-The housemaid’s face softened under Lally’s gentleness and sweetness.
-
-“I wouldn’t wonder if she was a born lady, after all,” the girl
-thought. “She won’t stand putting down, and her face is that sorrowful
-I pity her.”
-
-But she did not give expression to these thoughts. What she did say was
-this:
-
-“My name’s Loizy, and if I can do anything for you just let me know.
-There’s my bell, and I must go. When you get ready, come down stairs to
-Missus’s boo-door.”
-
-She vanished just as the house boy, or Buttons, as he was called,
-appeared with Lally’s box. He set this down near the door, and also
-departed. Left alone, Lally examined her new home with a faint thrill
-of interest.
-
-The floor was bare, with the exception of a strip of loose and
-threadbare carpet before the low brass bedstead. There was a
-chintz-covered couch, a chintz-covered easy-chair, a chest of drawers,
-and a green-shuttered blind at the single window. The room had a dreary
-aspect, but to Lally it was a haven of refuge.
-
-She locked her door and knelt down and prayed, thanking God that He had
-been so good to her as to give her a safe shelter and a home. Then,
-rising, she dressed herself as quickly as possible, putting on her
-black alpaca dress, a spotless linen collar and cuffs, a black sash,
-and a black ribbon in her hair. Thus attired, she descended the stairs,
-finding the way to the boudoir, at the door of which she knocked.
-
-Mrs. Blight’s languid voice bade her enter.
-
-She obeyed, finding her employer still reclining in an armed chair,
-looking as if she had not moved since Lally’s previous visit. She had
-a book in one hand, a paper cutter in the other. She recognized Lally
-with a sort of pleased surprise.
-
-“Ah, back again, and punctual!” she exclaimed, glancing at a toy clock
-in white and blue enamel on the low mantel-piece. “I had a great many
-misgivings after you went away, Miss Bird. Five pounds is a good deal
-of money to one in your position in life, and the world is _so_ full of
-swindlers. I have already written to the ladies to whom you referred
-me. I suppose I should have waited for their answer before engaging
-you, but I am such an impulsive creature, I always do just as I feel at
-the spur of the moment. My husband calls me ‘a child of impulse,’ and
-the words describe me exactly. I’m glad to see you back. I don’t know,
-I’m sure, what I should have said to Mr. Blight if you had decamped,
-for he does not appreciate my ability to read faces. The time I got
-taken in with my last cook--the one we found lying with her head in a
-brass kettle, and the kitchen fire gone out, at the very hour when I
-had a large company assembled to dine with me--Charles said, ‘Fudge,
-don’t let us hear any more about physiognomy.’ You see, I engaged the
-woman because her face was all that could be desired. And since that
-time Charles won’t hear a word about physiognomy.”
-
-Lally sat down, obeying a wave of Mrs. Blight’s hand. That “child of
-impulse,” silly, garrulous, and puffed up with self-importance and
-vulgarity, pursued her theme until she had exhausted it.
-
-“You are looking very well, Miss Bird,” she said, changing the subject,
-“but all in black--why, you are quite a black-bird, I declare,” and she
-laughed at her own wit. “Are you in mourning? Have you lately lost a
-friend?”
-
-“Yes, madam,” replied Lally sorrowfully, “I have lately lost the only
-friend I had in the whole world.”
-
-“Oh, indeed. That is sad; but I do hope you won’t wear a long face and
-go moping about the house, frightening the children,” said Mrs. Blight,
-with a candor that was less charming than oppressive to her newly
-engaged governess. “You must do as the poet so romantically says:
-
- “‘Wear a smile,
- Though the cold heart runs darkly to ruin the while.’
-
-“If he doesn’t say that, it’s some such thing, and a very pretty
-sentiment too. And now let us discuss your new duties.”
-
-She proceeded to sketch Lally’s duties much as the housemaid had
-done. Then she gave a history of each one of the five children who
-were to be under Lally’s supervision. Three of the children were boys,
-and their fond mother described them as paragons. Her girls also were
-extraordinary in their mental and physical attractions, “having once
-been taken at the Zoological gardens during a visit to London, by a
-strange gentleman, for the children of a nobleman!”
-
-“I will accompany you to the nursery, Miss Bird,” said the lady,
-arising. “I desire to introduce you to my darlings. I have great faith
-in the instincts of children, and I want to see what my children think
-of you.”
-
-Accordingly Mrs. Blight conducted Lally again to the upper floor and
-to the nursery, which was at the moment of their entrance in a state of
-wildest confusion and disorder.
-
-The nurse, a stout old woman, and the nursemaid, a red-faced young
-girl, were in a state of despair, and frantically holding their hands
-to their ears, while five robust, boisterous, frouzy-headed children
-rode about the room upon chairs, played “tag,” and otherwise disported
-themselves.
-
-The entrance of Mrs. Blight and Lally caused a cessation of the noise.
-The mother called her children to her, but they retreated with their
-fingers in their mouths, looking askance at their new governess. The
-three “noble boys” presently set up a loud bellowing, and the two girls
-who had been “mistaken by a strange gentleman for the children of a
-nobleman,” hid behind their nurses.
-
-It required all the persuasions, coupled with threats, of Mrs. Blight,
-to induce her shy children to show themselves to Lally. It appeared
-that they had a horror of governesses, regarding them as tyrants and
-ogresses created especially to destroy the happiness of children; but
-Lally’s smiles, added to the fact that she looked but little more than
-a child, finally induced them to be sociable and to approach her.
-
-“In a day or two you won’t be able to do anything with them, Miss,”
-said the head nurse. “They’ll ride rough-shod over you.”
-
-“They are so spirited,” murmured Mrs. Blight. “Study their characters
-closely, Miss Bird, and be very tender with them. I have one child
-more than the Queen, and my children are named for the royal family.
-These three boys are Leopold, Albert Victor, and George. The girls are
-named Victoria and Alberta. My elder children are at school. Children,
-this is Miss Bird, your new governess. Now come with her into the
-school-room. Lessons begin immediately.”
-
-The little flock, with Lally at their head, was conducted to the
-school-room, a large, bare apartment, furnished with two benches, a
-teacher’s chair and desk, and a black-board. Here Mrs. Blight left
-them, convinced that she had fulfilled her duties as parent and
-employer, and returned to her book.
-
-Lally proceeded to examine into the acquirements of her pupils, finding
-them lamentably ignorant. Lessons were given out, but there was no
-disposition on the part of her pupils to study. They threw paper balls
-at each other, whispered and giggled, and altogether proved at the very
-outset a sore trial to their young teacher. Their shyness lasted for
-but a brief period, and then, having no longer fear of the sad-faced
-governess, they began to romp about the room, to shout, and to engage
-in a general game of frolics.
-
-Lally had a vein of decision in her character, and with the exercise
-of a gentle firmness induced her pupils to return to their seats. She
-explained their lessons to them, with an unfailing patience, but the
-hours of that September afternoon seemed almost endless to her. The
-children were froward, disobedient, and idle. They had been spoiled by
-their mother, and were full of mischievous tricks, so that Lally’s soul
-wearied within her.
-
-Dinner, a very plain and frugal one, was served to the governess and
-the children in the school-room at five o’clock. After dinner, Lally’s
-time belonged to herself, and she put on her hat and went out for a
-walk, having a longing for the fresh air.
-
-This first day at Sandy Lands was a fair type of the days that
-followed. The children, under Lally’s firm but gentle rule, became
-more quiet and studious, and conceived an affection for their young
-governess. Mrs. Blight was delighted with their improvement. She had
-received a reply from Lally’s former employers, giving the young girl
-very high praise, and was consequently well pleased with herself for
-securing such valuable services as Lally’s at a salary less than half
-she had ever before paid to a governess.
-
-Mr. Blight was a lawyer in good practice at Canterbury, and spent his
-days at his office, returning to Sandy Lands to dine, and leaving home
-immediately after breakfast. He was a small, ferret-eyed man, always
-in a hurry, a mere money making machine, with a great ambition to make
-or acquire a fortune. At present he lived fully up to his income, a
-fact which gave both him and Mrs. Blight much secret anxiety. With
-ten children to educate and provide for, several servants to pay, a
-carriage and pair for Mrs. Blight, and the lawyer’s wines, cigars,
-frequent elaborate dinners to his friends, and other items by no means
-small to settle, Mr. Blight was continually harassed by debt, and yet
-had not sufficient strength of will to reduce his expenses and live
-within his income.
-
-One cause, perhaps, of their indiscreet self-indulgence was that they
-had “expectations.”
-
-There was an old lady connected with the family, the widow of a wealthy
-London banker who had been Mr. Blight’s uncle. This old lady was
-supposed to have no relatives of her own to enrich at her death, and
-the Blights had lively hopes of inheriting her fifty thousand pounds,
-which had descended to her absolutely at her husband’s death, and of
-which she was free to dispose as she might choose.
-
-This lady lived in London, at the West End, was very eccentric, very
-irascible, and went little in society, being quite aged and infirm. She
-was in the habit of coming down to Sandy Lands annually in September,
-ostensibly to spend a month with her late husband’s relatives; but she
-always returned home within a week, alleging that she could not bear
-the noise of the Blight children, and that a month under the same roof
-with them would deprive her of life or reason. It was now about the
-time of this lady’s annual visit, and one morning, when Lally had been
-about two weeks at Sandy Lands, Mrs. Blight came up to the school-room,
-an open letter in her hand, and dismissing the children to the nursery
-for a few minutes, said confidentially:
-
-“Miss Bird, I have just received a letter from the widow of my
-husband’s uncle, a remarkable old lady, with fifty thousand pounds at
-her own absolute disposal. My husband is naturally the old lady’s heir,
-being her late husband’s nephew, and we expect to inherit her property.
-Her name is Mrs. Wroat.”
-
-“An odd name!” murmured Lally.
-
-“And she’s as odd as her name,” declared Mrs. Blight. “She comes here
-at this time every year, and always brings a parrot, a lap-dog, a
-band-box in a green muslin case, a blue umbrella, and a snuffy old
-maid, who eyes us all as if we had designs on her mistress’s life. The
-absurd old creature is devoted to her mistress, who is a mere bundle
-of whims and eccentricities. The old lady calls for a cup of coffee at
-midnight, and she hates our dear children, and she thrashed Leopold
-with her cane last year, because he put nettles in her bed and flour
-on her best cap, the poor dear innocent child. And I never dared to
-interfere to save Leopold, though his screams rang through the house,
-and I stood outside her door listening and peeping, for you know we
-must have her fifty thousand pounds, even if she takes the lives of all
-my darlings!” and Mrs. Blight’s tone was pathetic. “She’s a nasty old
-beast--there! Of course I say it in confidence, Miss Bird. It would
-be all up with us, if Aunt Wroat were to hear that I said that. She’s
-very tenacious of respect, and all that bother, and insisted I should
-punish Albert Victor because he called her ‘an old curmudgeon.’”
-
-“When do you expect this lady?” asked Lally.
-
-“To-morrow, with her maid, lapdog, parrot, umbrella and bandbox. She
-writes that she will stay a month, and that she must have no annoyance
-from the children, and that she won’t have them in her room--the old
-nuisance! If it wasn’t for her money, I’d telegraph her to go to
-Guinea, but as we are situated I can’t. I must put up with her ways.
-And what I want of you, Miss Bird, is to see that the children do
-not stir off this floor while she is here. Let them die for want of
-exercise, the poor darlings, rather than we offend this horrid old
-woman. If we sacrifice ourselves, she can’t leave her property to some
-fussy old charity, that’s one comfort.”
-
-“I will do my best to keep the children out of Mrs. Wroat’s sight,”
-said Lally gravely.
-
-“You must succeed in doing so, for the old lady says this will probably
-be her last visit to us, as she is growing more and more infirm, and
-she hints that it is time to make her will. Everything depends upon
-her reception on the occasion of this visit. Let her get miffed at us,
-and it’s all up. I declare I wish I had a place where I could hide the
-children during her stay. She must not see or hear them, Miss Bird.”
-
-“Is there anything more that I can do, Mrs. Blight?”
-
-“Yes; she always has the governess play upon the piano and sing to her
-in the evening. She is fond of music, desperately so. We always hire
-a cottage piano and put it in her sitting-room while she stays, and
-the governess plays to her there evenings. She’s very liberal with a
-governess who can play well. She gave Miss Oddly last year a five-pound
-note. And always when she leaves us after a visit, she hands me twenty
-pounds and says she never wants to be indebted to anybody, and that’s
-to defray her expenses while here. I have to take it. I wouldn’t dare
-to refuse it.”
-
-“I shall be glad to amuse her in any way, Mrs. Blight,” declared the
-young governess. “I shall not mind her eccentricities, and shall
-remember that she is ‘aged and infirm.’”
-
-“And she has fifty thousand pounds which we must have,” said Mrs.
-Blight. “Don’t fail to remember that!”
-
-Much relieved at having guarded against a meeting between her expected
-guest and her children, Mrs. Blight departed to seek an interview with
-her cook.
-
-Extensive preparations were made that day for the reception of Mrs.
-Wroat. Two rooms were prepared for her use, one of them having two
-beds, one bed being for the use of the maid. A cottage piano was hired
-and put into one of the rooms. The choicest articles of furniture in
-the house were arranged for her use. The hint that Mrs. Wroat was
-thinking of making her will was sufficient to render her time-serving,
-money-hunting relatives gentle, pliable, and apparently full of tender
-anxiety for her happiness and comfort.
-
-Mr. Blight was informed of the good news when he came home to dinner,
-and he sought a personal interview with his children’s governess,
-entreating her to keep the youngsters out of sight during the visit of
-Mrs. Wroat, as she valued her situation.
-
-Everything being thus arranged, it only remained for the guest to
-arrive.
-
-No. 232 of the SELECT LIBRARY, entitled “Neva’s Choice,” is the sequel
-to the foregoing novel, and the story of Neva’s romance, together with
-the intrigues and plottings of her enemies, is charmingly brought to
-its conclusion.
-
- * * * * *
-
-What Makes a Superwoman?
-
- Beauty? No!
- Daintiness? No!
- Wit? No!
- Youth? No!
- Femininity? No!
-
-Seek the Superwoman
-
-You will find her in almost every generation, in almost every country,
-in almost every city. She is not a typical adventuress, she is not a
-genius. The reason for her strong power is occult. The nameless charm
-is found as often in homely, clumsy, dull, old masculine women as in
-the reverse of these types.
-
-What Makes a Superwoman?
-
-If you think the problem worth while, why not try to solve it by
-reading Albert Payson Terhune’s great book, SUPERWOMEN? From Cleopatra
-to Lady Hamilton--they are mighty interesting characters. Some of
-them smashed thrones, some of them were content with wholesale heart
-smashing. You will know their secret, or rather their secrets, for
-seldom did two of them follow the same plan of campaign.
-
-We have prepared a very handsome, special, limited edition of the
-book, worthy of a place on your “best book” shelf. If you subscribe to
-AINSLEE’S MAGAZINE now you can purchase it for 50c. Send us a money
-order for $2.50 and receive SUPERWOMEN postpaid, and, in addition, over
-1900 pages of splendid fiction throughout the coming year. AINSLEE’S
-MAGAZINE is the best and smartest purely fiction magazine published.
-You cannot invest $2.50 in reading matter to better advantage than by
-availing yourself of this offer. Send check or money order or, if you
-remit in cash, do not fail to register the envelope. Act now!
-
- The Ainslee Magazine Company
- 79 Seventh Avenue New York City
-
- * * * * *
-
-History of the World War
-
-_By Thomas R. Best_
-
-The most portentous crisis in the history of the human family has just
-passed. The World War was conceived in greed and will be consummated
-in justice. It will prove a blessing to mankind, because it spells
-emancipation to countless unborn generations from enslaving political
-and social evils. It is a big subject and one that will be discussed in
-every household for many years to come. Questions will arise that only
-a clear, concise account of the war in handy form can settle.
-
-Therefore, we ask you to consider _=History of the World War=_ by
-Thomas R. Best which has been written from the American standpoint. It
-is purely history--not vituperation. This volume has a chronology of
-important events that will prove of inestimable reference value.
-
-Price 25 Cents
-
-_If ordered by mail add four cents to cover cost of postage_
-
- STREET & SMITH CORPORATION
- 79 Seventh Avenue New York City
-
- * * * * *
-
-A Big Step
-
-forward in quality is the reason for the unprecedented strides in
-popularity that the S. & S. novels are making.
-
-The demand has been greater than the supply, the latter having been
-somewhat restricted on account of war conditions. We are running our
-presses night and day turning out “good ones” for the consumption of
-men and women who want good reading matter and who have got to get it
-at a modest price.
-
-If you want to read a novel really worth while, buy a copy of No. 1020
-NEW EAGLE SERIES--SLIGHTED LOVE--by Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller. This is
-a book that will be appreciated by every woman.
-
-If the above are ordered from the publishers, 4c. must be added to the
-retail price of each copy to cover postage.
-
- STREET & SMITH CORPORATION
- 79 Seventh Avenue, New York City
-
- * * * * *
-
-1855-1919
-
-For sixty-four consecutive years, Street & Smith have specialized in
-the publication of clean, wholesome fiction. During this time we gave
-the public what it wanted, and as the demand changed, our publications
-changed with it.
-
-What most American readers want at present are the S. & S. novels,
-especially those in the NEW EAGLE SERIES by Emma Garrison Jones, who
-wrote straightaway American love stories of exceptional interest and
-vigor. Mrs. Jones’ works cannot be found in any other line, and for
-interest they cannot be excelled at the price.
-
-Here are some of the best Jones books:
-
- =Against Love’s Rules= =No. 890=
- =All Lost but Love= =No. 868=
- =Her Twentieth Guest= =No. 860=
- =His Good Angel= =No. 786=
- =Just for a Title= =No. 909=
-
-If the above are ordered from the publishers, 4c. must be added to the
-retail price of each copy to cover postage.
-
- STREET & SMITH CORPORATION
- 79 Seventh Avenue, New York City
-
- * * * * *
-
-A REQUEST
-
-Conditions due to the war have made it very difficult for us to keep in
-print all of the books listed in our catalogues. We still have about
-fifteen hundred different titles that we are in a position to supply.
-These represent the best books in our line. We could not afford, in the
-circumstances, to reprint any of the less popular works.
-
-We aim to keep in stock the works of such authors as Bertha Clay,
-Charles Garvice, May Agnes Fleming, Nicholas Carter, Mary J. Holmes,
-Mrs. Harriet Lewis, Horatio Alger, and the other famous authors who
-are represented in our line by ten or more titles. Therefore, if your
-dealer cannot supply you with exactly the book you want, you are almost
-sure to find in his stock another title by the same author, which you
-have not read.
-
-It short, we are asking you to take what your dealer can supply, rather
-than to insist upon just what you want. You won’t lose anything by such
-substitution, because the books by the authors named are very uniform
-in quality.
-
-In ordering Street & Smith novels by mail, it is advisable to make a
-choice of at least two titles for each book wanted, so as to give us an
-opportunity to substitute for titles that are now out of print.
-
- STREET & SMITH CORPORATION,
- 79-89 Seventh Avenue, New York City.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Punctuation has been made consistent.
-
-Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained as they appear in
-the original publication, except that obvious typographical errors have
-been corrected.
-
-The following changes were made:
-
-p. 35: Missing letter assumed to be C (Even Madame Da-Caret, the)
-
-p. 114: second changed to third (her third marriage)
-
-p. 216: In changed to I’ll (cruel. I’ll dismiss)
-
-p. 247: Dobson’s changed to Hobson’s (was “Hobson’s choice)
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEVA'S THREE LOVERS ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where
- you are located before using this eBook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that:
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/68274-0.zip b/old/68274-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 0e28105..0000000
--- a/old/68274-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68274-h.zip b/old/68274-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 5aa1ad4..0000000
--- a/old/68274-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68274-h/68274-h.htm b/old/68274-h/68274-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index b348a00..0000000
--- a/old/68274-h/68274-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11291 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- Neva’s Three Lovers, by Mrs. Harriet Lewis&mdash;A Project Gutenberg eBook
- </title>
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2 {
- text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
- clear: both;
-}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
-}
-
-.pminus1 {margin-top: -0.25em;}
-.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
-
-hr {
- width: 33%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 2em;
- margin-left: 33.5%;
- margin-right: 33.5%;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-hr.tb {width: 45%; margin-left: 27.5%; margin-right: 27.5%;}
-hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
-@media print { hr.chap {display: none; visibility: hidden;} }
-
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
-.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;
- padding-top: 0;}
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
-}
-
-.tdl {text-align: left;}
-.tdr {text-align: right;}
-
-.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
- /* visibility: hidden; */
- position: absolute;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
- font-style: normal;
- font-weight: normal;
- font-variant: normal;
-} /* page numbers */
-
-.blockquot {
- margin-left: 5%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
-.boxit{
- max-width: 12em;
- padding: 1em;
- border: 0.5em double black;
- margin: 0 auto; }
-
-.boxit1{
- max-width: 25em;
- padding: 1em;
- border: 0.5em double black;
- margin: 0 auto; }
-
-.boxcontents{
- max-width: 22em;
- padding: 1em;
- border: 0em solid black;
- margin: 0 auto; }
-
-.pcontents{
- text-align:left;
- text-indent:-2em;
- padding-left:2em;
- margin-top: 0.1em;
- margin-bottom: 0.1em;
-}
-/*Indent-padding*/
-.ir1{text-align:right; padding-right:1em}
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-/* Images */
-
-img {
- max-width: 100%;
- height: auto;
-}
-
-img.w100 {width: 100%;}
-
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
- page-break-inside: avoid;
- max-width: 100%;
-}
-
-/* Poetry */
-.poetry-container {text-align: center;}
-
-.poetry{
- display: inline-block;
- text-align: left;
-}
-
-/* large inline blocks don't split well on paged devices */
-
-@media print{
- .poetry{
- display: block;
- margin-left: 1.5em;
- }
-}
-
-.x-ebookmaker .poetry{
- display: block;
- margin-left: 1.5em;
-}
-
-.poetry .stanza {margin: 1em auto;}
-
-.poetry .indent0 {text-indent: -3em; padding-left: 3em;}
-.poetry .indent10{text-indent: -1em; padding-left: 12em;}
-/* End poetry*/
-
-/* Transcriber's notes */
-.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
- color: black;
- font-size:smaller;
- padding:0.5em;
- margin-bottom:5em;
- font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
-
-/*CSS to set font sizes*/
-/*font sizes for non-header font changes*/
-.xxlargefont{font-size: xx-large}
-.xlargefont{font-size: x-large}
-.largefont{font-size: large}
-.smallfont{font-size: small}
-.cheaderfont{font-size:medium}
-.boldfont{font-weight:bold}
-/*for drop caps*/
-
-p.dropcap {
- text-indent: 0em;
-}
-
-p.dropcap:first-letter{
- float: left;
- font-size: 2.75em;
- padding-right: 0.05em;
- margin-top: 0.1em;
- margin-bottom: -0.1em;
- line-height: 0.65em;
-}
-
-.x-ebookmaker p.dropcap:first-letter{
- font-size: 1em;
- padding-right: 0em;
- margin-top: 0em;
- margin-bottom: 0em;
- line-height: 1em;
-}
-
-/* Illustration classes */
-.illowp75 {width: 75%;}
-.x-ebookmaker .illowp75 {width: 100%;}
-.illowp25 {width: 25%;}
-.illowp47 {width: 47%;}
-.x-ebookmaker .illowp47 {width: 100%;}
-.illowp72 {width: 72%;}
-.x-ebookmaker .illowp72 {width: 100%;}
- </style>
- </head>
-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Neva&#039;s three lovers, by Harriet Lewis</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Neva&#039;s three lovers</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Harriet Lewis</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 9, 2022 [eBook #68274]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Demian Katz, Craig Kirkwood, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (Images courtesy of the Digital Library@Villanova University.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEVA&#039;S THREE LOVERS ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp75" style="max-width: 109.625em;">
- <img id="coverpage" class="w100" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover." />
-</div>
-
-<div style="padding-top:2em">
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2 style="margin-top: 0em">Transcriber’s Notes:</h2>
-
-<p>The Table of Contents was created by the transcriber and placed
-in the public domain.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#TN_end">Additional Transcriber’s Notes</a> are at the
-end.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="boxcontents">
-<p class="xlargefont center boldfont">CONTENTS</p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">Chapter I. The Game Well Begun.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">Chapter II. A Decisive Move Commanded.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">Chapter III. A Fateful Move Decided Upon.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">Chapter IV. A Door Opened to Wickedness.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">Chapter V. Settling Into Her Place.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">Chapter VI. Her Ladyship’s Accomplice.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">Chapter VII. Neva’s First Lover.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">Chapter VIII. The Son of the Honorable Craven Black.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">Chapter IX. A Knot Summarily Severed.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">Chapter X. Neva at Home Again.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">Chapter XI. Lady Wynde’s Idea Acted Upon.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">Chapter XII. Black Continues His Conspiracy.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">Chapter XIII. How Neva Received the Forgeries.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">Chapter XIV. The Meeting of Neva and Rufus.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">Chapter XV. Mr. Black Gets a New Idea.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">Chapter XVI. Rufus Asks the Momentous Question.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">Chapter XVII. The Young Wife’s Desolation.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">Chapter XVIII. One of Neva’s Lovers Disposed of.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">Chapter XIX. Neva’s Choice Foreshadowed.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">Chapter XX. Was It a Dream?</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">Chapter XXI. A Scene in India.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">Chapter XXII. Back as From the Dead.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">Chapter XXIII. Neva’s Decision About Rufus.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">Chapter XXIV. Lally Finds a New Home.</a></p>
-<p class="pcontents"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">Chapter XXV. Lally in Her New Situation.</a></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center largefont">SELECT LIBRARY No. 231</p>
-
-<p class="center xxlargefont pminus1" style="color:#B22222"><span class="smcap">Neva’s Three Lovers</span></p>
-
-<p class="center pminus1"><em>BY</em></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="xlargefont smcap">Mrs. Harriet Lewis</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp72" style="max-width: 40.625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/cover_illo.jpg" alt="Cover illustration." />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter illowp47" style="max-width: 40.625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i003.jpg" alt="Title page." />
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1 class="nobreak">Neva’s Three Lovers</h1>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center xlargefont p2"><em>A NOVEL</em></p>
-
-<p class="center p2">BY<br />
-<span class="center xlargefont">MRS. HARRIET LEWIS</span></p>
-
-<p class="center smallfont">AUTHOR OF</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="margin-bottom:2em">“Adrift in the World,” “The Bailiff’s Scheme,” “The Belle of the<br />
-Season,” “Cecil Rosse,” “The Haunted Husband,” “Sundered<br />
-Hearts,” and numerous other books published in the<br />
-<span class="smcap">Eagle</span>, <span class="smcap">New Eagle</span>, and <span class="smcap">Select</span> Libraries.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp25" style="max-width: 7.8125em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/publishers_icon.jpg" alt="Publishers icon." />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center p2" style="line-height:1.75"><span class="largefont">STREET &amp; SMITH CORPORATION</span><br />
-PUBLISHERS<br />
-<span class="largefont">79-89 Seventh Avenue, New York</span>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="boxit">
-<p class="center">Copyright, 1871 and 1892<br />
-By Robert Bonner’s Sons</p>
-
-<p class="center">Neva’s Three Lovers</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center xxlargefont nobreak" style="margin-bottom:1em" id="CHAPTER_I">NEVA’S THREE LOVERS.</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">THE GAME WELL BEGUN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Sir Harold Wynde, Baronet, was standing upon the
-pier head at Brighton, looking idly seaward, and watching
-the play of the sunset rays on the waters, the tossing
-white-capped waves, and the white sails in the
-distance against the blue sky.</p>
-
-<p>He was not yet fifty years of age, tall and handsome
-and stately, with fair complexion, fair hair, and keen
-blue eyes, which at times beamed with a warm and
-genial radiance that seemed to emanate from his soul.
-The rare nobility of that soul expressed itself in his features.
-His commanding intellect betrayed itself in his
-square, massive brows. His grand nature was patent in
-every look and smile. He was a widower with two
-children, the elder a son, who was a captain in a fine
-regiment in India, the younger a daughter still at boarding-school.
-He possessed a magnificent estate in Kent,
-a house in town, and a marine villa, and rejoiced in a
-clear income of seventy thousand pounds a year.</p>
-
-<p>As might be expected from his rare personal and material
-advantages, he was a lion at Brighton, even<span class="pagenum">[10]</span>
-though the season was at its height, and peers and peeresses
-abounded at that fashionable resort. Titled ladies&mdash;to
-use a well-worn phrase&mdash;“set their caps” for him;
-manœuvring mammas smiled upon him; portly papas
-with their “quivers full of daughters,” and with groaning
-purses, urged him to dine at their houses or hotels;
-and widows of every age looked sweetly at him, and
-thought how divine it would be to be chosen to reign as
-mistress over the baronet’s estate of Hawkhurst.</p>
-
-<p>But Sir Harold went his ways quietly, seeming oblivious
-of the hopes and schemes of these manœuverers.
-He had had a good wife, and he had no intention of
-marrying again. And so, as he stood carelessly leaning
-against the railing on the pier head, under the gay awning,
-his thoughts were far away from the gaily dressed
-promenaders sauntering down the chain pier or pacing
-with slow steps to and fro behind him.</p>
-
-<p>The sunset glow slowly faded. The long gray English
-twilight began to fall slowly upon promenaders,
-beach, chain pier, and waters. The music of the band
-swallowed up all other sounds, the murmur of waters,
-the hum of gay voices, the sweetness of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>But suddenly, in one of the interludes of the music,
-and in the midst of Sir Harold’s reverie, an incident occurred
-which was the beginning of a chain of events
-destined to change the whole future course of the baronet’s
-life, and to exercise no slight degree of influence
-upon the lives of others.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the incident was simple. A little pleasure-boat,
-occupied by two ladies and a boatman, had been sailing
-leisurely about the pier head for some time. The
-boatman, one of the ordinary pleasure boatmen who
-make a living at Brighton, as at other maritime resorts,
-by letting their crafts and services to chance customers,
-had been busy with his sail. One of the ladies, a hired<span class="pagenum">[11]</span>
-companion apparently, sat at one side of the boat, with
-a parasol on her knee. The other lady, as evidently the
-employer, half reclined upon the plush cushions, and an
-Indian shawl of vivid scarlet lavishly embroidered with
-gold was thrown carelessly about her figure. One cheek
-of this lady rested upon her jewelled hand, and her eyes
-were fixed with a singular intentness, a peculiar speculativeness,
-upon the tall and stalwart figure of Sir
-Harold Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>There was a world of meaning in that long furtive
-gaze, and had the baronet been able to read and comprehend
-it, the tragical history we are about to narrate
-would never have happened. But he, wrapped in his
-own thoughts, saw neither the boat nor its occupants.</p>
-
-<p>The little craft crept in quite near to the pier head&mdash;so
-near as to be but a few rods distant&mdash;when the boatman
-shifted his helm to go about and stand upon the
-other tack. The small vessel gave a lurch, the wind
-blowing freshly; the lady with the Indian shawl started
-up, with a shriek; there was an instant of terrible confusion;
-and then the sail-boat had capsized, and her late
-occupants were struggling in the waters.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment the promenaders of the chain pier had
-thronged upon the pier head. Cries and ejaculations
-filled the air. No one could comprehend how the accident
-had occurred, but one man who had been watching
-the boat averred that the lady with the shawl had deliberately
-and purposely capsized it. <em>And this was the actual
-fact!</em></p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold Wynde was startled from the trance-like
-musings by the lady’s shriek. He looked down upon the
-waters and beheld the result of the catastrophe. The
-boat’s sail lay half under water. The boatman had
-seized the lady’s companion and was clinging to the upturned
-boat. The companion had fainted in his arms,<span class="pagenum">[12]</span>
-and he could not loosen his hold upon her unless he
-would have her drown before his eyes. The lady, at a
-little distance from her companions in peril, tangled in
-her mass of scarlet and gold drapery, her hat lost, her
-long hair trailing on the waves, seemed drowning.</p>
-
-<p>Her peril was imminent. No other boats were near,
-although one or two were coming up swiftly from a distance.</p>
-
-<p>The lady threw up her white arms with an anguished
-cry. Her glance sought the thronged pier head in wild
-appealing. Who, looking at her, would have dreamed
-that the disaster was part of a well-contrived plan&mdash;a
-trap to catch the unwary baronet?</p>
-
-<p>As she had expected from his well-known chivalrous
-character, he fell into the trap. His keen eyes flashed a
-rapid glance over beach and waters. The lady was likely
-to drown before help could come from the speeding
-boats. Sir Harold pulled off his coat and made a dive
-into the sea. He was an expert swimmer, and reached
-the lady as she was sinking. He caught her in his arms
-and struck out for the boat. The lady became a dead
-weight, and when he reached the capsized craft her head
-lay back on his breast, her long wet tresses of hair coiled
-around him like Medusean locks, and her pale face was
-like the face of a dead woman.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold clung to the side of the boat opposite that
-on which the boatman supported his burden. And thus
-he awaited the coming of the boats.</p>
-
-<p>Among the eager thronging watchers on the pier head
-above was a tall, fair-faced man, with a long, waxed
-mustache, sinister eyes and a cynical smile. He alone of
-the throng seemed unmoved by the tragic incident.</p>
-
-<p>“It was pretty well done,” he muttered, under his
-breath&mdash;“a little transparent, perhaps, and a trifle awkward
-as well, but pretty well done! The baronet fell<span class="pagenum">[13]</span>
-into the trap too, exactly as was hoped. Your campaign
-opens finely, my beautiful Octavia. Let us see if the
-result is to be what we desire. In short, will the baronet
-be as unsuspicious all the way through?”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold certainly was unsuspicious at that moment.
-The helpless woman in his arms aroused into activity
-all the chivalry of his chivalric nature. He held her
-head above the creeping waves until the foremost boat
-had reached him. His burden was the first to be lifted
-into the rescuing craft; the lady’s companion followed;
-the baronet and the boatman climbing into the boat
-last, in the order in which they are named.</p>
-
-<p>The capsized boat was righted and its owner took
-possession of her. The rescuing craft transported the
-baronet and the two ladies to the beach. The lady companion
-had recovered her senses and self-possession, but
-the lady employer lay on the cushions pale and motionless.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the landing, a cab was found to be in
-waiting, having been summoned by some sympathizing
-spectator. The companion, uttering protestations of
-gratitude, entered the vehicle, and her mistress was assisted
-in after her. The former gathered her employer
-in her arms, crying out:</p>
-
-<p>“She is dead! She is dead! I have lost my best
-friend&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Not so, madam,” said Sir Harold, in kindly sympathy.
-“The lady has only fainted, I think. To what
-place shall I tell the cabman to drive?”</p>
-
-<p>“To the Albion Hotel. Oh, my poor, poor lady! To
-die so young! It is terrible!”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold made some soothing response, but being
-chilled and wet, did not find it necessary to accompany
-to their hotel the heroines of the adventure. He gave
-their address to the cabman, watched the cab as it rolled<span class="pagenum">[14]</span>
-away, and then breaking loose from the crowd of friends
-who gathered around him with anxious interrogatories,
-he secured his coat and procured a cab for himself and
-proceeded to his own hotel.</p>
-
-<p>It was not until he had had a comfortable bath, and
-was seated in dry attire in his private parlor, that Sir
-Harold remembered that he did not know the name of
-the lady he had served, or that he had not even seen her
-face distinctly.</p>
-
-<p>“She is as ignorant of my name and identity,” he
-thought, “as I am of hers. If the incident could be
-kept out of the papers, I need never be troubled with
-the thanks of her husband, father, or brother.”</p>
-
-<p>But the incident was not kept out of the papers. Sir
-Harold Wynde, being a lion, had to bear the penalty of
-popularity. The next morning’s paper, brought in to
-him as he sat at his solitary breakfast, contained a glowing
-account of the previous evening’s adventure, under
-the flaming head line of “Heroic Action by a Baronet,”
-with the sub-lines: “Sir Harold Wynde saves a lady’s
-life at the risk of his own. Chivalry not yet dead in our
-commonplace England.” And there followed a highly
-imaginative description of the lady’s adventure, her
-name being as yet unknown, and a warm eulogy upon
-Sir Harold’s bravery and presence of mind.</p>
-
-<p>The baronet’s lip curled as he read impatiently the
-fulsome article. He had scarcely finished it when a
-waiter entered, bringing in upon a silver tray a large
-squarely enveloped letter. It was addressed to Sir Harold
-Wynde, was stamped with an unintelligible monogram,
-and sealed with a dainty device in pale green
-wax. As the baronet’s only lady correspondent was
-his daughter at school, and this missive was clearly not
-from her, he experienced a slight surprise at its reception.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[15]</span></p>
-
-<p>The waiter having departed, Sir Harold cut open the
-letter with his pocket knife, and glanced over its contents.</p>
-
-<p>They were written upon the daintiest, thickest vellum
-paper unlined, and duly tinted and monogrammed, and
-were as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="ir1"><span class="smcap">Albion Hotel</span>, Tuesday Morning.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Sir Harold Wynde</span>: The lady who writes this letter
-is the lady whom you so gallantly rescued from a
-death by drowning last evening. I have read the accounts
-of your daring bravery in the morning’s papers,
-and hasten to offer my grateful thanks for your noble
-and gallant kindness to an utter stranger. Life has not
-been so sweet to me that I cling to it, but yet it is very
-horrible to go in one moment from the glow and heartiness
-of health and life down to the very gates of death.
-It was your hand that drew me back at the moment
-when those gates opened to admit me, and again I bless
-you&mdash;a thousand thousand times, I bless you. Alas, that
-I have to write to you myself. I have neither father,
-lover, nor husband, to rejoice in the life you have saved.
-I am a widow, and alone in the wide world. Will you
-not call upon me at my hotel and permit me to thank
-you far more effectively in person? I shall be waiting
-for your coming in my private parlor at eleven this
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class="ir1 pminus1"><span style="padding-right:5em">“Gratefully yours,</span><br />
-“<span class="smcap">Octavia Hathaway</span>.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The baronet read the letter again and again. His
-generous soul was touched by its sorrowful tone.</p>
-
-<p>“A widow and alone in the world!” he thought.
-“Poor woman! What sentence could be sadder than
-that? She is elderly, I am sure, and has lost all her
-children. I do not want to hear her expressions of gratitude,
-but if I can make the poor soul happier by calling
-on her I will go.”</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, at eleven o’clock that morning, attired
-in a gentleman’s unexceptionable morning dress, Sir<span class="pagenum">[16]</span>
-Harold Wynde, having sent up his card, presented himself
-at the door of Mrs. Hathaway’s private parlor at the
-Albion Hotel, and knocked for admittance.</p>
-
-<p>The door was opened to him by the lady’s companion,
-who greeted him with effusiveness, and begged him to
-be seated.</p>
-
-<p>She was a tall, angular woman, with sharp features,
-whose characteristic expression was one of peculiar hardness
-and severity. Her lips were thin, and were usually
-compressed. Her eyes were a light gray, furtive and sly,
-like a cat’s eyes. Her pointed chin gave a treacherous
-cast to her countenance. Her complexion was of a pale,
-opaque gray; her hair, of a fawn color, was worn in
-three puffs on each side of her face, and her dress was of
-a tint to match her hair. Sir Harold conceived an instinctive
-aversion to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Hathaway?” he said politely, with interrogative
-accent.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I am not Mrs. Hathaway,” was the reply, in a
-subdued voice, and the furtive eyes scanned the visitor’s
-face. “I am only Mrs. Hathaway’s companion&mdash;Mrs.
-Artress. Mrs. Hathaway has just received your card.
-She will be out directly.”</p>
-
-<p>The words were scarcely spoken when the door of an
-inner room opened, and Mrs. Hathaway made her appearance.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold stood up, bowing.</p>
-
-<p>The lady was by no means the elderly, melancholy
-personage he had expected to see. She was about thirty
-years of age, and looked younger. She had a tall, statuesque
-figure, well-rounded and inclined to <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">embonpoint</i>.
-She carried her head with a certain stateliness. Her hair
-was dressed with the inevitable chignon, crimped waves,
-and long, floating curl, and despite the monstrosity of
-the fashion, it was decidedly and undeniably picturesque.<span class="pagenum">[17]</span>
-Her face, with its clear brunette complexion, liquid black
-eyes, Grecian nose, low brows, and faultless mouth, was
-very handsome. There was a fascination in her manners
-that was felt by the baronet even before she had spoken.</p>
-
-<p>She was not dressed in mourning, and it was probable,
-therefore, that her widowhood was not of recent beginning.
-She was clothed in an exquisitely embroidered
-morning dress of white, which trailed on the floor, and
-was relieved with ornaments of pale pink coral, and a
-broad coral-colored sash at her waist.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>This</em> is Mrs. Hathaway, Sir Harold,” said the gray
-looking lady’s companion.</p>
-
-<p>The lady sprang forward after an impulsive fashion, and
-clasped the baronet’s hands in both her own. Her black
-eyes flooded with tears. And then, in a broken voice,
-she thanked her preserver for his gallant conduct on
-the previous evening assuring him that her gratitude
-would outlast her life. Her protestations and gratitude
-were not overdone, and unsuspecting Sir Harold
-accepted them as genuine, even while they embarrassed
-him.</p>
-
-<p>He remained an hour, finding Mrs. Hathaway charming
-company and thoroughly fascinating. The companion
-sat apart, silent, busy with embroidery, a mere gray
-shadow; but her presence gave an easy unconstraint to
-both the baronet and the lady. When Sir Harold took
-his departure, sauntering down to the German Spa, he
-carried with him the abiding memory of Mrs. Hathaway’s
-handsome brunette face and liquid black eyes, and
-thought himself that she was the most charming woman
-he had met for years.</p>
-
-<p>From that day, throughout the season, the baronet was
-a frequent visitor at Mrs. Hathaway’s private parlor.
-The gray companion was always at hand to play propriety,
-and the tongues of gossips, though busy, had no<span class="pagenum">[18]</span>
-malevolence in them. Sir Harold had his own horses at
-Brighton, and placed one at Mrs. Hathaway’s disposal.
-The widow accepted it, procured a bewitching costume
-from town, and had daily rides with the baronet. She
-also drove with him in his open, low carriage, and bowed
-right and left to her acquaintances upon such occasions
-with the gracious condescension of a princess. She
-sailed with him in his graceful yacht, upon day’s excursions,
-her companion always accompanying, and rumor
-at length declared that the pair were engaged to be
-married.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold heard the reports, and they set him thinking.
-The society of Mrs. Hathaway had become necessary
-to him. She understood his tastes, studying them
-with a flattery so delicate that he was pleased without
-understanding it. She read his favorite books, played
-his favorite music, and displayed talents of no mean
-order. She was fitted to adorn any position, however
-high, and Sir Harold thought with a pleasant thrill at his
-heart, how royally she would reign over his beautiful
-home.</p>
-
-<p>In short, questioning his own heart, he found that he
-had worshiped his dead wife, who would be to him always
-young, as when he had buried her&mdash;but with the
-passion of later manhood, an exacting, jealous yearning
-affection, which gives all and demands all. With his
-children far from him, his life had been lonely, and he
-had known many desolate hours, when he would have
-given half his wealth for sympathy and love.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall find both in Octavia,” he thought, his noble
-face brightening. “I shall not wrong my children in
-marrying her. My son will be my heir. My daughter’s
-fortune will not be imperilled by my second marriage.
-Neva is sixteen, and in two years more will come home.
-How can I do better for her than to give her a beautiful<span class="pagenum">[19]</span>
-mother, young enough to win her confidence, old enough
-to be her guide? Octavia would love my girl, and would
-be her best chaperon in society, to which Neva must be
-by and by introduced. I should find in Octavia then a
-mother for my daughter, and a gentle loving wife and
-companion for myself. But will she accept me?”</p>
-
-<p>He put the question to the test that very evening. He
-found the handsome widow alone in her parlor, the gray
-companion being for once absent, and he told her his
-love with a tremulous ardor and passion that it would
-have been the glory of a good woman to have evoked from
-a nature so grand as Sir Harold’s.</p>
-
-<p>The fascinating widow blushed and smiled assent, and
-her black-tressed head drooped to his shoulder, and Sir
-Harold clasped her in his arms as his betrothed wife.</p>
-
-<p>With a lover’s impetuosity he begged her to marry
-him at an early day. She hesitated coyly, as if for
-months she had not been striving and praying for this
-hour, and then was won to consent to marry him a
-month thence.</p>
-
-<p>“I am alone in the world, and have no one to consult,”
-she sighed. “I have an old aunt, a perfect miser, who
-lives in Bloomsbury Square, in London. She will permit
-me to be married from her house, as I was before.
-The marriage will have to be very quiet, for she is averse
-to display and expense. However, what she saves will
-come to me some day, so I need not complain. I shall
-want to keep Artress with me, Sir Harold. I can see
-that you don’t like her, but she has been a faithful friend
-to me in all my troubles, and I cannot abandon her when
-prosperity smiles so splendidly upon me. I may keep
-her, may I not?”</p>
-
-<p>Thus appealed to, Sir Harold smothered his dislike of
-the gray companion, and consented that she should
-become an inmate of his house.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[20]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Hathaway proceeded to explain the causes of her
-friendlessness. She was an orphan, and had early married
-the Honorable Charles Hathaway, the younger son
-of a Viscount, who had died five years before. The
-Honorable Charles had been a dissipated spendthrift, and
-had left his wife the meagre income of some three hundred
-pounds a year. Her elegant clothing was, for the
-most part, relics of better days. As to the expensive
-style in which she lived, keeping a companion and maid,
-no one knew, save herself and one other, how she managed
-to support it. Her name and reputation were unblemished,
-and the most censorious tongue had nothing
-to say against her.</p>
-
-<p>And yet she was none the less an unscrupulous,
-unprincipled adventuress.</p>
-
-<p>This was the woman, the noble, gallant baronet proposed
-to take to his bosom as his wife, to endow with
-his name and wealth, to make the mother and guide of
-his pure young daughter. Would the sacrifice of the
-generous, unsuspected lover be permitted?</p>
-
-<p>It <em>was</em> permitted. A month later their modest bridal
-train swept beneath the portals of St. George’s Church,
-Hanover Square. The bride, radiant in pearl-colored
-moire, with point lace overdress, wore a magnificent parure
-of diamonds, presented to her by Sir Harold. The
-baronet looked the picture of happiness. The miserly
-aunt of Mrs. Hathaway, a skinny old lady in a low-necked
-and short-sleeved dress of pink silk, that, by its
-unsuitability, made her seem absolutely hideous, attended
-by a male friend, who gave away the bride, was
-prominent among the group that surrounded the altar.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold’s son and heir was in India, and his daughter
-had not been summoned from her boarding-school in
-Paris. The baronet’s tender father soul yearned for his
-daughter’s presence at his second marriage; but Lady<span class="pagenum">[21]</span>
-Wynde had urged that Neva’s studies should not be interrupted,
-and had begged, as a personal favor, that her
-meeting with her young step-daughter might be delayed
-until her ladyship had become used to her new position.
-She professed to be timid and shrinking in regard to the
-meeting with Neva, and Sir Harold, in his passionate
-love for Octavia, put aside his own wishes, yielding to
-her request. But he had written to his daughter, announcing
-his intended second marriage, and had received
-in reply a tender, loving letter full of earnest prayers for
-his happiness, and expressing the kindest feelings toward
-the expected step-mother.</p>
-
-<p>The words were spoken that made the strangely
-assorted pair one flesh. As the bride arose from her
-knees the wife of a wealthy baronet, the wearer of a
-title, the handsome face was lighted by a triumphant
-glow, her black eyes emitted a singular, exultant gleam,
-and a conscious triumph pervaded her manner.</p>
-
-<p>She had played the first part of a daring game&mdash;and
-she had won!</p>
-
-<p>As she passed into the vestry to sign the marriage register,
-leaning proudly upon the arm of her newly made
-husband, and followed by her few attending personal
-friends, a man who had witnessed the ceremony from
-behind a clustered pillar in the church, stole out into the
-square, his face lighted by a lurid smile, his eyes emitting
-the same peculiar, exultant gleam as the bride’s had
-done.</p>
-
-<p>This man was the tall, fair-haired gentleman, with
-waxed mustaches, sinister eyes and cynical smile, who,
-nearly three months before, had witnessed from the pier
-head at Brighton the rescue of Mrs. Hathaway from the
-sea by Sir Harold Wynde. And now this man muttered:</p>
-
-<p>“The game prospers. Octavia is Lady Wynde. The<span class="pagenum">[22]</span>
-first act is played. The next act requires more time,
-deliberation, caution. Every move must be considered
-carefully. We are bound to win the entire game.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">A DECISIVE MOVE COMMANDED.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Sir Harold and Lady Wynde ate their wedding breakfast
-in Bloomsbury Square, at the house of Lady
-Wynde’s miserly aunt, Mrs. Hyde. A few of the baronet’s
-choice friends were present. The absence of Sir
-Harold’s daughter was not especially remarked save by
-the father, who longed with an anxious longing to see
-her face smiling upon him, and to hear her young voice
-whispering congratulations upon his second marriage.
-Neva had been especially near and dear to him. Her
-mother had died in her babyhood, and he had been both
-father and mother to his girl. He had early sent his
-son to school, but Neva he had kept with him until, a
-year before, his first wife’s relatives had urged him to
-send her to a “finishing school” at Paris, and he had
-reluctantly yielded. Not even his passionate love for
-his bride could overcome or lessen the fatherly love and
-tenderness of years.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after the breakfast the newly married
-pair proceeded to Canterbury by special train. The gray
-companion and Lady Wynde’s maid traveled in another
-compartment of the same coach. The Hawkhurst carriage
-was in waiting for the bridal pair at the station.
-Sir Harold assisted his wife into it, addressed a few
-kindly words to the old coachman on the box, and<span class="pagenum">[23]</span>
-entered the vehicle. The gray companion and the maid
-entered a dog-cart, also in waiting. Hawkhurst was
-several miles distant, but the country between it and
-Canterbury was a charming one, and Lady Wynde found
-sufficient enjoyment in looking at the handsome seats,
-the trim hedges, and thrifty hop-gardens, and in wondering
-if Hawkhurst would realize her expectations.
-She found indeed more enjoyment in her own speculations
-than in the society of her husband.</p>
-
-<p>About five o’clock of the afternoon, the bridal pair
-came in sight of the ancestral home of the Wynde’s.
-The top of the low barouche was lowered and Sir
-Harold pointed out her future home to his bride with
-pardonable pride, and she surveyed it with eager eyes.</p>
-
-<p>It was, as we have said, a magnificent estate, divided
-into numerous farms of goodly size. The home grounds
-of Hawkhurst proper, including the fields, pastures,
-meadows, parks, woods, plantations and gardens, comprised
-about four hundred acres. The mansion stood
-upon a ridge of ground some half a mile wide, and was
-seen from several points at a distance of three or four
-miles. It was a grand old building of gray stone, with
-a long facade, and was three stories in height. Its turrets
-and chimneys were noted for their picturesqueness.
-Its carved stone porches, its quaint wide windows, its
-steep roof, from which pert dormer-windows, saucily
-projected, were remarkable for their beauty or oddity.
-Despite its age, and its air of grandeur and stateliness,
-there was a home-like look about the great mansion
-that Lady Wynde did not fail to perceive at the first
-glance.</p>
-
-<p>The house was flanked on either side by glass pineries,
-grape houses, hothouses, greenhouses and similar buildings.
-Further to the left of the dwelling, beyond the
-sunny gardens, was the great park, intersected with<span class="pagenum">[24]</span>
-walks and drives, having a lake somewhere in the
-umbrageous depths, and herds of fallow-deer browsing
-on its herbage. In the rear of the house, built in the
-form of a quadrangle, of gray stone, were the handsome
-stables and offices of various descriptions. The mansion
-with its dependencies covered a great deal of
-ground, and presented an imposing appearance.</p>
-
-<p>The house was approached by a shaded drive a half
-mile or more in length, which traversed a smooth green
-lawn dotted here and there with trees. A pair of bronze
-gates, protected and attended by a picturesque gray
-stone lodge, gave ingress to the grounds.</p>
-
-<p>These gates swung open at the approach of Sir Harold
-Wynde and his bride, and the gate-keeper and his
-family came out bowing and smiling, to welcome home
-the future lady of Hawkhurst. Lady Wynde returned
-their greetings with graceful condescension, and then,
-as the carriage entered the drive, she fixed her eager
-eyes upon the long gray facade of the mansion, and
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“It is beautiful&mdash;magnificent! You never did justice
-to its grandeurs, Harold, in describing Hawkhurst. It
-is strange that a house so large, and of such architectural
-pretension, should have such a bright and sunny
-appearance. The sunlight must flood every room in
-that glorious front. I should like to live all my days at
-Hawkhurst!”</p>
-
-<p>“Your dower house will be as pleasant a home as this
-although not so pretentious,” said Sir Harold, smiling
-gravely. “It is probable that you being twenty years
-my junior, will survive me, Octavia, and therefore I have
-settled upon you for your life use in your possible
-widowhood one of my prettiest places, and one which
-has served for many generations as the residence of the
-dowager widows of our family.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[25]</span></p>
-
-<p>The glow on Lady Wynde’s face faded a little, and
-her lips slightly compressed themselves, as they were
-wont to do when she was ill pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“I have never asked you about your property, Harold,”
-she remarked, “but your wife need be restrained
-from doing so by no sense of delicacy. I suppose your
-property is entailed?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hawkhurst is entailed, but it will fall to the female
-line in case of the dying out of heirs male,” replied the
-baronet, not marking his bride’s scarcely suppressed
-eagerness. “It has belonged to our family from time
-immemorial, and was a royal grant to one of our ancestors
-who saved his monarch’s life at risk of his own.
-Thus, at my death, Hawkhurst will go, with the title,
-to my son. If George should die, without issue, Hawkhurst&mdash;without
-the title, which is a separate affair&mdash;will
-go to my daughter.”</p>
-
-<p>“A weighty inheritance for a girl,” remarked Lady
-Wynde. “And&mdash;and if she should die without issue?”</p>
-
-<p>“The estate would go to distant cousins of mine.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde started. This was evidently an unexpected
-reply, and she could not repress her looks of disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I should think your wife would come before your
-cousins,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“How little you know about law, Octavia,” said the
-baronet, with a grave, gentle smile. “The property
-must go to those of our blood. If our union is blessed
-with children, the eldest of them would inherit Hawkhurst
-before my cousins. But although the law has proclaimed
-us one flesh, yet it does not allow you to become
-the heir of my entailed property. It is singular even
-that a daughter is permitted to inherit before male
-cousins, but there was a clause in the royal deed of gift
-of Hawkhurst to my ancestors that gave the property<span class="pagenum">[26]</span>
-to females in the direct line, in default of male heirs, but
-there has never been a female proprietor of the estate.
-I hope there never may be. I should hate to have the
-old name die out of the old place. But here we are at
-the house. Welcome home, my beautiful wife!”</p>
-
-<p>The carriage stopped in the porch, and Sir Harold
-alighted and assisted out his bride. He drew her arm
-through his and led her up the lofty flight of stone steps,
-and in at the arched and open door-way. The servants
-were assembled to welcome home their lady, and the
-baronet uttered the necessary words of introduction and
-conducted his bride to the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>This was an immensely long apartment, with nine
-wide windows on its eastern side looking out upon gardens
-and park. Sculptured arches, supported by slender
-columns of alabaster, relieved the long vista, and curtains
-depending from them were capable of dividing the
-grand room into three handsome ones. The drawing-room
-was furnished in modern style, and was all gayety,
-brightness and beauty. The furniture, of daintiest
-satin-wood, was upholstered in pale blue silk. The carpet,
-of softest gray hue, was bordered with blue.</p>
-
-<p>“It is very lovely,” commented the bride. “And that
-is a conservatory at the end? I shall be very happy
-here, Harold.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope so,” was the earnest response. “But let me
-take you up to your own rooms, Octavia. They have
-been newly furnished for your occupancy.”</p>
-
-<p>He gave her his arm and conducted her out into the
-wide hall, with its tesselated floor, up the wide marble
-staircase, to a suit of rooms directly over the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>This suit comprised sitting-room, bedroom, dressing-room
-and bath-room. Their upholstery was of a vivid
-crimson hue. A faultless taste had guided the selection<span class="pagenum">[27]</span>
-of the various adornments, and Lady Wynde’s eyes kindled
-with appreciation as she marked the costliness and
-beauty of everything around her.</p>
-
-<p>“Your trunks have arrived in the wagon, Octavia,”
-said her husband, well pleased with her commendations.
-“Mrs. Artress and your maid, who came on in the dog-cart,
-have also arrived. Dinner has been ordered at
-seven. I will leave you to dress. And, by the way,
-should you have need of me, my dressing-room adjoins
-your own.”</p>
-
-<p>He went out. Lady Wynde rang for her maid and
-her gray companion, and dressed for dinner. When her
-toilet was made, the baronet’s bride dismissed her maid
-and came out into her warm-hued sitting room, where
-Mrs. Artress sat by a window looking out into the leafy
-shadows of the park.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” said the beauty interrogatively. “What do
-you think? Have I not been successful?”</p>
-
-<p>“So far, yes,” said the grim, ashen-faced companion,
-raising her light, hay-colored eyes in a meaning expression.
-“But the end is not yet. The game, you know,
-is only fairly begun.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know,” said the bride thoughtfully. “But it
-is well begun. But hush, Artress. Here comes my happy
-bridegroom!”</p>
-
-<p>There was a mocking smile on her lips as she bade
-Sir Harold enter. The wedded pair had a few minutes’
-conversation in the sitting-room, her ladyship’s companion
-sitting in the deep window seat mute as a shadow,
-and they then descended to the drawing-room. Mrs.
-Artress meekly followed. She remained near Lady
-Wynde, in attendance upon her until after dinner, and
-then went up to her own room, which was in convenient
-proximity to the apartments of Lady Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>The bride and bridegroom were left to themselves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[28]</span></p>
-
-<p>The former played a little upon the grand piano, and
-then approached her husband, sitting down beside him
-upon the same sofa. His noble face beamed love upon
-her. But her countenance grew hard with speculative
-thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me see,” said she, speaking with well-assumed
-lightness. “What were we talking about when we arrived,
-Harold? Oh, about your property! So, this
-dear old Hawkhurst will belong to George? And what
-will Neva have?”</p>
-
-<p>“Her mother’s fortune, and several estates which are
-not entailed. Neva will be a very rich woman without
-Hawkhurst. You also, Octavia, will be handsomely provided
-for, without detriment to my children.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, of course,” said Lady Wynde. “But if the
-estates are not entailed which you intend to give to
-Neva, you must leave them to her by will. Have&mdash;have
-you made your will?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; but since I have contracted a new marriage, I
-shall have to make a new will. I shall attend to that at
-my leisure.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde became thoughtful, but did not press the
-subject. She excused her questionings on the plea of
-interest in her husband’s children, and Sir Harold gave
-no thought to them.</p>
-
-<p>The days went by; the weeks and months followed.
-Neva Wynde had not been summoned home, her step-mother
-finding plenty of excuses for deferring the return
-of her step-daughter. Perhaps she feared that a
-pair of keen young eyes, unvailed by glamor, would
-see how morally hideous she was&mdash;how base and scheming,
-and unworthy of her husband.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold’s infatuation with his wife deepened as the
-time wore on. His love for her became a species of
-worship. All that she did was good in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[29]</span></p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde went into society, visited the first county
-families, and received them at Hawkhurst. She gave a
-ball, dancing and dinner parties, “tea-fights,” and fetes
-champetres, without number. She promoted festivities
-of every sort, and became one of the most popular ladies
-in the county. She was a leader of fashion too, and
-withal was so gracious, so circumspect, so full of delicate
-flattery to every one, that even venomous tongued gossip
-had naught but good to say of her. Her position at
-Hawkhurst was thus firmly established, and she might
-be called a happy woman.</p>
-
-<p>As the months went on, an air of expectancy began to
-be apparent in her manner. The gray companion shared
-it, moving with a suppressed eagerness and nervousness,
-as if waiting for something. And that which she waited
-for came at last.</p>
-
-<p>It was one February evening, more than a year after
-the bride’s coming home to Hawkhurst. Outside the
-night was wild. Within Lady Wynde’s dressing-room
-the fire glowed behind its silvered bars, and its rays
-danced in bright gleams upon the crimson furniture.
-The lamps burned with mellow radiance. In the centre
-of the room stood the lady of Hawkhurst. She had dismissed
-her maid, and was surveying her reflection in a
-full-length mirror with a complacent smile.</p>
-
-<p>She was attired in a long robe of crimson silk, and
-wore her ruby ornaments. Her neck and arms were bare.
-Her liquid black eyes were full of light; her face was
-aglow.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of her self-admiration, her gray companion
-entered abruptly, bearing in her hand a letter. Lady
-Wynde turned toward her with a startled look.</p>
-
-<p>“What have you there, Artress?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“A letter addressed to me,” was the reply. “I have
-read it. I have a question to ask you, Octavia, before<span class="pagenum">[30]</span>
-I show the letter to you. Sir Harold Wynde adores
-you. He loads you with gifts. He lays his heart under
-your feet. You are his world, his life, his very soul.
-And now I want to ask you&mdash;do you love him?”</p>
-
-<p>The ashen eyes shot a piercing glance into the handsome
-brunette face, but the black eyes met hers boldly
-and the full lips curled in a contemptuous smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Love him?” repeated Lady Wynde. “You know I
-do not. Love him? You know that I love another even
-as Sir Harold loves me! Love him? Bah!”</p>
-
-<p>The gray woman smiled a strange mirthless smile.</p>
-
-<p>“It is well,” she said. “Now read the letter. The
-message has come at last!”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde seized the letter eagerly. It contained
-only these words, without date or signature:</p>
-
-<p>“<em>The time has come to get rid of him!</em> Now!”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">A FATEFUL MOVE DECIDED UPON.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Notwithstanding that the sinister message, contained
-in the single line of the mysterious missive brought to
-Lady Wynde by her gray companion, had been long expected,
-it brought with it none the less a shock when it
-came.</p>
-
-<p>The paper fluttered slowly from the unloosed fingers
-of the baronet’s wife to the floor, and into the liquid
-black eyes stole a look half of horror and half of eagerness.
-Unconsciously her voice repeated the words of
-the message, in a hoarse whisper:</p>
-
-<p>“<em>It is time to get rid of him.</em> Now!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[31]</span></p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde shuddered at the sound of her own voice,
-and she stared at her gray companion, her eyes full of
-shrinking and terror. Those ashen orbs returned her
-stare with one that was bold, evil, and encouraging.</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I haven’t the courage I thought, Artress,” faltered
-her ladyship. “It is a terrible thing to do!”</p>
-
-<p>“You love Sir Harold, after all?” taunted the companion,
-as she picked up the sinister slip of paper and
-burned it.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, but he trusts me; he loves me. There was
-a time, Artress, when I could not have harmed a dog that
-licked my hand or fawned upon me. And now&mdash;but I
-am not so bad as you think. I am base, unscrupulous,
-manœuvring, I know. My marriage was but part of a
-wicked plan, the fruit of a conspiracy against Sir Harold
-Wynde, but I shrink from the crowning evil we have
-planned. To play the viper and sting the hand that has
-warmed me&mdash;to wound to the core the heart that beats so
-fondly and proudly for me&mdash;to&mdash;to cut short the noble,
-beneficent, happy life of Sir Harold&mdash;oh, I cannot! I
-cannot!”</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship swept forward impetuously toward the
-hearth and knelt down before a quaint crimson-cushioned
-chair, crossing her arms upon it, and laying her head on
-her bare white arms. The firelight played upon the
-ruddy waves of her long robe, upon the gems at her
-throat and wrists, upon her picturesquely dishevelled
-hair, and upon her stormy, handsome face. She stared
-into the fire with her great black terrified eyes, as if
-seeking in those dancing flames some mystic meaning.</p>
-
-<p>Her gray companion flitted across the floor to her
-side like an evil shadow.</p>
-
-<p>“How very tragic you are, my lady,” she said, with a
-sneer. “It almost seems as if you were doing a scene
-out of a melodrama. No one can force you to any step<span class="pagenum">[32]</span>
-against your will. You can do whatever you please.
-Sir Harold dotes upon you, and you can continue his
-seemingly affectionate wife, can receive his caresses, can
-preside over his household, and can soothe his declining
-years. He is not yet fifty-eight years old, vigorous and
-healthy, and, as he comes of a long-lived race, he will
-live to be ninety, I doubt not. You will, should you survive
-him, then be seventy. You can play the tender
-step-mother to his children. His daughter is sure to
-dislike you, and she may cause her father to distrust
-you. All this will no doubt be pleasant to you&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, hush!” breathed Lady Wynde, with a tempestuous
-look in her eyes. “Let me alone, Artress. You
-always stir up the demon within me. Forty years of a
-dull, staid, respectable existence, when I might be a
-queen of society in London, might be married to one I
-have loved for years! Forty years! Why, one year seems
-to me an eternity. It seems a lifetime since I was married
-to Sir Harold. I&mdash;I will act upon the letter.”</p>
-
-<p>The gray companion smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“I was sure you would,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“But Sir Harold has not made a new will since our
-marriage,” urged Lady Wynde. “By our marriage
-settlements, I am to have the use of the dower house,
-Wynde Heights, during my lifetime, and a life income
-of four thousand pounds a year. At my death, both
-house and income revert to the family of Wynde. I
-have nothing absolutely my own, nothing left to me by
-will to do with as I please. Craven expected that I
-would have the dowry of a princess, I suppose, out of
-Sir Harold’s splendid property.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is not too late to acquire it,” said the companion,
-significantly. “Sir Harold is clay in your hands. You
-can mould him to any shape you will. He has no child
-here to counteract your influence. He has money and<span class="pagenum">[33]</span>
-estates which he intends to leave by will to his daughter
-Neva. If you are clever, you can divert into your own
-coffers all of Miss Wynde’s property that is not settled
-upon her already from her mother’s estate. It will do
-no harm to delay acting upon the message for a day or
-two, since something of so much importance remains to
-be transacted.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am thankful for even a day’s respite,” murmured
-Lady Wynde. “I have been eager to receive the message,
-intending to act upon it promptly. But I am not
-all bad, Artress, and I shrink from the consummation
-of our plans. If Sir Harold would only die naturally!
-If something would only occur to remove him from my
-path!”</p>
-
-<p>She breathed heavily as she arose, shook out the folds
-of her dress, and moved toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>“The phial I had when we came here I found was
-broken yesterday,” said Artress. “I shall have to go up
-to London to-morrow for more of that fluid, so that
-there must be a day’s delay in any case. We must be
-very cautious, for people will wonder at the sudden
-death of one so hale and strong, and should suspicion
-arise, it must find no foundation to build upon.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde nodded assent, and opened the door and
-went out with a weary step. She descended the broad
-staircase, crossed the great hall, and entered the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold was seated near the fire, in a thoughtful
-reverie, but arose at her entrance with a beaming face
-and a tender smile.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a wild night, Octavia,” he said. “Come forward
-to the fire my darling. How pale you are! And you
-are shivering with the cold.”</p>
-
-<p>He gently forced her into the easy-chair he had vacated,<span class="pagenum">[34]</span>
-bent over her with lover-like devotion, patting her
-head softly with his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“You look unhappy, dear,” resumed the baronet, after
-a pause. “Is there anything you want&mdash;a ball, jewels, a
-trip to the Continent? You know my purse is yours,
-and I am ready to go where you may wish to lead.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are very good!” said Lady Wynde, her black
-eyes fixed in a gaze upon the fire, and again she shivered.
-“I&mdash;I am not worthy of all your kindness, Harold. Hark!
-There is the dinner-bell. Thank fortune for the interruption,
-for I believe I was growing really sentimental!”</p>
-
-<p>She forced a laugh as she arose and took her husband’s
-arm, and was conducted to the dining-room, but
-there was something in her laughter that jarred upon
-Sir Harold, although the unpleasant impression it produced
-upon him was evanescent.</p>
-
-<p>At the dinner Lady Wynde was herself again, bright
-and fascinating, only now and then, in some pause of
-the conversation, there came again into her eyes that
-horrified stare which they had worn up stairs, and which
-testified how her soul shrank from the awful crime she
-contemplated.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner the pair returned to the drawing-room.
-Sir Harold drew a sofa toward the corner of the hearth
-and sat down upon it, calling his wife to him. She
-obeyed, taking a seat beside him. Her face was all
-brightness at this moment, and Sir Harold forgot his late
-anxieties about her.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe I am the happiest man in the world, Octavia,”
-he said thoughtfully, caressing one of her jewelled
-hands he had lifted from her knee, “but my cup of joy
-lacks a drop or two of sweetness still. You are all the
-world to me, my wife, and yet I want something more.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it you want, Harold?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been thinking about my children,” said the<span class="pagenum">[35]</span>
-baronet. “It is over a month since I heard from George,
-and he does not intend to leave India this year, although
-I have urged him to sell his commission and come home.
-The boy has a passion for a military life, and he went
-out to India against my better judgment. I cannot have
-George home again this year, but there is Neva near
-me. I long to see her, Octavia.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are the most devoted of fathers,” laughed Lady
-Wynde. “We have been married but little over a year,
-and yet you have made two trips alone to Paris to see
-Neva. She must be a very paragon of daughters to
-cause her father to forget his bride.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold’s fair cheeks flushed a little.</p>
-
-<p>“You forget,” he said, “that Neva was my especial
-charge from the hour of her mother’s death till I sent
-her to that Paris school. My love for you, Octavia, cannot
-lessen my love for her. I begin to think that I have
-done wrong in not bringing you two together before. I
-had a most pathetic letter from Neva before the holidays,
-begging to be allowed to come home, but at your
-request, Octavia, I denied her natural entreaty and compelled
-her to remain at her school. Even Madame <a id="Ref_35" href="#BRef_35">Da-Caret</a>,
-the head of the establishment, thought it singular
-that Miss Wynde should, alone of all the English pupils,
-spend her holidays at the deserted institution. And now
-to-day I received a letter from Neva asking if she was to
-come home for the Easter holidays. I am afraid I have
-not rightly treated my motherless child, Octavia. She
-has never seen you; never been at home since you became
-mistress here. I fear that the poor child will
-think her exile due to your influence, to speak frankly,
-dear, and that she will regard you with dislike and bitterness,
-instead of the trust and confidence I want her to
-feel in you. You are both so dear to me that I shall be
-unhappy if you do not love each other.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[36]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There is time enough to form the acquaintance after
-Neva leaves school,” said Lady Wynde. “She is but a
-child yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is seventeen years old, Octavia. I have decided
-to have her home at Easter, and I hope you will take
-some pains to win her trust and affection. She will meet
-you half-way, dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not fond of bread-and-butter school-girls,” said
-Lady Wynde, half frowning. “The neighborhood will
-be agape to see how I play the role of step-mother.
-And, to own the truth, Harold, I have no fancy to be
-called mother by a tall, overgrown girl, with her hair hanging
-down her back in two braids, and her dresses reaching
-to her ankles. I shall feel as old as Methuselah.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold sighed, and a grave shadow settled down
-upon his square massive brows.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope that Neva will win her way to your heart,
-Octavia,” he remarked gently. “I thought it would look
-better if my daughter were to call her father’s wife by the
-endearing name of mother, but teach her to call you
-what you will. I have faith in your goodness of heart,
-my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I am a little jealous of her,” returned Lady
-Wynde, with a forced smile. “You fairly idolize her&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Have I not made her second to you?” interposed the
-baronet. “Has she not been banished from her home to
-please you since you entered it? When I think of her
-dull, dreary holidays in her school&mdash;holidays! the name
-was a mockery&mdash;my soul yearns for my child. Jealous
-of her, Octavia? What further proofs do you need that I
-prefer my wife in all things above my child?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said Lady Wynde tremulously, a hectic flush
-burning on either cheek, “look at the magnificent fortune
-she will have! While, if you should die I have<span class="pagenum">[37]</span>
-only the pitiful income of four thousand pounds a year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pitiful, Octavia!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it <em>is</em> pitiful, compared to Neva’s. You have estates
-which you can convey away absolutely by will.
-Why should you not make me independently rich, with
-property that I can sell if I choose? What you leave to
-me is to be mine <em>for life</em>. What you leave to Neva is
-hers absolutely. This is monstrous, hateful, unjust!”</p>
-
-<p>The baronet regarded his wife in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“You were satisfied with your marriage settlements
-when they were drawn up, Octavia,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I was not satisfied even then, but I had no male relatives
-to speak to you about the matter, and it would
-have been indelicate for me to have said what I thought.
-But I hoped you would make things right in a will, as
-you can easily do. It is <em>not</em> right that such a distinction
-should be made between a daughter and a wife!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am surprised at you, Octavia,” declared the baronet.
-“Neva inherits her mother’s fortune with something
-from me, but I cannot undertake to alter my intentions
-in regard to her. The provisions that were made for my
-mother are the same as those that have been made for
-you, and she found them ample. I can promise you
-nothing more; but, Octavia,” and he smiled faintly, “I
-have no intention of dying soon, and while I live your
-income need not to be limited to any certain sum. Let
-no jealousy of my Neva warp your noble nature, Octavia.
-I shall love you all the better if you love her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you decline to make a new will, with further
-provision for me?” demanded the wife, her eyes downcast,
-the hectic spot burning fiercely on both cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“You surprise me, Octavia. Why are you so persistent
-about a subject of which I never dreamed you even
-thought? I <em>do</em> decline to make further provision for you,
-but not because I do not love and appreciate you, for I<span class="pagenum">[38]</span>
-do both. So long as there is no issue to our marriage,
-the sum settled on you is ample for your own wants. If
-Providence sends us children, they will be provided for
-separately. We will let the discussion end here, Octavia,
-with the understanding that Neva will spend her
-Easter at Hawkhurst.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde compressed her lips and looked sullen,
-but, as Sir Harold suggested, the discussion was
-dropped. The baronet was troubled, and disappointed in
-the wife he had believed faultless. The first shadow of
-their married life, the first suspicion of distrust of Lady
-Wynde in her husband’s mind had come at last, and they
-were hard to bear. Lady Wynde went to the piano and
-executed a dashing fantasia, all storm and violence, expressive
-of her mental condition. Sir Harold moved
-back from the fire and took up a book, but his grave,
-saddened face, his steady, intent gaze, and anxious
-mouth, showed that he was not reading, and that his
-thoughts were sorrowful.</p>
-
-<p>When Lady Wynde had become tired of music, she
-went up to her rooms without a word to her husband.
-She entered her sitting-room, made beautiful by her husband’s
-taste, and going to the fire, knelt down before it
-on the hearth-rug. Artress and her maid were neither
-of them to be seen, and the baronet’s wife communed in
-solitude with her own deformed soul.</p>
-
-<p>The winds tore through the trees in the park and on
-the lawn with a melancholy soughing, and the sound
-came to the ears of the kneeling woman. Her room was
-warm and bright with firelight, lamplight, and the glowing
-hue of crimson furniture. Every luxury was gathered
-within those walls dedicated to her use. Silken
-couches and fauteuils, portfolios of choice engravings,
-rare bronzes on the low marble mantel-piece, exquisite
-statuettes on carved brackets, albums of scenes in every<span class="pagenum">[39]</span>
-hand done in water-colors, a beautiful cottage piano, and
-a hundred other articles made the room a very temple of
-comfort and beauty, yet in the spot where only loving
-thoughts of her husband should have had place she
-dared to harbor thoughts of crime! And that crime the
-most hideous that can be named&mdash;the crime of <em>murder</em>!</p>
-
-<p>While she was kneeling there, the gray companion
-stole in softly and silently.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde slowly turned her head, recognized the
-intruder, and stared again with wide eyes into the
-flames.</p>
-
-<p>“You look like a tragedy queen,” said Artress, with a
-soft laugh like the gurgling of waters. “You look as if
-you cast away all your scruples, and were ready to carry
-out the game.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am,” said Lady Wynde, in a hard, suppressed
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you would come to it. Will Sir Harold
-make a new will?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; he absolutely refuses.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, four thousand pounds a year need not be despised.
-And perhaps,” added Artress significantly, “we
-can make the sum larger. Am I to go to town to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, by the morning train. Go to Craven, and tell
-him the phial he gave you is broken and the contents
-spilled, and ask him for more of the&mdash;the preparation.
-I will find occasion to administer it. I have worked
-myself up to the necessary point, and would not scruple
-at any crime so long as I need not fear discovery. You
-will be back before dinner,” added Lady Wynde, her
-brunette complexion turning as gray as that of her companion,
-“and to-morrow night at this time I shall be a
-widow!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[40]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">A DOOR OPENED TO WICKEDNESS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Soon after daybreak, upon the morning following the
-occurrence of the incidents related in the preceding
-chapter, Lady Wynde’s gray companion departed from
-Hawkhurst for Canterbury in a dog-cart which, with its
-driver, the baronet’s wife had ordered to be always at
-Artress’ disposal. She took the early train up to London,
-her business a secret between her mistress and herself.</p>
-
-<p>At the usual breakfast hour, eight o’clock, Lady
-Wynde descended to the breakfast room. Sir Harold
-was already there, and greeted her with his usual tender
-smile, although he looked somewhat careworn. Their
-greetings were scarcely over, and the couple had taken
-their places at the table, when the butler appeared,
-bringing in the morning mail bag.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold produced his key and unlocked it. There
-were a few newspapers for himself, some packets of silk
-samples, and a letter from Madame Elise, her dressmaker,
-for Lady Wynde. There were two letters for
-the baronet, one quite unimportant, which he tossed
-aside. The other bore the Indian post-mark.</p>
-
-<p>“A letter from George,” said Sir Harold, his eyes
-brightening. “No, it’s not from George. The address
-is not in his hand. Who can have written to me in his
-stead?”</p>
-
-<p>He tore open the letter hastily, his countenance falling.</p>
-
-<p>His first glance was at the date; his second at the
-signature. An exclamation broke from his lips as he<span class="pagenum">[41]</span>
-read aloud the name appended to the letter: “Cooper
-Graham, Regimental Surgeon.”</p>
-
-<p>“What can this mean?” he exclaimed, in sudden agitation.
-“Can George be ill? Octavia, read the letter
-to me. The words seem all blurred.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde took the letter, reading it aloud.</p>
-
-<p>It was long, too long to transcribe here, and its import
-was terrible to the baronet. It opened with the
-announcement that the writer was the surgeon of Captain
-Wynde’s regiment, and that Captain Wynde was a
-patient under his care. It went on to say that Captain
-Wynde was the victim of a terrible and incurable disease
-under which he had been suffering for months, and
-the surgeon had learned that the poor young man had
-not written home to his friends the fact of his peril.
-His disease was a cancer, which was preying upon his
-vitals. Captain Wynde had been relieved of his regimental
-duties, and sent up into the hill country, where
-he now was. The young man’s thoughts by day and
-night were of his home&mdash;his one longing was to see his
-father before he died. Surgeon Graham went on to say
-that Captain Wynde could not possibly survive a sea
-journey; that he could not bear the bracing sea air, nor
-the fatigues of the overland route, and he would assuredly
-die on his way home. But, he added, that in
-the cool and quiet seclusion of his upcountry bungalow,
-his life could probably be prolonged for some three
-months.</p>
-
-<p>Surgeon Graham concluded his startling letter with a
-further reference to Captain Wynde’s anxiety to look
-once more on his father’s face before he died. He said
-that the poor young man had desired that the letter
-should not be written to Sir Harold, and that the baronet
-should be informed of his son’s illness only in the
-letter which should announce that son’s death.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[42]</span></p>
-
-<p>This terrible news was a fearful shock to Sir Harold.
-His son George, the heir of his name and estates, was
-dying in a far, foreign land, with a frightful disease,
-with no relative nor friend about him to smooth his
-pillow in his last agony, or to wipe the death-damp
-from his brows. The father sobbed aloud in his
-agony.</p>
-
-<p>“My boy! my poor boy!” he cried, in a broken voice.
-“My poor dying boy!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is very sad,” said Lady Wynde, wondering in her
-own heart if George Wynde’s death could be made to
-benefit her pecuniarily. “The surgeon seems a very
-kind-hearted person, and he says that George has an excellent
-native nurse, George’s man-servant&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold interrupted his wife by a gesture of impatience.</p>
-
-<p>“The man is a Hindoo,” he said. “What consolation
-can he offer George in the hour of his death, when his
-eyes should rest on a tender, loving face&mdash;when his
-dying hands should grasp the hands of a friend? My
-poor brave boy! How could I ever consent to his going
-out to India? All his bright, military genius, all his
-longings to distinguish himself in the army, must end in
-an early Indian grave! But he shall not die with not one
-of his kindred beside him. We must go to him, Octavia.
-We shall reach him in time.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold seized upon his unopened <cite>Times</cite>, and
-glanced over the advertisements.</p>
-
-<p>“A steamer sails from Marseilles two days hence,” he
-announced. “We must be off to-day, immediately, to
-catch it. I will have a bag packed at once. Order your
-maid to pack your trunks, Octavia&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He paused, not comprehending the surprised stare in
-her ladyship’s bold black eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to be laboring under a mistake Sir Harold,”<span class="pagenum">[43]</span>
-said Lady Wynde, coolly. “If you choose to go out
-to India, you can do so. George is your son and heir,
-and I suppose it would really look better if you were to
-go. But as to my hurrying by sea and land, by day
-and night, to witness the death of a young man I never
-saw, the idea is simply preposterous. My health could
-never endure the strain of such a fatigue. You would
-have two graves to make instead of one.”</p>
-
-<p>The lines in Sir Harold’s face contracted as in a sudden
-spasm.</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I was selfish to think of your going, Octavia,” he
-said sorrowfully. “It is true that we should have to
-travel day and night to reach Marseilles in time to catch
-the steamer. The passage of the Red Sea would also be
-hard for you. But I was thinking of my poor brave boy
-dying there among strangers, with no woman beside
-him. If&mdash;if you could have gone to him, my wife, and
-let him feel that he was going from one mother here to
-another mother <em>there</em>&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to go, if only my health would permit,”
-sighed Lady Wynde. “But why do you not take your
-daughter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>The father shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“She is so young,” he said. “She is so fond of poor
-George. I cannot cast so heavy a shadow over her
-future life as that visit to her brother’s death-bed would
-be. No, Octavia, I will go alone.”</p>
-
-<p>He arose and went out, leaving his breakfast untouched.
-Lady Wynde sipped her coffee leisurely, and
-ate her breakfast with untroubled appetite. Then she
-proceeded to her own private sitting-room and took her
-place at one of the windows, watching the whirling
-snow-flakes of the February storm.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold found her here when he came in, dressed
-for his journey. He had ordered a carriage, which was<span class="pagenum">[44]</span>
-ready. His travelling bag was packed, and had been
-taken below. He had come in to say good-bye to his
-wife.</p>
-
-<p>“What a great change a single hour has wrought in
-our lives!” he said, as he came up to Lady Wynde and
-put his arms around her. “Octavia, my darling, it
-wrings my heart to leave you. Write to me by every
-post. I shall remain with my boy until all is over. Tell
-me all the home news. You will have Neva home at
-Easter, and love her for my sake! She will be our only
-child soon!”</p>
-
-<p>He embraced his wife with passionate affection, and
-murmured words of anguished farewell. He tore
-himself from her, but at the door he turned back, and
-spoke to her with a solemnity she had never seen in him
-before.</p>
-
-<p>“Octavia,” he said, “at this moment a strange presentiment
-comes over me&mdash;a sudden horror&mdash;a chill as of
-death! Perhaps I am to die out there in India! If&mdash;if
-anything happens to me, Octavia, promise me to be good
-to my Neva.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is not necessary to promise,” said Lady Wynde,
-“but to please you, I promise!”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold’s keen blue eyes, full of anguish, rested in
-a long steady gaze upon that false handsome face, and
-the solemnity of his countenance increased.</p>
-
-<p>“You will be Neva’s guardian, if I die,” he said, in a
-broken voice. “I trust you absolutely. God do unto
-you, Octavia, as you do unto my orphan child!”</p>
-
-<p>How those words rang in the ears of Lady Wynde
-long afterward!</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold gave her a last embrace, and dashed down
-the stairs and sprang into the carriage. Lady Wynde
-watched him with tearless eyes as he drove down the
-avenue.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[45]</span></p>
-
-<p>When he had disappeared from her sight, she said to
-herself:</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I could have done nothing to put an end
-to Sir Harold’s life this morning. I only hope he will
-die in India&mdash;to save me the trouble of&mdash;of doing anything
-when he gets back!”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold proceeded to Canterbury with all speed.
-On arriving, he proceeded directly to his solicitor’s, had
-a new will drawn up, constituting Lady Wynde his
-daughter’s personal guardian, and making Neva his sole
-heiress in the event of her brother’s death, Lady Wynde
-having been sufficiently provided for by her marriage
-settlements. The will duly signed and witnessed, Sir
-Harold hastened to the station, catching the train for
-Dover.</p>
-
-<p>He crossed to Calais by the first boat, and went on to
-Marseilles, by way of Paris, without stopping even
-to see his daughter. He was not only in time to get
-passage by the <em>Messageries Imperiales</em> steamer, but had
-an hour to spare. In this hour he wrote a long and very
-tender letter to his daughter, telling her of her brother’s
-illness, and hinting of the gloom that had settled down
-upon his own soul. He begged her if anything happened
-to him on this journey, to love her step-mother, and to
-obey her in all things, regarding Lady Wynde’s utterances
-as if they came from Sir Harold.</p>
-
-<p>He also wrote a note to his wife, and sent the two
-ashore to be posted by one of the agents of the company,
-just as the vessel weighed anchor for Suez.</p>
-
-<p>In thirty-five days after leaving home he was in the
-Indian hill country, and beside his dying son.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde went out very little after her husband’s
-departure. She gave no more dinner parties, and behaved
-with such admirable discretion that her neighbors
-were full of praises of her. Although young, handsome<span class="pagenum">[46]</span>
-and admired, presiding over one of the finest places in
-the county, with no one to direct or thwart her movements,
-the most censorious tongue could find nothing to
-condemn in her.</p>
-
-<p>The only recreation she allowed herself were her weekly
-visits to London, ostensibly to see Madame Elise, but as
-the ashen-eyed Artress always accompanied her, they excited
-no comment even in her own household.</p>
-
-<p>Easter drew near, and Lady Wynde wrote to her step-daughter
-that it would not be convenient to have her at
-Hawkhurst during the holidays, and ordered her to remain
-at her school.</p>
-
-<p>The spring months passed slowly. Lady Wynde
-wrote by every post to her husband, and received letters
-as frequently. George’s minutest symptoms were described
-to her by the anxious father, and George himself,
-looking at his step-mother through his father’s eyes,
-sent her loving and pathetic messages, to which she
-duly responded.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the time wore on until the midsummer.</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of July, Lady Wynde received a
-black-bordered letter from her husband stating that his
-son and heir was dead. He had died at his up-country
-bungalow, after an illness which had been protracted
-considerably beyond the anticipations of his surgeon. Sir
-Harold wrote that he was exhausted by long nursing,
-and that he should remain a fortnight longer at his son’s
-bungalow to recruit his own health, and that he should
-then start for home.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish he would come,” said Lady Wynde discontentedly,
-to her gray companion. “I am tired of this
-dull existence. I am anxious to rid myself of the trammels
-of my present marriage, and to be free to marry
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can be free within a week after Sir Harold’s return,”<span class="pagenum">[47]</span>
-said Artress. “And he will be here in September.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be free in September,” mused Lady Wynde,
-with sparkling eyes. “A widow with four thousand a
-year! Ah, if only some good demon would bring about
-that happy fact, leaving <em>my</em> hands unstained with crime?”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed as if her familiar demon had anticipated her
-prayer.</p>
-
-<p>Some two weeks later, a second black-bordered letter
-was brought to Lady Wynde. It was in an unfamiliar
-handwriting, and proved to be from Surgeon Graham.</p>
-
-<p>It announced the death of Sir Harold Wynde!</p>
-
-<p>The surgeon stated that the baronet had made all arrangements
-for returning to England, and that he had
-gone for a last ride among the hills. He had taken a
-jungle path, but being well armed and attended by a
-Hindoo servant, had anticipated no trouble. Some
-hours after he had set out on his ride, about the time the
-surgeon looked for his return, the Hindoo servant, covered
-with dust, rode up alone in a very panic of terror.
-With difficulty he told his story. Sir Harold Wynde had
-been attacked by a tiger that had leaped upon him from
-the jungle, and before his terrified servant could come
-to his aid, he had been dragged from his saddle, with
-the life-blood welling from his torn throat and breast.
-The servant, appalled, had not dared to fire, knowing
-that no human power could help Sir Harold in his extremity,
-and the baronet had been killed before his eyes.
-The Hindoo had then fled homeward to tell the awful
-story.</p>
-
-<p>The surgeon added, that a party had been made up to
-visit the scene of the tragedy. A pool of blood, fragments
-of Sir Harold’s garments, the bones of his horse,
-and the foot-prints of a tiger, all tended to the confirmation
-of the Hindoo’s story. A hunt was organized for<span class="pagenum">[48]</span>
-the tiger, and he was found near the same spot on the
-following day and killed.</p>
-
-<p>We have given a brief epitome of the letter that declared
-to Lady Wynde that her prayer was answered,
-and that she was a widow.</p>
-
-<p>She was sitting in the drawing-room at Hawkhurst
-when the letter was brought in to her. She was still sitting
-there, the letter lying on her lap, twice read, when
-her gray companion stole into the room.</p>
-
-<p>“A letter from Sir Harold, Octavia?” said Artress,
-glancing at the black-bordered missive.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it is from that Surgeon Graham,” answered her
-ladyship, with an exultant thrill in her low, soft voice.
-“You cannot guess the news, Artress. Sir Harold is
-dead!”</p>
-
-<p>“Dead?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” cried Lady Wynde, “and I am a widow. Is it
-not glorious? A widow, well-jointured and free to marry
-again! Ha, ha! Tell the household the sad news, Artress,
-and tell them all that I am too overcome with grief
-to speak to them. Let the bell at the village be set tolling.
-Send a notice of the death to the <cite>Times</cite>. I am a
-widow, and the guardian of the heiress of Hawkhurst!
-You must write to my step-daughter of her bereavement,
-and also drop a note to Craven. A widow, and without
-crime. The heiress of Hawkhurst in my hands to do with
-as I please! Your future is to be linked with mine, my
-young Neva, and a fate your father never destined for
-you shall be yours. I stand upon the pinnacle of success
-at last.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[49]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">SETTLING INTO HER PLACE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The announcement of Sir Harold Wynde’s death in
-India, so soon too after the death of his son and heir, produced
-a shock throughout his native county of Kent, and
-even throughout England; for, although the baronet had
-been no politician, he had been one of the best known
-men in the kingdom, and there were many who had known
-and esteemed him, who mourned deeply at his tragic
-fate.</p>
-
-<p>The London papers, the <cite>Times</cite>, the <cite>Morning Post</cite>, and
-others, came out with glowing eulogies of the grand-souled
-baronet whose life had been so noble and beneficent.
-The local papers of Kent copied these long obituaries,
-and added thereto accounts of the pedigree of the
-Wynde family, and a description of the young heiress
-upon whom, by the untimely deaths of both father and
-brother, the great family estates and possessions, all excepting
-the bare title, now devolved.</p>
-
-<p>The retainers of the family, the farmers and servants&mdash;those
-who had known Sir Harold best&mdash;mourned for him,
-refusing to be comforted. They would never know again
-a landlord so genial, nor a master so kindly: and although
-they hoped for much from his daughter, yet, as
-they mournfully said to each other, Miss Neva would
-marry some day, and the chances were even that she
-would give to Hawkhurst a harsh and tyrannical
-master.</p>
-
-<p>The little village of Wyndham, near Hawkhurst, the
-very ideal of a Kentish village, had been mostly owned
-by Sir Harold Wynde. To him had belonged the row of<span class="pagenum">[50]</span>
-shops, the old inn with its creaking sign, and most of the
-neat houses that stood in gardens along the single street.
-It was Sir Harold who had caused to be built the little
-new stone church, with its slender spire, and in this
-church the mourning villagers gathered to listen to the
-sermon that was preached in commemoration of the baronet’s
-death.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde was not present to listen to this sermon.
-Her gray companion, attired in deep mourning, with the
-entire household of Hawkhurst, was there, and the young
-clergyman made a feeling allusion to “the bereaved young
-widow, sitting alone in her darkened chamber and weeping
-for her dead, refusing like Rachel of old, to be comforted.”
-Many of the kindly women present shed tears
-at this picture, but Artress smiled behind her double
-mourning vail. She knew that Lady Wynde was lying
-upon a sofa in her luxurious sitting-room at Hawkhurst,
-busy with a French novel, and she knew also that not one
-tear had dimmed her ladyship’s black eyes since the news
-had come of Sir Harold’s horrible fate.</p>
-
-<p>Neighbors and friends thronged to Hawkhurst to offer
-their condolences to the young widow. For the first
-week she was reported inconsolable, and refused to see
-any one; but a box of the most elegant and fashionable
-mourning having come down from London, Lady Wynde
-began to receive her visitors. She affected to be quite
-broken down by her bereavement, and for weeks did not
-go out of doors. And when, finally, being urged to take
-care of her health and to become resigned to her loss,
-she took morning drives, her equipage looked like a
-funeral one, her carriage and horses being alike black,
-and her own face being shrouded in double folds of
-sombre crape.</p>
-
-<p>Artress had written to Sir Harold’s daughter immediately
-upon the arrival of the news of Sir Harold’s<span class="pagenum">[51]</span>
-death, but the letter had been cold and practical, and
-contained merely the terrible announcement, without
-one line to soften its horror. About a week later, no
-letter having been received from Neva, Lady Wynde
-wrote a very pathetic letter, full of protestations of sympathy,
-and setting forth her own mock sorrow as something
-genuinely heart-rending, and declaring herself
-utterly prostrated in both body and mind. Her ladyship
-offered her condolences to the bereaved daughter,
-assuring her that henceforth they “must be all the world
-to each other,” and concluded her letter by the false
-statement that it had been the late Sir Harold’s wish
-that his daughter should remain at her Paris school a
-year longer, and, as the wishes of the dead are sacred,
-Lady Wynde had sacrificed her own personal feelings in
-the matter, and had consented that Neva should remain
-another year “under the care of her excellent French
-teachers.”</p>
-
-<p>“That disposes of the girl for a year,” commented
-Lady Wynde, as she sealed the missive. “I won’t have
-her here to spy upon me until the year of mourning is
-over, and I am free to do just as I please.”</p>
-
-<p>So the letter was dispatched, and the baronet’s daughter
-was condemned to continue her school tasks, even
-though her heart might be breaking. There was no
-leisure for her in which to weep for the fate of her noble
-father; no one who had known him with whom she
-might talk of him; and only in the long and lonely
-night times was she free to weep for him, and then indeed
-her pillow was wetted with her tears.</p>
-
-<p>About three weeks after the receipt of the letter from
-India announcing Sir Harold’s death, the baronet’s solicitor
-at Canterbury received a note from the widow, requesting
-him to call at Hawkhurst on the following day.
-He obeyed the summons, bringing with him a copy of<span class="pagenum">[52]</span>
-Sir Harold’s will, made, as will be remembered, upon
-the day of the baronet’s departure from England. Lady
-Wynde, clad in the deepest weeds of woe, and attended
-by Artress, also in mourning, received the solicitor in
-the library, a grand apartment with vaulted ceiling, and
-lofty walls lined with books in uniform Russia leather
-bindings.</p>
-
-<p>“I have sent for you, Mr. Atkins,” said Lady Wynde,
-when the customary greetings had been exchanged, “to
-learn if poor Sir Harold left a will. I had his desk
-searched, and no document of the sort can be found. If
-he made no will, I am anxious to know how I am to be
-affected by the omission.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Atkins, a thin, small man, with a large, bald head,
-looked surprised at the simple directness of this speech.
-He had expected to find her ladyship overcome with
-grief, as report portrayed her; but her eyes were as
-bright and tearless, her cheeks as red, her features as
-composed, as if the business in hand were of the most
-trivial and unimportant description. Atkins, who had
-appreciated Sir Harold’s grand nature, felt an aversion
-to Lady Wynde from this moment.</p>
-
-<p>“She didn’t care for him,” he mentally decided on the
-instant. “She’s an arrant humbug, and poor Sir Harold’s
-love was wasted on her. Upon my soul, I believe all
-she cared about him was for the title and his money.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde’s sharp eyes did not fail to perceive the
-unfavorable impression she had made. She bit her lip
-fiercely, and her cheeks flushed hotly. Her brows arched
-themselves superciliously, and Mr. Atkins, marking her
-impatience, hastened to answer:</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold left a will, my lady. It was drawn up at
-my office at Canterbury upon the day on which he left
-England for India. You will remember that he left
-Hawkhurst in the morning and drove to Canterbury. He<span class="pagenum">[53]</span>
-came direct to my office, and dictated and signed his
-will. He then proceeded directly to the station and
-went by train to Dover, and crossed to Calais. The will
-was left in my keeping and is, there can be no question,
-the last will and testament of Sir Harold Wynde.”</p>
-
-<p>“I presume no one will care to question the will,” said
-Lady Wynde coldly, “although Sir Harold was in a very
-excited frame of mind that morning, on account of the
-news of his son’s illness, and the pain of leaving his home
-and me. Nevertheless, I dare say he was quite competent
-to dictate a will. I sent you the particulars of Sir Harold’s
-death, with some of the letters detailing the sad
-event which I have received from India. There being
-no possible doubt of his awful fate, it is time to prove
-his will. I wish you to give me some idea of its contents.”</p>
-
-<p>The solicitor drew out a long leathern pocket-book
-and took from it a neatly folded paper.</p>
-
-<p>“I have here a copy of the will,” he said briefly. “Is
-it your ladyship’s wish to have the will formally read, in
-the presence of witnesses?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, that is unnecessary. Leave out the usual useless
-preamble and tell me what disposition my husband made
-of his property&mdash;the freehold farms, the money in bank,
-the consols, the bonds and mortgages? All these he was
-free to leave to whom he pleased. I desire to know to
-whom he did leave them.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a greediness in the looks and tones of Lady
-Wynde that chilled Atkins. In her anxiety to learn the
-contents of the will, her ladyship half dropped her mask
-and displayed something of her true character, and he
-was quick to read it.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold Wynde, in expectation of the death of his
-son and heir,” replied Atkins, in his most formal tones,
-“bequeathed all the property you have mentioned, all<span class="pagenum">[54]</span>
-his real and personal property, to his daughter, Miss
-Neva Wynde.”</p>
-
-<p>“All to her?” muttered Lady Wynde. “<em>All</em>, you
-say?”</p>
-
-<p>“All, my lady. Miss Wynde also inherits Hawkhurst
-and the entailed property. She is one of the richest
-heiresses in England.”</p>
-
-<p>“And&mdash;and my name is not mentioned?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold declares that you are provided for by the
-terms of the marriage settlement. You have Wynde
-Heights for your dower house and four thousand pounds
-a year during your life, with no restrictions in regard to
-a second marriage&mdash;a very liberal provision I consider
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And a very shabby one I consider it,” cried Lady
-Wynde, with a black frown. “Sir Harold’s daughter
-seventy thousand pounds a year, and I have a paltry
-four. It is a shame, a miserable, burning shame!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is unjust, scandalous!” muttered Artress.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold thought the sum sufficient, and I must
-say I agree with him,” declared Atkins. “Your ladyship
-was contented with the provision at your marriage.
-If the allowance was unsatisfactory, why did you not
-expostulate with Sir Harold at that time? Why wait
-until he is dead to accuse him of injustice?”</p>
-
-<p>“We will not argue the matter,” said Lady Wynde
-superciliously. “I shall not contest the will. And now
-about my rich young step-daughter. Who are her
-appointed guardians?”</p>
-
-<p>There was a perceptible anxiety in her manner, which
-Atkins noticed with some wonder. He referred to his
-copy of the will, which was open in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold appointed yourself, my lady, the personal
-guardian of his daughter,” he said slowly. “Miss Wynde
-is to reside at Hawkhurst under your care until she becomes<span class="pagenum">[55]</span>
-of age or marries. Upon the occurrence of either
-of those events your ladyship is to retire to Wynde
-Heights, or to whatsoever place you may prefer, leaving
-Miss Wynde absolute mistress of Hawkhurst. Of course
-if Miss Wynde desires you to remain after her marriage,
-or the attainment of her majority, you are at liberty to
-do as you please. I think you comprehend Sir Harold’s
-meaning. If it is not precisely clear, I will read the
-will&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not!” interrupted Lady Wynde impatiently. “I
-abhor all that tedious phraseology. I understand that
-I am Miss Wynde’s sole personal guardian, that I am to
-direct her actions, introduce her into society, and that
-she is to give me the simple, unhesitating obedience of
-a daughter. Is this not so?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is,” assented Atkins, rather hesitatingly. “Sir
-Harold expresses the hope that his widow and his daughter
-will love each other; and that your ladyship will give
-to his orphan child a mother’s tenderness and affection.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold knew that he could depend upon my
-kindness to his child,” said Lady Wynde hypocritically.
-“I promised him before he went away to be a mother to
-her, although I shall be but a young mother, to be sure.
-I shall be very good to the poor girl, whom I love
-already. I don’t know anything about law, Mr. Atkins,
-but is not some other guardian also necessary&mdash;some one
-to see to the property, you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“There are three trustees appointed to look after the
-estate during Miss Wynde’s minority,” answered Atkins.
-“Sir John Freise is one. You know him well, my lady,
-and a more incorruptible, honest-souled gentleman than
-he does not exist. He is a man of fine business capacity,
-and Sir Harold could not have chosen better. I am also
-a trustee, and I can answer for my own probity, and for
-my great devotion to the interests of Miss Wynde.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[56]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And the third trustee&mdash;who is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“The young Earl Towyn. He is the son of one of
-Sir Harold’s dearest friends, as you probably know, and
-his youth admirably balances Sir John’s age.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde looked thoughtful. Her gray companion
-bent over her work, embroidering a black monogram
-upon a black-bordered handkerchief, and did not look
-up. Her ashen-hued lashes lay on her ashen cheeks, and
-she looked dull, spiritless, a mere gray shadow, as we
-have called her, but Atkins, studying her face, had an
-uncomfortable impression that under all that coldness a
-fire was burning.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s more than she looks to be,” he thought keenly.
-“I wonder Sir Harold tolerated her in his house. How
-singularly she resembles a cat!”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde presently broke the silence.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand the situation of affairs,” she said, “and
-I am obliged to you for your prompt attendance upon
-my summons, Mr. Atkins. I shall leave my money
-affairs in your hands. I desire my jointure to be paid
-into the bank and placed to my credit, so that I may
-draw upon it when I please. There is nothing more, I
-think.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would like to make a few inquiries about Miss
-Wynde, if you please, my lady,” said Atkins, with
-quiet firmness. “I understand that she is not at home.
-Has she not been summoned from her school since her
-father’s death?”</p>
-
-<p>“She has not,” answered Lady Wynde haughtily.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me, madam, but are you not about to summon
-her?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not. Miss Wynde will remain this year at
-school. Her studies must be interrupted upon no account
-at this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not even by her father’s death?” asked Atkins<span class="pagenum">[57]</span>
-bitterly. “Sir Harold mentioned to me his desire to
-have her at home&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold Wynde is no longer master of Hawkhurst,”
-interposed Lady Wynde, with increased superciliousness.
-“I believe, by the terms of the will, that I
-am mistress here during Neva’s minority. Let me tell
-you, Mr. Atkins, that I am my step-daughter’s sole personal
-guardian, and that I will submit to no dictation
-whatever in my treatment of the girl. If my husband
-had sufficient confidence in me to make me his daughter’s
-guardian, the trustees whom he himself appointed
-have no need nor right to comment upon my actions or
-interfere in my plans. Permit me to assure you that I
-will brook no interference, and if you try to sow dissension
-between Neva and me you are proving unfaithful
-to Sir Harold&mdash;as well as oblivious of your own
-interests.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Atkins sighed, and murmured an apology. He
-soon after took his leave, and drove away in the chaise
-in which he had come. His heart was very heavy and
-his face overcast as he emerged from the Hawkhurst
-grounds into the highway, and journeyed toward Canterbury.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a sorry day for Neva Wynde when her father
-died,” he murmured, looking back at the grand old seat&mdash;“a
-sorry day! This handsome black-eyed Lady
-Wynde, that everybody is praising for an angel of love
-and devotion to her husband, is at heart a demon! She
-means mischief, though I can’t see how. Poor Neva is
-booked for trouble!”</p>
-
-<p>Enough of honest Mr. Atkins’ sentiments had been
-apparent in his countenance to prejudice Lady Wynde
-against him, and to warn her that he comprehended
-something of her real character. As may be supposed,
-therefore, she did not again summon him to Hawkhurst.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[58]</span></p>
-
-<p>The days and weeks and months of Lady Wynde’s
-widowhood passed on without event. She carried herself
-circumspectly in the eyes of the world. No visitors
-were invited to Hawkhurst, and her ladyship’s visits to
-London were few and far between. She seldom went
-to Canterbury, and her drives about the neighborhood
-of Hawkhurst were always of the most funereal description,
-with black coach, black horses and black attire,
-and a slow gait. Her ladyship was found every Sunday
-in the baronet’s great square pew in the little Wyndham
-church, and as she always sat with the silken curtains
-drawn, no one could know that she was not absorbed in
-the church services. In short, during the year she had
-determined to devote to mourning for her dead husband,
-the conduct of Lady Wynde was such as to deepen
-her popularity throughout the county. Sir John Freise
-enthusiastically declared her an angel, her neighbors
-praised her, and only honest Mr. Atkins shook his head
-doubtfully when her virtues were lauded, and dared to
-suggest that she might not be all she seemed.</p>
-
-<p>The year slowly wore away, and midsummer had
-come again. The languor of Lady Wynde’s dull existence
-had begun to give place to a strange restlessness.
-Her deep mourning had grown odious in her sight, and
-was replaced by the lovely combinations of white and
-black, the delicate lavenders and soft gray hues which
-are supposed to indicate a mitigated grief. The hideous
-widow’s cap, not at all becoming to her ladyship, was
-exchanged for lavender ribbons in her hair, and jewels
-took the place of the orthodox mourning ornaments of
-jet. In her “half mourning,” Lady Wynde appeared
-more than ever a strikingly handsome woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Artress,” she said one morning to her gray companion,
-as she looked out of her sitting-room window
-upon the fair domain of Hawkhurst, “this dreaded year<span class="pagenum">[59]</span>
-is over at last. I have satisfied the demands of society;
-I have hoodwinked the jealous and envious eyes of
-neighbors, and am free at last. If I were to marry to-morrow,
-no one could say that I had not treated the
-memory of Sir Harold Wynde with respect. With the
-sacrifice of but little over two years of my life, I have
-won a fine income, a splendid home during Neva’s minority,
-and the guardianship of one of the greatest heiresses
-in England. That office is worth three thousand
-a year to me while I hold it. Surely I have played my
-part well.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have indeed,” echoed Artress.</p>
-
-<p>“Neva must come home soon, but my own business
-must be settled before her advent on the scene. I shall
-write to Craven immediately. I will have no further
-delay.”</p>
-
-<p>She went to a small, beautifully inlaid writing desk,
-which stood in a recessed window, and sitting down by
-it, wrote upon heavy velvet paper the following words:</p>
-
-<p class="center">“<span class="smcap">Craven</span>: You may come to me at last. There is no
-further obstacle between us.</p>
-
-<p class="center pminus1" style="padding-left:20em">“<span class="smcap">Octavia.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>This brief missive she inclosed in a square envelope,
-and stamped with pale green wax and her favorite device.</p>
-
-<p>The letter she addressed to The Hon. Craven Black,
-The Albany, London, W.</p>
-
-<p>She then touched her bell. To the servant who came
-at her summons she gave the letter, ordering it to be
-posted at Wyndham village without delay. When her
-messenger had gone, her ladyship gave a sigh of consent,
-and murmured:</p>
-
-<p>“I am about to reap the reward of all my schemes.
-Craven will be here to-morrow!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[60]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">HER LADYSHIP’S ACCOMPLICE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The morrow to which Lady Wynde looked forward
-with feverish expectation dawned at last, bright and
-clear, and deepened into a sultry afternoon. The baronet’s
-widow spent hours at her toilet, and the effect of
-her labors was satisfactory to her. She surveyed her
-reflection in a full-length mirror in her dressing-room
-with a smile of complacency. Her black hair was
-arranged in braids, curls, and finely crimpled waves,
-after the fashion of the day, and in the midst of its prodigal
-luxuriance, above her forehead, a jeweled spray
-flashed and glittered. Her dress, made low in the neck
-and short in the sleeves, to display her finely rounded
-shoulders and arms, was of lustrous silk of lavender hue,
-and was draped with a black lace overskirt. A necklace
-and bracelets incrusted with diamonds added brilliancy
-to her appearance. Her liquid black eyes shone and
-glittered; her cheeks were red as damask roses; she had
-never looked half so handsome in the days when she
-had fascinated Sir Harold Wynde and made him adore
-her.</p>
-
-<p>She had dismissed her maid, and was giving a last
-touch to the short curls that dropped over her forehead,
-while she talked with Artress, when wheels were heard
-coming up the drive. The gray companion flitted to a
-shuttered window and peeped out. A cab was approaching
-the house, and a man’s head was protruded from the
-window. His face was half averted, as he apparently
-studied the exterior of the dwelling, but Artress knew
-him. She glided back to Lady Wynde with the words:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[61]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He has come!”</p>
-
-<p>A sudden agitation seemed to convulse the soul of the
-baronet’s widow. A sudden paleness swept over her
-face. She leaned heavily upon the back of a chair, and
-stood there motionless until a servant brought up a
-silver tray on which lay a large square card with the inscription,
-“The Honorable Craven Black,” and announced
-that the gentleman had been shown into the
-drawing-room. Then her ladyship started abruptly,
-the color returning to her face in ruddy waves.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Artress,” she said, “we will go below. Yet
-stay. You may delay your coming for half an hour.
-Surely no one can find fault with me for seeing him
-alone a little while. Since I became a widow for the
-second time, I have felt as if I lived in a glass lantern
-with the eyes of all Kent upon me. Yet there is no
-need of carrying my caution too far.”</p>
-
-<p>She gave a last glance at her reflection in the mirror, a
-last deft touch to her attire, and then swept from the
-room down the stairs, and slowly entered the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman within arose from his seat, and came
-forward with outstretched hands and eager face. He
-was tall, handsome, fair-haired, with light eyes full of
-sinister gleams, and his full, sensual lips wore even now
-a cynical smile that appeared habitual to them.</p>
-
-<p>He was the same man who had watched, from the
-pier head at Brighton, the rescue of Octavia Hathaway
-from the sea by Sir Harold Wynde&mdash;the same man who
-had witnessed the marriage of the baronet and the
-widow from behind a clustered pillar in the church, and
-whose sinister comments, as he emerged into Hanover
-Square, we have chronicled.</p>
-
-<p>His quick glance swept the form and face of Lady
-Wynde; a look of admiration burned in his eyes. He<span class="pagenum">[62]</span>
-held out his arms. With a joyous cry, the handsome
-widow sprang forward, and was clasped in his embrace.</p>
-
-<p>“At last! At last!” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, at last!” echoed Mr. Black, in tones of exultation.
-“Nothing stands between us now, Octavia! We
-have lost nothing by waiting. We have been guilty of
-no crime, and fate itself has played into our hands. And
-you, Octavia, in the prime of your beauty, are more
-magnificent than ever.”</p>
-
-<p>He drew her to a sofa and clasped an arm around her
-waist. Her head drooped to his shoulder. The flush of
-intense joy mantled her face. With all her soul Lady
-Wynde loved this man, and her voice trembled as she
-murmured:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Craven, I am glad that my life of hypocrisy is
-over at last, that there is no longer fear of discovery,
-and that we are free to enjoy our reward. How long
-ago it seems since you and I formed and entered upon
-our conspiracy which has placed me where I am! I
-was a widow with a meager income and expensive
-tastes. You were a widower with a son to educate, and
-a beggarly home and a beggarly income, so that you
-could not afford to marry. How well I remember that
-night in London, when you told me that if I had courage
-and boldness proportionate to my beauty, I could
-make our fortunes and our happiness. I eagerly asked
-how I could do this, and you showed me a copy of a
-Court Journal in which was a paragraph to the effect
-that ‘Sir Harold Wynde had gone down to Brighton,
-and that his presence there had created quite a flutter
-among marriageable ladies.’ And then you told me of
-his wealth and generosity, and urged me to try my fascinations
-upon him, to win him, to marry him&mdash;and to
-succeed in good time to a handsome fortune upon which
-you and I could marry. How long ago all that seems!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[63]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Was it not a clever idea, and cleverly executed?”
-said Mr. Black triumphantly. “It was a successful conspiracy,
-Octavia, and to you belongs the credit of its
-success. You went down to Brighton; you introduced
-yourself in a novel manner to Sir Harold Wynde; and
-you followed up the acquaintance with such effect that
-he offered you marriage. And as that was what you
-wanted, you married him. You would have made yourself
-a widow, but that fate saved you the trouble. Two
-years and six months ago you were a poor widow, unable
-to marry me because of our mutual poverty. Now
-you are again a widow, rich, respected, honored throughout
-Kent, and can marry whom you please. I am as
-poor as I was three years ago, and yet, Octavia, I know
-that you prefer me to all other men. Is it not so?”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde blushed as she murmured assent. She
-was essentially bad, being unprincipled and unscrupulous,
-but she loved Craven Black with her whole heart,
-and with a fervor that astonished herself.</p>
-
-<p>After the death of her first husband, Lady Wynde had
-first met Craven Black. They had fallen in love with
-each other, as the phrase goes, at their first meeting.
-He was a gambler, dissolute&mdash;an adventurer, in fact, although
-his respectable birth and connections prevented
-the name from attaching to him. He was a widower,
-and possessed but a scanty settled income; yet, from
-his nefarious gains at the gambling table, and in other
-ways, he managed to keep up the appearance of a man
-of fashion, to keep a private cab and a tiger, chambers
-at the Albany, and to educate his only son, now a man
-grown. His gains were, however, precarious, and he
-declined entering upon marriage with a person even
-poorer than himself.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde, in the days of her first widowhood, had
-been but little better than an adventuress. It is true that<span class="pagenum">[64]</span>
-she had a respectable name, high connections, and a
-home in her aunt’s house in Bloomsbury Square; but
-she was ambitious of social position, she chafed at her
-poverty, and had too much worldly wisdom to marry
-Craven Black in the then state of their fortunes, even
-had he desired it.</p>
-
-<p>When his fertile brain, therefore, formed a scheme by
-which she could enrich them both by imposing upon a
-high-minded gentleman, marrying, and then putting him
-out of her way as if his life were valueless, she hesitated,
-and finally consented. How she had carried out her
-share in the foul conspiracy against Sir Harold, the
-reader knows.</p>
-
-<p>“Four thousand pounds a year and a good house are
-worth serving for,” said Mr. Black meditatively. “I
-think, however, that we have waited long enough, Octavia.
-When are you going to marry me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not before September,” declared Lady Wynde decisively.
-“I must have a magnificent wardrobe. I am
-so tired of dowdy black. And as I shall have to give
-up the Wynde family diamonds to the heiress, I must
-order some jewels for myself. Let us appoint our marriage
-to take place in October. People will talk if it
-occurs sooner.”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black smiled cynically.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall you care what people say?” he inquired. “I
-thought you were a law unto yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I am not. No woman in the world has a
-greater regard for ‘they say’ than I have,” returned
-Lady Wynde emphatically. “You see I cannot afford
-to turn my back upon Mrs. Grundy. I am ambitious to
-be a social leader, and to become so, I must give people
-faith in my knowledge of the proprieties of life. I occupy
-a high position here as the widow of Sir Harold
-Wynde, and he was a sort of idol here, so that, I dare<span class="pagenum">[65]</span>
-say, people will be jealous of my marrying at all. And
-then, again, I desire to gain the love and confidence of
-my step-daughter before I remarry. Her guardianship
-is worth three thousand a year to me. I shall have
-that sum annually as a recompense for chaperoning
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would be willing to chaperon several young ladies
-on such terms,” said Mr. Black. “How old is she?”</p>
-
-<p>“About eighteen.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how large an income has she?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seventy thousand a year.”</p>
-
-<p>An eager light came into Craven Black’s eyes, and an
-eager glow mounted to his fair face.</p>
-
-<p>“A handsome sum,” he ejaculated. “She has a glorious
-inheritance. What sort of girl is she?”</p>
-
-<p>“A bread-and-butter school-girl, I suppose. I have
-never met her. She was Sir Harold’s idol, and he was
-always wanting her to come home, but I did not want
-her jealous eyes spying on me, so I contrived to keep
-her away. She has not been at Hawkhurst since my
-coming.”</p>
-
-<p>“You correspond with her?”</p>
-
-<p>“I write to her now and then, and she sends me a duty
-letter, as I call it, once a month. I generally read a line
-or two and throw them aside.”</p>
-
-<p>“Has she any love affair?” inquired Mr. Black
-thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not. A girl in a French boarding-school
-might as well be in a convent, as far as love affairs are
-concerned. What are you thinking of, Craven?” and
-Lady Wynde looked at him jealously.</p>
-
-<p>The glow on Craven Black’s face deepened, as he
-hastened to answer:</p>
-
-<p>“I was thinking what if this girl were to take a liking
-to my son Rufus? If we could bring about a marriage<span class="pagenum">[66]</span>
-between her and Rufus, we should retain her fortune in
-the family, and Rufus should agree to allow us ten thousand
-a year for using our influence with her. What do
-you think?”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde looked startled&mdash;pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“The very thing!” she exclaimed. “I have been
-thinking that I should not long be allowed to remain
-mistress of Hawkhurst after Neva’s return. An heiress
-like her will not want for suitors, and she will marry,
-and I cannot prevent it. The proper way is to direct
-her marriage for our own benefit. Is Rufus likely to
-please a romantic school-girl?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think he cannot fail to please her. He is not yet
-one and twenty, well-looking, accomplished, well educated,
-rather weak-willed and easily governed, and like
-clay in my hands. He has romantic notions about love
-and marriage, and if he is on the ground first I am sure
-he will win the girl’s heart. I had a quarrel with him
-some weeks ago, and he went away from me at my command,
-and has taken cheap rooms somewhere and is trying
-to live by painting cheap pictures, or some such
-thing. I’ll send for him, and have him up at Wyndham
-directly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you quarrel with him, Craven? I thought
-you were so fond of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was&mdash;I am. But he dared oppose his will to mine,
-and I turned him adrift, to let him try how he could get
-along without me. He is not long out of his university,
-and is perfectly helpless about earning money, but he
-has some high-flown notions which hardship will cure.
-To be frank, our quarrel was about a little music teacher
-that the boy thought himself in love with. He has given
-her up, and will be glad enough to be summoned to me.
-When will Miss Wynde be here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I had a letter to-day from Madame Dalaut, Neva’s<span class="pagenum">[67]</span>
-preceptress, inquiring my wishes in regard to the girl.
-Neva has completed her studies, and Madame Dalaut
-insinuates that she ought to be removed from school and
-be allowed to enter society. Moreover, the midsummer
-holidays have commenced, and the other pupils are gone
-to their homes. I have concluded to send Artress over
-to Paris to-night to bring Neva home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do so. My son shall also be at Wyndham to-morrow,
-and shall be introduced to the heiress the day after her
-return. I will engage rooms for Rufus and myself at
-the Wyndham inn, so that I can be near you until our
-marriage. Is this plan agreeable to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perfectly. We must be prompt in our actions.
-Neva must become engaged to Rufus before she actually
-enters society here. Her marriage can take place at
-the same time with our own in October. Elise can do
-the two trousseaux at the same time. It is an admirable
-plan, and a worthy continuation of our little game.”</p>
-
-<p>They talked further, disclosing to each other their
-nefarious plans of self-aggrandizement. Craven Black
-talked in lover-like fashion, and even the exacting Lady
-Wynde was persuaded that his passion for her had received
-a new impulse, and that he loved her as she loved
-him&mdash;with an utter devotion.</p>
-
-<p>As the dinner hour drew near Mr. Black took his departure,
-not caring to excite the gossip of the household
-upon his first visit to Lady Wynde. Directly after
-dinner, Artress, attired in gray travelling suit, set out in
-a carriage for Canterbury, on her way to Paris, whence
-she was to bring to her own home the heiress of Hawkhurst.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[68]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">NEVA’S FIRST LOVER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The dingy little packet-boat from Calais to Dover,
-carrying the mails, bore her usual complement of passengers
-upon the bright midsummer day upon which young
-Neva Wynde returned after years of absence to her own
-country.</p>
-
-<p>A few tall, mustached Frenchmen, with cigars in their
-mouths; a German or two with the inevitable pipe; a
-few students returning from foreign universities; a few
-pedestrian tourists with hobnailed shoes, preposterous
-alpenstocks, and a proudly displayed Bradshaw or Murray;
-several stout and puffy Englishmen, with singularly
-pale faces, and the usual number of rotund ill-dressed
-English women, with flimsy muslin dresses and fur
-tippets in odd contrast&mdash;a conjunction much affected by
-the average British lady&mdash;made up the majority of the
-passengers. Some of these people walked about, affecting
-to enjoy the fresh breeze; others studied the now
-useless guide-book, recalling their adventures; and others
-scanned the blue shores of France alternately with the
-chalk cliffs of England through the tourist glasses slung
-from their shoulders, and wondered aloud if the passage
-would be accomplished in the usual ninety minutes.</p>
-
-<p>An odd feature of a Channel packet is the total disregard
-of appearances manifested by the passengers
-upon it.</p>
-
-<p>Very few, if any, persons go below into the stuffy
-little cabins, and doubting souls provide themselves with
-ominous white bowls at the outset of the voyage, and
-should illness come upon them they proceed to make<span class="pagenum">[69]</span>
-themselves comfortable upon the deck, or moan, or
-swear, according to the sex of the sufferer, totally unmindful
-and oblivious of lookers on.</p>
-
-<p>In a corner by herself, at one side of the boat, her
-thick green vail over her face shrouding a bowl that
-filled her lap, sat Artress, Lady Wynde’s gray companion,
-in a condition of abject misery. She had no thought of
-any one but herself in that crisis of her physical career,
-and gave no heed to her young charge, the one great
-desire of her soul being to find herself once more upon
-solid land.</p>
-
-<p>At the opposite side of the boat, leaning lightly upon
-the rail, and looking back with wistful, longing eyes
-upon the fading blue of the French shores, stood a young
-girl who was strangely lovely. She was slender and
-graceful as a swaying reed, and her lithe, light figure
-carried itself with a slight hauteur that was inexpressibly
-charming. Her high-bred manner, her evident gentleness
-and sweetness, betrayed thorough culture of heart
-and mind. Her face was a rare poem. The features
-were slightly irregular, and even in repose, with a grave
-shadow upon her fair brows, her countenance had a
-bright, piquant witchery. Her complexion was very
-pure and fair, her lips a vivid scarlet, and under her
-broad forehead a pair of wondrous red-brown eyes
-sparkled and glowed with strange brilliancy. Her hair,
-very abundant, and of a reddish-brown tint as rare as
-beautiful, was gathered into braids at the back of her
-small, noble head.</p>
-
-<p>She was dressed in a traveling suit of black cashmere,
-and wore a black hat surmounted with a scarlet wing.</p>
-
-<p>She was Neva Wynde, the owner of Hawkhurst, one
-of the greatest heiresses in England, and now the object of
-the sinister machinations of her handsome step-mother
-and Craven Black.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[70]</span></p>
-
-<p>Her school-days were over, and she was on her way to
-a home she had not visited for years, and to a guardian
-whom she did not know, and who was secretly her enemy.
-She had emerged from the pleasant security of the school-room
-into a region of perils. A premonition of the
-dangers before her seemed almost to come upon her now,
-and into her glowing eyes crept a look of sorrowful
-yearning, and of passionate protest against the friendlessness
-of her lot.</p>
-
-<p>A few feet distant from her, also leaning upon the railing,
-stood a young man, whose gaze, ostensibly fixed
-upon the French coast, now and then rested upon the
-girl’s speaking face with an expression of keen admiration
-and interest. He thought in his own soul that he
-had never seen a being so fresh, so dainty, so pure, so
-rarely beautiful. She seemed utterly alone. No one inquired
-how she felt, nor offered her a seat, nor looked
-after her, and her young admirer wondered if she were
-all alone in the world, as she seemed.</p>
-
-<p>He was speculating upon the subject when a sudden
-lurch of the boat upon the short, chopping Channel
-waves, caused Neva to involuntarily loosen her hold upon
-the railing, and pitched her abruptly along the deck
-toward him. He sprang forward and caught her in his
-arms. She recovered her equilibrium upon the instant,
-and again grasped the railing, blushing, confused, and
-murmuring her thanks for his civility.</p>
-
-<p>“The Channel is rough to-day,” remarked the young
-gentleman. “Shall I not find you a seat?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, no,” returned Neva, in her sweet, low,
-cultured voice. “I prefer standing.”</p>
-
-<p>The words were simple enough, and her manner was
-quiet and reserved, but her voice went to the young
-man’s heart, thrilling it with a strange sensation. He did<span class="pagenum">[71]</span>
-not attempt a retreat, and Neva looked up at him with
-something of surprise in her glorious red-brown eyes.</p>
-
-<p>As he encountered her full gaze, his face flushed, his
-eyes glowed, and a warm smile curved his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon,” he said, “but are you not Miss
-Wynde of Hawkhurst?”</p>
-
-<p>Neva bowed assent, with an increasing surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“I was sure, when I met your full glance, that you
-were Neva Wynde,” cried the young gentleman. “You
-do not remember me, I see; and yet, when you went
-away to that odious Paris school you and I parted with
-tears, and you promised to be true to me, little Neva.
-And you have forgotten me&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no,” cried the young girl, an answering glow in
-her face, and her eyes shining like suns. “Is it really
-you, Arthur? How you have changed!”</p>
-
-<p>She held out her hand to him, and he clasped it with
-a warm, lingering pressure. Her eyes scanned his face
-in an earnest scrutiny, and she blushed again when she
-saw how handsome he was, and how like he was to an
-ideal she had long cherished in the very depths of her
-young soul.</p>
-
-<p>He was fair, with warm blue eyes, golden hair, and a
-mustache of tawny gold. He had a frank, noble face,
-and his sunny eyes betrayed a generous soul. One who
-ran might read in his countenance a brave, dauntless
-soul, a grand, unselfish nature, an enlightened spirit,
-quick sympathies, and an honest, truthful, resolute character.
-Neva thought, as she shyly regarded him, that
-he was very like a hero of romance.</p>
-
-<p>“I can hardly believe that it is Arthur,” she said, smiling,
-her face softly flushing. “You are not at all like
-the Arthur Towyn I knew, and yet I can see the old
-boyish gayety and brightness of spirit. Your mustache
-has changed your looks greatly, Lord Towyn.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[72]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It makes me look older perhaps,” said Lord Towyn
-gravely, “and as I am but three and twenty, and have a
-ward who is eighteen years old, it becomes me to produce
-as venerable an appearance as possible. Of course
-you are aware Neva, that I am one of the three trustees
-or guardians of your entire property, appointed by your
-father in his will?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I knew it a year ago,” replied Neva, the brightness
-fading a little from her face. “Mr. Atkins wrote
-me about papa’s will. Mr. Atkins and Sir John Freise
-are the two other executors. You are very young for
-such an appointment, are you not, Lord Towyn?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is a fault that time will mend,” said his lordship,
-smiling. “I am young for the post, but Sir Harold
-Wynde knew that he could trust me, especially with two
-older heads to direct me. I am only the least of three,
-you know, and my youth was meant to balance Sir John
-Freise’s age. Your school life is over, is it not, Miss
-Wynde?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it is over,” and Neva sighed. “I am on my way
-to a new sort of life, and to new acquaintances and
-friends. I feel a sort of terror of my future, Lord
-Towyn. I am foolish, I know, but a dread comes over
-me when I look forward to going home. Home! Ah,
-all that made the old house home has vanished. My poor
-brother George lies in an Indian grave. Papa&mdash;poor
-papa&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Her voice broke down, and she averted her head.</p>
-
-<p>Young Lord Towyn came nearer to her. He longed
-to press her hand and to offer her his sympathy. He
-comprehended her desolation, and the unhealed wound
-caused by Sir Harold’s fate. His heart bled for her.</p>
-
-<p>He had known Neva Wynde from her earliest childhood.
-They had played together in the woods and gardens
-of Hawkhurst and before Neva had been sent to<span class="pagenum">[73]</span>
-her foreign school the child pair had betrothed themselves
-and vowed an eternal fidelity to each other. The
-late Earl Towyn, the father of Arthur, and Sir Harold
-Wynde had been college-mates, and it had been their
-dearest wish to unite their families in the persons of
-their children, but they had been too wise to broach the
-idea to the young couple. They had, however, encouraged
-the affection of Arthur and Neva for each other,
-and had looked forward hopefully to the time when that
-childish affection should possibly ripen into the love of
-manhood and womanhood. Soon after Neva’s departure
-for school Lord Towyn had died, and his son, then at
-college, had become earl in his stead. A mysterious
-fate had also removed Sir Harold Wynde, and Neva’s
-step-mother, as is known to the reader, had schemes of
-her own in regard to Neva’s marriage.</p>
-
-<p>The young earl’s mute sympathy seemed to penetrate
-to Neva’s heart, for presently she turned her face again
-to him, and although her mouth quivered her eyes were
-brave, as she said brokenly:</p>
-
-<p>“You will think me unchristian, Lord Towyn, but I
-cannot become reconciled to the manner of papa’s death.
-If he had but died as George died, peacefully in his bed;
-but his fate was so horrible&mdash;so awful! I sometimes
-fancy in the night that I can hear his cries and moans.
-In my own imagination I have witnessed his awful death
-a thousand times. The horror of it is as fresh to me
-now as when the news first came. Shall I ever get used
-to my sorrow? Will the time ever come, do you think,
-when I can think of papa with the calmness and resignation
-with which I think of my poor brother?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was horrible, even to me, beyond all words to describe,”
-said the young earl softly. “I loved Sir Harold
-only less than my own father, and I have mourned
-for him as if I had been his son. All ordinary words of<span class="pagenum">[74]</span>
-consolation seem a mockery to one who mourns a friend
-who perished as he did. He was vigorous and young
-for his years, noble and true and good. Let us hope
-that his pangs and terrors were but brief, Neva. Perhaps
-his death was not so terrible to him as it seems to
-us. It were better so to die than to languish for years
-a prey to some excruciating disease. And let us remember
-‘whatever is, is right.’ Instead of dwelling on
-the manner of his death, let us remember that his death
-was but the opening to him of the gates of life eternal.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva did not answer, but her face was very grave and
-tender, and her sun-like eyes glowed with a softer radiance.
-There was a brief silence between them, and
-finally Neva said, with an abrupt change of the subject:</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know Lady Wynde, Lord Towyn?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have met her several times, but not since Sir
-Harold’s death,” was the reply. “Is she traveling with
-you?” and the young earl glanced around the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“No, she sent her companion for me. That is Artress,
-on the other side of the boat. I have never seen Lady
-Wynde.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Towyn looked his astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you not been home since your father’s marriage,
-nor since his death, Miss Wynde?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No. Papa came once to see me at my school after
-his marriage, but he did not bring his wife. I have a
-picture of her which papa sent me. He must have
-adored her. His letters were full of loving praises of
-her, and in the last letter he wrote he told me that he
-desired me to love and obey her as if she were my own
-mother. His wishes are sacred to me now, and I shall
-try to love her. Is she very handsome?”</p>
-
-<p>“She is considered handsome,” replied Lord Towyn.
-“She is dark almost to swarthiness, and has a gypsy’s
-black eyes. Sir Harold almost worshiped her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[75]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Then she must be good?”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Towyn hesitated. He knew little of the handsome
-Lady Wynde, but he had an instinctive distrust of
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“She must be good,” he answered thoughtfully.
-“Had she not been good, Sir Harold would not have
-loved her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes, I have thought that a hundred times,” said
-Neva. “I shall try to win her love. She is to stay at
-Hawkhurst as my personal guardian during my minority,
-and there can be no indifference between us. It
-must be peace or war. I intend it shall be peace. You
-see, Lord Towyn, that I shall be almost completely dependent
-upon her for society and friendship. I am
-coming back a stranger to my childhood’s home. Years
-of absence have estranged me from the friends I knew,
-and I have no one outside of Hawkhurst to look to, save
-Mr. Atkins and Sir John Freise.”</p>
-
-<p>“And me,” said Lord Towyn earnestly. “I am associated
-with them, you know. But you will not be so
-utterly friendless as you think. The old county families
-will hasten to call upon you, and you can select
-your own friends among them. The Lady of Hawkhurst
-will be feted and welcomed, and made much of.
-Your trouble will soon be that you will have no time to
-yourself. I desire to add myself to your list of visitors.
-I am staying this summer at a place of mine on the
-Kentish coast. But here is the Dover pier straight
-ahead, Miss Wynde. We have made the voyage in good
-time, despite the roughness of the Channel.”</p>
-
-<p>There was no time for further conversation. The suggestive
-bowls were being hidden under benches by the
-late sufferers, and bundles, boxes and bags were being
-sought after with reviving energies. Artress arose,
-found her traveling bag and umbrellas, and then sought<span class="pagenum">[76]</span>
-for her charge. As her gaze encountered Neva’s piquant
-face upturned to the admiring glances of a handsome
-young gentleman, she looked shocked and horrified, and
-her sharp, ashen-hued features became vinegary in their
-expression. She approached the young lady with unseemly
-haste, and exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Wynde, I am surprised&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me,” said Neva, quietly interposing, although
-her face flushed haughtily, “but I desire to introduce
-to you, Mrs. Artress, my old friend Lord Towyn.”</p>
-
-<p>The young earl bowed, and Mrs. Artress did the same,
-divided between her desire to be polite to a nobleman
-and her anger that Neva should have renewed his acquaintance
-while under her charge. Artress was deep
-in the confidence of Lady Wynde and Craven Black, and
-her interests were identical with theirs. She had a keen
-scent for danger, and in the attitude of Lord Towyn toward
-Neva she recognized an admiration which might
-easily deepen into love.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, my dear,” said Mrs. Artress anxiously. “The
-boat is at the pier, and we must hasten ashore. Give
-me your dressing bag&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She paused, seeing that Lord Towyn had already possessed
-himself of it. The young earl offered his arm to
-Neva, and she placed her hand lightly upon it, and was
-conducted along the boat to the place of landing. Mrs.
-Artress followed, biting her lips with chagrin.</p>
-
-<p>The landing and examination of baggage were duly
-accomplished, and Lord Towyn conducted his charges
-to a first-class coach of the waiting train, seated them,
-and took his place beside Neva.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to Hawkhurst also, my lord?” inquired
-Mrs. Artress sourly, as he fed the guard handsomely,
-in order that no other travelers might be ushered
-into their compartment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[77]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No, madam, not to-day,” answered the young earl
-pleasantly. “I am on my way to Canterbury to consult
-with Sir John Freise and Mr. Atkins concerning
-some business relative to the Hawkhurst property, and I
-shall probably do myself the honor to call with them
-upon Miss Wynde in a day or two.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Wynde will be happy to see you and to consult
-with you,” said Mrs. Artress, with ill-concealed
-annoyance. “Miss Wynde is too young, I should judge,
-to understand anything about business. Besides, her
-friends should spare her all trouble of that description.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be always ready to consult with you about
-business, Lord Towyn,” said Neva in her clear, low voice.
-“I desire to fit myself for my position as owner and dispenser
-of a large income. I regard the money intrusted
-to me as a talent for which I shall be called to account,
-and I want to learn to manage my affairs properly, and
-with prudence and discretion. I think,” she added
-lightly, “that I shall take Miss Burdett Coutts as my exemplar
-in this matter. She is a business woman, I understand,
-and I should like to be like her.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Artress was silenced, but she thought within
-herself:</p>
-
-<p>“Our young lady has opinions of her own, and has the
-courage to express them. I am afraid that she is not the
-bread and butter school-girl we expected. I am afraid
-that we shall have trouble with her.”</p>
-
-<p>The journey to Canterbury was accomplished only too
-quickly for Lord Towyn and Neva. They talked of their
-childhood, but no allusion was made to their childish betrothal,
-although both doubtless thought of it. The
-young earl explained that he had been over to Brussels
-for a week, and had no thought of meeting her on his
-way home, and his face as well as his tones told how glad
-he was of that meeting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[78]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Hawkhurst carriage with its liveried servants was
-in waiting at the Canterbury station when they alighted.
-Lord Towyn assisted the ladies into the vehicle, bade
-them adieu, and as they drove away followed them with
-a lingering gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“How beautiful Neva is!” he murmured to himself.
-“And so pure and sweet and tender, yet spirited! I wonder
-if she remembers our childish betrothal? I don’t like
-that Artress, and I do not quite like Lady Wynde. I
-hardly think Neva will be happy with her, their natures
-being so dissimilar. I must go out to Hawkhurst to-morrow,
-and judge whether they are likely to get on together.
-If Neva does not like her step-mother, she has
-but one avenue of escape from her dominion before she
-becomes of age, and that avenue is marriage. If she
-would only marry me. I love her already. Love her! I
-could adore her.”</p>
-
-<p>A passionate flush arose to his fair cheek, and a tender
-glowing light to his warm blue eyes, and he descended
-the steps and strode out of the station, his heart thrilling
-with the strange and new sensation which he now knew
-was love. And as he walked along the street, he vowed
-within himself that he would woo and, if he could, would
-win young Neva Wynde to be his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Ah, he little knew the gulfs that would arise between
-him and her&mdash;the dangers, the perils, the sorrows, they
-two must taste. And even as he strode along, acknowledging
-to his own soul that he was Neva’s lover, Neva
-was speeding across the pleasant country toward the
-home where her enemy awaited her with schemes perfected,
-and an evil heart hidden under a smiling face.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[79]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">THE SON OF THE HONORABLE CRAVEN BLACK.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Upon the morning of the day on which Neva Wynde
-and Lord Towyn so strangely encountered each other
-upon the dingy packet-boat&mdash;an encounter that was destined
-to be fateful&mdash;a scene transpired in one of the London
-suburbs to which we would call the attention of the
-reader.</p>
-
-<p>In an upper room, in one of the dingiest houses of one
-of the dingiest crescents at New Brompton, a young man,
-a mere youth, was engaged in painting a picture. The
-room was bare and comfortless, with threadbare carpet,
-decrepit and worn-out furniture, and springless sofa-bed&mdash;one
-of the poorest rooms, in fact, a lodging-house of
-the fourth rate can furnish. There were two windows
-without curtains, and provided only with torn and faded
-blue paper shades, rolled up and confined with cotton
-cord. A few ashes were in the grate, showing that although
-the season was summer, a fire had lately burned
-there.</p>
-
-<p>The picture which the youth was painting stood upon
-an easel before one of the windows, and was but little
-better than a daub. It had been sketched by a bold and
-vigorous hand, but was faulty in conception and ill-colored.
-The light upon it was bad, and the hand that
-wielded the brush was trembling and impatient, weakened
-by fasting and emotions.</p>
-
-<p>The painter looked a mere boy, although he was full
-twenty years of age. His complexion was florid, his
-eyes hazel in hue, and he wore his brown hair long, artist
-fashion, and tossed back from his high white forehead.<span class="pagenum">[80]</span>
-He was handsome, with an honest look in his eyes, and
-a pleasant mouth, but his chin was short, and weak in
-its expression, and his countenance betrayed a character
-full of good and noble impulses, yet with a weakness,
-indecision, and irresolution that might yet prove fatal to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>He was dressed in a shabby velveteen jacket, daubed
-with paints and out at the elbows. His garments, like
-his lodging, betrayed poverty of the most unmitigated
-description.</p>
-
-<p>This young man was Rufus Black, the only son of
-Craven Black who was Lady Wynde’s lover. And it
-was Rufus Black whom his father and Lady Wynde had
-planned should marry Neva Wynde, and thus play into
-their hands, enabling them to possess themselves of a
-portion of Neva’s noble fortune.</p>
-
-<p>As Mr. Black had said, he had quarrelled with his son
-some weeks before, and cast him off, penniless and destitute
-of friends, to shift for himself. He had drifted to
-his present lodgings, and was trying to keep soul and
-body together by painting wretched pictures, which he
-sold to a general dealer for wretched pay.</p>
-
-<p>“The picture don’t suit me,” he said, pushing back his
-chair, that he might get a better view of the painting.
-“It’s only a daub, but it’s as good as the pay. I’ve been
-three days at it, and it won’t bring me in even the fifteen
-shillings I got for the last. It will do to stop up a
-chimney-place, I suppose&mdash;and I had such grand ideas
-of my art, and of my talents! I meant to achieve fame
-and fortune, and here I am without food or fuel, with
-the rent due, and with my soul so fettered by these cares,
-so borne down by despair and remorse, that I am incapable
-of work. I am gone to the dogs, as my father
-told me to go&mdash;but, oh, why did I not travel the downward<span class="pagenum">[81]</span>
-road alone? Why must I drag <em>her</em> down with
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>A despairing look gathered on his face; the tears filled
-his eyes; a sob escaped him. He looked haggard, worn
-and despairing. He was in no condition for work, yet
-he resumed his task with blinded eyes, and painted on
-at random with feverish haste.</p>
-
-<p>He had grown somewhat calmer, with the calmness of
-an utter despair, when the door opened, and a girl came
-in bearing a large basket heavily loaded. She was a
-slender young creature, not more than seventeen years
-old, and her pale face and narrow chest betrayed a tendency
-to consumption. Her complexion was of a clear
-olive tint; her hair was of a blue-black color, and was
-worn in braids; her eyes were dark and loving, with an
-appealing expression in them; and, despite the circumstances
-of her lot, she maintained a hopeful, sunshiny
-spirit and a sunshiny countenance.</p>
-
-<p>She was the young music-teacher for whose sake Rufus
-Black had quarrelled with his father. She was the
-last member of a large family who had all died of consumption.
-She had lost her situation in a ladies’ school
-about the time that Rufus had separated himself from
-his father; and after the young man had abandoned his
-parent, he had hastened to her and begged her to marry
-him. He was full of hope, ambitious, determined to
-achieve fame and fortune by his painter’s brush, and she
-was weak and worn, sorrowful and nearly ill, and quite
-penniless. Believing in his talents and ability to support
-them both, she had accepted the refuge he offered
-her, and one week after Craven Black had turned his
-son adrift, the young pair were married, and moved into
-their present dingy quarters.</p>
-
-<p>They had joined their poverty together, and soon discovered
-that the achievement of fame and wealth was<span class="pagenum">[82]</span>
-uphill work. Rufus was fresh from his university,
-unused to work for his bread, and he had overrated his
-talent for painting, as he presently discovered. He found
-it hard work to sell his poor efforts, and he could not
-paint enough at first to bring him in twenty shillings a
-week. It was now three months since his marriage, and
-one by one his books, his better articles of clothing, his
-watch, and other trinkets, had been sold or pledged to
-buy necessaries or pay the rent. Upon this morning
-they had had no breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>“How big your eyes are, Rufus!” laughed the young
-wife, throwing off her battered little hat. “You look as
-if I had brought you some priceless treasure; but you
-well may, for I have the nicest little breakfast we have
-had for a week.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you get it?” inquired the young artist,
-his thin cheeks flushing with an eagerness he would
-have concealed. “Have you prevailed on the grocer to
-give us credit?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I could not do that,” and the young wife shook
-her head. “I’m afraid his heart is as hard as the nether
-mill-stone we read about. He thinks I’m a humbug&mdash;a
-cheat! But our landlady, Mrs. McKellar, you know, has
-faith in your picture, and I borrowed two shillings of
-her. See what a sumptuous repast we shall have,” and
-she proceeded to display the contents of her basket,
-unpacking them swiftly. “Here’s two-pence worth of
-coffee, a pennyworth of milk, a threepenny loaf, and a
-superb rasher of ham of the kind described by the Irishman
-as ‘a strake of fat and a strake of lane.’ And here’s
-a bundle of wood to boil the coffee; and I’ve gone to
-the extravagance of a sixpenny pot of jam, your appetite
-is so delicate. And now for breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p>She piled her wood skillfully in the grate, put on her
-coffee-pot and frying pan, and lighted her fire.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[83]</span></p>
-
-<p>Then while her breakfast was cooking, she laid her
-table with her scanty ware, and bustled about like an
-incarnate sunbeam, and no one would have suspected
-that she too was weak and hungry, and that she was
-sick at heart and full of dread for the future.</p>
-
-<p>“So breakfast is provided for,” murmured Rufus
-Black, in a tone in which it would have been hard to
-tell which predominated, relief or bitterness. “I began
-to fear we should fast to-day, as we did yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>The young wife turned her rasher of ham in the pan,
-and put her small allowance of coffee in the pot, before
-she answered gravely:</p>
-
-<p>“Rufus, I think I might get another situation to teach
-music. I have good references, you know. I don’t like
-being so utterly dependent upon you. You have not
-been used to work. I’m afraid we did very wrong in
-getting married.”</p>
-
-<p>“What else could we do?” demanded Rufus Black.
-“I could not see you working yourself to death, Lally,
-when a little care would save you. You had to go out
-of doors in all weathers, and you were going into a galloping
-consumption. I expected to be able to support
-you, but I’m only a useless fellow, after all. I thought I
-had talent, but it has turned out like the fairy money&mdash;it
-has turned to dead leaves at the moment of using it.
-I have a university education, and would be thankful
-for a situation as usher in a dame’s school. I am willing
-to dig ditches, only I’m not strong enough. Oh,
-Lally, little wife, what is to become of us?”</p>
-
-<p>Lally Black&mdash;she had been christened Lalla by her
-romantic mother, after the heroine of Moore’s poem, but
-her name had lost its romantic sound through years of
-every-day use&mdash;approached her young husband, and
-softly laid her cheek against his. She stroked his hand
-gently as she said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[84]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It is I who am useless, Rufus. You ought to have
-married a rich wife instead of a poor little music-teacher.
-I’m afraid you’ll reproach me in your heart some day
-for marrying you&mdash;there, there, dear boy! I did not
-mean it. I know you will never regret our marriage, let
-what will be the result!”</p>
-
-<p>She caressed him tenderly, and then hurried to the fire
-intent upon her breakfast. The coffee was steaming,
-and the ham was cooked. The busy little housewife
-made a round of toast, and then announced that breakfast
-was ready. Rufus drew up his chair to the table,
-and Lally waited upon him, and was so gay and bright
-and hopeful that he became infected with her spirit.</p>
-
-<p>But when the delicious breakfast was over he became
-grave and haggard again, and bowed his face on his
-hand and sat in silence, while she washed the dishes and
-carefully put away the remnants of the meal. Then she
-came to him and sat on his knee, and drew his hand
-from his face, and whispered:</p>
-
-<p>“Rufus, is your father rich?”</p>
-
-<p>“He has some three or four hundred pounds a year&mdash;that’s
-all,” answered Rufus. “Why do you ask?”</p>
-
-<p>“Could he not assist us a little, if he wished?” ventured
-Lally. “I have no relative to apply to. I had a
-great-aunt who married a rich man, and I think she
-lives in London, but I don’t know her name, and she
-probably never heard of me, so I can’t write or go to
-her. Let us humble ourselves to your father, dear&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“To what purpose?” interposed Rufus half fiercely.
-“My father is a mercenary, villainous&mdash;Don’t stop me,
-Lally. I am telling the truth, if he <em>is</em> my father. Thank
-God, I took after my poor mother. My father does not
-know we are married, and I dare not tell him. If I fear
-anybody in this world, I fear my father.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he must know some time of our marriage,”<span class="pagenum">[85]</span>
-urged the young wife. “You make me afraid, dear, that
-we did wrong in marrying. We are too young, and I had
-to work for my living. Your father could never forgive
-me, and accept me as his daughter. My family is of no
-account, and yours is good. People think of all these
-things, and you will be looked down upon for your unfortunate,
-ill-starred marriage. Oh, Rufus, if we could
-undo what we have done, it might be well for us.”</p>
-
-<p>The young husband endeavored to console his wife,
-and he had brought back her bright hopefulness, when
-the postman’s knock was heard on the street door. A
-sudden hope thrilled them both. They listened breathlessly,
-and not in vain. Presently the housemaid’s heavy
-tread was heard on the stairs, and she entered the room,
-bringing a letter.</p>
-
-<p>When she had departed, Rufus opened the letter, and
-the young couple perused it together. It was dated
-Wyndham village, and had been written by Craven
-Black, and contained simply an announcement that the
-father desired to be reconciled to his son; that he saw
-a way in which he could make Rufus a rich man; and
-he begged his son, if he also desired a reconciliation and
-wealth, and was willing to submit himself to his father’s
-will, to come to him at once by the earliest train. Between
-the leaves of the letter was a ten-pound note.</p>
-
-<p>“You will go, of course?” cried the young wife
-excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I knew what he meant,” muttered Rufus
-irresolutely.</p>
-
-<p>“He is your father, dear, and you will go,” urged
-Lally. “For my sake, you will go. And Rufus, I beg
-you to yield to his wishes. They will not be unreasonable,
-I am sure. Say you will go!”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus hesitated. He knew that when with his father,
-he was a coward without a will of his own. What if he<span class="pagenum">[86]</span>
-should be driven into some act he should hereafter repent?
-Yet at last he consented to go to his father, and
-an hour later he divided his money with his wife, giving
-her the larger share, and took his departure. At that
-last moment a horrible misgiving came over him, and
-he ran back and kissed the little sunshiny face he loved,
-and then he went out again and made his way to the
-station, with a death-like pall upon his soul.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">A KNOT SUMMARILY SEVERED.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Rufus Black’s heart grew heavier still, and his sense
-of dread deepened, as he steamed down to Canterbury
-in the express train. He had a seat by a window in a
-second-class compartment in which were four other passengers,
-but he was as much alone as if he had had the
-compartment to himself. His travelling companions
-chatted and laughed and jested among themselves, while
-he looked from his window upon hop-gardens, green
-fields, and clustering hamlets, with sad, unseeing eyes,
-and thought of his poverty, his friendlessness, and the
-slow starvation that lay before him and his young wife.</p>
-
-<p>“I could bear it for myself,” he thought bitterly.
-“But it is hard to see Lally suffer, and I know she does
-suffer, although she seems so light-hearted and brave.
-My poor little wife! Ah, what place have I in the
-world of gay idlers and strong workers? I am neither
-the one nor the other. What is to be the end of it
-all?”</p>
-
-<p>He looked enviously at the workers in a brick-yard<span class="pagenum">[87]</span>
-the train was passing at that moment. There were men
-there, coarse and ignorant, but brawny of limb and
-broad of chest; and there were children too, boys and
-girls of tender years, working steadily for scanty pay;
-but they were all workers, and they looked stolidly contented
-with their lot.</p>
-
-<p>“With all my university education,” thought the boy
-artist bitterly, “I am less capable of self-support than
-those ignorant brick-makers. Why did my father bring
-me up with expensive tastes and like the heir of fine estates,
-only to cast me off to starve at the first moment
-I displeased him? What is the empty name of gentleman
-worth, if one cannot keep it and be a worker? If
-he had put me to some trade, I should not have been
-half so miserable to-day. I am only twenty years old,
-and my life is a failure at the outset.”</p>
-
-<p>The train swept on through new scenes, and the
-course of the young man’s musings was changed, but
-their bitterness remained in full strength.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder what my father can want of me,” he said
-to himself presently. “How can he put me in the way
-of a fortune? He promised that I should study law,
-but he has forgotten the promise. With a profession to
-depend upon, I know I could win a competence. Perhaps
-it is to speak of this he has sent for me this morning.
-He surely cannot mean for me,” and the young
-man’s brow darkened, “to become a gambler, as he has
-been? I shall refuse, if he proposes it. For my innocent
-Lally’s sake, I will keep myself pure of his vices.”</p>
-
-<p>This resolution was strong within him when he
-alighted from the train at Canterbury and took a hansom
-cab to Wyndham village. The drive of several
-miles was occupied with speculations as to what his
-father wanted of him, and with thoughts of his young
-wife in her dingy lodgings at New Brompton, and he<span class="pagenum">[88]</span>
-did not even notice the houses, farms and villas they
-passed, nor any feature of the scenery, until the horse
-slackened his speed to a walk, and the driver opened
-his small trap in the roof, and said:</p>
-
-<p>“The house yonder on the ridge, sir, is Hawkhurst,
-the seat of the Wynde family. Sir Harold Wynde died
-in India a year ago, you know, sir, and the property belongs
-to his only child, a daughter. A mile or so beyond
-is Wyndham village.”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Black turned his gaze upon the fair domain of
-the Wyndes. It lay on both sides of the highway,
-stretching as far as his eye could reach. The grand old
-mansion of gray stone, with outlying houses of glass
-glittering in the summer sunshine like immense jewels,
-the great lawns, the gardens, the park, the cool woods,
-all these made up one of the fairest pictures the eyes of
-Rufus Black had ever rested upon.</p>
-
-<p>“How glorious!” he said involuntarily. “And it all
-belongs to a lady!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, a mere girl,” replied the cabman. “She is
-at school in France. It’s a great place, is Hawkhurst.”</p>
-
-<p>He dropped the trap and urged on his horse, but
-Rufus continued to look upon the house and estate with
-great, envious eyes. Why should all this belong to one,
-and that one a mere girl, while he wanted for bread?
-His soul was convulsed with bitterness and repining,
-and the shadow of his trouble rested upon his face.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes of brisk driving brought them to Wyndham
-village, which consisted merely of one long straggling
-street, lined with houses and gardens. In the
-very centre of the street, upon four corners formed by
-the intersection of a country road, was gathered the
-business portion of the hamlet. Upon the corner was
-the village smithy, from whose open door came the ringing
-sound of hammer upon anvil. A group of countrymen<span class="pagenum">[89]</span>
-were gathered about the door of the smithy, and a
-few carts stood before it on the paved street. Upon a
-second corner was a general shop and postoffice in one.
-Upon a third corner was a rival establishment, of the
-same description, but without the advantage and prestige
-of the postoffice, and on the fourth corner stood the
-Wyndham Inn, with its swinging sign, ample court-yard
-and hospitable look.</p>
-
-<p>It was an old stone building, with a wide portico in
-front, on which were tables and chairs. Rufus Black
-was driven into the court, and sprang out of the cab, at
-the same moment that the portly, rubicund landlord
-came out to receive him. The young man inquired for
-his father, and was informed that he was in his rooms at
-the inn. Rufus paid and dismissed the cabman, and
-followed the landlord into the inn.</p>
-
-<p>He was conducted up a flight of uncarpeted stairs,
-and the landlord pointed out to him the door of a front
-chamber as the one at which he was to knock. Rufus
-quietly lifted the latch and ushered himself into the
-room, closing the door behind him.</p>
-
-<p>The room was a pleasant little country parlor, with
-three casement windows, a faded carpet on the floor,
-cane-seated furniture, and a jug of flowers on the mantel-shelf.
-The sunlight streamed in, but its heat was tempered
-by the delicious breeze. The Honorable Craven
-Black was not in the room, but there were vestiges of
-his occupancy on every side. Upon a small table stood
-his massive dressing case with mirror and brushes
-mounted in exquisitely carved ivory, and with boxes and
-bottle-stoppers of finely chased and solid gold. All the
-appointments of the large case were luxurious in the
-extreme, and Rufus thought bitterly that the sum which
-that Sybaritic affair had cost would be a fortune to him
-in his own present destitution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[90]</span></p>
-
-<p>A beautiful inlaid writing case, a tobacco jar of the
-finest Sevres porcelain, a Turkish pipe mounted in gold
-and amber, a liqueur case, and various other costly
-trifles, were scattered lavishly about. The Honorable
-Craven Black had never denied himself a luxury in his
-life, and these things he carried with him wherever he
-went, as necessary to his comfort and happiness.</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Black’s lips curled as he looked on these luxuries
-and mentally calculated their cost. He was in the midst
-of his calculation when the door of the adjoining bedroom
-was opened from within, and his father came out,
-habited in slippers and dressing-gown, and with an Indian
-embroidered cap of scarlet and gold poised lightly on his
-fair head.</p>
-
-<p>His light eyes opened a little wider than usual as he
-beheld his son, and his usual cynical smile showed itself
-disagreeably around his white teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“So you’ve come at last, have you?” he exclaimed.
-“I expected you yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“I received your letter this morning, soon after breakfast,
-sir,” answered Rufus, “and I came on at once in the
-express train. I have changed my lodgings from the one
-you knew, and the letter was sent on from my old to my
-new address.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Black eyed his son critically, his cynical smile
-deepening.</p>
-
-<p>“You have a general out-at-the-elbows look,” he observed.
-“You’ve gone down hill since I threw you over.
-You look hungry and desperate!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am both,” was the reply, in a reckless tone. “And
-I have reason to be. I am starving!”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Black flung himself into the only easy chair the
-room afforded, and made a gesture to his son to be seated
-upon the couch. Rufus obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>“You are in the mood I hoped to find you,” declared<span class="pagenum">[91]</span>
-the father, with a disagreeable laugh. “Desperate&mdash;starving!
-That is better than I expected. What has
-become of all your fine anticipations of wealth and fortune
-achieved with your brush? You do not find it easy
-to paint famous pictures?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mistook my desires for ability,” cried Rufus, his
-eyes darkening with the pain of his confession. “I have
-a liking for painting, and I fancied that liking was genius.
-I find myself crippled by not knowing how to do anything
-well. My pictures bring me in fifteen shillings
-apiece, and cost me three days’ work. I could earn more
-at brick-making&mdash;if I only knew how to make bricks.
-When you sent me to the university, father, you said I
-should study a profession. I demand of you the fulfilment
-of that promise. I want some way to earn my
-living!”</p>
-
-<p>“Better get a living without work,” said Mr. Black
-coolly. “I don’t like work, and I don’t believe you do.
-You want to study law, but your talents are not transcendent,
-my son&mdash;you will never sit upon the woolsack.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I can earn two hundred pounds a year, I will ask
-nothing more,” said Rufus bitterly. “I have discovered
-for myself that my abilities are mediocre. I shall never
-be great as anything&mdash;unless as a failure! But if I can
-only glide along in the great stream of mediocre people,
-and be nothing above or below them, I shall be content!”</p>
-
-<p>“And you say this at twenty years old?” cried his
-father mockingly. “You talk like one of double your
-years. Where have your hopefulness, your bright dreams,
-your glowing anticipations, gone? You must have had
-a hard experience in the last three months, to be willing
-to settle down into a hard-working drudge!”</p>
-
-<p>“My experience <em>has</em> been hard.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe you. You look beaten out, worn out, discouraged.<span class="pagenum">[92]</span>
-Now, Rufus, I have sent for you that I may
-make your fortune as well as mine. There is a grand
-prospect opening before you, and you can be one of the
-richest men in England, if you choose to be sensible.
-But you must obey my orders.”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot promise that before knowing what you
-demand,” said the son, his face clouding. “I have no
-sympathy with your manner of life, father. If you had
-not the advantage of titled connections, and did not
-bear the title of ‘Honorable,’ you would be called an
-adventurer. You know you would. I want nothing to
-do with your ways of life. I will not be a gambler&mdash;not
-for all the wealth in England!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t refuse till you are asked,” said Mr. Black
-harshly. “Don’t imagine that I want to corrupt your
-fine principles by making a gambler of you. I am no
-gamester, even though I play at cards. I play only as
-gentlemen play. The game I have in hand for you is
-easily played, if you have but ordinary skill. I can
-make you master of one of the finest estates in England,
-if you but say the word!”</p>
-
-<p>“Honorably? Can you do it honorably?” cried Rufus
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly. I would not propose anything dishonorable
-to one of your nice sense of honor,” said Mr. Black,
-with sarcastic emphasis.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it you would have me do?”</p>
-
-<p>“You are young, enthusiastic, well looking and well
-educated,” said Mr. Black, without paying heed to his
-son’s questions. “In short, you are fitted to the business
-I have in hand. I intended to give you a professional
-education, but if you obey me you won’t want it, and if
-you do not obey me you may go to the dogs. I suppose
-your poverty has driven that little low-born music
-teacher out of your head?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[93]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What has she to do with this business?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing whatever. I want to make sure that you
-are well rid of her, but perhaps it would be as well to
-leave her name out of the question. You say you are
-starving. Now, if you will solemnly promise to obey
-me, I will advance you fifty pounds to-day, with which
-you can fit up your wardrobe and gratify any luxurious
-desires you may have.”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Black’s eyes sparkled.</p>
-
-<p>“Speak,” he said impatiently. “I am desperately
-poor. I would do almost anything for fifty pounds.
-What do you want done?”</p>
-
-<p>Again Craven Black laughed softly, well pleased with
-his son’s mood.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you see Hawkhurst as you came?” he asked, with
-seeming irrelevancy. “It’s one of the grandest places in
-Kent.”</p>
-
-<p>“I saw it. The driver pointed it out to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did it look to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Like heaven.”</p>
-
-<p>“How would you like to be master of that heaven?”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus stared at his father with wide, incredulous
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“You are chaffing me,” said the young man, his countenance
-falling.</p>
-
-<p>“I am in serious earnest. The owner of Hawkhurst
-is a young girl, who is expected home from school to-day.
-She has lived the life of a nun in her French school, and
-does not know one young man from another. She will
-be beset with suitors immediately, and the one who
-comes first stands the best chance of winning her. I
-want you to make love to her and marry her.”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Black’s face paled. The suggestion nearly
-overcame him. The project looked stupendous, chimerical.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[94]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I wondered that you should be down here at Wyndham,
-father,” he said, “and I suppose you are here because
-you had formed some design upon this young
-heiress. Do you know her?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but I know her step-mother, who is her personal
-guardian,” explained Craven Black. “Do you remember
-the handsome widow, Mrs. Hathaway, whom you
-saw once at the theatre in my charge? She married Sir
-Harold Wynde. He died in India last year, leaving her
-well-jointured. I came down to see her the other day,
-and it seems she remembers me with her old affection.
-In short, Rufus, I am engaged to marry Lady Wynde,
-and the wedding is to take place in October. She is her
-step-daughter’s guardian, as I said, and will have unbounded
-influence to back up your suit. The field is clear
-before you. Go in and win!”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus grew yet paler, and his voice was hoarse as he
-asked:</p>
-
-<p>“And this is your scheme for making me rich?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is. The girl has a clear income of seventy thousand
-pounds a year. As her husband, you will be a man
-of consequence. She owns a house in town, a hunting
-box in the Scottish Highlands, and other houses in England.
-You will have horses and hounds; a yacht, if
-you wish it, at your marine villa, and a bottomless purse.
-You can paint wretched pictures, and hear the fashionable
-world praise them as divine. You can become a
-member of Parliament. All careers are open to the fortunate
-suitor of Neva Wynde.”</p>
-
-<p>The picture was dazzling enough to the half-starved
-and desperate boy. He liked all these things his father
-enumerated&mdash;the houses, the horses, the luxuries, the
-money, and the luxurious ease and the honors. He had
-found it hard to work, and harder to dispose of his
-work. All the bitterness and hardness of his lot arose<span class="pagenum">[95]</span>
-before him in black contrast with the brightness and
-beauty that would mark the destiny of the favored lover
-of young Neva Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>He arose and walked the floor with an impetuous
-tread, an expression of keen anguish and keener longing
-in his eyes. His father watched him with a furtive
-gaze, as a cat watches a mouse. It was necessary to his
-plans that his son should marry Neva Wynde, and he
-was sanguine that he would be able to bring about the
-match.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” he said, tiring of the quick, impetuous walk
-of his son. “What do you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is impossible!” returned Rufus abruptly. “Utterly
-impossible.”</p>
-
-<p>“And why, if I may be allowed to ask?” inquired Mr.
-Black blandly, although a scowl began to gather on his
-fair forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“Because&mdash;because&mdash;the young lady may have other
-designs for herself&mdash;I can’t marry her for her money&mdash;I
-can’t give up Lally!”</p>
-
-<p>“The&mdash;the young person who taught music? I understood
-you to say that she was a corn-chandler’s daughter.
-And you prefer a low-born, low-bred creature to a
-wealthy young lady like Miss Wynde? For a young
-man educated as you have been, your good taste is remarkable.
-You have a predilection for high-class society,
-I must say. What is the charm of this not-to-be-given-up
-‘Lally?’ Is she beautiful?”</p>
-
-<p>“She is beautiful to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which means that she is beautiful to no one else.
-The beauty which requires love’s spectacles to distinguish,
-is ugliness to every one but the lover. Low-born
-and low-bred,” repeated Mr. Black, dwelling upon the
-words as if they pleased him, “with a pack of poor and
-ignorant relations tacked to her skirts, ugly by your<span class="pagenum">[96]</span>
-own confession, what a brilliant match she would be for
-the son of the Honorable Craven Black!”</p>
-
-<p>“She has no poor relations,” said Rufus hotly. “She
-has no relations except a great-aunt, whose name she
-does not know, and who very likely does not dream of
-her existence. It is true that Lally’s father was a corn-chandler,
-but he was an honest one, and more than that,
-he was an intelligent, upright gentlemen. You arch
-your brows, as if a man could not be a tradesman and a
-gentleman. If the word gentleman has any meaning, he
-was a gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not care to discuss the subtle meaning of words;
-I am willing to accept them at the valuation society
-puts upon them. The pedigree of ‘Lally’ is of no interest
-to me. I merely want to know if you mean to marry
-Neva Wynde and be rich, or marry your ‘Lally’ and
-starve. And if you are willing to starve yourself, are
-you willing to have ‘Lally’ starve also? With your fine
-ideas of honor, I wonder you can wish to drag that girl
-into a marriage that will be to her but a slow death.”</p>
-
-<p>A groan burst from the youth’s lips. He wrung his
-hands weakly, while the secret of his marriage trembled
-on his tongue. But he dared not tell it. He was afraid
-of his father with a deadly fear, and more than that, he
-had yet some hope of receiving assistance from his
-parent.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot give her up, father,” he said hoarsely. “I
-beg you to help me in some way, and let me go. You
-are not rich, I know, but you have influence. You could
-get me a situation under government, in the Home office,
-Somerset House, or as secretary to some nobleman. If
-you will do this for me, I will bless you while I live.
-Oh, father, be merciful to me. Give me a little help,
-and let me go my ways.”</p>
-
-<p>“By Heaven, I will not. If you cling to that girl, you<span class="pagenum">[97]</span>
-shall have not one penny from me, not one word of recommendation.
-You can drift to the hospital, or the
-alms-house, and I will not raise a finger to help you! I
-will not even give one farthing to save you from a pauper’s
-burial. I swear it!”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black uttered the oath in a tone of utter implacability,
-and Rufus knew that the heavens would sooner
-fall than his father would relent. A despair seized upon
-him, and again he wrung his hands, as he cried out recklessly:</p>
-
-<p>“I <em>must</em> cling to her, father. Cast me off if you will,
-curse me as you choose&mdash;but Lally is my wife!”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black was stupefied for the moment. An apoplectic
-redness suffused his face, and his eyes gleamed
-dangerously.</p>
-
-<p>“Your wife? Your wife?” he muttered, scarcely knowing
-that he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, she is my wife,” declared Rufus, his voice gathering
-firmness. “I married her three months ago. We
-have been starving together in a garret at New Brompton.
-Oh, father&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Not one word! Married to that girl? I will not
-believe it. Have you a marriage certificate?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have. Here it is,” and Rufus drew from his
-pocket-book a slender folded paper. “Read it, and you
-will see that I tell the truth. Lally Bird is my wife!”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black took the paper and perused it with
-strange deliberation, the apoplectic redness still suffusing
-his face. When he had finished, he deliberately tore
-the marriage certificate into shreds. Rufus uttered a
-cry, and sprang forward to seize the precious document,
-but his father waved him back with a gesture of stern
-command.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor fool!” said the elder man. “The destruction<span class="pagenum">[98]</span>
-of this paper would not affect the validity of your marriage,
-if it were valid. But it is not valid.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not valid.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; you and the girl are both minors. A marriage
-of minors without consent of parents and guardians is
-not binding. The girl is not your wife!”</p>
-
-<p>“But she is my wife. We were married in church&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That won’t make the marriage binding. You are a
-minor, and so is she. She had no one to consult, but
-you married without my consent, and that fact will render
-the marriage null and void. More than this,” and
-Mr. Black’s eyes sparkled wickedly, “you have committed
-perjury. You obtained your marriage license by declaring
-yourself of age, and you will not become of age
-under some months. Do you know what the punishment
-is for perjury. It is imprisonment, disgrace, a
-striped suit, and prison fare.”</p>
-
-<p>The young man looked appalled.</p>
-
-<p>“Who would prosecute me?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>I</em> would. You have got yourself in a tight box, young
-man. Your marriage is null and void, and you have
-committed perjury. Now I will offer you your choice
-between two alternatives. You can make love to Miss
-Wynde and marry her, and be somebody. Or, if you refuse,
-I will prosecute you for perjury, will have you sent
-to prison, and will brand that girl with a name that will
-fix her social station for life. Take your choice.”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black meant every word he said, and Rufus
-knew that he meant it. The young fellow shuddered and
-trembled, and then broke into a wild appeal for mercy,
-but his father turned a deaf ear to his anguished
-cry.</p>
-
-<p>“You have my decision,” he said coldly. “I shall not
-reconsider it. The girl is not your wife, and when she
-knows her position she will fly from you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[99]</span></p>
-
-<p>Rufus groaned in his anguish. He knew well the pure
-soul of his young wife, and he felt that she would not remain
-in any position that was equivocal, even though to
-leave him might break her heart. The disgrace, the terror,
-the poverty of his lot, nearly crushed him to the
-earth.</p>
-
-<p>“What is your answer to be?” demanded Mr.
-Black.</p>
-
-<p>The poor young fellow sat down and covered his face
-with his hands. He was terribly frightened, and the inherent
-weakness and cowardice of his character, otherwise
-full of noble traits, proved fatal to him now. He
-gasped out:</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I don’t know. I must have time to think. It is all
-so strange&mdash;so terrible.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can have all day in which to consider the matter.
-I have engaged a bedroom for you on the opposite side
-of the hall. I will show you to it, and you can think the
-matter over in solitude.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Black arose and conducted his son across the hall
-to a bedroom overlooking the street and the four corners,
-and here, with a last repetition of the two alternatives
-offered him, he left him.</p>
-
-<p>Poor Rufus, weak and despairing, locked the door and
-dropped upon his knees, sobbing aloud in the extremity
-of his anguish.</p>
-
-<p>“What shall I do? What can I do?” he moaned. “She
-is not my wife. My poor Lally! And I am helpless in
-my father’s hands. I shall have to yield&mdash;I feel it&mdash;I
-know it. I wish I were dead. Oh, my poor wronged
-Lally!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[100]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">NEVA AT HOME AGAIN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The home coming of the heiress of Hawkhurst was far
-different from that which her father had once lovingly
-planned for her when looking forward to her emancipation
-from school. There was no sign of festivity about
-the estate, no gathering of tenants to a feast, no dancing
-on the lawn, no floral arches, no music, no gladness of
-welcome. The carriage containing Neva Wynde and
-Mrs. Artress, and attended by liveried servants, turned
-quietly into the lodge gates, halted a moment while Neva
-spoke to the lodge keepers, whom she well remembered,
-and then slowly ascended the long shaded drive toward
-the house.</p>
-
-<p>Neva looked around her with kindling eyes. The fair
-green lawn with its patches of sunshine and shade, the
-close lying park with the shy deer browsing near the invisible
-wire fence that separated the park from the lawn,
-the odors of the flower gardens, all these were inexpressibly
-sweet to her after her years of absence from her
-home.</p>
-
-<p>“Home again!” she murmured softly. “Although those
-who made it the dearest spot in all the world to me are
-gone, yet still it is home. No place has charms for me
-like this.”</p>
-
-<p>The carriage swept up under the high-pointed arch of
-the lime trees, and drew up in the porch, where the
-ladies alighted. Artress led the way into the house, and
-Neva followed with a springing step and a wildly beating
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>The great baronial hall was not brightened with<span class="pagenum">[101]</span>
-flowers or green boughs. The oaken floor, black as
-ebony, was polished like jet. The black, wainscoted
-walls, hung with ancient pictures, glittering shields, a
-few fowling pieces, a stag’s head with antlers, an ancient
-boar’s head, and other treasures, was wide, cool and
-hospitable. No servants were gathered here, although
-Neva looked for them and was disappointed in not seeing
-them. Most of the servants had been at Hawkhurst
-for many years, and Neva regarded them as old friends.</p>
-
-<p>It had been the wish of the butler and housekeeper to
-marshal their subordinates in the great hall to welcome
-their young mistress, but Lady Wynde, hearing of their
-design, had peremptorily forbidden it, with the remark
-that until she came of age, Miss Wynde would not be
-mistress of Hawkhurst. And therefore no alternative
-had remained for the butler and housekeeper but to
-smother their indignation and submit to Lady Wynde’s
-decree.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Artress flung open the door of the drawing-room
-with an excessive politeness and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Be kind enough to enter, Miss Wynde, and make
-yourself comfortable while I inform Lady Wynde of
-your arrival.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not a guest in my own home, and I decline to
-be treated as one,” said Neva quietly. “I presume
-my rooms are ready, and I will go up to them immediately.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not positive,” said Artress hesitatingly, “as to
-the rooms Lady Wynde has ordered to be made ready
-for your use. I will ring and see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, but I won’t put you to the trouble. I shall
-resume possession of my old rooms, whatever rooms
-may have been made ready,” said Neva half haughtily.</p>
-
-<p>Her cheeks burned with a sense of indignation and
-annoyance at the strangeness of her reception. She<span class="pagenum">[102]</span>
-had not wished for the rejoicings her father had once
-planned for her, but she had entered her own house precisely
-as some hireling might have done, with no one to
-receive or greet her, no one to care if she had come.
-She turned away to ascend the stairs, but paused with
-her foot on the lowest step as a door at the further
-end of the hall opened, and the housekeeper, rosy and rotund,
-with cap ribbons flying, came rushing forward with
-outstretched arms.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my dear Miss Neva,” cried the good woman,
-who had known and loved the baronet’s daughter from
-her birth. “Welcome home, my sweet lamb! How
-you have grown&mdash;so tall, so beautiful, so bright and
-sweet!”</p>
-
-<p>“You dear old Hopper!” exclaimed Neva, springing
-forward and embracing the good woman with girlish
-fervor. “I began to think I must have entered a strange
-house. I am so glad to see you!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Artress looked upon this little scene with an air
-of disgust, and with a little sniff hastened up the stairs
-to the apartments of Lady Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>“Your rooms are ready, Miss Neva,” said Mrs. Hopper&mdash;“your
-old rooms. I made sure you wanted them
-again, because poor Sir Harold furnished them new for
-you only four years ago. I will go with you up stairs.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva led the way, tripping lightly up the broad steps,
-and flitting along the wide upper hall.</p>
-
-<p>Her rooms comprised a suit opposite those of Lady
-Wynde. Neva opened the door of her sitting-room and
-went in. The portly old butler was arranging wreaths
-of flowers about the pictures and statuettes, but turned
-as the young girl came in, and welcomed her with an
-admixture of warmth and respectfulness that were pleasant
-to witness. Then he took his basket of cuttings and
-withdrew, the tears of joy flooding his honest eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[103]</span></p>
-
-<p>The girl’s sitting-room had been transformed by the
-loving forethought of the butler into a very bower of
-beauty. The carpet was of a pale azure hue starred
-with arbutus blossoms, and the furniture was upholstered
-in blue silk of the same delicate tint. The pictures on
-the walls were all choice and framed in gilt, and with
-their wreaths of odorous blossoms, gave a fairy brightness
-to the room. The silvermounted grate was crowded
-thickly with choice flowers from the conservatory, whose
-colors of white and blue were here and there relieved
-with scarlet blossoms like living coals. The wide French
-windows, opening upon a balcony, were open.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, this is home!” said Neva, sinking down upon a
-silken couch, and looking out of one of the windows
-upon the lawn. “I am glad to be back again, Hopper,
-but it’s a sad home coming. Poor Papa!”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Sir Harold!” echoed the housekeeper, wiping
-her eyes. “If he could only have lived to see you grown
-up, Miss Neva. It was dreadful that he should have
-been taken as he was. I can’t somehow get over the
-shock of his death.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall never get over it!” murmured Neva softly.</p>
-
-<p>“I am making you cry the first thing after your return,”
-exclaimed Mrs. Hopper, in self-reproach. “I hope
-those tears are not a bad omen for you, Miss Neva. I
-have arranged your rooms,” she added, “as they used to
-be, and if they are not right you have only to say so.
-You are mistress of Hawkhurst now. Did you bring a
-maid from Paris, Miss Neva?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Mrs. Artress said it was not necessary, and my
-maid at school did not wish to leave France. Mrs. Artress
-said that Lady Wynde had engaged a maid for
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Her ladyship intended to give you her own maid,
-but I made bold to engage your old attendant, Meggy<span class="pagenum">[104]</span>
-West, and she is in your bedroom now. She is wild
-with joy at the prospect of serving you again.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva remembered the girl Meggy with pleasure, and
-said so.</p>
-
-<p>“I had dreaded having a strange attendant,” she said.
-“You were very thoughtful, Hopper. I suppose I ought
-to dress at once. Since Lady Wynde did not meet me
-at the door, she evidently means to be ceremonious, and
-I must conform to her wishes. I am impatient to see
-my step-mother, Hopper. Is she as good as she is handsome?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not fond of Lady Wynde, Miss Neva,” replied
-the housekeeper, coloring. “Her ways are different from
-any I have been accustomed to, but you must judge of
-her for yourself. Sir Harold just worshiped the ground
-she walked on.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva did not pursue her questioning, comprehending
-that Lady Wynde was not adored by the housekeeper,
-whoever else might admire her. The young girl was
-not one to gossip with servants, nor even with Mrs.
-Hopper, who was lady by birth and education, and she
-dropped the subject. Soon after Mrs. Hopper withdrew,
-and Neva went into her bedroom.</p>
-
-<p>She found here the maid who had attended her before
-she had left home, and who was now to resume service
-with her. The girl was about her own age, bright-eyed
-and red-cheeked, hearty and wholesome, the daughter
-of one of the Hawkhurst tenants. Neva greeted her so
-kindly as to revive the girl’s old affection for her with
-added fervor, and, Neva’s trunks having arrived, the
-process of the toilet was at once entered upon.</p>
-
-<p>The dress of the heiress of Hawkhurst was exceedingly
-simple, but she looked very lovely when fully attired.
-She wore a dress and overskirt of white Swiss
-muslin, trimmed with puffs and ruffles. A broad black<span class="pagenum">[105]</span>
-sash was tied around her waist, with a big bow and ends
-at the back. Ear-rings, bracelets, and brooch of jet,
-were her ornaments.</p>
-
-<p>The housekeeper sent up a tempting lunch, and after
-partaking of it Neva went down stairs to the great drawing-room,
-but it was untenanted. She stood in the large
-circular window and looked out upon the cool depths of
-the park, and became absorbed in thought. More than
-half an hour thus passed, and Neva was beginning to
-wonder that no one came to her, when the rustling of
-silk outside the door was heard, and Lady Wynde came
-sweeping into the room.</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship presented a decidedly striking appearance.
-She had laid aside the last vestige of her mourning
-garments, and wore a long maize-colored robe of
-heavy silk, with ornaments of rubies. Her brunette
-beauty was admirably enhanced by her attire, and Neva
-thought she had never seen a woman more handsome or
-more imposing.</p>
-
-<p>Behind Lady Wynde came Artress, clad in soft gray
-garb, as usual, and making an excellent foil to her employer.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Wynde, this is Miss Wynde,” said the gray
-companion, in her soft, cloying voice.</p>
-
-<p>Neva came forward, frank and sweet, offering her
-hand to her step-mother. Lady Wynde touched it with
-two fingers, and stooping, kissed the girl’s forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“You are welcome home, Neva,” she said graciously.
-“I am glad to see you, my dear. I began to think we
-should never meet. Why, how tall you are&mdash;not at all
-the little girl I expected to see.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am eighteen, you may remember, Lady Wynde,”
-returned Neva quietly. “One is not usually very small
-at that age.”</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship surveyed her step-daughter with keen<span class="pagenum">[106]</span>
-scrutiny. She had already heard Artress’ account of the
-voyage home from Calais, and of Neva’s meeting with
-Lord Towyn, and she was anxious to form some idea of
-the girl’s character.</p>
-
-<p>She saw in the first moment that here was not the insipid,
-“bread-and-butter school girl” she had expected.
-The frank, lovely face, so bright and piquant, was full of
-character, and the red-brown eyes bravely uplifted betrayed
-a soul awake and resolute. Neva’s glances were
-as keen as her own, and Lady Wynde had an uncomfortable
-impression that her step-daughter was reading her
-true character.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down, my dear,” she said, somewhat disconcerted.
-“Artress has been telling me about your voyage. Artress
-is my friend and companion, as I wrote you, and
-has lived with me so many years that I have learned to
-regard her as a sister. I hope you will be friends with
-her. She is an excellent mentor to thoughtless youth.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva bowed, but the smile that played for an instant
-on her saucy lips was not encouraging to the would-be
-“mentor.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall try not to trouble her,” she said, smiling,
-“although I shall always be glad to receive advice from
-my father’s wife. I trust that you and I will be friends,
-Lady Wynde, for poor papa’s sake.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde sat down beside her step-daughter.
-Artress retreated to a recessed window, and took up her
-usual embroidery. Neva exerted herself to converse
-with her step-mother, and was soon conscious of a feeling
-of disappointment in her. She felt that Lady
-Wynde was insincere, a hypocrite, and a double-dealer,
-and she experienced a sense of uneasiness in her presence.
-Could this be the wife her father had adored?
-she asked herself. And then she accused herself of injustice
-and harsh judgment, believing that her father<span class="pagenum">[107]</span>
-could not have been so mistaken in the character of his
-wife, and in atonement for her unfavorable opinion she
-was very gentle, and full of deference. Lady Wynde
-congratulated herself upon having won her step-daughter’s
-good opinion after all.</p>
-
-<p>“I must acquire a thorough control and unbounded
-influence over her,” she thought. “But how can I do
-it? If her father had only left her stronger injunctions
-to sacrifice everything to my wishes, I think she would
-obey the injunctions as if a voice spoke to her from the
-grave. She will obey in all things reasonable&mdash;I can
-see that. But if she has formed a liking for Lord
-Towyn, how am I to compel her to marry Rufus
-Black?”</p>
-
-<p>The question occupied her attention even while she
-talked with Neva. It made her thoughtful through the
-dinner hour, and silent afterward. Neva was tired, and
-went to her own rooms for the night soon after dinner,
-and Lady Wynde and Artress talked together for a
-long time in low tones.</p>
-
-<p>“I have it!” said her ladyship exultantly, at last. “I
-have a brilliant idea, Artress, that will make this girl my
-bond-slave. But I shall need the cooperation of Craven.
-I must see him this very evening. It is strange he does
-not come&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“He is here,” said the gray companion, as the house
-door clanged and heavily shut. “I will go to my room.”</p>
-
-<p>She slipped like a shadow down the long triple drawing-room
-and out at one door, as the Honorable Craven
-Black was ushered in at the other. Lady Wynde rose
-to receive him, welcoming him with smiles, and presently
-she unfolded to him the scheme she had just conceived,
-and the two conspirators proceeded to discuss
-it and amplify it, and prepare it for the ensnarement of
-the baronet’s daughter.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[108]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">LADY WYNDE’S IDEA ACTED UPON.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was still early upon the evening of Neva’s return
-to Hawkhurst when Craven Black took his leave of the
-handsome widow and set out upon his walk to Wyndham.
-The summer night was filled with a light, pleasant
-gloom; and the songs of the nightingales, the chirping
-and drumming of insects in the Hawkhurst park
-and plantations, made the air musical. But Craven
-Black gave no heed to these things as he strode along
-over the hilly road. His mind was busy with the
-scheme that had been suggested to him that evening by
-Lady Wynde, and as he hurried along, he muttered:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a good idea, if well worked out. But there’s no
-finesse in it. It’s too simple, if it has any fault. And
-the girl may see through it, although that’s not likely.
-People who are guileless themselves are not apt to suspect
-guile in others. We shall have no difficulty with
-her. The only one who can balk our plans is that obstinate
-boy of mine, whom I have not seen since he shut
-himself up in his chamber. I must know his decision
-before I move a step further in this business. Of course
-he will yield to me; he has never dared pit his will
-against mine, and say to my face that he would not
-obey me. Poor weak coward! If he dares cling to
-that girl he married, I’ll risk the exposure and disgrace,
-and have the marriage legally set aside on the ground
-of his minority. By Heaven, if he dares to beard me,
-he shall find me a very tiger!”</p>
-
-<p>He set his teeth together and his breath came hissingly
-between them as he strode heavily along the village<span class="pagenum">[109]</span>
-street and approached the Wyndham inn. He saw
-that his own rooms were lighted, and that the room
-that he had assigned his son was dark. The fear came
-to him that Rufus had stolen away and returned to his
-young wife with the mad idea of flying with her, and,
-with a muttered curse upon the boy, he hurried into the
-inn and sped swiftly up the stairs, halting at his son’s
-door, with his hand on the knob.</p>
-
-<p>It did not yield to his touch. The door was locked
-from within. Rufus must be within that darkened
-chamber, and as this conviction came to him Craven
-Black recovered all his coolness and self-possession. He
-crossed the hall into his own room and procured a
-lighted lamp, and then returned and knocked loudly on
-his son’s door. No voice answered him. No sound
-came from within the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Can he have committed suicide?” Craven Black
-asked himself, with a sudden fluttering at his heart.
-“He was desperate enough, but I hardly think he could
-have been such a fool as that.”</p>
-
-<p>He shook the door loudly, but eliciting no reply, he
-stooped to the key-hole, and cried, in a clear, hissing
-whisper:</p>
-
-<p>“Rufus, open this door, or I’ll break it in! I’ll arouse
-the whole house. Quick, I say! Be lively!”</p>
-
-<p>There was a faint stir within the room, as if a tortured
-wild beast were sluggishly turning in his cage,
-and then an unsteady step crossed the floor, and an
-unsteady hand groped feebly about the door, seeking
-the key. The bolt suddenly shot back, and then the
-unsteady steps retreated a few paces.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black opened the door and entered the room,
-closing the portal behind him. He set down his lamp,
-and his light eyes then sought out the form of his son.</p>
-
-<p>Rufus stood in the centre of the room, his eyes<span class="pagenum">[110]</span>
-covered with one hand to shade them from the sudden
-light, his figure drooping and abject, his head bowed to
-his breast, his mouth white and drawn with lines of pain.
-It seemed as if years had passed over his head since the
-morning. It would have been scarcely possible to trace
-in this spiritless, slouching figure, in this white, haggard
-face, the boy artist who had left his young wife that
-morning. All the brightness, elasticity and youth
-seemed gone from him, leaving only a poor broken
-wreck.</p>
-
-<p>The cynical smile that was so characteristic of Craven
-Black’s countenance came back to his lips as he looked
-upon his son. He read in the changed aspect of the
-boy that he had achieved a victory over Rufus.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come for your decision, Rufus,” he said.
-“What is it to be? Disgrace, imprisonment, a blasted
-name? Or will you turn from your low-born adventuress
-and accept the career I have marked out for you?
-Speak!”</p>
-
-<p>The hand that shaded the artist’s eyes dropped, and
-he looked at his father with a countenance so wan, so
-woeful, so despairing, that a very demon might have
-pitied him. Yet his father only smiled at what he
-deemed the evidence of the lad’s weakness.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, father,” said the young man hollowly, “will you
-not have mercy upon me&mdash;upon <em>her</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>“None!” replied Craven Black curtly. “Again I
-demand your choice!”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus wrung his hands in wild despair.</p>
-
-<p>“If I abandon her, what will become of her?” he
-moaned. “She will die of starvation! My poor little
-wife!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not call her again by that title!” cried Craven
-Black frowning. “Can you not comprehend that the
-marriage is illegal&mdash;is null and void&mdash;that she is not your<span class="pagenum">[111]</span>
-wife? When she hears the truth, she will turn from you
-in loathing. As to her support, I will provide for her.
-She shall not starve, as she will do if you are sent to
-prison for perjury. For the last time I demand your
-decision. Will you give up the girl peaceably, or will
-you be forced to?”</p>
-
-<p>There was a moment of dead silence. Then the
-answer came brokenly from the young man’s lips.</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I give her up!” he muttered. “God help us
-both!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is well,” declared Craven Black, more kindly.
-“You could not do otherwise. You like the girl now,
-but a year hence you will smile at your present folly.
-Why should you fling away all your possibilities of
-wealth and honor for a silly boyish fancy? Cheer up,
-Rufus. Throw aside all that despair, and accept the
-goods the gods provide you. The girl will marry some
-one else, as you must do. Your future bride has arrived
-at Hawkhurst, and to-morrow evening I shall take you
-to call upon her. I suppose you have eaten nothing since
-the morning, and your first need is supper.”</p>
-
-<p>He rang the bell vigorously, and to the servant who
-came up gave an order for supper&mdash;to be served in his
-own parlor. Taking up his lamp, and drawing his son’s
-arm through his, he conducted Rufus to his own rooms,
-and seated him in an easy-chair. The young man’s
-head fell forward on his breast and he sat in silence,
-but Craven Black, rendered good-natured by the success
-of his schemes, talked at considerable length of the revenues
-of Hawkhurst, and the perfections of Lady Wynde,
-and of Neva, whom he had not yet seen.</p>
-
-<p>The supper of cold game was brought up, and Mr.
-Black ordered two bottles of wine. Rufus refused to
-eat, having, as he declared, no appetite, but he drank an
-entire bottle of wine with a recklessness he had never<span class="pagenum">[112]</span>
-before displayed, and was finally prevailed upon to take
-food. When he had finished, he arose abruptly and retired
-to his own chamber.</p>
-
-<p>The waiter removed the remains of the supper, and
-Craven Black was left alone. He sat a little while in his
-chair, with a complacent smile on his fair visage, and
-then arose and locked his door, and brought forward his
-small inlaid writing-desk and deposited it upon the
-table.</p>
-
-<p>He produced from his pocket a small packet which
-Lady Wynde had given him that evening, and opened
-it. It contained a dozen sheets of note paper, of the style
-Sir Harold had liked and had habitually used. It was a
-heavy cream-colored vellum paper, unlined, and very
-thick and smooth. Upon the upper half of the first page
-was engraven in black and gold the baronet’s monogram
-and crest, and below these to the right, in quaint black
-and gold letters, were stamped the words, “Hawkhurst,
-Kent.” It was upon paper like this that nearly all of Sir
-Harold’s letters to his daughter had been written.</p>
-
-<p>A dozen square envelopes similarly adorned with crest
-and monogram accompanied the paper; and a tiny vial
-of a peculiar black ink, a half stick of bronze wax, Sir
-Harold’s seal, and a half dozen letters, comprised the remaining
-contents of the packet.</p>
-
-<p>The curtains were drawn across the windows, and Mr.
-Black had carefully vailed the keyhole of his door, so he
-leaned back in his chair, with a pleasant feeling of
-security, and engaged in the study of the letters.
-Five of them had been written by Sir Harold to his wife
-during the early part of his visit to India, and bore the
-Indian postmark. The sixth letter had been an enclosure
-in one of those to Lady Wynde, and was addressed
-to Neva. It had evidently been thus inclosed by Sir
-Harold under the impression that Neva would spend her<span class="pagenum">[113]</span>
-midsummer holidays at Hawkhurst in the absence of her
-father. The letter had been opened by Lady Wynde
-and read, and she had thrown it aside, without thought
-of delivering it to its rightful owner.</p>
-
-<p>“How the baronet adored his wife!” thought Craven
-Black, as he carefully perused the letters. “What a
-depth of passion these letters show. It is strange that
-Octavia should not have been touched and pleased by
-his devotion, and learned to return it. But she had an
-equal passion for me, and thought of him only as an
-obstacle to be removed from her path. I never loved a
-woman as Sir Harold loved her. I do not think I am
-capable of such intense devotion. I am fond of Octavia&mdash;more
-fond of her than I ever was of woman before.
-She is handsome, stately and keen-witted. Her tastes
-and mine are similar. She will make me a rich man,
-and consequently a happy one. Four thousand a year
-from her, and ten thousand a year from Rufus when he
-marries Miss Wynde. That won’t be bad. I could have
-married an African with prospects such as these!”</p>
-
-<p>He studied the style of the composition, the peculiar
-expression, and the penmanship, at great length, and
-then took up Sir Harold’s intercepted letter to his
-daughter. It was very tender and loving, and was written
-in a deep gloom after the death of the baronet’s son
-in India. It declared that the father felt a strange conviction
-that he should never see again his home, his wife,
-or his daughter, and he conjured Neva by her love for
-him to be gentle, loving and obedient to her step-mother,
-to soothe Lady Wynde in the anguish his death
-would cause her, if his forebodings proved true, and he
-should die in India.</p>
-
-<p>“Women are mostly fools!” muttered Craven Black
-impatiently. “Why didn’t Octavia send the girl this
-letter? Probably because Sir Harold mentions in it her<span class="pagenum">[114]</span>
-probable anguish at his loss, and she was waiting impatiently
-for the hour of her <a id="Ref_114" href="#BRef_114">third</a> marriage. And Sir
-Harold writes as if he had expected his daughter to
-spend her summer’s holidays at Hawkhurst, and Octavia
-did not want her here at that time. The girl must have
-the letter. It will strengthen Octavia’s influence over
-her immensely.”</p>
-
-<p>After an hour’s keen study, Craven Black seized pen
-and ink and carefully imitated upon scraps of paper the
-peculiar and characteristic handwriting of Sir Harold.
-He had a singular aptitude for this sort of forgery, and
-devoted himself to his task with genuine zeal. He
-wrote out a letter with careful deliberation, studying the
-effect of every line, incorporating some of the favorite
-expressions of the baronet, and this he proceeded to copy
-upon a sheet of the paper Lady Wynde had given him,
-and in a curiously exact imitation of Sir Harold’s penmanship.</p>
-
-<p>He worked for hours upon the letter, finishing it
-to his satisfaction only at daybreak of the following
-morning. His nefarious composition purported to be a
-last letter from Sir Harold Wynde to his daughter, written
-the night before his tragic death in India, and under
-a terrible gloom and foreboding of approaching death!</p>
-
-<p>The forger began the letter with a declaration of the
-most tender, paternal love for Neva on the part of the
-father in whose name he wrote, and declared that he
-believed himself standing upon the brink of eternity,
-and therefore wrote a few last lines to Neva, which he
-desired her to receive as an addenda to his last will and
-testament.</p>
-
-<p>The letter went on to state that Sir Harold adored his
-beautiful wife, but that as she was still young, it was
-not his wish that she should spend the remainder of her
-life in mourning for him. He desired her to marry<span class="pagenum">[115]</span>
-again, to form new ties, to take a fresh lease of life, and
-to make another as happy as she had made him happy!</p>
-
-<p>This message he wished to be delivered to Lady
-Wynde from his daughter’s lips, as his last message to
-the wife he had worshiped.</p>
-
-<p>And now came in the subtle point of the forged missive.
-As from the pen and heart of Sir Harold Wynde,
-the letter went on to say that the father was full of
-anxieties in regard to his daughter’s future. She was
-young, an heiress, and would perhaps become a prey to
-a fortune-hunter. From this fate he desired with all his
-soul to save her.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I should rise in my grave, if my loving,
-tender little Neva were to marry a man who sought her
-for her wealth,” the forged letter said. “If I die here,
-I have a last request to make of you, my child, and I
-know that your father’s last wish will be held sacred by
-you. If I do not die, this letter will never be delivered
-to you. I shall send it to the care of Octavia, to be
-given to you in the case of my death. I know not why
-this strange gloom has come upon me, but I have a premonition
-that my death is near. I shall not see you
-again in life, my child, my poor little Neva, but if you
-obey my last request I shall know it in heaven.</p>
-
-<p>“My request is this. I have long taken a keen interest
-in the character and career of a young man now at
-Oxford. His talents are good, his character noble and
-elevated, his principles excellent. His name is Rufus
-Black. He comes of a fine old family, but he is not
-rich. There is not a man in the world to whom I would
-give you so readily as to Rufus Black. He will come to
-see you at Hawkhurst some day when the edge of your
-grief for me has worn away, and for my sake treat him
-kindly. If he asks you to marry him, consent. I shall
-rest easier in my grave if you are his wife.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[116]</span></p>
-
-<p>“My child, your father’s voice speaks to you from the
-grave; your father’s arm is stretched out to protect you
-in your desolation and helplessness. I lay upon you no
-commands, but I pray you, by your love for me, to
-marry Rufus Black if he comes to woo you. And as
-you heed this, my last request, so may you be happy.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a further page or two of similar purport, and
-then the letter closed with a few last tender words, and
-the name of Sir Harold Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>“It will do, I think,” said Craven Black exultantly.
-“I might have made it stronger, ordered her to marry
-Rufus under penalty of a father’s curse, but that would
-not have been like Sir Harold Wynde, and she might have
-suspected the letter to be a forgery. As it is, Sir Harold
-himself would hardly dare to deny the letter as his own,
-should his spirit walk in here. I’ve managed the letter
-with the requisite delicacy and caution, and there can be
-no doubt of the result. The handwriting is perfect.”</p>
-
-<p>He inclosed the letter, and addressed it to Miss Neva
-Wynde, sealing it with the bronze wax, and Sir Harold’s
-private seal. Then he inclosed the sealed letter in a
-larger envelope, that which had inclosed the baronet’s last
-letter to his wife from India. The letter which had come
-in this envelope was written upon three pages, and contained
-nothing at variance with his forged missive. Upon
-the fourth and blank page of Sir Harold’s last letter he
-forged a postscript, enjoining Lady Wynde to give the
-inclosure&mdash;the forgery&mdash;to Neva, in case of his death in
-India, but to keep it one year, until her school-days
-were ended, and the first bitterness of grief at her father’s
-death was past.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black made up the double letter into a thick
-packet resembling a book, and addressed it to Lady
-Wynde. He gathered together all his scraps of paper
-and the envelopes remaining and burned them, and<span class="pagenum">[117]</span>
-cleared away the evidences of his night’s work. He extinguished
-his lights, drew back his curtains, opened his
-windows to the summer morning breeze, and flung himself
-on a sofa and went to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>He was awakened about eight o’clock by the waiter at
-the door with his breakfast. He arose yawning, gave
-the waiter admittance, and summoned a messenger, whom
-he dispatched to Hawkhurst, early as was the hour, with
-orders to give the packet he had made into the hands
-of Lady Wynde or Mrs. Artress, Lady Wynde’s companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Artress will be on the look-out for him,” thought
-Craven Black. “She will meet the messenger at the
-lodge gates, and carry the packet herself to Octavia. So
-that is arranged!”</p>
-
-<p>He summoned his son to breakfast, and presently
-Rufus came in, worn and haggard, having evidently
-passed a sleepless night. The two men ate their breakfast
-without speaking. After the meal, when the tray
-had been removed, Rufus would have withdrawn, but his
-father commanded him to remain.</p>
-
-<p>“I want you to write a letter to that girl in Brompton,”
-said Craven Black, in the tone that always compelled the
-abject obedience of his son. “Tell her it is all up between
-you&mdash;that she is not your wife&mdash;that you shall never see
-her again!”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot&mdash;I cannot! I must see her again. I must
-break the news to her tenderly&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Do as I say. There are writing materials on my desk.
-Write the letter I have ordered, or, by Heaven, I’ll summon
-a constable on the spot!”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus sobbed pitifully, and turned away to hide his
-weakness. He was but a boy, a poor, weak, cowardly
-boy, afraid of his father, unable to earn a living for himself
-and Lally, unable even to support himself, and he<span class="pagenum">[118]</span>
-had actually gained his marriage license by committing
-perjury&mdash;swearing that he was of age, and his own master.
-He had laid a snare for himself in that wrong act,
-and was now entangled in that snare.</p>
-
-<p>He felt himself helpless in his father’s hands, and sat
-down at the desk, and with tear-blinded eyes and unsteady
-hand, dashed off a wild, incoherent letter to his
-poor young wife, telling her that their marriage was null
-and void&mdash;that she was not his wife&mdash;and that they two
-must never meet again. When he had appended his
-name, he bowed his head on his arms and wept aloud.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black coolly perused the letter and approved
-it. He folded it, and put it in his pocket-book.</p>
-
-<p>“I will take it to her,” he said quietly. “My cab is at
-the door, and I am ready to start to London. I shall take
-the half-past ten express, if I can reach Canterbury in
-time. You will await my return here. I shall be back
-before evening. Reconcile yourself to your fate, Rufus,
-and don’t look so woe-begone. I shall expect to find you
-in a better frame of mind when I return. As to the girl,
-I will provide for her liberally. Fortunately I am in funds
-just now. I shall send her away somewhere where she will
-never cross your path again!”</p>
-
-<p>Without another glance at his son, he took up his hat
-and went out. The rumbling of the carriage wheels, as
-it bore Craven Black on his way to Canterbury, aroused
-Rufus from his stupor. That sound was to him the knell
-of his happiness!</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[119]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">BLACK CONTINUES HIS CONSPIRACY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>As the hours wore on after Rufus Black’s departure
-from the dingy little lodging he had called home, poor
-Lally became anxious and troubled. Her young husband
-had inspired her with a great awe for his father, as well
-as terror of him, but she was a brave little soul and prayed
-with all her heart that Rufus would have courage to confess
-his marriage, let the consequences of that confession
-be what they would. She had a horror of concealment
-or deception, and she believed that Craven Black would
-relent toward his son when he should discover that he
-was really married.</p>
-
-<p>As the afternoon of that first day of solitude wore on,
-and the hour for Rufus’ return drew near, she swept
-and dusted and garnished the dreary little room as well
-as she could, put the shining tin kettle on the grate, and
-made her simple toilet, putting on her best dress, a cheap
-pink lawn that contrasted well with her berry-brown
-complexion, and winding a pink ribbon in her hair.
-She looked very pretty and fresh and bright when she
-had finished, and she stood by the window, her face
-pressed to the glass, all hopefulness and expectancy, and
-looked out upon the opposite side of the crescent until
-long after the hour appointed for her husband’s return.
-But when evening came on and the gas lamps were
-lighted in the streets, her expectancy was changed to a
-terrible anxiety and she put on her shabby little hat
-and hurried out to a little newsstand, investing a penny
-in an evening paper, with a vague idea that there must<span class="pagenum">[120]</span>
-have been an accident on the line and that her husband
-had perhaps been killed.</p>
-
-<p>But no accident being reported, she returned to her
-poor little home, and waited for him with what patience
-she could summon. But he came not, and no message,
-letter, or telegram came to allay her fears. She waited
-for him until midnight, hearkening to every step in the
-street, and then lay down without undressing, consoling
-herself with the thought that Rufus would be home in
-the morning.</p>
-
-<p>But morning came, and Rufus did not come. Poor
-Lally was too anxious to prepare her breakfast, and sustained
-her strength by eating a piece of bread while she
-watched from the window. She assured herself that it
-was all right, that Rufus’ prolonged absence was a sign
-that he had reconciled himself with his father, and that
-probably he would return in company with his parent.
-This idea prompted her to brush her tangled waves of
-hair, and to press out her tumbled dress and otherwise
-make herself presentable.</p>
-
-<p>As the day deepened a conviction that something had
-happened that was adverse to her happiness dawned
-upon her. It was not like Rufus to leave her in such
-suspense, and she was sure that some harm had come to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he has been murdered and thrown out of
-the railway coach,” she thought, her round eyes growing
-big with horror. “I will go to Wyndham by the next
-train.”</p>
-
-<p>She was about to put on her hat when her landlady, a
-coarse, ill-bred woman, opened the door unceremoniously,
-and entered her presence.</p>
-
-<p>“Going out, Mrs. Black?” she demanded, with a sniff
-of suspicion. “I hope you are not going off, like the last
-lodger I had in this ’ere blessed room, without paying of<span class="pagenum">[121]</span>
-the rent? I hope you don’t intend to give me the slip,
-Mrs. Black, which you’ve got no clothes nor furniture to
-pay the rent, and you owing ten and sixpence!”</p>
-
-<p>“I have the money for the rent, Mrs. McKellar,” answered
-Lally, producing her pocket-book, while her
-childish face flushed. “I have no intention of giving
-you the slip, as you call it. I&mdash;I am going down into
-the country to look for my husband. Here is your pay.”</p>
-
-<p>The landlady took her money with an air of relief.
-Her greed satisfied, her curiosity became ascendant.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Mr. Black, if I may be so bold?” she inquired.
-“It’s not like him to be away over night. But
-young men will be young men, Mrs. Black, whether they
-are young gentlemen or otherwise, and they will have
-their sprees, you know, Mrs. Black, although I <em>would</em> say
-that Mr. Black seemed as steady a young gentlemen as
-one could wish to see.”</p>
-
-<p>“He <em>is</em> steady,” asserted the young wife, half indignantly.
-“He never goes on a spree. He&mdash;he went to
-see his father, and said he would be back last night.
-And, oh, I am so anxious!” she cried, her terrors getting
-the better of her reserve. “I am sure he would never
-have stayed away like this if something had not happened
-to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he’s deserted you?” suggested her Job’s
-comforter. “Men desert their wives every day. Lawks!
-What is that?” the landlady ejaculated, as a loud double
-knock was heard on the street door. “It’s not the postman.
-Perhaps Mr. Black has been killed, and they’re
-bringing home his body.”</p>
-
-<p>The poor young wife uttered a wild shriek and flew to
-the head of the stairs, the ponderous landlady hurrying
-after her, and reaching her side just as the slipshod
-maid-servant opened the door, giving admittance to
-Craven Black.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[122]</span></p>
-
-<p>The landlady descended the stairs noisily, and Lally
-retreated to her room. She had hardly gained it when
-Mr. Black came up the stairs alone and knocked at the
-door. She gave him admittance, her big round eyes full
-of questioning terror, her pale lips framing the words:</p>
-
-<p>“My husband?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Black, holding his hat in his hand, closed the door
-behind him. He bowed politely to the scared young
-creature, and demanded:</p>
-
-<p>“You are Miss Lally Bird?”</p>
-
-<p>The slight, childish figure drew itself up proudly, and
-the quivering voice tried to answer calmly:</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir; I am Mrs. Rufus Black. My name used to
-be Lally Bird. Do&mdash;do you come from my husband?”</p>
-
-<p>“I come from Mr. Rufus Black,” replied Craven Black
-politely. “I am the bearer of a note from him, but
-must precede its delivery with an explanation. Mr.
-Black is now in Kent, and will remain there for the summer.”</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I don’t understand you, sir,” said poor Lally,
-bewildered.</p>
-
-<p>There was a rustling outside the door, as the landlady
-settled herself at the keyhole, in an attitude to listen to
-the conversation between Lally and her visitor. Mrs.
-McKellar was convinced that there was some mystery
-connected with her fourth floor lodgers, and she deemed
-this a favorable opportunity of solving it.</p>
-
-<p>“Permit me to introduce myself to you, Miss Bird,”
-said her visitor, still courteously. “I am Craven Black,
-the father of Rufus.”</p>
-
-<p>The young wife gasped with surprise, and her face
-whitened suddenly. She sat down abruptly, with her
-hand upon her heart.</p>
-
-<p>“His father?” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black bowed, while he regarded her and her<span class="pagenum">[123]</span>
-surroundings curiously. The dingy, poverty-stricken
-little room, with its meagre plenishing and no luxuries,
-struck him as being but one remove from an alms-house.
-The young wife, in her wretchedly poor attire, with her
-big black eyes and brown face, from which all color had
-been stricken by his announcement, seemed to him a
-very commonplace young person, quite of the lower
-orders, and he wondered that his university bred son
-could have loved her, and that he still desired to cling to
-her and his poverty, rather than to leave her and wed an
-heiress.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment or more Lally remained motionless and
-stupefied, and then the color flashed back to her cheeks
-and lips, and the brightness to her eyes. She could interpret
-the visit of Craven Black in but one manner&mdash;as
-a token of his reconciliation with his son.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, sir, I beg your pardon,” she said, arising to her
-feet, “but I was sorely frightened. I have been so
-anxious about Rufus. I expected him home last night.
-And I could not dream that you would come to our poor
-home.”</p>
-
-<p>She placed a chair for him, but he continued standing,
-hat in hand, and leaned carelessly upon the chair
-back. He was the picture of elegance and cool serenity,
-while Lally, flushed and excited, glanced down at her
-own attire in dismay.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand that Rufus has remained in Kent,” she
-said, all breathless and joyous, “and I suppose you have
-been kind enough to come to take me to him. I fear I
-am hardly fit to accompany you, Mr. Black. We have
-been so poor, so terribly poor. But I will be ready in a
-moment. Oh, I am so grateful to you, sir, for your
-goodness to us. Poor Rufus feared your anger more
-than all things else. I know I am no fit match for your
-son, but&mdash;but I love him so,” and the bright face drooped<span class="pagenum">[124]</span>
-shyly. “I will be a good wife to him, sir, and a good
-daughter to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stay,” said Mr. Black, in a cold, metallic voice. “You
-are laboring under a misapprehension, Miss Bird. I am
-not come to take you down into Kent. You will never
-look upon the face of Rufus Black again.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Sir!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean it, madam. I pity you from my soul; I do,
-indeed. It were better for you if you had never seen
-Rufus Black. You fancy yourself his wife. You are
-not so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not his wife? Oh, sir, then you do not know?
-Why, we were married at St. Mary’s Church, in the
-parish of Newington. Our marriage is registered there,
-and Rufus has a certificate of the marriage.”</p>
-
-<p>“But still you are not married,” said the pitiless visitor,
-his keen eyes lancing the soul of the tortured girl.
-“Permit me to explain. My son procured a marriage
-license, and he made oath that you and he were both of
-age, and legally your own masters. He swore to a lie.
-Now that is perjury. A marriage of minors without
-consent of parents is null and void, and my consent was
-not given. Your marriage is illegal, is no marriage at
-all. You are as free and Rufus is as free as if this little
-episode had not been.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Heaven!” moaned the young girl, in a wild
-strained voice, sinking back into a chair. “Not married&mdash;not
-his wife!”</p>
-
-<p>“You are not his wife,” declared Craven Black mercilessly.
-“I cannot comprehend by what fascination you
-lured my son into this connection with you, but no
-doubt he was equally to blame. He is well born and
-well connected. You are neither. A marriage between
-you and him is something preposterous. I have no fancy
-for an alliance with the family of a tallow-chandler. I<span class="pagenum">[125]</span>
-speak plainly, because delicacy is out of place in handling
-this affair. You are of one grade in life, we of
-another. I recognize your ambition and desire to rise
-in the world, but it must not be done at my expense.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ambition?” repeated poor Lally, putting her hand
-to her forehead. “I never thought of rising in the world
-when I married Rufus. I loved him, and he loved me.
-And we meant to work together, and we have been so
-happy. Oh, I am married to him! Do not say that I
-am not. I am his wife, Mr. Black&mdash;I am his own wife!”</p>
-
-<p>“And I repeat that you are not,” said Mr. Black
-harshly. “The law will not recognize such a marriage.
-And if you persist in clinging to the prize you fancy you
-have hooked, I will have Rufus arrested on the charge
-of perjury and sent to prison.”</p>
-
-<p>Lally uttered a cry of horror. Her eyes dilated, her
-thin chest heaved, her black eyes burned with the fires
-that raged in her young soul.</p>
-
-<p>“Rufus has recognized the stern necessity of the case,
-and full of fears for his own safety he has given you up,”
-continued Lally’s persecutor. “He will never see you
-again, and desires you, if you have any regard for him
-and his safety, to quietly give him up, and glide back
-into your own proper sphere.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will not give him up!” cried Lally&mdash;“never! never!
-Not until his own lips tell me so! You are cruel, but
-you cannot deceive me. I am his own wife, and I will
-never give him up!”</p>
-
-<p>“Read that!” said Mr. Black, producing the note his
-son had written. “I presume you know his handwriting?”</p>
-
-<p>He tossed to Lally the folded paper. She seized it
-and read it eagerly, her face growing white and rigid
-like stone. She knew the handwriting only too well.
-And in this letter Rufus confirmed his father’s words,<span class="pagenum">[126]</span>
-and utterly renounced her. A conviction of the truth
-settled down like a funeral pall upon her young soul.</p>
-
-<p>“You begin to believe me, I see,” said Mr. Black,
-growing uncomfortable under the awful stare of her horrified
-eyes. “You comprehend at last that you are no
-wife?”</p>
-
-<p>“What am I then?” the pale lips whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t look at me in that way, Miss Bird. Really
-you frighten me. Don’t take this thing too much to
-heart. Of course it’s a disappointment and all that, but
-the affair won’t hurt you as if you belonged to a higher
-class in life. It’s a mere episode, and people will forget
-it. You can resume your maiden name and occupations
-and marry some one in your own class, and some day
-you will smile at this adventure!”</p>
-
-<p>“Smile? Ah, God!”</p>
-
-<p>Poor Lally cowered in her chair, her small wan face
-so full of woe and despair that even Craven Black, villain
-as he was, grew uneasy. There was an appalled
-look in her eyes, too, that scared him.</p>
-
-<p>“You take the thing too hardly, Miss Bird,” he said.
-“I will provide for you. Rufus must not see you again,
-and I must have your promise to leave him unmolested.
-Give me that promise and I will deal liberally with you.
-You must not follow him into Kent. Should you meet
-him in the street or elsewhere, you must not speak to
-him. Do you understand? If you do, he will suffer in
-prison for your contumacy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Heaven be merciful to me!” wailed the poor
-disowned young wife. “See him, and not speak to him?
-Meet him and pass him by, when I love him better than
-my life? Oh, Mr. Black, in the name of Heaven, I beg
-you to have pity upon us. I know I am poor and humble.
-But I love your son. We are of equal station in the<span class="pagenum">[127]</span>
-sight of God, and my love for Rufus makes me his equal.
-He loves me still&mdash;he loves me&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not deceive yourself with false hopes,” interposed
-Craven Black. “My son recognizes the invalidity
-of his marriage, and has succumbed to my will. If you
-know him well, you know his weak, cowardly nature.
-He has agreed never to speak to you again, and, moreover,
-he has promised to marry a young lady for whom
-I have long intended him&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>A sharp, shrill cry of doubt and horror broke from
-poor, wronged Lally.</p>
-
-<p>“It is true,” affirmed Craven Black.</p>
-
-<p>The girl uttered no further moan, nor sob. Her wild
-eyes were tearless; her white lips were set in a rigid
-and awful smile.</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I feel as if I were going mad!” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“You will not go mad,” said Craven Black, with an
-attempt at airiness. “You are not the first woman who
-has tried to rise above her proper sphere and fallen
-back to her own detriment. But, Miss Bird, I must have
-your promise to leave Rufus alone. You must resume
-your maiden name, and let this episode be as if it had
-not been.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not trouble Rufus,” the poor girl said, her
-voice quivering. “If I am not his wife, and he cannot
-marry me, why should I?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is right and sensible. Here are fifty pounds
-which may prove serviceable if you should ever marry,”
-and Mr. Black handed her a crisp new Bank of England
-note.</p>
-
-<p>The girl crumpled it in her hand and flung it back to
-him, her eyes flashing.</p>
-
-<p>“You have taken away my husband&mdash;my love&mdash;my
-good name!” she panted. “How dare you offer me
-money? I will not take it if I starve!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[128]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Black coolly picked up the note and restored it
-to his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>He was about to speak further when the door was
-burst violently open, and the landlady, flushed with
-excitement, came rushing in like an incarnate tornado.
-The rejection of the money by Lally had incensed her
-beyond all that had gone before.</p>
-
-<p>“I keep a respectable house, I hope, Miss,” snapped
-the woman. “I’ve heard all that’s been said here, as is
-right I should, being a lone widow and a dependent upon
-the reputation of my lodging-’us for a living. And
-being as you an’t married, though a pretending of it, I
-can’t shelter you no longer. Out you go, without a
-minute’s warning. There’s your hat, and there’s your
-sack. Take ’em, and start!”</p>
-
-<p>Lally obeyed the words literally. She caught up her
-out-door apparel, and with one wild, wailing cry, dashed
-out of the room, down the stairs and into the street.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Black and the landlady regarded each other in a
-mutual alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“You have driven her to her death, Madam,” said
-Craven Black excitedly. “She has gone out to destroy
-herself, and you have murdered her.”</p>
-
-<p>He put on his hat and left the house. The girl’s flying
-figure had already disappeared, and the villain’s
-conscience cried out to him that she would perish, and
-that it was <em>he</em>, and none other, who had killed her.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[129]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">HOW NEVA RECEIVED THE FORGERIES.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>While Craven Black was successfully pursuing his
-machinations to destroy the happiness of two young
-lives, Lady Wynde had been active in carrying out her
-part in the infamous plot against Neva. The little
-packet of forged letters which had cost Lady Wynde’s
-fellow-conspirator a night of toil, and which had been
-sent to Hawkhurst by a special messenger, had been
-safely delivered into the hands of Mrs. Artress, who had
-been waiting at the gate lodge to receive it. It had so
-happened that not even the lodge keeper had witnessed
-the reception of the packet, and she had dismissed the
-messenger, and carefully concealed the packet upon
-her person, and returned to the house and to the presence
-of her mistress.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde had not yet risen. She lay in the midst
-of her white bed, with her black hair tossing upon her
-ruffled pillow, one white and rounded arm lying upon
-the scarlet satin coverlet, and with a profusion of
-dainty frills and laces upon her person. A small inlaid
-table stood at her bedside, supporting a round silver
-tray, upon which gleamed a silver <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tete-a-tete</i> set of the
-daintiest proportions, and at the moment of her companion’s
-entrance her ladyship was sipping her usual
-morning cup of black coffee, which was expected to tone
-and strengthen her nerves for the day.</p>
-
-<p>She dropped her tiny gold spoon, and looked up
-eagerly and expectantly, and Artress, closing the door,
-drew forth the packet with an air of triumph.</p>
-
-<p>“I have received it,” said the gray companion, “and<span class="pagenum">[130]</span>
-no one is the wiser for it. The messenger thinks it a book,
-and the people at the lodge did not even see it. We are
-in the usual luck, Octavia. Everything goes well with
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad that Craven did not fail me,” murmured
-Lady Wynde. “I feared he might find the task too
-heavy for him. But he is always prompt. Open the
-packet, Artress.”</p>
-
-<p>The companion obeyed, bringing to light the double
-letter, the one Craven Black had forged being securely
-lodged within the last letter Sir Harold Wynde had
-written to his wife from India.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde saw that the inner letter, addressed to
-Neva, was securely sealed, read the forged postscript to
-the letter addressed to her, and placed both under her
-pillow, with a complacent smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Craven is a clever fellow,” she muttered. “And how
-much he loves me, Artress. Not many men could have
-seen the woman they loved marry another, but Craven
-and I have been worldly wise, and we shall reap the reward
-of our self-denial. If we had married three years
-ago, we should have been poor now, mere hangers on
-upon the outskirts of society, tolerated for the sake of
-our connections, but nothing more. But we determined
-to play a daring game, and behold our success. I am
-again a widow, with four thousand a year and a good
-house while I live, and I can lay up money if I choose
-while I continue the chaperon of my husband’s daughter.
-And if our game continues to prosper, and Neva
-marries Rufus Black, Craven and I will make ten thousand
-a year more for the remainder of our lives. Rufus
-will have to sign an agreement giving us that amount
-out of Neva’s income. Think of it Artress; fourteen
-thousand a year!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of which if you win it, I am to have five hundred,”<span class="pagenum">[131]</span>
-said Artress, her gray face flushing. “And if you do not
-win the ten thousand, I am to have two hundred pounds
-a year settled upon me for life. Is not that our bargain?”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde nodded assent.</p>
-
-<p>“And,” continued Artress, “I am to enter society with
-you, to remain with you as your guest instead of companion.
-I have been necessary to you in playing this
-game. I have lived with you some three years now, and
-though people know that I am a lady born, no one suspects
-that I am own cousin to Craven Black, and soon to
-be your cousin by marriage. We have joined our forces
-and wits together in this game, and we shall enjoy our
-success together.”</p>
-
-<p>This, then, was the secret of the connection between
-the two women so unlike each other, yet so in unison in
-their schemes. Mrs. Artress was the cousin of Craven
-Black, and being poor as well as unscrupulous, she was
-his most faithful ally in his stupendously wicked schemes.
-The interests of the three conspirators were indeed identical.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe I will rise,” said Lady Wynde. “I am impatient
-to give this letter to Neva, and to see how she
-receives it. Do you suppose she is up?”</p>
-
-<p>“She has been up these two hours,” answered Artress.
-“She has been all over the house, has talked with the
-butler and the servants, has visited the stable and gardens,
-and has even been into the park. She means to
-assert her dignity as mistress of Hawkhurst, and to win
-the hearts of her dependents, so that in case she disagrees
-with you they will support her.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde frowned darkly.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Neva is not yet of age, and so, although she
-owns Hawkhurst, there may be a question whether she is<span class="pagenum">[132]</span>
-its mistress, or whether I, who am her guardian and her
-father’s widow, am mistress here.”</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship pulled the bell cord at her bed head,
-summoning her maid. Artress retired into Lady Wynde’s
-sitting-room, and upon the appearance of her attendant,
-the widow arose and attired herself in a white morning
-wrapper with crimson trimmings, and put upon her head
-a small square of white lace adorned with crimson bows.
-She had some time since discarded her widow’s cap, as
-“too horribly unbecoming.”</p>
-
-<p>She ascertained that Neva was now in her own rooms,
-and took her way thither, the forged letters in her hand.
-Neva was alone when her step-mother, after a preliminary
-knock upon the door, entered her sitting-room, and
-she greeted Lady Wynde with a smile and look of welcome.</p>
-
-<p>Neva was looking very lovely this morning, flushed
-with her early exercise, her red-brown eyes strangely
-brilliant, her red-brown hair arranged in crimps and
-braids. She wore a simple dress of white lawn, made
-short to escape the ground, and her ribbons and ornaments
-were of black. Lady Wynde fancied that Neva’s
-half-mourning attire was a reproach to her, and this
-fancied reproach, coupled with Neva’s bright, spirited
-beauty, gave an impulse to her incipient dislike to the
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>A vague jealousy of Neva’s youth and loveliness had
-found place in her heart on the previous evening. Now
-that faint spark became fanned into a burning flame.
-She aspired to be a social queen, and here under her very
-roof, and under her chaperonage, was a girl whom she
-felt sure would eclipse her. She would not be known in
-society as the handsome Mrs. Black, but as the chaperon
-of the beautiful Miss Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>But, despite her anger and jealousy, nothing could<span class="pagenum">[133]</span>
-have been more bland and affectionate than the greeting
-of Lady Wynde to her step-daughter. She kissed her
-with seeming tenderness, and caressed her bright hair as
-she said:</p>
-
-<p>“How animated you look, my dear&mdash;fairly sparkling!
-I should fancy that you have an electric sort of temperament&mdash;all
-fire and glow. Is it not so? You remind me
-of your father, Neva. It will be very sweet to have you
-with me, but my grief at my husband’s awful death has
-been so great that until now I could never bear to look
-upon his daughter’s face. I fancied you would look even
-more like him, and I could not have borne the resemblance
-in my first grief.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde sighed deeply, and sat down upon the
-blue silken couch, drawing Neva to a seat beside her.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come in to have a long confidential talk with
-you, my child,” resumed her ladyship. “There should be
-between you and me strangely tender relations. Your
-poor dear father desired us to be all the world to each
-other, and for his sake, as well as your own, I intend to
-be a true and good mother to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, madam,” said Neva, gravely, yet gratefully.
-“I will try to deserve your kindness, and to be a
-daughter to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You do not call me mother,” suggested Lady Wynde,
-reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p>The young girl colored, and her brilliant eyes were
-suddenly shadowed. Her scarlet lips quivered an instant,
-as she said gently:</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me, dear Lady Wynde, but one has but one
-mother. I love my dead mother as if she were living,
-even though I know her only through my dear father’s
-description of her. I cannot give you her name, and I
-think it would hardly be appropriate. You are too young<span class="pagenum">[134]</span>
-to be called mother by a grown-up girl. Does it not
-seem so to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Possibly you are right. Suit yourself, my dear. I
-seek only your happiness. I can be a mother to you,
-even if you decline to give me the name.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I can equally be a daughter to you, dear Lady
-Wynde,” said Neva. “We shall be like sisters, I trust.
-And I desire to say that I hope you will consider yourself
-as fully mistress of Hawkhurst as when poor papa
-was here. I shall not interfere with your rule here, even
-if I may, until I attain my majority. While I live, my
-home shall be a home to my father’s widow.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are very kind, my dear. All these things will
-settle themselves hereafter. I have now to deliver to
-you a last message from your dear father&mdash;a message,
-as I might say, from the grave. Your father’s voice
-speaks to you from the other world, my dear Neva, and
-I know that you will heed its call.”</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship drew forth the packet of letters, and laid
-them on Neva’s knee.</p>
-
-<p>“You have there,” continued Lady Wynde, putting her
-handkerchief to her eyes, “the last letter I ever received
-from my dear husband. You may read it. You will see
-that he had a presentiment of his approaching death; that
-a gloom hung upon him that he could not shake off. That
-letter was written the night before his tragic death.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva opened the letter with trembling hands and
-read it, even to the postscript upon the last page which
-had been forged by the cunning hand of Craven Black.
-Her tears fell as she read it.</p>
-
-<p>“The inclosure&mdash;ah, you have not seen it,” said Lady
-Wynde&mdash;“is the letter alluded to in that last page of the
-letter to me. You see that it has never been opened.
-It is a sealed document to me in every sense, although,
-as poor Sir Harold often told me of his secret wishes in<span class="pagenum">[135]</span>
-regard to your future, I have some suspicion of its contents.
-Your father requested me should he die in India,
-to give you this letter one year after his death. The
-appointed time has now arrived, and I deliver into your
-hands the last letter your father ever wrote, and which
-contains his last sacred wishes in regard to you. You
-are to receive it as an addendum to his will, as a sacred
-charge, as if his voice were speaking to you from his
-home in Heaven!”</p>
-
-<p>She lifted the sealed letter, laying it in Neva’s hands.</p>
-
-<p>The young girl received it with an uncontrollable
-agitation.</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I must read it alone,” she said brokenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, dear. Go into your dressing-room with
-it, and when you have finished reading it come back to
-me. I have more to say to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva departed without a word, and went into the adjoining
-room. As the door closed behind her, Lady
-Wynde softly arose, crossed the floor, and peeped in
-upon the young girl’s privacy through the key-hole of
-the door.</p>
-
-<p>Neva was alone in her dressing-room, and was kneeling
-down before a low chair upon which she had laid
-the forged letter, as yet unopened. The baronet’s widow
-watched the girl as she examined the address and the
-seal, and then cut open the top of the letter with a pocket-knife.
-Neva unfolded the closely written sheet, all
-stamped with her father’s monogram, and with low sobs
-and tear-blinded eyes began to read the letter, accepting
-it without doubt or question as her father’s last letter
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde’s eyes gleamed, and a mocking smile
-played about her full, sensual lips, as Neva read slowly
-page after page, still upon her knees, now and then
-pausing to kiss the handwriting she believed to be her<span class="pagenum">[136]</span>
-father’s. The forger’s work had been well done. The
-tender pet names by which Sir Harold had loved to call
-his daughter were often repeated, with such protestations
-of affection as would most stir a loving daughter’s
-heart when receiving them long after the death of her
-father, and believing them to have been written by that
-father’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, papa! poor, poor, papa!” the girl sobbed. “He
-foresaw my loneliness and desolation, and left these last
-words to cheer me. I will remember your wishes so
-often expressed in this and other letters. I will be kind
-and gentle and obedient to Lady Wynde. I will try to
-love her for your sake.”</p>
-
-<p>When she had grown calmer, Neva read on. As she
-read that her father had a last request to make of her,
-she smiled through her tears, and murmured:</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad that he has left me something to do&mdash;whatever
-it may be. I should like to feel that I am
-obeying him still, although he is in Heaven. Dear papa!&mdash;your
-‘request’ is to me a sacred command, and I shall
-so consider it.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde’s eyes glittered like balls of jet. She
-had estimated rightly the childlike trust of Neva in her
-father’s love and devotion to her.</p>
-
-<p>“She accepts the whole thing as gospel!” thought
-the delighted schemer. “Our success is certain. But
-let me see how she takes it, when she finds what the
-‘request’ is.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva perused the letter slowly, and again and again,
-with careful deliberation. Her surprise became apparent
-on her features, but there was no disbelief, no distrust,
-betrayed on her truthful face. But a wan whiteness
-overspread her cheeks and lips, and a weary look came
-into her eyes, as she folded the letter at last and hid it
-in her bosom. She bent her head as if in prayer, and<span class="pagenum">[137]</span>
-murmured words which Lady Wynde tried in vain to
-hear. They were simple&mdash;only these:</p>
-
-<p>“It is very strange&mdash;very strange; but papa meant it
-for the best. He feared to leave me unprotected, and a
-prey to fortune-hunters. Who is this Rufus Black? Oh,
-if papa had only mentioned Lord&mdash;Lord Towyn!”</p>
-
-<p>The very thought brought a vivid scarlet to Neva’s
-face in place of her strange pallor, and as if frightened at
-her own thought, she arose and went to the open window,
-and leaned upon the casement.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde stole back to her couch, and she was sitting
-upon it the picture of languor when Neva returned,
-very pale now and subdued, and with a shadow of trouble
-in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you finished your letter so soon, dear?” asked
-the step-mother, sweetly. “I believe I can guess what
-were the last injunctions to you of your dear father. He
-often told me of his plans for you. Shall you do as he
-desired?”</p>
-
-<p>Again the glowing scarlet flush covered Neva’s cheeks,
-lips, even her slender throat.</p>
-
-<p>“My father’s last wishes are a command to me,” she
-said, slowly, yet as if her mind were quite made up to
-obey the supposed wishes of her father.</p>
-
-<p>“It was Sir Harold’s request that you should marry a
-young man in whom he took considerable interest&mdash;one
-Rufus Black, was it not?” asked Lady Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>Neva uttered a low assent.</p>
-
-<p>“And you will marry this young fellow?”</p>
-
-<p>“My father liked him well enough to make him my&mdash;my
-husband,” said Neva. “I can trust my father’s
-judgment in all things. I never disobeyed papa in his
-life, and I cannot disobey him now that he seems to speak
-to me from Heaven. If&mdash;if Rufus Black ever proposes<span class="pagenum">[138]</span>
-marriage to me, and if he is still worthy of the good
-opinion papa formed of him, I&mdash;I&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Her voice broke down, as she remembered the fair,
-boyish face, the warm blue eyes, the tawny hair and
-noble air of Lord Towyn, and again with inward shame
-the question framed itself in her mind&mdash;why could not
-her father have recommended to her affection young Arthur
-Towyn, whom her father had loved next to his own
-son? Why must he desire her to marry a man she had
-never seen?</p>
-
-<p>“You will marry Rufus!” demanded Lady Wynde, as
-the girl’s pause became protracted.</p>
-
-<p>Neva bowed her head&mdash;she could not speak.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde’s face glowed, and an evil light gleamed
-in her eyes. Her heart throbbed wildly with her evil
-triumph.</p>
-
-<p>“You are indeed a good and faithful daughter, Neva,”
-she said caressingly. “In accordance with your father’s
-wishes, I must give Mr. Black every chance to woo you.
-I believe he knows something of what Sir Harold designed
-for you and him, and he is at this moment at
-Wyndham village. He is staying at the inn with his
-father, and both will call upon you this evening.”</p>
-
-<p>“So soon?”</p>
-
-<p>“The sooner the better. I have not seen Rufus Black,
-but his father called here last evening. The father
-knew poor Sir Harold intimately. And, Neva, dear, in
-honor of your guests, and in deference to my wishes, you
-ought to lay aside all vestige of your mourning to-day.
-You have worn black a year, and that is all that modern
-society demands.”</p>
-
-<p>“The outward garb does not always indicate the feelings
-of the heart,” said Neva. “I will change my manner
-of dress, since you desire it, but I shall mourn for
-papa all my days.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[139]</span></p>
-
-<p>As Neva became thoughtful and abstracted, Lady
-Wynde soon took her leave. She found Artress in her
-sitting-room and the gray companion had no need to
-ask of her success.</p>
-
-<p>“Our silly little fish has swallowed the bait,” said
-Lady Wynde. “She is ready to immolate herself ‘for
-dear papa’s sake,’ although I could see that she is already
-interested in Lord Towyn. I am impatient for evening.
-I want to see how young Rufus Black will proceed in
-his task of winning the heiress of Hawkhurst.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">THE MEETING OF NEVA AND RUFUS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The hours of his father’s absence in London were full
-of an insupportable suspense to Rufus Black. He was
-tempted to hurry up to town by the next train, and only
-his weakness and cowardice prevented him from flying
-to the succor of his wronged young wife. His terror of
-his father was a lion in his way. And the act of perjury
-he had committed in declaring himself of age when obtaining
-his marriage license&mdash;an act more of thoughtlessness
-and boyish ardor than of deliberate lying&mdash;arose
-now between him and poor Lally like a wall of iron.
-He had erred, and must accept the consequences, but he
-thought to himself that he would give all his hopes of
-heaven if Lally might have been spared his punishment.</p>
-
-<p>Anguished and despairing, he put on his hat and
-hurried out into the street, eager for fresh air and for
-action. He passed out of the little hamlet, seeing no
-one, and wandered into the open country, where a noble<span class="pagenum">[140]</span>
-park bordered one side of the road, and fair green fields
-stretched far away upon the other. Both park and fields
-belonged to the domain of Hawkhurst, but Rufus Black
-was unconscious of the fact until he came out in full
-view of the great gray stone house throned upon the
-broad ridge of ground, and set in its parks and gardens
-like some rare jewel in its setting.</p>
-
-<p>Then he recognized the place, and muttered moodily:</p>
-
-<p>“So, this is what I am to sell my soul for? A goodly
-price, no doubt, and more than it is worth. The owner
-of all this wealth cannot go begging for a husband, be
-she ugly as Medusa. Perhaps, after all, I have been
-troubling myself for nothing. She may not choose to
-accept a shabby young man, without a penny in his
-pocket, and with a gloomy face. If she refuses me, I
-dare say that father will let me go back to Lally.”</p>
-
-<p>This thought afforded him some comfort, and he
-plodded on, seeking relief from his troubles in exertion.
-He cared not whither he went, and his surprise was
-great when at last, arousing from his abstraction, he
-found himself in the streets of Canterbury.</p>
-
-<p>He was near an inn of the humbler sort, and, with a
-sudden recklessness as to what became of him, he turned
-into the low barroom and demanded a private parlor.
-A bare little apartment on the upper floor, overlooking
-the inn stables, was assigned him. The floor was uncovered,
-and a deal table, rush-bottomed chair and
-rickety lounge made up the sum of the furniture.</p>
-
-<p>Rufus called for brandy and water, tossing a shilling
-to the frowsy waiter. A decanter of brandy and a bottle
-of water were brought to him, and he entered upon
-a solitary orgie. He had not been used to drink, and
-the fiery liquid mounted to his brain, inducing stupidity
-and drunkenness. For an hour or two he drank with
-brief intermission, but sleep overpowered him, and his<span class="pagenum">[141]</span>
-head fell upon the table and he snored heavily. With
-his red face, dishevelled hair and stertorous breathing,
-his unmistakable aspect of drunkenness, he presented a
-terrible contrast to the hopeful boy artist with his honest
-eyes and loving soul, who had made the dingy lodging
-in New Brompton a very paradise to poor Lally.</p>
-
-<p>The day wore on. A waiter looked in upon the poor
-wreck, once or twice, and went away each time chuckling.
-In the latter part of the afternoon Rufus awakened,
-and came to himself. Ashamed and conscience-stricken,
-his first thought being of what Lally would
-think of him, he summoned a waiter and demanded
-strong coffee and food. These were furnished him, and
-having partaken of them he settled his bill, and set out
-to walk back to Wyndham.</p>
-
-<p>“It makes no difference what becomes of me now,” he
-said to himself, as he strode along the return route. “I
-have started down hill, and I may as well keep on
-descending.”</p>
-
-<p>He had accomplished half the distance between Canterbury
-and his destination, when a four-wheeled cab,
-traveling briskly, came up behind him, compelling him
-to take to the side path. The next moment the cab
-stopped, and Craven Black’s head was protruded from
-the open window, and Craven Black’s smooth voice
-called:</p>
-
-<p>“Is that you, Rufus? What are you doing away out
-here? Jump in! jump in!”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus obeyed, entering the vehicle, and the cabman
-drove on.</p>
-
-<p>“Where have you been?” demanded the elder Black,
-as the son settled himself upon the front seat and opposite
-his father.</p>
-
-<p>“I have spent the day in Canterbury,” returned Rufus
-sullenly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[142]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What have you been doing there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Getting drunk,” was the dogged answer.</p>
-
-<p>The young man’s face testified to his truthfulness.
-His eyes, wild in their glances, were bloodshot and
-watery, and he had a reckless air, as if he had thrown
-off all restraints of virtue and decency.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black experienced a sense of alarm. He began
-to fear lest his son would defeat all his plans by his
-obstinacy and recklessness.</p>
-
-<p>“You do not ask me about the girl,” said the father,
-with more gentleness than was usual to him. “I have
-seen her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I supposed you had,” was the reply. “I gave you
-her address.”</p>
-
-<p>“I told her the truth,” said Craven Black, puzzled by
-his son’s strange mood. “I explained to her kindly
-enough that her marriage with you was no marriage at
-all. She readily accepted the situation. She cried a little,
-to be sure, but she said herself that she was of lower
-rank than you, and that the match was too unequal.
-She&mdash;she said that of course all was over between you,
-and it was best you and she should never meet again.
-And in fact, to render any such meeting impossible, she
-left her lodging while I was there.”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus fixed a burning gaze upon his father.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe a word you say,” he cried. “The
-news you carried to her broke my darling’s heart. Do
-you suppose I do not know how much she loved me? I
-was all she had in the wide world&mdash;her only friend.
-Think of that, sir! Her only friend&mdash;and you have torn
-me from her. If she dies of grief, you are her murderer.”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black shuddered involuntarily, remembering
-poor Lally’s flight, and his conviction that she had<span class="pagenum">[143]</span>
-gone to destroy herself. His emotion did not pass unnoticed
-by his son.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Lally!” said Rufus, his voice trembling. “It’s
-all over between us forever. I have blighted her life,
-ruined her good name, and made her an outcast. Yet
-it was not I who did this. It was you. Her blood be
-upon your head. If I could find her and were free to
-woo her, she would never take me back, now that I have
-proved myself a liar, perjurer and pitiful wretched coward.
-It is indeed all over between us. You can do what
-you like with the wreck you have made me. You might
-have given me a chance to redeem myself; you might
-have let me be true to her, but you would make me
-perjure myself doubly. I hope you are pleased with
-your work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let there be an end of these silly boyish reproaches,”
-exclaimed Mr. Black harshly. “You have done with the
-girl, and are about to enter upon a new life. I have
-generously forgiven your errors and crimes. If you repeat
-the drunkenness of to-day, I’ll send you to prison.
-Try me, and see if I do not. I have brought you a trunk
-from London, filled with new clothing from your tailor,
-shirt-maker, boot-maker and jeweller. I have spared no
-expense to make you look as my son should look. And
-now, by Heaven, if you disgrace me to-night by any
-recklessness and folly, any mock despair, I’ll prosecute
-you on that charge of perjury.”</p>
-
-<p>“You need not fear that I shall disgrace myself, or
-insult my hostess,” said Rufus doggedly. “You think
-no one has the instincts of a gentleman save yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>With such recriminations as these, the pair beguiled
-their drive to Wyndham; nor did they cease from them
-after their arrival in Mr. Black’s private parlor. A sullen
-silence succeeded in good time, and reigned throughout<span class="pagenum">[144]</span>
-the dinner, of which they partook together. After
-dinner, they retired to their several rooms to dress.</p>
-
-<p>The trunk Mr. Black had brought from London had
-been deposited in his son’s chamber. Rufus had the
-key, and unlocked the receptacle, bringing to light an
-ample supply of fine garments, perfume cases, a dressing
-case, and a set of jewelled shirt studs in a little velvet
-case.</p>
-
-<p>He arrayed his boyish figure in his new black garments,
-noticing even in his despair that they fitted him
-as if he had been measured for them. He waited in his
-room until his father came for him, and submitted sullenly
-to his father’s careful inspection.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll do,” commented Craven Black. “If you act
-as well as you look, I shall be satisfied. Mind, if you
-mention to Miss Wynde one word about the girl Lally,
-it’s all up with you. The cab is waiting. Come on!”</p>
-
-<p>They descended together to the cab, and were conveyed
-to Hawkhurst. On arriving at the mansion, they
-alighted, and entered the great baronial hall, sending in
-their cards to Lady Wynde by the footman. The baronet’s
-widow having signified to her domestic that she
-was “always at home” to Mr. Black and his son, the
-visitors was ushered into the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde and Artress arose to receive them. Craven
-Black presented his son, and the baronet’s widow
-welcomed the young man graciously. She was looking
-unusually well this evening in a robe of pale amber silk,
-with a row of short locks trimmed squarely, nursery
-fashion, across her low polished forehead, a long black
-curl trailing over each shoulder, and her cheeks glowing
-with suppressed excitement. Rufus remembered having
-seen her before her marriage to Sir Harold Wynde, and
-his face brightened as at the sight of a friend.</p>
-
-<p>He was acquainted, although slightly, with his father’s<span class="pagenum">[145]</span>
-cousin, Mrs. Artress, and as he held out his hand to her,
-he looked his surprise at seeing her at the house of Lady
-Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>“I am her ladyship’s hired companion,” said Artress,
-explainingly. “My husband left me very poor, you know,
-Rufus, and I have been in dear Lady Wynde’s employ
-for some three years. I beg you not to recognize me as
-a relative, nor to mention the fact to any one. I have my
-family pride, you know, Rufus, and it is hard to be
-obliged to earn one’s own living when one has not been
-brought up to it.”</p>
-
-<p>Her reasons for concealment of the relationship existing
-between them seemed to Rufus no reasons at all, but
-he could not gainsay her wishes, and muttered that he
-would obey her.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Wynde has gone out for a solitary stroll in the
-park,” observed Lady Wynde, as Mr. Black’s eyes wandered
-about the room. “I sent her out for the fresh air.
-She is not looking well, I regret to say. Mr. Rufus, if
-you will be kind enough to go down the wide park
-avenue, you cannot fail to find her. I beg you will
-introduce yourself to her, and bring her back to the
-house.”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus bowed, and stepping lightly out of the open window,
-moved leisurely toward the park.</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothing like an informal meeting,” said
-Lady Wynde, looking after the young man. “I planned
-to have the meeting occur in this way, so that neither
-should be embarrassed by the presence of a third
-party.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should have preferred to keep my eye upon Rufus,”
-remarked Mr. Black uneasily. “Did you give the letter
-to the young lady?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and she received it exactly as I had expected she
-would. She is not at all the style of girl I looked for,<span class="pagenum">[146]</span>
-Craven, and it is fortunate for our plans that she cared so
-much for her father.”</p>
-
-<p>While the conspirators were thus conversing, Rufus
-crossed the lawn and entered the park by a small gate.
-The wide avenue, a fine carriage drive, was readily found,
-and Rufus walked for some distance upon it, keeping a
-vigilant look-out for Miss Wynde. He was beginning to
-meditate upon a return to the house without the young
-lady, when a flutter of white garments among the dusky
-shadows of a side path caught his gaze. He plunged
-into the path without hesitation, and presently overtook
-the wearer of the garments, who was of course Miss
-Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>Hearing his swift approach, she halted and turned her
-face toward him. Rufus also halted, strangely embarrassed
-under her brave full glance. She had laid aside
-her mourning garments, and wore rose-colored ribbons
-and a profusion of frills and puffs and lace, in which she
-looked very fair and dainty and sweet. Her wine-brown
-eyes were all aglow, but her cheeks were pale, and her
-face was very grave, even to sadness.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon,” said Rufus awkwardly, raising
-his hat. “I am looking for Miss Wynde.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am Miss Wynde,” said Neva, with gentle courtesy.</p>
-
-<p>The young man’s embarrassment was not lessened by
-this announcement.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Wynde sent me to look for you,” he declared.
-“I&mdash;I am Rufus Black!”</p>
-
-<p>Neva started and looked at him with her grave, serious
-eyes. He appeared to advantage in his new garments,
-and his face was pale and worn by the day’s dissipation.
-His sorrows and his sickness had given him a
-refined look to which he was not fully and fairly entitled,
-and his eyes met hers frankly and honestly, with a
-real admiration in their gaze.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[147]</span></p>
-
-<p>Neva’s cheeks flushed slightly, and her heart fluttered.
-Clearly Rufus Black had not made an unfavorable impression
-upon her in that first glance.</p>
-
-<p>They turned and walked slowly up the path together,
-entering the avenue. Rufus tried to conquer his unwonted
-awkwardness, and singularly impressed with
-Neva’s beauty, exerted himself to please her. They
-sauntered on, stopping now and then to gather ferns or
-flowers, and when they emerged from the park upon the
-lawn, they were chatting gayly, and on the best of terms
-with each other.</p>
-
-<p>And yet the heart of each was strangely sore. Neva
-thought of what “might have been,” and sighed in
-her inmost soul that the husband her father was supposed
-by her to have chosen for her was not the one her
-heart most longed for. And Rufus mourned as bitterly
-as ever in his soul for his lost young wife, and felt that
-he should never be comforted.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black and Lady Wynde watched them as they
-approached the house, and the lip of the former curled,
-as he muttered:</p>
-
-<p>“So fade the griefs of the young! Unstable as water,
-Rufus is already this girl’s lover!”</p>
-
-<p>“They are mutually pleased,” murmured Lady
-Wynde. “Her father’s supposed wishes and this young
-man’s interesting melancholy will soon efface Lord
-Towyn’s image from Neva’s mind, if it has made any
-impression there.”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed indeed as if the opinion of the worldly-wise
-conspirators would be justified.</p>
-
-<p>The young couple halted upon the lawn, and Neva’s
-gravity and the melancholy of Rufus began to disappear,
-when the lodge gates swung open, and three gentleman
-came riding up the avenue.</p>
-
-<p>The long twilight had begun, and even Neva’s keen<span class="pagenum">[148]</span>
-eyes could not recognize the new-comers at that distance,
-and she chatted merrily to Rufus, who answered
-as lightly. But as the horsemen came nearer, and Neva
-regarded them more closely, a sudden silence fell upon
-her, and a strange shyness seized her.</p>
-
-<p>It was a critical movement in the progress of the
-game which Craven Black and Lady Wynde were playing,
-and these new-comers had arrived in time to give
-a new turn to it.</p>
-
-<p>For Neva recognized them as the three guardians of
-her property&mdash;Sir John Freies, Mr. Atkins, and the
-young Lord Towyn!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">MR. BLACK GETS A NEW IDEA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>As Neva recognized the youngest of her three guardians,
-as they rode up the avenue of Hawkhurst at a
-leisurely pace, a strange embarrassment seized upon
-her. The horsemen had not yet seen her in the twilight
-and the shadow of shrubbery, and she proposed a
-return to the drawing-room. Rufus Black assented,
-and they passed in at the open French window which
-gave directly upon the marble terrace.</p>
-
-<p>The drawing-room was full of shadows. Artress sat
-in a recessed window, silent and immovable, and Lady
-Wynde and Craven Black were in the second portion of
-the triple arched apartment, completely hidden from
-view, and their low whispers barely penetrated to the
-outer room. Lady Wynde, hearing her step-daughter’s
-return, came forth, rang for lights, and ordered the lace
-curtains to be dropped.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[149]</span></p>
-
-<p>A score of wax candles were presently glowing in their
-polished silver sconces, and a couple of moon-like lamps
-dispensed a mellow radiance that penetrated to every
-corner of the triple room. The curtains, fluttering in
-the soft night breeze, shut out all insects, but admitted
-the perfumed air. Craven Black, satisfied that his <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tete-a-tete</i>
-with Lady Wynde was over for the present, sauntered
-into the outer room to make the acquaintance of
-the young heiress.</p>
-
-<p>He had thought of Neva as an insipid, affected, weak-headed
-young lady, who would be a mere puppet in his
-hands and those of Lady Wynde. His surprise may be
-imagined when he beheld a slender, spirited girl, with
-eyes of red gloom, brown hair tinted with the sunshine,
-scarlet lips, and a piquant face, full of an irresistible
-witchery and sauciness&mdash;a girl so bright and keen of
-intellect, so resolute and strong in herself, that he wondered
-that she could ever have been imposed upon by
-even his skilfully forged letter.</p>
-
-<p>“Neva, my dear,” said Lady Wynde, “allow me to
-present to you the Honorable Craven Black&mdash;one of your
-dear papa’s friends, and consequently yours and mine.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva acknowledged the introduction by a bow of her
-haughty little head, and a smile so warm and sweet that
-Craven Black was captivated by it. Any friend of her
-late father’s had a peculiar claim upon Neva’s friendship,
-and Craven Black resolved to elaborate the small
-fiction, and coin agreeable little anecdotes of his relations
-to her father, so that the heiress would be inspired
-with a liking for him.</p>
-
-<p>Before time had been granted for more than the usual
-commonplaces incident to an introduction, the three
-guardians of Miss Wynde were announced by the footman,
-and were ushered into the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>Sir John Freise came first&mdash;a tall, stately old gentleman,<span class="pagenum">[150]</span>
-with white hair and closely cropped whiskers, distinguished
-for his old-fashioned courtliness of bearing,
-and noted throughout Kent for his unswerving integrity.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Atkins, the attorney, came next, looking more
-than ordinarily insignificant of person, his bald head
-shining, his honest face flushed to redness. He was not
-fine looking, nor well shaped, but, like Sir John, he was
-a man of invincible integrity and honesty of character,
-and many years of service to Sir Harold Wynde had
-inspired him with a genuine affection for the family, and
-given him, as one might say, a personal interest in its
-prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, and because he preferred to come last, was
-young Lord Towyn, as handsome as any knight of chivalry,
-his golden hair tossed back from his noble forehead,
-his blue eyes glowing, and a warm smile playing
-about his tawny mustached lips.</p>
-
-<p>Neva recognized her guardians, and welcomed them
-all in turn with handshakings and quiet greetings. Lady
-Wynde introduced the Blacks, father and son, to the
-new-comers.</p>
-
-<p>“This is scarcely a business visit, Miss Neva,” said Sir
-John Freise, leading his young hostess to a sofa with old-fashioned
-gallantry. “Lord Towyn and Mr. Atkins have
-been closeted with me to-day, discussing your affairs in
-the way of rents and leases, but it is our business to
-spare you these details, and it is your province to enjoy
-the fruits of our labors,” and he smiled paternally upon
-her. “We are come to welcome you back to the home
-of your fathers, and to express the hope that you will
-fill worthily the place your father has resigned to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will try to walk in papa’s steps,” returned Neva,
-lowly and gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Freise and my girls will call upon you to-morrow,”
-said Sir John. “They sent their love to you,<span class="pagenum">[151]</span>
-and would have come to-day, but that I begged them to
-allow you a day to rest in after your journey. You will
-be inundated with visitors, Miss Neva. The Lady of
-Hawkhurst will not be permitted to hide her light under
-a bushel! Lady Freise has already projected no end of
-fetes, balls and dinners in your honor, and she has persuaded
-our young friend Lord Towyn to spend a month
-with us, so that you will not lack an escort, should you
-desire one.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are very thoughtful, Sir John,” said Lady
-Wynde, with a curl of the lip. “Miss Wynde, however,
-can never lack for an escort. I fancied, when I saw you
-three gentlemen enter in such formidable array, that
-some horrid red-tape business was about to be transacted.
-I did not know indeed but that you had come
-with some official suggestions as to the management of
-the household, or to discuss the matter of pin-money.”</p>
-
-<p>“All that is settled by Sir Harold’s will,” said Mr.
-Atkins quietly. “The baronet was very explicit in his
-directions, and assigned to Miss Wynde an extraordinarily
-liberal allowance until she comes of age, when, of
-course she comes into full possession of her magnificent
-revenues. Your residence at Hawkhurst was also provided
-for, Lady Wynde with a very handsome allowance
-in recognition of your services to Miss Wynde as friend
-and chaperon.”</p>
-
-<p>“And are we compelled to remain at Hawkhurst,
-whether we will or not?” demanded the baronet’s
-widow.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly not,” replied Atkins. “You and Miss
-Wynde are free to reside where you please, but it is
-natural to suppose you will prefer for a stated residence
-the seat of the family grandeur.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde made no reply, but her glittering eyes
-became speculative.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[152]</span></p>
-
-<p>The visitors, while courteous to her ladyship, bestowed
-the larger share of their attention upon the young heiress
-to whom their visit was directed. They had intended
-to make but a brief call, but the time flew by as if on
-wings. Neva talked with them with cheerful gayety or
-gravity, as the subject rendered befitting, and at Sir
-John’s request played and sang for him. Lord Towyn
-leaned over the piano, turning the music leaves, a rapt
-expression on his face, and there was not one present,
-save Neva, who failed to see that he was already the
-lover of the beautiful young heiress.</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Black recognized the fact with an actual jealousy.
-He said to himself with a furious bitterness that
-his happiness and Lally’s had been ruined for the sake
-of Neva Wynde, and he would not be cheated of fortune
-and bride by the young earl.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black sat apart, his forehead shaded by his
-hand, his light eyes fairly devouring the glowing loveliness
-of Neva’s face. He was a world-worn, base, dissolute
-man, incapable of honor and fidelity, even to
-the woman who had sinned and perilled so much for
-him. As he sat there, he contrasted Neva’s spirited and
-dainty beauty with the maturer and lesser charms of
-Lady Wynde, and strange thoughts and hopes awoke to
-life within his breast.</p>
-
-<p>“My fate is not so settled as to be irrevocable,” he
-thought within himself. “I wish I had seen the girl
-before I forged that letter. Why should I throw myself
-away upon four thousand a year and a woman of
-the world when, by skillful manœuvring, I might gain
-seventy thousand per annum and a bride like an houri?
-I will study my chances. If there is a chance for me
-with Neva, I will run the race with these others and win
-the prize.”</p>
-
-<p>And so, all unknown and unsuspected by Neva, she<span class="pagenum">[153]</span>
-had three aspirants to her hand among those who listened
-to her music.</p>
-
-<p>And of these three lovers, one only was pure and true
-and altogether worthy of her love. Only one loved her
-without a shadow of greed, and that one was the young
-Lord Towyn.</p>
-
-<p>But which, should she choose among these three,
-would she prefer? To whose fate, of these three, would
-she link her own? Would a regard for the supposed
-wishes of her dead father outweigh the desires of her
-own heart? These were problems which time alone
-could solve.</p>
-
-<p>After the music, Lady Wynde rang for coffee, which
-was brought in and dispensed to the guests. Sir John
-Freise, waxing eloquent upon the degeneracy of modern
-society, held Lady Wynde captive. Rufus Black wandered
-down the length of the drawing-rooms, looking
-with an artist’s eye at the glorious pictures upon the
-walls. Mr. Atkins and Craven Black engaged in conversation,
-and Artress sat apart, silent and observing, as
-usual.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Towyn and Neva also looked at the pictures
-and talked of their childhood days, growing animated
-over their pleasant reminiscences. The young earl
-gradually drew his hostess into the great conservatory,
-a huge glass dome at the bottom of the drawing-room.
-Here the air was heavy with fragrance. Stalks of white
-lilies sprang from the side walls, bearing pistils of red
-and dancing light. Aisles of tropical shrubbery, thick
-with golden fruitage or snowy blossoms, or both at once,
-stretched on either side. A feathery palm reared its
-plumed head in the very centre of the dome. Vines
-trailed and festooned themselves from floor to roof,
-dropping perfume from fiery chalices. And through
-the light foliage of a well-trimmed jungle of flowers and<span class="pagenum">[154]</span>
-leaves, gleamed a great mellow moon of light, reminding
-one of a Brazilian forest on a moonlit summer night.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember when we were here last, Neva?”
-asked Lord Towyn, as they paused beside the marble
-basin of a great fountain, and Neva idly dropped rose
-petals upon the crystal waters. “We were standing
-upon this very spot, with only that marble Naiad to
-hear us, and you and I were but children when we
-entered upon our childish betrothal. How long ago
-that seems! Do you remember it, Neva?”</p>
-
-<p>The rose petals in the girl’s white fingers were not
-brighter than her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I remember,” she said, dropping her head over
-the bright waters. “What precocious children we were,
-Lord Towyn.”</p>
-
-<p>The young earl sighed.</p>
-
-<p>“The utterance of my title shows the great gulf between
-the now and the then,” he said. “I was no lord
-in those days, and you called me Arthur. Now when
-your name comes instinctively to my lips, I must remember
-that you are no longer Neva, but Miss Wynde.
-Why will you not call me by the old name, and let us
-take up our old friendship where we left off, instead of
-beginning anew as strangers?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am willing,” said Neva frankly, yet shyly. “I&mdash;I
-look upon you as a brother, Arthur, and you may call
-me Neva.”</p>
-
-<p>Strange to say, the permission thus granted did not
-seem to delight Lord Towyn. His warm blue eyes
-clouded over with a singular discontent, and a pained
-expression gathered about his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to be considered as your brother,
-Neva,” he declared, after a minute’s struggle with himself.
-“I would prefer to begin again as your merest acquaintance.
-A fraternal relation toward you would<span class="pagenum">[155]</span>
-be insupportable. For years I have dreamed and hoped
-that I might some time win your love. I am no longer
-a boy, Neva, and I love you with a man’s love. I have carried
-your picture for years next my heart. I have worshiped
-you in secret ever since our childhood. I do not know
-how I have been betrayed into this confession, Neva,” he
-added. “I did not intend to be so premature. I do not
-yet ask you to love or to marry me, but I do ask you to
-allow me to become your suitor.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva’s heart thrilled under this ardent and impassioned
-declaration as under an angel’s touch. Then a leaden
-pall seemed to descend upon her soul, and her face grew
-white, as she faltered:</p>
-
-<p>“It cannot be, Arthur.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Towyn shivered with sudden pain.</p>
-
-<p>“You&mdash;you are not promised to another, Neva?”</p>
-
-<p>“N-no!”</p>
-
-<p>“You love another then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, no!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is that I have startled you by my premature confession,
-Neva?” he cried tremulously. “Dolt that I am!
-I have thought and dreamed of you so much, that I had
-forgotten how perfect a stranger I must seem to you
-after all these years of separation. You cannot take up
-the old life where we dropped it. I was foolish to have
-expected it. Do not let my undue haste prejudice you
-against me. It will not, Neva?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Arthur,” answered the girl lowly and hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“And you will give me a chance to reprieve my error?”
-he demanded eagerly. “Perhaps in time you may grow
-to love me, Neva&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Arthur,” said the young girl, nerving herself to tell
-him of her father’s supposed last wishes, “I have something
-to say to you. Papa&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[156]</span></p>
-
-<p>Her voice died out in a half sob.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, darling?” said the young earl, bending nearer
-to her, his eyes burning with the love that filled his being.
-“What of Sir Harold? Did you fancy that he would
-not have approved of our love?”</p>
-
-<p>Neva nodded a dumb assent.</p>
-
-<p>“And if Sir Harold had approved, do you think you
-could learn to love me?” whispered the young earl softly,
-his eager breath fanning the girl’s cheek.</p>
-
-<p>Neva’s silence was interpreted as a favorable answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Before my father died,” said Lord Towyn gently,
-“he told me that it had long been his wish and that of
-Sir Harold to unite the two families in our marriage.
-Sir Harold was in India at the time of my father’s death,
-and was not likely, at that distance from home, to have
-contracted an aversion to me, or to have formed other
-plans for your future. You see, I am right, Neva, and now
-I claim to be considered as your suitor. May it not be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Arthur,” the girl murmured, sorely perplexed,
-“I&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The story trembled on her lips, but she did not give
-utterance to it, for at that critical moment Rufus Black
-entered the conservatory, and came up the flower-bordered
-aisle, with an unmistakable displeasure upon his
-melancholy face.</p>
-
-<p>Neva started guiltily at his approach, as if she had been
-wronging him or her dead father in listening to Lord
-Towyn’s avowals of love. But although she moved away
-from the young earl, she paused under a tropical rose-tree,
-and began to gather roses, and her two suitors hovered
-about her, each recognizing in the other a rival.</p>
-
-<p>They were presently joined by Neva’s third lover,
-Craven Black. The last-named looked moodily and
-jealously at his son and the young earl, and devoted
-himself so closely to the heiress that, with a feeling of<span class="pagenum">[157]</span>
-annoyance, Neva presently proposed a return to the
-drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>A glance of jealous anger from the eyes of Lady
-Wynde greeted Craven Black as he reentered the presence
-of his betrothed. The baronet’s widow began to
-entertain a suspicion of the disaffection of her lover.</p>
-
-<p>Sir John Freise was the first to propose a departure,
-and the horses were ordered, and he, with Mr. Atkins
-and Lord Towyn, took their leave.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black exchanged a few whispered words with
-Lady Wynde, appointing an interview for the next
-morning, and then also departed with his son.</p>
-
-<p>They were to walk to Wyndham, and not a word was
-spoken by either as they strode down the wide avenue,
-and passed out at the lodge gates. Once out upon the
-highway, Craven Black broke the silence, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Rufus, how do you like Miss Wynde?”</p>
-
-<p>“She is beautiful&mdash;lovely beyond comparison,” answered
-Rufus enthusiastically. “I never saw a being
-so witching, so bright, so sweet!”</p>
-
-<p>“You talk like a lover,” sneered Craven Black. “One
-would not believe that you had been lying drunk all day
-at a low inn through love for another woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will drive me mad!” ejaculated Rufus, his voice
-choking suddenly. “How dare you taunt me with my
-misery and degradation? I did love Lally&mdash;I do love
-her, God knows. But you have separated us. She despises
-me, and I am thrown upon myself. Why grudge
-me the little comfort Miss Wynde’s presence and smiles
-give me? If I had never met Lally, I should have idolized
-Miss Wynde. And as Lally can never be mine
-again&mdash;my poor wronged girl&mdash;and I shall go to perdition
-unless some hand pulls me back, I turn to Miss
-Wynde as a drowning man might turn to any frail support<span class="pagenum">[158]</span>
-and cling to it. I&mdash;I like her. I could almost say
-I love her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Enviable elasticity of youthful affections!” sighed
-Craven Black, still sneeringly, and speaking in a stilted
-voice. “You remind me of a child, Rufus, whose doll is
-smashed to-day, but who is equally content with a new
-one to-morrow. You remind me also of the old maid’s
-prayer. She wanted one man and another, but as the
-years went on and she grew old, she ceased to pray for
-the affections of any man in particular, but cried out,
-‘Any, O Lord, <em>any</em>!’ And so, I judge, one woman is to
-you the same as another. It is ‘Lalla Rookh’ one day,
-and Miss Wynde the next. ‘Extremes meet.’”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus grew terribly angry.</p>
-
-<p>“You talk as if you were dissatisfied with me for obeying
-your own orders to make myself agreeable to Miss
-Wynde,” he ejaculated. “Do you want her now for
-yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Black hastened to disclaim any such desire.</p>
-
-<p>“As to me,” said Rufus, with unwonted decision, “I
-will not be much longer dependent upon you. I will
-win Miss Wynde and her fortune, or I’ll blow my brains
-out. Lally is lost to me, but all is not lost, as I thought
-this morning. I like Miss Wynde. I even love her
-already, strange as it may seem, but I do not and cannot
-love her as I love poor Lally. But I shall marry her
-and make her happy. I am desperate, but by no means
-helpless and hopeless.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Black maintained a dogged silence during the
-remainder of the walk. He bade his son good-night
-coldly upon the inn stairs, and locked himself in his own
-rooms, muttering:</p>
-
-<p>“The girl has three lovers, for my fickle son really
-loves her. I must watch my chances, and not loosen my
-hold upon Octavia until I have made sure of Neva. In<span class="pagenum">[159]</span>
-default of the greater prize, I must not lose the lesser. It
-requires some skill to sit upon two stools and not fall between
-them. I wish I could have foreseen the turn affairs
-would take, and had inserted my name in that forged letter
-in place of my son’s name. I shall have to be pretty
-keen to do away with the effect of that letter. I would
-give all I own in the world at present to know which
-of her three lovers will win the heiress of Hawkhurst.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">RUFUS ASKS THE MOMENTOUS QUESTION.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Craven Black and his son met at their late breakfast in
-the private parlor of the former. The father was himself
-again, cold, polite, and cynical. The son was sullen and
-irritable, at war with himself and all mankind. His grief
-for the loss of his young wife had lost none of its poignancy,
-although he had avowed himself the suitor of another.
-His thoughts during the night just passed had
-been all of Lally, and not of Neva. In his dreams at
-least, he was still true to the loving heart he had
-broken.</p>
-
-<p>The pair were sipping their coffee when a waiter
-brought in Mr. Black’s morning paper, just arrived from
-London. Craven Black unfolded the sheet and scanned
-its contents lazily.</p>
-
-<p>“Any news?” inquired Rufus.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing particular. It’s all about a war in prospect
-between Prussia and France. I never read politics, so I’ll
-skip the French letter and alarming head lines. I prefer
-to read the smaller items. Ah, what is this?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[160]</span></p>
-
-<p>Craven Black started and changed color as his eye
-rested upon a familiar name in an obscure paragraph,
-under a startling title. His agitation increased as he
-glanced over the paragraph, taking in its meaning.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” demanded Rufus. “Any of
-your acquaintance dead? Any one left you a fortune?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is terrible,” said Craven Black, shuddering, and regarding
-the paper with horrified eyes. “How could she
-have been so utterly foolish and insane? It was not I
-who killed her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Killed whom? Then some one is dead?”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor girl!” muttered Craven Black, still staring at
-the paper with wide eyes, as if he read there an accusation
-of wilful murder. “Poor Lally&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Who?</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus leaped to his feet with a shriek on his lips,
-bounded to his father’s side, and snatched the paper in
-his trembling hands.</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I see nothing,” he cried. “You shocked me cruelly.
-I&mdash;I thought that Lally&mdash; Oh, my God!”</p>
-
-<p>He stood as if suddenly frozen, staring as his father
-had done at an item in a lower corner of the paper&mdash;an
-item which bore the title: “Distressing Case of Suicide.
-Another unfortunate gone to her death!”</p>
-
-<p>From the midst of this paragraph the name of Lalla
-Bird stood out with startling distinctness.</p>
-
-<p>Unconsciously to himself, Rufus Black read the brief
-paragraph aloud in a hoarse, strained, breathless sort of
-voice, and his father listened with head bent forward,
-and with a horrified look graven on his face, as upon
-stone.</p>
-
-<p>“Last evening,” the notice read, “as officer Rice was
-pursuing his usual beat, a young woman dashed past him,
-bonnetless, her hair flying, and ran out upon Waterloo
-Bridge. She was muttering wildly to herself, and her<span class="pagenum">[161]</span>
-aspect was that of one beside herself. The officer, comprehending
-her purpose, rushed after her, but he was too
-late to arrest her in her dread purpose. She looked back
-at him, sprang up to the parapet like a flash, and with
-a last cry upon her lips&mdash;a name the officer could not
-make out&mdash;she precipitated herself into the river. In
-falling, her head struck a passing boat, mutilating her
-features beyond all semblance of humanity. She was
-dead when taken from the water, and will have a pauper’s
-burial unless some one comes forward to claim her
-remains. No token of her identity was found upon her
-person, but her handkerchief, floating on the water and
-picked up immediately by a boatman, bore the name of
-Lalla Bird. The girl, for she was very young, was
-pretty, and without doubt belonged to that frail class
-which more than any other furnishes us suicides.”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Black read this paragraph to the very end, and
-then the paper fell from his nerveless hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Dead!” he said hollowly. “Dead!”</p>
-
-<p>“Dead!” echoed his father hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Dead!</em>” said Rufus Black, turning his burning, terrible
-eyes upon his father’s face. “And it was you who
-killed her! I loved her&mdash;I would have been true to her
-all her days, but you tore us asunder, and drove her to
-despair, madness and death. You are her murderer!”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black started, nervously, and looked around
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, Rufus&mdash;don’t,” he ejaculated uneasily. “Some
-one might hear you. The girl is to blame for killing
-herself, and no one else can be held accountable for
-it. I offered her money but she would not take it. It
-was the landlady who drove her to the&mdash;the rash act.
-The old woman listened at the door, and suddenly burst
-in upon us and called the girl some foul name and<span class="pagenum">[162]</span>
-ordered her out of her house. The girl fled as if pursued
-by demons. I thought then she meant to kill herself&mdash;just
-as she has done!”</p>
-
-<p>A groan burst from Rufus Black’s lips.</p>
-
-<p>“My poor, poor wife!” he moaned. “She <em>was</em> my
-wife, and she shall not lie in a pauper’s grave. I am
-going up to London&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“To make a fool of yourself,” interrupted Craven
-Black, recovering from his shock. “And to-morrow
-morning the papers will all come out with the romantic
-story that this girl was your wife, and the story will stick
-to you all your days. People will say that you drove
-her to her death. Your chance of becoming master of
-Hawkhurst will end on the spot. You will be cast out
-and abhorred. Others as pretty and as good as this girl
-have been buried at the public expense. Leave her alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose you go then? What will you say to the
-coroner, or police justice? What excuse will you have
-for abandoning your wife, as you persist in calling the
-girl? Shall you confess your perjury? Can you stand
-the cross-questioning, the badgering, the prying into
-your life and motives?”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus shrank within himself in a sort of terror. The
-besetting weakness and cowardice of his nature now
-paralyzed him.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot go,” he muttered. “Oh, Lally, my lost
-wronged wife!”</p>
-
-<p>He dashed from the room, and entered his own, locking
-his door, and was not visible again that day.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black attired himself in morning costume and
-walked over to Hawkhurst. Neva was in the park, and he
-had a long private interview with Lady Wynde. In returning
-to his inn, he crossed the park, ostensibly to cut<span class="pagenum">[163]</span>
-short his walk, but really to exchange a few words with
-the heiress.</p>
-
-<p>He found her in one of the wide shaded paths, but she
-was not alone. Lord Towyn, on his way to the house,
-had just encountered her, and they were talking to each
-other, in utter forgetfulness of any supposed obstacles to
-their mutual love. Craven Black accosted them, and
-lingered a few moments, and then pursued his way
-homeward, while the young couple slowly proceeded
-toward the house.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black called at Hawkhurst the next day, and
-the next, but alone, Rufus remaining obstinately sequestered
-in his darkened chamber. Neva was busy with
-visitors, Lady Freise and her daughters, and other friends
-and neighbors, hastening to call upon the returned
-heiress. Lord Towyn found excuses to call nearly every
-day. He was devoting all his energies to the task of
-wooing and winning Neva, and he pushed his suit with
-an ardor that brought a cynical smile to Craven Black’s
-lips continually.</p>
-
-<p>There were fetes given at Freise Hall in Neva’s honor;
-breakfast and lawn parties at other houses; and the
-young girl found herself in a whirl of gayety in strong
-contrast with her late life of seclusion.</p>
-
-<p>During the week that followed the publication of the
-announcement of Lally Bird’s suicide, Rufus Black did
-not cross his threshold. He meditated suicide, and wept
-and bemoaned his lost darling with genuine anguish.
-During this week, Craven Black made various overtures
-to Miss Wynde, uttered graceful compliments to her
-when Lady Wynde was not within hearing, and threw a
-lover-like ardor into his tones and countenance when
-addressing her. But he could not see that he was regarded
-by her with any favor, and grew anxious that
-his son should again enter the lists, and win her from<span class="pagenum">[164]</span>
-Lord Towyn, who seemed to be having the field nearly
-to himself.</p>
-
-<p>After an energetic talk with his son, Craven Black
-persuaded Rufus to emerge from his retirement and to
-again visit Hawkhurst. There is a refining influence about
-grief, and Rufus had never looked so well as when, habited
-in black, his face pale, thin, and sharp-featured, his
-eyes full of melancholy and vain regret, he again called
-upon Neva. The impression he had made upon her
-upon the occasion of his first visit had been favorable,
-and it became still more favorable upon this second
-visit. Neva received the impression, from his steady
-melancholy and the occasional wildness of his eyes, that
-he was a genius, and became deeply interested in him.</p>
-
-<p>Add to this interest the influence of the forged letter,
-which she devoutly believed to have been written by her
-father now dead, and one will see that even Lord Towyn
-had in the boy artist a dangerous rival.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde steadily pursued her preparations for
-her marriage, keeping a keen watch upon her lover,
-whom she more than suspected of faithlessness to her.
-She loved him with all her wicked soul, and was anxious
-to secure him in matrimonial chains, but her engagement
-to him had not yet been announced, and even Neva
-did not know of it.</p>
-
-<p>By the exercise of Lady Wynde’s influence, the Blacks,
-father and son, were invited to all the parties given in
-Neva’s honor, and Rufus Black and Lord Towyn were
-ever at the side of the young heiress. Lady Wynde
-hinted judiciously to a few of her chosen friends that
-Neva and young Black were informally betrothed, but
-that the betrothal was still a secret.</p>
-
-<p>As the summer passed and September came, bringing
-near at hand the time appointed for the marriage of
-Lady Wynde and Craven Black, both the Blacks, father<span class="pagenum">[165]</span>
-and son, became uneasy and restless. The former was
-anxious to try his fate with Neva before committing
-himself beyond retrieval with her step-mother. Rufus
-had learned to love the heiress with a genuine love, not
-as he had loved Lally, but still with so much of fervor
-that he believed he could not live without her. His
-grief for his young wife had not lessened, but time had
-robbed the blow of its sharpest sting, and he thought
-of Lally in heaven, while he coveted Neva on earth. He
-grew anxious to put his faith to the test.</p>
-
-<p>A favorable opportunity was afforded him.</p>
-
-<p>Neva was fond of walking, and frequently took long
-walks, despite the fact that she had carriages and horses
-at command. One mild September evening, after her
-seven o’clock dinner, she walked over to Wyndham village
-to purchase at the general dealer’s some Berlin
-wool urgently required for the completion of a sofa pillow,
-or some such trifle, and sauntered slowly homeward
-in the gloaming.</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Black, who was idly wandering in the streets
-at the time, hurried after her and offered his escort, and
-took charge of her parcel. They walked on together.</p>
-
-<p>As they emerged from the village into the open country,
-Rufus felt that the hour had come in which to learn
-his fate from Neva’s lips. He revolved in his mind a
-dozen ways of putting the momentous question, but the
-manner still remained undecided when Neva sat down
-to rest upon a way-side bank in the very shadow of
-Hawkhurst park.</p>
-
-<p>This bank was her favorite halting-place when going
-on foot to or from Wyndham. It was shaded by a giant
-oak, and clothed in the softest and greenest turf. Here
-the earliest primroses blossomed and hearts-ease starred
-the ground. Near the bank a small private gate opened
-into the park. Rufus decided in his own mind that this<span class="pagenum">[166]</span>
-was the spot, and this soft, deepening twilight the hour
-for the avowal of his love.</p>
-
-<p>There was no one within the park within view to interrupt
-him; no one coming along the road. With a
-slight sense of nervousness he even surveyed a way-side
-thicket that flanked the bank upon one side, as if fearing
-some way-side tramp might be lurking there within
-hearing, but he saw nothing to discountenance his projects.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a lovely evening,” said Neva softly, looking up
-at the shadowing sky and around her at the shadowed
-earth. “The air is full of balm!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it is lovely,” said Rufus, fixing his gaze upon
-the young girl, as if he meant his remark to apply to
-her face. “How the time has sped since I first saw you,
-Miss Neva. Life was very dark to me in those July
-days, but you have given it a glow and brightness I did
-not dream that it could ever possess. It seems to me
-that I never existed until&mdash;until I knew you. You cannot
-fail to know that I love you. I have often thought
-that you have purposely encouraged my suit. But be
-that as it may, I love you more than all the world, Miss
-Neva. Will you be my wife?”</p>
-
-<p>He waited in a breathless suspense for her reply.</p>
-
-<p>Neva’s face did not flush with joy, as it might have
-done had the speaker been Lord Towyn. She looked
-very grave, and into her eyes of red gloom came a sadness
-that was terrible to see.</p>
-
-<p>“I like you, Rufus,” she said gently, looking beyond
-him with a strange, far-seeing gaze. “I believe you to
-be good and honorable&mdash;would to God I did not&mdash;for
-then&mdash;then&mdash;Rufus, I do not know what to say to you.
-What shall I answer you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Say Yes,” pleaded Rufus, with the energy of a gathering
-terror. “Do not refuse me, Neva, I implore you. I<span class="pagenum">[167]</span>
-am not handsome and titled like Lord Towyn; I am
-plain and awkward, but I love you with all my soul.
-I place my fate in your hands. I have it in me to become
-great and good, and if you will be my wife I will be
-noble for your sake. But if you cast me off, I shall
-perish. In you are centred all my hopes. Oh, Neva, I
-beseech you to be merciful to me, and to save me from
-the utter misery of a life without you. I cannot&mdash;cannot
-live if you cast me off!”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke with an earnestness that went to Neva’s soul.
-She trembled, as if the burden of responsibility laid
-upon her were too heavy to be borne. In her uplifted
-eyes was a wild, beseeching look, as if she called upon
-her father from his home in heaven to aid her now.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember,” said Rufus desperately, “you are deciding
-upon my life or death&mdash;mortal and physical!”</p>
-
-<p>Neva read in the declaration an awful sincerity that
-made her shudder.</p>
-
-<p>“I must think,” she faltered. “I cannot decide so
-suddenly. Give me a week, Rufus&mdash;only a week in
-which to decide. Oh,” she added, under her breath,
-with a passionate emphasis, “if papa only knew! He
-would have spared me this.”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus assented to the delay with a beaming face. If
-she had intended to refuse him, he thought, she would
-have done so on the spot. But she had not refused
-him, and there was hope. She should be his wife, and
-he would be master of Hawkhurst yet.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of his self-gratulations, Neva arose and
-walked slowly onward, grave and sorrowful. Rufus
-walked beside her with a joyous tread.</p>
-
-<p>When they had passed on into the thickening shadows,
-and the primrose bank had been left far behind, a
-ragged, childish figure stirred itself from the further
-shadow of the thicket, and a childish face, wan and<span class="pagenum">[168]</span>
-thin and haggard, with a woman’s woe in the great
-dark eyes, looked after the young pair with an awful
-horror and despair.</p>
-
-<p>That face belonged to the disowned young wife whom
-Rufus mourned as dead! The wild and woful eyes were
-the eyes of Lally Bird!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">THE YOUNG WIFE’S DESOLATION.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was indeed poor Lally Bird, the wronged young
-wife, whom her husband mourned as dead, who, crouching
-in the shelter of the way-side thicket, stared after
-Neva Wynde and Rufus Black with eyes full of a burning
-woe and despair.</p>
-
-<p>“He loves her! He loves her!” the poor young creature
-moaned, in the utter abandonment of her terrible
-anguish. “He said her answer meant life and death to
-him! And I am so soon forgotten? Oh, he never loved
-me&mdash;never&mdash;never! And he does love her with all his
-soul&mdash;O Heaven!”</p>
-
-<p>She sank back into the deeper shadow of the thicket,
-moaning and wringing her hands.</p>
-
-<p>Her hat had fallen off, and her face was upturned to
-the gray evening sky. That face, still childlike in its
-outlines and in its innocence, yet sharp of feature, wan,
-thin and haggard, was full of wild beseeching. The
-great hungry black eyes were upraised to Heaven in
-agonized appeal.</p>
-
-<p>How terribly alone in all the wide world she was! Alone
-and friendless, with no roof to shelter her, no food to<span class="pagenum">[169]</span>
-break a long fast, no money. She was ragged and forlorn,
-her feet peeping from their frail coverings, her
-sharpened elbows protruding through her sleeves. And
-now her last hope had been dashed from her, and it
-seemed as if nothing remained to her but to die.</p>
-
-<p>The story of her life from the moment in which she
-had fled from her dingy lodgings at New Brompton, had
-been one of bitterness and privation.</p>
-
-<p>When she had escaped from her only shelter, half
-maddened and wholly despairing, with the voices of
-Craven Black and Mrs. McKellar yet ringing in her ears,
-her first impulse had been self-destruction. She had
-sped along the streets until, by a circuitous route, she
-had gained the river and a jutting pier, but it was daylight,
-and people were in waiting for the boats, so her
-dread purpose was checked, and she wandered on, wild
-of face and half distraught, keeping the river ever in
-sight, as if the view of its waters soothed her mad despair.</p>
-
-<p>Wandering aimlessly onward, she passed through foul
-river streets, where the vile of every sort congregated,
-but no one spoke to her or molested her. The shield of
-a watchful Providence interposed between her and all
-harm. Once or twice some ruffian would have accosted
-and stayed her, but a glance into her white and rigid face
-and wild unseeing eyes made him shrink back abashed,
-and she sped on as if pursued, not knowing the dangers
-she had escaped.</p>
-
-<p>She grew weary of foot, and to the wildness of her
-anguish succeeded a merciful apathy, which steeped her
-senses. The night came on; the gas lamps were lighted
-in the streets; the warehouses and shops were closed,
-there were fewer women in the streets; and in happy
-homes in the suburbs, at the north and south and east
-and west of the great teeming city, wives and daughters<span class="pagenum">[170]</span>
-were gathered into pleasant homes. But she had no
-home, no refuge, no shelter. She had&mdash;oh, saddest of
-words, and saddest of meaning&mdash;she had nowhere to
-go!</p>
-
-<p>And so she plodded on, slowly and wearily now. She
-had traversed miles since leaving her lodgings, and it
-seemed as if her march, like that of the fabled Wandering
-Jew, must be eternal.</p>
-
-<p>At last, still wandering without aim, she staggered
-through the turn-gate and out upon the Waterloo Bridge,
-in the wake of a party of returning play-goers. No one
-noticed her, and she passed half-way over the bridge
-and sank down upon one of the stone benches, while
-the party she had followed went on and were soon lost
-to view in the Waterloo Road.</p>
-
-<p>She was alone on the bridge, in the night and darkness.
-Below her lay the dark river, with the small
-steamers puffing and glancing through the gloom with
-their tiny eyes of fire, and lowering their stack-pipes as
-they passed under the bridge. A few people stood at
-the landing below. Somerset House, dark and silent,
-like some gigantic mausoleum, lay to her left. Along
-the river banks were the great warehouses, long since
-closed for the night, and in the distance the dome of St.
-Paul’s reared its head, faint and shadowy, among the
-deeper shadows.</p>
-
-<p>The glancing lights of the river boats, the lamps at the
-landing and along the shores looked strangely unreal to
-Lally’s dazed eyes. She crouched in a corner of the
-seat and peered over the parapet and tried to think, but
-her brain seemed paralyzed. The only thought that
-came to her was that she was no wife, that Rufus had
-abandoned and disowned her, and that he was to marry
-another.</p>
-
-<p>People crossed the bridge in laughing groups as the<span class="pagenum">[171]</span>
-Strand theatres and concert-halls closed, but no one paid
-heed to, even if they saw, the slender, crouching figure
-with its wild, fearing eyes. Sometimes, for many minutes
-together, Lally was alone upon that portion of the
-bridge&mdash;alone with her desperate soul and her terrible
-temptation to end her sorrows in one fatal plunge.</p>
-
-<p>She arose in one of these intervals to her feet upon
-the bench and leaned over the parapet, a prayer upon
-her lips that Heaven would forgive the deed she meditated.
-And, as she stood poised for the leap into eternity,
-there came back to her, though years had passed
-since she heard it, the voice of her mother, as she had
-once listened to it, denouncing the self-murderer as one
-who destroys his soul as well as his body. The remembrance
-of the words, and the thought of her mother,
-caused her to drop again into the corner of her bench
-sobbing, and weeping a storm of tears that saved her
-reason.</p>
-
-<p>The wild outburst of her anguish had been succeeded
-by a strange dullness and apathy, when a woman&mdash;a
-mere girl&mdash;“bonnetless, and her hair flying,”&mdash;as the
-Blacks had read in the paper&mdash;came running upon the
-bridge with moans upon her lips. Lally was as pure
-and innocent as a little child, yet she knew at a glance
-that this poor creature belonged to that class which is
-often termed “unfortunate”&mdash;as Heaven knows they
-are indeed, in every sense of the sad word. This girl
-came up to the very niche where Lally was hidden, and
-sprang upon the bench. She gave one wild look over
-her shoulder, at the officer who pursued her, and then,
-with the name of some man upon her lips, tossed up her
-arms, and sprang over the parapet&mdash;into eternity!</p>
-
-<p>Lally uttered a cry of horror.</p>
-
-<p>“It might have been me!” was her first thought, and<span class="pagenum">[172]</span>
-trembling and terrified, she looked over at the whirling
-figure as it struck heavily upon the passing boat.</p>
-
-<p>And in the same instant Lally’s handkerchief, upon
-which her name was marked, and which she had held in
-her hand, dropped over the parapet upon the body of
-the woman. That accident it was that changed poor
-Lally’s destiny. For the poor suicide was she of whose
-death Rufus Black read in the paper of the following
-morning, and Lally’s handkerchief found upon the
-water beside the dead girl gave the impression that the
-suicide was Lally Bird.</p>
-
-<p>The presence of Lally upon the bridge escaped the
-notice of the officer, who turned and ran along the
-bridge to the end, and hurried down to the pier, whither
-the rescued body of the suicide was being carried.</p>
-
-<p>People began to gather upon the bridge, seeming almost
-to spring up miraculously, and Lally, fearing questioning,
-or detention as witness of the suicide, arose and
-went back by the way she had come, up Wellington
-street, into the Strand. She was sufficiently herself by
-this time to know that she must seek shelter for the
-night; but where could she go? What respectable inn
-would give shelter to one so forlorn of aspect, so utterly
-alone as she? She would be driven forth as something
-disreputable and unclean, should she demand lodgings
-at such an inn. She had money in her pocket&mdash;the
-share Rufus had given her of the ten pounds his father
-had sent him&mdash;but she might almost as well have been
-penniless, since her money could not procure her respectable
-shelter for the night.</p>
-
-<p>There might be some home for friendly wanderers,
-some asylum for respectable women, where she could
-pass the dangerous hours of darkness, but she knew of
-none. Such asylums are generally for reclaimed women,
-not for those who have never gone astray. The<span class="pagenum">[173]</span>
-omnibuses were still running, it not being yet midnight,
-and Lally being too tired to walk further, signalled an
-empty one and took her seat in it.</p>
-
-<p>A long ride followed over rough pavements, past
-dingy rows of shops and houses, past small villas in
-small gardens, looking like toy establishments, and
-through a more sparsely settled region. Lally, overcome
-with fatigue, dozed most of the time, and was
-rudely awakened from her slumbers by the stopping of
-the omnibus and the rough voice of the driver bidding
-her alight.</p>
-
-<p>She got out, feeling quite dazed, and saw that the
-omnibus had stopped at the end of its route, and that
-the horses were already unhitched and being led into the
-stable. She crept away, not knowing where to go, not
-even knowing where she was.</p>
-
-<p>Plodding on wearily, now and then clinging to some
-way-side fence or wall for a moment’s rest, she came out
-upon a wide, deserted heath, open to whoever might
-choose to camp upon it. This was Hampstead Heath.
-She walked out upon the turf for some distance, and lay
-down in the shelter of a furze patch, thinking she was
-going to die. The skies were dark above her, and all
-around her the black gloom brooded, covering her from
-the sight of any tramps who might be taking their sleep
-that summer night on that same broad common.</p>
-
-<p>And here Lally slept the sleep of utter weariness. She
-awakened at the dawn of the new day, and started up,
-with a wild look around her.</p>
-
-<p>There were donkeys of diminutive breed grazing
-around her, a few tramps rising lazily from the ground,
-and a score of industrious people, men, women, boys and
-girls, digging up groundsel, chickweed and other green
-weeds, to sell in the great city for the sustenance of
-birds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[174]</span></p>
-
-<p>Lally wonderingly surveyed this species of industry of
-which she had not previously suspected the existence,
-and then hastily took her departure, not even tempted
-to prolong her stay by the offer of some bread and cheese
-from an old, blackened chimney-sweep, who had evidently
-also slept upon the heath.</p>
-
-<p>All thoughts of self-destruction had gone from her
-mind, and the question as to her future course now presented
-itself. The school with which she had formerly
-been connected as music teacher was broken up, and
-among the few people she had known there was one only
-to whom she was tempted to go in her distress. That
-one was an old, consumptive woman who had been
-“wardrobe mistress” at the seminary during Lally’s stay
-there&mdash;that is, the old woman had mended and darned
-the garments of the pupils, and had supported herself
-on her meagre pay. She lived at Notting Hill, the school
-having been located in that neighborhood, and Lally
-knew her address. The old woman had been kind to
-her, and Lally resolved to seek her.</p>
-
-<p>She walked a portion of the distance, and availed herself
-of the aid of omnibuses when she could. Yet the
-morning was well on when the girl climbed the rickety
-stairs to the garret of her old friend, and timidly knocked
-for admittance.</p>
-
-<p>The old woman was at home, busy with her needle,
-and gave Lally admittance. More&mdash;when she heard her
-pitiful story&mdash;she gave the girl sympathy and the
-tenderest kindness. She was very near her grave, and
-very poor, but she offered Lally a share of her home, and
-the girl gratefully accepted it. Here she ate breakfast.
-During the day her old friend borrowed a copy of the
-morning’s paper, as was her daily custom, and Lally read
-in it the account of the suicide on Waterloo Bridge, her<span class="pagenum">[175]</span>
-name being given&mdash;to her utter amazement&mdash;as that of
-the self-murderess.</p>
-
-<p>Having a conviction that Rufus would see the same
-notice, as indeed he had done, she visited the coroner’s
-office with a yearning to see her young husband
-as he should bend over the poor mutilated body believing
-it to be her own, and to relieve his anguish and remorse.
-But Rufus came not, and the suicide was buried
-in a pauper’s grave.</p>
-
-<p>Lally went back to the garret at Notting Hill, with a
-strange gloom on her face, and shared the labors of the
-old seamstress, gradually assuming the entire support
-of her friend, as the old woman’s strength failed. She
-did all the sewing her friend&mdash;who was now wardrobe
-mistress at a boys’ school&mdash;had engaged to do, and
-nursed her with a daughter’s tenderness, actually starving
-herself to nourish her only friend, watching by day
-and night at her side, denying herself food, clothes, and
-needed rest, to take care of the one who had befriended
-her; but with all her care and kindness the old woman
-faded day by day, and early in September died, invoking
-with her last breath blessings on Lally’s name.</p>
-
-<p>The few sticks of furniture were sold to give the old
-woman a decent burial. Lally was out of money&mdash;out
-of everything. The superintendent of the boys’ school
-refused to allow her to continue the duties she had performed
-in the old woman’s name, alleging that she was
-too young. And as a last blow, she was turned out of
-her lodgings because of her inability to pay the rent.</p>
-
-<p>At this crisis of her history, when as it seemed only
-death presented an open door to her, she resolved to go
-down to Wyndham and look once more on her husband’s
-face.</p>
-
-<p>To think, with our desperate Lally, was to act. She
-set out to walk to Wyndham, working in the hop-fields<span class="pagenum">[176]</span>
-for sustenance as she went. Thus she did three full days
-of work before she arrived near her destination, and she
-had crept into the way-side thicket to rest before continuing
-her journey to Wyndham, when she chanced to
-overhear the conversation between Neva Wynde and
-Rufus Black.</p>
-
-<p>Her despair, as she listened to the words of her young
-husband in declaring his love for Neva, may be imagined.
-She did not dream how bitterly he had mourned for his
-lost young wife; she did not dream that she was dearer
-to him still than Neva could ever be. How could she
-tell, when listening to his passionate vows of love to Miss
-Wynde, that the young wife who had slept in his bosom
-was in his thoughts by day and by night, and was regarded
-by him as a holy, precious memory?</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all over!” she sobbed, pressing her face down
-upon the dewy turf. “I am forgotten&mdash;but why should
-I not be? I never was his wife. He said so himself in
-his letter to me that I carry still next my heart. Not
-his wife&mdash;but <em>she</em> will be! How beautiful she is! How
-lovely her face was, how clear her voice. She would pity
-me if she knew, but she is an heiress, I dare say, while I
-am only the poor outcast Rufus has made me! Oh,
-Rufus, Rufus!”</p>
-
-<p>She wailed aloud, but she had learned to bear her
-griefs in silence, and presently she struggled to her feet
-and walked in the direction in which the heiress and her
-lover had gone&mdash;the same way by which Lally had recently
-come.</p>
-
-<p>There was no need for her to go to Wyndham now.
-Her presence there, or her appearance to Rufus, might
-embarrass his relations to his newer love, and possibly
-interfere with his marriage. He thought her dead, and
-had not even come forward to claim the body he supposed
-to be hers. Ah, yes, she had never been his wife,<span class="pagenum">[177]</span>
-and she was forgotten. She would never cross his path
-again.</p>
-
-<p>She staggered wearily along the road, in and out of
-the beaten foot-path, with the twilight deepening around
-her, and with a deeper twilight settling down upon her
-heart and brain. She passed the Hawkhurst park, the
-picturesque stone lodge guarding the great bronze gates,
-and here she paused.</p>
-
-<p>The lodge was closed, and a faint light streamed out
-through the dotted white curtains. Lally crept close to
-the great gates formed of bronze spears tipped with gilt,
-like the gates of the Tuileries gardens at Paris, and
-pressing her face against the cool rods, looked up the
-avenue.</p>
-
-<p>At the distance of half a mile or more, the great gray
-stone mansion sat throned upon a broad ridge of land,
-and lights flared from the wide uncurtained windows
-far upon the terrace, and the glass dome of flowers was
-all alight, and the stately old house looked to the homeless
-wanderer down by the gates like Paradise.</p>
-
-<p>Her eager eyes searched the terrace, and then, inch
-by inch, the great tree-arched avenue.</p>
-
-<p>Midway up the avenue, walking slowly, as lovers walk,
-she saw her young husband and Neva Wynde. With
-great jealous eyes she watched their progress through
-the shadows, and, when they paused in the stream of
-light upon the terrace, and Rufus Black bent low
-toward the heiress, a great flame leaped into poor Lally’s
-sombre eyes, and she caught her breath sharply.</p>
-
-<p>The heiress and her suitor stood for some moments
-upon the terrace, unconscious of the eyes upon them.
-Rufus declined to go into the house that evening, alleging
-his agitation as an excuse. Neva took her small parcel
-which he had carried, and he seized her hand, uttering
-passionate words of love, and begging her to look<span class="pagenum">[178]</span>
-favorably upon his suit. Then not waiting for an answer,
-he pressed her hand to his lips, and dashed down
-the avenue toward the gates, while Neva entered the
-house.</p>
-
-<p>And all this the jealous, disowned wife saw, with her
-face growing death-like, and the flame burning yet more
-brightly in her sombre eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“She has accepted him,” she muttered. “She will
-not take the week to consider his suit. They are betrothed.
-I was sure she lived here. Perhaps she owns
-the place, and he will be its master. They will both be
-rich and happy and beloved, while I&mdash;Ah, how swiftly
-he comes! He walked like that the night <em>I</em> accepted
-him. But I am not his wife; I never was, even when I
-thought myself so. He must not see me. No shadow
-from the past must darken his happy life&mdash;his and hers.
-It is all over&mdash;all over&mdash;and I shall never see his face
-again!”</p>
-
-<p>With one last, long lingering look, and a sob that
-came from her very soul, she turned and sped down the
-road like a mad creature&mdash;away from Wyndham, and
-Rufus, and all her hopes&mdash;going, ah, where?</p>
-
-<p>And Rufus, with his new love-dream glowing in his
-soul, came out of the Hawkhurst grounds, and hurried
-toward his inn, never dreaming how near he had been
-to his lost wife, nor how surely he had lost her.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[179]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">ONE OF NEVA’S LOVERS DISPOSED OF.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Upon his return to the Wyndham inn, Rufus Black
-found his father awaiting him in their private parlor.
-The elder Black arched his brows inquiringly as his son
-came in, and Rufus bowed to him gayly, as he said:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, father, you ought to be pleased with me now.
-I have offered myself to Miss Wynde.”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black started.</p>
-
-<p>“She has accepted you?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet. She wants to think the matter over, and I
-have consented to let the thing rest where it is for a
-week. I take it as a good sign that she did not refuse
-me at once. Her hesitation implies a regard for me&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Or a sense of duty toward some one else,” muttered
-Craven Black. “Curse that letter. If I had seen the
-girl, I would never have written it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it you say, father? I did not catch your
-words.”</p>
-
-<p>“They were not meant for your ears. So, Miss Wynde
-demands a week in which to consider your offer? It
-would be proper for you to refrain from going to Hawkhurst
-to-morrow. I’ll explain to her that you remained
-away from motives of delicacy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which I shall not do,” said Rufus doggedly. “I
-shall go to Hawkhurst to-morrow evening. I will not
-leave the field clear to Lord Towyn. He’s an earl, rich,
-handsome, and intellectual, the very man to capture a
-girl’s heart, and if I know myself, I am not going to give
-him a clear field. Why, he loves her better than I do
-even, and I can only come out ahead of him by dint of<span class="pagenum">[180]</span>
-sheer persistency. It’s a mystery to me how she refrained
-from saying No to me, when she can have Lord Towyn
-if she chooses. There is something behind her hesitation&mdash;some
-hidden cause&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Which you will do well to let alone,” interposed his
-father. “‘Take the goods the gods provide’ without
-questioning.”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus was not satisfied, but concluded to act upon this
-advice.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning Craven Black attired himself with
-unusual care, and mounted his piebald horse, a new purchase,
-and set out alone, at a slow canter, for Hawkhurst.
-He knew that the heiress usually took a morning
-ride, attended only by her groom, and he knew in
-what direction these rides usually lay. It was impossible
-for him to demand a private interview with her at
-her home without exciting the suspicions and jealousy
-of Lady Wynde, and he was determined to see the
-heiress alone, and discover in what estimation she held
-him. He was also determined not to accept quietly the
-four thousand a year of the baronet’s widow until he
-knew, beyond all peradventure, that he could not obtain
-the seventy thousand per annum of the baronet’s
-daughter.</p>
-
-<p>He rode up to Hawkhurst lodge, slackening his speed,
-but not pausing. As it happened, a little boy, a son of
-the lodge keeper, was playing in the road, and Craven
-Black tossed him a sixpence, and demanded if Miss
-Wynde were out riding, and which way she had gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Dingle Farm way,” said the urchin, scrambling in
-the dust for the shining coin. “She’s been gone a long
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is with her?” asked Craven Black.</p>
-
-<p>“Jim, the groom&mdash;that be all.”</p>
-
-<p>Black put spurs to his horse and dashed on. He knew<span class="pagenum">[181]</span>
-where the Dingle Farm was, it having been pointed out
-to him by Lady Wynde, as a portion of the Hawkhurst
-property. The ride was a favorite one with Neva, being
-unusually diversified. The road led through the Dingle
-wood, across a common, and skirted a chalk-pit of unusual
-size and depth.</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black turned off from the main road into a
-narrower one that led across the country, and pursued
-this course until he entered into the cool shadows of the
-Dingle wood. Still riding briskly, he came out a little
-later upon the Dingle common, a square mile of unfenced
-heath, covered with furze bushes. At the further
-edge of the common was the chalk-pit, now disused.
-The road ran dangerously near to the precipitous side
-of the pit, and there was no railing or fence to serve as a
-safeguard. Beyond the chalk-pit lay the Dingle Farm,
-a cozy, red brick farm-house, embowered with trees.</p>
-
-<p>The morning was clear and bright, and the sun was
-shining. As Craven Black emerged from the shadow of
-the wood he swept a keen glance over the level common,
-and beheld a mile or more away, beyond the chalk-pit,
-but approaching it, the figure of Miss Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>She was superbly mounted upon a thoroughbred
-horse, and was followed at a little distance by her
-groom.</p>
-
-<p>Even at that distance, Craven Black noticed how well
-Neva sat her horse; how erectly she carried her lithe,
-light figure; how proudly the little head was poised upon
-her shoulders. She was coming on toward him at a
-sweeping gait, her long green robe fluttering in the
-swift breeze she made.</p>
-
-<p>“She will be a wife to be proud of,” thought Craven
-Black, with a strange stirring at his heart. “How fearless
-she is. One would think she would pass the<span class="pagenum">[182]</span>
-chalk-pit at a walk, but it is evident she does not intend
-to.”</p>
-
-<p>He dashed on to meet her. Neva saw him coming,
-recognized him, and the close grasp upon her bridle
-rein relaxed, and the fierce gallop subsided into a quiet
-canter.</p>
-
-<p>She was past the chalk-pit when he came up to her,
-and she bowed to him coldly, but courteously.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-morning, Miss Wynde,” said Mr. Black. “You
-were having a mad ride here. I fairly shuddered when
-I saw you coming. A single sheer on the part of your
-horse would have sent you over the precipice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Badjour and I understand each other,” said
-Neva lightly, patting the horse’s proudly arched neck.
-“I never ride a horse, Mr. Black, if I have not confidence
-in my ability to control him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the road is so narrow and dangerous at this
-point,” said Craven Black, wheeling and riding slowly
-at her side.</p>
-
-<p>“You are right, Mr. Black. The road must be fenced
-in. I will speak to Lord Towyn about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And why not to Sir John Freise or Mr. Atkins, who
-are equally your guardians?” asked Craven Black, with
-an attempt at playfulness.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I presume I shall see Lord Towyn first,”
-replied Neva, gravely. “What do you say to a race, Mr.
-Black? I see that you are returning with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black looked over his shoulder. The discreet
-groom had fallen behind out of earshot. Now was the
-time to make his declaration of love. Such an opportunity
-might not again occur.</p>
-
-<p>“The truth is, Miss Wynde,” he exclaimed, “I came
-out to meet you. I want to have a quiet talk with you,
-if you will hear me.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva bowed her head gravely, and her reins fell<span class="pagenum">[183]</span>
-loosely in her gauntleted hand. They were out upon
-the wide common now, the Dingle farm behind them.
-The Dingle wood ahead.</p>
-
-<p>“You may guess the nature of the communication I
-have to make to you, Miss Wynde,” said her elderly
-lover, with an appearance of agitation, a portion of
-which was genuine. “That which I have to say would
-be more fittingly said in some other position perhaps. I
-should prefer to say it on my knees to you, as the
-knights made love in olden times.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” said Neva. “Hadn’t we better move on faster,
-Mr. Black?”</p>
-
-<p>“Coquettish like all of your sex!” said Craven Black,
-drawing nearer to her. “You understand my meaning,
-Neva? You know that I love you&mdash;I who never loved
-before&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Surely,” cried Neva, with an arch sparkle in her red-brown
-eyes, “you did not perjure yourself when you
-married the mother of your son?”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black bit his lips fiercely, but said smilingly:</p>
-
-<p>“That marriage was one of convenience. No love
-entered into it, on my side, at least. I never loved till I
-met you, fair Neva. You have younger suitors, but not
-one among them all who will be to you what I would be&mdash;your
-slave, your minister, your subject.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I should want my husband to be my king,”
-murmured Neva softly. “And I would be his queen.”</p>
-
-<p>“That arrangement would suit me perfectly,” declared
-Craven Black, feeling a little awkward at his
-love-making, not altogether sure Neva was not secretly
-laughing at him, yet eagerly catching at the assistance
-her words afforded him. “I would be your king, Miss
-Neva&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He paused in anger, as the girl’s light laugh made
-music in his ears that he by no means appreciated. His<span class="pagenum">[184]</span>
-anger deepened, as Neva looked at him with a bright
-sauciness, a piquant witchery of eyes and mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“You are very kind,” the girl laughed, “but I do not
-think&mdash;pardon me, Mr. Black&mdash;that you are of the stuff
-of which kings of the kind I meant are made!”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black’s fair face flushed. He tugged at his
-light beard with nervous fingers. An angry light
-glowered in his light eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I may not know the full meaning of your words,
-Miss Neva,” he said, forcing himself to speak calmly.
-“A romantic young girl like you is sure to have many
-fancies which time will prune. A young girl’s fancy is
-like the overflowing of some graceful rose-tree. When
-time shall have picked off a bud here, a leaf there, or a
-half-blown rose elsewhere, the remainder of the blossoming
-will be more perfect. I am no knight of romance,
-but I am not aware that there is anything ridiculous
-in my face or figure. Ladies of the world have
-smiled graciously upon me, and more than one peeress
-would have taken my name had I but asked her. My
-heart is fresh and young, full of romantic visions like
-yours. My love is honest, and a king could offer no
-better. Miss Wynde, I ask you to be my wife!”</p>
-
-<p>Neva’s face was grave now, but the sparkle was still
-in her eyes, as she said:</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure I beg your pardon, Mr. Black, but I
-thought you were a suitor of Mrs. Artress. I never had
-an idea that your visits were directed to me. I am
-deeply grateful for the honor you have done me&mdash;I suppose
-that is the proper remark to make under the
-circumstances; the ladies in novels always say it&mdash;but
-I must decline it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And why, if I may be allowed to ask?” demanded
-Craven Black, his face deepening in hue nearly to<span class="pagenum">[185]</span>
-purple. “Why this insulting refusal of an honest offer
-of marriage, Miss Wynde?”</p>
-
-<p>Neva regarded her angry suitor with cool gravity.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon if the manner of my refusal
-seemed insulting,” she said gently, “but the idea seems
-so singular&mdash;so preposterous! At the risk of offending
-you again, Mr. Black, I must suggest that a union with
-Mrs. Artress would be more suitable. I am only a girl,
-and young still, as you know, and it is proper that youth
-should mate with youth.”</p>
-
-<p>“You prefer my son then?”</p>
-
-<p>“To you? I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you will marry him?”</p>
-
-<p>The lovely face shadowed, but Neva answered
-quietly:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Rufus has asked me that question, sir, and I
-prefer to have him receive his answer from my lips.
-Whatever my feelings toward him, I have no indecision
-in regard to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you actually and decidedly refuse me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Actually and decidedly, Mr. Black!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there no hope that you may change your mind
-Miss Wynde? Will no devotion upon my part affect
-your resolution?”</p>
-
-<p>“None whatever. I cannot even give your proposal
-serious consideration, Mr. Black. I am willing to regard
-you as a friend. As a lover, pardon me, you would be
-intolerable to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva spoke with an honest frankness that increased
-Craven Black’s anger. He saw that he had no chance
-of winning her love or her fortune, and it behooved him
-not to lose the lesser fortune and lesser charms of her
-step-mother. He tried to take his failure philosophically,
-but in refusing his love, Neva had made him her
-bitter and unscrupulous enemy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[186]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I accept my defeat, Miss Wynde,” he said bitterly,
-“and resign all my pretensions to your hand. Pardon
-my folly, and forget it. I hope my son will meet with
-better success in his suit. And may I ask as a favor that
-you will keep my proposal secret, not even telling it to
-your step-mother?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not in the habit of boasting of such things,
-even to Lady Wynde,” said Neva, coldly. “Your proposal,
-Mr. Black, is already forgotten.”</p>
-
-<p>They were in Dingle wood now, and the heiress struck
-her horse sharply and dashed away at a canter. Craven
-Black kept pace with her, and at a discreet distance
-behind followed the liveried groom.</p>
-
-<p>Neither spoke again until they were out of the wood,
-and had traversed the cross-road and gained the highway.
-When the gray towers of Hawkhurst loomed up
-in full view, their speed slackened, and Craven Black
-said hastily:</p>
-
-<p>“One word, Miss Wynde. I have your solemn promise,
-have I not, that you will never betray the fact that
-I have proposed marriage to you?”</p>
-
-<p>Neva bowed haughtily.</p>
-
-<p>“Since you have not confidence in my delicacy,” she
-said, “I will give the promise.”</p>
-
-<p>Craven Black’s face flushed with something of triumph.
-He was still smarting with his anger and disappointment,
-still secretly foaming with a bitter rage, but
-he desired to show Neva that he was not at all crushed
-or humiliated.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” he said. “I shall rely upon that promise.
-The truth is, Miss Neva, a betrayal of my secret
-would cause me serious trouble. Ladies never pardon
-even a slight and temporary disaffection like mine. I
-am engaged to be married, and my promised bride is the
-most exacting of women. She would rage if she knew<span class="pagenum">[187]</span>
-that I had looked with love upon one so many years
-her junior.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed! You will marry Artress then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Artress?” ejaculated Black, in well-counterfeited
-amazement. “What, marry the companion when I can
-have the mistress? No, indeed, Miss Neva. I am engaged
-to Lady Wynde!”</p>
-
-<p>“To Lady Wynde&mdash;to my father’s widow?”</p>
-
-<p>Black bowed assent.</p>
-
-<p>Neva was astounded. She had been too busy with
-her friends since her return to Hawkhurst to detect the
-real object of Craven Black’s visits, and both Lady
-Wynde and Black had conspired to hoodwink her. She
-had never contemplated the possibility of Lady Wynde
-marrying for the third time. The idea almost seemed
-sacrilegious. Her father had seemed to her so grand
-and noble, so above other men, that she had not deemed
-it possible for a woman who had once been honored
-with his love to marry another.</p>
-
-<p>“It is like Marie Louise, who married her chamberlain
-after having been the wife of Napoleon,” she
-thought. “It is incredible. I refuse to believe it!”</p>
-
-<p>Her incredulity betrayed itself in her face.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t believe it?” said Black, with a mocking
-smile. “It is true, I assure you. Lady Wynde and I
-became engaged before your return from school. We
-are to be married next month. Her trousseau is secretly
-preparing in London.”</p>
-
-<p>His manner convinced Neva that he spoke the truth.</p>
-
-<p>“And so,” she said, her lip curling, “when your wedding-day
-is so near, and the woman you have won is
-making ready for your marriage, you amuse yourself in
-talking love to me! And that is your idea of honor,
-Mr. Black? You are well named. Craven by name, and
-Craven by nature!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[188]</span></p>
-
-<p>She inclined her head haughtily and dashed on. Black,
-choking with rage, hurried in close pursuit. The lodge
-gates swung open at their approach, and they galloped
-up the avenue. Lady Wynde came out upon the terrace
-to meet them. Neva dismounted at the carriage porch,
-the terrace being only upon one side of the mansion, and
-with a haughty little bow to Lady Wynde passed into
-the house.</p>
-
-<p>Black dismounted and gave his horse in charge of the
-stable lad who had taken in hand the horse of Neva,
-and then walked toward the open drawing-room window
-with his betrothed wife.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter between you and Neva, Craven?”
-asked Lady Wynde jealously. “You look as black as a
-thundercloud, and she looked like an insulted queen.
-What have you been saying to her?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought it time to divulge our secret to her, my
-darling,” said Black hypocritically. “Our wedding-day
-is so near that I deemed it best to inform her. I met her
-out riding, and seized upon the occasion to declare the
-truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what did she say?”</p>
-
-<p>“She fairly withered me with her scorn; recommended
-me to marry Matilda Artress; and seemed to regard my
-marriage with her father’s widow as a species of sacrilege.
-I hate her!” he hissed between his clenched
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde smiled, well-pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“And so do I,” she acknowledged frankly. “But it
-is for our interest to counterfeit friendship for her. Be
-patient, Craven. Some day you and I may bring down
-her haughty pride to the dust.”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose she refuses Rufus?”</p>
-
-<p>“You and I will soon be married, Craven, and in our
-union is strength. Tell Rufus to write to Neva, delaying<span class="pagenum">[189]</span>
-her answer to his suit for a month. By that time we shall
-be married. If she refuses then to accept your son as her
-husband, we can contrive some way to compel her
-obedience. I am her step-mother and guardian, and
-have authority which I shall use if I am pushed to the
-wall. I promise you, Craven, that we shall secure our
-ten thousand a year out of Neva’s fortune, and that we
-shall compel the girl to marry your son. Leave it all to
-me. Only wait and see!”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">NEVA’S CHOICE FORESHADOWED.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>In accordance with the advice of his scheming father,
-Rufus Black wrote a letter to Neva Wynde entreating
-her to take a month or six weeks, instead of the single
-week for which she had stipulated, for the consideration
-of his suit. And Neva, struggling between conflicting
-feelings, whose nature the reader already knows, and
-glad to be relieved of the necessity for an immediate
-decision, gratefully accepted the offered reprieve.</p>
-
-<p>The engagement of Craven Black and Lady Wynde,
-now that it had been declared to Neva, was no longer
-kept a secret from the world. Mr. Black, in a moment
-of good-natured condescension, informed his host at the
-Wyndham inn, and the amazed landlord bruited the
-story through the village. The engagement was publicly
-announced in the court papers, Craven Black himself
-writing the paragraph and procuring its insertion,
-and this announcement was copied into the Kentish
-journals.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[190]</span></p>
-
-<p>As may be imagined, the news of Lady Wynde’s intended
-marriage produced quite a sensation in the neighborhood
-of Hawkhurst. Sir Harold Wynde’s former
-friends were scandalized that he should have been so
-soon forgotten by the wife he had idolized, and that a
-man so palpably inferior to the baronet in character and
-attributes should have been chosen to take his place.
-Others, the three guardians of Neva’s property among
-the number, were ill-pleased that Craven Black should
-take his place during Neva’s minority as nominal master
-of Hawkhurst, and accordingly one morning, a fortnight
-after the publication of the engagement, Sir John Freise,
-Mr. Atkins, and Lord Towyn, rode over to Hawkhurst,
-and demanded an interview with Lady Wynde and
-Neva.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynde appeared first in the drawing-room, simply
-dressed in white, and fresh from a ramble in the park.
-She looked a little worn and troubled, as if her nights
-were spent more in anxious thoughts than in slumbers,
-but the radiance of her wonderful red-brown eyes was
-undimmed, and her face had lost nothing of the piquant
-witchery which was its chiefest charm.</p>
-
-<p>Before time had been granted Neva to more than
-exchange greetings with her guardians, Lady Wynde
-entered the room with an indolent languor of motion,
-and welcomed her visitors with effusion.</p>
-
-<p>“This is an unexpected pleasure, gentlemen,” said her
-ladyship, her black eyes glancing from one to another.
-“You have come to congratulate me upon the change in
-my prospects, I dare say. I have been overwhelmed
-with calls during the past week, and begin to find my
-connection with an old county family decidedly onerous,”
-and she laughed softly. “All of Sir Harold’s
-friends have been to see me, and really I believe that
-some of them have felt it their duty to condole with<span class="pagenum">[191]</span>
-Neva upon the misfortune of so soon possessing a step-papa.”</p>
-
-<p>The three gentlemen had called for the purpose of
-discussing with Lady Wynde and Neva the expected
-change in the prospects of her ladyship, but the quiet
-audacity of the handsome widow’s speech and manner
-half-confounded them.</p>
-
-<p>Sir John Freise, being the eldest of the party, took
-upon himself the office of spokesman.</p>
-
-<p>“I was an old friend of Sir Harold, Lady Wynde,” he
-said, a little stiffly. “I was a man when Sir Harold was
-a boy, but I knew him well, and I loved him. I know
-how deeply he was attached to you, and it is for his sake
-that I have now intruded upon you. You are still young,
-and with your attractions and your fortune you are peculiarly
-liable to be beset by fortune-hunters. As your
-late husband’s most intimate friend, I desire to ask you
-if you have well considered this step you are about to
-take?”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde bowed a cold assent.</p>
-
-<p>“Your knowledge of the character of Mr. Black can
-be but slight,” persisted Sir John Freise, leaning his
-chin upon the gold knob of his walking-stick, and regarding
-the handsome widow with troubled eyes. “He
-has been at Wyndham but a few months. I grant that
-he is of attractive exterior, Lady Wynde, but what do
-you know of his character? I have not come here to
-make any charges against Mr. Black but those I am prepared
-to substantiate. These gentlemen who have accompanied
-me will bear me out in the statement that I
-have no personal prejudices in the matter, and that I am
-actuated only by a desire for your ladyship’s happiness
-and that of Miss Wynde. I have written to London
-since hearing the report of your engagement, and yesterday
-received a reply of so much moment that I summoned<span class="pagenum">[192]</span>
-Lord Towyn from his marine villa and Mr. Atkins
-from Canterbury to accompany me into your presence,
-and assist me to impart to you the unpleasant
-news. Lady Wynde, this Craven Black, your accepted
-lover, is a scoundrel, a gamester, a man unworthy your
-consideration for a moment.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed!” said Lady Wynde, with a slight sneer.
-“Mr. Black, to my knowledge, goes in the first society.
-He visited at the Duke of Cheltenham’s last year, and
-the duke is a perfect Puritan, as every one knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Duke of Cheltenham is a distant connection of
-Mr. Black, and invited him to his house with the hope
-of winning him into better courses,” said Sir John
-gravely. “But it is not Mr. Black’s high connections,
-but the man himself, with whom your destiny is to be
-linked, Lady Wynde. I implore you to consider your
-decision. Better to remain for ever the honored widow
-of Sir Harold Wynde than to become the wife of Mr.
-Craven Black.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not think so,” said her ladyship, her sneer deepening.
-“I believe I am competent to choose for myself,
-Sir John, and it is <em>my</em> happiness, you will be pleased to
-remember, which is at stake. I resent your interference,
-as uncalled for and intrusive. I shall marry Mr. Craven
-Black in two weeks from to-day, and if you do not
-approve the marriage I presume you will be able to
-testify your disapproval by remaining away from the
-wedding.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir John looked deeply pained; Mr. Atkins looked
-disgusted. Lord Towyn’s warm blue eyes were directed
-toward Neva rather than toward Lady Wynde, but he
-lost nothing of the conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“I have performed only my duty in warning you,
-Lady Wynde,” said Sir John, after a pause. “You are
-bent upon this marriage with a man who was a stranger<span class="pagenum">[193]</span>
-to you three months since, and so soon after the tragic
-death of Sir Harold Wynde in India?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have waited a year and three months before marrying
-again,” declared Lady Wynde, impatiently. “Why
-should I wait longer? Surely a year of mourning is all
-that custom requires. And as to not knowing Mr. Black,
-permit me to say that I know him well. I knew him
-before I ever met Sir Harold. Frequenting the same
-circles in town, and meeting more than once at the same
-houses in the country, it is impossible that I should not
-have known him. And here I beg you will drop the
-subject. I am in no mood to hear your aspersions of an
-honorable man, and your jealousy for the memory of
-Sir Harold Wynde need not blind you to the fact that
-virtue and honor did not die with him.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir John looked shocked and amazed. Neva’s face
-paled, and a sudden indignation flamed in her eyes, but
-she remained silent.</p>
-
-<p>“I think, with all deference to your opinion, Sir John,”
-said Mr. Atkins, “that, as Lady Wynde suggests, we
-would better drop the subject of Mr. Black. It is difficult
-to convey unpleasant information in a case like this without
-giving offence. We have done our duty, and that
-must content us. Let us now come to the actual business
-in hand. Allow me to ask you, Lady Wynde, if you
-intend to continue your residence at Hawkhurst after
-becoming Mrs. Craven Black?”</p>
-
-<p>A flash of defiance shot from her ladyship’s black
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, I intend to reside here with my husband
-during the minority of my step-daughter,” she declared
-boldly. “I am Neva’s guardian, and my residence as
-such was assigned at Hawkhurst.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold never contemplated a state of affairs such
-as you propose Madam,” said Mr. Atkins doggedly.<span class="pagenum">[194]</span>
-“To make this Mr. Craven Black nominal master of
-the home of the Wyndes is something utterly unlooked
-for.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where I am mistress, my husband will be master!”
-asserted Lady Wynde, with temper.</p>
-
-<p>“It should be so,” declared Mr. Atkins, “but you see
-how inappropriate it would be to make Mr. Black master
-of Hawkhurst. Good taste&mdash;pardon my plainness&mdash;would
-dictate your ladyship’s retirement from Hawkhurst
-upon the occasion of your third marriage, and we
-have come to propose that Hawkhurst be closed, Miss
-Neva transferred to the guardianship of Sir John Freise
-and Lady Freise, and that you and your new husband
-take up your abode at Wynde Heights, your dower house,
-or at any other place you may prefer.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde frowned her anger and defiance.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall remain at Hawkhurst,” she exclaimed haughtily.
-“If you desire to remove me, you must do so by
-process of law. If you think her father’s wife an unfit
-personal guardian for Miss Wynde, you can have Sir
-Harold’s will set aside, or take legal proceedings to obtain
-for her another guardian. I shall not relinquish my
-post, or the charge my dead husband reposed in me, until
-I am compelled to do so.”</p>
-
-<p>The young Lord Towyn’s face flushed, and he addressed
-Neva, in his clear ringing voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Wynde, this matter concerns you above all
-others, and it is for you to have a voice in it. The proposed
-marriage of Lady Wynde completely vitiates your
-present relations to her. In becoming Mrs. Craven Black,
-I consider that Lady Wynde throws off all allegiance to
-Sir Harold Wynde, and ceases to be your step-mother.
-It is for you to decide if you will choose a new personal
-guardian in her stead.”</p>
-
-<p>All eyes turned upon the fair young girl. The young<span class="pagenum">[195]</span>
-earl awaited her reply with a breathless anxiety. Sir John
-Freise and Mr. Atkins fixed their eager gaze upon her,
-and Lady Wynde regarded her sharply and with some
-uneasiness.</p>
-
-<p>“Before Neva comes to a decision,” said her ladyship
-hastily, “I have a word to say to her. Have I not treated
-you with all kindness and tenderness, Neva, since you
-came under this roof? Have I been guilty of one act of
-neglect, of step-motherly cruelty, or want of consideration?
-Have not your wishes been considered in all
-things?”</p>
-
-<p>Neva could not answer these questions in the negative.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no stipulation in Sir Harold’s will that I
-should not again marry,” continued Lady Wynde. “Sir
-Harold, without mention of the contingency of another
-marriage on my part, constituted me his daughter’s personal
-guardian, with the request that I make Hawkhurst
-my home until Neva marries or attains her majority. Not
-one word is said about or against my marriage, you will
-observe; and certainly Sir Harold Wynde was too sensible
-to expect me to remain a widow long&mdash;at my age
-too. My marriage, therefore, does not interfere with my
-relations toward Neva as her step-mother and personal
-guardian. Any court of law will confirm this decision.
-If you choose, Neva, to apply for a change of guardians,
-and to make a scandal, and to make your name common
-on every lip, I can only regret your ill-taste, and that you
-have yielded to such ill-guidance.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Atkins felt a sentiment of admiration mingle with
-his dislike for Lady Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>“She ought to have been a lawyer,” he thought. “She’s
-a mighty sharp woman, and we are sure to get the worst
-of it in a battle with her. Pity we made the attack, if it
-is only to put her on her guard.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[196]</span></p>
-
-<p>Neva was still considering the matter intently. She
-had a thorough contempt for Craven Black, and disliked
-the prospect of being under the same roof with him, but
-she dreaded still more the publicity that would be given
-to her application for change of guardians. She remembered
-her father’s many injunctions to cling to Lady
-Wynde until her own marriage, or the attainment of her
-majority. Lady Wynde had not been unkind to her, nor
-illy fulfilled her duties as chaperon. Neva had actually
-nothing of which to complain, save Lady Wynde’s proposed
-marriage. She was a conscientious girl, and she
-could not decide to throw off the yoke her father had
-placed upon her shoulders, simply because Lady Wynde
-had chosen to enter into new relations which were not
-likely to affect the old. She felt that she was placed in
-a cruel position, but her duty, she thought, was plain to
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what is your decision, my child?” asked Sir
-John Freise paternally.</p>
-
-<p>“You are very kind to me, Sir John, and you also,
-Lord Towyn and Mr. Atkins,” said the young girl tremulously,
-“and I cannot properly express my gratitude to
-you for your concern for me. I appreciate all you have
-said, all that you mean. I own that Lady Wynde’s intended
-marriage is repugnant to me, and that I cannot
-understand how her ladyship can take Mr. Craven Black
-into papa’s place, but I have tried to reconcile myself to
-the change. And I think,” added Neva, her tones gathering
-firmness, and a brave look shining in her eyes of
-red gloom, “that I have not sufficient excuse for appealing
-to the law to give me a change of guardians. I shall
-have little to do or say to Mr. Craven Black, and Hawkhurst
-is large enough for us both. It was papa’s wish
-that I should remain for a certain period under the care
-of Lady Wynde, and I cannot forget that she was papa’s<span class="pagenum">[197]</span>
-wife, and that he loved her. And more,” concluded
-Neva very gently, “if Lady Wynde is about to contract
-an imprudent marriage, and if she is likely to know sorrow
-because of her false step, she will need my friendship
-when the truth comes home to her. I thank you
-again, Sir John, Lord Towyn, Mr. Atkins, but I do not
-think I should be justified in taking the decided step
-you advise.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know but you are right, Neva,” said Sir John.
-“At any rate, give your ideas of duty a fair trial, and if
-you change your mind let us know. It is not as if you
-were going away from us. Mr. Black, finding himself in
-a quiet, decorous neighborhood, may choose to settle
-down, and become a better man. We shall see you frequently,
-and my house will always be open to you, my
-dear, and my wife and girls will always be glad to receive
-you as an inmate of our family.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not forget your kindness, Sir John,” said Neva
-gratefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Neva has always a way of escape from an unpleasant
-situation,” said the practical Mr. Atkins. “Her
-marriage will free her from Lady Wynde’s guardianship
-without publicity of an unpleasant description.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva reddened vividly.</p>
-
-<p>The frankness with which the conversation had been
-distinguished had considerably surprised the young earl.
-No one seemed to require the use of diplomacy in making
-plain an unpleasant meaning, and even Lady Wynde did
-not seem offended at the utterance of home truths from
-the lips of Mr. Atkins. It was an hour for plain-dealing,
-which was freely indulged in.</p>
-
-<p>The visitors, finding their errand fruitless, offered
-Lady Wynde their best wishes for her future, and bade
-her good-morning. At the door, Sir John Freise looked
-back with a smile and said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[198]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You look pale, Neva. Come down the avenue for a
-walk. I have a message for you from the girls which I
-forgot to deliver.”</p>
-
-<p>Neva procured her hat, and followed Sir John out of
-the house. The horses were in waiting, and Mr. Atkins
-mounted. Sir John and Lord Towyn took their bridles
-on their arms, and walked slowly down the long arched
-avenue with the young heiress.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wynde watched them jealously from the window.</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid, my dear,” said the kindly baronet, “that
-you have made a romantic decision to-day, but you must
-decide in this matter for yourself. If you remain unmarried,
-these Blacks will fairly riot at Hawkhurst for the
-next three years. Craven Black will fill your father’s
-house with dissolute company, and you will be brought
-in contact with men whom your father would never have
-allowed to cross his threshold.”</p>
-
-<p>“Should such an event arise,” said Neva, her lovely
-face growing resolute and stern, “I will then consider
-your proposition, Sir John, to seek a change of guardians.
-But I dread the publicity such a proceeding
-would cause.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you take into consideration Atkins’ idea
-then?” demanded Sir John, smiling, yet earnest. “You
-must marry some day, Neva; why not marry soon?
-You have plenty of suitors. Only choose some one
-worthy to stand in your father’s place, and you will be
-happy. Your marriage will be the best way out of the
-difficulty&mdash;the best and the easiest. It would be a great
-load off my mind to see you happily married, my dear
-child. Wait a moment, Atkins?” added the baronet,
-raising his voice. “Why go so fast? I have a word to
-say to you.”</p>
-
-<p>The kindly old man hurried on to speak to his coadjutor,<span class="pagenum">[199]</span>
-leading his horse as he went, and Neva and Lord
-Towyn were left to themselves&mdash;an opportunity specially
-planned by Sir John, who regarded his manœuvres
-as decidedly Machiavellian, and who consequently
-plumed himself upon their success.</p>
-
-<p>The young earl’s visit at Freise Hall had long since
-terminated, and he was now stopping at his marine villa
-on the coast, a dozen miles or more away. The distance
-was not so great that he could not ride over to Hawkhurst
-every pleasant day, and he did so with an utter
-disregard of distance or exertion. His suit with Neva,
-however, had never progressed beyond his early declaration
-of love, Neva’s reserve having chilled him whenever
-he had attempted to renew the subject.</p>
-
-<p>He recognized his present favorable opportunity, and
-hastened to improve it.</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid we took you by storm to-day, Neva,”
-said the young earl, as they slowly walked down the
-avenue, considerably behind Mr. Atkins and Sir John,
-who had now mounted. “But Sir John Freise was determined
-to make an effort to save Lady Wynde from a
-union which she is likely to regret. Her ladyship is too
-pure and true to comprehend the character of her suitor,
-and she will cling to him all the more determinedly because
-of our well-meant warning.”</p>
-
-<p>By this it will be seen that Lord Towyn, with his
-frank nature, and honest soul, had not the slightest suspicion
-of the real character of Lady Wynde. If Craven
-Black was bad, she was also bad. She could never have
-loved or been wholly at ease in the society of a good
-man.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry for her,” said Neva, sighing.</p>
-
-<p>“She must ‘go her own gait,’” said Lord Towyn, “but
-you must not be involved in her unhappiness. Neva,
-darling Neva, I would almost die to spare you one pang<span class="pagenum">[200]</span>
-of sorrow, one shadow of grief. I love you, and each
-day only adds to that love,” and his voice grew unsteady
-and impassioned. “You have held me off at arms’ length
-ever since that evening in which I told you so prematurely
-how dear you were to me. Do not repulse me
-now. Tell me honestly, my darling, whether you could
-be happy with me&mdash;whether I am dearer to you than
-another?”</p>
-
-<p>His blue eyes, radiant with the warmth of his glowing
-soul, flashed an electric light into hers. His passionate
-face, so fair and handsome, so noble in expression
-and feature, looked love upon hers. Neva’s eyelids
-trembled and drooped. An answering thrill convulsed
-her heart, and she knew in that moment that, come what
-would, she loved Arthur Towyn with all her soul, even
-as he loved her, and that she would know perfect happiness
-only as his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the conviction came upon her as a painful shock,
-and in that instant the struggle between her love and
-her duty of obedience to the supposed wishes of her
-dead father began in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>“You love me?” whispered the young earl ardently,
-and with a passionate tremor of his voice. “Neva, with
-all my soul I love you, and I never loved before. Do I
-love in vain?”</p>
-
-<p>The shy, red-brown eyes were upraised for a brief
-glance, but in their swift flash Lord Towyn read his
-answer, and knew himself beloved.</p>
-
-<p>There was a brief silence between them full of rapture.
-They exchanged no betrothal kiss, no embrace, but Lord
-Towyn held Neva’s hand in his, and in his fervent pressure
-his soul spoke to hers.</p>
-
-<p>“I may tell Sir John and Mr. Atkins that we are betrothed,
-may I not, my darling?” said the young earl
-softly, as they walked on yet more slowly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[201]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Not yet, Arthur&mdash;not yet. I love you,” and the girl’s
-voice sank to a whisper her lover’s ears could scarcely
-catch, “but I want a little time to decide. Don’t look
-surprised, Arthur; I do love you better than all the
-world, but it is all so new and strange, and&mdash;and&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand,” said the earl, his face beaming. “Our
-love is too sacred to be proclaimed on the instant we
-acknowledge it ourselves. We will keep it secret until
-after Lady Wynde’s marriage; but we are promised,
-darling! Our happiness would be complete if we could
-know beyond all doubt that Sir Harold smiles upon our
-union. And why should he not smile upon our marriage
-from his home in Heaven? He loved me, Neva, and he
-desired our marriage. My father told me this on his
-death-bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I could think so!” breathed Neva. “I know papa
-loved you, Arthur. Do you think he would really
-approve our marriage?”</p>
-
-<p>“What an anxious little face! I know he would approve
-it, Neva. My blessed little darling, mine own,
-whom no one can take from me!” cried Lord Towyn
-passionately. “I am going home to dine with Sir John,
-and I will call upon you this evening. I am going to
-exact a lover’s privilege of seeing you when I please,
-without the cold, prying eyes of Mrs. Artress devouring
-me. I will be prudent and secret, Neva, since you insist
-upon it, but oh, if my month of probation were over
-and I might proclaim my happiness to the world!”</p>
-
-<p>They parted near the lodge gates, and Neva returned
-slowly toward the house, while her young lover vaulted
-into his saddle and rejoined his friends with a countenance
-so rapturous that they could not avoid knowing
-that he had confessed his love to Neva and had not been
-rejected.</p>
-
-<p>While they overwhelmed him with congratulations,<span class="pagenum">[202]</span>
-which he tried to disclaim as altogether premature,
-Neva’s mind was divided between joy and grief, and she
-murmured:</p>
-
-<p>“What shall I do? What is right for me to do? I love
-Arthur, and life will not be complete without him. Shall
-I, for the sake of that love, disregard papa’s last wishes
-which I vowed to accept as sacred commands? Oh, if I
-only knew what to do!”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">WAS IT A DREAM?</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>As the time appointed for the marriage of Lady
-Wynde and Craven Black drew near, great preparations
-were entered upon for its celebration. One would have
-thought, from the scale of the arrangements on foot,
-that the heiress of Hawkhurst was to be the bride,
-rather than the baronet’s widow. Dress-makers came
-down from London, boxes were sent to and fro, new
-jewels from Emanuel’s or Ryder’s, were selected to replace
-the Wynde family jewels, which Mr. Atkins had
-compelled the handsome widow to yield up to her step-daughter,
-and Artress made a special trip to Brussels
-for laces, and to Paris for delicate and sumptuous novelties
-in attire. One or two of Madame Elise’s best
-work women spent several days at Hawkhurst in fitting
-robes, and Lady Wynde, with Neva, Artress and two
-maids, spent a week in London at the long-closed town
-house of Sir Harold.</p>
-
-<p>The eventful day came at last, and was one of the
-mellowest of all that mellow October. The sun flooded<span class="pagenum">[203]</span>
-the little village of Wyndham in waves of golden light.
-The pretty little stone church in which the marriage
-ceremony was to be performed was beautifully decorated
-with flowers. A floral arch vailed the door-way.
-A carpet of red roses, from the glass-houses at Hawkhurst,
-strewed the path the bride must traverse in going
-from her carriage to the church door.</p>
-
-<p>Inside the church, myrtles and red roses festooned the
-walls, and were suspended above the spot where the
-bride and groom would stand, in the form of a marriage
-bell. The breath of roses filled the air with perfume
-sweeter than “gales from Araby.”</p>
-
-<p>Long before eleven o’clock, the villagers and the tenants
-of Hawkhurst began to assemble at the church.
-They were all in gala attire, for Lady Wynde, with an
-insatiable vanity, had decreed that her third marriage-day
-was to be a gala-day for the retainers of the Wynde
-family. The villagers and tenants were all invited to a
-grand out-door feast at Hawkhurst, where a hogshead
-of ale, it was said, was to be broached, and deers and
-pigs roasted whole. A brass band from Canterbury had
-been engaged for the evening, and there would be colored
-lanterns suspended from the trees, and dancing on
-the terrace and on the lawn.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after eleven, the carriages of various county
-families began to arrive at the church. Sir John and
-Lady Freise, with their seven blooming daughters whose
-ages ranged from eighteen to thirty-five, were among
-the first comers. One of the white-gloved ushers, with
-a bridal favor pinned to his coat, showed them into
-a reserved seat. Other acquaintances and friends, some
-curious, some full of condemnation, made their appearance,
-and were similarly accommodated. Lord Towyn
-and Mr. Atkins came in together.</p>
-
-<p>It was nearly twelve o’clock when two carriages rolled<span class="pagenum">[204]</span>
-up to the church door, bringing the bridal party from
-Hawkhurst. From the first of these alighted Neva and
-Rufus Black. The heiress was attired in white, with
-pink ribbon at her waist and pink roses securing the
-frill of lace at her throat, and Rufus wore the prescribed
-dress suit of black. They walked up the aisle side by
-side, and more than one noticed how pale the young
-girl was. They took their places in the Wynde family
-pew, for Neva had resolutely declined to enact the part
-of bride’s-maid to her father’s widow, and would have
-declined to appear at the wedding had not she realized
-that her absence would be more marked and conspicuous
-than her presence.</p>
-
-<p>The young heiress had scarcely sank into her seat,
-when a fluttering at the door declared to the assembly
-that the hero and heroine of the occasion were at hand.
-In defiance of the custom of meeting at the altar, Craven
-Black and Lady Wynde came in together, she leaning
-upon his arm.</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship was dressed in a pink moire, with sweeping
-court train of pink velvet. She had worn white at
-her first marriage, pearl color at her second; and for the
-third, and most satisfactorily to her, had put on the
-color of love. A diadem set with flashing diamonds
-starred her black, fashionably dishevelled hair, above
-her low forehead. Her arms and neck were bare, and
-glittered with gems. Her face was flushed with
-triumph; her black eyes shone with a perfect self-content.</p>
-
-<p>The bridal pair took their places before the altar, and
-the clergyman and his assistants began their office. The
-usual questions were asked and answered; the usual appeal
-made to any one who knew “any just cause or impediment
-why these two should not be united,” but
-which, of course, received no response; and her third<span class="pagenum">[205]</span>
-marriage ring was slipped upon Lady Wynde’s finger,
-and for the third time she was a wife.</p>
-
-<p>If any regret mingled with her present happiness, it
-was that by her third marriage she lost the title her
-second alliance had conferred upon her. But as there
-was a prospect that Craven Black would inherit a title
-some day, and that she would then be a peeress, she
-easily contented herself with her present untitled condition.</p>
-
-<p>After the ceremony, the newly married pair proceeded
-to the vestry and signed the marriage register. Friends
-and curious acquaintances thronged in upon them with
-congratulations, and soon after, when the church bell
-began peeling merrily, the bride and groom reentered
-their carriage, and drove home to Hawkhurst.</p>
-
-<p>Neva and Rufus Black followed in the second carriage.</p>
-
-<p>The guests invited to the wedding breakfast entered
-their carriages, and followed in the wake of the bridal
-pair.</p>
-
-<p>The villagers and tenants, in a great, straggling
-crowd, proceeded on foot along the dusty road, to take
-their part in the out-door festivities.</p>
-
-<p>A magnificent green arch had been erected over the
-great gates, with the monogram of the bride and groom
-curiously intertwisted, and lettered in red roses upon the
-green ground. Three similar arches intersected at regular
-distances the long avenue. The marble terrace was
-bordered with orange trees, oleanders, lemon-trees, and
-tropical shrubs, all in wooden tubs, and the front porch
-was a very bower of myrtles and red roses.</p>
-
-<p>“It is all in singularly bad taste,” was Sir John
-Freise’s exclamation, as he surveyed the scene. “It’s
-very fine, girls, and would do very well if it was all for
-Neva’s marriage, but it is worse than tomfoolery to invite<span class="pagenum">[206]</span>
-Sir Harold Wynde’s tenantry and friends to rejoice
-at the wedding of Sir Harold’s widow to a man not
-worthy to tie his shoes. I must repeat that it is in singularly
-bad taste. The tenantry are not Lady Wynde’s;
-the house is not Lady Wynde’s. What can be done to
-give distinction to the marriage-day of the heiress, if all
-this display is made for Lady Wynde?”</p>
-
-<p>Sir John’s sentiment was the general one among the
-house guests. Some were disgusted, and others privately
-sneered, but there were some to whom the proceedings
-of the baronet’s widow seemed eminently
-proper, and these fawned upon her now.</p>
-
-<p>The wedding breakfast was eaten in the grand old
-dining-hall, among flowers which, by a rare refinement
-of taste, had been chosen for this room without perfume.
-The tables were resplendent with gold and silver plate.
-Fruits of rare species and delicious flavor, fresh from
-the hot-houses of Hawkhurst, were nestled among blossoms
-or green leaves. A noted French cook from London
-had charge of the commissary department, and
-the rare old wines from Sir Harold’s cellar were unequalled.</p>
-
-<p>While toasts were offered and drank to the newly
-married pair in the banquet hall, the tenantry were
-amusing themselves with their barbecue and ale out of
-doors, and their hilarity corresponded to the lower-toned
-merriment within the house.</p>
-
-<p>After the breakfast, Sir John Freise and his family,
-and several others, all of whom had come out of respect
-to Neva rather than to compliment Lady Wynde, took
-their departure. Many guests remained for the ball.
-Lord Towyn took his leave toward evening, and Neva
-retired to her own room, whence she did not emerge
-again that night.</p>
-
-<p>She had tried hard to dissuade Lady Wynde from<span class="pagenum">[207]</span>
-giving the ball, but her persuasions had not availed.
-Neva had declined to attend the ball, and Lady Freise
-had supported her in her refusal. How could she dance
-in honor of the third marriage of her father’s widow?
-All day her thoughts had been of India and of her father,
-and remembering his tragical fate, how could she rejoice
-at a union which could never have taken place but
-for his death?</p>
-
-<p>Her step-mother was angry at what she deemed
-Neva’s obstinacy, and came to her and commanded her
-to descend to the ball-room. The young girl was
-sternly resolute in her refusal, and the bride went away
-muttering her anger and annoyance, but powerless to
-compel obedience.</p>
-
-<p>There was dancing until a late hour that night in the
-old baronial hall that traversed the centre of the great
-mansion, and there was dancing outside upon the terrace
-and lawn to the music of a brass band. Mrs. Craven
-Black&mdash;Lady Wynde no longer&mdash;was the belle of the
-occasion, full of gayety and brightness. Mrs. Artress,
-to the amazement of everybody who had known her as
-the gray companion of Lady Wynde, flashed forth in the
-sudden splendor of jewels and a trained dress of crimson
-silk, and Craven Black danced one set with her, and
-saw her supplied with numerous partners. Mrs. Artress
-considered that her day of servitude was over, and that
-it was quite possible that she might make a “good
-match” with some wealthy country gentleman, for
-whom, during all the evening, she kept a diligent look-out.</p>
-
-<p>Among the guests were two or three reporters of
-society papers from London, whom Craven Black, with
-an eye to the publicity of his glory, had invited down to
-Hawkhurst. These gentlemen danced and supped and
-wined, and in the pauses of these exercises wrote down<span class="pagenum">[208]</span>
-glowing descriptions of the festivities, elaborate details
-of the ladies’ dresses, and ecstatic little eulogies of the
-bride’s beauty and connection with the Wynde family,
-and of the groom’s pedigree, stating the precise value of
-Craven Black’s prospects of a succession to his cousin,
-Viscount Torrimore.</p>
-
-<p>The aunt of the bride, Mrs. Hyde of Bloomsbury
-Square, was not present. She lay indeed at the point
-of death, a fact which Mrs. Craven Black judiciously
-confined to her own breast, the news having reached her
-that morning as she was dressing for her bridal.</p>
-
-<p>At twelve o’clock, midnight, fire-works were displayed
-on the lawn. They lasted over half an hour, and were
-very creditable. After they had finished, carriages were
-ordered, and the house guests departed in a steady
-stream until all were gone. The tenantry and villagers
-departed to their homes on foot or in wagons, as they
-had come. The colored lanterns were taken down from
-the trees; the musicians went away, and the lights one
-by one died out of the great mansion.</p>
-
-<p>The bridal pair were to remain a week at Hawkhurst,
-and were then to go to Wynde Heights, the dower
-house of the baronet’s widow, and it had been arranged
-that Neva should accompany her step-mother. Rufus
-Black was to be a member of the party also, and much
-was hoped by Mr. and Mrs. Craven Black from the
-enforced propinquity of the young couple.</p>
-
-<p>Silence succeeded to the late noise, confusion and
-merriment&mdash;a silence the more profound by contrast
-with what had preceded. The household had retired.
-Neva had long since dismissed her maid and gone to
-bed, thinking sadly of her father. Even before the last
-carriage had rolled away, Neva had fallen asleep, not-withstanding
-her wrapt musings concerning her father,
-and as the hours went on, and darkness and silence fell,<span class="pagenum">[209]</span>
-that sleep had deepened into a strange and almost
-breathless slumber.</p>
-
-<p>But suddenly she sprang up, broad awake, her eyes
-starting, a cold dew on her forehead, a wild cry upon
-her lips.</p>
-
-<p>She stared around her with a look of terror. The
-white curtains of her bed were fluttering in the breeze
-from her open window, and around her lay the thick
-gloom of her chamber.</p>
-
-<p>Her voice called through the darkness in a wild, piercing
-wail:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, papa, papa! I dreamed&mdash;ah, was it a dream?&mdash;that
-he still lives! I saw him, pale and ghastly, at the
-door of a hut among the Indian hills, and I heard his
-voice calling the names: ‘Octavia! Neva!’ He is not
-dead&mdash;he is not dead! So surely as I live, I believe that
-papa too is alive! Oh, my father, my father!”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">A SCENE IN INDIA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Neva Wynde had retired to her bed, as will be remembered,
-upon the marriage night of Lady Wynde and
-Craven Black, her thoughts all of her father and of his
-tragic fate in India. All day long she had thought of him
-with tender yearning, pity and regret, recalling to mind
-his goodness, nobleness, and grandeur of soul; and when
-night came, and she lay in her bed with the noise of
-revellers in the drawing-rooms and on the lawn coming
-faintly to her ears, she had sobbed aloud at the thought
-that her father had been so soon forgotten, and that his<span class="pagenum">[210]</span>
-friends and tenantry were now making merry over the
-marriage of his widow to a man unworthy to cross the
-threshold of Hawkhurst.</p>
-
-<p>And thus sobbing and thinking, she had slept, and in
-her sleep had dreamed that her father still lived, and
-that she saw him standing at the door of a hut among
-the far-off Indian hills, and that she heard his voice calling
-“Octavia! Neva!” And thus dreaming, she had
-awakened with a cry of terror, to ask of herself if it was
-only a dream.</p>
-
-<p>It was not strange that she had thus dreamed, since
-all the day and all the evening her mind had been fixed
-upon her father. It would have been strange if she had
-not dreamed of him. Her dream had had the clearness
-of a vision, but Neva was not romantic, and although
-she slept no more that night, but walked her floor with
-noiseless steps and wildly questioning eyes, yet she convinced
-herself long before the morning that she had been
-the victim of her excited imagination, and that her
-dream was “only a dream.”</p>
-
-<p>But was it so? There is a philosophy in dreams
-which not the wisest of us can fathom. And although
-the cause of Neva’s dream can be simply and naturally
-explained as the result of her agitated thoughts of her
-father, yet might one not also think, with less of this
-world’s wisdom, perhaps, and more of tenderness, that
-the girl’s guardian angel had placed that picture before
-her in her sleep, and so made recompense, in the joy of
-her dream, for her day of anguish and unrest?</p>
-
-<p>Be this as it may, our story has to deal with actual
-facts, and has now to take a startling turn, perhaps not
-anticipated by the reader.</p>
-
-<p>It was about one o’clock of the morning when Neva
-awakened from her dream.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[211]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was then about seven o’clock&mdash;there being six hours
-difference in time&mdash;in India.</p>
-
-<p>Among the cool shadows of the glorious Himalayas
-are many country seats, or “bungalows,” occupied at
-certain seasons by exhausted English merchants from
-Calcutta, with their families, by army officers, and by
-others of foreign birth, enervated or rendered sickly
-by the scorching heats of the sea-coast or more level
-regions. They find “among the hills” the fresh air,
-and consequent health, for which otherwise they would
-have to undertake, at all inconvenience and expense, a
-voyage home to England or Holland.</p>
-
-<p>These bungalows, for the most part, are cheaply built
-of bamboo, with thatched roofs, and are encircled with
-broad and shaded verandas, always roofed, and sometimes
-latticed at the sides and grown with vines, to form
-a cool and leafy arcade, which serves all the purposes of
-promenade, sitting-room, music-room, dining-room, and
-even sleeping room, for there are usually bamboo
-couches scattered about, upon which the indolent resident
-takes his siesta at midday.</p>
-
-<p>To one of these bungalows, a fair type of the rest, we
-will now direct the attention of the reader.</p>
-
-<p>It stood upon an elevated plateau, with the tall mountains
-crested with snow in the distance. It was surrounded
-at the distance of a few miles by a range of
-hills, and between it and them lay miles of forest, which
-was an impenetrable jungle. Around the bungalow was
-a clearing of limited extent, and which was dotted with
-plumed palms, bamboo, and banyan trees.</p>
-
-<p>The dwelling, frail like all of its class, was sufficiently
-well built for the climate. It was constructed of bamboo,
-was a single story in height, and was thatched with
-the broad leaves of the palm. A veranda, twelve feet
-wide, surrounded it. Its interior consisted of a broad<span class="pagenum">[212]</span>
-hall, extending from front to rear, with two rooms opening
-from each side of it. The central hall, containing no
-staircase, was a long and wide apartment, which served
-as dining-room, sitting-room, and parlor, when required.</p>
-
-<p>A little in the rear of this dwelling were two others,
-one of which served as the kitchen of the establishment,
-and the other as the quarters of the half-dozen native
-servants belonging to the place.</p>
-
-<p>The bungalow which we have thus briefly described
-belonged to a Major Archer, H. M. A., and it was under
-its roof that George Wynde had breathed his last.
-It was from its broad veranda that Sir Harold Wynde
-had rode away for a last morning ride in India, upon
-that fatal day on which he had encountered the tiger
-of the jungle, in which encounter he was said to have
-perished.</p>
-
-<p>At about seven o’clock of the morning then, as we
-have said, and about the moment when Neva awakened
-from her dream, Major Archer reclined lazily upon a
-bamboo couch in the shadow of his veranda. He was
-dressed in a suit of white linen, and wore a broad-brimmed
-straw-hat, which was tipped carelessly upon
-the back part of his head. He was reading an English
-paper, received that morning at the hands of his messenger,
-and indolently smoking a cigar as he read.</p>
-
-<p>The major was a short, stout, choleric man, with a
-warm heart and a ready tongue. He had greatly loved
-young Captain Wynde, and still mourned his death, and
-he mourned also the tragic fate of Sir Harold.</p>
-
-<p>“Not much news by this mail,” the major muttered,
-as he withdrew his cigar and emitted a cloud of smoke
-from his pursed lips.</p>
-
-<p>“And no hope whatever of our regiment being ordered
-back to England! We shall get gray out here in this
-heathenish climate, while the fancy regiments play the<span class="pagenum">[213]</span>
-heroes at balls in country towns at home. The good
-things of life are pretty unevenly distributed any how.”</p>
-
-<p>He replaced his cigar and clapped his hands sonorously.
-A light-footed native, clad in loose white trousers and
-white turban, and having his copper-colored waist naked,
-glided around an angle of the veranda and approached
-him with a salaam.</p>
-
-<p>“Sherbet,” said the major sententiously.</p>
-
-<p>The servant muttering, “Yes, Sahib,” glided away as
-he had come.</p>
-
-<p>The major let fall his paper and reclined his head
-upon a bamboo rest, continuing to smoke. He had
-arisen hours before, had taken his usual morning ride to
-the house of a friend, his nearest neighbor, three miles
-distant, and had returned to breakfast with his wife and
-family, who were now occupied in one of the four rooms
-of the dwelling. The major’s duties for the day were
-now to be suspended until sunset, the intervening hours
-being spent in smoking, reading, sleeping and partaking
-frequently of light and cooling refreshments.</p>
-
-<p>The sherbet was presently brought to the major in a
-crystal jug upon a salver. He laid down his cigar and
-sipped the beverage with an air of enjoyment, yet lazily,
-as he did everything.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see how I should get along without you,
-Karrah,” said the major. “And you know it too, you
-dog. I pay you big wages as it is, and now I want to
-know how much extra you will take, and forego your
-present practice of stealing. I think I’d better commute.
-Mrs. Archer says you are robbing us right and left.
-What do you say?”</p>
-
-<p>The native, a slim, lithe, sinewy fellow with oblong
-black eyes, full of slyness and wickedness, a mouth indicative
-of a cruel disposition, and with movements like a
-cat, grinned at the major’s speech, but did not deny the<span class="pagenum">[214]</span>
-charge. He had formerly been George Wynde’s servant
-and nurse, then Sir Harold’s attendant, and was now
-Major Archer’s most valued servant. He had made himself
-necessary to the officer by his knowledge of all his
-master’s requirements, and his exact fulfillment of them;
-by his skill in concocting sherbets and other cooling
-drinks; by his apparent devotion, and in other ways.
-Being so highly valued, he had every opportunity, in
-that loosely ordered household, of robbing his employer,
-and he was maintaining a steady drain upon the major’s
-purse which that officer now purposed to abolish.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, you coppery rascal,” said the major good-humoredly,
-“what will you take to let the sugar and
-tea and coffee and the rest of the things alone, except
-when you find them on the table?”</p>
-
-<p>“Karrah no make bargain, Sahib,” said the native,
-rolling up his eyes. “Karrah do better as it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt; but I’m afraid, my worthy copper, that
-we shall have to part unless you and I can commute
-your stealings. Yesterday, for instance, I left five gold
-sovereigns in my other coat pocket, and last night when
-I happened to think of them and look for them they
-were gone. You took them&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“No prove, Sahib&mdash;no prove!” said the native stolidly.</p>
-
-<p>“I can prove that no one but you went into that room
-yesterday except me,” declared the major coolly. “You
-needn’t deny the theft, even if you purpose taking that
-trouble. I know you took the money. You are a thief,
-Karrah,” continued his master placidly and indolently,
-“and a liar, Karrah, and a scoundrel, Karrah; but your
-race is all tarred with the same stick, and I might as
-well have you as another. By the way my fine Buddhist,
-if that is what you are, did you use to steal right
-and left from Captain Wynde?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[215]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Karrah honest man; Karrah no steal, but Karrah
-always same.”</p>
-
-<p>“Always the same! Poor George! Poor fellow!
-No wonder he died!” muttered the major compassionately.
-“It was a consumption of the lungs by disease,
-and a consumption of means by a scoundrel. And did you
-take in Sir Harold in the same way?”</p>
-
-<p>The Hindoo’s face darkened, and an odd gleam shone
-in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold no ’count gen’leman,” he said briefly.
-“Karrah no like him. Three days ’fore tiger eat him,
-Karrah look into Sir Harold’s purse and take out gold,
-only few miserable pieces, and Karrah look into Captain
-Wynde’s trunk and take a few letters and diamond pin.
-Sir Harold come in sudden, see it all; he eyes fire up;
-he seize Karrah by waistband and kick he out doors.
-Karrah hate Sir Harold&mdash;<em>hate&mdash;hate</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>The indolent officer shrank before the sudden blaze of
-his servant’s eyes, with a sudden realization of the possibilities
-of that ignorant, untaught and vicious nature.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you’re a perfect demon, Karrah,” exclaimed
-the major. “You’re a firebrand&mdash;a&mdash;a devil! If you
-hated Sir Harold to such an extent, how did it happen
-that you continued in his service, and were even his attendant
-upon that last ride?”</p>
-
-<p>The Hindoo smiled slowly, a strange, cruel smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” he said softly, “Karrah go back; Karrah say
-sorry; know no better. Sir Harold smile sad, say been
-hasty, and forgive. Karrah say he love Sir Harold.
-That night Karrah send messenger up country&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He paused abruptly, as if he had said more than he
-intended.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what did you send a messenger up country for,
-you rascal?”</p>
-
-<p>“To Karrah’s people, many miles away, to say that<span class="pagenum">[216]</span>
-Karrah not come home,” declared the Hindoo more
-guardedly. “Makes no difference why Karrah sent.
-Karrah stay with Sahib Sir Harold three days, and see
-him die. Then Karrah live with Sahib Major.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you don’t hate me,” said the major, with a
-shudder. “I have a fancy that your hatred would be as
-deadly as a cobra’s. If it were not for the tiger, I might
-think&mdash;But, pshaw! And yet&mdash;I say, Karrah, did you
-know that there was a tiger in that part of the jungle
-that morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“Karrah know nothing,” returned the Hindoo. “Karrah
-good fellow. He has enemies&mdash;they happen die,
-that’s all. Karrah no set a tiger on Sahib. Karrah no
-friend tigers. Sahib have more sherbet?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, nothing more. You may go, Karrah.”</p>
-
-<p>The Hindoo glided away around the angle of the veranda.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe I’ll have to let the fellow go,” muttered the
-major, uneasily. “His looks and words give me a
-strangely unpleasant sensation. I shall take care not to
-offend him, or he may season my sherbet with a snake’s
-venom. How he glared in that one unguarded moment
-when he said he hated Sir Harold! There was murder
-in his look. I declare I had a hundred little shivers
-down my spine. If Sir Harold had not been killed so
-unmistakably by a tiger, and if Doctor Graham and I
-had not seen the fresh tracks and the marks of the
-struggle, and if the tiger had not been afterward killed, I
-should think&mdash;I should be sure&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>An anxious look gathered on his face, and he ended
-his sentence by a heavy sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“Strange!” he said presently, giving utterance to his
-secret thoughts; “my wife never liked this fellow, although
-I could see no difference between him and the
-rest. She insists that he is treacherous and cruel. <a id="Ref_216" href="#BRef_216">I’ll</a><span class="pagenum">[217]</span>
-dismiss him, and tell her that I do so out of deference
-to her judgment. But the truth is, since I’ve seen the
-fellow’s soul glaring out of his eyes, I sha’n’t dare to
-sleep nights for fear I may have offended his High Mightiness.
-I think it better for me that he should travel out
-of this.”</p>
-
-<p>He had just announced to himself this decision, when
-raising his eyes carelessly and looking out from the cool
-shadows of the pleasant veranda, he beheld a horseman
-approaching his bungalow, riding at great speed.</p>
-
-<p>“It may be Doctor Graham coming up for a month,
-as I invited him,” thought the major, too indolent to feel
-more than a trivial curiosity at the sight of a coming
-stranger. “But the doctor’s too sensible to ride like
-that. It is either a green Englishman, with orders from
-headquarters for me, or it’s some reckless native. In
-either case the fellow’s preparing for a first-class sunstroke
-or fever, or something of that nature. But that’s
-his look-out. I’ve troubles enough of my own without
-worrying about him. It might be as well to finish my
-sherbet before losing my appetite under an order to return
-to my post. Oh, bother the army!”</p>
-
-<p>He sipped his sherbet leisurely, not even looking again
-at the horseman, who came on swiftly, urging his horse
-to a last burst of speed. That the horse was jaded, his
-jerking, convulsive mode of going plainly showed. He
-was wet with sweat, and his head hung low, and he frequently
-stumbled. The horseman urged him on with
-spur and whip, now and then looking behind him as if
-he feared pursuit.</p>
-
-<p>The major did not look up until the horseman drew
-rein before the bungalow, and alighted at a huge stone
-which served as a horse-block. The stranger came slowly
-and falteringly toward the veranda, and then the Sybaritic
-major set down his empty cup and glanced at him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[218]</span></p>
-
-<p>The glance became a fixed gaze, full of wildness and
-affright.</p>
-
-<p>The stranger slowly entered the shade of the veranda
-and there halted, his features working, his form trembling.
-He looked weary and travel-stained. His haggard eyes
-spoke to the owner of the bungalow in a wild appeal.</p>
-
-<p>With the peculiar movement of an automaton, the
-major slowly arose to his feet and came forward, his face
-white, his eyes dilating, a tremulous quiver on his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you know me, major?” asked the stranger
-wearily.</p>
-
-<p>“Great heaven!” cried the major, even his lips growing
-white. “It is not a ghost! I am not dreaming!
-Have the dead come to life? It is&mdash;<em>it is&mdash;Sir Harold
-Wynde</em>!”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">BACK AS FROM THE DEAD.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The stranger who stood upon the veranda of Major
-Archer’s bungalow was tall and thin, with a haggard face,
-worn and sharp of feature, and full of deeply cut lines,
-such as a long-continued anguish never fails to graven
-on the features. His weary eyes were deeply sunken
-under his brows, and were outlined with dark circles.
-His hair was streaked with gray, and his long ragged
-beard was half gray also. His face was white like death,
-and unutterably wan. His garments were torn, and hung
-about his lank body in rags, save where they were ill-patched
-with bits of rags and vegetable fibres.</p>
-
-<p>Was Major Archer right? Could this haggard and
-pitiable being be Sir Harold Wynde of Hawkhurst, one<span class="pagenum">[219]</span>
-of the richest baronets in England, who was supposed to
-have perished in the clutches of a tiger?</p>
-
-<p>It seemed incredible&mdash;impossible.</p>
-
-<p>And yet when the heavy eyelids lifted from the thin
-white cheeks, and looked upon the major, it was Sir
-Harold’s soul that looked through them. They were the
-keen blue eyes the major remembered so well, so capable
-of sternness or of tenderness, so expressive of the grand
-and noble soul, the pure and lofty character, which had
-distinguished the baronet.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the stranger was Sir Harold Wynde&mdash;alive and
-well!</p>
-
-<p>“You know me then, Major?” he said. “I am not
-changed, as I thought, beyond all recognition!”</p>
-
-<p>He held out his hand. The major grasped it in a mixture
-of bewilderment and amazement, and not without
-a thrill of superstitious terror.</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I thought you were dead, Sir Harold,” he stammered.
-“We all thought so, Graham and all. We
-thought you were killed by a tiger. I&mdash;I don’t know
-what to make of this!”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold let go the major’s hand and staggered to
-the bamboo couch upon which he sank wearily.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not dead&mdash;but dying,” muttered the major.
-“Lord bless my soul! What am I to do?”</p>
-
-<p>He clapped his hands vigorously. A moment later
-his Hindoo servant Karrah glided around upon the front
-veranda.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring brandy&mdash;sherbet&mdash;anything!” gasped the
-major, pointing at his guest. “He’s fainting, Karrah&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold lifted his weary head and gazed upon the
-Hindoo. The sight seemed to endue him with new life.
-He leaped to his feet, and his blue eyes blazed with an
-awful lightning, as he pointed one long and bony finger
-at the native, and cried:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[220]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Traitor! Viper! Arrest him, Major. I accuse
-him&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Hindoo stood for a second appalled, but as the
-last words struck his hearing he flung at the baronet a
-glance of deadly hatred, and then turned in silence and
-fled from the bungalow, making toward the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>Something of the truth flashed upon the major’s mind.
-He routed up his household in a moment, and dispatched
-them in pursuit of the fugitive.</p>
-
-<p>Aroused by the tumult, Mrs. Archer came forth from
-her chamber. She was a portly woman, and was dressed
-in a light print, and wore a cap. Her husband met her
-in the hall and told her what had occurred. Restraining
-her curiosity, she hastened to prepare food and drink
-for the returned baronet.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Sir Harold had sank down again upon the
-couch. The major approached him, and said:</p>
-
-<p>“You look worn out, Sir Harold. Let me show you
-to a room, where I will attend upon you. My men will
-capture that scoundrel&mdash;never fear. Come with me.”</p>
-
-<p>The baronet arose and took the major’s arm and was
-led into the central hall of the house, and into one of
-the four rooms the house contained. It was the room
-in which his son had died. The windows were closely
-shuttered, but admitted the air at the top. The floor
-was of wood and bare. A bedstead, couch, and chairs
-of bamboo comprised the furniture.</p>
-
-<p>At one side of the room were two spacious closets.
-One of these contained a portable bath-tub, a rack of
-fresh white towels, and plenty of water. The other contained
-clothes depending from hooks.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll find your own suit of clothes there, Sir Harold,”
-said the major. “I intended to send them to
-England, but I am as fond of procrastination as ever.<span class="pagenum">[221]</span>
-It’s just as well though, now. You can take them home
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold sat down in the nearest chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Home!” he whispered. “How are they&mdash;Octavia?
-Neva?”</p>
-
-<p>“All well&mdash;or they were when I heard last.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me what you know of them?” And Sir Harold’s
-great hungry eyes searched the major’s face. “They
-believe me dead?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, Sir Harold. Everybody believes you dead.
-And I am dying to know how it is that you are alive.
-Where have you been these fifteen months? How did
-you escape the tiger?”</p>
-
-<p>The desired explanation was delayed by the appearance
-at the door of Mrs. Archer, who brought a jug of
-warm spiced drink and a plate of food. The major
-took the tray, and shut his wife out, returning to his
-guest.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold was nearly famished, and ate and drank
-like one starving. When his hunger was appeased, and
-a faint color began to dawn in his face, he pushed the
-tray from him, and spoke in a firmer voice than he had
-before employed.</p>
-
-<p>“I have imagined terrible things about my wife and
-Neva,” he said. “My poor wife! I have thought of her
-a thousand times as dead of grief. Do you know, major,
-how she took the report of my death?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard,” said the major, “she nearly died of
-grief. For a long time she shut herself up, and was inconsolable,
-and when she did venture out at last, it was
-in a funereal coach, and dressed in the deepest mourning.
-There are few wives who mourn as she did.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold’s lips quivered.</p>
-
-<p>“My poor darling!” he muttered inaudibly. “My<span class="pagenum">[222]</span>
-precious wife! I shall come back to you from the
-dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Wynde is heart-broken, they say,” said the
-major. “One of the men in our mess, a lieutenant, is
-from Canterbury and hears all the Kentish gossip, and
-he says people were afraid that Lady Wynde would go
-into a decline.”</p>
-
-<p>“My poor wife!” said Sir Harold, with a sobbing
-breath. “I knew how she loved me. We were all the
-world to each other, Major. I must be careful how she
-hears the news that I am living. The sudden shock may
-kill her. Have you any news of my daughter also?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was still at school when I last heard of her,”
-answered the major. “There is no more news of your
-home, Sir Harold. Your family are mourning for you
-and you will bring back their lost happiness. You ought
-to have seen your obituaries in the London papers.
-Some of them were a yard long, and I’d be willing to die
-to-day if I could only read such notices about myself.
-That sounds a little Hibernian, but it’s true. And your
-tenantry put on mourning, and they had funeral sermons
-and so on. By all the rules, you ought to have been dead,
-and, by the Lord Harry, I can’t understand why you are
-not.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Harold smiled wanly.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me explain why I am not,” he said. “You remember
-that I was taking my last ride in India, and was
-about to start for Calcutta, to embark for England, when
-I disappeared? Some three days before that I had a
-quarrel, if I might call it so, with the Hindoo Karrah&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it. He told me about it for the first time this
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“You understand then that I had incurred his enmity
-by kicking him out of this house? I found him stealing
-the effects of my dead son. He had also stolen from me.<span class="pagenum">[223]</span>
-The letters he was stealing he was acute enough to know
-were precious to me, and there was George’s diary, for
-which I would not have taken any amount of money.
-The scoundrel meant to get away with these, and then
-sell them to me at his own terms. I took back my property,
-and punished him as he deserved. I have now reason
-to believe he went away that night to his friends among
-the hills&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“He did. He told me he did. But what did he go
-for?” cried the major excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“You can soon guess. The next morning Karrah came
-back, professing repentance,” said Sir Harold. “I reproached
-myself for having been too harsh upon the poor
-untaught heathen, and took him back. He accompanied
-me upon that last ride, and was so humble, so deprecating,
-so gentle, that I even felt kindly toward him. We
-rode out into the jungle. I was in advance, riding slowly,
-and thinking of home, when suddenly a monstrous tiger
-leaped out of a thicket and fastened his claws in the neck
-of my horse. I fought the monster desperately, for he
-had pinned my leg to the side of my horse, and I could
-not escape from him. We had a frightful struggle, and
-I must have succumbed but for Karrah, who shot at the
-tiger, wounding him, I think, in the shoulder, and frightening
-him into retreat.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so you escaped, when we all thought you
-killed?” cried the major.</p>
-
-<p>“My horse was dying,” said the baronet, “and I was
-wounded and bleeding. I thought I was dying. I fell
-from my saddle to the ground, groaning with pain.
-Karrah came up, and bent over me, with a devilish smile
-and moistened my lips with brandy from a flask he
-carried. Then, muttering words in his own language
-which I could not understand, he carried me to his own
-horse, mounted, with me in his arms, and rode off in the<span class="pagenum">[224]</span>
-direction in which we had been going, and away from
-your bungalow.”</p>
-
-<p>“The scoundrel! What was that for?”</p>
-
-<p>“After a half-hour’s ride, we came to a hollow, where
-three natives were camped. Karrah halted, and addressed
-them. They gathered around us, and then Karrah
-said to me, in English, that he hated me, that he
-would not kill me, but meant me to suffer, and that
-these men were his brothers, who lived a score of miles
-away up among the mountains. I was to be their slave.
-He transferred me to their care, disregarding my pleas
-and offered bribes, and rode away on his return to you.
-I was carried on horseback, securely bound, a score of
-miles to the north and westward. How I suffered on
-that horrible journey, wounded as I was, I can never tell
-you. A dozen times I thought myself dying.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a wonder you did not die!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is,” said Sir Harold. “We went through savage
-jungles, and forded mountain torrents. We went up
-hill and down, and more than once leaped precipices. I
-was in a dead faint when we reached the home of the
-three Hindoos, but afterward I found how wild and secluded
-the spot was, and that there were no neighbors
-for miles around. Their cabin was niched in a cleft in
-a mountain, and hidden from the eye of any but the
-closest searcher. Had you searched for me, you would
-never have found me. It was in a rear hut, small and
-dark, with a mud floor, and windowless walls, that I have
-been a prisoner for fifteen months, major. My enemies,
-for the most part, left me to myself, and I have dragged
-out my weary captivity with futile plans of escape. Ah,
-I have known more than the bitterness of death!”</p>
-
-<p>“If we had only known it, we’d have scoured all
-India for you, Sir Harold,” said the major hotly. “We’d
-have strung up every native until we got the right ones.<span class="pagenum">[225]</span>
-But that episode of the tiger&mdash;for it seems that the tiger
-was only an episode, coming into the affair by accident,
-but greatly assisting Karrah’s foul treachery&mdash;threw us
-off the scent, and made us think you dead. Why did
-we not suspect the truth?”</p>
-
-<p>“How could you? Don’t reproach yourself, major.
-My chiefest sufferings during these horrible fifteen
-months have been on account of my wife and my
-daughter. To feel myself helpless, a slave to those
-Hindoo pariahs, bound continually and in chains, while
-Octavia and Neva were weeping for me and crying out
-in their anguish, and perhaps needing me&mdash;ah, that was
-almost too hard to bear! Now and then Karrah came
-to taunt me in my prison, and to tell me how he hated
-me, and how sweet was his revenge. He told me that
-you had heard through a friend that my poor wife was
-dying of her grief. After that I tried, with increased
-ingenuity, to find some way of escape. Last night the
-three Hindoos went away&mdash;upon a marauding expedition,
-I think. After they had gone, one of the women
-brought me my usual evening meal of boiled rice. I
-pleaded to her to release me, but she laughed at me.
-She went out, leaving the door open, intending to return
-soon for the dish. The sight of the sky and of the
-green earth without nerved me to desperation. I was
-confined by a belt around my waist, to which an iron
-chain was attached, the other end of the chain being secured
-to a ring in the wall. I had wrenched my belt
-and the chain a thousand times, but last night when I
-pulled at it with the strength of a madman, it gave way.
-I fell to the floor&mdash;unfettered!”</p>
-
-<p>“You bounded up like an India rubber ball, I dare
-swear?” cried the major, wiping his eyes sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p>“I leaped up, and darted out of the door. There was<span class="pagenum">[226]</span>
-a horse tethered near the hut. I bounded on his back
-and sped away, as the woman came hurrying out in
-wild pursuit. I knew the general direction in which
-your bungalow lay. I rode all night, going out of my
-road, but being set straight again by some kindly Hindoos;
-and here I am, weary, worn, but Oh, how thankful
-and blest!”</p>
-
-<p>The baronet bowed his head on his hands, and his
-tears of joy fell thickly.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re safe now, Sir Harold,” cried the major. “I
-hear a hubbub outside. My fellows have got back, with
-Karrah, no doubt. I want to superintend the skinning
-him, and while I am gone, you can refresh yourself with
-a bath, and put on a suit of Christian garments. My
-wife is dying to see you. I hear her pacing the hall like
-a caged leopardess. Get ready, and I’ll come back to
-you as soon as you have had a little sleep. You’re
-among friends, my dear Sir Harold; and, by Jove, I’m
-glad to see you again!”</p>
-
-<p>He pressed Sir Harold’s hand, catching his breath
-with a peculiar sobbing, and hurried out.</p>
-
-<p>His servants had returned, but Karrah had escaped.
-The major indulged in some peculiar profanity, as he
-listened to this report, and then withdrew to his wife’s
-cool room, and told her Sir Harold’s story.</p>
-
-<p>The baronet, meanwhile, took a bath and went to bed.
-He slept for hours, awakening after noon. He shaved
-and trimmed his beard, dressed himself in the suit of
-clothes he had formerly worn, and which were now
-much too large for him, and came forth into the central
-hall of the dwelling. Major Archer was lounging here,
-and came forward hastily, with both hands outstretched,
-and with a beaming face.</p>
-
-<p>“You look more like yourself, Sir Harold!” he exclaimed.<span class="pagenum">[227]</span>
-“Mrs. Archer is out on the veranda, and is
-full of impatience to see you.”</p>
-
-<p>He linked his arm in the baronet’s and conducted him
-out to the veranda, presenting him to Mrs. Archer, who
-greeted him with a certain awe and kindliness, as one
-would welcome a hero.</p>
-
-<p>The little Archers were playing about under the
-charge of an ayah, and they also came forward timidly
-to welcome their father’s guest.</p>
-
-<p>Tiffin&mdash;the India luncheon&mdash;was served on the veranda,
-and after it was over, and the young people had
-dispersed, Sir Harold said to his host:</p>
-
-<p>“When does the next steamer leave for England?”</p>
-
-<p>“Three days hence. You will have time to catch the
-mail if you write to-day,” said Major Archer.</p>
-
-<p>“Write! Why, I shall go in her, Major!”</p>
-
-<p>“Impossible, Sir Harold. You are not fit for the voyage,”
-said Mrs. Archer.</p>
-
-<p>“I must go,” persisted the baronet, in a tone no one
-could dispute. “Think of my wife&mdash;of my daughter.
-Every day that keeps me from them seems an eternity.
-Major, I was robbed by Karrah of every penny I possessed.
-Plunder was a part of his motive, as well as desire
-for revenge. I shall have to draw upon you for a
-sufficient sum for my expenses.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s fortunate, and quite an unprecedented thing
-with me, that I have a couple of hundred pounds in bank
-in Calcutta,” said the major. “I wish it were a thousand,
-but you’re quite welcome to it, Sir Harold&mdash;a
-thousand times welcome. I appreciate your impatience
-to be on your way home. If it were I, and your wife
-was my Molly, I’d travel day and night&mdash;but there, I’ve
-said enough. I’ll go to Calcutta with you, and see you
-off on the <em>Mongolian</em>. I wish I could do more for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can, Major. You can keep silence concerning<span class="pagenum">[228]</span>
-my reappearance,” declared Sir Harold thoughtfully.
-“My wife is reported to be dying of grief. If she hears
-too abruptly that I still live, the shock may destroy her.
-Major, I am going home under a name not my own, that
-the story of my adventures may not be bruited about
-before she sees me. I will not reveal myself to any one
-in Calcutta, nor to any one in England, before reaching
-home. I will go quietly and unknown to Hawkhurst,
-and reveal myself with all care and caution to Neva, who
-will break the news to my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Harold is right,” said Mrs. Archer. “Lady
-Wynde and Miss Wynde should not first hear the news
-by telegraph, or letter, or through the newspapers. Their
-impatience, anxiety, and suspense, after hearing that Sir
-Harold still lives, and before they can see him, will be
-terrible. The shock, as Sir Harold suggests, might
-almost be fatal to Lady Wynde.”</p>
-
-<p>“My wife is always right,” said the burly major, with
-a glance of admiration at his spouse. “Sir Harold, you
-cannot do better than to follow your instincts and my
-Molly’s counsels. It is settled then, that you return to
-England under an assumed name, and see your own family
-before you proclaim your adventures to the world.
-What name shall you adopt as a ‘name of voyage,’ to
-translate from the French?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will call myself Harold Hunlow,” said the baronet.
-“Hunlow was my mother’s name. I am rested, Major,
-and if you can give me a mount, we’ll be off at sunset
-on our way to Calcutta.”</p>
-
-<p>It was thus agreed. That very evening Sir Harold
-Wynde and Major Archer set out for Calcutta on horseback,
-arriving in time to secure passage in the <em>Mongolian</em>.
-And on the third day after leaving Major Archer’s bungalow,
-Sir Harold Wynde was at sea, and on his way to
-England. Ah, what a reception awaited him!</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[229]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">NEVA’S DECISION ABOUT RUFUS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Could her guardian angel have whispered to Neva
-that her father did indeed still live, and that at the very
-moment of her vivid dream he stood upon the veranda
-of Major Archer’s Indian bungalow, weak, wasted and
-weary, but with the principle of life strong within him,
-what agony she might have been spared in the near
-future! what terrors and perils she might perhaps have
-escaped!</p>
-
-<p>But she did not know it&mdash;she could not guess that life
-held for her a joy so rare, so pure, so sweet, as that of
-welcoming back to his home her father so long and bitterly
-mourned as dead.</p>
-
-<p>As we have said, she remained awake during the remainder
-of the night, walking her floor in her white
-gown and slippered feet, now and then wringing her
-hands, or sobbing softly, or crying silently; and thus
-the weary hours dragged by.</p>
-
-<p>Before the clear sunlight of the soft September morning,
-which stole at last into her pleasant rooms, Neva’s
-dream lost its vividness and semblance of reality, and
-the conviction settled down upon her soul that it was
-indeed “only a dream.”</p>
-
-<p>She dressed herself for breakfast in a morning robe of
-white, with cherry-colored ribbons, but her face was very
-pale, and there was a look of unrest in her red-brown
-eyes when she descended slowly and wearily to the
-breakfast-room at a later hour than usual.</p>
-
-<p>This room faced the morning sun, and was octagon
-shaped, one half of the octagon projecting from the<span class="pagenum">[230]</span>
-house wall, and being set with sashes of French plate-glass,
-like a gigantic bay-window. One of the glazed
-sections opened like a door upon the eastern marble terrace,
-with its broad surface, its carved balustrade, and
-its rows of rare trees and shrubs in portable tubs.</p>
-
-<p>There was no one in the room when Neva entered it.
-The large table was laid with covers for five persons.
-The glazed door was ajar, and the windows were all
-open, giving ingress to the fresh morning air. The
-room was all brightness and cheerfulness, the soft gray
-carpet having a border of scarlet and gold, the massive
-antique chairs being upholstered in scarlet leather, and
-the sombreness of the dainty buffet of ebony wood being
-relieved by delicate tracery of gold, drawn by a
-sparing hand.</p>
-
-<p>Neva crossed the floor and passed out upon the terrace,
-where a gaudy peacock strutted, spreading his fan
-in the sunlight, and giving utterance to his harsh notes
-of self-satisfaction. Neva paced slowly up and down the
-terrace, shading her face with her hand. A little later
-she heard some one emerge from the breakfast room
-upon the terrace, and come behind her with an irregular
-and unsteady tread.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-morning, Miss Neva,” said Rufus Black, as he
-gained her side. “A lovely morning, is it not?”</p>
-
-<p>Neva returned his salutation gravely. She knew that
-Rufus Black had slept under the same roof with herself
-the preceding night, after the ball, and that a room at
-Hawkhurst had been specially assigned him by Lady
-Wynde, now Mrs. Craven Black.</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to have sacrificed your scruples, and come
-down to the drawing-rooms last night,” said Rufus
-Black. “I assure you we had a delightful time, but you
-would have been the star of the ball. I watched the
-door for your appearance until the people began to go<span class="pagenum">[231]</span>
-home, and I never danced, although there was no end of
-pretty girls, but they were not pretty for me,” added
-Rufus, sighing. “There is for me <em>now</em> only one beautiful
-girl in the whole world, and you are she, sweet
-Neva.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever love any one before you loved me?”
-asked Neva, with a quiet frankness and straightforwardness,
-looking up at him with her clear eyes full of dusky
-glow.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye&mdash;no!” stammered Rufus, turning suddenly pale,
-and his honest eyes blenching. “Almost every man has
-had his boyish fancies, Miss Neva. Whatever mine may
-have been, my life has been pure, and my heart is all
-your own. You believe me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I believe you. Mr. and Mrs. Black have come
-down to breakfast, Mr. Rufus. Let us go in.”</p>
-
-<p>She led the way back to the breakfast room, Rufus
-following. They found the bride and bridegroom and
-Mrs. Artress waiting for them. Neva greeted Lady
-Wynde by her new name, and bowed quietly to Craven
-Black and Mrs. Artress. The little party took seats at
-the table, and the portly butler, with a mute protest in
-his heart against the new master of Hawkhurst, waited
-upon them, assisted by skillful subordinates.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Craven Black, dressed in white, looked the incarnation
-of satisfaction. She had so far succeeded in the
-daring game she had been playing, and her jet-black
-eyes glittered, and her dark cheeks were flushed to
-crimson, and her manner was full of feverish gayety, as
-she did the honors of the Hawkhurst breakfast table to
-her new husband.</p>
-
-<p>Three years before she had been a poor adventuress,
-unable to marry the man she loved. Now, through the
-success of a daring and terrible conspiracy, she was
-wealthy, the real and nominal mistress of one of the<span class="pagenum">[232]</span>
-grandest seats in England; the personal guardian of one
-of the richest heiresses in the kingdom; and the wife of
-her fellow-conspirator, to obey whose behests, and to
-marry whom, she had been willing to peril her soul’s
-salvation.</p>
-
-<p>Only one thing remained to render her triumph perfect,
-her fortune magnificent, and her success assured. Only
-one move remained to be played, and her game would be
-fully played.</p>
-
-<p>That move comprehended the marriage of Neva Wynde
-to Rufus Black, and Mrs. Craven Black, from the moment
-of her third marriage, resolved to devote all her energies
-to the task of bringing about the union upon which she
-was determined.</p>
-
-<p>The breakfast was eaten by Neva almost in silence.
-When the meal was over Mr. and Mrs. Craven Black
-strolled out into the gardens, arm in arm. Mrs. Artress,
-who had fully emerged from her gray chrysalis, and who
-was now dressed in pale blue, hideously unbecoming to
-her ashen-hued complexion, retired to her own room to
-enjoy her triumph in solitude, and to count the first installment
-of the yearly allowance that had been promised
-her, and which had already been paid her, with remarkable
-promptness, by Lady Wynde.</p>
-
-<p>Neva went to the music-room, and began to play a
-weird, strange melody, in which her very soul seemed to
-find utterance. In the midst of her abstraction, the door
-opened, and Rufus Black came in softly.</p>
-
-<p>He was standing at her side when her wild music
-ceased abruptly, and she looked up from the ivory keys.</p>
-
-<p>“Your music sounds like a lament, or a dirge,” said
-Rufus, leaning upon the piano and regarding with admiration
-the pale, rapt face and glowing eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I meant it so,” said Neva. “I was thinking of my
-father.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[233]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” said Rufus, rather vacantly.</p>
-
-<p>“I dreamed of papa last night,” said Neva softly,
-resting her elbow on the crashing keys and laying one
-rounded cheek upon her pink palm. “I dreamed he was
-alive, Rufus, and that I saw him standing before the
-door of an Indian hut, or bungalow, or curious dwelling;
-and my dream was like a vision.”</p>
-
-<p>“A rather uncomfortable one,” suggested Rufus.
-“You were greatly excited yesterday, Neva, I could see
-that; and, as your mind was all stirred up concerning
-your father, you naturally dreamed of him. It would
-make a horrid row if your dream could only turn out
-true, and you ought to rejoice that it cannot. You have
-mourned for him, and the edge of your grief has worn
-off&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, it has not,” interrupted the girl’s passionate
-young voice. “If I had seen him die, I could have been reconciled
-to the will of God. But to lose him in that awful
-manner&mdash;never to know how much he suffered during
-the moments when he was struggling in the claws of that
-deadly tiger&mdash;oh, it seems at times more than I can bear.
-And to think how soon he has been forgotten!” and
-Neva’s voice trembled. “His wife whom he idolized
-has married another, and his friends and tenantry have
-danced and made merry at her wedding. Of all who
-knew and loved him, only his daughter still mourns at
-his awful fate!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is hard,” assented Rufus, “but it’s the way of the
-world, you know. If it will comfort you any, Neva, I
-will tell you that half the county families came to the
-wedding breakfast to support and cheer you by their
-presence, and the other half came out of sheer curiosity.
-But few of the best families remained to the ball.”</p>
-
-<p>“Papa thought much of you, did he not, Rufus?”
-asked Neva, thinking of that skilfully forged letter<span class="pagenum">[234]</span>
-which was hidden in her bosom, and which purported to
-be her father’s last letter to her from India.</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Black had been warned by his father that Neva
-might some day thus question him, and Craven Black
-had told his son that he must answer the heiress in the
-affirmative. Rufus was weak of will, cowardly, and
-timid, but it was not in him to be deliberately dishonest.
-He could not lie to the young girl, whose truthful eyes
-sought his own.</p>
-
-<p>“I had no personal acquaintance with Sir Harold
-Wynde, Neva,” the young man said, inwardly quaking,
-yet daring to tell the truth.</p>
-
-<p>“But&mdash;but&mdash;papa said&mdash;I don’t really comprehend,
-Rufus. I thought that papa loved you.”</p>
-
-<p>“If Sir Harold ever saw me, I do not know it,” said
-Rufus, cruelly embarrassed, and wondering if his honesty
-would not prove his ruin. “I was at the University&mdash;Sir
-Harold may have seen me, and taken a liking to
-me&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Neva looked strangely perplexed and troubled. Certainly
-the awkward statement of Rufus did not agree
-with the supposed last declaration of her father.</p>
-
-<p>“There seems some mystery here which I cannot
-fathom,” she said. “I have a letter written by papa in
-India, under the terrible foreboding that he would die
-there, and in this letter papa speaks of you with affection,
-and says&mdash;and says&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She paused, her blushes amply completing the sentence.</p>
-
-<p>A cold shiver passed over the form of Rufus. He
-comprehended the cause of Neva’s blushes, and a portion
-of his father’s villainy. He understood that the
-letter of which Neva spoke had been forged by Craven
-Black, and that it commanded Neva’s marriage with
-Craven Black’s son. What could he say? What should<span class="pagenum">[235]</span>
-he do? His innate cowardice prevented him from confessing
-the truth, and his awe of his father prevented
-him from betraying him, and he could only tremble and
-blush and pale alternately.</p>
-
-<p>“Papa might have taken an interest in you, without
-making himself known to you,” suggested Neva, after a
-brief pause. “Some act of yours might have made your
-name known to him, and he might secretly have watched
-your course without betraying to you his interest in you,
-might he not?”</p>
-
-<p>“He might,” said Rufus huskily.</p>
-
-<p>“I can explain the matter in no other way. It is singular.
-Perhaps poor papa might not have well known
-what he was writing, but the letter is so clearly written
-that that idea is not tenable. After all, so long as he
-wrote the letter, what does it matter?” said Neva wearily.
-“He must have known you, Rufus&mdash;or else the
-letter was forged!”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus averted his face, upon which a cold sweat was
-starting.</p>
-
-<p>“Who would have forged it?” he asked hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>“That I do not know. I know no one base enough
-for such a deed. It could not have been forged, of
-course, Rufus, but the discrepancy between your statement
-and that in the letter makes me naturally doubt.
-Papa was the most truthful of men. He hated a lie,
-and was so punctilious in regard to the truth that he
-was always painfully exact in his statements. He trained
-me to scorn a lie, and was even particular about the
-slightest error in repeating a story. How then could he
-speak of knowing you? Perhaps, though, I am mistaken.
-I may find, on referring to the letter, that he
-speaks of liking you and taking an interest in you, without
-alluding to a personal acquaintance.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I had known Sir Harold, I should have tried to<span class="pagenum">[236]</span>
-deserve his good opinion,” said Rufus, his voice trembling.
-“I have the greatest reverence for his character,
-and I wish I might be like him.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are few like papa,” said Neva, a sudden glow
-transfiguring her face.</p>
-
-<p>“How you loved him, Neva. If I had had such a
-father!” and Rufus sighed. “I would rather have an
-honorable, affectionate father whom I could revere and
-trust than to have a million of money!”</p>
-
-<p>Neva reached out her hand in sympathy, and the
-young man seized it eagerly, clinging to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Neva,” he exclaimed, with a sudden energy of passion,
-“it is more than a month since I asked you to be
-my wife, and you have not yet given me my answer.
-Will you give it to me now?”</p>
-
-<p>The girl withdrew her hand gently, and rested her
-cheek again on her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I know I am not worthy of you,” said Rufus, beseechingly.
-“I am poor in fortune, weak of character, a
-piece of drift-wood blown hither and thither by adverse
-winds, and likely to be tossed on a rocky shore at last,
-if you do not have pity upon me. Neva, such as I am,
-I beseech you to save me!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am powerless to save any one,” said Neva gently.
-“Your help must come from above, Rufus.”</p>
-
-<p>“I want an earthly arm to cling to,” pleaded Rufus,
-his tones growing shrill with the sudden fear that she
-would reject him. “I have in me all noble impulses,
-Neva; I have in me the ability to become such a man
-as was your father. I would foster all noble enterprises;
-I would become great for your sake. I would study my
-art and make a name of which you should be proud.
-Will you stoop from your high estate, Neva, and have
-pity upon a weak, cowardly soul that longs to be strong
-and brave? Will you smile upon my great love for you,<span class="pagenum">[237]</span>
-and let me devote my life to your happiness and comfort?”</p>
-
-<p>His wild eyes looked into hers with a prayerfulness
-that went to her soul. He seemed to regard her as his
-earthly saviour&mdash;and such indeed, if she accepted him,
-she would be, for she would bring him fortune, and,
-what he valued more, her affection, her pure life, her
-brave soul, on which his own weak nature might be
-stayed.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Rufus!” said Neva, with a tenderness that a
-sister might have shown him. “My poor boy!” and her
-small face beamed with sisterly kindness upon the tall,
-awkward fellow, the words coming strangely from her
-lips. “I am sorry for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you will marry me?” he cried eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>The young face became grave almost to sternness.
-The lovely eyes gloomed over with a great shadow.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to obey papa’s wishes as if they were commands,”
-she said. “I have thought and prayed, day
-after day and night after night. I like you, Rufus, and
-I cannot hear your appeals unmoved. I believe I am
-not selfish, if I am true to my higher nature, and obey
-the instincts God has implanted in my soul. I must be
-untrue to God, to myself, and to my own instincts, or I
-must pay no heed to that last letter and to the last
-wishes of poor papa. Which shall I do? I have decided
-first one way, and then the other. The possibility that
-that letter was&mdash;was not written by papa&mdash;and there is
-such a possibility&mdash;I cannot now help but consider.
-Forgive me, Rufus, but I have decided, and I think
-papa, who has looked down from heaven upon my perplexity
-and my anguish, must approve my course. I
-feel that I am doing right, when I say,” and here her
-hand took his, “that&mdash;that I cannot marry you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not marry me! Oh, Neva!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[238]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It costs me much to say it, Rufus, but I must be
-true to myself, to my principles of honor. I do not love
-you as a wife should love her husband. I could not
-stand up before God’s altar and God’s minister, and perjure
-myself by saying that I thus loved you. No,
-Rufus, no; it may not be!”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus bowed his head upon the piano, and sobbed
-aloud.</p>
-
-<p>His weakness appealed to the girl’s strength. She had
-seldom seen a man in tears, and her own tears began to
-flow in sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>“I am so sorry, Rufus!” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“But you will not save me? You will not lift a hand
-to save me from perdition?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will be your sister, Rufus.”</p>
-
-<p>“Until you become some other man’s wife!” cried
-Rufus, full of jealous anguish. “You will marry some
-other man&mdash;Lord Towyn, perhaps?”</p>
-
-<p>The girl retreated a few steps, a red glory on her features.
-A strange sweet shyness shone in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I see!” exclaimed Rufus, in a passion of grief and
-jealousy. “You will marry Lord Towyn? Oh, Neva!
-Neva!”</p>
-
-<p>“Rufus, it cannot matter to you whom I marry since
-I cannot marry you. Let us be friends&mdash;brother and
-sister&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I will be all to you or nothing!” ejaculated Rufus
-violently. “I will marry you or die!”</p>
-
-<p>He broke from the grasp she laid upon him, and with
-a wild cry upon his lips, dashed from the room.</p>
-
-<p>In the hall he encountered Craven Black and his bride,
-just come in from the garden. He would have brushed
-past them unseeing, unheeding, but his father, seeing his
-excitement and agitation, grasped his arm forcibly, arresting
-his progress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[239]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” demanded Craven Black fiercely.
-“What’s up?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to kill myself!” returned Rufus shrilly, trying
-to break loose from that strong, unyielding clasp.
-“It’s all over. Neva has refused me, and turned me
-adrift. She is going to marry Lord Towyn!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is she?” said Craven Black mockingly. “We’ll
-see about that.”</p>
-
-<p>“We will see!” said Neva’s step-mother, with a cruel
-and fierce compression of her lips. “I am Miss Wynde’s
-guardian. We will see if she dares disobey her father’s
-often repeated injunctions to obey me! If she does refuse,
-she shall feel my power!”</p>
-
-<p>“Defer your suicide until you see how the thing turns
-out, my son,” said Craven Black, with a little sneer. “Go
-to your room and dry your tears, before the servants
-laugh at you.”</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Black slunk away, miserable, yet with reviving
-hope. Perhaps the matter was not ended yet? Perhaps
-Neva would reconsider her decision?</p>
-
-<p>As he disappeared up the staircase, Mrs. Craven Black
-laid her hand on her bridegroom’s arm, and whispered:</p>
-
-<p>“The girl will prove restive. We shall have trouble
-with her. If we mean to force her into this marriage,
-we must first of all get her away from her friends. Where
-shall we take her? How shall we deal with her?”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[240]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">LALLY FINDS A NEW HOME.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Nearly six weeks had intervened between Rufus
-Black’s proposal of marriage to Neva Wynde on the
-road-side bank and his final rejection by her in the music-room
-at Hawkhurst.</p>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that there had been a hidden
-witness to the half-despairing, half-loving, proposal of
-Rufus, and that this hidden witness, seeing, but unseen,
-was no other than the wronged young wife whom Rufus
-Black mourned as dead, and whom in his soul he loved
-a thousand-fold better than the beautiful young heiress.</p>
-
-<p>During the six weeks that had passed, what had become
-of Lally&mdash;poor, heart-broken, despairing Lally?</p>
-
-<p>We have narrated how she staggered away in the
-night gloom, after seeing Rufus and Neva together in
-the square of light from the home windows upon the
-marble terrace, not knowing whither she went, but hurrying
-as swiftly as she might from her young husband,
-from happiness, and from hope itself.</p>
-
-<p>She had no thought of suicide. She had learned many
-lessons by the bedside of her old friend the seamstress,
-whose dying hours she had cheered. She had learned
-that life may be very bitter and hard to bear, but that it
-may not be thrown aside, or flung back in anger or
-despair to the Giver. Its burdens must be borne, and
-he who bears them with earnest patience, and in humble
-obedience to the divine will, shall some day exchange
-the cross of suffering for the crown of a great
-reward. No; Lally, weak and frail as she was, deserted
-by humanity, would never again seriously think of
-suicide.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[241]</span></p>
-
-<p>She wandered on in the soft starlight and moonlight,
-a helpless, homeless, hopeless creature, with nowhere to
-go, as we have said. She had no money in her pocket,
-no food, and her shoes were worn out, and her clothes
-were patched and darned and pitiably frayed and worn.
-The very angels must have pitied her in her utter forlornness.</p>
-
-<p>For an hour or two she tottered on, but at last wearied
-to exhaustion, she sank down in the shelter of a way-side
-hedge, and sobbed and moaned herself to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>She was awake again at daybreak, and hurried up and
-on, as if flying from pursuit. About eleven o’clock she
-came to a hop-garden, divided from the road by wooden
-palings. There were men and women, of the tramp
-species, busy at work here under the supervision of the
-hop farmer. Lally halted and clung to the palings with
-both hands, and looked through the interstices upon the
-busy groups with dilating eyes.</p>
-
-<p>She was worn with anguish, but even her mental sufferings
-could not still the demands of nature. She was
-so hungry that it seemed as if a vulture were gnawing
-at her vitals. She felt that she was starving.</p>
-
-<p>The hop-pickers, many of them tramps who lived in
-unions and alms-houses in the winter, and who stray
-down into Kent during the hop season, presently discovered
-the white and hungry face pressed against the palings,
-and jeered at the girl, and called her names she
-could not understand, making merry at her forlornness.</p>
-
-<p>The hop raiser heard them, and discovering the object
-of their rude merriment, came forward, opened a gate in
-the palings, and hailed the girl. He was short of hands,
-he said, and would give her sixpence a day, and food and
-drink, if she chose to help in the hop picking.</p>
-
-<p>Lally nodded assent, and crept into the gate, and into
-the presence of those who mocked at her. Her eyes<span class="pagenum">[242]</span>
-were so wild, her manner so strange and still, that the
-workers stared at her in wonder, whispered among
-themselves, discovering that she was not of their kind,
-and turned their backs upon her.</p>
-
-<p>It was taken for granted that the new hand had had
-her breakfast, and not a crust was offered to her. The
-hop raiser had doubts about her sanity, and observed
-her narrowly, but a dozen times that day he mentally
-congratulated himself on his acquisition. Lally worked
-with feverish energy, trying&mdash;ah, how vainly&mdash;to escape
-from her thoughts, and she did the work of two persons.
-She had bread and cheese and a glass of ale at
-noon, and a similar allowance of food for supper.</p>
-
-<p>That night she slept in a barn with the women tramps,
-but chose a remote corner, where she buried herself in
-the hay, and slept peacefully.</p>
-
-<p>The next day she would have wandered on in her unrest,
-but the farmer, discovering her intention, offered
-her a shilling a day, and she consented to remain. That
-night she again slept in her remote corner of the barn,
-and no one spoke to her or molested her.</p>
-
-<p>She made no friends among the tramps, not even
-speaking to them. They were rude, vicious, quarrelsome.
-She was educated and refined, had been the
-teacher and companion of ladies, and was herself a lady
-at heart. She went among these rude companions by
-the soubriquet of “The Lady,” and this was the only
-name by which the hop farmer knew her.</p>
-
-<p>For a week Lally kept up this toil, laboring in the
-hop-fields by day, and sleeping in a barn at night. At
-the end of that period, the work being finished, she was
-no longer wanted, and she went her way, resuming her
-weary tramp, with six shillings and sixpence in her
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>For the next fortnight she worked in various hop-fields,<span class="pagenum">[243]</span>
-paying nothing for food or lodging. Her pay
-was better too, she earning a sovereign in the two
-weeks.</p>
-
-<p>Three weeks after overhearing Rufus solicit the hand
-of Miss Wynde in marriage, Lally found herself at Canterbury,
-shoeless and ragged, a very picture of destitution.
-Her first act was to purchase a pair of shoes, a
-ready-made print dress and a thin shawl. Her purchases
-were all of the cheapest description, not costing her over
-five shillings. She added to the list a round hat of
-coarse straw, around which she tied a dark blue ribbon.</p>
-
-<p>She found a cheap lodging in the town; and here put
-on her new clothes. The lodging was an attic room,
-with a dormer window, close up under the slates of a
-humble brick dwelling. There was no carpet on her
-floor, and the furniture comprised only an iron bed-stead,
-a chair and a table. The house was rented by a tailor,
-who used the ground floor for his shop and residence,
-and sub-let the upper rooms to a half dozen different
-families. The three attic rooms were let to women,
-Lally being one, and two thin, consumptive seamstresses
-occupying the others.</p>
-
-<p>It was necessary for Lally to find employment without
-delay, and she inserted an advertisement in one of
-the local papers, soliciting a position as nursery governess.
-She had the written recommendation of her former
-employers, the superintendents of a ladies’ school, and
-with this she hoped to secure a situation.</p>
-
-<p>Her advertisement was repeated for three days without
-result. Upon the fourth day, as she was counting
-her slender store of money, and wondering what she was
-to do when that was gone, the postman’s knock was
-heard on the private door below, and presently the
-tailor’s little boy came to Lally’s room bringing a letter.</p>
-
-<p>She tore it open eagerly. It was dated Sandy Lands,<span class="pagenum">[244]</span>
-and was written in a painfully minute style of penmanship,
-with faint and spidery letters. The writer was a
-lady, signing herself Mrs. Blight. She stated that she
-had a family of nine children, five of whom were young
-enough to require the services of a nursery governess.
-If “L. B.”&mdash;the initials Lally had appended to her advertisement&mdash;could
-give satisfactory references, was an
-accomplished musician, spoke French and German, and
-was well versed in the English branches, she might call
-at Sandy Lands upon the following morning at ten
-o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly the next morning Lally set out in a cab
-for Sandy Lands, whose location Mrs. Blight had described
-with sufficient accuracy. It was situated in one
-of the fashionable suburbs of the old cathedral town.
-Lally expected from the grandeur of its name to find a
-large and handsome estate, but found instead a pert
-little villa, close to the road, and separated from it by a
-high brick wall in which was a wooden gate. The domain
-of Sandy Lands comprised a half-acre of rather
-sterile soil, in which a few larches struggled for existence,
-and an acacia and a lime tree led a sickly life.</p>
-
-<p>The little villa, with plate-glass windows, green parlor
-shutters drawn half-way up, a gabled roof, from which
-three saucy little dormer windows protruded, was unmistakably
-the house of which Lally was in search, for on
-one side of the gate, over a slit in the wall required for
-the use of the proper letter-box, was the legend in bright
-gilt letters, “Sandy Lands.”</p>
-
-<p>The cabman alighted and rang the garden bell. A
-smart looking housemaid with white cap and white apron
-answered the call. Lally alighted and asked if Mrs.
-Blight were at home. The smart housemaid eyed the
-humbly clad stranger rather contemptuously, and remarked<span class="pagenum">[245]</span>
-that she could not be sure; Mrs. Blight might
-be at home, and then again she might not.</p>
-
-<p>“I received a letter from her telling me to call at this
-hour,” said Lally, with what dignity she could summon.
-“I am seeking a situation as nursery governess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then Missus is at home,” replied the housemaid.
-“You can come in, Miss.”</p>
-
-<p>Bidding the cabman wait, Lally followed the servant
-across the garden to a rear porch and was ushered into
-a small over-furnished reception room.</p>
-
-<p>“What name shall I say, Miss?” asked the maid, pausing
-in the act of withdrawal.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Bird,” answered poor Lally, who had relinquished
-her young husband’s name, believing that she
-had no longer any right to it.</p>
-
-<p>The maid went out, and was absent nearly twenty
-minutes. Lally began to think herself forgotten, and
-grew nervous, and engaged in a mental computation of
-her cabman’s probable charges. The maid finally appeared,
-however, and announced that “Missus was in
-her boudoir, and would see the young person.”</p>
-
-<p>Lally was conducted up stairs to a front room overlooking
-the road. This room, like the one below, was
-over-furnished. The wide window opened upon a balcony,
-and before it, half-reclining upon a silken couch,
-was a lady in a heavy purple silk gown, and a profusion
-of jewelry&mdash;a lady, short, stout, and red-visaged, with a
-nose much turned up at the end, and so ruddy as to induce
-one to think it in a state of inflammation.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Bird!” announced the maid abruptly, flinging
-in the words like a discharge of shot, and retired precipitately.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Blight turned her gaze upon Lally in a languid
-curiosity, and waved her hand condescendingly, as an intimation
-that the “young person” might be seated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[246]</span></p>
-
-<p>Lally sat down.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Blight then raised a pair of gold-mounted eye-glasses
-to her nose, and scrutinized Lally more closely,
-after what she deemed a very high-bred and <em>nonchalant</em>
-fashion indeed.</p>
-
-<p>She beheld a humbly dressed girl, not past seventeen,
-but looking younger, with a face as brown as a berry and
-velvet-black eyes, which were strangely pathetic and sorrowful&mdash;a
-girl who had known trouble evidently, but
-who was pure and innocent as one might see at a glance.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, is your name Bird?” asked Mrs. Blight languidly.
-“Seems as if I had heard the name somewhere, but I
-can’t be sure. Of course you have brought references,
-Miss Bird?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have only a recommendation signed by ladies in
-whose service I have been,” said Lally. “I have been
-a music-teacher, but I possess the other accomplishments
-you require.”</p>
-
-<p>She drew forth the little worn slip of paper which she
-had guarded as of more value to her than money,
-because it declared her respectable and a competent
-music-teacher, and gave it into the lady’s fat hands.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not dated very lately,” said Mrs. Blight. “How
-am I to know that this recommendation is not a forgery?
-People do forge such things, I hear. Why, a
-friend of mine took a footman on a forged recommendation,
-and he ran away and took all her silver.”</p>
-
-<p>Lally’s honest cheeks flushed, and her heart swelled.
-She would have arisen, but that the lady motioned to
-her to retain her seat, and so long as there was a prospect
-that she might secure the situation Lally would
-remain.</p>
-
-<p>“The recommendation looks all right,” continued
-Mrs. Blight, scanning it with her glass, while she held it
-afar off, and daintily between two fingers, as if it were a<span class="pagenum">[247]</span>
-thing unclean. “You look honest too, but appearances
-are <em>so</em> deceiving! I had a nurse girl once who looked
-like a Madonna, and as if butter wouldn’t melt in her
-mouth, but she turned out a perfect minx, artful as a
-cat. What salary do you expect?”</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I don’t know, Madam. I have never been employed
-as nursery governess.”</p>
-
-<p>“My husband allows me forty pounds a year for the
-salary of the governess,” said Mrs. Blight. “But, of
-course, forty pounds ought to get a governess with the
-very best of references. You are inexperienced, as you
-confess. Now I will take the risk of you turning out
-bad, if you should decide to remain with me as governess
-to my five children, at a salary of twenty pounds a
-year, board and washing, lights and fuel, included.”</p>
-
-<p>It was “<a id="Ref_247" href="#BRef_247">Hobson’s</a> choice&mdash;that or none”&mdash;to poor
-Lally. Twenty pounds a year, and to be sheltered and
-fed and warmed besides, seemed very liberal after her
-recent terrible struggle with the vulture of starvation.</p>
-
-<p>“I will accept it, Mrs. Blight,” she said, her voice
-trembling&mdash;“that is, if you will take me when you know
-that I have only the clothes I stand in, and that for a
-few weeks I shall need my pay weekly to provide me
-with decent garments.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, as to that,” said Mrs. Blight, “your clothes are
-poor, beggarly, I might say. They will have to be improved
-at once. I will advance you a quarter’s salary,
-five pounds, if you are quite sure you will use it for
-clothes, and that you do not intend to cheat me out of
-my money. You see I always speak plainly. My governesses
-are not pampered. They have to earn their
-money, but that you probably expect to do. I don’t
-know of another lady in Canterbury who would do as I
-am doing, lending money to a perfect stranger, on a recommendation
-you may have written yourself. But I<span class="pagenum">[248]</span>
-am different from other ladies. <em>I</em> am a judge of physiognomy,
-and am not often deceived in my estimate of
-people. Why are you out of clothes?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been out of a situation as a teacher for some
-time,” said Lally. “I have the present addresses of the
-ladies who signed my recommendation, and I beg you
-to write to them to assure yourself that I have spoken
-the truth. The addresses are written on the recommendation
-itself.”</p>
-
-<p>“I noticed them, and shall write this very morning,”
-declared Mrs. Blight. “Go now for your clothes, and
-be back to luncheon. I want to introduce you to the
-children, who are running wild.”</p>
-
-<p>She waved her hand, and Lally, with her five pounds
-in her hand, took her departure. She had found a new
-home, and one not likely to be pleasant, but it would
-afford her shelter, and she believed she could bear all
-things rather than to pass again through the poverty
-and misery she had known. She little knew that it was
-the hand of Providence that had brought her to Sandy
-Lands, and that the acceptance of her present situation
-was destined to change the entire future current of her
-existence, and even to affect that of her young husband.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.
-<br /><span class="cheaderfont">LALLY IN HER NEW SITUATION.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Lally returned to Canterbury in the cab that had
-brought her out to Sandy Lands, Mrs. Blight’s pert little
-villa in the suburbs, and entered upon the task of procuring
-a neat although necessarily scanty wardrobe.
-She bought a cheap box, which she had sent to her<span class="pagenum">[249]</span>
-lodgings. A lady’s furnishing house yielded her a
-change of under garments, another print dress, and a
-gown of black alpaca, and a supply of collars and
-cuffs; her entire purchases amounting to three pounds
-ten shillings. She carried her effects to her attic lodgings,
-the rent of which she had paid in advance, packed
-her box, and set out again in the cab for Sandy Lands.</p>
-
-<p>It was noon when the vehicle stopped again before the
-little villa. The cabman rang the garden bell as before,
-and when the housemaid appeared he dumped down
-Lally’s box upon the gravelled walk, received his pay,
-and departed. The smart housemaid was as contemptuous
-as before of Lally’s humble garments, but spoke
-to her familiarly, as if the two were upon a social level,
-and conducted her toward the rear porch, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Missus said you was to be shown up to your room,
-Miss, to make your twilet before seeing the children. If
-you please,” added the girl, with increasing familiarity,
-“you and I are to see a good deal of each other, and so
-I want to know what to call you.”</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the social rank of Lally’s parents, Lally herself
-was a lady by instinct and education. The housemaid’s
-easy patronage was offensive to her. She answered
-quietly:</p>
-
-<p>“You may call me Miss Bird.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said the housemaid, with a sniff and a toss of
-her head. “That’s the talk, is it? Well, then, Miss
-Bird, follow me up to your room. This way, Miss Bird.
-Up these stairs, Miss Bird.”</p>
-
-<p>Lally followed her guide up the stairs to the third
-and topmost story, and to a rear room.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the room of the nussery governess,” said the
-offended housemaid, her nose in the air. “The room on
-your right is the school-room, Miss Bird. That on the
-left is the nussery. You are to have your room to yourself,<span class="pagenum">[250]</span>
-Miss Bird, which I hopes will suit you. There’s no
-petting of governesses in this here ’stablishment. You
-rises at seven, Miss Bird, and eats with the children.
-You begins lessons at nine o’clock, Miss Bird, and keeps
-’em up till luncheon, and then comes music, langwidges,
-and them sort. Dinner in the school-room, Miss Bird,
-at five o’clock. Your evenings you has to yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall receive my list of duties from Mrs. Blight,”
-said Lally pleasantly, “but I am obliged to you all the
-same.”</p>
-
-<p>The housemaid’s face softened under Lally’s gentleness
-and sweetness.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t wonder if she was a born lady, after all,”
-the girl thought. “She won’t stand putting down, and
-her face is that sorrowful I pity her.”</p>
-
-<p>But she did not give expression to these thoughts.
-What she did say was this:</p>
-
-<p>“My name’s Loizy, and if I can do anything for you
-just let me know. There’s my bell, and I must go.
-When you get ready, come down stairs to Missus’s boo-door.”</p>
-
-<p>She vanished just as the house boy, or Buttons, as he
-was called, appeared with Lally’s box. He set this down
-near the door, and also departed. Left alone, Lally examined
-her new home with a faint thrill of interest.</p>
-
-<p>The floor was bare, with the exception of a strip of
-loose and threadbare carpet before the low brass bedstead.
-There was a chintz-covered couch, a chintz-covered
-easy-chair, a chest of drawers, and a green-shuttered
-blind at the single window. The room had a dreary aspect,
-but to Lally it was a haven of refuge.</p>
-
-<p>She locked her door and knelt down and prayed,
-thanking God that He had been so good to her as to
-give her a safe shelter and a home. Then, rising, she
-dressed herself as quickly as possible, putting on her<span class="pagenum">[251]</span>
-black alpaca dress, a spotless linen collar and cuffs, a
-black sash, and a black ribbon in her hair. Thus attired,
-she descended the stairs, finding the way to the boudoir,
-at the door of which she knocked.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Blight’s languid voice bade her enter.</p>
-
-<p>She obeyed, finding her employer still reclining in an
-armed chair, looking as if she had not moved since
-Lally’s previous visit. She had a book in one hand, a
-paper cutter in the other. She recognized Lally with a
-sort of pleased surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, back again, and punctual!” she exclaimed, glancing
-at a toy clock in white and blue enamel on the low
-mantel-piece. “I had a great many misgivings after
-you went away, Miss Bird. Five pounds is a good deal
-of money to one in your position in life, and the world
-is <em>so</em> full of swindlers. I have already written to the
-ladies to whom you referred me. I suppose I should
-have waited for their answer before engaging you, but I
-am such an impulsive creature, I always do just as I feel
-at the spur of the moment. My husband calls me ‘a
-child of impulse,’ and the words describe me exactly.
-I’m glad to see you back. I don’t know, I’m sure, what
-I should have said to Mr. Blight if you had decamped,
-for he does not appreciate my ability to read faces.
-The time I got taken in with my last cook&mdash;the one
-we found lying with her head in a brass kettle, and
-the kitchen fire gone out, at the very hour when I had a
-large company assembled to dine with me&mdash;Charles said,
-‘Fudge, don’t let us hear any more about physiognomy.’
-You see, I engaged the woman because her face was all
-that could be desired. And since that time Charles
-won’t hear a word about physiognomy.”</p>
-
-<p>Lally sat down, obeying a wave of Mrs. Blight’s hand.
-That “child of impulse,” silly, garrulous, and puffed up<span class="pagenum">[252]</span>
-with self-importance and vulgarity, pursued her theme
-until she had exhausted it.</p>
-
-<p>“You are looking very well, Miss Bird,” she said,
-changing the subject, “but all in black&mdash;why, you are
-quite a black-bird, I declare,” and she laughed at her
-own wit. “Are you in mourning? Have you lately
-lost a friend?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, madam,” replied Lally sorrowfully, “I have
-lately lost the only friend I had in the whole world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, indeed. That is sad; but I do hope you won’t
-wear a long face and go moping about the house, frightening
-the children,” said Mrs. Blight, with a candor that
-was less charming than oppressive to her newly engaged
-governess. “You must do as the poet so romantically
-says:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="indent10">“‘Wear a smile,
-</div><div class="indent0">Though the cold heart runs darkly to ruin the while.’
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<p>“If he doesn’t say that, it’s some such thing, and a very
-pretty sentiment too. And now let us discuss your new
-duties.”</p>
-
-<p>She proceeded to sketch Lally’s duties much as the
-housemaid had done. Then she gave a history of each
-one of the five children who were to be under Lally’s
-supervision. Three of the children were boys, and their
-fond mother described them as paragons. Her girls
-also were extraordinary in their mental and physical
-attractions, “having once been taken at the Zoological
-gardens during a visit to London, by a strange gentleman,
-for the children of a nobleman!”</p>
-
-<p>“I will accompany you to the nursery, Miss Bird,”
-said the lady, arising. “I desire to introduce you to my
-darlings. I have great faith in the instincts of children,
-and I want to see what my children think of you.”</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly Mrs. Blight conducted Lally again to the<span class="pagenum">[253]</span>
-upper floor and to the nursery, which was at the moment
-of their entrance in a state of wildest confusion
-and disorder.</p>
-
-<p>The nurse, a stout old woman, and the nursemaid, a
-red-faced young girl, were in a state of despair, and
-frantically holding their hands to their ears, while five
-robust, boisterous, frouzy-headed children rode about
-the room upon chairs, played “tag,” and otherwise disported
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The entrance of Mrs. Blight and Lally caused a cessation
-of the noise. The mother called her children to
-her, but they retreated with their fingers in their mouths,
-looking askance at their new governess. The three
-“noble boys” presently set up a loud bellowing, and the
-two girls who had been “mistaken by a strange gentleman
-for the children of a nobleman,” hid behind their
-nurses.</p>
-
-<p>It required all the persuasions, coupled with threats,
-of Mrs. Blight, to induce her shy children to show themselves
-to Lally. It appeared that they had a horror of
-governesses, regarding them as tyrants and ogresses created
-especially to destroy the happiness of children; but
-Lally’s smiles, added to the fact that she looked but little
-more than a child, finally induced them to be sociable
-and to approach her.</p>
-
-<p>“In a day or two you won’t be able to do anything
-with them, Miss,” said the head nurse. “They’ll ride
-rough-shod over you.”</p>
-
-<p>“They are so spirited,” murmured Mrs. Blight.
-“Study their characters closely, Miss Bird, and be very
-tender with them. I have one child more than the
-Queen, and my children are named for the royal family.
-These three boys are Leopold, Albert Victor, and
-George. The girls are named Victoria and Alberta.
-My elder children are at school. Children, this is Miss<span class="pagenum">[254]</span>
-Bird, your new governess. Now come with her into the
-school-room. Lessons begin immediately.”</p>
-
-<p>The little flock, with Lally at their head, was conducted
-to the school-room, a large, bare apartment, furnished
-with two benches, a teacher’s chair and desk, and
-a black-board. Here Mrs. Blight left them, convinced
-that she had fulfilled her duties as parent and employer,
-and returned to her book.</p>
-
-<p>Lally proceeded to examine into the acquirements of
-her pupils, finding them lamentably ignorant. Lessons
-were given out, but there was no disposition on the part
-of her pupils to study. They threw paper balls at each
-other, whispered and giggled, and altogether proved
-at the very outset a sore trial to their young teacher.
-Their shyness lasted for but a brief period, and then,
-having no longer fear of the sad-faced governess, they
-began to romp about the room, to shout, and to engage
-in a general game of frolics.</p>
-
-<p>Lally had a vein of decision in her character, and with
-the exercise of a gentle firmness induced her pupils to
-return to their seats. She explained their lessons to
-them, with an unfailing patience, but the hours of that
-September afternoon seemed almost endless to her.
-The children were froward, disobedient, and idle. They
-had been spoiled by their mother, and were full of mischievous
-tricks, so that Lally’s soul wearied within her.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner, a very plain and frugal one, was served to the
-governess and the children in the school-room at five
-o’clock. After dinner, Lally’s time belonged to herself,
-and she put on her hat and went out for a walk, having
-a longing for the fresh air.</p>
-
-<p>This first day at Sandy Lands was a fair type of the
-days that followed. The children, under Lally’s firm
-but gentle rule, became more quiet and studious, and
-conceived an affection for their young governess. Mrs.<span class="pagenum">[255]</span>
-Blight was delighted with their improvement. She had
-received a reply from Lally’s former employers, giving
-the young girl very high praise, and was consequently
-well pleased with herself for securing such valuable services
-as Lally’s at a salary less than half she had ever
-before paid to a governess.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Blight was a lawyer in good practice at Canterbury,
-and spent his days at his office, returning to Sandy Lands
-to dine, and leaving home immediately after breakfast.
-He was a small, ferret-eyed man, always in a hurry,
-a mere money making machine, with a great ambition to
-make or acquire a fortune. At present he lived fully up
-to his income, a fact which gave both him and Mrs.
-Blight much secret anxiety. With ten children to educate
-and provide for, several servants to pay, a carriage
-and pair for Mrs. Blight, and the lawyer’s wines, cigars,
-frequent elaborate dinners to his friends, and other items
-by no means small to settle, Mr. Blight was continually
-harassed by debt, and yet had not sufficient strength of
-will to reduce his expenses and live within his income.</p>
-
-<p>One cause, perhaps, of their indiscreet self-indulgence
-was that they had “expectations.”</p>
-
-<p>There was an old lady connected with the family, the
-widow of a wealthy London banker who had been Mr.
-Blight’s uncle. This old lady was supposed to have no
-relatives of her own to enrich at her death, and the
-Blights had lively hopes of inheriting her fifty thousand
-pounds, which had descended to her absolutely at her
-husband’s death, and of which she was free to dispose as
-she might choose.</p>
-
-<p>This lady lived in London, at the West End, was very
-eccentric, very irascible, and went little in society, being
-quite aged and infirm. She was in the habit of coming
-down to Sandy Lands annually in September, ostensibly
-to spend a month with her late husband’s relatives; but<span class="pagenum">[256]</span>
-she always returned home within a week, alleging that
-she could not bear the noise of the Blight children, and
-that a month under the same roof with them would deprive
-her of life or reason. It was now about the time
-of this lady’s annual visit, and one morning, when Lally
-had been about two weeks at Sandy Lands, Mrs. Blight
-came up to the school-room, an open letter in her hand,
-and dismissing the children to the nursery for a few minutes,
-said confidentially:</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Bird, I have just received a letter from the
-widow of my husband’s uncle, a remarkable old lady,
-with fifty thousand pounds at her own absolute disposal.
-My husband is naturally the old lady’s heir, being her
-late husband’s nephew, and we expect to inherit her property.
-Her name is Mrs. Wroat.”</p>
-
-<p>“An odd name!” murmured Lally.</p>
-
-<p>“And she’s as odd as her name,” declared Mrs. Blight.
-“She comes here at this time every year, and always
-brings a parrot, a lap-dog, a band-box in a green muslin
-case, a blue umbrella, and a snuffy old maid, who eyes us
-all as if we had designs on her mistress’s life. The absurd
-old creature is devoted to her mistress, who is a mere
-bundle of whims and eccentricities. The old lady calls for a
-cup of coffee at midnight, and she hates our dear children,
-and she thrashed Leopold with her cane last year, because
-he put nettles in her bed and flour on her best cap,
-the poor dear innocent child. And I never dared to interfere
-to save Leopold, though his screams rang through
-the house, and I stood outside her door listening and
-peeping, for you know we must have her fifty thousand
-pounds, even if she takes the lives of all my darlings!”
-and Mrs. Blight’s tone was pathetic. “She’s a nasty old
-beast&mdash;there! Of course I say it in confidence, Miss
-Bird. It would be all up with us, if Aunt Wroat were to
-hear that I said that. She’s very tenacious of respect,<span class="pagenum">[257]</span>
-and all that bother, and insisted I should punish Albert
-Victor because he called her ‘an old curmudgeon.’”</p>
-
-<p>“When do you expect this lady?” asked Lally.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow, with her maid, lapdog, parrot, umbrella
-and bandbox. She writes that she will stay a month,
-and that she must have no annoyance from the children,
-and that she won’t have them in her room&mdash;the old nuisance!
-If it wasn’t for her money, I’d telegraph her to
-go to Guinea, but as we are situated I can’t. I must put
-up with her ways. And what I want of you, Miss Bird,
-is to see that the children do not stir off this floor while
-she is here. Let them die for want of exercise, the poor
-darlings, rather than we offend this horrid old woman.
-If we sacrifice ourselves, she can’t leave her property to
-some fussy old charity, that’s one comfort.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will do my best to keep the children out of Mrs.
-Wroat’s sight,” said Lally gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“You must succeed in doing so, for the old lady says
-this will probably be her last visit to us, as she is growing
-more and more infirm, and she hints that it is time
-to make her will. Everything depends upon her reception
-on the occasion of this visit. Let her get miffed at
-us, and it’s all up. I declare I wish I had a place where
-I could hide the children during her stay. She must not
-see or hear them, Miss Bird.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there anything more that I can do, Mrs. Blight?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; she always has the governess play upon the
-piano and sing to her in the evening. She is fond of
-music, desperately so. We always hire a cottage piano
-and put it in her sitting-room while she stays, and the
-governess plays to her there evenings. She’s very liberal
-with a governess who can play well. She gave Miss
-Oddly last year a five-pound note. And always when
-she leaves us after a visit, she hands me twenty pounds
-and says she never wants to be indebted to anybody, and<span class="pagenum">[258]</span>
-that’s to defray her expenses while here. I have to
-take it. I wouldn’t dare to refuse it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be glad to amuse her in any way, Mrs. Blight,”
-declared the young governess. “I shall not mind her
-eccentricities, and shall remember that she is ‘aged and
-infirm.’”</p>
-
-<p>“And she has fifty thousand pounds which we must
-have,” said Mrs. Blight. “Don’t fail to remember that!”</p>
-
-<p>Much relieved at having guarded against a meeting
-between her expected guest and her children, Mrs. Blight
-departed to seek an interview with her cook.</p>
-
-<p>Extensive preparations were made that day for the reception
-of Mrs. Wroat. Two rooms were prepared for
-her use, one of them having two beds, one bed being for
-the use of the maid. A cottage piano was hired and put
-into one of the rooms. The choicest articles of furniture
-in the house were arranged for her use. The hint that
-Mrs. Wroat was thinking of making her will was sufficient
-to render her time-serving, money-hunting relatives
-gentle, pliable, and apparently full of tender anxiety for
-her happiness and comfort.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Blight was informed of the good news when he
-came home to dinner, and he sought a personal interview
-with his children’s governess, entreating her to
-keep the youngsters out of sight during the visit of Mrs.
-Wroat, as she valued her situation.</p>
-
-<p>Everything being thus arranged, it only remained for
-the guest to arrive.</p>
-
-<p>No. 232 of the <span class="smcap">Select Library</span>, entitled “Neva’s
-Choice,” is the sequel to the foregoing novel, and the
-story of Neva’s romance, together with the intrigues and
-plottings of her enemies, is charmingly brought to its
-conclusion.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="xxlargefont boldfont center">What Makes a Superwoman?</p>
-<div class="center boldfont largefont">
-<table style="border:0em; padding:0em; border-spacing:0em" summary="Superwoman list">
-<tr><td class="tdl">Beauty?</td><td class="tdr">No!</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Daintiness?</td><td class="tdr" style="padding-left:1em">No!</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Wit?</td><td class="tdr">No!</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Youth?</td><td class="tdr">No!</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Femininity?</td><td class="tdr">No!</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p class="xlargefont boldfont center">Seek the Superwoman</p>
-
-<p>You will find her in almost every generation, in almost every
-country, in almost every city. She is not a typical adventuress,
-she is not a genius. The reason for her strong power is occult.
-The nameless charm is found as often in homely, clumsy, dull,
-old masculine women as in the reverse of these types.</p>
-
-<p class="xlargefont boldfont center">What Makes a Superwoman?</p>
-
-<p>If you think the problem worth while, why not try to solve it
-by reading Albert Payson Terhune’s great book, SUPERWOMEN?
-From Cleopatra to Lady Hamilton&mdash;they are mighty
-interesting characters. Some of them smashed thrones, some
-of them were content with wholesale heart smashing. You
-will know their secret, or rather their secrets, for seldom did
-two of them follow the same plan of campaign.</p>
-
-<p>We have prepared a very handsome, special, limited edition
-of the book, worthy of a place on your “best book” shelf. If
-you subscribe to AINSLEE’S MAGAZINE now you can purchase
-it for 50c. Send us a money order for $2.50 and receive
-SUPERWOMEN postpaid, and, in addition, over 1900 pages of
-splendid fiction throughout the coming year. AINSLEE’S
-MAGAZINE is the best and smartest purely fiction magazine
-published. You cannot invest $2.50 in reading matter to better
-advantage than by availing yourself of this offer. Send check
-or money order or, if you remit in cash, do not fail to register
-the envelope. Act now!</p>
-
-<p class="center largefont boldfont"><span style="word-spacing:0.5em">The Ainslee Magazine Company</span><br />
-79 Seventh Avenue <span style="padding-left:1em">New York City</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="boxit1"><p class="center xxlargefont boldfont">History of the<br />
-World War</p>
-
-<p class="center xlargefont boldfont"><em><span class="largefont">By</span> Thomas R. Best</em></p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">The most portentous crisis in the history
-of the human family has just passed.
-The World War was conceived in greed
-and will be consummated in justice. It will
-prove a blessing to mankind, because it spells
-emancipation to countless unborn generations
-from enslaving political and social
-evils. It is a big subject and one that will
-be discussed in every household for many
-years to come. Questions will arise that
-only a clear, concise account of the war
-in handy form can settle.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, we ask you to consider <cite><b>History
-of the World War</b></cite> by Thomas R. Best
-which has been written from the American
-standpoint. It is purely history&mdash;not vituperation.
-This volume has a chronology of
-important events that will prove of inestimable
-reference value.</p>
-
-<p class="largefont boldfont center">Price 25 Cents</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>If ordered by mail add four cents to cover cost of postage</em></p>
-
-<p class="center largefont"><span class="xlargefont">STREET &amp; SMITH CORPORATION</span><br />
-79 Seventh Avenue<span style="padding-left:4em"> New York City</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center xxlargefont boldfont">A Big Step</p>
-
-<p>forward in quality is the reason for the unprecedented
-strides in popularity that the S. &amp; S.
-novels are making.</p>
-
-<p>The demand has been greater than the supply,
-the latter having been somewhat restricted on
-account of war conditions. We are running our
-presses night and day turning out “good ones”
-for the consumption of men and women who
-want good reading matter and who have got to
-get it at a modest price.</p>
-
-<p>If you want to read a novel really worth while,
-buy a copy of No. 1020 <span class="smcap">New Eagle Series</span>&mdash;SLIGHTED
-LOVE&mdash;by Mrs. Alex. McVeigh
-Miller. This is a book that will be appreciated
-by every woman.</p>
-
-<p>If the above are ordered from the publishers,
-4c. must be added to the retail price of each copy
-to cover postage.</p>
-
-<p class="center largefont"><span class="xlargefont">STREET &amp; SMITH CORPORATION</span><br />
-79 Seventh Avenue,<span style="padding-left:4em"> New York City</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="boxit1">
-<p class="center xxlargefont boldfont">1855-1919</p>
-
-<p>For sixty-four consecutive years, Street &amp;
-Smith have specialized in the publication of clean,
-wholesome fiction. During this time we gave
-the public what it wanted, and as the demand
-changed, our publications changed with it.</p>
-
-<p>What most American readers want at present
-are the S. &amp; S. novels, especially those in the <span class="smcap">New
-Eagle Series</span> by Emma Garrison Jones, who
-wrote straightaway American love stories of exceptional
-interest and vigor. Mrs. Jones’ works
-cannot be found in any other line, and for interest
-they cannot be excelled at the price.</p>
-
-<p>Here are some of the best Jones books:</p>
-
-<div class="center boldfont largefont">
-<table style="border:0em; padding:0em; border-spacing:0em" summary="Book list.">
-<tr><td class="tdl"><b>Against Love’s Rules</b></td><td class="tdr" style="padding-left:2em"><b>No. 890</b></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><b>All Lost but Love</b></td><td class="tdr"><b>No. 868</b></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><b>Her Twentieth Guest</b></td><td class="tdr"><b>No. 860</b></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><b>His Good Angel</b></td><td class="tdr"><b>No. 786</b></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><b>Just for a Title</b></td><td class="tdr"><b>No. 909</b></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p>If the above are ordered from the publishers,
-4c. must be added to the retail price of each copy
-to cover postage.</p>
-
-<p class="center largefont"><span class="xlargefont">STREET &amp; SMITH CORPORATION</span><br />
-79 Seventh Avenue,<span style="padding-left:4em"> New York City</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="xxlargefont boldfont center" style="word-spacing:0.15em">A REQUEST</p>
-
-<p>Conditions due to the war have made it very difficult
-for us to keep in print all of the books listed in our
-catalogues. We still have about fifteen hundred different
-titles that we are in a position to supply. These
-represent the best books in our line. We could not afford,
-in the circumstances, to reprint any of the less
-popular works.</p>
-
-<p>We aim to keep in stock the works of such authors as
-Bertha Clay, Charles Garvice, May Agnes Fleming,
-Nicholas Carter, Mary J. Holmes, Mrs. Harriet Lewis,
-Horatio Alger, and the other famous authors who are
-represented in our line by ten or more titles. Therefore,
-if your dealer cannot supply you with exactly the
-book you want, you are almost sure to find in his stock
-another title by the same author, which you have not
-read.</p>
-
-<p>It short, we are asking you to take what your dealer
-can supply, rather than to insist upon just what you
-want. You won’t lose anything by such substitution,
-because the books by the authors named are very uniform
-in quality.</p>
-
-<p>In ordering Street &amp; Smith novels by mail, it is advisable
-to make a choice of at least two titles for each
-book wanted, so as to give us an opportunity to substitute
-for titles that are now out of print.</p>
-
-<p class="center largefont boldfont" style="margin-left:15em">STREET &amp; SMITH CORPORATION,<br />
-<span style="padding-left:5em">79-89 Seventh Avenue, New York City.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2 id="TN_end" style="margin-top: 0em">Transcriber’s Notes:</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation has been made consistent.</p>
-
-<p>Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained as they appear in
-the original publication, except that obvious typographical errors
-have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>The following changes were made:</p>
-
-<p><a id="BRef_35" href="#Ref_35">p. 35</a>: Missing letter assumed to be C (Even Madame Da-Caret, the)</p>
-
-<p><a id="BRef_114" href="#Ref_114">p. 114</a>: second changed to third (her third marriage)</p>
-
-<p><a id="BRef_216" href="#Ref_216">p. 216</a>: In changed to I’ll (cruel. I’ll dismiss)</p>
-
-<p><a id="BRef_247" href="#Ref_247">p. 247</a>: Dobson’s changed to Hobson’s (was “Hobson’s choice)</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEVA&#039;S THREE LOVERS ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away&#8212;you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:1em; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
-or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
-Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
-on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
-phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-</div>
-
-<blockquote>
- <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
- other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
- whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
- of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
- at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
- are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws
- of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
- </div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; License.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
-other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-provided that:
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- works.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
-public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
-visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/68274-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/68274-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 828ce2c..0000000
--- a/old/68274-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68274-h/images/cover_illo.jpg b/old/68274-h/images/cover_illo.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d5348e4..0000000
--- a/old/68274-h/images/cover_illo.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68274-h/images/i003.jpg b/old/68274-h/images/i003.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index dfd936f..0000000
--- a/old/68274-h/images/i003.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68274-h/images/publishers_icon.jpg b/old/68274-h/images/publishers_icon.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d90b39a..0000000
--- a/old/68274-h/images/publishers_icon.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ