QE CHIP. LIBHABY, LOS AlKJEUS POPULAR NOVELS. BY MAY AGNES FLEMING. 1. QUY EARLSCOURT'S WIFK. 8. A WONDERFUL WOMAN. 8. A TERRIBLE SECRET. 4. NORINE'S REVENGE. 5. A MAD MARRIAGE. . ONE NIGHT'S MYSTERY. 7. KATE DAXTON. 8.-S1LENT AND TRUE. . HEIR OF CIIARLTON. lO.-CAKUIED EY STORM. 11. LOST FOR A WOMAN. 18. A WIPE'S TRAGEDY. 18. A CHANGED HEART 14. PBIDB AND PASSION IB. SHAKING HSR OEIMB. 16. A WUONGE1) AVIFM (JVetc). " Mrs. Fleming's storle* are growing more and mor popular every day. Their deiia^.uon? of character, life-liite conversatious, flaahfs of wit, con- stantly varying scenes, aad deep!? IntCT- wtlng plots, combine to place their author iu the very flnt rank of Modem All published uniform with tbii rolome. Price, $1.60 each, and aent frit by mail on receipt of price. 6. W. CARLETON & CO., Publishers, New York. A CHANGED HEART BY MAY AGNES FLEMING, AUTHOR OF "GUY EARSLCOURT'S WIFE," "A TERRIBLE SECRET,' "A WONDERFUL WOMAN," "ONE NIGHT'S MYSTERY, "SILENT AND TRUE," "A MAD MARRIAGE, "LOST FOR A WOMAN," ETC., ETC. " If Fortune, with a smiling face, Strew roses on our way, When shall we stoop to pick them up ? To-day, my love, to-day." NEW YORK: Copyright, 1881, by G. W. Carleton & Co., Publishers, LONDON : S. LOW, SON & CO. HDCCCLXXXIU. Stereotyped by SAMUEL STODDER, TV.ow ELECTROTYPER & STEREOTYPED PRnmxo AXD Boos BINDINO Co. 00 ANN 8TRBST, N. Y. ; x '. Y. OKAPTEB PASB L Miss McGregor at home 7 II. Nathalie U III. Miss Hose 25 'IV. Val's office 36 V. Killing two birds with one stone 46 VI. An evening at Miss Blake's 59 VII. Too many irons in the fire 67 VIII. Val turns mentor 82 IX. Wooed and won 95 X. Fast and loose 112 XI. How Captain Cavendish meant to marry Cherrie . 123 XII. In which the wedding comes off 138 XTTT. After the wedding 150 XIV. Mining the ground 157 XV. Springing the mine 167 XVI. A crime 179 XVII. Found guilty 191 XVIII. The darkening sky 207 XIX. The flight 217 XX. " One more unfortunate " 227 XXT. Mrs. Butterby'a lodgings 236 CONTENTS. CHAPTER PAGH XXH. The heiress of Redmon ...................... 247 XXIII. The heiress of Redmon enters society .......... 259 XXIV. The spell of the enchantress .......... , ____ 275 XXV. The double compact .......................... 2 S3 XXVI. Mr. Paul Wyndham ......................... 299 XXVLL Mr. Wyndnam's wooing ...................... 312 XXVIII. Mr. Wyndham's wedding .................. . . 324 XXTX, Mr. Wyndham's mother ...................... 336 XXX, Very mysterious ............................ 349 YXXr. Val's discovery .............................. 36G XXXII. Cherrie tells the truth ...................... 377 XXXIIL Overtaken ................................... 391 XXXTV. The Vesper-Hymn ........................... 406 XXXV. " Quoth the Raven, 'Nevermore'" .......... 417 XXXVI. Drifting out ................................ 425 XXXVII. Dies Irae, Dies Ilia ........................... 430 XXXVIII. Out of Yhe crooked ways ..................... 450 In Hope .................................... 478 A CHANGED HEART. CHAPTER I. MISS M'GREGOR AT HOME. T was a foggy night in Speckport. There was nothing uncommon in its being foggy this close May evening; but it was rather provoking and ungallant of the clerk of the weather, seeing that Miss McGregor particularly desired it to be line. Miss Jeannette (she had been christened plain Jane, but scorned to- answer to anything so unromantic) Miss Jeannette McGregor was at home to-night to all the elite of Speckport ; and as a good many of the elite o\vned no other conveyance than that which Nature had given them, it was particularly desirable the weather should be tine. But it wasn't tine ; it was nasty and drizzly, and sultry and foggy; and sky and sea were blotted out; and the gas-lamps sprinkled through the sloppy streets of Speckport blinked feebly through the gloom ; and people buttoned up to the chin and wrapped in cloaks flitted by each other like phantoms, in the pale blank of wet and fog. And half the year round that is the sort of weather they enjoy in Speckport. You don't know Speckport ! There I have the ad- vantage of you ; for I know its whole history, past, pres- ent, and future, I was going to say, though I don't set up for a prophet ; but the future of Speckport does not seem hard to foretell. The Union-jack floats over it, the State of M.aine is its next-door neighbor, and iish and fog ra 8 MISS M l GREG OR AT HOME. are its principal productions. It also bad the honor of producing Miss McGregor, who was born one other foggy night, just two-and-twenty years previous to this Home," to which you and I are going presently, in a dirty little black street, which she scorns to know even bj r name now. Two-and-tweuty years ago, Sandy McGregor worked as a day-laborer in a shipyard, at three and six- pence per day. Now, Mr. Alexander McGregor is a ship-builder, and has an income of ten thousand gold dol- lars per year. Not a millionaire, you know ; but very well off, and very comfortable, and very contented ; living in a nice house, nicely furnished, keeping horses and car- riage, and very much looked up to, and very much re- spected in Speckport. Speckport has its Fifth Avenue as well as Xew York. Not that they call it Fifth Avenue, you understand ; its name is Golden Row, and the abiders therein are made of the porcelain of human clay. Great people, magnates and aristocrats to their tinge r-tips, scorning the pigmies who move in second and third society and have only the happiness of walking through Golden Row, never of dwelling there. The houses were not brown-stone fronts. Oh, no ! there were half-a-dozen brick buildings, some pretty, little Gothic cottages, with green vines, and bee- Lives, and bird-houses, about them, and all the rest were great painted palaces of wood. Some had green shutters, and some had not ; some were painted white, and some brown, and some stone-color and drab, and they all had a glittering air of spickspan-newness about them, as if their owners had them painted every other week. And in one of these palaces Mr. McGregor lived. . You drove down Golden Row through the fog and drizzle, between the blinking lamps, and you stop at a stone-colored house with a brown hall-door, and steps gointr up to it. The hall is brilliant with gas, so i drawing-room, so are the two parlors, so is the dining- room, so are the dressing rooms; ami the elite of Speck- port are bustling and jostling' one another about, and making considerable noise, and up in the gallery the band is in. full blast at the "Lancers" for they know how to MISS M< GREG OR AT HOME. 9 dance the Lancers in Speckport and the young ladies dipping and bowing through the intricacies of the dance, wear their dresses just as low in the neck and as short in the sleeves as any Fifth avenue belle dare to do. Very pretty girls they are, floating about in all the colors of the rainbow. There are no diamonds, perhaps, except glass ones ; but there are gold chains and crosses, and brace- lets, and lockets and things ; and some of the young ladies have rings right up to the middle joint of their lingers. The young gentlemen wear rings, too, and glittering shirt- gfcuds and bosom-pins, and are good looking and gentle- manly. While the young folks dance, the old folks play wallflower or cards, or take snuff or punch, or talk politics All the juvenile rag-tag and bobtail of Speckport are out side, gaping up with open-mouthed admiration at the blazing front of the McGregor mansion, and swallowing the music that floats through the open windows. Sailing along Golden Itow, with an umbrella up to protect her bonnet from the fog, comes a tall lady, un- protected and alone, and " There's Miss Jo, hurrah P 1 yells a shrill voice ; and the tall lady receives her ovation with a gratified face, and bows as she steps over the McGregor threshold. Ten minutes later, she enters the drawing- room, divested of her wrappings ; and you see she is elderly and angular, and prim and precise, and withal good-natured. She is sharp at the joints and shoulder- blades, and her black silk dress is hooked up behind in the fashion of twenty years ago. She wears no crinoline, and looks about as graceful as a lamp-post ; but she is fearfully and wonderfully fine, with a massive gold chain about her neck that would have made a ship's cable easily, and a cross and a locket clattering from it, and beating time to her movements on a cameo brooch the size of a dinner-plate. Eardrops, a finger-length long, dangle from her ears ; cameo bracelets adorn her skinny wrists ; and her hair, of which she has nothing to speak of, is worn in little corkscrew curls about her sallow face. Miss Johanna Blake is an old maid, and looks like it ; she is also an exile of Erin, and the most inveterate gossip in Speckport. 1* 10 . 3TI88 H' OREO OR AT HOME. A trem3ndous uproar greets her as she enters the drawing-room, and she stops in considerable consternation. In a reeess near the door was a card-table, round which four elderly ladies and four elderly gentlemen sat, with a laughing crowd looking on from behind. The card-party were in a violently agitated and excited state, all screaming out together at the top of the gamut. Miss Jo swept on in majestic silence, nodding right and left as she streamed down the apartment to where Mrs. McGregor stood, with a little knot of matrons around her a lady as tall as Miss Jo herself, and ever so much stouter, her fat face hot and flushed, and wielding a fan ponderously, as if it were a ton weight. Mrs. McGregor, during forty years of he** life, had been a good deal more familiar with scrubbing-brushes than fans; but yo:i would not think so now, maybe, if you saw her in that purple- satin dress and gold watch, her fat hands flashing with rings, and that bewildering combination of white lace and ribbons on her head. Her voice was as loud as her style of dress, and she shook Miss Jo's hand as if it had been a pump-handle. " And how do you do, A r iss Blake, and whatever on earth kept you till this hour? 1 was just saying to Jean- nette, a while ago, 1 didn't believe you were going to come at all." "I could not help it," said Miss Jo. "Val didn't come home till late, and then I had to stop and find him his things. You know, my dear, what a trouble men are, and that Val beats them all. Has everybody come?" " I think so ; everybody bat your Val and the Marshes. Maybe my lad}' is in one of her tantrums, and won't let Natty come at all. Jeannette is all but dis- tracted. Natty's got lots of parts in them things they're having tablets no ; tableaux, that's the name, and they never can get on without her. Jeannette's gone to look for Sandy to send him up to Redmon to sec." " I s:iy, Miss Jo, how do you lind yourself this even- ing : :" exclaimed a spirited voice behind her ; and Mrs. McGregor gave a little yelp of delight as she s.w who it was a young man, not more than twenty, perhaps, very MISS M l GREG OR AT HOME. 11 good-looking, with bright gray eyes, fair hair, aiid a sunny Binile. He was holding out a hand, small and fair as a lady's, to Miss Blake, who took it and shook it heartily. " Jo's very well, thank you, Mr. Charles. How is your mamma this evening ?" " She was all right when I left home. Is Val here ?" " Not yet. Have you just come?" The young gentleman nodded, and was turning away, but Mrs. McGregor recalled him. " Isn't your mother coming, Charley ?" " No, she can't," said Charley. " The new teacher's come, and she's got to stay with her. She told me to brin her apologies." The ladies were all animation directly. The new teacher ! What was she like ? When did she come $ Was she young ? Was she pretty ? Did she seem nice ? "I didn't see her," said Charley, lounging against a sofa and flapping his gloves about. " Didn't see her ! I thought you said she was in your house ?" cried Mi's. McGregor. " So she is. I mean I didn't see her face. She had a thick vail on, and kept it down, and I left two or three minutes after she came." " She came to Speckport in this evening's boat, then ?" said Miss Jo. "What did she wear?" Charley was bowing and smiling to a pretty girl pass- ing on her partner's arm. Mrs. McGregor nodded, and Charley sauntered off. The two ladies looked after him. " What a nice young man that Charley Marsh is !" ex- claimed Miss Jo, admiringly, " and so good-looking, and so steady, and so good to his mamma. You won't find many like him nowadays." Mrs. McGregor lowered her voice to a mysterious whisper. " Do you know, Miss Jo, they say he goes after that Cherrie Nottleby. Did you hear it?" " Fiddlestick !" said Miss Jo, politely. " Speckport's got that story out, has it? I don't believe a word of it!" 18 MISS M l GREG OR AT HOME.\ "Here's Yal!" cried Mrs. McGregor, off on a new tack ; " and, my patience ! wuat a swell lie's got with him !" Miss Jo looked round. Coming down the long room together were two young men, whose appearance created a visible sensation one of them, preposterously tall and thin, with uncommonly long legs and arms a veritable Shanghai was Mr. Valentine Blake, Miss Jo's brother and sole earthly relative. He looked seven-and-twenty, was carelessly dressed, his clothes hanging about him any way not handsome, but with a droll look of good humor about liis face, and a roguish twinkle in his eyes that would have redeemed a plainer countenance. His companion was a stranger, and it was he who created the sensation, not easy Val. Mrs. McGregor had called him a " swell," but Mrs. McGregor was not a very retined judge. He was dressed well, but not overdressed, as the slang term would imply, and he looked a thorough gentleman. A very handsome one. too, with dark curl- ing hair, dark, bright, handsome eyes, a jetty mustache on his lip, and a flashing diamond ring on his linger. There was a certain air militaire about him that bespoke his pro- fession, though he wore civilian's clothes, and he and Val looked about the same age. No wonder the apparition of BO distinguished-looking a stranger in Mrs. McGregor's drawing-room should create a buzzing among the Speck- port bon ton. ' My goodness !" cried Mrs. McGregor, all in a flutter. "Whoever can he be 2 He looks like a soldier, don't he 'C "There came a regiment from Halifax this morning," said Miss Jo. " Here's Val bringing him up." Mr. Val was presenting him even while she spoke. "Captain Cavendish, Mrs. McGregor, of the th," and then the captain was bowing profoundly ; and the lady of the mansion was returning it, in a violent trepidation and tremor, not knowing in the least what she was ex- pected to say to so distinguished a visitor. But relief was at hand. Charley Marsh was beside them with a young lady on his arm a young lady best described by that MISS M< GREG OR AT HOME. 13 odious word "genteel." She was not pretty; she was sandy-haired and freckled, but she was the daughter of the house, and, as such, demanding attention. V al in- troduced the captain directly, and Mrs. McGregor breathed freely again. " Look here, V al !" she whispered, catching him by the button, " who is he, anyway ?" Yal lowered his voice and looked round him cau- tiously. " Did you ever hear of the Marquis of Carrabas, Mrs. McGregor P " !No yes I don't remember. Is he an English nobleman 2" " A very great nobleman, Ma'am ; famous in history as connected with the cat-trade, and Captain Cavendish is next heir to the title. Mrs. Marsh can tell you all about the Marquis ; can't she, Charley 2" Charley, who was ready to burst into a fit of laughter at Mrs. McGregor's open-mouthed awe, took hold of the arm of a feeble-minded-looking young gentleman, whose freckled features, sandy hair, and general resemblance to the family, proclaimed him to be Mr. Alexander Mc- Gregor, Junior, and walked him off. " And he came from Halifax this evening, Val ?" Mrs. McGregor asked, gazing at the young Englishman in the same state of awe and delight. " Yes," said Val, "it was there I got acquainted with him first. 1 met him on my way here, and thought you would not be offended at the liberty I took in fetching him along." " Offended ! My dear Val, you couldn't have pleased me better if you had been trying for a week. A Markis and a Captain in the Army! Why, it's the greatest honor, and I'm ever so much obliged to you. I am, in- deed!" "All right," said Val. "Speckport will be envious enough, I dare say, for it's not every place he'll go to, and all will want him. You'll lose Jane if you're not careful, though see how he's talking to her." Mrs. McGregor's eyes were dancing in her head. A U NATHALIE. dazzling vision rose before her her daughter a Marchion- ess, living in a castle, dressed in satin and diamonds the year ronnd ! She could have hugged Val in her rapture : and Val reading some such idea in her beaming face, backed a little, in some alarm. " I say, though, wasn't there to be tableaux or some- thing ?" he inquired. " When are they coming off ?" "As soon as Natty Marsh gets here; they can't get on without her." " What keeps her?" asked Yal. "The new teacher's come to Mrs. Marsh's, Charley says, and Natty is stopping in to see her. There's the captain asking Jeannette to dance." So he was ; and Miss Jeannette, with a gratified sim- per, was just laying her kidded fingers inside his coat- sleeve, vheri her brother came breathlessly up. " Look here, Janie ! you'd better not go off dancing," was his cry, " if you mean to have those tableaux to-night. Natty's come !" CHAPTER II. NATHALIE. KS. McGREGOR'S drawing-room was empty. Everybody had flocked into the front parlor and arranged themselves on seats there to wit- ness the performance ; that is to say, every- body who had no part in the proceedings. Most of the young people of both sexes were behind the solemn green curtain, with its row of footlights, that separ- ated the two rooms, dressing for their parts. The old people were as much interested in the proceedings as the young people, for their sons and daughters were the ac- tors and actresses. Captain Cavendish and Mr. Yal Blake occupied a front NATHALIE. 15 Beat. Yal had a part assigned him ; but it did not come on for some time, so he was playing spectator now. " I saw you making up to little Jane, Cavendish," Yal was saying, sotto voce, for Miss Janie's mamma sat near. " Was it a case of love at first sight ?" "Miss McGregor is not very pretty," said Captain Cavendish, moderately. " Who was that young lady with the red cheeks and bright eyes I saw you speaking to, just before we came here ? ' " Red checks and bright eyes !" repeated Val, putting on his considering-cap, " that description applies to half the girls in Speckport. What had she on ?" Captain Cavendish laughed. " Would any one in the world but Yal Blake ask such a question 2 She had on a pink dress, and had pink and white flowers in her hair, and looked saucy." " Oh, I know now !" Yal cried, with a flash of recol- lection ; " that was Laura Blair, one of the nicest little girls that ever sported crinoline ! Such a girl to laugh, you know !" " She looks it ! Ah ! up you go S" This apostrophe was addressed to the curtain, which was rising as he spoke. There was a general flutter, and settling in seats to look; the orchestra pealed forth and the first tableau was revealed. It was very pretty, but very common " Rebecca and Rowena." Miss Laura Blair was Rowena, and a tall brunette, Rebecca. The audience applauded, as in duty bound, and the curtain fell. The second wa.3 "Patience" "Patience-on a monument smiling at Grief." On a high pedestal f;tood Mi*-; Laura Blair, again, draped in a white sheet, like a ghost, her hair all loose about her, and an azure girdle all over spangles clasping her waist. At tho foot of the pedestal crouched Grief, in a strange, patience for another half -hour, and then the end came. j lu flocked the performers, in laughing commotion, to 4 find themselves surrounded by the rest, and showered with congratulations. Captain Cavendish stood apart, leaning against a fauteuil, stroking his mustache thoughtfully, ancl looking on. Looking on one face and form only of all the dozens before him ; a form tall, taller than the average height, slender, graceful, and girlish as became its owners NATHALIE. J9 eighteen years; and a face inexpressibly lovely in the garish gaslight. There was nobility as well as beauty in that classic profile, that broad brow ; fire in those laughing blue eyes, so dark that you nearly mistook them for black ; resolution in those molded lips, the sweetest that ever were kissed. The hair alone of Nathalie Marsh would have made a plain face pretty ; it hung loose over her shoulders as it had done on the stage, reaching to her waist, a cloud of spun gold, half waves, half curls, half yellow ripples. Few could have worn this hair like that, bnt it was eminently becoming to Nathalie, whom everything became. Her dress was of rose color, of a tint just deeper than the rose color in her cheeks, thin and flouting, and she was entirely without ornament. A half-blown rose was fast- ened in the snowy lace of her corsage, a rose that had decked the buttonhole of Captain Cavendish half an hour before. Yal espied him at last and came over. "Are you making a tableau of yourself," he asked, " for a certain pair of bright eyes to admire ? I saw them wandering curiously this way two or three times since we came in." " Whose were they 2" " Miss Nathalie Marsh's. Come and be introduced." "But she i.s surrounded." "Never mind, they'll make way for you. Standout of the way, Sandy. Lo! tho conquering hero comes! Miss Marsh, let me present Captain Cavendish, of the tli ; Miss Marsh, Captain Cavendish." The music at that instant struck up a delicious waltz. Mr. Val J>lake, without ceremony, laid hold of the nearest young lady he could grab. " Come, Catty ! let's take a twist or two. That's it, Cavendish! follow in our wake!" For Captain Cavendish, having asked Miss Marsh to waltz, was leading her off, and received the encouraging nod of Val with an amused smile. " What a character he is !" he said, looking after Val, spinning around with considerable more energy than 20 NATHALIE. grace ; " the most unceremonious and best-natured fellow in existence." The young lady laughed. "Oh, everybody likes Val! Have you known him long?" " About a year. I have seen him in Halifax frequently, and we are the greatest friends, I assure you. Damon and Pythias were nothing to us !" " It is something new for Mr. Blake to be so enthu- siastic, then. Pythias is a new role for him. I hope he played it better than he did Robert Bruce in that horrid tableau awhile ago." They both laughed at the recollection. Natty scented her rose. " Some one threw me this. Gallant, wasn't it ? I love roses." " Sweets to the sweet ! I am only sorry I had not something more worthy * Evangeline,' than that poor little flower." " Then it it was you. I thought so ! Thank you for the rose and the compliment. One is as pretty as the other." She laughed saucily, her bright eyes flashing a danger- ous glance at him. Next instant they were floating round, and round, and round ; and Captain Cavendish began to think the world must be a great rose garden, and Speckport Eden, since in it he had found his Eve. Not quite his yet, though, for the moment the waltz concluded, a dashing and dangerously good-looking young fellow stepped coolly up and bore her off. Yal having given his partner a finishing whirl into a seat, left her there, and came up, wiping his face. " By jingo, 'tis hard work, and Catty Clowrie goes the pace with a vengeance. How do you like Natty?" " ' Like ' is not the word. Who is that gentleman she is walking with 2" " That where are they ? Oh, I see that is Captain Locksley, of the merchant-service. The army and navy forever, eh ! Where are you going ?" NATHALIE. 21" "Out of this hot room a moment. I'll be back directly." Mrs. McGregor came up and asked Yal to join a whist- party she was getting up. " And be my partner, Yal," she enjoined, as she led him off, " because you're the best cheat 1 know of." Yal was soon completely absorbed in the fascinations o*f whist, at a penny a game, but the announcement of supper soon broke up both card-playing and dancing ; and as he rose from the table he caught sight of Captain Caven- dish just entering. His long legs crossed the room in three strides. " You've got back, have you ? What have you been about all this time ?" . " I was smoking a cigar out there on the steps, and getting a little fresh air no, fog, for I'll take my oath its thick enough to be cut with a knife. When I was in London, I thought I knew something of fog, but Speck- port beats it all to nothing." " Yes," said Ya!, gravely, "it's one of the institutions of the country, and we're proud of it. Did you see Charley Marsh anywhere in your travels. I heard Natty just now asking for him." "Oh, yes, Tve seen him,", said Captain Cavendish, sig- nificantly. There was that, in his tone which made Yal look at him. "Where was he and what was he doing?" he in- quired. " Making love, to your first question ; sitting in a recess of the tall window, to your second. He did not see me, but I saw him." " Who was he with ?" " Something very pretty prettier than anything in this room, excepting Miss Natty. Black eyes, black curls, rosy cheeks, and tlu dearest little waist ! Who is she f Yal gave a long, low whistle. " Do you know her ?" persisted Captain Cavendish. " Oh, don't I though ? Was she little, and was she laughing ?" " Yes, to both questions. Now, who is she ?" 22 NATHALIE. Yal's answer was a shower of mysterious nods. " 1 heard the story before, but I didn't think the boy was sucli a fool. Speckport is such a place for gossip, you know; but it seems the gossips were right for once. What will Natty say, I wonder?" " Will you tell me who she is ?" cried Captain Caven- dish, impatiently. " Come to supper," was Yal's answer ; " I'm too hun- gry to talk now. I'll tell you about it by-and-by." Charley was before them at the table, helping all the young ladies right and left, and keeping up a running lire of jokes, old and new, stale and original, and setting the table in a roar. Everybody was talking and laughing at the top of their lungs ; glass and china, and knives and forks, rattled and jingled until the uproar became deafen- ing, and people shouted with laughter, without in the least knowing what they were laughing at. The mus- tached lip of Captain Cavendish curled with a little con- temptuous smile at the whole thing, and Miss Jeannette McGregor, who had managed to get him beside her, saw it, and felt tit to die with mortification. " What a dreadful noise they do keep up. It makes my head ache to listen to them !" she said, resentfully. Captain Cavendish, who had been listening to her tattle-tittle for the last half -hour, answering yes and no at random, started into consciousness tnat she was talking again. " I beg your pardon, Miss McGregor. What was it you said 2 I am. afraid I was not attending." " I am afraid you were not," said Miss McGregor, forcing a laugh, while biting her lips. " They are going back to the drawing-room Dieu mercif It is like Bubel being here." "Let us. wait," said Captain Cavendish, eying the crowd, and beginning to be gallant. " I am not going to have you jostled to death. One would think it was for life or death they were pushing." It was fully ten minutes before the coast was clear, and then the captain drew Miss Jeannette's arm within his, and led her to the drawing-room. Mrs. McGregor, NATHALIE. 28 sitting there among her satellites, saw them, and the ma- ternal bosom glowed with pride. It was the future Mar- quis aiid Marcliioness of Carrabas ! Some one was singing. A splendid soprano voice was ringing through the room, singing, " Hear me, Norrna." It finished as they drew near, and the singer, Miss Natty Marsh, glancing over her shoulder, flashed one of her bright bewitching glances at them. She rose up from the piano, flirting out her gauze skirts, and laughing at the shower of entreaties to sing again. " I am going to see some engravings Alick has prom- ised to show me," she said ; " so spare your eloquence, Mesdames et Messieurs. I am inexorable." "I think I will go over and have a look at the engrav- ings, too," said Captain Cavendish. She was sitting at a little stand, all her bright hair loose around her, and shading the pictures. Young Mc- Gregor was bending devoutly near her, but not talking, only too happy to be just there, and talking was not the young gentleman's forte. " Captain Cavendish," said the clear voice, as, without turning round, she held the engraving over her shoulder, " look at this is it not pretty ?" How had she seen him? Had she eyes in the back of her head ? He took the engraving, wondering inwardly, and sat down beside her. It was a strange picture she had given him. A black and wrathful sky, a black and heaving sea, and a long strip of black and desolate coast. A full moon flickered ghastly through the scudding clouds, and wan in its light you saw a girl standing on a high rock, straining her eyes out to sea. Her hair and dress fluttered in the wind ; her face was wild, spectral, and agonized. Captain Cavendish gazed on it as if fascinated. " What a story it tells!" Nathalie cried. "It makes one think of Charles Kingsley's weird song of the ' Three Fishers.' Well, Charley, what is it ?" " It is the carryall from Eedmon come for you," said 24 NATHALIE. Charley, who had sauntered up. " If you are done look- ing at the pictures you had better go home." Natty pushed the portfolio away pettishly, and rose, half-poutingly. " What a nuisance, to go so soon !" Then, catching Captain Cavendish's eye, she laughed good-naturedly. " What can't be cured yon know the proverb, Cap- tain Cavendish. Charley, wait for me in the hall, I will be there directly." She crossed the room with the airy elegance peculiar to her light swinging tread, made her adieux quietly to the hostess, and sought her wrappings and the dressing- room. As she ran down into the hall in a large shawl, grace- fully worn, and a white cloud round her pretty face, she found Captain Cavendish waiting with Charley. It was he who offered her his arm, and Charley ran down the steps before them. Through the wet fog they saw an old-fashioned two-seated buggy waiting, and the driver looking impatiently down. " I wish you would drive up with me, Charley," said Natty, settling herself in her seat. " Can't," said Charley. " I am going to see some- body else's sister home. I'll take a run up to-morrow evening." " Miss Marsh," Captain Cavendish lazily began, " if you will permit me to " but Natty cut him short with a gay laugh. " And make all the young ladies in there miserable for the rest of the evening ! No, thank you ! I am not quite so heartless. Good night !" She leaned forward to say it, the next moment she ' was lost in the fog. He caught one glimpse of a white hand waved, of the half -saucy, half-wicked, wholly-be- witching smile, of the dancing blue eyes and golden hair, and then there was nothing but a pale blank of mist and wet, and Charley was speaking : "Hang the fog! it goes through one like a knife 1 Come along in, captain, they are going to dance." MISS ROSE. 25 Captain Cavendish went in, but not to dance. He had come from curiosity to see what the Speckportonians were like, not intending to remain over an hour or so. Now that Natty was gone, there was no inducement to stay. He sought out Mrs. McGregor, to say good- night. " What's your hurry ?" said Val, following him out. " It is growing late, and 1 am ashamed to say I am sleepy. Will you be in the office to-morrow morning ?" ""From eight till two," said Val. " Then I'll drop in. Good night !" The cathedral clock struck three as he came out into the drizzly morning, and all the other clocks in the town took it up. The streets were empty, as he walked rapidly to his lodgings, with buttoned-up overcoat, and hat drawn over his eyes. But a " dancing shape, an image gay " were with him, flashing on him through the fog; minting iim all the way home, through the sniur and mist of the dismal day-dawn. CHAPTER III. MISS EOSE. IGHT was striking by every clock in the town, as down Queen Street the Broadway of Speck- port a tall female streamed, with a step that rang and resounded on the wooden pavement. The tall female, nodding to her acquaintances right and left, and holding up her bombazine skirts out of the slop, was Miss Jo Blake, as bright as a new penny, though she had not had a wink of sleep the night before. Early as the hour was, Miss Jo was going to make a morning call, and strode on through the fog with her head up, and a nod for nearly every one she passed. Down Queen Street Miss Jo turned to the left, and kept straight on, facing the bay, all blurred and misty, so' 2 26 3/755 ROSE. tiiat you COL Id hardly tell where the fog ended and the sun began. The business part of the town, with its noise and rattle and bustle, was left half a mile behind, and Miss Jo turned into a pretty and quiet street, right down on the sea shore. It was called Cottage Street, very ap- propriately, too ; for all the houses in it were cozy little cottages, a story and a half high, all as much alike is 'i turned out of a mold. They were all painted white, had a red door in the center, and" two windows on either side of the door, decorated with green shutters. They had little grass-plots and flower-beds in front, with white pal- ings, and white gate, and a little graveled path, and be- hind they had vegetable-yards sloping right down to the very water. If 3^011 leaned over the fences at the lower end of these gardens, on a stormy day, and at high tide, you could feel the salt spray dashing up in your face, from the waves below. At low water, the '<>iig, smooth, sandy beach, delightful to walk over on ho: mer days. Before one of the cottages Miss Jo drew rein, and rapped. While waiting for the door to open, the ilutter of a skirt in the back garden caught her eye ; and, peering round the comer of the house, she had a full view of it and its wearer. And Miss Jo set herself to contemplate the view with keenest interest. To see the wearer of that fluttering skirt it was that had brought Miss Jo all the way from her own home so early in the morning, though she had never set eyes on her before. Uncommonly friendly, perhaps you are thinking. Not at all : Miss Jo was a woman, consequently curious ; ind curiosity, not kindness, had brought her out. The sight was very well worth looking at. You might have gazed for a week, steadily, and not grown tired of the prospect. A figure, slender and small, wen ring a black dress, white linen cull's ;.t the wrists, a wl collar, fastened with a knot of ciape. a profusion brown hair, worn in braids, and low in the neck, hands like a child's, small and white. She -.vas leaning against a tree, a gnarled old rowan tree, with her face turned sea- JfTSS ROSE. 27 ward, watching the fishing-boats gliding in and out through the fog; but presently, at some noise in the street, she glanced around, and Miss Jo saw her face. A small, pale face, very pale, with pretty features, and lit with large, soft eyes. A face that was a history, could Miss Jo have read it ; pale and patient, gentle and sweet, and in the brown eye a look of settled melancholy^ This young lady in black had been learning the great les- son of life, that most of us poor mortals must learn, sooner or later, endurance the lesson One too sublime to name came on earth to teach. Miss Jo dodged back, the door swung open, and a fat girl, bursting out of her hooks and eyes, and with a head like a tow mop, opened the door. Miss Jo strode in with- out ceremony. " Good morning, Betsy Ann ! Is Mrs. Marsh at home this morning ?" " Yes, Miss Jo," said Betsy Ann, opening a door to the left, for there was a door on either hand ; that to the right, leading to the drawing-room of the cottage, and a staircase at the end leading to the sleeping-room above ; the door to the left admitted you to the sitting-room and dining-room, for it was both in one a pleasant little room enough, with a red and green ingrain carpet, cane-seated chairs, red moreen window-curtains on the two windows, one looking on the bay, the other on the street. There was a little upright piano in one corner, a lounge in an- other ; pictures on the papered walls ; a Dutch clock and some china cats and dogs and shepherdesses on the man- telpiece ; a coal-tire in the Franklin, and a table laid for breakfast. The room had but one occupant, a faded and feeble- looking woman, who sat in a low rocking-chair, her feet crossed on the fender, a shawl around her, and a book in her hand. She looked up in her surprise at her early visitor. " Law ! Miss Blake, is it you ? Who'd have thought it ? Betsy Ann, give Miss Blake a chair." " It's quite a piece from our house here, and I feel kind of tired," said Miss Jo, seating herself. u Your tire 28 JfISS ROSE. feels comfortable, Mrs. Marsli ; these foggy days are chilly. Ain't you had breakfast yet 2" " It's all Charley's fault ; he hasn't come down stairs yet. How did you enjoy yourself at the party last night t" " First-rate. Never went home till six this morning, and then I had to turn to and make Val his breakfast. Charley left early." u Early !'' retorted Mrs. Marsh ; " I don't know wliat you call early. It was after six when he came here, Betsy Ann savs." ' Well, that's odd," said Miss Jo. " He left McGreg- or's about half past three, anyway. Did you hear they had an officer there last night r' " An officer ! No. Who is it?" " His name is Captain Cavendish, and a beautiful man he is, with a diamond ring on his linger, my dear, and the look of a real gentleman. His folks are very great in England. His brother's the Marquis of Cabbage Carra- ways no, I forget it ; but Yal knows all about him." " Law!'' exclaimed Mrs. Marsh, opening her light-blue eyes, " a Marquis ! Who brought him ';"' " Yal did. Yal knows every one, I believe, and got acquainted with him in Halifax. You never saw any one so proud as Mr. McGregor. I didn't say anything, my dear; but I thought of the time when lords and marquises, and dukes and captains without end, used to be entertain- ed at Castle Blake," said Miss Jo, sighing. "And what does he look like? Is he handsome?" asked Mrs. Marsh, with interest ; for Castle Blake and its melancholy reminiscences were an old story to her. " Uncommon," said Miss Jo ; " and I believe Mrs. Mc- Gregor thinks her Jane will get him. You never saw any one so tickled in your life. Why weren't you up '! I ex- pected you." " I couldn't go. Miss Hose came just as I was getting ready, and of course I had to stay with her." " Oh, the new teacher ! I saw a young woman in black standing in the background as I came in ; was that her C said Miss Jo, who did not always choose to be confined to the rules of severe grammar. MISS ROSE. 29 " Yes," said Mrs. Marsh ; " and what do 3*011 think, Miss Blake, if she wasn't up this morning before six o'clock? Betsy Ann always rises at six, and when she was rolling up the blind Miss Kose came clown-stairs al- ready dressed, and has been out in the garden ever since. Beisy Ann says she was weeding the flowers most of the time." " She's a little thing, isn't she ?" said Miss Jo ; " and so delicate-looking ! I don't believe she'll ever 1x3 able to manage them big rough girls in the school. What's her other name besides Miss Kose ?" " I don't know. She looks as if she had seen trouble," said Mrs. Marsh, pensively. " Who is she in mourning, for ?" li I don't know. I didn't like to ask, and she doesn't talk much herself." " Where did she come from ? Montreal, wasn't it ?" "I forget. .Natty knows. Natty was here last night before she went up to McGregor's. She said sue would come back this morning, and go with Miss Ro-e to the school. Here's Charley at last.'' Miss Jo faced round, and confronted that young gentleman sauntering in. "Well, Sleeping Beauty, you've got up now, have you ?" was her salute. " How do yon feel after all you danced last night i" " Never better. You're out betimes this morning, Miss Jo." " Yes," said Miss Jo ; " the sun don't catch me sim- mering in bed like it does some folks. Did it take you from half-past three till six to get home this morning, Dlr, Charles P " Who says it was six ?" said Charley. " Betsy Ann does," replied his mother. " Where were you all the time ?" " Betsy Ann's eyes were a couple -of hours too fast. , mother, is the breakfast ready ? It's nearly time I was oil." " It's been ready this half-hour. Betsy Ann 1" That maiden appeared. 80 MISS ROSE. " Go and ask Miss Rose to please come ill to breakfast, and then fetch the coffee." Betsy Ann fled off, and Charley glanced out of the window. " Miss Rose is taking a constitutional, is she ? What is she like, mother pretty ? I didn't see her last night, yon know." " What odds is it to you ?" demanded Miss Jo ; " she's not as pretty as Cherrie Nettleby, anyhow." Charley turned scarlet, and Miss Jo's eyes twinkled at the success of her random shaft. The door opened at that instant, and the small, slender "black figure glided in. Glided was the word for that swift, light motion, so noise- less and fleet. " Good morning," said Mrs. Marsh, rising smiling to shake hands ; " you are an early bird, I find. Miss Blake, MibS Rose Miss Rose, my son Charles." My son Charles and Miss Blake both shook hands wirh the new teacher, and welcomed her to Speckport. A faint smile, a shy fluttering color coming and going in her deli- cate cheeks, and a few low-murmured words, and then Miss Rose sat down on the chair Charley had placed for her, her pretty eyes fixed on the coals, her small childlike hands fluttering still one over the other. Betsy Ami came in with the coffee-pot and rolls and eggs, and Mrs. Marsh invited Miss Jo to sit over and have some break- fast. " I don't care if I do," said Miss Jo, untying her bon- net promptly. " I didn't feel like taking anything when Yal had his this morning, and your coflee smells good. Are you fond of coffee, Miss Rose ?" Miss Rose smiled a little as they all took their places. " Yes, I like it very well." " Some folks like tea best," said Miss Jo, pensively, stirring in a third teaspoouful of sugar in her cup, "but I don't. What sort of a journey had you, Miss Ro&e $" "Very pleasant, indeed.*' " You arrived yesterday F' Miss Rose assented. MISS ROSE. fl " Was it from Halifax you came ?" "No, ma'am; from Montreal." '' Oh, from Montreal ! You were born * in Montreal, 1 suppose ?" " JS T o, I was born in New York." " Law !" cried Mrs. Marsh, " then, you're a Yankee, > Miss Rose?" " Do your folks live in Montreal, Miss Rose ?" recom- menced the persevering Miss Jo. The faint, rosy light flickered and faded again in the face of Miss Rose. "I have no relatives," she said, without lifting her yes. " None at all ! Father, nor mother, nor brothers, nor sisters, nor nothing." " 1 have none at all." " Dear me, that's a pity ! "Who are you in black for ?" There was a pause then Miss Rose answered, still without looking up : " For my father." " Oh, for your father ! Has he been long dead ? An- other cup, if you please. Betsy Ann knows how to make nice coffee." " lie has been dead ten months," said Miss Rose, a flush of intolerable pain dyeing her pale cheeks at this questioning. " How do you think you'll like Speckport ?" went on the dauntless Miss Jo. " It's not equal to Montreal or New York, they tell me, but the Bluenoses think there's no place like it. Poor things ! if they once saw Dublin, it's little they'd think of such a place as this is." " Halte la !" cried Charley ; " please to remember, Miss Jo, I am a native, to the manner born, an out-and-out Bluenose, and will stand no nonsense about Speckport ! There's no place like it. See Speckport and die ! Mother, I'll trouble you for some of that toast." " Won't you have some, Miss Rose ?" said Mrs. Marsh. " You ain't eating anything." " Xot any more, thank you. 1 like Speckport very much, Miss Blake ; all I have seen of it." S3 MISS ROSE. " That's right, Miss Rose !" exclaimed Charley ; " say you like fog and all. Are you going to commence teach- ing to-day ? " I should prefer commencing at once. Miss Marsh said she was coming this morning, did she not?" Miss Hose asked, lifting her shy brown eyes to Mi's. Marsh. " Yes, dear. Charley, what time did Natty go home last night ?" " She didn't go home last night ; it was half-past two this morning." Did she walk ?" " No ; the old lady sent that wheelbarrow of hers after her." " Wheelbarrow !" cried his mother, aghast. " Why, Charley, what do you mean ?" " It's the same thing," said Charley. " I'd as soon go in a wheelbarrow as that carryall. Such a shabby old rattle-trap ! It's like nothing but the old dame herself." " Charley, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. Did you go with her ?" " Not I ! I was better engaged. Another gentleman offered his services, but she declined." " Who was it ? Captain Locksley ?" " No, another captain Captain Cavendish." " Did he want to go home with Natty ?" asked Miss Jo, with interest. " I thought he was more attentive to her than to Jane McGregor ! Why wouldn't she have him?" " She would look line having him an utter stranger ! If it had been Locksley, it would have been different. See here, Miss Rose," Charley cried, springing up in alarm, " what is the matter ?" " She is going to faint !" exclaimed Miss Jo, in con- t sternation. " Charley, run for a glass of water." Miss Rose had fallen suddenly back in her seat, her face growing so dreadfully white that they might well be startled. It was nothing for Miss Rose to look pale, only this was like the pallor of death. Charley made a rush for the water, and was back in a twinkling, holding it to MISS ROSE. 38 her lips. She drank a portion, pushed it away, and sat up, trying to smile. " I am afraid I have startled you," she said, as ii necessary to apologize, " but I am not very strong, a!U l ! Her voice, faltering throughout, died entirely away ; and, leaning her elbows on the table, she bowed her fore- on her hands. Miss Jo looked at her with com- pressed lips and prophetic eye. " You'll never stand that school, Miss Hose, and 1 thought so from the first. Them girls would try a con- stitution of iron, let alone yours." Miss Rose lifted her white face, and arose from the table. " It is nothing," she said, faintly. " I do not often get weak, like this. Thank you !" She had gone to the window, as if for air, and Charley had sprung forward and opened it. " Does the air revive you, or shall I fetch you sume more water ?" inquired Charley, with a face full of con- cern. "Oh, no! indeed, it is nothing. I am quite well now." " You don't look like it," said Miss Jo ; "you are os white as a sheet yet. Don't you go near that school to- day, mind." Miss Rose essayed a smile. " The school will do me no harm, Miss Blake thank you for your kindness all the same." Miss Jo shook her head. " You ain't fit for it, and that you'll find. Are you off, Charley ?" " Very hard, isn't it, Miss Jo ?" said Charley, drawing on his gloves. "But 1 mujjt tear myself away. Old Pestle and Mortar will be fit to bastinado me for staying till this time of day." " Look here, then," said Miss Jo, " have you any en- gagement particular for this evening f " " Particular ? no, not very. 1 promised Natty tc spend the evening up at Rechnou, that's all." 2* 84 MISS ROSE. "Oh, that's nothing, then. I want you and your mother, and Miss Rose, to come over to our house this evening, and take a cup of tea. I'll get Natty to come, too." " All right," said Charley, boyishly, taking his wide- awake. " I'll take two or three cups if you like. Good morning, all. Miss Hose, don't you go and use yourself up in that hot school-room to-day." Off went Charley, whistling " Cheer, boys, cheer !" and his hands rammed down in his coat-pockets ; and Miss Jo got up and took her bonnet. " You'll be sure to come, Mi's. Marsh, you and Miss Rose, and come nice and early, so as we can have a chat." " Certainly," said Mrs. Marsh, " if Miss Rose has no objection." Miss Rose hesitated a little, and glanced at her mourn- ing dress, and from it to Miss Jo, with her soft, wistful eyes. " I have not gone out at all since since " Yes, dear, I know," said Miss Jo, kindly, interrupt- ing. " But it isn't a party or anything, only just two or three friends to spend a few hours. Now, don't make any objection. I shall expect you both, without fail, so good- bye." With one of her familiar nods, Miss Jo strode out, and nearly ran against a young lady, who was opening the gate. " Is it you, Miss Jo? You nearly knocked me down ! You must have been up with the birds this mornii: get here so soon." The speaker was a young lady who had been at Mrs. McGregor's the previous night; a small, wiry damsel, with sallow face, thin lips, dull, yellow, lusterless hair, and light, faded-looking eyes. She was not pretty, but ^he looked pleasant that is, if incessant smiles can make i\ face pleasant and she had the softest and sweetest of voices you could liken it to nothing but the purring of a cat; and her hands were limp and velvety, and catlike too. MISS SOSK fa*: Miss Jo nodded her recognition. "How d'ye do. Catty? How do you feel after last night 3" "Very well." " Well enough to spend this evening with me ?" Miss Catty Clowrie laughed. " I am always well enough for that, Miss Jo ! Are you going to eclipse Mrs. McGregor?" " Nonsense ! Mrs. Marsh and Miss Rose are coming to take tea with ine, that's all, and I want you to come up." " I shall be veiy happy to. Are Natty and Charley coming?'' Miss Jo nodded again, and without further parley walked away. As she turned the corner of Cottage Street into a more busy thoroughfare, known as Park Lane, she saw a lady and gentleman taking the sidewalk in dashing style. Everybody looked after them, and everybody might have gone a long way without finding anything better worth looking after. The young lady's tall, slight, willowy figure was set off by a close-fitting black cloth basque, and a little, coquettish, black velvet cap was placed above one of the most bewitching faces that ever turned a man's head. Rosefl'te, smiling, sunshiny, the bright blue eyes flashing laughing light everywhere they fell. Her gloved hands daintily uplifting her skirts, and displaying the pretty high-heeled boots, as she sailed along with a very peculiar, jaunty, swinging gait. And quite as well worth looking at, in his way, was her cavalier, gallant and handsonje, with an unmistakable military stride, and an unmistakable military air general- ly, although dressed in civilian's clothes. As they swept past Miss Jo, the .young lady made a dashing bow ; and the young gentleman lifted his hat. Miss Jo stood, with her mouth open, gazing after them. u ^\ splendid couple, ain't they, Miss Blake ?" said a man, passing. It w;is Mr. Clowrie, on his way to his . and Miss Jo. just deigning to acknowledge him, walked on. " My patience !" was her mental ejaculation, " what 80 VADS OFFICE. a swell they cut ! He's as handsome as a lord, that young man ; and she's every bit as good-looking ! I must go up to Redinon this afternoon, and ask her down. Wouldn't it be great now, if that should turn out to be a match 1" CHAPTER IV. VAL'S OFFICE. MONG the many tall, dingy brick buildings, fronting on that busy thoroughfare of Speck- port, Queen Street, there stood one to the right as you went up, taller and dingier, if possible, than its neighbors, and bearing this legend along its grimy front, "Office of Speckport Spouter." There were a dozen newspapers, more or less, published in Speckport, weekly, semi-weekly, and daily ; but the Spouter went ahead of them all, and distanced all competitors. At about half-past seven o'clock, this foggy spring morning, two individuals of the manly sex occupied the principal apartment of the printing establishment. A dirty, nasty, noisy place it generally was ; and dirty and nasty, though not very noisy, it was this morning, for the only sound to be heard was the voice of one of its occu- pants, chattering incessantly, and the scratching of the other's pen, as he wrote, perched up on a high stool. The writer was foreman in the office, a sober-looking, middle-aged man, who wore spectacles, and wrote away as mechanically as if he was doing it by steam. The speaker was a lively youth of twelve, office-boy, printer's devil, and errand-runner, and gossiper-in-chief to the place. His name was in the baptismal register of Speck- port cathedral, WilMam Blair; but in every-day life he was Bill Blair, brother tj pretty Laura, whom Val Blako had eulogized as " such a girl to laugh." VAVS OFFICE. 87 Laughter seemed to be a weakness in the family, for Muster Bill's mouth was generally stretched in a steady grin from one week's end to the other, and was, just at this present moment. He was perched up on another high stool, swinging his legs about, chewing gum, looking out of the window, and talking. " And there goes Old Leach in his gig, tearing along as if Old Nick was after him," went on Master Bill, criti- cising the passers-by. " (Somebody's kicking the bucket in Speckport ! And there's Sim Tod hobbling along on his stick ! Now, I should admire to know how long that old codger's going to live; he must be as old as Methu- selah's cat by this time. And there, I vow, if there ahrt Miss Jo, streaking along as tall as a grenadier, and as spry as if she hadn't been up all night at that rout in Golden Row. What a frisky old girl it is !" "I tell you what, Bill Blair," said the foreman, Mr. Gilcase, "if you don't take yourself down out of that, and get to work, I'll report you to Mr. Blake as soon, as he comes in !" "No, you won't!" said Bill, snapping his gum be- tween his teeth like a pistol-shot. " There ain't nothing to do. I swept the office, and sprinkled this iioor, and I want a rest now, I should think. J feel as if i should drop!" "The office looks as if it had been swept," said Mr. Gilcase, contemptuously; "there's the addresses to write on those wrappers ; go and do that !" " That's time enough," said Bill ; " Blake won't be here for an hour or two yet ; he's puoozing, I'll bet you, after being up all night. Look here, Mr. Gilcase, did you know the new teacher was come <" " No," said the foreman, looking somewhat interested ; "has she?" "Came last night," nodded Bill ; "our Laury heard so last night at the party. Her name's Miss Hose. Did you know they had an officer last night at McGregor's i" " I didn't think the officers visited McGregor' "None of 'em ever did before; but one ot them was there last night, a captain, by the same token; and, I ex 88 VAUS OFFICE. pcct, old McGregor's as proud as a pig with two tail?. As fur Jane, there'll be no standing her now, and she was stuck-up enough before. Oh, here's Clowrie, and about as pleasant-looking as a wild cat with the whooping- cough !" A heavy, lumbering foot was ascending the steep dark stairs, and the door _>pened presently to admit a young gentleman in a pea-jacket and glazed cap. A short and thick-set young gentleman, with a sulky face, who was never known to laugh, and whose life it was the delight of Master Bill Blair to torment and make a misery of. The young gentleman was Mr. Jacob Clowrie, eldest son and hope of Peter Clowrie, Esq., attorney-at-iaw. ' How are you, Jake 2" began Mr. Blair, in a friendly tone, knocking his heels about on the stool. ki You look kind of sour this nfbrning. Was the milk at breakfast curdled, or didn't Cattv get up to make you any breakfast at all i" Mr. Clowrie's reply to this was a growl, as he hung up his cap. " 1 say, Jake, you weren't at McGregor's tea-splash last night, were you ? 1 know the old man and Catty were there. Scaly lot not to ask you and me !" Mr. Clowrie growled again, and sat down at a desk. "I say, Jake," resumed that young demon, Bill, grin- ning from ear to ear, " how's our Cherrie, eh \ seen her lately?" " What would you give to know ?" snapped Mr. Gjow- rie, condescending to retort. " But I do know, though, without giving nothing ! and I know your cake's deu^h, my boy ! Lor, I think I see 'em now !" cried Bill, gcm*g off in a shout of laughter at some lively recollection. Mr. Clowrie glared at him over the top of his desk, with savage inquiry. " Oh, you're cut out, old fellow! you're dished, you are ! Cherrie's got a new beau, and you're left in the lurch !" " What do you mean, you young imp ?'' inquired Mr. VAV8 OFFICE. 39 Clowrie, growing .very red in the face. "I'll go over and twist your neck for you, if you don't look sharp !" Mr. Blair winked. " Don't you think you see yourself doing it, Jakey ? I tell you it's as true as preaching ! Cherrie's got a new fellow, and the chap's name is Charley Marsh." There was a pause. Bill looked triumphant, Mr. Clow- rie black as a thunderbolt, and the foreman amused in spite of himself. Bill crunched his gum and waited for his announcement to have proper eifect, and theu resumed, in an explanatory tone : " You see, Jake, I had heard Charley was after her, but I didn't believe it till last night, when I see them with my own two blessed eyes. My governor and La my were off to McGregor's, so I cut over to Jim Tod's, to see a lot of terrier-pups he's got me and Tom Smith and he prom- ised us a pup apiece. Jim's folks were at the junketing, too ; so we had the house to ourselves. And Jim, he stole in the pantry through the window and hooked a lot of pies and cakes, and raspberry wine, and Tom had a pack of cards in his trowsers pocket. And we went up to Jim's room, and, crackey ! hadn't we a time ! There was no hurry neither ; for we knew the old folks wouldn't be home till all hours, so we staid till after three in the morn- ing, and by this time Jim and me had lost three shillings j'n pennies each, and the three of us were about ready to bui\>t with all we had eat and drank ! It was foggy and misty coming home, and me and Tom cut across them fields and waste lots between Tod's and Park Lane, when just as we turned into Golden How, who should we meet but Charley Marsh and Cherrie. There they were, coming along as large as life, linking together, and Charley's head down, listening to her, till their noses were nearly touch- ing. Me and Tom laughed till we were tit to split !" Mr. Blair laughed again at the recollection, but Mr. Clowrie, scowling more darkly than ever, replied not by scornful silence. Bill had his laugh out, and recom- menced. " So you see, Jake, it's no go ! You can't get the beau- tifulest mug that ever was looked at, and you haven't the 40 VAD8 OFFIQS. shadow of a chance against such a fellow as Charley Marsh! OLor!" With the last ejaculation of alarm, Bill sprang down f oin his perch in consternation, as the door opened and T\f r. Val Blake entered. He had been so absorbed eliciting I'Jr. Ciowrie that he had not heard Val coining up-stairs, and now made a desperate dash at the nearest desk. Val sti etched out his long arm and pinned him. " You young vagabond ! is this the way you spend your time in my absence? What's that, about Charley Marsh ?" ' Nothing, sir," said Bill, grinning a malicious grin over at Mr. Ciowrie. " I was only telling Jake how he was being cut out !" " Cut out ! What do you mean ?" " Why, with that Cherrie Nettleby ! Charley Marsh's got her now !" *' What 1" said Val, shortly ; " what are you talking about, you little rascal ?" " I can't help it, sir," said Bill, with an injured look, " if I am a rascal. I saw him seeing her home this morn- ing between three and four o'clock, and if that don't look like cutting Jake out, I don't know what does !" " And what were yon doing out at three o'clock in the moming. Master Blair f ' I was over to Tod's spending the evening, me and a lot more fellows, and that was the time we were getting home. I don't see," said Bill, with a still more aggrieved air, " why we shouldn't stop out a while, if all the old codgers in the town set us the example !" Val released him, and strode on to an inner room. u See if you can attend to your business for one morn- ing, sir, and give your tongue a holiday. Mr, Gilcase, w;-.s the postman here ?" " Yes, sir. The letters and papers are on your table." Val disappeared, closing the door behind him, and Master Biair turned a somersault of delight and cut a pigeon- wing afterward. " Get to work, sir !" shouted Mr. Gilcase, " or I'll make Mr. Blake turn you out of the office !" VADS OFFICE. 41 "Mr. Blake knows better," retorted the incorrigible. " I rather think the Spouter would be nowhere if I left; Do yon kuow, Mr. Gilcase, I think Blake has some notion of taking me into partnership shortly ! He has to work like a horse now." Val had to work hard no mistake about it, for Le was sole editor and proprietor of the Sunday and Weekly Speckport Spouter. lie is sitting in his room now and a dusty, grimy, littered, disordered room it is before a table heaped with papers, letters, books, and manuscript of all kinds, busily tearing the envelopes off sundry over- grown letters, and disgorging their contents. " What's this \ a private iiote from Miss Incognita. * Would I be so kind as to speak to the printers ; they made such frightful mistakes in her last sketch, lilled her heroine's eyes with tars, instead of tears, and in the battle- scene defeated Cromwell and his soldiers with wildest laughter, instead of slaughter !' Humph. " It's her own fault ; why don't she write decently 2 Very well, Miss Laura, I'll stick you in ; you think I don't know you, I suppose. Come in." Val looked up from his literary labors to answer a tap at the door. Mr. G-ilcase put in his head. " There's a gentleman here wants to see you, sir. Cap- tain Cavendish." Val got up and went out. Captain Cavendish, in a loose overcoat, and smoking a cigar, was lounging against a desk, and being stared at by Messrs. Clowrie and Blair, took out hie cigar and extended his hand languidly to Val. " Good morning ! Are you very busy '{ Am I an in- truder ? If so, I'll go away again." "I'm no busier than common," said Val. Come in, this is my sanctum, and here's the editorial chair; sit down." " Is it any harm to smoke ?" inquired the Captain, looking rather doubtful. " .Not the least. I'll blow a cloud myself. How did you find your way here through the clouds of fog ?" " Not very easily. Does the sun ever shine at all in Spcckport ?" 42 VAISS OFFICE. " Occasionally when it cannot help itself, But when did you take to early rising, pray ? You used to be loung- ing over your breakfast about this hour when I knew you in Halifax." " Yes, I know I'm a reformed character. Apropos, early rising seems to be the style here. I met two ladies of my acquaintance figuring through the streets ever so long ago." "Who were they?" " Your sister was one ; Miss Marsh, the other." "Natty, eh? Oh, she always was an early bird. Were you speaking to her ?" "I had the pleasure of escorting her to her mother's. By the way, she does not live with her mother, does she?' 5 " No ; she lives with old Lady Leroy, up at Redrnou." "Where is Redinon?" " About a mile from Speckport. Natty walks it two or three times a day, and thinks it's only a hen's jump. Kedmon's a fine place." " Indeed." "Not the house exactly it's a great barn but the property. It's worth eight thousand pounds." "So much?" said Captain Cavendish, looking inter- ested. " And who is Lady Leroy ?" " The wife the widow of a dead Jew. Don't stare, she only gets the title as a nickname, for she's the greatest old oddity the sun ever shone on. She's a cousin of Natty's mother, and Natty is to be her hei- Captain Cavendish's eyes lightened vividly. " Her heiress ! Is she very rich, then f ' " Immensely ! Worth thirty thousand pounds or more, and the stingiest old skinflint that ever breathed. Natty has been with her over a year now, as a sort of companion, and a line time she has with the old toad, I know." " And there is no doubt Miss Marsh is to be her heir- " None at all the will is made and in the hands of Darcy, her lawyer. She has no children, and no relatives that ever I heard of nearer than Miss Marsh. She was old Lcroy's servant whe. i lie married her it happened in Ne\v VAUS OFFICE. 43 York, where lie made his money. This place, Redmon, was to be sold for debt ; Leroy bid it in dirt cheap, and rented it, employing Darey as his agent to collect rents, for tliare is quite a village attached to it. After the old fellow's death, a year and a half ago, his venerable relict came here, took np her abode at Redmon, with as great an oddity as herself for a servant. She took a great farcy to pretty Natty after awhile, and got her to go np there and reside as companion." " And those Marshes what are they? like the rest of Speck port begging your pardon ! nobody ?" " Family, you mean ? That question is so like an Englishman. The father was a gentleman. His profession, was that of engineer, and his family, I have heard, was something extra in England ; but he made a low marriage over here, and they would have nothing more to do with him. Mrs. Marsh was pretty, and as insipid as a mng of milk arid water, caring for nothing in the world wide but sitting in a rocking-chair reading novels. He married her, though; and they lived quite in style until Charley was fourteen and Natty twelve years old. Then Mr. Marsh had a stroke of paralysis which left him altogether incapa- ble of attending to his business, of doing anything, in fact, but teaching. He started a school, and got a salary for playing the organ in the cathedral, but he only lived two years after. Before he died they had to give up their fine house, dismiss their servants, auction their furniture, and rent the cottage they live in now. Miss Natty, sir, kept the school, gave music-lessons after hours, took the organ Sundays, and supported the family for the next three years ; in point of fact, does to this day." k - How is that '<' 'said Captain Cavendish. "Mrs. Leroy pays her a salary as companion, I suppose?" " She does ; but that's only a pittance, wouldn't pay her mothers bills in the circulating library. Natty refused to go to Redmon unless under certain conditions. She would retain the school, the organ, and her music-pupils as usual, only she would engage another teacher for the school, coming there one hour a day to superintend. That would take about four hours a day, the rest was at the 44 VAUS OFFICE. service of Lady Leroy. Her ladyship grumbled, out had to consent ; so Natty went to live up at Rednion, and be- tween all has her hands full." i " She is indeed a brave girl ! What are her duties at the old lady's i" " No trifle ! She reads to her, retails all the news of the town, writes her letters, keeps her accounts, receives the rents, makes out the receipts, oversees the household does a thousand things besides. If she had as many hands as what's his name, the fellow in the mythology, Briarens, wasn't it ? the old vixen would keep them all occupied. By the way, did you see Charley this morning when you were in C " I wasn't in, I left Miss Natty at the door. I say, Val, vou didn't tell me last night who that pretty girl was I saw him with in the window. She was not a guest, though I'll take my oath there wasn't a young lady present half so pretty, save the belle of Speckport herself. Who WIIL- she f ' " Cherrie, otherwise Miss Charlotte Nettleby. A little llirting piece of conceit. She has had the young men of Speckport tagging after her. Rumor set Charley down lately as one of her killed or wounded ; but Speck- port is always gossiping, and I paid no attention to it. It seems it's true though, for that young scamp Blair iu the next room saw liim escorting her home this morn- ing." " What was she doing at the house if not invited !'' "How should I know? Cherrie is everywhere she knows the servants, I suppose." " Oh, is that it '{ Then she is nobody"." *'I wish she heard you! If ever any one thought themselves somebody it's the same Miss, Cherrie. She aspires to be a lady bless your heart ! and that foohsh boy is 10 be entrapped into marrying her." Val stopped to knock the ashes oil his cigar. " Well ; and what then C ' asked the captain. "Why, Natty will go frantic, that is all. She thinks the Princess Royal not half good enough for Charley." "Is Miss Cherrie's position iu life so low, then r' " It's not that. Her father is a gardener, a poor man, VAUS OFFICE. 46 bnt honest and respectable enough. It's Cherrie herself ; she's a shallow, vain, silly little beauty, as ever made fools of men, and her vanity, and her idleness, and her dress, and her flirtations are the scandal of the town. iS'ot that anything woise can be said of little Cherrie, mind ; but the is not the girl for Charley Marsh to marry." "Charley is a gentleman; perhaps he isn't going to marry her," suggested Captain Cavendish, with a light laugh, that told more of his character than folios could have done. "Being a gentleman," said Val, with emphasis, "he means to marry her if he means anything at all." And the young officer shrugged his shoulders. " Chacun dson gout. I must be going, I believe. Here 1 have been trespassing on your time these two hours." "The day's young yet," said Val; "have you any en- gagement for this evening?" " I believe not, except a dinner at the mess-room, which can be shirked." " Then come up to Itedmon. If you are a student of character, Mrs. Leroy will amply repay the trouble." "I'm there ! but not," said Captain Cavendish, laugh- ing, " to see Mrs. Leroy." " 1 understand. Well, good morning." "Until then, au revoir." Mr. Bill Blair, perched on his high stool, his elbows spread out on the clesk. stared at him as he went out. " Cracky, what a rum swell them officer chaps are ? I say, Clowrie, wouldn't Cherrie like that cove fur a beau '{ He would be safe to win if he tried it on, and Charley Marsh would be where you are now nowhere." And little did Mr. William Blair or his hearers think he was uttering a prophecy. 40 KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE. CHAPTER Y. KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE. APTAIN CAVENDISH, looking very hand- some and distinguished in the admiring eyes of Speckport, lounged down Queen Street, and down half a dozen other streets, toward the sea-shore. The tide was ebbing as he descended to the beach, and the long, lazy swell breaking on the strand was singing the old everlasting song it has sung through all time. Its mysterious music was lost on Captain Cavendish ; his thoughts were hundreds of miles away. .Not very pleasant thoughts, either, judging by his contracted brow and compressed lips, as he leaned against a tall rock, his eyes looking out to sea. lie started up after awhile, with a gesture of impatience. " Pshaw !" he said ; " what's the use of thinking of it now ? it's all past and gone. It is Fate, I suppose ; and if Fate has ordained I must marry a rich wife or none, where is the good of my puny struggles ? But poor little Winnie ! I have been the greatest villain that ever was known to you." He walked along the beach, sending pebbles skimming over the waves as he went. Two fishermen in oilcloth trowsers, very scaly and rattling, were drawing up their boat, laden to the water's edge with gaspereaux, all alive and kicking. Captain Cavendish stopped and looked at them. " Your freight looks lively, my men. You have got a line boatload there." The two young men looked at him. They were tall, strapping, sunburnt, black-eyed, good-looking fellows both, and the one hauling up the boat answered ; the other, pulling the fish out of the nets, went on with his work in silence. " Yes, sir, we had a good haul last night. The KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE. 47 freshet's been strong this spring, and lias made the fishing good." " Were you out all night ?" " Yes; we have to go when, the tide suits." " You hud a foggy night for it, then. Can you tell me which is the road to Redmon ?" The your.g fisherman turned and pointed to a path going up the hillside fro:n the r-hore. "Do you see that path? Well, follow it; cut across the field, and let down the bars t'other side. There's a road there ; keep straight on and it will fetch you to iled- mon. You can't miss the house when you get to it ; it's a big brick building on a sort of hill, with lots of trees around it." " Thank you. I'll find it, I think." lie sauntered lazily up the hillside-path, cut across the fields, and let down the bars as he had been directed, putting them conscientiously up again. The road was a very quiet one ; green meadows on either hand, and clumps of cedar and spruce woo. 1 sparsely dotting it here and there. The breeze swept up cool and fresh from the sea ; the town with its bustle and noise was out of sight and hearing. He was walking so slowly that it was nearly half an hour before Iledmon came in sight a large weather- beaten brick house on the summit of a hill, with bleak corners and reedy marshes, and dark trees all around it, the whole inclosed by a high wooden fence. The place took its name from these marshes or moors about it, sown in some time with crimson cranberries and pigoonborries, like fields of red stars. But Captain Cavendish only glanced once at lledtnon ; for the instant it Irid come in sight something oleo had come in sight, too, a thousand times better worth looking at. Just outside the extremity of the fence nearest him there stood a cottage a little whitewashed alfair, standing out in dazzling contrast to the black cedar woods beside it, hop -vines clustering round its door and windows, and a tall gate at one side opening into a well-cultivated vegetable garden. Swinging back and forward on this gate was a young 48 KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE. firl, whom Captain Cavendish recognized in a moment. t was a face that few young men forgot easily, for its owner was a beauty bora ; the figure was petite and plump, delightfully rounded and ripe indeed, with no nasty sharp curves or harsh angles ; the complexion dark and clear, the forehead low, with black, arching brows ; the eyes like black beads; the cheeks like June roses; the lips as red, and ripe, and sweet as summer strawberries, the teeth they parted to disclose, literally like pearls, and they parted very often, indeed, to disc- lose them. The hair was black as hair can be, and all clustering in little short, sliming rings and kinks about the forehead and neck. Captain Cavendish had seen that face for the first time last night, in the window with Charley Marsh, but he was a sufficiently good judge of physiognomy to know it was not necessary to be very ceremonious with Miss Cherrie Nettleby. He therefore advanced at once, with a neat little fiction at the top of his tongue. "I beg your pardon," he said politely, "but I am very thirsty. "Will you be kind enough to give me a drink ?" Miss Cherrie, though but nineteen in years, was forty at least in penetration where handsome men were con- cerned, and saw through the ruse at once. She sprang down from the gate and held it open, with the prettiest affectation of timidity in the world. " Yes, sir. Will you please to walk in." " Thank you," said the captain, languidly, " I believe I will. My walk has completely used me up." Miss Cherrie led the way into the cottage. The front door opened directly into the parlor of the dwelling, a neat little room, the iioor covered with mats; a table, with books and knicknacks in the center ; a lounge and a rock- ing-chair, and some common colored prints on the walls. 1 1 had an occupant as they came in, a sallow, dark-eyed girl of sixteen, whose hands fairly flew as she sat at the win- dow, netting on a fisherman's net, already some twenty fathoms long. " Ann," said Cherrie, placing a chair for their distin- guished vi.-ituy, "go and i'oidi the gentleman a drink." KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE. 49 The girl turned her sallow but somewhat sullen face, without rising. " There ain't no water in," she said, cur^Jy. 4 Go for some now," said Cherrie. " I'll knit till you come back." " No, no !" hastily interposed Captain Cavendish. " I beg you will give yourself no such trouble. I am not so thirsty as I thought I was." " Oh, we'll want the water anyhow to get the boys' dinner," said Cherrie, throwing off her scarlet shawl. " Go, Ann, and make haste." Ann got up crossly, and strolled out of the room at a snail's pace, and Miss Cherrie took her place, and went to work industriously. "Is that your sister?" he asked, watching Cherrie's hand flying as swiftly in and out as Ann's had done. u Yes, that's our Ann," replied the young lady, as if every one should know Ann, as a matter of course. " And do you and Ann live here alone together ?" Cherrie giggled at the idea. " Oh dear, no. There's father and the boys." " The boys, and are they " " My brothers," said Cherrie. " Two of 'em, Rob and Eddie. They fish, you know, and Ann, she knits the nets." " Are those you are now making for them ?" "Yes, these are shad-nets. I hate to knit, but. the boys pay Ann for doing it, and she does them all. I gaess you'll be pretty thirsty," said Cherrie, laughing as easily as if she had known him for the past ten years, " before Ann gets back with the water. She's horrid slow." " Never mind. The longer she is away, the better I shall like it, Miss Cherrie." Miss Cherrie dropped her needle and mesh-block, and opened her black eyes. " Why, how did you find out my name ? You don't know me, do you ?" " A little. I trust we shall be very well acquainted before long." 8 50 KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE. Cherrie smiled graciously. " Everybody knows me, I think. How did you fir^d out who I was f " I saw you last night." " No I did you, though ? What time ? where was I ?" " Sitting in a window, breaking a young gentleman's heart." Cherrie giggled again. " I'm sure 1 wasn't doing any such thing. That was only Charley Marsh." " Only Charley Marsh. Had you and he a pleasant walk home this morning ?" "Now, I never. How did you know he saw me home?" " A little bird told me. I only wish it had been my good fortune." " Oh, what a story !" cried Cherrie, her wicked black eyes dancing in her head ; " I wonder you ain't ashamed ! iMdn't I hear you wanting to ride home with Mi^s Natty. I was peeking out through the dining-room door, and I heard you as plain as could be." " Well, I wanted to b polite, you know. Not having the honor of your acquaintance, Cherrie, I knew there was no hope of escorting you ; so I made the offer to Miss Marsh in sheer despair. Now, Cherrie, I don't want you to get too fond of that brother of hers." Cherrie tittered once more. "Now, how can you! I'm sure I don't care nothing about him ; but I can't help his talking to me, and seeing me home, can I ?" "I don't know. I wouldn't talk too much to him, if I were you ; and as for seeing you home, I'd rather do it I ^myself. There is no telling what nonsense he may got talking I Does he come here often f ' " Pretty often ; but all the young fellows come ! Sandy McGregor, Jake Clowrie, Mr. Blake, Charley Marsh, and the whole lot of 'em I" " What time do they come ?" " Evenings, mostly. Then, there's a whole lot of Bob KILLING TWO SIRT) r J' WITH ONE STONE. 51 and Eddie's friends come, too, and the house is full most every night !" " And what do you all do 2" " Oh, ever so many things ! Play cards, sing songs, and carry on, and dance, sometimes." " May I come, too, Cherrie 2" " You may, if you like," said Cherrie, with coquettish indifference. " But the young ladies in Speckport won't like that !" " What do I care for the young ladies in Speckport ! Oh, here's the water !" Ann came in with a glass, and the captain drank it without being the least thirsty. "Bob and Eddie's coming up the road," said Ann to her sister ; ' ' you, knit while I peel the potatoes for dinner." " I am afraid I must go," said Captain Cavendish, ris- ing, having no desire to make the acquaintance of the Messrs. Nettleby. "I have been here nearly half an hour." " That ain't long, I'm sure," said Cherrie ; " what's your hurry ?" "I have a call to make. May I come again, Miss Cherrie 2" " Oh, of course !" said Miss Cherrie, with perfect coolness ; " we always like to see our friends. Are you going to Redrnon 2" Captain Cavendish nodded, and took his hat. Pretty Cherrie got up to escort him to the gate. "Good-bye, Miss Cherrie," he said, making her a flourishing bow. " I will have the pleasure of calling on you to-morrow." Cherrie smiled most gracious consent. As he turned out of the gate he encountered the two young fishermen who had directed him to Redmon. They were Cherrie's brothers, then ; and, laughing inwardly at the memory of the late interview with that young lady, he entered the grounds of Redmon. " She's a deuced pretty girl !" he said, slapping his boot with a rattan he carried ; " and, faith, she's free and 52 KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE. easy! No nonsensical prudery about Miss Cherrie. I only hope I may get on as well with the golden-haired heiress as I seem to have done with the black-eyed grisette !" He opened the wooden gate, and sauntered along a bleak avenue, the grounds on either hand overrun witli rank weeds, and spruce, and tamarack, and fir trees, casting somber gloom around. The nouse, a great red barn, as Yal had said, looked like a black, grimy jail ; the shutters were closed on every window, the hall-door seemed hermetically sealed, and swallows flew about it, and built their nests in security on the eaves and down the chimneys. There was a great, frim iron knocker on the door, and the, young man's nock reverberated with a hollow and ghostly echo through the weird house. " What a place for such a girl to live in !" he thought, looking up at it. " Her desire for wealth must be strong to tempt her to bury herself alive in such an old tomb. The riches of the Rothschilds would not induce me." A rusty key grated in a lock, the door swung open with a creaking sound, and the bright face of Nathalie Marsh looked out. She smiled when she saw who it was, and frankly held out her hand. " You have lost no time, Monsieur. Walk in, and please to excuse me a few moments. I must go back to Mrs. Leroy." They were in a long and dismal hall, flanked with doors, and with a great, wide, old-fashioned staircase sweeping up and losing itself somehow in the upper gloom. Natty opened one of the doors, ushered him into the reception parlor of the establishment, and then tlc\v swiftly up the stairs and was gone. Captain Cavendish looked about him, that is, as well as he could for the gloom. The parlor of Redmon was furnished after the style of the cabin of a certain " fine Duld Irish gentleman," immortalized in song, " with noth- ing at all for show." No carpet on the dreary Sahara of tloor ; no curtains on the gloomy windows ; no pictures KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE. 58 on the dead, blank waste of whitewashed walls ; a few chairs, a black, old mahogany table, a dreary horsehair sofa, about as Soft as if cushioned with bricks ; and that was all. The silence of the place was something blood- chilling ; not the squeak of a mouse relieved its deathlike quiet Five, ten, fifteen, twenty minutes passed, and the cap- tain, getting desperate, was seriously thinking of making his escape, when a light step came tripping down the stairs, and Natty, all breathless and laughing, came breezily in. "Are you tired to death waiting?" she laughed gayly. " Mrs. Leroy is dreadfully tiresome over her toilet, and I am femtne de chambre, if you please ! It is over now, and she desires me to escort you to her presence, and be introduced. I hope you may make a favorable im- pression !" "But what am I to do?" said Captain Cavendish, with an appalled face. " How am I to insinuate myself into her good graces? Where is the key to her heart 2" " The key was lost years ago, and her heart is now closed. Don't contradict her, whatever you do. Hush ! here we are !" They had ascended to a hall like the one below ; flanked, like it, by doors. Natty, with a glance of wicked delight at his dolorous face, opened the first door to the right, and ushered him at once into the presence of the awful Lady Leroy. Something it certainly looked more like an Egyptian mummy than anything else swathed in shawls and swaddling-clothes, was stuck up in a vast Sleepy Hollow open arm-chair, and had its face turned to the door. That face, and a very yellow, and seared, and wrinkled, and un- lovely face it was, buried in the flapping obscurity of a deeply-frilled white cap, was lit by a pair of little, twink ling eyes, bright and keen as two stilettos. '' Mrs. Leroy," said Natty, her tone demore, but her mischievous eyes dancing under their lashes, " this is Cap- tain Cavendish." 54 KILLING TWO BIRDS WITH -y as Hebe herself ; and Charley Marsh was there, making a martyr of himself in the attempt to be fascinating to three young ladies at once ; and everybody had eaten and drank, forced thereto by Miss Blake, until they were, as Charley forcibly put it, "a misery to themselves." So a move was made to adjourn, which just consisted of pushing their chairs about five inches from the table, not being able to push them any further, and Miss Jo began rattling amono; the tea-things, which she called clearing them on. Miss Catty, always sweet and obliging, and that sort of a thing, insisted on helping her, and Charley opening the upright, clattered a " Fisher's Hornpipe" in spirited style. " Come and sing us a song, Laura that's a good girl,'' he said, while Yal, making an apology, slipped out. " Come and sing ' The Laird o' Cockpen.' ' Miss Blair, all smiles, took her seat, and sung not only " The Laird o' Cockpen," but a dozen others of the same kidney. ' What do you think of that ?" inquired Miss Blair, triumphantly rising up, with a finishing bang. " Who says 1 can't sing? Now, Miss Eose, you sing, I know." "Of course she does," said Charley. "Miss Rose, permit me to lead you to the instrument." Miss Rose looked as though she were about to excuse herself, but that impulsive Laura Blair ran over and caught her by both hands. " Up with you ! We won't take any excuses. Charley, the young lady is at your mercy, lead her off." Charley promptly did so. Miss Rose, smiling gra AN EVENING AT MISS BLAKE'S. 61 cionsly, ran her white fingers over the yellow keys, and looked up at him. - What shall I sing, Monsieur f " Anything you please. Mademoiselle. I am prepared to be delighted with k Old Dan Tucker,' if you chose it." The white fingers still ran idly over the keys, break- ing into a plaintive prelude at last, and in a voice, " low and sweet " as Annie Laurie's own, the song began. The words were those of a gifted yonng American po> the melody, a low sweet air, in a melancholy minor key Miss Rose's own, perhaps. The sweet voice faltered a little toward the close ; but as a buzz of congratulation ran around the circle she arose hastily. Arose to find herself face to face with two gen- tlemen who had entered as she began her song, and who had stood silently listening with the rest. It was Captain Cavendish and Yal ; and the young officer's face wore a look no one in that room had ever seen it wear befoiv a pale and startled look of anxiety, almost of fear and as she faced them he .backed a few paces involuntarily. Miss Rose, evidently taken completely by surprise, started visibly, growing white and red by turns. But Val was introducing them, and only he and one other present saw the changing faces of the twain. That other v, as Miss Catty Clowrie, whose eyes were as keen as any other and who watched them furtively, with vividest int. Miss Catty was enough of a mathematician to know there is no eft'ect without a cause. What, then, was the cause of this 2 It was easily enough answered. Captain Cav- endish and Miss Rose had met before, and had known eacli other well, though they were now bowing as perfect strangers. The elegant officer had recovered all his high- bred sangfroid, and was smooth and bland as sweet oil ; but XTiss Rose's face had settled into so deadly a pallor that Mrs. Marsh, albeit not the most eagle-sighted in the world, noticed it. " Dear me, Miss Rose, how pale you are i Aren't you well?" Miss Rose murmured something about the heat, and subsided into the most shadowy corner she could find ; 63 AN EVENING AT MISS BLAK&8. and Charley created a diversion by sitting down to the piano himself and rattling off a jingling symphony. In the midst of it carriage wheels rolled up to the door of No. 16, and the first-floor bell rang loudly a min- ute after. " That's Natty," said Charley. Miss Jo met her in the hall and escorted her to her bedroom, which was the dressing-room for the evening ; and presently Miss Nathalie came in, dressed in black silk, trimmed with black lace, and all her beautiful golden hair falling in glittering ringlets over her shoulders, her cheeks glowing with the rapid ride through the night air. Bril- liant she looked ; and Captain Cavendish's heart, or what- ever the thing is that does duty for a heart with men of the world, quickened its beating a little, as he shook hands. Nathalie kissed Miss Rose, sitting so very still in her quiet corner. " My pale little girl ! Here you sit like a white shadow, all by yourself. Charley, what on earth are you shouting there ?" " Now, Natty, it's your turn," said Miss Jo. " Here's the cards," said Charley, laying hold of a pack. " "While Natty's singing we'll play ' Muggins.' Does any- body here know ' Muggins' ?" Nobody did. "What a disgrace ! Then I'll teach you. Miss Jo, I'll sit beside you. Come along, captain ; here Laura, Catty, Val, mother ; Miss Rose, won't you join us ?" " Don't, Miss Rose," said Natty, who was playing a waltz. " They're nothing but a noisy set. Come here and sing with me." Natty sung everything Italian arias, French chan- Bonettes, German and Scotch ballads ; her full, rich soprano voice filling the room with melody, as on Sundays it filled the long cathedral aisles. Natty's voice was superb Miss Rose listened like one entranced. So did another, Captain Cavendish, who made all sorts of blunders in the game, and could not learn it at all, for watching the two black figures at the piano the little pale girl with the modest brown braids, and the stately heiress with her shining yel- AN EVENING AT MISS BLAKE'S. 68 low curls. Catty Clowrie watched them and the captain, and the game too. noting everything, and making no mis- takes. A very noisy party they were, every one laughing, expostulating, and straining their voices together, and Charley winning everything right and left. " I say, Cavendish, old fellow ! what are you thinking of 2" cried Yal. " This is the third time I've told you to play." Captain Cavendish started into recollection, and began playing with the wildest rapidity, utterly at random. " Look here, Natty," called Charley, as the card-party, moue noisy than' ever, broke up ; " 1 say it's not fair of you to monopolize Miss Rose all the evening. Here's Captain Cavendish has lost all his spare change, because he couldn't watch the game for watching that piano." Miss Hose retreated hastily to her corner; Natty wheeled round on the piano-stool. " What noise you have been making. Have you finished your game 2" Charley jingled a pocketful of pennies Speckport pennies at that as large as quoits. " }Tes, we have finished, lor the simple reason I have cleaned the whole party completely out, and I have won small change enough to keep me in cigars for the next two months. Who's this 2" " It's somebody for me," said Natty, starting up ; " that's Rob Nettleby's knock." "Don't go yet, Natty," said Yal, "it is too early." " It is half-past ten ; I should have been off half an hour ago. Mies Blake, my things, please." Miss Jo produced a white cloud and large cloak, and Natty 's move was a signal for all to depart. Catty, Laura, Miss Hose, and Mrs. Marsh's muffliugs had to be got, and the little parlor was a scene of " confusion worse con- founded." Yal strolled over to where Captain Carendish was making himself useful, helping Miss Marsh on with her cloak. " Natty, I'll go home with you, if you like," said polite 64 AN EVENING AT MISS BLAKE'S. Val ; " it \vill be rather a dismal drive up there with no cue but Rob Nettleby." " ."Mr. Blake is forestalled," said Captain Cavendish, coolly. "Miss Marsh has accorded the honor to me." " A il right," said Val, " I'll go home with Laura Blair, M'.eu. Charley can take care of the other three, for Catty lives next door." Lady Leroy's carryall, with Cherrie Nettleby's elder brother for driver, was waiting at the door. Good-byes were said, Natty kissed her mamma, Laura and Miss Rose, but only shook hands with Miss Clowrie. Captain Caven- dish noticed the omission as he seated himself beside her, and they drove off. " 1 don't like her," said Natty ; " I never did, since I was a child. She was such a crafty, cunning little thing in those days a sort of spy on the rest of us a sort of female Uriah Heep." " Is she so still ?" " Oh, no ; she is well enough now ; but old prejudices cling to one, you know. I don't like her, because I don't like her an excellent female reason, you understand." "' Does your brother share your prejudices, Miss Marsh '?" asked the young officer, with a meaning smile. " Charley ? I don't know. Why ?" " Because I fancy the young lady is rather disposed to regard him with favor. I may be mistaken, though." Natty suddenly drew herself up. " I think you are mistaken, Captain Cavendish. Catty Clowrie has sense, whatever else she may lack, and neve) would drc-un of so preposterous a thing." k< Pardon ! it has been my mistake, then. You seem to be all old friends in this place." " Oh," said Natty, with her gay laugh, " every one knows every one else in Speckport, and a stranger is a marked being at once. Apropos of strangers, what a per- fect darling that Miss Rose is." " How very young-ladylike ! Miss Rose does not sound like a family name ; has she no other cognomen?" " Her letter to me was signed W. Rose. I don't know AN EVENING AT MISS BLAK&S. 5 what the l W ' is for. I think she has the sweetest face I ever saw." " What a lovely night it is ?" was Captain Cavendish'a somewhat irrelevant answer ; and had the moon been shin- ing, Natty might have seen the flush his face wore. Per- haps it was the sea-breeze, though ; for it was blowing up {fresh and bracing, and a host of stars spangled a sky of cloudless blue. The monotonous plash of the waves on the shore came dully booming over the rattle of their own car- 11 riage-wheels. " What are the wild waves saying ? Miss Rose and I have a bond of sympathy between us : we both love the sea. I suppose," said Natty, going off into another sub- ject, " Mrs. Leroy will read me a lecture for my long stay, when I get back." " Will she not be asleep ?" " Asleep ? No, indeed ; I believe if I staid out for a week she would never close an eye until I got back." " Is she so very fond of you, then ?" " It is not that ; though I think she is as fond of rne as it is in her nature to be of anything, except," with an other laugh, " eating and money. It is fear that keeps her awake ; she dreads being left alone." " Why ? Not from an evil conscience, I trust." " For shame, sir. No, she always keeps a large sum of money in her chamber yon saw that queer cabinet well, in that ; and she is terribly scared of robbers, in spite of all our bolts and bars." " She should not keep it about her, then." " Very true ; but she will. I sleep in the room next hers, and I presume she feels my presence there a sort of safeguard against burglars. In Midge she has no confi- dence whatever." " And yet I should consider Midge the greatest pos- sible safeguard. The sight of her might scare away an army of robbers." "Now, now !" cried Natty. " I shall not have Midge abused. She is the most faithful and trustworthy creature that ever lived." " Perhaps so ; but you will own that she is not the most lovely. When I was a boy at Eton, I used to read 66 AN EVENING AT MISS BLAK&8. German legends of beautiful princesses guarded by malig- nant spirits, in uncouth human forms. I thought of the stories this morning when I was at Redmon." " That's a compliment, I suppose," said Natty, " but I don't relish compliments, I can tell you, at Midge's ex- pense. Here we are at the cottage." u What cottage is it ?" Captain Cavendish asked, for- getting suddenly that he had spent half an hour there that very morning. " The Nettlebys. The father is our gardener ; the sons, the whole family, make themselves useful about the place, all but Cherrie, who is more for ornament than use. Here we are at Redmon, and there is the light burning in Mrs. Leroy's window." " Does it burn all night ?" he asked, looking up at it. ** No ; it is a beacon for me. I must go to her room the first thing now, give an account of myself, and extin- guish it. Good-night ; I hope you will enjoy your soli- tary journey back." " I shall have pleasant thoughts of a lady fair to keep me company. Are you sure you can get in ?" " Midge is opening the door now ; once more, good- night." Waving her hand to him, she was gone while she spoke. Midge stood blinking in the doorway, holding a candle above her head, which tar-mop WHS now tied up in a red flannel petticoat. She shaded her eyes with her hand, peering out at the tall figure in the loose overcoat ; and when she made sure of his identity, slamming the door to with a bang that left no doubt of her feelings toward him. " Midge, why did you do that 'C ' Natty said, reprov- ' Because I never want to see his wicked face here, Miss Natty; that's why!" cried Midge, shrilly; "and I don't want to see him with you, for he is a villain, and he will turn out one, if he was ten officers, ten times over." But Natty was flying up the polished stairs with a new happiness at her heart, singing as she went a snatch of " Love's Young Dream." *)-> TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. 87 CHAPTER VII. TOO MANY IKONS IN THE FIRE. E.. VAL BLAKE was a young gentleman pos- sessing a great many admirable virtues, among others the fearful one of always saying what he thought. Another, not quite so terrible to so- ciety, was that of early rising. The sun, when- ever that luminary condescended to show its face in Speck- port, which wasn't so very often, never found him in bed, either winter or summer. Val might be up until two o'clock in the office, as he sometimes was in busy seasons, guch as election times, but that never prevented his rising at half-past four the next morning, as bright as a new penny. Val had escorted Miss Laura Blair home from his sis- ter's little sociable not only escorted her home, in fact, but had gone in with her. . It was past eleven then, but Papa Blair had invited him to blow a friendly cloud, and Val had accepted the invitation. There they sat, smoking and talking politics until after one, and it was half-past when he got back to No. 16 Great St. Peter's Street ; but for all that, here he was next morning at the hour of six, coining striding along the sea-shore, a pipe in his mouth, and a towel in his hand. Val had been taking a sea-bath, his invariable custom every fine morning, from the first of May to the last of October, to the alarming increase of his appetite for breakfast. There were few to be met on the sand, at that hour, except in the fishing seasons ; and the fishermen not being in yet from the night's work, the shore was entirely deserted. The editor of the Speckport Gazette had not the shore all to himself after all ; for, as ho passed a jutting bowlder, he came in view of a fluttering figure walking slowly on before. The black dress waving in the breeze, the slender form in the long black mantle, 08 TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. the little straw hat, and the brown braid were familiar by this time. Miss Rose, the pretty little school-teacher, was taking an early constitutional as well as himself, with a book for her only companion. Val's long legs were beginning to measure ofl the sand in vast strides, to join her, when lie was forestalled most unexpectedly. Starting up from be- hind a tall rock, in whose shadow on the warm sand he had been lying, his hat pulled over his eyes to protect him from the sun, a gentleman came forward, lifted his hat, and accosted her. Val knew the gentleman quite as well as he did the lady, and stopped. At the sound of his voice coming so suddenly, she had recoiled with a snppresse;! cry, but at sight of whom it was, she stood perfectly still, as if transfixed. There was a path up the hillside the very path Cap- tain Cavendish had been shown by the young Nettlebys the day before. Val turned up this, with his hands in his pockets, and his mind in a state of soliloquy. " I'm not wanted, I expect ; so I'll keep clear ! There's something queer about this they were both taken aback last night, were they not ? She's a pretty little thing, and he's been in Montreal, I know ; was quartered there before he was ordered to Halifax. I suppose it's the old story- he always was a flirt, and his handsome face sets the girls loony wherever he goes. Miss Rose looks sensible, but I dare say she's as bad as the- rest." Val's suspicions might have become certainty had he been listening to the conversation of the young officer and the little school-teacher ; but there was no one to listen, except the waves and the wind, and the seagulls clanging over their heads. " Winnie !" Captain Cavendish was hurriedly saying, " I knew you would be here, and I have been waiting for the past half hour. No, do not go ! Pray stay and hear me out." " I must go!" Miss Rose said, in a violent tremor and agitation. "You have nothing to say to me, Captain Cav- endish. I cannot be seen here with you." TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. 99 " There is no one to see us the shore is deserted ! Winnie,! you must stay." She had turned to go ; but he caught her hand, his own face pale as hers had turned. " Let go my hand, sir !" she cried, in so peremptory a tone that he dropped it at once ; " every word you speak to me is an insult ! Let me go !" " Only one moment, Winnie." Again she interposed, her eyes quite flashing. " Have the goodness, Captain Cavendish, to be a little less familiar ; to cease calling me Winnie." " What shall I call you, then ?" lie said, with a strange look, "Miss Rose?" She turned away, and made a little passionate gesture with her hand. " You have no right to call me anything to speak to me at all ! I do not know what evil fate has driven us together here ; but if you have one feeling of honor, Cap- tain Cavendish, you will leave me in peace you will let me alone. My lot is not such a happy one that you should wish to destroy the little comfort I have left." Her voice choked and something fell on her book and wet it. The face of the English officer looked strangely moved for him. " Heaven knows, Winnie, I have no desire to disturb it ; I have been a villain we both know that but des- tiny was against me. I am poor ; I am in debt I was then what could I do ?" " Will you let me go ?" was her answer, without turn- ing her averted face to him. " Am I, then, utterly hateful to you ?" he asked, with some bitterness. " You have soon forgotten the past, but I deserve it ! I do not ask what chain of circumstances brought you here ; I only ask, being here, that you will not reveal the story of of what is past and gone. Will you promise me this, Winnie?" " What right have you to ask any promise of me ?" she demanded, her gentle voice full of indignation. " Very little, I know ; but still, I want the promise, Winnie, for your own sake, as well as for me." 70 TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. " I am not likely to tell ; the story of one's own folly is not too pleasant to repeat. And now, in return, Cap- tain Cavendish, I want, I demand, a promise from you ! We met last night as strangers, as strangers let us meet henceforth. Go your own way. I shall not molest you, never fear ; and be generous enough to grant me the same iavor. My life is to be one of hard work. 1 do not regret that. Let me find happiness in my own way, and do not disturb me any more." " And it has all come, to this !" he said, moodily, look- ing out over the wide sea. " Well, Winnie, let it be as you wish, only I never thought you could be so unforgiv- ing." " I have forgiven long ago ; I want to try and forget as well !" She walked rapidly away. Only once had she looked at him all the time after that first glance of recognition, her face had been averted. Captain Cavendish watched her out of sight, took two or three turns up and down the sand, and then strolled away to his lodgings. His rooms were in the Speckport House, fronting on Queen Street ; and after disposing of his beefsteak and coffee with a very good appetite, he seated himself near an open window, to smoke no end of cigars and watch the passers-by. A great many passers-by there were, and nearly all strangers to him ; but presently, two young men went strutting past, arm-in-arm, and, chancing to look at his window, lifted their hats in passing. A sudden thought seemed to flash through the officer's mind as he saw them, and, seizing his hat, he started out after them. It was young McGregor and Charley Marsh, and he speedily overtook them. " I have been fitting there for over half an hour," he said, taking Charley's other arm, familiarly, " watching society go by, and you two were the first I knew. Being tired of my own company, I thought I would join you. Have a cigar ?" " You find Speckport rather slow, I suppose 2" said TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. 71 Charley, lighting his weed. "I should myself, if I had nothing to do." " Oh, I am used to it ; and," with a droll look, " I have uncovered there is more than one pill to kill time, even in iSpeekport." " Already ! where do you mean ?" u Prince Street, for instance." Charley laughed, and young McGregor smiled. " You go there, do you ? Well, I have lived all my life in Speckport, but I have never set foot aver the threshold you mean, yet."' " Nor I," said young McGregor. " By George, wouldn't the old man look half-a-dozen ways at once if he thought I would dare look at it twice.'' There was a smilo on Captain Cavendish's face, half of amusement, half of contempt. " I am going there now, and was ahout asking you to accompany me for an hour's amusement. Come on, better late than never." Charley hesitated, coloring and laughing, but McGreg or caught at the invitation at once. " 1 say, Marsh, let us go ! I've always wanted to go there, but never had a chance without the governor find- ing it out, and kicking up the deuce of a row !" "I have the entree," said Captain Cavendish ; "no one will be the wiser, and if they should, what matter 2 It is only to kill time, after all." But still Charley hesitated, half laughing, half tempt- ed, half reluctant. " That is all very well from Captain Cavendish, nephew of a baronet, and with more money than he knows what to do with ; but it's of no use going to that place with empty pockets, and medical students, it is proverbial, never have anything to spare. No, 1 think you must hold me excused." " Oh, confound it, Charley," exclaimed McGregor, impatiently, " I'll lend you whatever you want. Fetch him along, captain ; what he says is only gammon." "Perhaps," said the captain, with a cynical smile, " Mr. Marsh has conscientious scruples- -some people have, I am told. If so " 72 TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. He did not finish the sentence, but the smile deepened. That mocking smile did more to overthrow Charley's reso- lution than any words could have done. He turned at once in the direction of Prince Street : " The only scruples I know anything about relate to weights and mensu: and I believe these are in a dram. I have a couple of hours before dinner ; so until then, I am at your service, captain." The trio turned into Prince Street a quiet street, with staid rows of white houses, and only one of any pretension, at one of its quiet corners. Captain Cavendish ran up the steps, with the air of a man perfectly at home, opened the outer door and rang the bell. There were few people passing, but Charley and McGregor glanced uneasily about them, before going in, and closed the street door after them with some precipitation. Charley had told the captain he was at his service for two hours, but over four passed before the three issued forth again. Charley looked flushed, excited, and in hii;h spirits, so did Alick McGregor ; but Captain Cavendish, though laughing, was a trifle serious, too. " I had no idea you were such an adept, Mr. Marsh," he was saying, i but you must give me my revenge. Better luck next time."- " All right," said Charley, in his boyish way, " whenever you like, now that the ice is broken. What do 3-011 sav, kae?" " I'm your man. The sooner the better, as I intend keeping on until I make a fortune on my own account. Would not the governor stare if he knew the pile I made this morning." As they passed into Queen Street, the town clock struck three. Charley looked aghast. " Three o'clock ! I had no idea it was two. "Won't they be wondering what has become of me at home. I feel as though I should like my dinner." " Dine with me," said the captain ; " I ordered din- ner at half -past three, and we will be in the nick of time." The two young Speckportians accepted the invitation, and the three went up crowded Queen Street together. Streaming down among the crowd came Miss Cherrie TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. 73 Xettleby. One kid-gloved hand uplifted her silken robe, and displayed an elaborately embroidered under-skirt to the admiring beholder ; the other poised a blue parasol ; and, gorgeous to behold, Miss Nettleby flashed like a meteor through Speckport. All the men spoke to her all the women turned up their fair noses and sailed by in dolicate disdain. Charley blushed vividly at sight of her. "Don't blush, Charley," drawled young McGregor, " it's too young-lady-like, but I suppose you can't help it any more than you can being in love with her. Good afternoon, Miss Cherrie." Miss Cherrie smiled graciously, made them a bow that ballooned her silk skirt over the whole sidewalk, and sailed on. Charley looked as if he should like to follow her, but that was next to impossible, so he walked on. " Cherrie comes out to show herself every afternoon," explained Alick ; " you don't know her, Captain Caven- dish, do you ?" " I have seen her before, I think. A very pretty girl." " Charley thinks so don't you, old fellow 2 Half the young men in the town are looney about her." "I must make her acquaintance, then," said Captain Cavendish, running up the hotel steps. " The girl that all are praising is just the girl for me. This way, gentle- men." While the triad sat over their dinner and dessert, Miss Nettleby did her shopping that is, she chatted with the good-looking clerks over the counter, and swept past the old and ugly ones in silent contempt. Cherrie was in no hurry ; she had made up her mind before starting to go through every dry goods store in Speckport, and kept her word. It was growing dusk when the dress was n'ually bought, cut oif, and paid for a bright pink ground, with a brighter pink sprig running through it. "Shall we send it, Miss Nettleby?" insinuated the gentlemanly clerk, tying it up with his most fascinating smile. " Of course," &aid Cherrie, shaking out her skirts with an air ; " Mr. Nettleby's, Redmon Road. Good evening, Mr. Johnston." 74 TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. Cherrie was soliloquizing as she gained the street. " Now, I do wonder if he'll be home. They have tea at six, I know, and it's only a quarter to six, now. I can say I want a book, and he'll be sure to come home with v me. I must see that new teacher." * Walking veiy fast Cherrie reached Cottage Street as the clocks of Speckport were Aiiming six, and the laborers' bolls ringing their dismissal. Catty Clowrie was standing in her own doorway, but Cherrie did not stop to speak, only nodded, and knocked at Mrs. Marsh's door. Betsy Ann opened it and Cherrie walked into the sitting-room, where a fire burned, warm as the afternoon had been, and Mrs. Marsh, with a shawl about her and a novel in her hand, swayed to and fro in her rocking-chair. Miss Rose in the parlor was trying her new piano, which Natty had ordered that morning, and which had just come home. " Dear me !" said Mrs. Marsh, looking up from the book and holding out her hand, " is it you, Cherrie t How do you do ? Sit down/' Cherrie did so. ." I've been out all the afternoon shopping for -Miss Natty, and I thought I would call here before 1 went home to ask you for another book. That last one was real nice." " Of course. What were you buying for Natty f " Oh, it was only a calico dress for Midge ; it's being sent up. Mrs. Marsh, who's that playing the piano ?" " That's Miss Rose, Natty's teacher, iiave you seen her yet?" "No. How nice she plays. Don't she?" " She plays very well. " And so you liked that last book what's this it was 'Regina,' wasn't it?" " Yes," said Cherrie ; " and oh, it was lovely. That * earl w;s so nice, and I liked Regina, too. What's that i you're reading?" " This is ' Qneechy ' a very good story. Did you ^ ever read ' The Lamplighter?' I'll lend you that." " Thank you, ma'am,'' said Cherrie. " It's getting latu I suppose I must go." " Stay for tea," said Mrs. Marsh, who liked Cherrie , TOO MANY IRON'S IN THE FIRE. 75 " it's all ready, and we are only waiting for Charley. I don't see where he's gone too'; he wasn't home to dinner, either." " I saw him this afternoon," said Cherrie ; " him and young McGregor and Captain Cavendish were going up Queen Street." " Was he ? Perhaps they had dinner together there. How did you know Captain Cavendish, Cherrie ?" " I saw him at Redmon. He was up all yesterday forenoon. I guess he is after Miss Natty." Mrs. Marsh smiled and settled her cap. " Oh, I don't know. Take off your things, Cherrie, and stay for tea. It's of no use waiting for Charley. Betsy Ann, bring ns the teapot, and call Miss Rose." Cherrie laid aside her turban and lace, and was duly made acquainted with Miss Rose. Cherrie had heard the new teacher was pretty, but she had hoped she was not so very pretty as this, and a pang of jealousy went through her vain little heart. She had stayed for tea, hoping Charley would partake of that repast with them, and afterward escort her home ; but it commenced and was over, but that young gentleman did not appear. Miss Rose played after tea, and Cherrie lingered and lingered, under pretense of being charmed ; but it got dark, and still that provoking Charley did not come. Cherrie could wait no longer, and a little cross and a good deal disappointed, she arose to go. " You will perish in that lace mantle," said Miss Rose, kindly. " You had better wear my shawl ; these spring nights are chilly." Cherrie accepted the offer, rolled her lace up in a copy of the " Speckport Spouter," and started on her homeward journey. The street lamps were lit, the shop windows ablaze with illumination, and the cold, keen stars wero cleaving sharp and chill through the blue concave above. A pale young crescent moon shone serene in their midst, but it might have been an old oil-lamp for all Miss Nettloby cared, in her present irate and vexed frame of mind. But there was balm in Gilead; a step was behind her, a man's step, firm and quick ; a tall form was making rapid head- 76 TOO MANY IRONS IX TUB FIRS. way in her direction. Cherrie looked behind, half fright- ened, but there was no mistaking that commanding pres- ence, that military stride, in the handsome face with the thick black mustache, looking down upon her. Cherrie's heart was bounding, but how was he to know that. " I knew it was you, Cherrie," he said, familiarly. " Are you not afraid to take so long and lonely a walk at this hour ?" " I couldn't help it," said Cherrie, all her good humor returning. " There was no one to come with me. I was down at Mrs. Marsh's, and Charley wasn't home." " I don't want you to go to Mrs. Marsh's, and I am glad Charley wasn't home." " I didn't go to see Charley," said Cherrie, coquettish- ly. " I wanted a book, and I wanted to see Miss Rose. Do you know where Charley is ?" " He is up at Redmon." " And you are going there, too, I suppose." " I am going to see you home, just now. Let me carry that parcel, Cherrie, and don't walk so fast. There's no hurry, now that I am with you. Cherrie, you looked like an angel this afternoon, in Queen Street." As we do not generally picture angelic beings in shot silks and blue parasols, not to speak of turban hats, it is to be presumed Captain Cavendish's ideas on the subject must have been somewhat vague. Cherrie obeyed his injunction not to hurry, and it was an hour before they reached the cottage. Captain Cavendish declined going in, but stood in the shadow of the trees, opposite the house, tattling to her for another half hour, then shook hands, and went to Lady Leroy's, where he and Charley and Mr. Blake were to spend the evening. Val and Charley were there before him, the former having but just entered. The captain had not seen Val, but Val had seen the captain, and watched him now with a comical look, playing the devoted to Nathalie. In Mrs. Leroy's mansion there was no lack of rooms Natty had t\vo to herself sleeping-room adjoining the old lady's, and a parlor adjoining that. In was in this TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. 77 parlor Natty received her own friends and visitors, and there the three gentlemen were now. Natty's rooms were the only light and cheerful ones in the vast, gloomy old house, and .Natty had fitted them up at 'her own expense. Delicate paper on the walls ; pretty drawings and land- scapes, in water- colors, the work of her own artistic fin- gers, hung around ; a lounge, cushioned in chintz ; an arm-chair, cushioned in the same ; attractive trifles of all sorts, books, a work-table, and an old piano made the apartment quite pleasant and home-like. The only thing it wanted was a fire ; for it was essentially a bleak house, full of draughts but a fire in any room save her own was a piece of extravagance Lady Leroy would not hear of. So the gentlemen sat in their overcoats ; and Lady Leroy, who had been wheeled in, in her arm-chair, looked more like an Egyptian mummy than ever. Midge sat behind her, on her hunkers, if you know what that is ; her elbows on her knees, her chin between her hands, glaring balefully on Captain Cavendish, mak- ing himself fascinating to her young mistress. If that gallant young officer had ever heard the legend of the Evil Eye, he might have thought of it then, with Midge's malignant regards upon him. Lady Leroy, who dearly loved gossip, was chattering like a superannuated magpie to val and Charley. Mr. Blake was giving her what he knew of the captain's history. " ilis uncle," said Yal, "is a baronet a Yorkshire baronet at that and Captain Cavendish is next heir to the title. Meantime, he has nothing but his pay, which would be enough for any reasonable man, but isn't a tithe to him." " And he wants a rich wife," said Lady Leroy, with a spiteful glance over at him. " Ah ! I see what he's com- ing after. Natty !" "Ma'am!" said Natty, looking up, and still laugh- ing at some anecdote Captain Cavendish had been re- lating. "What are you laughing at?" she said, sharply. 78 TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRS. " Only at a story I have been listening to ! Do you want anything ?" " Yes. Go into my room and see what time it is." " We bring Time with us," said Mr. B ] ake, producing a watch as big as a small football ; " it's five minutes to nine." " Then it's my bedtime ! Natty, go and make me my punch. Midge, wheel me in, and warm the bed. Young men, it's time for you to go." Captain Cavendish and Val exchanged an amused glance and arose. Charley stepped forward and laid his and on the arm-chair. " I'll wheel you in, Mrs. Leroy. Stand clear, Midge, or the train will run into you. Go ahead, fellows, I'll be after you." " You must not mind Mrs. Leroy's eccentricities, you know," said Natty, shaking hands shyly and wistfully at the front door with the captain. " Mr. Blake is quite used to it, and thinks nothing of it." " Think better of me, Miss Marsh. I do not mind her brasqueness any more than he does ; in proof whereof I shall speedily pay my respects at Redinon again. Good night !" " Tell Charley to overtake us. Good night, Natty !" called Yal, striding down the moon-lit avenue, and out into the road. Captain Cavendish lit a cigar, handed another to his companion, took his arm and walked along, thinking. The Nettleby cottage was in a state of illumination, as they passed it ; and the shrieks of an accordion, atrociously played, and somebody singing a totally different air, and shouts of laughter, mingling together, came noisily to their listening ears. Val nodded toward it. " Cherrie holds, a levee every night the house is full now. Will you come in ? * All the more the merrier,' is the motto there." "No," said the captain, shrinking fastidiously; "I have no fancy for making one in Miss Cherrie's menagerie." TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. 79 "Does the objection extend to Miss Cherrie herself?'-' asked Mr. Blake, puffing energetically. " What do I know of Miss Cherrie ?" "Can't say, only I should suppose you found out something while seeing her home an hour ago, and stand- ing making love to her under the trees afterward." Captain Cavendish took out his cigar and looked at him. " Where were you ?" " Coming through the rye I mean the fields. The next time you try it on, take a more secluded spot, my dear fellow, than the queen's highroad !" "Oh,. hang it!" exclaimed the young officer, impa- tiently ; " it seems to me, Blake, you see more than you have any business to do. Suppose I did talk to the little girl. I met her on the road alone. Could I do less than escort her home ?" " Look here," said Yal, " there is an old saying, f If you have too many irons in the fire, some of them must cool.' Now, that's your case exactly. You have too many irons in the tire." " I don't understand." " Don't you ? Here it is, then ! This morning, bright and early, I saw you promenading the shore with Miss Rose. This evening, I saw you making up to Cherrie "Nettleby ; and, ten minutes ago, you were as sweet as sugar-candy on Natty Marsh. No man can be in love with three women at once, without getting into trouble. Therefore, take a friend's advice, and drop two of them." "Which two?" " That's your affair. Please yourself." " Precisely what I mean to do ; and now, Val, old boy, keep your own counsel ; there's no harm done, and there will be none. A man cannot help being polite to a pretty girl it's nature, you know ; and, dear old fellow, don't see so much, if you can help it. It is rather an- noying, and will do neither of us any good." Perhaps Captain Cavendish would have been stiil more annoyed had he known Val was not the only witness of that little flirtation with Chorrio. As that young lady, 80 TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. when he left her, after watching him out of sight, was about crossing the road to go into the house, a voice sud- denly called, " Hallo, Cherrie ! How are you ?" Cherrie looked up greatly astonished, for the voice came from above her head. Was it the voice of a spirit ? if so, the spirit must have a shocking bad cold in the head, and inclined to over-familiarity at that. The voice came again, and still from above. " I say, Cherrie ! You put in a pretty long stretch of courting that time ! I like to see you cutting out the rest of the Speckport girls, and getting that military swell all to yourself." Cherrie beheld the speaker at last ; and a very sub- stantial spirit he was, perched up on a very high branch of a tree, his legs dangling about in the atmosphere, and his hands stuck in his trowsers. "Lor!" cried Miss Nettleby, quite startled, "if it ain't that Bill Blair ! I declare 1 took it for a ghost !" Bill kicked his heels about in an ecstasy. " Oh, crickey ! Wasn't it prime ! I ain't heard any- thing like it this month of Sundays. Can't he keep company stunning, Cherrie? I say, Charley's dished, ain't he, Cherrie ?" " How long have you been up there, you young imp 2" asked Cherrie, her wrath rising. " Long enough to hear every word of it ! Don't be mad, Cherrie Oh, no, I never mentions it, its name is never heard honor bright, you know.'' "Oh, if I had you here," cried Miss Nettleby, looking viciously up at him, " wouldn't I box your ears for you!" " Oh, no, you wouldn't !" said Bill, swinging about. " How was I to know when I roosted up here that you were going to take a whack at courting over there. 1 was going over to Jim Tod's, and, feeling tired, I got up here to rest. I say, Cherrie ? would you like to hear a secret 2" Cherrie would like nothing better, only before he told it, she would rather he got down. It gave her the TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE. 81 fidgets to look at him up there. Bill got lazily down accordingly. " Now, what's the secret ?" asked the young lady. " It's this," replied the young gentleman. " Do you know who Captain Cavendish happens to be?" " I know he's an Englishman," said Cherrie ; " all the officers are that." " Yes ; but you don't know who his folks are, I bet." " Xo. Who are they? Very rich, I suppose?" " Bich !" exclaimed Mr. Blair, contemptuously. " I say, Cherrie, you won't tell, will you? It's a secret." " Of course not, stupid. Go on." "Say, 'pon your wuixl and honor." " 'Pon my word ! .Now go on." " Well, then," said Bill, in a mysterious whisper, " he's Queen Victoria's eldest son !" " What !" " I told you it was a secret, and it is. 1 heard him telling my boss Blake, you know, and they didn't think I was listening. Queen Victoria, when she was a young woman, was married secretly to a duke, the Duke of Cavendish, and had one sou. When her folks found it out jimminy ! wasn't there a row, and the Duke was beheaded for high treason, and she was married to Prince Albert. Now, you'll never tell, will you, Cherrii: C ' " Never !" answered Cherrie, breathlessly. " Well ?" "Well, Captain Cavendish was brought up private, and is the right heir to the throne ; and he expects his mother to leave it to him in her will when she dies, instead of the Prince of Wales. Now, if he marries you, Cherrie, and 1 am pretty sure he will before long then you are Queen of England at once." " Now, Billy Blair," said Cherrie, puzzled whether to believe his solemn face or not, " J do believe you're telling lies." "It's true as preaching, I tell you. Didn't I hear 'em with my own ears. That chap's sure to be King of England some day, and when you're queen, Cherrie, send for Bill Blair to" be your prime-minister. And now 1 .mist go good night." 4* CHAPTER VAL TURNS MENTOR 1SS NATHALIE MARSH was not the only person in existence who took a violent fancy to the pretty, pale little school-mistress, Miss Rose. Before the end of the month, Speck- port pronounced her perfection ; though, to do Speckport justice, it was not greatly given to overpraise. Indeed, it was a common saying with the inhabitants that Speckport would find fault with an archangel, did one of these celestial spirits think fit to alight there, and the very person most vehement in this assertion would have been the first in the backbiting. Yet Speckport praised Miss Rose, and said their Johnnys and Marys had never get on so fast in their A B abs, before, and the little ones themselves chanted her praises with all their hearts. If she appeared in the streets, they rushed headlong to meet her, sure of a smile for their pains. They brought her flowers every morning, and a reproachful look was the severest punishment known in the schoolroom. The old women dropped their courtesies ; the old men pronounced her the nicest young woman they had seen for many a day, and the young men poor things ! fell in love. Theie was some one^else winning golden opinions, but not from all sorts of people. Only from young ladies, who were ready to tear each other's dear little eyes out, if it could have helped the matter : and the man was Captain George Cavendish. Speckport was proud to have him at its parties ; for was he not to be a baronet some day ? and was his family in England, their Alma Mater, not as old as the hills, and older? But he was an expensive luxury. Their daughters fell in love with him, and their sons spent their money frightfully fast with him ; and all sons or daughters got in return were fascinating smiles, courtly bows, and gallant speeches, lie was not a marrying man, VAL TUBNS MENTOR. 83 that was evident ; and yet he did seem rather serious with Nathalie Marsh. Miss Marsh was the handsomest girl in Speckport ; she would be the richest, and she was foi certain the only one that ever had a grandfather that is, to speak of : in the course of nature they all had, perhaps ; but the grandfathers were less than nobody peddlers, rag- men, and fish-hawkers. But her father and grandfather had been gentlemen born ; and it is well to have good blood in one's veins, even on one side. So the young ladies hated Miss Marsh, and were jealous of each other ; and that high-stepping young heiress laughed in their face, and walked and talked, and rode and sailed, and sang and danced with Captain Cavendish, and triumphed over them like a princess born. It was June, and very hot. Speckport was being grilled alive, and the dust new in choking simooms. Cool through all the heat, Captain Cavendish walked up Queen Street in the broiling noonday sun. Charley Marsh and Alick McGregor walked on either side of him, like that other day on which they had met Cherrie; and Charley's face was flushed and clouded, and young McGregor's drawn down to a most lugubrious length. They had just come from Prince Street an every-day resort now ; and Charley and McGregor seldom left it of that late without cluuded expression. Captain Cavendish was laughing at them both. " All in the downs !" he cried ; " nonsense, Marsh. One would think you were ruined for life." "I soon shall be at this rate. I owe you a small fortune now." " Only fifty pounds," said the captain, as carelessly as if it were fifty pence, " a mere trifle." "And I owe you twice as nnwli," said young Mc- Gregor, with a sort of groan ; " won't there be the dickens to pay when it's found out at home." " Don't let them find it out, then," said Captain Caven- dish, in the same off-hand manner. " That's easily said. How am I to help it ?" "Your father has a check-book help yourself." " That would be killing the goose that lays the golden 84 VAL TURNS MENTOR. eggs," said Charley. " Let the old man find that out and good-bye to Aleck's chance of ever seeing Prince Street again. Here are my quarters no use asking you in to hear the ro~w old Leach will make at my delay, I sup- pose." He nodded, with his own careless laugh, * i entered the office of Doctor ,Leach. Captain Cavendish looked at his watch. "Half -past eleven ! I believe I owe your people a call, McGregor ; so en avant /" Miss Jeannette McGregor was at home, and received the captain and her brother in her boudoir, a charming little room, with velvet-pile carpet, gilding, and ormolu, and medallion pictures of celebrated beauties set in the oval paneled walls. A copy of Longfellow, all gold and azure, was in her hand ; she had once heard Captain Caven- dish express his admiration of the great American poet ; and having seen her brother and he coming up the front steps, she had arranged this little tableau expressly for the occasion. If there was one young lady in all Speckport who more than another sincerely hated Nathalie Marsh, or more sincerely admired Captain Cavendish, that one was Miss McGregor. She had long been jealous of Natty's beauty, but now she deteste<| her with an honest earnestness that, I think, only women ever feel. She kissed her whenever they met ; she invited her to every party they gave ; she made calls at Redmon : and she hated her all the time, and could have seen her laid in her coffin with the greatest pleasure. It is a very common case, my brethren ; Judas Iscariot was not a woman, but kisses after his fashion are very popular among the gentler sex. " Evangeline," said Captain Cavendish, taking up her book ; " I always liked that, but never half so well as since I came to Speckport." " Because you saw Miss Marsh in the character," said Jeannette, laughing, as young ladies must, in these cases. " Miss Marsh took her character very veil, but that is not the only reason why I shall long remember that night." A glance accompanied this speech that brought a glow VAL TURNS MENTOR. 85 to Miss McGregors cheek and a flutter to her heart. Captain Cavendish was a ch.-ver man. He had more irons in the lire than even Val knew of. and allowed none of them to cool ; and it does take a clever man to make love discreetly to half-a-dozen women at once. " Natty looked shinning that night," put in Aleck ; " she is the handsomest girl in Speckport." " You think so we all know that," said Jeannette, Hashing a spiteful glance at him ; " you have been mak- ing a simpleton of yourself about her for the last two years. Why don't you propose at onco." " Because she wouldn't have me," blurted honest Alick ; "I wish to heaven she would ! I would soon do the popping." " Faintheart never won fair lady ; take courage and try," said the captain. Jeannette looked at him with her most taking smile. "Are you quite sincere in that, Captain Cavendi "Quite! Why not?" "Oh, nothing! Only rumor says you are going to carry a Blueuose bride back to Merrie England.'' " Perhaps I may. You are a Blueriose, are you not, Miss Jeannette '{" Before Jeannette could answer, a sort of shout from Alick, who was at the window, took their attention. Miss McGregor looked languidly over. " Oh, how noisy you are ! What is it, pray ?" The door-bell rang loudly. " It's Natty herself and Laura Blair. You ought to have seen Natty driving up, captain ; she handles the ribbons in tiptop style, and that black mare of Blair's is no joke to drive." Before he had finished speaking, the door opened, and a servant showed in the two young ladies. Miss Jean- nette sprang up with the utmost effusion, and kissed eacli on both cheeks. " You darling Natty ! It is ages since you were here. Laura, how good it is of you to fetch her ! for I know it must have been you." " So it was," said Laura, shaking hands with Captain 86 VAL TURNS MENTOR. Cavendish. " I haven t time, I haven't time, is always her cry. I tell her there will be time when we are all dead won't there, captain ?" " I presume so, unless at the loss of Miss Lanra Blair the whole economy of creation blows up with a crash." " And so you see," said Laura, sitting down on a chair, and flirting out her skirts all around her, " I drove up to Bedmon this morning, with a great basketful of English strawberries the size of crab-apples, as a coaxer to Lady Lcroy; and through their eloquence, and the promise of another, got her to let Natty come to town with me on business." " On business ;" said Captain Cavendish ; " that means shopping." " No, sir, it doesn't ; it means something serious, and that you must take share in. You, too, Jeannette, and you, Alick, if we run short." " Thank you," said Alick, "what is it?" " Why, you know," began Miss Blair, with the air of one about entering upon a story, " there's that Mrs. Hill you know her, Alick ?" "What! the wife of the pilot who was drowned in the storm last week ?" " That's the one," nodded Laura. " Well, she's poor Oh, dear me ! ever so poor, and her two children down in the measles, and herself half dead with rheumatism. I shouldn't have known a thing about it only for Miss Hose. I do declare Miss Hose is next door to an angel ; she found her out, and did lots of things for her, and told me at last how poor she was, and asked me to send her some things. So then I made up this plan." " What plan ?" inquired Jeannette, as Laura stopped for want of breath, and Nathalie sat listening with an amused look. " Oh, didn't I tell you ? Why, we're going to have a Elay, and every one of us turn into actors ; admission, alf a dollar. Won't it be grand 2" "And the play is Laura's own," said Nathalie; " nothing less than the adventures of Telemachus dramatized." VAL TURNS MENTOR. 87 " That is delightful," said Jeannette, with sparkling eyes. '* Have I a part, Laura ?" "To be sure, and so has Natty, and myself, and Captain Cavendish, and Yal Blake, and Charley Harsh, and as many more as we want. The new wing that pa has built to our house is just finished, and, being un- furnished, will make a lovely theater. Only a select number of tickets will be issued, and the place is sure to be crowded. The proceeds will be a little fortune to Mrs. Hill." " You should have given Miss Rose a part, as she was the head of it," suggested Alick. " She wouldn't have it. I tried hard enough, but she was resolute. She is such \ timid little thing, you know, and she would make a lovely nymph, too." " What part have you assigned mo r C inquired Captain Cavendish. " Being a soldier and a hero, you are Ulysses, of course ; Charley is Telemaclms ; Yal is Mentor fancy Val with flowing white hair and beard, like an old nanny- SDat. Jeannette, you will be Calypso ; Natty will take ucharis ; I, Penelope. I wanted Miss Rose to be Eucharis the part would have suited her so well." " I don't believe it would come natural to Charley to make love to her," said Alick ; " he'll have to, won't he, if he is Telemachus?" " You must change the casts, Miss Blair," said the captain, decidedly. "If Telemachus is to do the love- making, I must be Telemaehus. Mr. Marsh and I must change." " You would make such a nice Ulysses," said Laura, meditatingly, while Nathalie blushed ; " but please your- self. You must all spend the evening at our house, and when the whole drainatis personal are gathered, we can discuss and settle the thing for good, iix the rehearsal and the night of the play. Don't fail to come." " You need not be in a hurry," said Jeannette, as Laura rose and was sailing off ; " stay for luncheon." " Couldn't possibly promised to leave Natty back afe and sound in an hour, and it only wants ten minutea 88 VAL TURNS MENTOR. now. If we fail one second, she will never get off for rehearsals. Remember, you are all engaged for this evening." The two lo'.ig parlors -of the Blairs were pretty well iilled that night with young ladies and gentlemen, and a very gay party they were. There was so much laughing and chaffing over it, that it was some trouble to settle pre- limiparies ; but Laura was intensely in earnest, and could see nothing to laugh at, and Captain Cavendish coming gallantly to her aid, matters were arranged at last. Charley Marsh, who was a Rubens on a small scale, undertook to paint the scenery, superintend the carpenters and the machinery of the stage. The young ladies arranged the costumes ; everybody got thefr parts in MS. ; rehearsals were appointed, and some time before midnight the amateurs dispersed. In the June moonlight, the English officer drove Nathalie home, and it was not all theatricals they talked by the way. There was a good deal of trouble about the thing yet, now that it was finally started. In the first place, there was that tiresome Lady Leroy, who made a row every time Natty went to rehearsal, and re- quired lots of strawberries, and jellies, and bottles of old wine, to bring her to reason. Then they bungled so in their parts, and wanted so much prompting, and Muill ! And you, Olowrie, if you want to keep yourself out of trouble, take my advice and say nothing about it. Xow get to work, you, sir, and uo more gossiping." Yal strode off to his own room, and sat down to look over a iile of exchanges, and read his letters. But he could neither read nor do anything else with comfort this morning. The boy's gossip had disturbed him more than he would have owned; and at last, in desperation, he pitched all from him, seized his hat, and went out. " I played Mentor the other night on the stage. I think I'll try it in real life. Confound that Cavendish ; why can't he let the boy alone ? I don't mind McGregor ; he's only a noodle at best, and the old man can alford to lose the money; but Charley's another story! That Cherrie, too ! The fellow's a scoundrel, and she's a ! Oh, here she comes !" Sure enough, tripping along, her blue parasol up, her turban on, a little white lace vail down, a black silk mantle flapping in the breeze, a bull' calico morning- wrapper, with a perfect hailstorm of white buttons all over it, sweeping the dust, came Miss Nettleby herself, arrayed as usual for conquest. The incessant smile, ever parting her rosy lips, greeted Val. Cherrie always kept a large assortment of ifferent quality on hand for different gentlemen. Val greeted her and turned. " Where are you going, Cherrie ?" " Down to Mrs. Marsh's. I've got a book of hers to return. How's Miss Jo 2" " She's well. I'll walk with you, Cherrie ; I have something to say to you." His tone was so serious that Cherrie stared. " Lord, Mr. Blake ! what is it ?" "Let us go down this street it is quiet. Cherrie, VAL TURNS MENTOR. 93 does Captain Cavendish go to see you every evening in the week <" " Gracious me, Mr. Blake !" giggled Cheiry, " what a question !" " Answer it, Cherrie." " Xow, Mr. Blake, I never ! if you ain't the oddest man ! I shan't tell you a thing about it !" " He was with you last night, was he not ?" " It's none of your business !" said polite Cherrie ; " he has as much right to be with me as any one else, I hope. You come yourself sometimes, for that matter." " Yes ; but I don't make love to you, you know." " It wouldn't be any use for you if you did," said Miss Cherrie, bridling. "It's a different case altogether," said Val; "you and I are old friends he is a stranger." " He's not ! I've known him more than five weeks ! If you only came to preach, Mr. Blake, I guess you had better go back, and I'll find Mrs. Marsh's alone." " Ciierrie, I want to warn you the less you have to do with Captain Cavendish the better. People are talking about you now." " Let 'em talk," retorted Miss Nettleby, loftily ; " when Speckport stops talking the world will come to an end. I'll just do as I please, and talk to whom I like ; and if everybody minded their own business, it would be better for some folks." "W ith which the young lady swept away majestically, leaving Mr. Blake to turn back or follow if he pleased. He ehose the former, and walked along to Dr. Leach's office. Charley was standing, looking out of the window, and whistling a tune. " Hallo, V al !" was his greeting, " what brings you here ? Want a tooth pulled, or a little bleeding, or a tritle of physic of any kind t Happy to serve you in the ab- sence- of the doctor." ' JSio, I don't want any physic, but I have come to give you a dose. Are you alone 2" "Quite. Leach went to visit a patient ten mi mites ago. What's the matter/'' 94 VAL TURNS MENTOR. " Everything's the matter ! What's this I hear you havo been about lately ?" " Turning actor -do you mean that ? Much obliged to yon, Tal, for the puff you gave me in yesterday's Sponter." " No, sir, I don't mean that ! Isn't Alick McGregor a nice fellow to rob his own father and you his aider and abettor ? Fine doings that !" Charley fairly bounded. " Oh, the d ! Where did you find that out ?" " Never mind, I have found it out ; that is enough !" " Is it known ? Who else knows it ?" " Two that are not quite so safe to keep it as I am ! No, I won't tell you who they are. Charley, what are you coming to ?" " The gallows, I suppose ; but I had no hand in that. If McGregor took the money, it was his own doings, and his father could spare it." "What did he want of it " " Am I his keeper ? How should I know ?" "Yon do know! When did you turn gambler, Charley?" Charley turned round, his face white. " You know that, too ?" " I do ! McGregor stole the hundred pounds to pay a gambling-debt to Captain Cavendish. And you where does your money come from, Marsh T' " I don't steal it," said Charley, turning from pale to red ; " be sure of that I" " Come, my boy, don't be angry. You know I don't deserve that speech; but surely, Charley, this sort of thing should not go on. Where will it end ?" " Where, indeed ?" said Charley, gloomily. " Yal, I wish you would tell me how you found this out ?" " Pshaw ! do you really expect to go in and out of the most notorious gambling-house in Speckport, at all hours of the day and night, and it not be discovered ? Yon ought to know this place better." " That is true ; but how did that infernal business of McGregor's leak out ? No one knew it but ourselves." WOOED AND WON. 95 " It has -leaked out, and is known to two persons, who may blow on you all at any moment." " And I wanted to keep it from Natty. Yal, old fellow, do tell me who they are." " You know I won't ; it would do no good. Charley, I wish you would stop in time." " Stuff ! it's no hanging matter after all. Dozens go there as well as I !" " You won't give it up, then ?" "Not until I win back what I have lost. My coffers are not so full that I can lose without trying to win it back. Don't talk to me, Blake, it's of no use ; win I must, there is no alternative. Won't Aiick go into white hor- ror when he finds the murder's out ?" Val turned to leave. " You're going, are you 2" said Charley. " I need hard- ly tell you to keep dark about this ; it will only mar, not mend matters, to let it get wind. Don't look so solemn, old boy, all's not lost that's in danger." Val said nothing what was the use ? He passed out and went home to his domain. "I knew how it would be," he said to himself, going along ; " but I have done my duty, and that's satis- factory. I'll keep my eye on you, Captain Cavendish, and if ever I get a chance, won't I play you a good turn for this!" CHAPTER IX. WOOED AND WON. ND if ever I find her going prancing ronnd with him any more," said Lady Leroy, claw- ing the air viciously with her skinny fingers, " or letting him come home with her again, I'll turn her out of doors, I will, as sure as your name's Midge." 96 WO OLD AND WON. "Which it isn't," said Midge; "for I was christened Prisciller. And as for turning her out, you know right well, ma'am, you can never get along without her, so where's the good of your gabbing." The -dialogue between mistress and maid took place, of course, in the former's rocm } which she rarely left. Midge was preparing her ladyship's dinner, all the cooking being done in the chamber, and all the edibles being kept under lock and key, and doled out in ounces. Mi.-lgc and Lady Leroy fought regular pitched battles every day over the stinted allowance awarded her ; and Natty had to come to the resue by purchasing, from her own private purse, the wherewithal to satisfy Midge. No other servant would have lived at Redmon on the penurious wages the old lady grumblingly gave, probably on no wages at all, considering the loneliness of the place, its crabbed and miserly mistress, and hard work ; but Midge stayed through her love of Nathalie, and contradicted and bickered with Lady Leroy from morning till night. In the days when the Marshes were rich and prosperous, Midge had been a hanger on of the household, doing pretty much as she pleased, and com- ing and going, and working or loafing as she liked. She had saved Charley's life once, nearly at the risk of her own, and loved him and Nathalie with a depth of self- gacrih'cing and jealous tenderness few would have given her credit for. Nathalie was good to her always, consid- erate and kind, putting up with her humor and querulous- ness, and ready to shield her from slights at any time. Midge scolded the young lady roundly on many an occa- sion, and Natty took it good-humored! y al \vays. She was out now, and Lady Leroy's wrath had been kindled by something that had happened the preceding night, and which she had found out through Cherrie Net t lei) y, for Midge told no tales. Captain Cavendish, contrary to her express orders, had seen Nathalie home from a 1 : ble at her mother's. Yal, Miss Jo, Laura Blair, Catty Clowrie, Jeannette and Alick McGregor, Charley, and Captain Cavendish only had been there ; for some eick par. per had sent for Miss Rose, and she had gone, glad to escape. Cherrie had seen the captain and Miss Marsh WOOED AND WON. 97 pass the cottage, and, spiteful and jealous, had tattled next morning. Lady Leroy disliked Captain Cavendish she did most people for that matter, but she honored him with especial aversion. Nathalie had gone off after breakfast to Speckport, to attend to her music-pupils and visit the school. Cherrie had come in afterward to retail the town- gossip, and had but just departed ; and now the old lady was raging to Midge. " I tell you, Midge, I don't like him !" she shrilly cried, "I don't like him, and I don't want him coming here." "No more don't I," retorted Midge, "I'd go to his hanging with the greatest pleasure ; but where's the odds ? He don't care whether we like him or not; he only laughs and jeers at both of us, so long as she does." "It ain't her he likes," said Lady Leroy, "it's my money, my money, that I've pinched and spared to save, and that he thinks to squander. But I'll be a match for him, and for her too, the ungrateful minx, if she thinks to play upon me." " She ain't an ungratef nl minx, ma'am !" sharply con- tradicted Midge ; " she's better nor ever you were or ever will be ! She lives shut up here from one week's end to t'other, slavin' herself for you, and much she gets for it ! She can do what she likes with the money when you're dead!" Lady Leroy's face turned so horribly ghastly at this speech that it was quite dreadful to look at. The thought of death was her nightmare, her daily horror. She never thought of it at all if she could, and thus forcibly reminded, her features worked for a moment as if she had a fit. Even Midge grew a little scared at what she had done. " There, ma'am !" she cried, u you needn't go into fits about it. My speaking of it won't make you die any sooner. I dessay you're good for twenty years yet, if your appetite holds out !" The old woman's livid face grew a shade less deathlike. " Do you think so, Midge ? Do you think so 'C' " Oh, I think so fast enough ! Folks like you always is sure to spin out till everybody's tired to death of 'em. 5 08 WOOED AND WON. Here's your dinner ready now ; so swallow it, and save your breath for that !" The sight of her meals always had an inspiring effect on the mistress of Redmon, and Natty was for the moment forgotten. Perhaps it might have spoiled her appetite a little had she seen the way that young lady was returning home, and in what company. Not walking discreetly along Redrnon road, and not alone. In the pretty boat, all white and gold, with the name " Nathalie " in golden letters the boat that had been poor Alick McGregor's gift a merry little party were skimming over the sunlit waves, reaching Redmon by sea instead of land. The snow-white sail was set, and Nathalie Marsh was steering ; the sea-wind blowing about her tangled yellow curls, flut- tering the azure ribbons of her pretty hat, deepening the roses in her cheeks, and brightening the starry eyes. She sang as she steered, " Over the Sea in my Fairy Bark/' and the melodious voice rung sweetly out over the wide gea. Near her Captain Cavendish lounged over the side, watching the ripples as they flew along in the teeth of the breeze, and looking perfectly content to stay there forever. Beside him sat Laura Blair, and, near her, Miss Jo Blake. Laura was often with Miss Jo, whom she liked, partly for her own sake for she was the best-natnred old maid that ever petted a cat and partly for her brother's, whom Miss Blair considered but one remove from an angel. The quartet had " met by chance, the usual way,' ' and Nathalie had invited him to have a sail. She had rowed herself to tosvn in her batteau, but the sail back was incon- ceivably pleasanter. As the batteau ran up on the beach below Redmon, Natty did not ask them to the house, but no one was surprised at that. They accompanied her to the gate, Captain Cavendish slinging the light oars over I his shoulder. *' And you will be at the picnic day after to-morrow, without fail," Laura was saying to Nathalie. " Can't promise," replied Natty. " Mrs. Leroy may take it into her head to refuse permission, and I havet>een out a great deal lately." " I don't care," said Laura, " you must corno ! If Mrs. WOOED AND WON. 99 Leroy turns inexorable, I will go up with a basket of oranges and let them plead in your behalf. You see, captain, we have to 'stay that old lady with flagons and comfort her with apples ' when we want Natty very badly, and she turns refractory." " All the oranges in Seville would not be thrown away in such a cause. By all means, Miss Marsh, come to the picnic." Speckport was famous for its picnics, and excursions by land and water. This one was the first of the season, and was to be held on Lady Leroy's grounds a pretty high price having to be paid for the privilege. " There won't be any fun without you, Natty," said Miss Jo; "I won't hear of your absenting yourself at all. Is Miss Rose to have a holiday on the occasion ?" " I offered her one, but she declined ; she did not care for going, she said." " What a singular girl she is !" said Laura, thought- fully ; " she seems to care very little for pleasure of any kind for herself ; but the poor of Speckport look upon her as an angel sent down expressly to write their letters, look after them in sickness, make them beef-tea, and teach their children for nothing. I wish you would make her go to the picnic, .Natty, and not let her mope herself to death, drudging in that horrid school-room." Captain George Cavendish, leaning on the oars he had been carrying, seemed not to be listening. He was look- ing dreamily before him, seeing neither the broad green lie-Ids with the summer sunlight sleeping in sheets of gold upon them, nor the white, winding, dusty highroad, nor the ceaseless sea, spreading away and away until it 1. the horizon-sky, nor tall Miss Blake, nor even the two pretty girls who talked. It had all faded from before him ; and he was many a mile away in a strange, foreign- looking city, with narrow, crooked streets, filled with foreign-looking men and women, and priests in long black soutanes, and queer hats, and black nuns and gray nuns, and Notre Dame nuns and Sisters of Charity and Mercy, all talking in French, and looking at each other with dark Canadian eyes. He was back in Montreal, he saw the 100 WOOED AND WON. Champ-de-Mars, the Place d'Arme, the great convents, the innumerable churches with their tall crosses pointing to the heaven we are all trying to reach> and he saw him- self beside one fairer in his eyes than all the dusky Canadian beauties in the world, with their purple-black hair and great flashing black eyes. " Winnie ! Winnie ! Winnie!" his false heart was passionately crying, as that old time came back, and golden-haired, violet-eyed Nath- alie Marsh was no more to him than if she had been but the fantasy of a dream. He had flirted and played the lover to scores ; played it so long and so often that it had become second nature, as necessary as the air he breathed ; but he had only loved one, and he seemed in a fair way of going on to the end. He had been a traitor, but he could not forget. The girl he had jilted was avenged if she wished for vengeance : no pang he had ever given could be keener than what he felt himself. A laugh aroused him, a merry, girlish laugh. He awoke from his dream with a start, and found them all looking at him. " So you have awoke at last," laughed Laura. " Three times have I told you we were going, and there you stood, staring at empty space, and paying no more attention than if you were stone-deaf. Pray, Captain Cavendish, where were you just now ?" Before he could answer, the gate against which Nath- alie leaned was pushed violently open, and the thick dwartish figure and unlovely face of Midge was thrust out not made more prepossessing by an ugly scowl. "Miss Natty," she shrilly cried, "I want to know if you mean to stand here all day long? It's past two now, and when you go up to the house, perhaps the old woman won't give it you and serve you right, too !" added Miss Midge, sotto voce. "So late!" Nathalie cried, in alarm. "I had no idea of it.' Good -bye, Miss Jo; good-bye, Laura. 1 must go !" She had smiled and nodded her farewell to the cap- tain, and was off like a dart. Midge slammed the gate in their faces, and went sulkily after. WOOED AND WON. 101 In considerable consternation, Nathalie ran tip-staira and into the awful presence of the mistress of the house. She knew well she was in for a scolding, and was bracing herself to meet it. Lady Leroy had never been so furiously angry since the first day the young lady had entered beneath her roof, and the storm burst before Miss Marsh was fairly in the room. Such a tempe?t of angry words, such a tornado of scolding, such a wrathful outbreak of old woman's fury, it has been the ill-fortune of but few to hear. Nathalie bore it like a heroine, without flinching and without re- treat, though her cheeks were scarlet, and her blue eyes flashing fire. She had clinched one little hand involun- tarily, and set her teeth, and compressed her lips, as if to force herself not to fling back the old woman's rage in her face ; but the struggle was hard. Passionate and proud Nathalie's nature was, but the fiery steeds of pride and passion she had been taught, long ago, at her father's knee, to rein with the curb of patience. But I am afraid it was not this Christian motive that held her silent always ander Lady Leroy's unreasonable abuse. Ambition was the girl's ruling passion. With her whole heart and soul she longed for wealth and power, and the first of these priceless blessings, in whose train the second followed, could only be obtained through this vituperative old bel- dame. If Nathalie let nature and passion have their way, and filing back fury for fury, she would find herself incontinently turned out of doors, and back again, prol> ably, the day after, in that odious school-room, wearing out her heart, and going mad slowly with the dull drudg- ery of a poor teacher's life. This motive in itself was strong enough, but of late days another and a stronger had been added. If she were Miss Marsh, the school- mistress, Captain Cavendish, the heir of a baronet, would doubtless admire, and have nothing whatever to say to her; but Miss Marsh, the heiress of Redmon and of Lady Leroy's thousands, was quite another thing. He was p< > >r now, comparatively speaking ; she knew that how sweet it would be to lay a fortune at the feet of the man sho loved ! Some day in the bright future he would lay a 103 WOOED AND WON. title at her fair feet in return, and all her dreams of love, an \ power, and greatness, would be more than realized. Not that Nathalie for one instant fancied George Caven- dish sought her for her fortune she would have flung back such a suspicion furiously in the face of the profferer but she knew enough of the fitness of things to be aware that, however much he might-secretly adore her rose-hued cheeks, golden hair, and violet eyes, he could never marry a portionless bride. On this tiger-cat old Tartar, then, all these sweet dreams depended for their fruition ; and she must pocket her pride, and eat humble pie, and make no wry faces over that unpalatable pastry. She must be pa- tient and long-suffering now, that she might reign like a princess royal hereafter ; so while Lady Leroy stormed and poured no end of vials of wrath on her ward's un- fortunate head, that young person only shut her rosy lips the harder, and bated her breath not to reply. "We are so strong to conquer ourselves, you see, when pounds, shil- lings, and pence are concerned, and so weak and cowardly to obey the commands of One who was led " as a lamb to the slaughter, and who opened not his mouth." So Nath- alie stood, breathing quick, and only holding herself from flying at her tormentress by main force, and Lady Leroy stormed on until forced to stop from want of breath. " And now, Miss," she wound up, her little eyes glar- ing on the young lady, " I should like to know what you've got to say for yourself." " I have nothing to say," replied Nathalie, speaking for the first time. " Oh, I dare say not ! All I say goes in one ear and out t'other, doesn't it, now ? Ain't you ashamed of your- self, you minx ?" " No !" quietly said Nathalie. Mrs. Leroy glared upon her with a look of fury, hor- ribly revolting in that old and wrinkled face. " Do you mean to say you'll ever do it again ? Do you mean to say you'll go with that man any more ? Do you mean to say you defy and disobey ine ? Tell me !" cried Lady Leroy, clawing the air as if she were clawing WOOED AND WOK 103 the eyes out of Captain Cavendish's handsome head, " tell me if you mean to do this !" 'Yes!" was the fiery answer flaming in the girl's crimson cheeks and flashing eyes, "I defy you to the h!" But prudence sidled up to her and whispen " Heiress of Redmon, remember what you risk !" and so oh, that I should have to tell it ! Nathalie Marsh smoothed her contracted brows, vailed the angry brightness of her blue eyes under their sweeping lashes, and steadily said : " Mrs. Leroy, you know I have no wish to willfully defy or disobey you. I should be sorry to be anything but true and dutiful to you, and I am not conscious of being anything else now." " You are you know you are !" the old woman pas- sionately cried. "You know I hate this man this spendthrift, this fortune-seeker, this smooth-spoken, false- hearted hypocrite! Give up this man promise me never to speak to him again, and then I will believe you !" Nathalie stood silent. " Promise," shrilly screamed Lady Leroy, " promise or else " She stopped short, but the white rage in her distorted face finished the sentence with emphasis. " I will promise you one thing," said Nathalie, turning pale and cold, " that he shall not come to Redmon any more. You accuse him unjustly, Mrs. Leroy he is none of the things yon / say. Do not ask me to promise any- thing else I cannot do it !'' What Lady Leroy would have said to this Nathalie never knew ; for at that moment there came a loud knock at the front door, and Miss Marsh, only too glad to escape, flew down to answer it. The alarm at the outer door proved to come from Charley Marsh ; and Nathalie stared, as she saw how pale and haggard he looked so unlike her bright-faced brother. " What ails'you, Charley ?" she anxiously asked. " Are you sick?" " Sick ? No ! Whv should I be sick T 104 WOOED AND WON. " You are as pale and worn-looking as if you had been il] for a month. Something has gone wrong." " I have been up all night," said Charley, omitting, however, to add, playing billiards. " That's why. Nath- alie," hurriedly and nervously, %< have you any money ? I can't ask before that old virago up-stairs." " Money ! Yes, I have some. Do you want it ?" " I want you to lend me as much as you can, for a short time. There !" he said, impatiently, " don't begin asking questions, Natty. I want it particularly, and I will pay you back as soon as I can. How much have you got?" " I have nearly twenty pounds, more or less. Will that do?" " It will help. Don't say anything about it, Natty, like a good girl. Who's in ?" " No one but Mrs. Leroy. Won't you come up ?" ."I must, I suppose. Get the money while I am talk- ing to her, and give it to me as I go out. What a solemn face you have got, Natty !" He laughed as he spoke Charley's careless, boyish laugh, but Nathalie only sighed as they ascended the stairs together. " Mrs. Leroy has been scolding ever since I came from town. If ever a fortune was dearly bought, Charley, mine will be." " Paying too dear for your whistle eh ? Never mind, Natty! it can't last forever, and neither .can Lady Leroy." All the shadow had gone from Charley's brow, and the change was magical. Whether it was the promise of the money, or his natural elasticity of spirit rebounding, he knew best ; but certainly when he shook hands with the mistress of the domain, the sunshine outside was not brighter than his handsome face. Mrs. Leroy rather liked Charley, which is saying folios in the young man's favor, considering how few that cantankerous old cat admitted to her favor but every one liked Charley Marsh. While Nathalie went to her own room for the money, Nathalie's brother was holding Mrs. Leroy spell-bound with his brilliant flow of conversation. All the gossip and WOOED AND WON. 105 scandal of Speckport was retailed business, pleasure, fashion, and tights, related with appetizing gusto ; and where the reality fell short, Mr. Marsh called upon his lively imagination for a few extra facts. The forthcoming picnic and its delights were discussed, and Charley advised her to strain a point and be present. " Midge caii wheel you about the field, you know, in your chair," said Charley. "You won't take cold the clay's sure to be delightful, and I know every one will enjoy themselves ten times better for having yci there. You had better come. Val Blake and I will carry you down stairs!" To the astonishment of Nathalie, Mrs. Leroy assented readily to the odd proposition; and Charley departed, having charmed the old lady into utter forgetfulness, for the time being, of her antipathy to Captain Cavendish. Speckport could talk of nothing for a week beforehand but the picnic the first of the season. All Speckport was going, young and old, rich and poor. Admission, twenty-five cents ; children, half price. The Kedmon grounds, where the picnic was to be held, were extensive and beautiful. Broad velvety fields, green lanes, among miniature forests of fragrant cedar and spruce, and all sloping down to the smooth, white sands of the beach, with the gray sea tramping dully in, and the salt spray dashing up in your face. And "I hope it won't be foggy ! I do hope it won't be foggy !" was the burden of every one's cry ; the fog generally choosing to step in and stay a week or two, whenever Speckport proposed a picnic. How many blinds were drawn aside in the gray and dismal dawn of that eventful morning, and how many eager pairs of eyes, shaded by night-cap borders, turned anxiously heavenward ; and how delight- edly they were drawn in again ! for, wonderful to toll, the sky was blue and without a cloud, and the sun, rising in a canopy of rose and amber, promised all beholders a day of unremitting sunshine. Before nine o'clock the Redmon road was alive with people all in gorgeous array. Before ten, the droves of men, women, and children increased fourfold, and the 5* 106 WOOED AND WON. dust was something awful. The sun fairly blazed in the sky ; had it ever shone so dazzlingly before, or was there ever so brilliantly blue a sky, or such heaps and heaps of billows of snowy white, floating through it? Before eleven, that boiling seaside sun would have grilled you alive only for the strong sea-breeze, heaven-sent, sweeping up from the bay. Through fiery heat, and choking dust, the cry- was " still they come," and Kedmon grounds swarmed with people, as the lields of Egypt once swarmed with locust. A great arch of evergreens surmounted the entrance-gate, and the Union Jack floated loyally over it in the morning sunshine. The clanging of the band and the roll of the drum greeted your delighted ears the moment you entered the fairy arch, and you found yourself lost and bewildered in a sea of people you never saw before. The swings were flying with dizzying velocity, young belles went up until the toes of their gaiters nearly touched the firmament, and your head reeled to look at them. Some two or three hundred ladies and gentlemen were tripping the light fantastic toe to the inspiring music of a set of Irish quad- rilles ; and some eight hundred spectators were gathered in tremendous circles about them, looking on, gazing as if never in all their lives had so glorious and wonderful a vision as their fellow-sinners jigging up and down, dazzled their enchanted eyes. The refreshment tents were in such a crowded and jammed and suffocating state, that you could see the steam ascending from them as from an escape-valve ; and the fair ones behind the tables, be- wildered by two dozen clamorous voices, demanding the attention of each one at once, passed pies and tarts, and sandwiches and soda water, and coffee and cakes frantically and at random, and let little boys feed in corners unnoticed, and were altogether reduced to a state of utter imbecility by the necessity of doing half a dozen things at one and the same time. Pink and blue, and yellow and green ribbons fluttered, and silks and muslins and bareges trailed the grass and got torn off the waist by masculine boot- heels ; and the picnic was too delightful for description, and, over all, the fiery noonday July sun blazed like a wheel of fire, and the sea wind swept up fresh and deli- WOOED AND WON. 107 cious, and the waves sang their old song down on the shore, and no one listened to their mystic music or won- dered, like poor little Paul Dombey, what they were saying. No one ! Yes, there was one sitting on a green bank, all alone, who had been very busy all morning until now, arranging tables and waiting on hungry pleasure-seekers, making little boys and girls behave themselves, and swinging little people who could get no one else to attend them. The breeze that set the tall reeds and fern at fandangoing waved her black barege dress, and flung back the little black lace vail falling from, her hat. Tired and hot, she had wandered here to listen to the waves and to the tumult behind her. What were the thoughts of the man who leaned against a tall tamarack tree and watched the reclining figure as a cat does a mouse? There are some souls so dark that all the beauty of earth and heaven are as blank pages to them. They see without comprehending, without one feeling of thoughtfulness for all the glory around their.. Surely it were better for such to have been born blind. This man saw no wide sea spreading before him, glittering as if sown with stars. There was more to him worth watching in one flutter of that thin black dress on the bank than in all the world beside, and he stood and watched with his eyes half closed, waiting until she should see him. He had not to wait long. Some prescience that some- thing out of harmony with the scene was near, made iier restless. She rose up on her elbow, arid looked round a second after, her face flushed, she was up oil' the j and on her feet. The man lifted his hat and advanced. "Pardon my intrusion, "Winnie Miss Rose, and no, no I beg you will not go !" She had made to turn away, but he himself interposed something of agitation in his manner, and it was but rarely, indeed. Captain George Cavendish allowed himself to be agitated. She stopped gently enough, the surprised flush faded out from her face that pretty, pale face, tranquil as face could be, was only very grave. " If you have anything to say to me, Captain Caven- 108 WOOED AND WOK dish, please to say it quickly. I do not wish to be seen here." " Is it such a disgrace, then, to be seen for one poor instant with me?" he said, bitterly. She did not reply, save by an impatient tapping of one foot on the grass, and a backward glance at the crowded grounds. " Winnie !" he broke ont, passionately, as if string by her manner, " have you turned into a nirt ? Have you entirely forgotten what is past ? You cannot you can- not have ceased altogether to care for me, since I cannot, do what I will, forget you !" Miss Rose looked at him steadily, quietly, gravely, out of her brown eyes v If he had hoped for anything, that one look would have shivered his air-castles as a stone shivers brittle glass. " I told you once before, Captain Cavendish, that such words from you to me were insults. The past, where you are concerned, is no more to me than if you had never ex- isted. I have not forgotten it, but it has no more power to move me than the waves there can move those piles of rock. No ! I have not forgotten it. I look back often enough now with wonder and pity at myself, that I ever should have been the idiot that I was." His face turned crimson at the unmistakable earnest- ness of her words. " Then I need scruple or hesitate no longer," he said, launching his last pitiful shaft. " I need hesitate no lon- ger, on your score, to speak the words that will make one who is rich and beautiful, and who loves rie, happy. I came here willingly to make what atonement I could for the past, by telling you beforehand, lest the shock of my marriage " He stopped in actual confusion, but raging inwardly at the humiliation she was making him feel this poor little pale schoolmistress, whom he could have lifted with one hand and flung easily over the bank. She was smiling as she listened to him, a smile not of mockery or disdain, only so gallingly full of utter indifference to him. " There is no atonement necessary," she said, with that WOUED AND WON. 109 conscious smile still hovering on her lips ; " none, I assure yon. I have no hard feelings toward yon, Captain Cav- endish, nothing to resent or forgive. If I was an idiot, it was my own fault, I dare .say, and I would not blot out one day that is gone if I could. Marry when you will, many as soon as yon please, and no one will wish you joy more sincerely on your wedding day than I." It half-maddened him, that supreme indifference, that serene face. He knew that he loved her, herself, and her alone ; and while he fancied her pining and love-lorn, he was very well satisfied and quite complacent over her case. But this turn of the story was a little too mortifying to any man's pride to stand, and the man a lady-killer by pro- fession at that. " 1 don't believe it," he said, savagely, "you have not forgotten you cared for me too much for that. I did not think you could stoop to falsehood while playing the role of a saint." Miss Rose gave him a look a look before which, with all his fury, he shrank. She had turned to walk away, but she stopped for a moment. " I am telling no falsehood, Captain Cavendish : before I stoop to that, I pray I may die. You know in your heart I mean what I say, and you know that you believe me. I have many things to be thankful for, but chief among them, when I kneel down to thank God for his mercies, I thank him that I am not your wife !'' She walked slowly away, and he did not follow her ; he only stood there, swallowing the bitter pill, and digest- ing it as best he might. It was provoking, no doubt, not to be able to forget this wretched little school-ma'am, while she so coolly banished him from her memory so utterly and entirely banished him ; for Captain Cavendish knew better than to disbelieve her. He had jilted her, it is true, as he had many another ; but where was his triumph now ? If he con Id only have forgotten her himself ; but when the grapes were within his reach, he had despised them, ;tii:l now that they grew above his head, and he did want them, it was exasperating that he could not get them. "Pali!" ho thought bitterly, " what a fool I am! 1 110 WOOED AND WON. could not marry her were she ever so willing now, any more than I could then. This cursed debt is dragging me to perdition 1 was going to say, and I must marry a for- tune, and that soon. Nathalie Marsh is the richest girl in Speckport, therefore I shall marry Nathalie Marsh. She is ten times more beautiful than that little quakeress who is just gone; but I can't love her, and I can't forget the other." Captain Cavendish leaned against the tamarack a long time, thinking. The uproar behind him and the roar of the surf on the shore blended together in a dull, meaning- less tumult in his- ears. He was thinking of this marriage de convenance he must make, of this bride he must one day take home to England. He was a gambler and a spendthrift, this man, over head and ears in debt, and with no way but this one of ever getting out of it. From his friends in England ? He had no friends in England on whom he could rely. His only rich relative, his uncle, the baronet, had taken it into his head, at the age of fifty-five, to get married ; and what was more, there was an heir, a young gentleman of five months old, between him and the baronetcy. His commission had been purchased by his uncle, and it seemed all he need ever expect from him. He had never seen service, and had no particular desire to see any. He must marry a rich wife there was no alter- native and he knew the power of his handsome face ex- tremely well. He had no fear of a refusal ; there was no use in delaying ; he would make the heiress of Redmon happy that very day. The sun was going down behind the waves, in an ori- flamme of gold and crimson and purple and rose, flushing the whole sky with its tropical beauty, when the young officer turned away to seek for his future wife. As if his thoughts had evoked her she was coming toward him, and all alone ; her white dress floating mistily about her, all her golden curls hanging damp and loose over her shoulders, and her cheeks flushed with the heat. She had taken off her hat, and was swinging it by its azure ribbons, as she came up ; and she looked so beautiful that the young Eug- WOOED AND WON. Ill glishrnan thought that it would not be so very dreadful a thing to sell himself to this violet-eyed sultana after all. "Truant!" said Nathalie, " where have you been all the afternoon ? I thought you had gone away." " And all the time I have been standing here, like .Pa- tience on a monument, wishing you would come up." " Did you want me, then ?" " When do I not want you 2" Nathalie laughed, but she also blushed. " Then you should have gone in search of me, sir. Mrs. Leroy wants to go home now, and I must go with her." " But not just yet. I have something to say to you, .Nathalie." And so here, in the hot warmth of the red sunset, the old, old story was told the story that has been told over and over again since the world began, and will be told until its end, and yet is ever new. The story to which two little words, yes or no, ends so ecstatically, or gives the deathblow, it was yes this time ; and when Nathalie Marsh, half an hour after, went homo with Mrs. Leroy, she was wondering if there was one among all those thousands one in all the wide world as happy as she ! The last red glimmer of the sunset had faded out of the sky, and the summer moon was up, round and white and full, before the last of the picnickers went home. And in its pale rays, with his hands in his pockets, and a cigar between his lips, Captain Cavendish went home with Cherrie Nettleby. 113 FAST AND LOOSE. CHAPTEft X. JISS NATHALIE MAESH was not the only young lady who received a proposal that mem - orable picnic-day. Flashing in and out among the other belles of Speckport, and eclipsing them all as she went, the belle of the bourgeois, par excellence, came Miss Cherrie Nettleby, qnite dazzling to look at in a pink and white plaid silk, a white lace mantle, the blue parasol you wot of, the turban-hat, with a long white feather streaking round it, and the colored white lace vail over her blooming brunette face. Miss Nettleby had fawn-colored kid gloves, an embroidered kerchief sticking out of her pocket ; and, to crown all, two or three yards of gold chain around her neck, and hanging ever so far below her waist. An overgrown locket and a carnelian cross dangled from the chain ; and no giddy young peacock ever strutted about prouder of its tail than did the little black-eyed belle of these glittering fetters. She had only received the chain, and locket, and cross the night before ; they had come in a box, with a huge bouquet, under the weight of which a small black boy staggered, with the compliments of Captain Cavendish, and would Mi? s Nettleby do him the honor of accepting them \ Xct- tleby did him the honor, and was not able to sleep a wink all night for rapture. A gold chain had been the desire of her heart for many and many a day ; and, at last, some good fairy had taken pity on her and sent it, with the handsomest man in Speckport for her ambassador. Cher- rie's ecstasies are not to be described ; a chain from any one would have been a delightful gift ; but from Captain Cavendish, one smile from whom Cherrie would have fiven all the rest of her admirers for, delightedly. She ad hugged Ann in her transports, until that young per- son, breaking indignantly from her, demanded to know if FAST AND LOOSE. 113 she had gone mad ; and she had dressed for the picnic, ex- pecting to have the young Englishman devotedly by her side the whole day long, before the aggravated and envious eyes of all Speekport. But Cherrie had never made a greater mistake in all her life ; the blue parasol, the pink silk, the white'lace mantle, and fawn-colored kid gloves were powerless to charm Captain Cavendish never came near her. He ha_ J not come at all until late, and then he had driven in in the McGregor barouche, with the heiress of that house by his side, resplendent to look at ; and he had walked about with her, and with Miss Laura Blair, and Miss Marsh, and sundry other young ladies, a step or two higher up the ladder of life than Miss Nettleby, but he had not once walked with her. Pie had passed her two or three times, as lie could not very well help doing, since she had put herself straight in his way ; and he had nodded and smiled, and walked deliberately on. Cherrie could have cried with chagrin ; but she didn't, not wishing to redden her eyes and swell her nose there, and she con- soled herself by flirting outrageously with everybody who would be flirted with. As the afternoon wore on, Cherrie began to experience that fatigue which five or six hours' dancing in a blazing July sun is apt to engender, and informed her partner in the quadrille she was roasted to death. The partner who was Mr. Charles Marsh, and who had been her most de- voted all day was leaning against a stout elderly gentle- man as against a post, fanning himself with his straw wideawake, leisurely set that headpiece eideways on his brown locks and pre3ented his arm. " I thought you would come to that by-and-by, Miss Nettleby, in spite of your love of dancing. Quadrilles are all very well in December, but I can't say that I fancy them in the dog-days. Suppose w r e go down to the shore and get a whiff of fresh air." Miss Nettleby put her fawn-colored kid-glove inside Mr. Marsh's coat-sleeve, and poising her azure parasol in the other hand, strolled with him to the beach. On their way, Nathalie, standing with Captain Locksley, young McGregor., and a number of other gentlemen and ladies, 114 FAST A2H) LOOSE. espied them, and her color rose and her blue eyes flashed at the sight. '" Egad ! I think they'll make a match of it !" laughed Locksley. " Charley seems to be completely taken in tow by that flyaway Cherrie." Nathalie said nothing, but her brow contracted omi- nously as she turned impatiently away. " Oh, that's nothing," said the Reverend Augustus Tod ; " it's the fashion to go with Cherrie, and Charley is reudj to follow fashion's lead. The little girl will settle down some day, I dare say, into a sensible, hard-working fisher- man's wife." Even Nathalie laughed at the idea of Miss Nettleby hard-working and sensible ; and that young lady and her escort sauntered leisurely on to the breezy seashore. The sun was dipping behind the western waves, the sky all flushed and radiant with the scarlet and golden glory of its decline, the blue sea itself flooded with crimson radi- ance. Even Mr. Marsh was moved to admiration of its gorgeous splendor. " Neat thing in the way of sunsets, Cherrie," he re- marked, taking out a cigar, and lighting it. " What a nice magenta color them clouds is !" said Miss Nettleby, admiringly ; " they would make a lovely dress trimmed with black braid. And that mauve cloud over there with the yellow edge, I should like to have a scarf of that." " "Well," said Charley, " I can't get you the mauvo cloud, but if there's a scarf at all like it in Speckport you shall have it. By the way, Cherrie, where did you get that chain ?" " You didn't give it to me, anyhow," replied Miss Nettleby, tossing her turban. " I might wait a long time for anything before I got it from you." " 1 didn't know you wanted one, or I might. I wish you wouldn't take presents from anybody but me. Cherrie." " From anybody but you !" retorted Cherrie, with scorn. " I'd like to know the time you gave me anything, Charley Marsh >" FAST AND LOOSE. 115 " Come now, Cherrie, I don't want to be mean, but that's a little too bad !" " I suppose you're hinting at that coral set you sent me last week ?" said Cherrie, in a resentful tone. " But, I can tell you, there's lots of folks, not a thousand miies off, would be glad to give me ten times as much if I would take it." " Don't take their gifts, Cherrie ; there's a good girl ; it's not ladylike, you know ; and some day you shall have whatever you want when I am rich and you are my wife, Cherrie." " The idea !" giggled Cherrie, her color rising, " your wife, indeed ; I think I see myself !" " Wouldn't you have me, Cherrie ?" He was still smoking, and still looking at the sunset not seeing it, however. Poor Charley Marsh, light as was his tone, was exceedingly in earnest. Miss Nettleby stole a glance at him from under the blue parasol, not quite certain whether he were in jest or in earnest, and ' her silly little heart beating a trifle faster than, was its wont. " I suppose, Mr. Marsh," said the young lady, after a moment's deliberation, thinking it best to stand on her dignity, " you think it a fine thing to make fun of me ; but I can tell you I ain't going to stand it, if you are a doctor, and me only a gardener's daughter. I think you might find something else to amuse you." " I'll take my oath, Cherrie," said Charley, throwing his cigar over the bank, " I never was so much in earnest in all my life." " I don't believe it," said Miss Nettleby. "What's the reason you don't? Haven't I been going with you long enough ? What did you suppose I meant?" " I didn't suppose nothing at all about it. You aren't the only one that pays attention to me." "No; but I don't think any of the others mean^my- thing. I intend to marry yon, Cherrie, if you'll consent." Cherrie tossed her turban disdainfully, but in her secret heart she was in ruptures. Not that she meant to accept 118 FAST A2H) LOOSE. him just then, with Captain Cavendish in the background ; but neither had she the slightest intention of refusing him. The handsome Englishman had given her a gold chain, to be sure, but then he had also given her the cold shoulder all that day ; and if things did not turn out with him as she conld wish, Charley Marsh would do as a dernier re- sort. Cherrie liked Charley, and he could make her a lady ; and if she failed in becoming Mrs. Cavendish, it would be a very nice thing to become Mrs. Marsh, and half the young ladies in Speckport would be dying of envy. Cherrie thought all this in about two seconds and a half. " Well, Cherrie, have you nothing to say 2" inquired Charley, rather anxiously. " Mr. Marsh," said Miss Nettleby, with dignity, re- membering how the heroine of the last novel she had read had answered in a similar case, " I require time to pon ponder over it. On some other occasion, when I have seriously rellected on it, you shall have my answer." Mr. Marsh stood aghast for a moment, staring at the young lady, and then went off into a n't of uproarious laughter. u Well," demanded Cherrie, facing round, rather fierce- ly, " and what are you laughing at, sir '<" " Oh, I beg your pardon, (jherrie," said Charley, re- covering from his paroxysm ; " but really you did that so well that I " Charley came near going off a^ain ; but, seeing the black eyes flashing, recovered himself. " Come, Cherrie, never mind Laura-Matilda speeches, but tell me, like a sensible little girl, that you like me, and by-and-by will be my wii'e." " I'll do nothing of the sort !" cried Miss Nettleby, in a state of exasperation, " either now or at any other time, if I don't choose. You'll just wait for your answer, or go without." She sailed away as she spoke, leaving Charley, too much taken aback, not to say mortified, to follow her. " Hang it !" was Mr. Marsh's exclamation, as lie turned in an opposite direction ; " the idea uf getting such an FAST AND LOOSE. 117 answer from that girl ! What would Natty say ? She would think it bad enough my proposing at all, but to get such a reply." Yet, even in the midst of his chagrin, lie laughed again at the recollection of Miss Nettleby's speech careless Charley, who never let anything trouble him long. " She'll come to it, I dare say," he reflected, as~he went along, " and I can wait. I do like her, she's such a pretty little thing, and good, too, in the main, though rather frivolous on the surface. Well, Miss Rose, ho\V are you enjoying yourself 2" Miss Rose's fair, sweet face was rather a striking con- trast after Cherrie's, but Charley was not thinking of that, as he offered her his arm. Cherrie in the distance saw the act, and felt a pang of jealousy, " He's gone off with that pale-faced school-mistress, now," she thought, resentfully. " I dare say she'd be glad to catch him, if she could. Oh !" IShe stopped short with an exclamation half suppressed. She had come upon Captain Cavendish leaning against a tall tree, and talking to Nathalie Marsh. Another jealous pang pierced the frivolous heart, and I am sorry to tell it she crept in close under the tree, with the blue parasol furled, and yes, she did she listened. Listened for over twenty minutes, her color coming and going, her breath bated, her hands clenched. Then she fluttered hurriedly off, just in time to escape them, as they walked away, plighted lovers. There was a little clump of cedar-bushes, forming a sort of dell, up the side of the bank. Cherrie Nettleby fell down here in the tall grass, dashing the blue parasol down beside her, crumpling the turban, soiling the white feather, and smearing the pink dress, tore otf the gold chain, and burst into such a passion of spiteful, jealous, and enraged tears, as she had never before shed in her life. To think that all her hopes should have come to this ; that the gold chain was only a glittering delusion ; all his pretty speeches and lover-like attentions only hollow cheats, and Nathalie Marsh going to be his \vife ! Cherrie seized the 118 FAST AND LOOSE. chain in a paroxysm of f ury, as she thought of it, and hurled it over the bank. " The hateful, lying, deceitful scamp," she passionate- ly cried. " I hate him, and I'll go and marry Charley Marsh, just for spite." Charley was not hard to find. He was playing quoits with a lot of other young Speckportians ; and Miss Catty Ciowrie was standing gazing admiringly on, and ready to talk to him between whiles. Cherrie tapped him on the arm with her parasol, and looked shyly up in his face with a rosy blush. But the shy look and the blush were exceedingly well got up, and Charley dropped the quoits with a delighted face. " Cherrie 1 what is it ? Have you made up your mind, then?" " Yes, Charley ! You didn't believe I was in earnest that time, did you ? I do like you, and I will be your wife as soon as ever you like." Did Miss Catty Ciowrie, standing unheeded by, with ears as sharp as lances, hear this very straightforward avowal ? She had flashed a keen, quick glance from one to the other ; had dropped her vail suddenly over her face, and turned away. Neither noticed her. Charley was in raptures, and might have fallen on Miss Nettleby and embraced her there and then, only that before that maiden had quite finished speaking, Nathalie confronted them, her face haughty, her step ringing, her voice imperious. " Charley, Mrs. Leroy is going home, and desires you to come immediately and assist Mr. Blake." "Oh, bother!" cried Charley, politely, "let her get eome of the other fellows ; I can't go." " Charley !" " Why can't she get McGregor, or some of the rest ?" said Charley, impatiently ; " don't you see I'm playing quoits, Natty ?" " I see you're doing nothing of the sort, sir, and I in- sist on you coining this instant ! Don't trouble yourself about Miss Nettleby, she has legions of adorers here, who will only be too happy to attend her home." FAST AND LOOSE. 119 Miss Marsh swept away like a young queen ; her violet eyes Hashing, her perfect lips curling. Charley turned to follow, saying, hurriedly, as he went : " I'll be back in half an hour, Cherrie, wait for me here." " Proud, hateful thing !" exclaimed Cherrie, apos- trophizing the receding form of Miss Mai's h ; " she looked at me that time as if she scorned to touch me ! Wait un- til I am her brothers wife, we will see who will put on mistress." From where she stood, Cherrie could see the party for Redmon come. Charley and Val Blake wheeled Mrs. Leroy in her chair of state over the grass, that mummy having consented to be exhumed for the occa- sion, and having been the chief curiosity and attraction of the picnic. Nathalie walked on one side, and Midge on the other, but Captain Cavendish did not make one of the party now, for the moment they were out of sight, that gallant officer hurriedly walked deliberately up to her. Cherrie tossed her turban again, and curled her Hp suspiciously, not deigning to notice him by so much as a glance. " Come, Cherrie, what's the matter ?" he began, in a free and easy way ; " how have I got into dis- grace ?" " Oh, it's you, Captain Cavendish, is it ?" said Cherrie, loftily, condescending to become aware of his presence, " I don't know what you mean." "Nonsense, Cherrie! What is the matter? Come, now, be reasonable, and tell me what I have done." " You haven't done anything to me," quite frigidly, though ; " how could you '" "That's precisely what I want to know. Where is that chain I saw around your neck a short time " In my pocket. Yon had better take it back again. I don't want it." Captain Cavendish stared. Miss Nettleby, grasping the parasol firmly, though the sun had gone down, and the moon was rising, with a very becoming glow in her cheeks, and bright, angry light in her eyes, looked 12C FAST AND LOOS&. straight before her, and addressed empty space when she spoke. "There is some mystery here, and I am going to get at the bottom of it," he said, resolutely ; " Cherrie, let me go home with y :>u, and see if we cannot clear it up by the way." "With me ?" said Cherrie, stepping back, and looking at him disdainfully ; " why, what would Miss Marsh say to that ?" A light broke on the captain. " Miss Marsh ! Why, what have I to do with Miss Marsh?" " A great deal, I should think, after what passed be- tween you over there on the beach." " Cherrie ! where were you ? Not listening ?" " I was passing," said Miss Nettleby, stimy, " and I chanced to overhear. It wasn't my fault if you spoke out loud." Even Captain Cavendish stood for a moment non- plussed by this turn of affairs. He had no desire his pro- posal to Miss Marsh should become public property, for many reasons; and he knew he might as well have pub- lished it in the Speckport Spouter, as let Cherrie iind it out. Another thing he did not want to lose Cherrie ; she was a great deal too pretty, and lie fancied her a great deal too much for that. " Cherrie, that was all an an accident ! I didn't mean anything ! There are too many people looking at us here, to talk; but, if you will go home, I will explain by the Avay." "No," said Cherrie, standing resolutely on her dignity, but trying to keep from crying, "I can't. I promised Mr. Marsh to wait for him." " Oh, confound Mz\ Marsh ! Come with me, and never mind him." "No, Captain Cavendish ; 1 think I'll wait. Charley thinks more of mo than you do, since he asked me to iiiarry him this afternoon, and I am going to do it." Captain Cavendish looked at her. He knew Cherrie's regard for truth \vas nor tlio most stringent; that she FAST A1H) LOOSE. 121 would invent, and tell a fib with all the composure in life, but she was palpably telling no falsehood this time. He saw it in the triumphant flash of her black eyes, in the flush of her face, and set his teeth inwardly with anger and mortification. " How blessings brighten as they take their flight!" Never had Cherrie Nettleby looked so beautiful; never had her eyes been so much like black diamonds as now, when their light seemed set- ting to him forever. Captain Cavendish believed her, and resolved not to lose her, in spite of all the Charley Marshes in the world. " So Marsh has asked you to be his wife, has he ? Now, Cherrie, suppose I asked you the same question, what would you say ?" "You asked Miss Marsh to-day, and I think that's enough." " I did not mean it, Cherrie. I swear I did not ! I am fifty times as much in love with you as I am with her." And Captain Cavendish was speaking truth. Humi- liating as it is to say so of one's heroine, the black-eyed grisette was a hundred times more to his taste than the blue-eyed lady. Could they have changed places, he would have married Cherrie off-hand, and never given one sigh to Nathalie. It was the prospective fortune of that young lady he was in love with. " Cherrie, you don't believe me," he said, seeing in- credulity in her face, "but I swear I am telling the truth. Let me prove it give up Charley Marsh and marry me !" " Captain !" " I mean it ! Which of us do you like best Marsh or I?" " You know well enough," said Cherrie, crying. " I like you ever so much the best ; but when I heard you asking Miss Natty, I I " here the voice broke down, in good earnest, and Cherrie's tears began to flow. Captain Cavendish looked hurriedly about him. The last rays of the sunset had burned themselves out, and 6 122 FAST AXD LOOSE. the moon was making for herself a track of silver sheen over the sea. The crowd were flpcking homeward, tired out, and there was no one near ; but in the distance his eagle eye saw Charley Marsh striding over the dewy evening grass. Poor Charley ! The captain drew Cherrie's arm inside his own, and walked her rapidly away. They were out on the Redmon road before either spoke again. " I did not mean one word of what I said to Miss Marsh. But I'll tell you a secret, Cherrie, if you'll never mention it again." " I won't," said Cherrie. " What is it ?" " I should like to share her fortune that is, you and I and if she thinks I am in love with her, I stand a good chance. I should like to be richer than I am, for your sake, you know ; so you must not be jealous. I don't care a straw for her, but for her money." " And you do care for me ?" " You know I do ! Are you ready to give up Char- ley, and marry me?" " Oh !" said Cherrie, and it was all she replied ; but it was uttered so rapturously that it perfectly satisfied him. " Then that is settled ? Let me see suppose we get married next week, or the week after ?" " Oh ! Captain !" cried the enraptured Cherrie. " Then that is settled too. What a little darling you are, Cherrie ! And now I have only one request to make of you that you will not breathe one word of this to a livingrspul. Not a syllable do you understand ?" " WTiy?" said Cherrie, a little disappointed. * ' My dear girl, it would ruin us both ! We will be married privately no one shall know it but the clergyman and Mr. Blake." "Mr. Blake? Val?" " Yes," said Captain Cavendish, gravely, " he shall he present at the ceremony, but not another being in Speck- port must find it out. If they do, Cherrie, I will have to leave you forever. There are many reasons for this that I cannot now explain. You v/ill continue to livo at 'home, and no one but ourselves shall be the wiser. There, CAPTAIN CA VENDISH. 128 don't look so disappointed ; it won't last long, my darling. Let Charley still think himself your lover; but, mind you, keep him at a respectful distance, Cherrie." They reached the cottage at last, but it took them a very long time. Captain Cavendish walked back to Speckport in the moonlight, smoking, and with an odd little smile on his handsome face. _" I'll do it, too," he said, glancing up at the moon, as if informing that luminary in confidence. "There's a law against bigamy, I believe ; but I'll marry them both, the maid first, the mistress afterward." CHAPTER XL HOW CAPTAIN CAVENDISH MEANT TO MARRY CHER- RIE. HE clerk of the weather in Speckport might have been a woman, so fickle and changeable in his mind was he. You never could put any trust in him ; if you did, you were sure to be taken in. A bleak, raw, cheerless, gloomy morning, making parlor fires pleasant in spite of its being Juty, and hot coifee as delicious a beverage as cool soda- water had been the day before ; a morning not at all suited for constitutionals ; yet on this cold, wet, raw, foggy morning Charley Marsh had arisen at five o'clock, and gone off for a walk, and was only opening the front- door of the little cottage as the clock on the sitting-room mantel was chiming nine. Breakfast was over, and there was no one in the room but Mrs. Marsh, in her shawl and rocker, beside the fire which was burning in the Franklin, immersed ten fathoms deep in the adventures of a gentle- man, inclosed between two yellow covers, and bearing Ihe euphonious name of u Rinaldo Rinaldi." Miss Rose had 124 CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. gone to school, Betsy Ann was clattering among the pots in the kitchen ; the breakfast-table looked sloppy and littered ; the room, altogether dreary. Perhaps it was his walk in that cheerless fog, but Charley looked as dreary as the room ; his bright face haggard and pale, his eyes heavy, and with dark circles under them, bespeaking a sleepless night. Mrs. Marsh dropped " Rinaldo Rinaldi," and looked up with a fretful air. "Dear me, Charley, how late you are! What will Doctor Leach say ? Where have you been ?" " Out for a walk." "Such a hateful morning it's enough to give you your death ! Betsy Ann, bring in the conee-pot !" Betsy Ann appeared with that household god, and a face shining with smiles and yellow soap, and her mistress relapsed into " Rinaldo Rinaldi " again. Charley seemed to have lost his appetite as well as his spirits. He drank a cup of coffee, pushed the bread and butter impatiently away, donned his hat and overcoat, the former pulled very much over his eyes, and set out for the office. Charley had enough to trouble him. It was not only Cherrie's desertion, though that was enough, for he really loved the girl with the whole fervor and strength of a fresh young heart, and meant to make her his hon- ored wife. He was infatuated, no doubt ; he knew her to be illiterate, silly, unprincipled, false and foolish, a little dressy piece of ignorance, vanity, selfishness and conceit, or might have known it if he chose ; but he knew, too, she was a beautiful, brilliant, bewitching little fairy, with good-natured and generous impulses now and then, and the dearest little thing generally that ever was born. In short, he was in love with her, and love knows nothing about common sense ; so when he had seen her walk off the previous evening with Captain Cavendish, and desert him, he had leaned against a tree, feeling heaven only knows how deeply and how bitterly. Once he had started up to follow them, but had stopped the memory of a heavy debt contracted in Prince Street, inving to this man, and hanging like an incubus about his iiuck, night and day, thrust him back as with a hand of CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. 125 iron. He was in the power of the English officer, beyond redemption ; he could not afford to make him his enemy. How that long morning dragged on, Charley never knew ; certainly his medical studies did not progress much. Poor and in debt, in love and deserted, those were the changes on which his thoughts rang. A sulky- faced clock, striking one, made him start. It was time to go home to dinner, and he arose and went out. As he opened the shop-door, he stepped short. Tripping gayly along the foggy and sloppy streets came Cherrie her- self, her dress pinned artistically up, to display a bril- liant Balmoral skirt, of all the colors of a dying dol- phin; her high-heeled boots clinking briskly over the pavement. Charley's foolish heart ga've a great bound, and he stepped impulsively forward, with her name on his lips. " Cherrie ?" Cherrie had not seen him until he spoke, and she re- coiled with a scream. " Sir ! Charley ]\Iarsh ! how you scare me ! I wish you wouldn't shout out so sudden and frighten me out of my wits !" " You may spare your hysterics, Cherrie," said Char- ley, rather coldly ; " you could stand more than that if Captain Cavendish was in question." Cherrie laughed, and tripped along beside him with dancing eyes. She liked Charley, though in a far less degree than the dashing and elegant young officer, and was in a particularly good-natured state of mind that morning. There was more than her liking for Charley to induce her to keep good friends with him the warning of the captain and her own prudence. Cherrie, faithless herself, had no very profound trust in her fellow-crea- tures. Until she was actually the captain's wife, she was not sure of him ; there is many a slip, she knew ; and if he failed her, Charley was the next best in Speckport. Therefore, at his insinuation, she only tossed her turbaned head after her coquettish fashion, until all her black curls danced a fandango, and showed her brilliant white* teeth in a gay little laugh. '196 CAPTAIN OAVEHTDIBH. " Oh, you're jealous, are yon ?" she said. " I thought you would be !" " Cherrie !" " There, now, Charley, don't be cross ! I just did it to make you jealous, and nothing else ! I was mad at you for going off the way you did !" " You know I could not help it !" " Oh, I dare say not. I'm nobody beside Miss Natty ! So, when Captain Cavendish came up and asked leave to see me home, I just let him ! I thought it wouldn't do you any harm to be a little jealous, you know, Charley." Charley's hopes were h'igh again ; but his heart had been too deeply pained for him to forget its soreness at one encouraging word. Something wanting in Cherrie, he could not quite define what, had often struck him be- fore, but never so palpably as now. That want was prin- ciple, of which the black-eyed young lady was totally devoid ; and he was vaguely realizing that trusting to her was much like leaning on a broken reed. Cherrie, a good deal piqued, and a little alarmed by his silence, looked at him askance. " Oh, you're sulky, are you ? Very well, sir, you can just please yourself. If you've a mind to get mad for nothing, you may." " Cherrie," Charley said, quite gravely for him, " do you think you did right last night ? After promising to be my wife, to go off and leave me as you did ?" " I didn't, either !" retorted Cherrie ; " it was you went off and left me." " That was no fault of mine, and I didn't go with an- other young lady. Cherrie, I want you to promise me you will let Captain Cavendish see you home no more." " I shall promise nothing of the sort !" cried Cherrie, with shrill indignation. "Because I promised to marry you, I suppose you would like me to live like a nun for the rest of my life, and not even look at any other man. I'll just do as I did before, Mr. Charley Marsh ; and if you ain't satisfied with that, you may go and marry some- body else Miss Rose, or Miss Clowrie she'd have you, fast enough 1" CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. 127 "I don't want Miss Clowrie; I only want you, Cherrie ; and if you cared for me, you wouldn't act and talk as you do." Some of poor Charley's pain was in his voice and it touched the^coquette's frivolous heart. She stopped, at a dry-goods store, for an encouraging word before entering. " You know very well, Charley, I like you ever so much a great deal better than I do any one else ; but I can't help being pretty, and having the young men after me, and I hate to be cross to them, too. Come up to Redmou this evening, I haven't time to stop to talk now." With which the little hypocrite made a smiling obeisance, and darted into the shop, leaving her lover to pursue his homeward way, a little lighter in the region of the heart, but still dissatisfied and mistrustful. The afternoon was as long and dreary as the morning. Charley sat in the dismal little back-office, listening listlessly to the customers coming in and out of the surgery, to buy Epsom-salts and senna, or hair-oil and bilious pills ; and the shopboy droning over a song-book, which he read half aloud, in a monotonous sing-song way, when alone, staring vacantly at the rotten leaves, and bits of chips and straw and paper fluttering about the wet yard in the chill afternoon wind. And still the fog settled down thicker, and wetter, and colder than ever ; and when the shopboy came in a little after six, to light the flaring gas-jet it was already growing dark Charley arose, drearily, to go. " What a long day it has been !" he said, gaping in the boy's face ; " it seems like a week since I got up this morning. Where's the doctor ?" " Up to Squire Todd's, sir. The old gentleman's took bad again with the gout." The lamps were flaring 1 through the foggy streets as he walked along, and the few people abroad flitted in and out of the wet gloom, like shadowy phantoms. Queen Street was bright enough with the illumination from shop-windows, put the ios* bt.sy thoroughfares looked dis- 128 CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. inal and deserted, and the spectral passers-by more shadowy than ever. As lie was turning the corner of Cottage Street, one of these phantoms, buttoned up in. an overcoat, and bearing an umbrella, accosted him in a very unphantomlike voice, and with a very iinphantom- like slap on the shoulder. " How are you, Marsh ? I thought I should come upon you here !" Charley turned round, and, with no particular ex- pression of rapture, recognized Captain Cavendish. " Good evening," he said, coldly ; u were you looking for me " The captain turned and linked his arm within his own. "I was. What became of you last night? We expected you at Prince Street." " I made another engagement." " You will be there to night, of course ? I owe you your revenge, you know." "Which means," said Charley, with a laugh, that sounded strange and bitter from him, " you will get me some thirty or forty dollars more in your debt !" " Talking of debt," said Captain Cavendish, in an in- different matter-of-fact tone, " could you oblige me with a trifle on account say twenty pounds ?" Charley silently produced his pocketbook, and handed over the twenty he had received from Nathalie a few days before. The nonchalant young officer pocketed it as coolly as if it had been twenty pence. " Thanks J One often needs a trifle of this sort on an occasion. Is this your house ? Who is that playing 2 Not your sister ?" They had halted in front of the cottage, and could ^ hear the sound of the piano from within. " It is Miss Rose, I presume," said Charley, in the same cold voice ; " will you come in 2" " Not now. Tou will be up at Prince Street for cer- tain then to-night ?" Charley nodded, and entered the house. At her own door stood Miss Catty Clowrie. She CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. 129 was often standing there ; and though she retained the captain's bow, it was after Charley she looked until he disappeared. There was no one in the sitting- room when he entered; his mother's rocking chair was vacant, and Miss Rose was playing and singing in the parlor touching the keys so lightly and singing so sweetly that it seemed more an echo of the wind and waves than any- thing else. The table was set for tea, and Betsy Ann was scouring knives in the kitchen, humming some dole- ful ditty at her work. There was a lounge under the window overlooking the bay, sullen and stormy to-night. Charley flung himself upon it, his arm across tho pillow, his face lying in it, and listened in a vague and dismal way to the music. The song was weird and mournful, truly an echo of the wailing wind and sea. " Come to supper, ma'am !" at this juncture shrilly pealed the voice of Betsy Ann at the foot of the stairs, to some invisible person above; *Mr. Charley's here, and the biscuit is getting cold." The song died away, as if it had drifted out on the gale surging up from the black bay, and Mrs. Marsh crept shivering down stairs. " Come in, Miss Rose," she said, looking in at the parlor door before entering the room ; "tea is ready, and Charley is here." Charley started up ; and, as he did so, the front door unceremoniously opened, and Nathalie, wrapped in a large shawl, and wearing a white cloud about her head, stepped in, to the surprise of all. " Gracious me ! Natty ! is it you ?" cried her mamma, in feeble consternation, "whatever has taken you out such an evening ?" " What's the matter with the evening ?" said Nathalie, kissing her and Miss Rose. " A little cold sea-fog is nothing new, that it should keep me in-doors. Good evening, Charley." " It's not a good evening," said Charley ; " it's a very bad one, arid yon deserve to get your death of cold for venturing out in it. Did the old lady send you f " No, indeed ! I had hard work to get off. Is tea 6* 130 CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. ready, mamma ? I have had no dinner, and am almost famished." Mi-s. Marsh was profuse in her sympathy. Another cup and plate were laid, and the quartet sat down to tea. It was wonderful how Nathalie's bright presence radiated the before gloomy room ; the laughing light of her violet eyes made sunshine of their own, and all her luxuriant golden hair, falling loose and damp, in curls short and long around her face and shoulders, never looked so much like silky sunbeams before. " How did you get on in school to-day ?" she was asking Miss Hose ; " I could not get down. The picnic must have disagreed with Mrs. Leroy ; for I never saw her so cross." " I should say all the cake, and pastry, and nastiness of that sort she devoured, would have disagreed with a horse," said Charley ; '* it was a sight only to see Laura Blair cramming her." u I got on very well," answered Miss Rose, smiling at Charley's remark, which was perfectly true ; " but the day seems long, Miss Marsh, when yqu do not visit us, and the children seem to think so too. I have got a ne\r music-pupil little Vattie Gates." " You will make your fortune, Miss Rose, if you are not careful," said Charley ; " eight dollars per quarter from each of those music-pupils, beside your school-salary. What do you mean to do with it all ?" " I should say rather she will work herself to death," said Nathalie. " Do you want to kill yourself, Miss Rose, that you take so many pupils ?" " Dear me ! I think it agrees with her," remarked Mrs. Marsh, languidly, stirring her tea ; " she is getting fat." Everybody laughed. Miss Rose was not getting very fat ; but she certainly had gained flesh and color since her advent in Speckport, though the small face was still rather pale, and the small brow sometimes too thoughtful and anxious. As they arose from table, Miss Clowrie came in with her crotcheting to spend the evening, Natty went to the piano, Miss Rose, with some very unfanciful- CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. 181 looking work in a dropsical work-basket, sat down at the window to sew wJiile the last gray ray of daylight lingered in the sky, and Charley lounged on the sofa, beside Catty. " What are you making, Miss Rose ?" inquired Miss Clowrie, looking curiously at the small black figure, drooping over the work, at the window. Miss Rose laughed, and threaded her needle. " You needn't ask," said Nathalie ; " clothes for all the poor in Speckport, of course. Why don't you become a Sister of Charity at once, Miss Winnie ?" " I came very near it one time," smiled Miss Rose ; " perhaps I may yet. I wish I could." There was no mistaking the sincerity of her tone. Nathalie shrugged her shoulders to her it looked like wishing for something very dreary and dismal indeed. The world seemed a very bright and beautiful place to the heiress of Redmon that foggy summer night. " Why don't you become one, then ?" asked Catty, who would have been very glad of it ; "I should tln'nk they would be pleased to get you." " I am not so sure of that ; I would be no great acqui- sition. But just at present there is a reason that renders it impossible. 5 ' Of course, no one could ask the reason, though all would have liked to know. When it grew too dark to sew or play, the lamp was lit, and they had cards, and it was nine when Nathalie arose to go. "Couldn't you stay all night, Natty?" asked her mother; "it's dreadfully foggy to go up to Redmon to-night." "If it were ten times as foggy, I should have to go. I don't mind it, though, in company with Charley and an umbrella." , She kissed them all good night, even Catty, in the hap- piness of her heart ; and, wrapped in her shawl and cloud, she took her brother's arm and started. The fog was thicker, and wetter, and colder than ever ; the night as wretched a one for a walk as could well be imagined, and the bleak sea wind blew raw in their faces all the way. 182 CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. " How confoundedly cold it is !" exclaimed Charley, " more like January than July. You will perish, Natty, before we get to Redmon ! You should not have come out this evening." " I wanted to talk to you, Charley, on a very important matter indeed !" Charley stared at her grave tone, but it all flashed upor him directly. Nathalie was used to talk to him more as a mother than a sister, in her superior woman's wisdom, and Charley was accustomed to take her lectures cheerfully enough ; but in the damp darkness his face flushed rebel- liously now. He would not speak again, and his sister, after waiting a moment, broke the silence herself. " It is about that girl, Charley ?" " What girl ?" inquired Mr. Marsh, rather sulkily. " Tou know well enough Cherrie Nettleby." " Well, what of Cherrie Nettleby ?" this time defiantly. " Charley, what do you mean by going with her as you do? " Nathalie," said Charley, mimicking her tone, " what do you mean by going with Captain Cavendish as you do ?" " My going with Captain Cavendish has nothing what- ever to do with it ; but if you want to know what I mean I mean to marry him !" " Nathalie, I don't want you to have anything to do with that man," Charley burst out passionately. "He is a villain !" "Charley!" " He is, I tell you ! You know nothing about him I do ! I tell you he is a villain !" " This is ungenerous of you, Charley," she calmly said ; " it is cowardly. Is not Captain Cavendish your friend f " A friend I could throttle with the greatest pleasure in life !" exclaimed Charley, savagely. "What has he done?"' " More than I would like to tell you more than you would care to hear ! All I have to say is, I would rather shoot you than see you his wife !" " You are slandering him !" said Nathalie, her passion CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. 133 rising in spite of herself. " Yon are trying to baffle me ; to keep me from talking of Cherrie, but I'll not be put off. You cannot you cannot mean to marry that girl." "Natty look here," he said, more gently, "I don't want to be disagreeable, but I cannot be dictated to in this ! I am a man, and must choose for myself. I have obeyed you all my life ; but in this you must let me be my own master." " You know what a name she has ! She is the talk of all Speckport !" " Is Speckport ever done talking ? "Wouldn't it slan- der an archangel, if it got the chancv ' " "But it is true in this instance she is all that Speck- port says an idle, silly, senseless, flirty, foolish, divssy, extravagant thing ! She has nothing in the wide world to recommend her but her good locks." "Neither has Captain Cavendish, if it comes to that !" " Charley, it is false! He is a gentleman by birth, rank, and education !" "Yes," said Charley, bitterly. "Nature did her best to make a gentleman of him, but I know street sweepers in Speckport ten times more of a gentleman than he ! I tell you he is corrupt to the core of his heart a spend- thrift and a fortune-tranter 1 If you were Miss Marsh, the school-teacher, as you were two or three years ag<>, lie would as soon ask Miss Jo Blake to be his wife as you !" "I don't doubt it," said Nathalie, quite calmly; '"he may not be able to aiford the luxury of a penniless bride, and for all that be no fortune-hunter. You can't shake my faith in him, Charley !" " You are blind !" Charley cried, vehemently. " I am telling you Heaven's truth, Natty, with no other motive than your good !" "We will drop the subject," said Nathalie, loftily, " and talk of you and Cherrie Nettleby 1" " We'll do nothing of the sort," replied Charley, reso- lutely ; "go your own way, Natty, if you will, and I will go mine ! The one marriage can be no madder than the other!" "And you will really many this girl i" 134 CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. " I really will, if she will have me !' Nathalie laughed a low and bitter laugh. " Have you ? Oh, there is little doubt of that, I fancy. Every one knows how she has been running after you this many a day !" " But there is doubt of it. Your tine Captain Caven- dish pursues her like her shadow." "Charley, I will not listen to another word," cried Nathalie, imperiously. " Your infatuation seems to have changed your very nature. Why, oh why, has this girl crossed your path ? If you wanted to marry, why could you not have chosen some one else ? Why could you not have chosen Miss Rose ?" Charley smiled under cover of the darkness. The question was absurd. Why could she not have chosen any of her other suitors, all good and honorable men ? Why could she not have chosen Captain Locksley, young, hand- some, rich, and the soul of integrity. He did not say so, however, and neither spoke again till the gate of Rechnon was reached. " Good night," Nathalie briefly said, her voice full of inward pain. " Good night, Natty," Charley replied, " and God bless you and," lowering his voice as he turned away " keep you from ever becoming the wife of Captain Cavendish !" He walked on and entered the Nettleby cottage, where he found Cherrie in the parlor alone, bending over a novel. Cherrie's welcome to her lover was uncommonly cordial, for she was ennuied nearly to death. She had expected Cap- tain Cavendish all the afternoon, and had been disappoint- ed. Had she known that officer was making arrangements for their speedy nuptials, she might perhaps have forgiven him ; and at that very moment, whilst talking to Charley of the time when she should be Mrs. Marsh, everything was arranged for her becoming, the very next week, Mrs. Captain George Cavendish. About live o'clock of that foggy July afternoon, Mr. Val Blake sat in his private room, in the office of the Speckport Sr-outer, his shirt-collar limp and wilted with the heat, his hair wildly disheveled, and his expression CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. 185 altogether bewildered and distracted. The table at which he sat was, as usual, heaped with MS., letters, books, buff envelopes, and newspapers ; and Mr. Blake was poring over some sheets of white ruled foolscap, closely written in a very cramp and spidery hand. It was a story .from " the fascinating pen of our gifted and talented contribu- tor 'Incognita,' whose previous charming productions have held spellbound hosts of readers," as the Spouter said, in announcing it the following week, and the title of the fascinating production was the " Ten Daughters of Dives." Miss Laura Blair had just finished reading the "Seven Loves of Mammon," by Mr. George Augustus Sala ; hence the title and the quaint style in which the thing was written. So extremely quaint and original in- deed was the style, that it soared totally beyond the com- prehension of all ordinary intellects, beginning in the most disconcertingly abrupt manner, and ending with a jerk, while you were endeavoring to make out what it was all about. " It's of no use trying," he murmured, pensively, " the thing is beyond me altogether. I'll put it in, hit or miss, or Laura will never forgive me ; and I dare say the women will make out what it means, though I can't make top or tail of it." There was a tap at the door as he arrived at this con- clusion, and Master Bill Blair, in a state of ink, and with a paper cap on his head, labeled witii the startling word "Devil" made his appearance, and announced that Cap- tain Cavendish was in the office and wanted to see him. "Tell him to come in," said Val, rather glad than otherwise of a chat by way of relaxation after his late severe mental labor." The captain accordingly came in, smoking a cigar, and presented his cigar-case the tirst thing to Val. That gen- tleman helped himself, and the twain puffed in concert, and discussed the foggy state of the weather and the pros- pects of the " Spouter." As this desultory conversation began to flag, and the weed smoked out, Mr. Blake re- membered he was in a hurry. "'I say, captain, you'll excuse me, won't you, if I 136 CAPTAIN CAVENDISH. tell yon I haven't mnch time to spare this evening. "We go press to to-morrow, anci I shall have to get to work." Captain Cavendish came out of a brown study he had fallen into, and lit another cigar. " I won't detain you long, Val. I know you're a good fellow, and would do me a favor if you could." Val nodded and lit a cigar also. " I want you to do me the greatest service, and I shall be forever your debtor." " Eight," said Val ; " let us hear what it is." " You won't faint, will you? I am going to be mar- ried." " Are yon ?" said Mr. Blake, no way. discomposed. " To whom P "To Cherrie Nettleby." Val did start this time, and stared with all his eyes. "To what? You're joking, ain't you? To Cherrie Nettleby!" " Yes, to Cherrie Nettleby, but on the cross you know, not on the square. Do }'ou comprehend ?" " Not a bit of it. I thought you were after Natty Marsh all the time." Captain Cavendish laughed. " You dear old daisy, you're as innocent as a new-born babe. I'm not going to marry Cherrie in earnest, only sham a marriage, and I cannot do it without your help. The girl is ready to ran away with me any day; but to make matters smooth for her, I want her to think, for a while at least, she is my wife. You understand now ?'' " I understand," said Val, betraying, I regret to say, not the slightest particle of emotion at this expose of vil- lainy ; '' but it's an ugly-looking job, Cavendish." " Not us bad us if she ran away with me in cold blood for her I mean and she is sure to do it. You know the kind of girl pretty little Cherrie is, Blake ; so you will be doing her rather a service than otherwise hi helping me on. If you won't help, you know 1 can easily get sonic one who will, and I trust to your honor to keep silent. But come, like a good fellow, help me out." CAPTAIN CA VENDISH. 187 " "What do you want me to do ? Not to play clergy- man r ' No ; but to get some one a stranger to Cherrie and I consequently a stranger in Speckport, who will tie the knot, and on whose discretion you may depend. You shall play witness." Val put his hands in his pockets and mused. "Well," he said, after a pause, "it's a horrid shame, but rather than that she should ran off with you, without any excuse at all, I'll do it. How soon do you want the thing to come oil' ?" " As early as possible next week say Tuesday night. It will be better after night, she won't be so apt to notice deficiencies." Val mused again. " Cherrie's a Methodist herself; at least, she sits under the teaching of the .Reverend Mr. Drone, who used to be rather an admirer of hers before he got married. The chapel is in an out-of-the-way street, and I can feign an excuse for getting the key from Drone. Suppose it takes place there '{' ' Captain Cavendish grasped his hand, and gave it a friendly vise-like grasp. " Val, you're a trump ! You shall have my everlasting gratitude for this." " Next Tuesday night, then," responded Val, taking the officer's rapture stoically enough. " And now I must beg you to leave me, for I have bushels of work on hand." Captain Cavendish, expressing his gratitude once more, lounged into the drear and foggy night. How lucky for the peace of the community at large, we cannot read each other's thoughts. The young captain's ran something after this fashion : "1 always knew Blake was a spoon, but I never thought he was such an infernal scoundrel as this. Why, he is worse than J. am ; for I really am in love with the girl, and he does his rascality without a single earthly motive. Well, it's all the better for me. I'll have Cherrie as sure as a gun." 138 THE WEDDING. Mr. Blake, in the seclusion of his room, leaned back in his chair, and indulged himself in a low and quiet laugh, before commencing work. " I said I owed you one," he soliloquized, throwing away the stump of his second cigar, "for leading Charley Marsh astray, and now's the time to pay you. If I don't serve you out this go, Captain Cavendish, iny name's not Valentine Blake 1" CHAPTER XII. IN WHICH THE WEDDING COMES OFF. HE foggy day had ended in a stormy night. Black clouds had hurried wildly over the troubled face of the sky ; a dull peal of thunder, booming in the distance, had been its herald. Rain, and thunder, and lightning had it all its own way until about midnight, when the sullen clouds had drifted slowly, and the moon showed her fair, sweet face in her place. A day of brightest sunshine, ac- companied by a high wind, had been the result ; and in its morning refulgence, Captain Cavendish was sauntering along the Redmon road. Not going to the big brick house, surely : Nathalie had told him the picnic day of Mrs. Leroy's growing dislike to visitors, and the hint had been taken. Perhaps it was only for a constitutional, or to kill time ; but there he was, lounging in the teeth of the gale, and whistling an opera air as he went. The Nettleby cottage, fairly overrun with its luxuriance of sweetbrier, and climbing roses, and honeysuckle, was a pretty sight, and well worth looking at, and perhaps that was the reason Captain Cavendish stood still to admire it. The windows, all wreathed with crimson and pink roses, were open ; and at one sat Cherrie, in all her beauty, like THE WEDDING. 139 a picture in a frame. The crimson July roses about her were not brighter than her cheeks at the sight of him, and her starry eyes flashed a welcome few men would not have coveted. How prettily she was dressed, too knowing well he would come, the gypsy ! in pink muslin ; her bar* neck and arms rising plump and rounded out of the gauziness ; all her shining jetty curls flashing about, and sprays of rosebuds twisted through them. How the pale, blue-eyed, snowy-skinned, fair-haired prettiness of Nathalie dimmed in the young officer's ardent imagination beside this tropical, gorgeous loveliness of the sunny South. He opened the little gate, and was at the window before she arose. ' My black-eyed fairy ? You look perfectly dazzling this morning. Who is in ?" " No one," said Cherrie, showing her pearl-white teeth in her deepening smile. " The boys are off flshing ; father's up working in Lady Leroy's garden, and Ann's gone to town for groceries." " Allah be praised ! I may come in, then, my darling, may I not ?" Cherrie's answer was to throw the door wide open ; and the young officer entered and took a seat, screened from the view 01 passe'rs-by by the green gloom of the vines. That green twilight of roses and honeysuckles was just the thing for lo /ers to talk in ; and Captain Caven- dish had a great deal to say to Cherrie, and to all he said Cherrie had nothing to give but rapturous assents, and was altogether in the seventh heaven, not to say a few miles beyond that lofty elysium. It was all arranged at last as the young gentleman wished, and, lolling easily on the sofa, he went off on another tack. " Are you often up in Eedmon House, Cherrie ?" he asked, stringing the black ringlets about his fingers. Cherrie, seated on a low stool beside his couch, nestled luxuriously, with her head on his knee. " Pretty often, George." It had come to that, you eee. "Why?" " Because because I think you might find out some- 140 THE WEDDING. thing for me. I have a fancy, do you know, thai the old lady doesn't over and above like me." " I know she don't," said Cherrie, decidedly. " She can't bear you, nor Midge either. They scold Miss Natty like sixty every time you go there." " The deuce they do ! Suppose she fancied mind, I only say fancied I wanted to marry Miss Natty, do you suppose she would consent ?" " Consent ! She'd pack Miss Natty bag and baggage out of the house, more likely. She'd die before she'd give in, would Mrs. Leroy." Captain Cavendish fell to musing, and mused so long that Cherrie glanced up from under her black lashes, wondering what made his handsome face look so grave. " What are you thinking about 3" she pouted ; " Miss Natty, I suppose." " No, my little black-eye. I was thinking how you could do something for me." "What is it?" " Couldn't you listen ; couldn't you manage to hear sometimes what Mrs. Leroy says to Natty, when they are talking of me ?" Miss Nettleby was not at all shocked at this proposal ; but I suppose the reader is. I know very well it is dis- graceful in one calling himself a gentleman, and altogether dishonorable ; but Captain Cavendish's ideas of honor, and yours and mine, are rather different. Had any one called him a liar or a swindler, or thrown a decanter at his head, or a tumbler of wine in his face, at the mess- table, or elsewhere, he woukl have considered his honor forfeited forever, if he did not stand up to shoot and be shot at by the offending party, as soon as possible after- ward. In one word, not to mince matters, Captain Caven- dish, handsome and elegant as he was, was an infidel and a villain, and you may as well know it first as last. "I dare say I can," wa. Che trie's reply to hi? pro- posal. " 1 am up there often enough, and I know an the ins and outs of the place. I'll do what I can." Captain Cavendish rewarded her, as lovers do reward THE WEDDING. 141 one another, I am told, and shortly after arose to take hia leave. Miss Nettleby escorted him to the gate. "You won't forget Tuesday nig] it, Cherrie," he said, turning to go. " It's not very likely." said Cherrie ; " but I'll see you again before that won't I, George ?" " Of course, rny darling ! Take care of yourself, and good-bye." He sauntered up the road at an easy pace ; and Cher- rie lingered at the gate, admiring his tall and elegant figure, and thinking, with an exultant heart beating, what a happy and lucky girl she was. Forget Tuesday night ! the night that was to make her his bride. She quite laughed aloud at the thought, in the glee of her heart. He was still in sight, this Adonis of hers, and she still lingered at the gate watching him. Lingering the^e, she saw something not quite so pleasant as she could wish. Miss Nathalie Marsh, in a dress of blue barege, a black silk mantle, and a pretty white hat trimmed with azure ribbon, its long white plume tipped with blue, and set jauntily on her flowing sunny curls, came down the avenue from the house, opened the gate, and stepped into the road, and confronted her (Cherrie's) beloved. Cherrie saw him start eagerly forward, but could not hear^what he said, and perhaps for her peace of mind it was just as well. " My darling Nathalie ! the fortuna-.e chance I have been wishing for has come then ! Are you going to town?" Nathalie, smiling and blushing, shyly held out her hand. " Good morning, Captain Cavendish ! I " but he interposed reproachfully. " Captain Cavendish, from you, Nathalie ; I thought you knew my name." " Perhaps I have forgotten it," she laughed. " What are you doing up here, George," a little hesitatingly, though, and with a vivid flush, not half so glibly as NettL-by had uttered it ten minutes before. " Were you going to call ?'' 142 THE WEDDING. " Hardly remembering the hint you gave me the other day. But though I could not storm the castle of my fairy-princess, it was, pleasant, at least, to reconnoiter the outside, and I hoped, too, for the lucky chance that lias arrived. Am 1 1<> have the happy privilege of escort- ing you into town ?" Nathalie cast a half-apprehensive glance behind, but Midge was not on the watch. Had she known how dearly she was to pay for that walk for that escort, rather she had hardly answered with that happy, careless laugh. "Yes, you may have that happy privilege! What did you do with yourself all day yesterday in the fog ?" Cavendish thought of what he had been doing in Val's office, but he did not tell Miss Marsh. Cherrie was still standing by the cottage gate, and they were passing it now, looking like a black-eyed queen, under the arches of scarlet runners and morning-glories. " A pretty place," said Captain Cavendish, " and that girl at the gate has a beautiful face. They tell me she has turned half the heads in Speckport." Nathalie's fair brow contracted ; not in jealousy, she never thought of that, but at the recollection of Charley. She made no answer. Her attention was attracted by a lady who was coming toward them. A young lady, nice- ly dressed, who stepped mincingly along, with a sweet smile on her sullen face. " What brings Catty Clowrie up this way, I wonder ?" exclaimed Nathalie, bowing as she passed, while the cap- tain lifted his hat. "It is ever so long since I have seen her on this road before. I hope she is not going to Redmon." But Miss Clowrie was going to Redmon. She had not started with that idea ; it had never entered her head until she met the lovers; but she turned and looked after them with a smile of evil menace on her face. " I hate her !" was her thought. " I hate her ! But for her I might have had him once. Now he is that Net- tleby girl's beyond hope. I wish Miss Marsh joy of her sister-in-law." "That Nettleby girl" still stood at the gate. Miss THE WEDDING. 148 Clowrie bestowed the light of her smile upon her in pass- ing, still deep in thought. " They say in Speckport Lady Leroy has forbidden Captain Cavendish the house, and threatens to disinherit Natty if she keeps his company. Perhaps she does not know of this. I think I'll go up and tell her. One good turn deserves another." Midge answered the yotmg lady's knock, and admitted her to the presence of Lady Leroy. That mummy she found in her usual state of wrappings, and very ready for a little gossip. " Why don't you go out more, Mrs. Leroy," insinuated Catty ; "it would do you good, 1 am sure." " No, it wouldn't !" snapped the old lady. "It does me harm. I hain't got over that picnic yet." " But I should think you would tind it very lonely here, with Nathalie away so much. I hear she spends most of her time in town of late." "So she does," Lady Leroy screamed. "She will go in spite of me. If it ain't the school, it's a party or a picnic something or other ; but she's gallivanting all the time." " I met her just now," remarked Catty, in a careless way, " with Captain Cavendish. He had been waiting for her, I think, at the gate." " What ?" shrieked Lady Leroy, " who with, or who did you say ?" "Captain Cavendish," repeated Miss Clowrie, looking surprised. " I thought you said they were engaged ! At least, every one says they are." Lady Leroy fell back, gasping, clawing the air in her struggle with her ten talon-like lingers. Catty, quite alarmed, started up to assist her. Lady Leroy grasped her by the wrist with a fierce grip. "You're sure of this? You're sure of this?" she huskily whispered, still gasping. "You're sure she was walking with him? You're sure she is engaged to him?"' " I am sure she was walking with him," said Catty ; " and every one says she is engaged to him ; and what 144 TEE WEDDING every one says must be true. It's very strange yon did not know it." Lady Leroy "grinned horribly a ghastly smile." "I do know it now ! I told her not to go with him I told her not to go with him and this is the way she obeys me!" She fell to clawing the air again, in a manner so very uncomfortable to look at, that Miss Clowrie arose, with gome precipitation, to go. " They say he is a fortune-hunter and very extrava- gant, and goes after her because she is your heiress ; but I'm sure I don't know. Good morning, Mrs. Leroy. I am glad to see you looking so well." With which the fair Miss Clowrie bowed herself out, smiling more than Midge had ever seen her before, and quite laughing, in fact, when she got out of doors. " I think I have paid a little of my debt, Miss Natty," she thought. " I'll pay it all, my dear, I hope, before either of us die." In the silent solitude of her lonely room, Lady Leroy had ample time to nurse her wrath before the return of her ward. It was nearly noon before that young lady reached home, her pretty face glowing with her rapid walk. " Midge," was her first breathless question, " has Catty Clowrie been here this morning?" Midge answered in the affirmative, and Nathalie's heart sank. All the way up-stairs she was preparing her- self for a violent outburst of wrath ; but, to her astonish- ment, Lady Leroy was quite tranquil. She glanced very hard at her, it is true, and her fingers were clawing empty air very viciously, but her voice was not loud nor angry. " You're very late, aren't you ?" she said. ' What kept you?" "1 ran down to see mamma. Miss Rose told me she was not very well; but I hurried home as fast as I could. I'll make out those bills now." " Let the bills wait awhile," said the old lady. " I have something to tell you." THE WEDDING. 145 This was an ominous commencement, and Nathalie looked at her in some dread. " Who was it you walked into town with this morn- ing ?" she asked, glaring harder than ever. Catty had told, then. All the blood in Nathalie's body seemed blazing in her face, as she answered : " It was Captain Cavendish. I chanced to meet him near the ga-te, and I could not very well help his walking back to town with me." " Didn't you promise me," said Lady Leroy, still speak- ing with astonishing calmness, but clawing the air tiercely with both hands, " when I forbade you going with him, that you would walk with him no more ?" "No," said Nathalie. "I said he would come here no more, and neither he shall." " Until I am dead, I suppose," said the old woman, with a laugh that was very unpleasant to hear, "and you have all my money. Answer me one question, Natty. Are you engaged to him ? Don't tell a lie." " No," said Nathalie, proudly, " 1 am not in the habit of telling deliberate lies. I am !" Lady Leroy gave a shrill gasp, her fingers working convulsively, but the spasm was over in a moment. She sat up again ; and Nathalie, hurriedly and imploringly, went on : " Dear Mrs. Leroy, don't be angry ! Indeed, you mis- judge Captain Cavendish ; he is a good and honorable man, and respects you much. Dear Mrs. Leroy, consent to our engagement and I will be the happiest girl in the world !" She went over and put her arms round the mummy's neck, kissing the withered face. The old woman pushed her away with another of her unpleasant laughs. " There there, child ! do as you please. I knew you would do it anyway, only I won't have him here mind. I won't have him here ! Now, get to work at them bills. What's the matter with your mother ?" " Sick headache," said Nathalie, chilled, she scarcely knew why, by the old woman's manner. " She wanted 7 146 TEE WEDDING. me to stay with her this afternoon ; but I told her I was afraid you could not spare me." Mrs. Leroy mused a few moments, while Nathalie wrote, and then looked up. "I'll spare you this afternoon, Natty, since your mother is sick. You can take the bills in with you and collect them. If you are back by nine, it will do." Nathalie was so amazed, she dropped her pen and sat etaring, quite unable to return a word of thanks, and uofc quite certain she was not dreaming. " Get on, get on !" exclaimed Lady Leroy, in her cus- tomary testy tone. "You'll never have the bills done at that rate." Nathalie finished the bills mechanically, and with a mind far otherwise absorbed. "Then she went to her room, and put on her hat and mantle for another walk to Speckport ; but all the time that uneasy feeling of doubt and uncertainty remained. Mrs. Leroy had acted so strangely, had been so ominously quiet and unlike herself, and had not consented. Nathalie came in dressed for town, and bent over her, until her long bright curls swept the yellow old face. "Dear Mrs. Leroy!" she pleadingly said, "I cannot feel satisfied until you actually say you agree to this en- fagemem. Do do, if you love your Natty, for all my appiness depends upon it. Do say you consent, and I will never offend you again as long as 1 live ?" Lady Leroy glared up at her with green, and glitter- ing, and wicked old eyes. " If I don't consent, will you break off, Natty ?" " You know I cannot. I love him with all my heart. Oh, Mrs. Leroy ! remember you were once young your- self, and don't be hard !" Looking at that dry and withered old antediluvian, it was hard to imagine her ever young harder still to imag- ine her knowing anything about the fever called love. She pushed Nathalie impatiently away. " Get along with you, and don't bother !" was her cry. " I told you to have your way, and you ought to be satisfied. You won't give in to me, but you'd like me to THE WEDDING. 147 give in to you wouldn't you ? Go along, and don't tor- ment me !" When Mrs. Leroy's cracked voice grew shrill and piercing, and her little eyes gleamed greenish flame, Nathalie knew better than to irritate her by di-.'obedience. She turned to go, with a strange sinking of the heart. " I will be back by nine," she said, simply, as she quitted the room. Miss Nettleby, seated at her cottage door, under the roses and sweetbrier, industriously stitcliing on some gos- samer article to be worn next Tuesday evening, looked up in some surprise at sight of Miss Marsh on her way to Speckport, for the second time that day. " Going back to town, Miss Natty ?" she called out, familiarly. Miss Natty's answer was a cold and formal bow, as she passed on. Cherrie dropped her work and started up. " I'll go to the house and have a talk with Granny Grumpy herself before she comes back. Perhaps I may fiud out something. I wonder what sort of humor she is in." Lady Leroy was in uncommonly serene humor for her. Before Nathalie had been ten minutes gone, she had shouted for Midge ; and that household treasure appear- ing, with sleeves rolled up over her elbows, and in a very soapy and steamy state, had desired her to array herself in other garments, and go right away into Speckport. " Go into Speckport !" cried Midge, in shrill indigna- tion. " I'll see you boiled alive first, ma'am, and that's the long and short of it. Go into town, wash-day, indeed ! What do you want in town, ma'am ?" " I want Mr. Darcy that's what I want !" vehe- mently replied her mistress. " I want Mr. Darcy, you ugly little imp ; and if you don't go straight after him, I'll heave this at your head, I will !" " This " was a huge black case bottle, which trifle of glass the lady of liedmon brandished in a manner that made even Midge draw back a few paces in alarm. " I want Mr. Darcy on important business, I do 1" screamed Lady Leroy. " And tell him not to let the 148 THE WEDDING. grass grow under his feet on the way. Be off, will you?" " "Why didn't you tell Miss Natty ?" sulkily said Midge " Because she isn't coming back till nine o'clock, that's why ; and I can't wait. Well, what do you want, young woman ?" This last polite interrogation was addressed to Miss Nettleby, who stood smiling in the doorway, in all the splendor of her charms. " I just ran up to see how you were," said Cherrie. " If you want any errand done in the town, Mrs. Leroy, I'll go. I can walk fsfcter than Midge, you know." " So she can," cried Midge ; " let her go, ma'am ; I won't." With which Midge waddled off, making the hall quake with her airy tread. Mrs. Leroy looked with un- usual graciousness at the young lady. " Will you go, Cherrie, and be quick about it. Tell Darcy to hurry ; you can drive back with him, you know." Cherrie wanted nothing better, and was off like a dart, scenting a secret, and determined to get at the bot- tom of it. " What does she want with her lawyer, I wonder?" soliloquized Cherrie, on the road. " I'll find out. Miss Natty's out of the way, and Midge will be down in the kitchen. I'll find out." Mr. Darcy was one of the best lawyers in the town, and was Lady Leroy's man of business ever since her advent in Speckport. Cherrie found him in his office a handsome and gentlemanly old man, with gray hair, whiskers, and mustache, and a clear, bright eye. " What can the old lady want 2" he wondered, aloud, putting on his hat ; " she didn't tell you, I suppose ? Will you drive back with me, Miss Cherrie 2" Miss Cherrie consented, and they had a very pleasant drive together, the old gentleman chaffing her about her beaux, and wanting to know when she was going to stop breaking hearts, and get married. Cherrie did not say "next Tuesday," she only laughed, and desired to be set down at her own gate. TJTK WKDDIXd. 149 There slie watched the lawyer out of sight, and then went deliberately after him. JNot to the front door, how- ever, but to a back window she knew of, easily lifted, through it, up-stairs on tiptoe, and into Nathalie's room, which she locked on the inside. Nathalie's room adjoined Lady Leroy's, and the wall being thin, the conversation of the lawyer and the old woman was distinctly audible. Cherrie sat down on the floor, with her ear glued to the wall, and listened. It was a prolonged and excited talk, the lawyer angrily protesting, Mrs. Leroy angrily deter- mined ; and it ended in Mr. Darcy's yielding, but gram- blingly, and still under protest. Cherrie had fairly held her breath while listening astonishment and delight pictured on her face. There was a long silence; Mr. Darcy was writing. In half an hour his task was completed, and he read it aloud to the mistress of Redmon. " That will do," said Lady Leroy, " I'm glad it's over." " Do you want that paper witnessed ? Call Midge." Mr. Darcy opened the door, and shouted through the darkness for Midge, as Captain Cavendish had once done before. Midge made her appearance, as soapy and steamy as ever. " Write your name here," said Mr. Darcy, abruptly pointing to the place. " What is it T inquired Midge* " That's no affair of yours, is it ? Sign it, will you ?" Midge took the pen as if it weighed half a ton or so, set her head very much on one side, thrust her tongue a little out of one corner of her mouth, and with much labor and painstaking, affixed a blotted autograph Pris- cilla Short. " That will do," said Mr. Darcy ; " we want another. Call in old Nettleby he can write." Midge, casting a parting look, of much complacence at her performance, departed on her errand, and old Nettleby coming in shortly after, affixed another blotted signature. Mr. Darcy dispatched him about his business, folded the document, put it in his pocket-book, and took his hat and cane to go. On the threshold he paused. 150 AFTER THE WEDDING. " This has been done under the influence of anger, Mrs. Leroy," he said ; " and you will think better of it, and send me word to destroy it before long. I consider it most unjust exceedingly unjust altogether unjustifi- able ! Good afternoon, ma'am." Cherrie waited in her hiding-place until she heard the hall door close after him, then stole noiselessly out, down- stairs, through the window, and gained her own home, unobserved. What had she heard ? Her face was flushed, her eyes bright, her whole manner strangely excited. She could not keep still she walked ceaselessly to and from the gate, straining her eyes in the direction of Speckport. " Why don't he come ! Why don't he come 1" she kept repeating, hurriedly. "Oh, what will he say to this?" CHAPTER AFTEE THE WEDDING. KIST KETTLEBY, busy in the culinary depart- ment, never remembered seeing her restless sister so exceedingly restless as on this after- noon. When the clock struck six, and old Mr. Nettleby plodded home from his day's work, and the two young Mr. Nettleby's came whistling from town, and tea was ready, Ann came out to call her to partake. But Cherrie impatiently declined to partake ; and still waited and watched, while the sunset was burn- ing itself out of the purple sky, and the cinnamon roses drooped in the evening wind. The last amber and crim- son flush was paling behind the blue western hills, when he, so long waited for, came up the dusty road, twirling a cane in his hand, and smoking a cigar. The unspeakable beauty and serenity of the summer twilight was no more AFTER THE WEDDING. 151 to him tliaii to her who watched at the vine- wreathed gate. A handsome man and a pretty girl each was far more to the taste of the other than aU the beauty of sky and earth. Right opposite the cottage were the dark, silent cedar woods. The moment he came in sight, Cherrie opened the gate, motioning him to follow, struck into the narrow footpath, winding among the woods. Captain Cavendish followed, and found her sitting on a little knoll, under the tree. " I have been watching for you this ever so long," she breathlessly began ; " I thought you would never come ! I have something to tell you, and I daren't tell you in the house, for father and the boys are there." Captain Cavendish leaned against a tree, puffed his cigar, and looked lazily down at her. " Well, petite, what is it ?" " Oli, it's something dreadfully important. It's about Miss Marsh." The young captain threw away liis ci^ar, and took a seat beside Cherrie, interes^pd at once. He put his arm round her waist, too, but this is by-the-way. " About Miss Marsh '{ Have you been listening ?" Cherrie gave him an account how she had gone for Mr. Darcy, and hidden afterward in Nathalie's room. " My clever little darling ! And what did you hear?" " You never could guess ! O my goodness," cried Cherrie, clasping her hands, " won't Miss Natty be in a passion, when she finds it out." " Will she, though ? Let us hear it, Cherrie." "Well," said 1 Cherrie, "you know Miss Natty was to bo heiress of Redmon, and have all Lady Leroy's money when she dies 'f ' "Yes! well?" " Well, she isn't to be any longer ! Lady Leroy made a new will this afternoon, and Miss Natty is disinherited !" Captain Cavendish started with something like an oath. " Cherrie ! are you sure of this ?" " Certain sure f" said Cherrie, with a look and tone there was no doubting. "I heard every word of it her 152 AFTER THE WEDDING. telling him so first, and him reading the will afterward and father and Midge signed it !" " The devil !" said Captain Cavendish between his teeth ; " but what put such a freak in the old hag's head?" " You !" said Cherrie. I!" " Yes just you ! She told Mr. Darcy Natty was en- gaged to you, and would not give you up, all she could say; so she meant to disinherit her. She said Nathalie should never know, unless she married you before she was dead if she didn't, she shouldn't find it out until she was in her grave, and then you would desert her when you found out she was poor, and Nathalie would be rewarded for her disobedience !" Captain Cavendish's handsome face wore a scowl so black, and the oath he swore was so dreadful, that even Cherrie shrank away in something like terror. " The old hag ! I could throttle her if I had her here ! Cherrie, who did she leave her money to ?" " To her brother or, in case of his death, to his heirs ; and five pounds to Natty to b^uy a mourning ring." " Did you hear her brother's name ?" " Yes, but I forget ! It was Harrington, or Harrison, or something like that. Mr. Darcy scolded like every- thing, and said it was unjust ; but Lady Leroy didn't seem to mind him. Isn't it good I listened '?" "Cherrie! Cherrie! Cherrie!" called Ann Nettleby, " Where are you, Cherrie ? There's somebody in the house wants you !" " I must go !" said Cherrie, rising. " You stay here, BO Ann won't see you. Will you be up to-morrow ?" " Yes," said Captain Cavendish ; and Cherrie flitted away rapidly in the growing dusk. For once he was glad to be rid of Cherrie glad to be calm and think, and the late-rising moon was high in the sky before he left the wood, and walked back to Speckport. Cherrie's visitor turned out to be Charley Marsh, who received the reverse of a cordial welcome from his fickle- minded lady-love, who was more than a little provoked at his shortening her interview with one she liked better. AFTER THE WEDDING. 153 She seated herself by the window, with her eyes fixed on the cedar wood, rapidly blackening now, waiting for her lover to emerge ; but when his, tall dark figure did at length stride out through the. dark path, night had fairly fallen, and it was too late to see what expression his face wore. Whatever the young Englishman's state of mind had been on leaving the wood that night, it was serene as mood could be when, next morning, Sunday, Miss Nettleby, en grande tenue, gold chain and all, made her appearance in Speckport, and met him as she turned out of Redrnon road. Miss Nettleby was going to patronize the cathedral this morning, confirmation was to take place, with all the magnificent and poetical ceremonies of the Catholic Church, and Cherrie would not have missed it for the world. Neither would Captain Cavendish, who went partly from curiosity, partly to kill time, partly to show himself in full uniform, and partly to hear Nathalie Marsh play and sing. Out of the great organ she was drawing such inspiring strains as Captain Cavendish thought he had never heard before ; rolling out in volumes of har- mony over the ears of people below, and grand and grateful were the notes the instrument gave forth to her master-hand. In front of the altar all the youthful aspir- ants for confirmation were seated, tiie girls robed in snowy white, and wearing vails and wreaths on their bowed heads, like young brides. But now the bishop, in mitre and chasuble, with a throng of attendant priests, in splendid vestments, preceded by a score of acolytes in scarlet soutanes, and white lace surplices, bearing candles and crozier, are all on the altar, and the choir have burst forth as with one voice, into the plaintive cry " Kyrie Eleison," and pontifical high massh as begun. High over all that swelling choir, high, clear and sweet, one soprano voice arises, the voice of the golden-haired organist : " Gloria in Excelsis !" Something in the deep solemnity of the scene, in the inspiring music, in the white- robed and fiower- crowned girls, in the silent devotion of the thousands around him, stirred a feeling in the soul of the man, that he had never felt since, in early boyhood, before he knew 7* .154 AFTER THE! WEDDING. Eton or Volt lire, he had knelt at his mother's knee, and learned there his childish prayers. He forgot, for a brief while, his wickedness and his worldliness, forgot the black- eyed girl by his side, and the blue-eyed girl whose voice vibrated through those lofty aisles, and, with dreamy eyes, and a heart that went back to that old time, listened to the sermon of the aged and white-haired priest, grown gray in the service of that God whom he, a poor atom of the dust, dared deride. It was one of those moments in which the great Creator, in his infinite compassion for his lost sheep, goes in search of us to lead us back to the fold, in which our good angel flutters his white wings about us, and tries to lift us out of the slime in which we are wallowing. But the sermon was over, the benediction given, the last voluntary was playing, and the vast crowd were pouring out. Captain Cavendish took his hat and went out with the rest ; and before he had fairly passed through the cathedral gates was his old, worldly, infidel self again, and was pouring congratulations and praise into the too-willing ears of Nathalie Marsh, on her admirable performances, while Charley went home with Cherrie. All that day, and the next, and the next, Captain Cavendish never came near He- anon, or the pretty cottage where the roses and sweetbriers grew ; but Mr. Johnston, a pleasant-spoken and dapper young cockney, without an h in his alphabet, and the captain's confidential valet, came back and forth with messages, and took all trouble and suspicion off his master. Neither had Miss Nettleby made her appearance in Speckport; she had spent the chief part of her time about the red-brick house, but had learned nothing further by all her eavesdropping. In a most restless and excited state of mind had the young lady been ever since Monday morning, in a sort of inward fever that grew worse and worse with every passing hour. She got up and sat down, and wandered in and out, and tried to read, and sew, and net, and play the accordion, and threw down each impatiently, after a few moments' trial. She sat down to her meals and got up without eating any- thing ; her cheeks burned with a deep, steady fever-red, her eyes had the unnatural brightness of the same disease, AFTER THE WEDDING. 155 and Ann stared at her, and opined she was losing her wits. In rain and gloom the wedding-day dawned at last. Cherrie's fever was worse she wandered from room to room of the cottage all day long, the fire in her eyes and the hectic on her cheek more brilliant than ever. The sky was like lead, the wind had a warning wail in its voice, and the rain fell sullenly and ceaselessly. But the rain could not keep the girl in-doors ; she went out and wan- dered around in it all, returning dripping wet, three or four times, to change her drenched clothes. The girls had the cottage to themselves ; old Nettleby was out in the shed, mending his gardening-tools, and the boys were in Speckport. ^The dull day was ending in a duller and rainier twilight, and Ann Nettleby was bustling about the tidy kitchen, getting tea, and wondering if Cherrie had fone to bed in her room up-stairs, she had been so quiet M* the last half-hour. She did not go up to see ; but set the tea to draw, laid the table, and lit the lamp. The wet twilight had now closed in, in a black and dismal night, when Ann heard a carriage stop at the gate, and, a mo- ment after, a loud knock at the front door. Before she could open it, some person without did <>, and Ann saw Mr. Val Blake, wrapped in a mackintosh, and waiting at the gate a cab, with a lighted lump. " How are you, Ann ?" inquired Mr. Blake. " Is Cherrie in ?" " Yes, here I am !" a voice called out, and Cherrie her- self came running down stairs, her heart beating so fast and thick she could hardly speak. " I thought you would like a drive this evening, Cher- rie," said Val ; " it's wet, but you won't mind it in the cab, and I'll fetch you back before ten. Bun and wrap up and come along." It was not the nrst time Ann Nettleby had heard such impromptu invitations given and accepted, and it. was none of her business to interfere. Cherrie was off like a Hash, and down again directly, in out-door dress, her vail down, to hide her flushed and excited face. Nettleby, standing in the cottage-door, watched 156 AFTER TEE WEDDING. the cab drive away through the rainy night, and then, closing the door, went back to the kitchen, to give her father his tea. She took her own with him, setting the teapot back on the stove, to keep hot for "her brothel's. Old Nettleby fell asleep immediately after tea, with his 'pipe in his mouth, and Ann went back to her netting, wondering once more what Cherrie was about, and wish- ing she could have such fine times as her elder sister. Could she only have seen in some magic mirror what was at that moment going on in a humble little Wesleyan chapel in a retired street of the town! The building dimly lighted by one nickering candle ; a minister, or what looked like one, in white neckcloth and clerical suit of black; the tall and distinguished man, wearing a shroud- ing cloak, and the little girl, who trembled and quivered BO fearfully, standing before him, while he pronounced them man and wife ; and that other tall young man, with his hands in his coat-pockets, listening and looking on 1 Could Ann Nettleby only have seen it all, and known that her pretty sister was that very night a bride ! Val Blake was certainly the soul of punctuality. As the clock on the kitchen-mantel was striking ten, the cab stopped once more at the cottage-door, and she heard his unceremonious voice bidding Cherrie good-night. Ann opened the door, and Cherrie, her vail still down, brushed past her without saying a word, and flitted up the staircase to her own room. It was half an hour later when Ann Nettleby's two brothers came, dripping like water-dogs, home from town ; and Ann having admitted them, went yawningly up-stairs to bed. " I say, father," said Rob Nettleby, pulling off his wet jacket, " was there company up at .Redinon to-day ?" ; ' No," replied the old man. " Why ?" " Oh, because we met a carriage tearing by just now, as if Old Nick was driving. I wonder what it was about 2" MINING THE GROUND. 1W CHAPTER XIV. MINING THE GROUND. ISS CHERRIE NETTLEBY was not a joung lady of very deep feeling, or one likely to be long overcome by romantic emotion of any sort. Therefore, before a week stood between her and that rainy July night, she was all her own self again, and that night seemed to have come and g:me out of her life, and left no trace behind it. She was herrie Nettleby still, not Mrs. Captain Cavendish ; she lived in the cottage instead of the handsome suite of apart- ments the elegant young officer occupied in the best hotel in Speckport. She flaunted in the old gay way through her native town, and held her usual evening levee of young men in the cottage-parlor as regularly as the evening came round. It did seem a little strange to her at first that marriage, which makes such a change in the lives of other girls, should make so little in hers. She never doubr.t-d for a single second that she was really and legally his wife, and Val Blake kept his own counsel. The captain told her that he would resign his commission or exchange into the first homeward-bound regiment ; and meantime she was to be a good girl and keep their secret inviolably. She was to encourage Charley Marsh still -poor Charley! while he every day played the devoted to Nathalie. Cherrie's wedding night had been nearly the last of July. The crimscn glory of an August sunset lay on the climbing roses, the sweetbrier and honeysuckle arches of the cottage, and was turning its windows into sheets of red gold. The sun, a crimson globe, was dropping in an oriflamme of indescribable gorgeousuess behind the tree- tops; and at all this tropical richness of light and color- ing, Cherrie, leaning over her father's garden-gate, looked. There were not many passers-by to look at that hot 158 MINING THE UKOUND. August evening ; but presently up the dusty road carne a young man, well-dressed and well-looking. Cherrie knew nim, and greeted him with a gracious smile, for it was Mr. Johnston, Captain Cavendish's servant. Mr. Johnston, with a look of unqualified admiration at her dark, bright face, took off his hat. " Good-evening, Miss Nettleby. Ain't it shocking 'ot ? Been to the picnic to-day ?" Cherrie nodded. " 'Ad a good time, I 'ope. "Weren't you nearly melted with the 'eat?" "Yes, it was warm," said Cherrie; "got anything for me ?" "A letter," said Mr. Johnston, producing the docu- ment, " which he'd 'ave come himself honely hold Major Grove hinvited 'im to dinner." Cherrie eagerly broke open the envelope and read : " DEAREST : Meet me to-night, at half -past eight, in the cedar dell, without fail. Destroy this as soon as read. G. S." Cherrie tore the note into atoms, and strewed them over the grass. " There was to be a hanswcr," insinuated Mr. John- ston. "Tell him yes," said Cherrie; "that is all." Mr. Johnston took off his hat once more, and himself immediately after. Ann Nettleby, at the same moment, came to the door to tell Cherrie tea was ready ; and Cher- rie went in and partook of that repast with her father, sister, and brothers. " Did you hear, boys," said old Nettleby, " that Lady Leroy has sold Partridge Farm ?" ""Sold Partridge farm !" repeated Rob. "No! has she, though ? Who to ?" " To young Mr. Oaks, so Midge tells me ; and a rare penny she'll get for it, I'll warrant you." What does Ouks want of it, I wonder?" said his other son. " lie isn't going to take to farming." MINING THE GROUND. 150 " Oats is the richest fellow in Speckport," said Rob Nettleby; "he has more money a great deal than he knows what to do with, and he may as well lay it out in property as at the gaming-table." " Does he gamble ?" asked Cherrie, helping herself to bread and butter. Her brother laughed significantly. " Doesn't he, though ? You may find him and that Captain Cavendish all hours of the day and night in Prince Street." " Is Captain Cavendish a gambler ?" said Ann ; " that's bad for Miss Natty. They say they're going to be mar- ried." Cherrie smiled to herself, and Rob went on speaking. " It's bad for Miss Nathalie, for that Cavendish is a villain, for all his fine airs and graces, and is leading her brother to the devil. I met him and young McGregor coming from Prince Street last night, and they hadn't a leg to put Tinder them either one." " Drunk ?" said Cherrie, stirring her tea. " Drunk as lords, the pair of 'em. I helped them both home, and found out afterward how it was. They had gone with Cavendish to the gam ing-house as usual, had lost heavily also, as usual, and, excited and maddened, had drank brandy until they could hardly stand. Young Mc- Gregor will fleece his father before he stops ; and where Marsh's money comes from, I can't tell." " You ought to tell Miss Natty, Rob," said his father. " I should not like to see hei throw herself away on such a man, such a handsome and pleasant-spoken young lady as she is." " Not I," said his son, getting up ; " she wouldn't thank me, and it's none of my business. Let Charley tell her, if he likes a poor fellow like me has no call to inter- fere with fine ladies and gentlemen." Cherrie. with a little disdainful toss of her black curls, but discreetly holding her tongue, went into the front room and seated herself with a novel at the window. She read until a quarter past, eight, and it grew too dark to see ; then, rising, she wrapped herself in a plaided shawl 160 MINING THE GROUND. and crossed the deserted road unobserved. Cedar dell, the place of tryst, was but a few yards off the green hol- low in the woods where Cherrie had told the captain of the result of her eavesdropping ; a delightful place, shut in by the tall, dark trees, with a carpet of velvet sward, and a rustic bench of twisted boughs. Cherrie sat down on the bench and listened to the twittering of the birds in their nests, the restless murmuring and swaying of the trees in the night-wind, and watched the blue patches of sky and the pale rays of the new moon glancing in and out of the black bougns. All the holy beauty of the pale summer night could not lift her heart to the Creator who had made it she was only waiting for the fall of a well- known step, for the sound of a well-known voice. Both came presently. The branches were swept aside, a step crashed over the dry twigs, a pale and handsome face, with dark eyes and mustache, under a broad-brimmed hat, looked in the white moonlight through the opening, and the expected voice asked : " Are you there, Cherrie ?" "Yes, George," said Cher Cherrie composedly. " Come in." Captain George Cavendish came in accordingly, em- braced her in very husbandly fashion, and sat down beside her on the bench. The gloom of the place and the hat he wore obscured his face, but not so much but that the girl could see how pale ft was, and notice something strange in his voice and manner. "Is there anything the matter?" she asked. "Did you want anything very particular, George I" " Yes," he said, in a low, impressive voice, taking both her hands in his, and holding them tightly. " I want you to do me the greatest service it may ever be in your power to render me, Cherrie." Cherrie looked up at his white, set face, feeling frightened. " I will do whatever 1 can for you, George. What is it " " You know you are my wife, Cherrie, and that my interests are yours now. Wouldn't you like I should be- MINING THE GROUND. 161 come rich and take you away from this place, and keep you like a lady all the rest of your life 2" Yes Cherrie would decidedly like that, and gave him to understand accordingly. " Then you must take an oath, Cherrie do you hear? an oath to obey me in all things, and never reveal to living mortal what I shall tell you to-night." Now, Cherrie, thinking very little of a falsehood on ordinary occasions, held an oath to be something solemn and sacred, and not to be broken, and hesitated a little. " Perhaps it is something hard something I can't do. 1 feel afraid to take an oath, George." " You must take it ! It is not a matter of choice, and I will ask nothing you can't do. You must only swear to keep a secret." " Well, I'll try," said Cherrie, with a sigh, " but I hate to do it." " I dare say you do !" he said, breaking into a slight smile ; " it is not in your line, I know, to keep secrets, Cherrie ; but at present there is no help for it. You know what an oath is, don't you, Carrie &" " Yes." " And you swear never tt-> reveal what I am about to say to you 8" " Y es," said Cherrie, her curiosity getting the better of her fear. " I swear ! Wlat is it ?" Was it the gloom of the p)*ce, or some inward st niggle, that darkened so his handsome face. The silence lasted so long after her question, th*t Cherrie's heart began to beat with a cold and nameless fear. lie turned to her at last, holding both her hands iu his own, and eo hard that she could have cried out with the pain. " You have sworn, Cherrie, to help me. Say you hope you may die if you ever break tb^t oath. Say it !" The girl repeated the frightful words, with a shiver. " Then, Cherrie, listen, and don't scream. I'm going to rob Lady Leroy to-morrow night." Cherrie did not scream ; but she ^ave a gasping cry, and her eyes and mouth opened to their widest extent. " Going to rob Lady Leroy," repeated Cactaij? Caven- 162 MINING THE GROUND. dish, looking at her fixedly, and magnetizing her with his powerful glance, " to-morrow night ; and I want you to help me, Cherrie." " But but they'll put you in prison for it," gasped Cherrie, all aghast. " No, they won't, with your help. I mean they shall put somebody else in prison for it ; not through any dis- like to him, poor devil, but to avert suspicion from myself. Will you help me, Cherrie ? Remember, you have sworn." " I will do what I can," shive^ -ooor Cherrie, " but oh ! I am dreadfully scare^ " / " There is no need yo^ part will ' *>e very easy, and to-morrow afternoon you shall leave iSpeckport forever." Cherrie's face turned radiant. " With you, George ! Oh, I am so glad ! Tell me what you want me to do, and see if I don't do it." " That is my good little wife. Now then for explana- tions. Do you know that Lady Leroy has sold Partridge Farm?" " To Mr. Tom Oaks yes, and that he is coming up to-morrow to pay her eight thousand pounds for it." Who told you ?" " Father and the boys were talking about it at tea. George, is that the money you're going to steal ?" "It is/ I am .deucedly hard-up just at present, Cher- rie, and eight thousand would be a godsend. Now, my dearest, you must be up at the house when Oaks comes, and find out where the money is put." " J know where she always keeps the money," said Cherrie ; " and she's sure to put this with the rest. It is in that black japanned tin box on the stand at the head of her bed." " Very well. You see, I must do it to-morrow night, for she never would keep so large u sum in the house ; it will go into the bank the day after. The steamer for Halifax leaves to-morrow night at eleven o'clock, and I ehall go to Halifax in her." " And take me with you ?" eagerly asked Cherrie. " No ; you must go in another direction. Until our MINING THE GROUND. 163 marriage is made public, it never would do for us to go together, Cherrie. Let me see. You told me once you had a cousin up in Greentown, who wanted you to visit her, did not you?" Yes Cousin Ellen." " Well, there fe a train leaving Speckport at half-past five in the afternoon. You must depart by that, and you will be in Greentown before nine. Take care to make your departure as public as possible. Go into Speckport early in the morning, and bid everybody you know good- bye. Tell them you don't know how long you may be tempted to stay." " Yes," said Cherrie, with . submissive sigh. " All but one. You must tell Charley Marsh a different story." " Charley ! Why, what's Charley Marsh got to do with it ?" "A good deal, since I mean he shall be arrested for the robbery. 1 hate to do it, but there is no help for it, Cherrie. You told me the other day that he was getting desperate, and wanted you to elope with him." " So he did," said Cherrie. " lie went on dread- fully ; said he was going to perdition, and you were drag- ging him down, but he would take me from you if he could. He wanted me to go with him to the United States, and we would be married in Boston." " And you what is this you told him, Cherrie ?" " I told him I would think about it, and give him his answer in a day or two." " Very well. Give him his answer to-morrow morn- ing. Call at the office, and tell him you consent to run away with him, but that, to avoid suspicion for a few days, you are going to give out you are oil' on a visit to your cousin in Greentown. That you will actually ^tart in the cars, but will step quietly out at the first station, which is only three miles from town, and that you will walk back and get to Speckport about dark. You understand, Cherrie? Yon are not really to do this, only to tell Marsh you will." " Yes," said Cherrie, looking hopelessly bewildered. tf ~\T ' . 164 MINIS G THE GROUND.' "Tell him to come to Redinon between eight and nine, to call at your cottage first, and if you are not there, to go to Lady Leroy's and wait there as long as he can. If you are not there before the house is closed, he is to wait in the grounds for you in front of the house until you do come. I will enter by that back window you showed me, Cherrie, and the probability is Charley will wait all night, and, of course, will be seen by several people, and actually suspected of the robbery." " It seems a pity, though, don't it ?" said Cherrie, her woman's heart touched for poor Charley. " If he is not suspected, I will be," said Captain Cav- endish, sternly. " Remember your oath." " I remember. Is there anything else ?" " Yes ; you must send him a note in the afternoon. Ann will fetch it for you. To-morrow is Thursday, and at eight in the morning the steamer leaves for Boston." " Here," said the young man, putting his hand in his pocket and producing a slip of paper, " is a draft of the note you are to send him, written in pencil. Copy it word for word, and then tear this up. Listen, and I will read it." More from memory than the pale moon's rays glancing through the woods, Captain Cavendish read : " DEAR CHARLEY : I forgot to tell you this morning, when I consented to elope with you, that you had better go down to the steamboat office to-day and secure state- rooms, so that we may conceal ourselves as soon as we go on board. You can pay for this out of that money ; it will do us more good than it ever would do that miser of a Lady Leroy. Ever yours, "CHEERIE NETTLEBY." "What money?" inquired Cherrie. "What money is he te pay for the staterooms out of 1" " Oh, I forgot. When you see him in the morning, give him this," producing a bank note. " I know he has not a stiver, and I got this from Oaks myself yesterday. It is for ten pounds, and Oaks's initials were scrawled on MINING THE GROUND. 165 it, as he has a fashion of doing with all his bills. Tell him Lady Leroy gave it to your father in payment, and he presented it to you. Charley will take it ; he is too hard up to be fastidious. Your note will, no doubt, be found upon him, and convict him at once." "'There's another thing," said Cherrie. "When Charley's arrested and my name found to that note, they'll think I knew about the robbery, and come up to Green- town after me. What should I do then?" " That is true," said the captain, thoughtfully. " Per- haps, after all, then, you had better not go to your cousin's. Go on to Bridgeford ; it is thirty miles further up, and a quiet out-of-the-way place, where no one ever stops, hard- ly. There is one hotel there, where you can stay quietly for a few days, and then slip oil' and get board in some farmer's bouse. Call yourself Miss Smith, and write to me when you arc settled, telling all the particulars. Dis- guise your hand in writing the address, and I will rim up and see you as soon as I safely can, and settle our future plans. Kow, you are sure you remember and understand all I have been saying ?" " Yes," said Cherrie ; " but, oh, dear me ! I feel just as nervous and as scared ! What will they do to Charley? Maybe they'll hang him !" " Not the least fear of it. If they put him in prison, I'll try and get him clear oil. You say they always go to bed for certain at nine o'clock at Rcclmon house?" " At nine to a minute ; but Lady Leroy always locks her door, nights. How will you get in 2" Captain Cavendish smiled. " If it all was as easy as that, it would be a simple af- fair. Don't look so discouraged, my darling black eyes. With eight thousand pounds in my pocket, and the prettiest little girl in wide America as my wife, I will be off to merry England, and you and I will forget this land of fog and tish. I'm oil now, Cherrie and perhaps it may be two or three weeks before I shall see you again, so take care of yourself. Here are eight sovereigns to pav your expenses; and be sure you write tome from Brideeford." 166 MINING- THE GROUND. He got up, but Cherrie clung to him, crying: " Oh, I am afraid 1 O George, I am f raid I will never see you again." "Little simpleton," he said, giving her a parting caress, " what can happen if you do your part bravely! If you fail, then, indeed, we will never meet again." Cherrie's tears were falling fast now. " I will not fail ; but but " " But what, my darling ?" " When you go to Halifax, perhaps you will never come back; perhaps you will never come to Bridge- ford." " Cherrie, you are a goose ! Don't you know I am in your power, and that I must come back ? Come, stop crying now, and give me a kiss, and say good-bye. It won't be long, you know." One other parting caress, and then he was gone. Cherrie listened until the echo of his footsteps died out in the distance, and then she threw herself on her face in the wet grass, heedless of her white dress, and cried like a spoiled child whose doll has been taken away. She was frightened, she was excited, she was grieved, but she was not remorseful. There was little compunction in her heart for the part she was to play betraying the man who loved her and trusted her. It was the old story of Delilah and Samson over again. The clocks of Speckport striking ten, and clearly heard this still summer night, had ceased before she came out, her cheeks pale, her eyes red with weeping. There was a dull circle round the moon, foreboding a coming storm ; but what was there to give warning to poor Charley Marsh of the storm about to burst upon him ( Ann Nettleby was at the door waiting patiently for Cherrie. She turned crossly upon her when she ap- peared. " I wish you would learn to come home earlier, and not keep folks out of their beds all night. What were you doing in the woods " " Crying," said Cherrie, quite as crossly as her sister. SPRINGING THE MINE. 167 "I'm tired to death of this dull place. I'D go off to Greentown to-morrow." " I wish to mercy you would ; the rest of us would have some peace then. Did you expect Charley Marsh to-night ?" "JSTo; why?" "He's beeu here, then, and only just gone. Come in, and let me lock the door." Cherrie went up to her room, but not to sleep. She sat by the window, looking out on the quiet road, the black woods, and the moon's sickly, watery glimmer, while the long hours dragged slowly on, and her sister slept. She was thinking of the eventful to-morrow the to- morrow that was to be the beginning of a new life to her. CHAPTER XV. SPRINGING THE MINE. |HEN Mr. Robert Nettleby informed his family circle that Charley Marsh was going to well, to a certain dark spirit not to be lightly named in polite literature, he was aboilt right. That young gentleman, mounted, on the furious steed of extravagance, was galloping over the road to ruin at the rate of an express train. Not alone, either ; young McGregor, Tom Oaks, Es- quire, and some dozen more .young Speckportians, wero keeping him company and all ran nearly abreast in the .dizzy race. 1 The terrible terminus Disgrace, Misery, and Sudden Death looked very near to some of them, very near, in- deed, to the brother of Nathalie. He had taken to hard drinking of late, as a natural sequence of the other vice ; gamblers must olrink to drown remorse, and it was no un- usual thing now for him to bo helped home by pitying 168 SPHINGING THE MINE. friends, and carried up-stairs to bed. How the mother cried and scolded; how the sister wept in passionate shame and sorrow in the silence of her own room ; how he, the prodigal, suffered after, Heaven only knows, but it never came to anything. Next day's splitting headache, and insuperable shame and remorse, must be drowned in brandy ; that fatal stimulant brought the old delusive hopes he must go back, he must win. He was over four hundred dollars indebted to Captain Cavendish now, without possessing one dollar in the world, or the hope of one, to pay him. He had ceased to ask money from Nathalie she had no more to give him, and Alick McGregor and Tom Oaks found enough to do to foot their own bills. Strange to say, the primary mover of this mischief, the arch-tempter himself, George Percy Cavendish, re- mained unsuspected, save by a few, and went altogether unblamed. Captain Cavendish seldom lost his money, never his temper ; never got excited, was ever gentleman- ly and cool, though half the men about him were mad with liquor and losses, and ready to hold pistols to their heads and blow their miserable brains out. Nathalie, humbled to the very dust with shame for Charley, never suspected her betrothed lover never for one second ; in her eyes he was the incarnation of all that was honorable and good. It was in one of his fits of rage and remorse that Charley had asked Cherrie to fly with him. Not that he expected to atone by that ; but, far from Speckport, which enchanting town was fast becoming hateful to him, and with her as his wife, he hoped to begin a new life, away from those he had disgraced. He hated Captain Caven- dish with a furious and savage hatred, and it would be a demoniac satisfaction to tear Cherrie from him. For, with the eyes of jealousy, Charley saw his game, though all Speckport was blind. Miss Nettleby, at her old game of fast and loose, had put him off indefinitely. And, casting bitter reproaches to Fate, after the manner of Dick SPRINGING TUB MINE. ISO Swivcller, Charley Marsh let himself drift with the rapid current, bearing him along to a fearful end. The day that came after the night spent by Cherrie and Captain Cavendish in the cedar dell was one of scorch- ing, broiling heat and sunshine. The sun was like a wheel of red flame, the sky of burnished brass, the bay a sea of amber fire. Through all the fiery glare of this fierce August morn- ing, went Charley Marsh to the office of Dr. Leach. No longer the Charley Marsh who had been the life of Mrs. McGregor's party, that foggy May evening when Captain Cavendish had first appeared in Speckport, but a pale, sunken-cheeked, hollow-eyed vision, with parched and feverish lip, and gaze that shrunk from meeting that of his fellow-men. His temples seemed splitting, his eyes ached with the blinding gleam, and he could have cursed the heat in his impious impatience and suffering. He glanced down toward the shining bay, and thought, if it had only looked blue and cool, instead of being a lake of fire, he could have gone and kin down in its pleasant waters, and escaped forever from the miseries of this life, at least. "Char-ley!" The voice at his elbow made him bound. He turned and saw Cherrie Kettleby, her shining ebon ringlets freshly curled, her black eyes dark and dewy, her rosy cheeks bright and unwilted, her dress airy and cool unflushed, unheated ; basking, like a little salamander, in the genial sunlight, and wearing the smile of an angel. Charley could scarce believe his eyes. " You here, Cherrie !" he cried, " this blazing day. Have you been in Speckport all night ?" " No, I got a drive in this morning, and, Charley," dropping her wicked eyes, " I came to see you !" They were near the office. The surgery looked cool and shady, and Charley opened the door and ushered the } oung lady in. The shopboy had the place to himself, and lie retreated to a distant corner, with a knowing grin, at sight of the pair. Dr. Leach was rarely at home, reople would persist in devouring new potatoes, and green peas, 170 SPRINGING THE MINE. and cucumbers, and striug-beans, and other green stuffs, and having pains, and cramps, and eholera afterward, and the doctor was fairly run off his legs that is to say, his horse was. " How nice and cool it is in here," said Cherrie ; " it's the hottest day came this summer, I think. What a hurry you were in leaving, last night, Charley." " Hurry ! It was past ten." " Well, I came in a few minutes after, and was so mad when I found you were gone. I got such a jawing for being out ! I won't stand it," cried Miss Cherrie, nyiug out in an affected temper ; " I just won't !" " Stand what ?" " Why, being scolded and put upon the way I am ! It's dreadful dull, too, and I am getting tired of the place altogether; and so, I am going to leave it." " With me, Cherrie e l" " I don't care if I do i I'm off this very day ; I'll not stand it a minute longer so, if you want me to go with you, you haven't much time to spare !" Charley grasped both her hands, his pale face lighting with ecstasy ; and the shopboy behind the pestle-and-mor- tar grinned delightedly at the scene, although he could not hear a word. " My darling Cherrie !" Charley cried, " you have made me the happiest fellow alive ! Wait until to-morrow, and we will be off in the boat to Boston." Miss Nettleby fell to musing. " Well, I don't care if I do," she said, at length. " I should like to see Boston, and the trip in the steam boat will be nice. But, look here, Charley, I've gone and told our folks and everybody else that I was going to Green- town, in this afternoon's train, and it won't do to back out." " But you must back out, Cherrie ! You canuot go to Greentown and to Boston, both." Cherrie put on her considering-cap again, only for a moment, though, and then she looked up with a sparkling face. " I have it, Charley 1 The nicest plan ! This evening, SPRINGING THE MINE. 171 at half-past five, I'll go off in the cars, and every one will think I've gone to Greentown, so my absence to-inorrow won't be noticed. I'll get out at the first station, three miles off, and walk back home, but won't go in. About eight to-night you call at our house, pretending you don't know about my being off, you know ; and when our Ann tells you I have gone, you go up to Lady Lcroy's and stay till bed-time. Then wait around the grounds in front of the house, and I'll come to you about ten. I can stop in one of the hotels here, where, they don't know me. I'll wear a thick vail until morning, and then we will hide on board the boat. Isn't it a splendid plan, Charley ? They'll think I'm in Greentown, and never suspect we have gone off together !'' 3sTo poor fly ever got entangled in a spider's web more readily than did Charley Marsh in that of Captain Caven- dish. He thought the plan was capital, and he told her so. " You must be sure to wait in front of the house until I come," said the wicked little- enchantress, keeping her black eyes fixed any where but oil his face. "And here, Charley now don't refuse it is only a trifle, and I won't go with you, if you don't take it. I don't suppose you have much money, and father made it a present to me after Lady Leroy paid him. I must go now, because I have ever so much to do before evening. Good-bye, Charley, you won't forget anything I've said ?" Forget ! That face, fair in spite of its haggardness, was radiant. Bad as Cherrie was, she had not the heart to look at him as she hurried out of the shop and down the street. If he had only known ! if he had only known ! known of the cunning trap laid for him, into which he was falling headlong if he had only known what was to take place that fatal night ! Charley Marsh did not go home to his dinner ; he had dinner enough for that day. All that long sweltering afternoon he sat in the smothering little back-office, staring out at the baked and blistered backyard, and weaving, oh! such radiant dreams of the future. Such dreams as we all weave ; as we see wither to shreds, even in the next hour. 172 BPEUfQISQ THE MINE. Visions of a home, far, very far from Speckport, where the past should be atoned for and forgotten a home of which Cherrie, his darling little Cherrie, should be the mistress and fireside fairy. It was some time past five, when, awakening from these blissful day-dreams, Charley Marsh found that the little back office was so insufferably hot as not to be borue any longer, and that a most extraordinary change had come over the sky, or at least as much of the firmament as was visible from the dirty office- window. He took his hat and sauntered out, pausing in the shop-door to stare at the sky. It had turned livid; a sort of ghostly, greenish glare, all over with wrathful black clouds and bars of blood-red streaking the western horizon. Not a breath of air stirred ; the trees along the streets of Speckport and in its squares hung motionless in the dead calm, and feathers and bits of paper and straw lay on the sidewalk. The sea was of the same ghastly tinge as sky and air, as if some commotion in its watery bowels had turned it sick. And, worst of all, the heat was unabated, the planked sidewalks scorched your feet as you walked, and you gasped for a mouthful of air. Speckport declined taking its tea ; its butter was butter no longer, but oil ; its milk had turned eour, and the water from the street-hydrants nearly warm enough to make tea of, without boiling at all. There were very few out as Charley walked down Queen Street, but among these few he encountered Mr. Yal Blake, strid- ing in the direction of Great St. Peter Street. Val nodded familiarly. " Hot day, Charley. Going to be a thunder-storm, I t;ike it. By the way, she'll have an ugly night for her journey." "Who will?" " Little Cherrie, of course ; she's off to Greentown, man ! Didn't you know it ? I was down at the station ten minutes ago, and saw her off. How's the mother ?" " Getting better. Good afternoon, Val," said Charley, passing on, and smiling at the news Mr. Blake had told him. SPRINGING HIE MINE. 178 " What a clever head the little darling has to put them off the scent ! Hallo, what do you want ?" Some one had shouted after him ; and turning round, he saw Master Bill Blair, his hands in his pockets, his hat cocked on one side of his head, following at an extremely leisurely pace. " I want you to hold on. I'll go part of the way with YOU, for I'm going home tQ tea," replied Mr. Blair, not hurrying himself. " It's libt enough to roast an ox, it is. You don't suppose the sky has got the jaundice, do yon ; it is turned as yellow as a kite's claw." " You had better send up and inquire," said Charley, shortly, preferring his own thoughts to this companion- ship. " I say, Marsh," said Bill, grinning from ear to ear, " Cherrie s gone, hasn't she ? Good riddance, I say. What took her streaking off to Greentown, and whatever will you do without her ?" Mr. Marsh came to a sudden stand-still they were in a quiet street and took Mr. Blair by the collar. " Look you here, Master Bill," said Charley, emphati- cally, " you see the water down there ! Well, now take warning ; the next time I find you making too free use of that tongue of yours, I'll duck you ! Mind ! I've said it !" With which Mr. Marsh released him, and stalked on. Mr. Blair, pretty well used to being collared, took this admonition so much to heart, that he leaned against a lamp-post, and, went off with a roar of laughter that awoke all tne sleeping echoes of the place. There was no one in the cottage parlor when Charley went in ; and on the lounge in the sitting-room his mother lay asleep. He went softly up-stairs to his own room, so as not to awake her. That poor, pale, peevish, querulous, novel-reading, fond mother, when should he see her again ? A murmur of voices caught the young man's ear as he ascended ; it came from Miss Rose's room the door of which, that sultry evening, stood half open. Charley glanced in. Miss Rose, sitting at a little table, was writ- ing, and an old woman on a chair near, with her shawl and 174 SPRINGING THE MINE. bonnet on, rocked to and fro, and dictated. Charley knew Miss Rose was scribe to all the poor illiterate of Speck- port, and knew she was at one of those sacred tasks now. He saw the pale, sweet face in profile ; the drooping white eyelids, hiding the hazel eyes, and the brown hair, damp and loose, falling over her mourning-dress. He thought of what Nathalie had said "If you must marry any one, why not Miss Rose ?" as he closed the door without dis- turbing them. " No, Natty," he mentally answered. " Miss Rose is an angel, which I am not, unless it be an angel of dark-- ness. No ; she is too innocent and good for such a fellow as I am. I wouldn't marry her if I could, and couldn't, I dare say, if I would. He changed his dress, and packed his trunk, layin;; out a long waterproof coat on the bed, as a shield against the coming rain. Before he had finished, he heard Betsy Ann calling Miss Rose to tea. That reminded him he had had no dinner, and was hungry ; so he went down stairs, and Mrs. Marsh, at sight of him, broke out in petulant com- plainings. Why had he not come home to dinner ? Where had he been ? What was the reason it was so hot, and why was hewin evening dress ? And Charley laughed good-hu- moredly as he took his place at the table. " Be easy, mother mine ! Who could think of so pre- posterous a thing as dinner this sweltering day ? I have been in the office since morning." " Catty Clowrie was in here some time ago," pursued Mrs. Marsh, feebly stirring her tea, " and she told me Cherrie Nettleby had gone away up the country. What's taken her off ?" Miss Rose was kind-hearted enough not to look at him, and his mother was without her specs ; so neither noticed the hot flush that arose to his face. " How should I know ? Am I Miss Nettleby's confi- dant? Was Nathalie in the school-room to-day, Mia Rose?" "No." SPRINGING THE MINE. 175 " It was too hot, I suppose. This intense closeness can only end in a thunder-storm." " I fancy we will have it shortly. The sky looks fear- ful ; it has turned perfectly livid." The meal ended, Charley walked to the window over- looking the wide sea, and stood blankly gazing out. It was nearly seven time he was off to Rednion ; and yet. u'ith iove and Cherrie beckoning him on, he was- hesitating When should he stand here again in this pleasant home where he had spent so many happy years ? When, indeed ? He was going to his fate, as we all go, blindly ; and there was no foreshadowing dread to whisper to him stand back. The clock struck seven. It was possible to linger no longer. He went over to where his mother sat, and bent over her. Miss Rose in the next room was practicing. "Mother!" Charley said, trying to laugh, and speak- ing very fast, " I have not been a very good boy lately, but I am going to turn over a new leaf from to-day. You can forgive the past, mother dear, can you not, if 1 promise better for the future V Mrs. Marsh looked up at him rather surprised, but still peevish. " I am glad to hear it, I am sure. You have been act- ing disgracefully of late, just as if you wanted to break my heart." " But I don't, mother, and I am going to amend. And when after this you hear others speaking ill of me, you will be my defender, will you not, mother 2" "Of course, Charles," his mother said, pettishly, "if you deserve it." " Good-bye, then, mother ; take care of yourself, and try and forgive me." He kissed her, and hastily left the room. Miss Hose faintly and sweetly was playing some evening hymn. He stopped a moment to look at the slight black figure for the last time, perhaps, he thought. " Good-bye, Miss Rose," he called out ; " I am off." She turned round with a smile. " Good-bye, Mr. Marsh I There is a storm coming take care 1" 176 SPKIN&ING THE MINE. How little she dreamed of the storm that was coming when she gave him that warning. He went out of the cottage, closing the hall door after him ; and the street and the figures in it looked blurred to him, seen through some foolish mist in his eyes. With the waterproof overcoat thrown across his arm, his umbrella in his hand, and his hat pulled far over his eyes, Charley Marsh walked through the streets of Speck- port steadily to his fate. There was an ominous hush in the stifling atmosphere, a voiceless but terrible menace in the sullen sky, the black and glassy bay, and the livid-lmed evening. Cnarley's thoughts wandered to Cherric. The storm would overtake her coming to town ; she would get drenched, and frightened half to death, for it was going to lighten. He could not walk fast, owing to the heat, and night fell before the Nettleby cottage came in sight. With it fell the storm, flash after flash of lightning cleav- ing black cloud and yellow air like a two-edged sword flash after flash, blinding, intermittent, for nearly five minutes. Then a long dull roar, that seemed to shake the town, with great plashing drops of rain, as large and heavy as peas. And then the tempest burst in its might flash, flash, flash ! the heavens seemed one sheet of flame the earth rocking with the ceaseless roll of thunder, and the rain descending in torrents. Some low spruce-bushes, a zigzag fence, his glazed overcoat and umbrella, were shelter enough for Charley. He sat on a rock by the wayside, his hands over his eyes, feeling as though the fierce blue glare had struck him blind. The summer-hurricane was sub- lime in its fury, but too violent to last long. In three- quarters of an hour the lightning and thunder had ceased, but the rain still fell heavily. Charley got up, drew out his watch, struck a match for the night had struck in pitch black and looked at the hour. A quarter to nine, and where, oh where, in all this tempest was poor Cher- rie? He hurried on at a frantic pace, fumbling in the blind blackness, until the red light of the cottage-window streamed across the inky gloom. He never stopped to imagine what they would think of his presence there at such a time ; he was too full of anxiety for Cherrie. She SPIHNGIXG THE MINE. 177 might have hired a cab and driven home, frightened by the storm, and he rapped loudly at the door. Ann .Net- tleby, lamp in hand, answered his authoritative summons. " Is Cherrie here, Ann ?" Ann stared. " Law, Mr. Marsh ! how should she be here ? Don't you know she went off to Greentown in the half -past five train 2" Charley stood looking at her, so pale and wild and wet, that Ann stared at him harder than ever. " Is Lady Leroy worse ?" she asked. "Worse! Yes no I don't know. Has she been ill 3" " She's been very bad all the day. Dr. Leach has been up to see her, and our Rob's staying there all night for fear she should take another bad turn, and some one should be wanted to go for him again." This was news to Charley. "What is the matter with her?" he asked. " Cramps. Did you not get Cherrie's letter 3" "What?" " Cherrie's letter ! She left a letter for you, and told me to fetch it to town to you, and I did this evening, but you weren't in, the boy said." " Did you leave it at the office ?" "Yes." Charley wondered what it could be about, but he did not ask Ann. He turned and walked through the dark- ness and the slanting rain, to Redmon House. The outer gate never was fastened, and he went under the dripping trees up to the castle of Lady Leroy. It was all in dark- ness, looming up a blacker spot in the blackness, but one feeble ray shone from Nathalie's room. Charley knew it was of no use entering then past nine when the place was closed and locked for the night, so he stood under the tall, gaunt trees, and watched that feeble, flickering ray. It seemed to connect him to bring him in communion with Nathalie ; and when it went out, and all was dark and lonely, a light the light of his love for her seemed to go out of his heart with it. 8* 178 SPRINGING TUE MINE. And now there was nothing to do but to watch for Cherrie. He seemed to have bidden farewell to all his old friends, and have only her left. His past life seemed gliding behind him, out of sight a newer and better life opening before him, with her by his side to share it, until they should lie down at the far end, full of years and good works. He leaned against a tree, thinking of this, and waiting. The storm was abating, the rain ceasing, the clouds parting, and a pale and watery moon staring wanly across the gloom. In another hour the clouds were scud- ding wildly before a rising gale, and the moon had broken out, through their black bars, lighting up the grim old house with an eerie and spectral gloom. The trees looked like tall, moaning ghosts in the sickly and fitful rays, and the loneliness of the tomb reigned over all. Another weary hour of watching, and Charley was nearly mad with impatience and anxiety. Where where was Cherrie ? The sighing night-wind, the moaning and tossing trees, the ghastly light of the fitful moon, and the ominous si- lence of nature, had no answer to give him. What was that which rent the silence of the night ? A shriek from the house behind him a woman's shriek the sound of flying feet, a key turning in a rusty lock, and the front door thrown wide open. En sac de nuit, which means, in a short night-gown and red flannel petticoat, her head tied up in a yellow silk handkerchief, Midge rushed frantically out, followed by a man. Charley had started forward, and the moon's light fell full upon his black form in the middle of the park. Quick as Lightning, the iron grasp of the dwarf was upon his collar, and the shrill voice piercing wildly the night air : " 1 have Mm I I have him 1 Murder 1 Murder! Murder 1" A CHIME. m 179 CHAPTER XYL A CRIiLE. HAT was done that night ? At the very hour of that fine August morn- * ing that Mr. Charles Marsh and Miss Cherrie Nettleby had the surgery of Dr. Leach so com- fortably to themselves, that medical gentleman up at Redmon, helping its mistress to fight out a bat- tle with death. Yes, on that hot summer morning Lady Leroy was likely to die, stood even within the portal of the Valley of the Shadow, and Redmon and all earthly pos- sessions seem about to slip from her forever. Good- natured Miss Jo, in the early morning, had sent up a present of a basket of cucumbers and lettuce, of both of which specimens of the vegetable kingdom Mrs. Leroy had partaken, well 9aked in vinegar, a., a sharpener to break- fast appetite. The consequence was, that before tluit re- past was well down, she was seized with such convulsive cramps as only cholera patients ever know. Brandy applied inwardly, and hot flannel and severe rubbing applied outwardly, being without avail, Dr. Leach was Bent for in hot haste. The old woman was in agonies, and Nathalie frightened nearly out of her wits. Dr. Leach looked grave, but did his best. For some hours it was quite uncertain whether he or the grim Rider of the Pale Horse would gain the battle : but victory seated herself at last on the medical banner of the Speckport physician. Mrs. Leroy, totally exhausted with her fierce sufferings, took an opiate and fell asleep, and the doctor took his hat to leave. " She'll do well enough now, Miss Natty," he said, " only pitch the cucumbers into the fire the first thing. She'll be all right to-morrow." Nathalie sat patiently down in the steaming and op- pressive eick-room, to keep watch. The house was as still 180 . A CHIME. as a tomb ; Midge was buried in the regions below, ancf the sick woman slept long and profoundly. Nathalie took a book, and, absorbed by it, did not notice when Lady Leroy awoke. Awake she did, after some hours, and lay there quite still, looking at the young girl, and thinking. Of what? Of the Icng and weary months that young girl had in a -manner buried herself alive in this living tomb of a house, to minister to her, to arrange all her business, to read to her, to talk to her, to do her all manner of good service, and to bear patiently her querulonsness and caprice. It had been a lonely and eerie life for her, but when had she ever complained ? and now what was she to gain by it all ! For one act of disobedience she was disinherited all these months and years wasted for nothing. She had come there in the belief implanted by Mrs. Leroy herself that she was to be the heiress of Redmon. Had she any right to go back from her word to make her memory accursed to go into that shadowy and unknown world opening before her with a lie on her soul ? Dared she do it ? She had an awful fear of death, this miserly old w*man an awful fear of what lay beyond death ; and yet, with strange in- consistency, she felt herself on the verge of the grave a long life of sin lying behind her, and making no effort to atone only letting herself drift on. Yet is the incon- sistency strange ? Are we not, every one of us, doing the same ? We are younger, perhaps, and fuller of life ; yet do we not know the terrible truth, that death and ourselves are divided but by a single step? Nathalie, bending over her book, all her fair hair drop- ping loose about her, saw not the eyes so closely watching her. How pale she looked. Perhaps it was the fright, not yet over ; perhaps the heat ; but ner face was like a lily- leaf. While she watched her, Midge came softly in, and Mrs. Leroy closed her eyes again. " Is she sleeping still ?" Midge asked, looking toward the bed. " Yes," said Nathalie, glancing up. Midge bustled out, and presently returned with a cup of tea. A CRIME. 181 " Who do you think was here this morning to say good- bye ?" she asked, while Nathalie was drinking it. ' "I don't know. Who?" " Cherrie Nettleby, no less. She wanted to come up here whether or no, to see you and the missis, but I sent her to the light about quicker. The flyaway good-for- nothing's off to Greentown in the- cars this afternoon." " Indeed. And how long is she going to stay ?" " I told her I was glad to hear it," said Midge, " and that I hoped she wouldn't come bothering back in a hurry ; and she laughed and shook back them black curls of hers, and said perhaps she would stay all summer. The place is well rid of her, and I told her so." Nathalie, reverting to Charley, perhaps, thought the same, but she did not say so. Midge departed, refreshed by her bit of gossip, and Nathalie resumed her book. The steaming sick-room was irksome enough to her, but she would not leave Mrs. Leroy even for a moment in her present state. That old lady opened her eyes again ; and as she did so, Midge came bolting back. " Miss Natty, here's Mr. Tom Oaks come to pay that there money, I expect. Shall I send him off again ?" -Before Nathalie could reply, Lady Leroy half sat up in bed, feeble as she was, the ruling passion strong in death. " No, no, no !" she shrilly cried, " don't send him away. Fetch him up here fetch him up !" Nathalie dropped her book and was bending over her directly. " Dear Mrs. Lerov, are you awake ? How do you feel now?" " Better, Natty, better. Fetch him up, Midge fetch him up." Midge trotted off, soliloquizing as she went : " Well, I never ! I do think if she was dead and buried, the sound of money jingling atop of her grave would bring her out of it. You're to come up, Mr. Oaks. Missis is sick abed, but she'll see you." Mr. Tom Oaks, a dashing young fellow, well looking 182 A CRIME. of face, and free and easy of manner, strolled in, hat in hand. Nathalie rose to receive him. " Good day to you, Miss Nathalie. How are you 5 Mrs. Leroy ? Nothing the matter, I hope." u She is better, now," said Nathalie, placing a chair for him by the bedside. " I suppose you've come up to pay the money ?" Mrs. Leroy inquired, her lingers beginning to work, as they always did when she was excited. Yes, Mr. Oaks had come to pay the money and obtain possession of the documents that made him master of Partridge Farm. Sundry papers were signed and handed over a long roll of bank-bills, each for fifty pounds, were presented to Lady Leroy and greedily counted by her, over and over again. Then Nathalie had to go through the performance, and the roll was-f ound to be correct. Mr. Oaks, master of a magnificent farm, bowed himself out, the perspiration streaming from every pore. When he was gone, the old woman counted the bills over again once, twice, three times ; her eyes glittering with the true miser's delight. It was not to make sure of their accuracy, but for the pure and unalloyed pleasure it gave her to handle so much money and feel that it was hers. A knock at the front door. Mrs. Leroy rolled the bills hastily up. " Give me the box, Natty ; some one's coining, and it's not safe to let any one know there's so much money in the house, and only three poor lone women of us here." Nathalie handed her the large japanned tin box Cher- ric had spoken of, which always stood at the head of the bed, and the bills were placed in it, the tin box relocked and replaced, before the visitor entered. It proved to be Lawyer Darcy ; and Nathalie, availing herself of his presence, left the room for a few moments to breathe purer air, " I was very sorry to hear of your illness," the lawyer said, ' : and ran in as I was going by, although I am in rather a hurry. By the way, I am uxpeotiug every day to A CHIME. 183 be summoned back here to alter that last unjust will of yours. I hope you have begun to see its cruel injustice yourself." " Yes," Lady Leroy gravely replied, " I have. There is no one living has so good a right to whatever I possess as Nathalie Marsh. I did wrong to take it from her, but it is not too late yet. Come up here to-morrow morning and draw out another my last will she shall have every- thing I own." The old lawyer grasped the sick woman's hand de- lightedly. " Thank heaven, my dear Mrs. Leroy, that you have been brought to see matters in their true light. Natty's the best girl alive ain't you, Natty ?" "What, sir?" Nathalie asked, as she re-entered the room. "The best and prettiest girl alive! There, don't bl ush. Good afternoon to you both. I'll be up to-morrow morning without fail, Mrs. Leroy, and I trust I shall find you quite restored." He went out. How little did he think that never again, this side of eternity, should he meet that woman ; how little did he think that with those words he had bidden her an eternal farewell. Midge brought up some tea and toast to her mistress after the lawyer's departure ; and feeling more comforta- ble after it, the old woman lay back among her pillows, and requested her ward to " read a piece for her." The book Nathalie was reading had been one of her father's, and she loved it for his sake and for its own. It was not a novel, it was " At the Foot of the Cross," by Faber ; and seating herself by the bedside, she read aloud in her sweet, grave voice. The touching story of Calvary was most touchingly retold there ; more than once the letters swam on the page through a thick mist of tears, and more than once bright drops fell on the page and blistered it. The long, sultry afternoon hours wore over, and in that shuttered room it had grown too dark to see the words, before the girl ceased. There wa.s a silence ; 184 A CRIME. Nathalie's heart was full, and Mrs. Leroy was quiet, lookr ing unwontedly thoughtful. " It's a beautiful book," she said, at last, " a beautiful book, Natty ; and it does me good to hear it. I wish you had read to me out of that book before !" " I will read it all through to you," Nathalie said ; " but you are tired now, and it is past seven. You had better have some tea, and take this opiate and go to sleep. You will be quite well again to-morrow." Nathalie got the old woman's tea herself, and made the toast with her own white hands. Mrs. Leroy wished her to share the meal, but Nathalie could not cat there ; the steaming and fetid atmosphere of that close chamber made her sick and faint. She was longing for the old woman to go to rest for the night, so that she might get out. She removed the tea-tray, and turned to leave the room. " I am going out for a walk in the grounds," she said, " but I will be back by eight to give you the sleeping draught ; and, for fear you might be taken ill again in the night, I will ask one of the Nettlebys to sleep here." Without hat or mantle, she ran down-stairs and out into the hot twilight. The brassy hue of the sky, and the greenish-yellow haze filling the air, the ominous silence of nature, and the scudding black clouds, gave her warning for the first time of the coming storm. She went down the aveuue, through the gate, and along the dusty road to the cottage. The roses about it were hanging their heavy heads, the morning-glories and the scarlet-runners looked limp and wilted. She found Ann washing the dishes, and the two young Nettleby's lying lazily on the grass behind the cottage, smoking pipes. Nathalie preferred her request, and Rob Nettleby at once volunteered. "I'll go up in half an hour, Miss Natty," he said, " and, if I'm wanted, I can gallop into town in ten min- utes." " Thank yon, Rob !" She went back to the kitchen, lounging a minute be- fore she left. A CRIME. -1851 " And so Ch erne's gone, Ann ?" " Yes," said Ann ; " and I'm glad of it. "We will have some peace for a while, which we don't have when she's here, with her gadding." Nathalie walked slowly back to the house, wondering and awed by the weird and ghostly look of the sky. The evening was so clo >e and oppressive that no breath of air was to be had ; yet still it was better than the house, and she lingered in the grounds until the lightning shot out like tongues of blue flame, and the first heavy raindrops began to fall. Hurrying in out of the coming storm, followed by Bob Nettleby, who opined it was going to be a " blazer of a night," she saw that all the doors and windows were secured, and then returned to Mrs. Leroy's room to ad- minister the opiate. She found the old woman in a doze, from which her entrance aroused her, and raised her with her right arm in bed, while she held the glass to her lips with her left hand. " It will make you sleep, dear Mrs. Leroy," the girl said, " and you will be as well as ever to-morrow." " I hope so, Natty. Is that thunder ?" " Yes ; it is going to be a stormy night. Is there anything else I can do for you before I go ?" " Yes ; turn down that lamp ; I don't like so much light." A little kerosene lamp burned on the table. Nathalie lowered the light, and turned to go. " Good-night," she said, " I will come in once or twice through the night to see how you are. You are sure you do not want anything more ?" The sleeping-potion was already taking effect. The old woman drowsily opened her eyes: " No," she said ; nothing else. You're a good girl, Natty, and it was wrong to do it ; but I'll make it all right, Natty ; I'll make it all right 1" They were the last words sne ever spoke ! Nathalie wondered what she meant, as she went into her own room, and lit her lamp. The storm without was raging fast and furious ; the '186 A CRIME. blaze of the lightning filled the room with a lurid bine glare, the dull and ceaseless roll of the thunder was ap- palling, and the rain lashed the windows in torrents. " Heaven help any poor wanderer exposed to such a tempest !" Nathalie thought. If she had only known of him who cowered under the spruce bushes on Kedmon road, waiting for it to subside. Nathalie brushed out her long, shining, showering curls, bathed her face, and said her prayers. The furious and short-lived tempest had raged itself out by that time, and she blew out the lamp and sat down by the window it was too hot to go to bed. She made a pile of the pillows, and leaned her head against them where she sat ; and, with the rushing rain for her lullaby, fell asleep. What was that? She awoke with a start. She 'knew she had not slept long, but out of a disturbed dream some noise awoke her a sharp metallic sound. Her room was weirdly lighted by the faint rays of the wan and spectral moon, and with her heart beating thick and fast she lis- tened. The old house was full of rats she could hear them scampering over her head, under her feet, and be- tween the partitions. It was this noise that had awoke her; the trees were writhing and groaning in the heavy wind, and tossing their green arms wildly, as if in some s dryad agony perhaps it was that. She listened, but save these noises all was still. Yes, it was the rats, Nathalie thought, and settling back among the pillows once more, she fell into another light slumber. No, Nathalie. Neither the wailing wind, nor the surging trees, nor the scurrying rats made the noise you heard. In the corridor outside your room a tall, dark figure, with a black crape mask on its face, is standing. The figure wears a long overcoat and a slouched hat, and it is fitting a skeleton key in the lock of Mrs. Leroy's door ; for Nathalie has locked that door. Like some dark and evil spirit of the night, it glides into the chamber ; the lamp on the table burns low, and the old woman sleeps heavily. Softly it steals across the room, lays hold of the japanned tin box, tries key after key from a bunch it carries, and at last succeeds. The box . is open the A CHIME. 187 treasure is found. Fifty fifty fifty ! they are all fifties fifty-pound notes on good and sound Speckport banks. The eyes behind the mask glitter the eager hands are thrusting the huge rolls into the deep pockets of the over- coat. But he drops the last roll and stops in his work aghast, for there is an awful sound from the bed. It is not a scream, it is not a cry ; but something more awful than ever came from the throat of woman in all the his- tory of woman's agony. It is like the death-rattle hoarse and horrible. lie turns and sees the old woman sitting up in bed, one flickering finger pointing at him, the face convulsed and livid, the lips purple and foaming, the eyes starting. One cry, and all for which he has risked so much will be lost ! He is by the bedside like a Hash ; he has seized one of the pillows, and hurled her back ; lie has grasped her by the throat with one- powerful hand, while with the other he holds the pillow over her face. Fear and fury distort his own could you see it behind the mask and his teeth are set, and his eyeballs strained. There is a struggle, a convulsive throe, another awful rattle in the throat, and then he sees the limbs relax, and the palpitating throat grow still. He need fear no cry now ; no sound will ever again come from those aged lips; the loss or gain of all the treasures in the wide earth will never disturb her more. He loosens his grasp, re- moves the pillow, and the lamplight falls on a horrible sight. He turns away with a shudder from that black- ened and convulsed visage, from the starting eyes forced out of their sockets, and from the blood which trickles in a slow, dreadful stream between purple lips. He dare not stop to look or think what he has done ; he thrusts the last roll into his pocket and flies from the room. He is so furiously impatient now to get away from that horrible thing on the bed, that he forgets caution. He flies do\vn the stairs, scarcely knowing that the noise he makes echoes from cellar to attic of the silent old house. Ho takes the wrong turning, and swears a furious oath, to find himself at a door instead of the window by which he had entered. He hears a shriek, too ; and, mad with ter- ror, tears off .his mask and turns down another passage. 188 A CRIME. Right at last ! this is the window ! He leaps through it he is out in the pale moonlight, tearing through the trees like a madman. He has gained the road a horse stands tied to a tree, and lie leaps on his back, drives his spurs furiously into the beast's side, and is off like the wind. In ten minutes, at this rate, he will be in Speck- port, and safe. The apartment in which Midge sought sleep after the fatigues of the day, was the kitchen, and was on the first floor, directly under Lady Leroy's room. She had quar- tered Rob Nettleby in the adjoining apartment a big, draughty place, where the rats held grand carnival all the year round. Midge, like all honest folks in her station, who have plenty of hard work, and employ their hands more than their heads, was a good sleeper. But on this stormy August night Midge was destined to realize some of the miseries of wakefulness. She had not dared to go to bed during the first fury of the storm; for "Midge was scared beyond everything by lightning and thunder ; but after that had subsided, she had ven- tured to unrobe and retire. But Midge could not sleep. Whether it was the heat, or that the tempest had made her nervous, or why or wherefore, Midge could never afterward tell ; but she tossed from side to side, and lis- tened to the didoes of the rats, and the whistling of the wind about the old house, and the ghostly moonlight shimmering down through the fluttering leaves of the trees, and groaned and fidgeted, and felt just as miserable as lying awake when one wants to go asleep, can make any one feel. There were all sorts of strange and weird noises and echoes in the lonely old house ; so when Midge fancied she heard one of the back windows softly opened, and something on the stairs, she set it down to the wind and the rats, as Nathalie had done. She heard the clock overhead in Lady Leroy's room the only timepiece in the house strike eleven, and thought it had come very soon ; for it hardly seemed fifteen minutes since it had struck ten. But she set this down to her fidgetiness, too ; for. how. was she to know Jthat the black shadow in the A CRIME. 189 room above had moved the hands on the dial-plate before quitting ? But that other noise ! this is no imagination, surely. Midge starts up with a gasping cry of affright. A man's step is on the stairs a man's hurried tread is in the nail she hears a smothered oath hears him turn and rush past her door hears a leap and then all is still. The momentary spell that has made Midge speechless is broken. She springs to her feet yes, springs, for Midge forgets she is short and fat and given to waddling, in her terror, throws on the red flannel undergarment you wot of, and rushes out of her room and up-stairs, shrieking like mad. She cannot conceive what is the matter, or where the danger lies, but she bursts into Nathalie's room first. Nathalie, aroused by the wild screams from a deep sleep, starts up with a bewildered face. Midge sees she is safe, and still uttering the most appalling yells, flies to the next, to Lady Leroy's room, Nathalie after her ; and Mr. Hob Nettleby, with an alarmed countenance and in a state of easy undress, making his toilet as he comes, brings up the rear. " What is it ? Is Mrs. Leroy worse ?" he asked, staring at the shrieking Midge. " There's been somebody here robbing and murder- ing the house ! Ah h h 1" The shriek with which Midge recoiled was echoed this time by Nathalie. They had entered the fatal room ; the lamp still burned on the table, and its light fell full on the livid and purple face of the dead woman. Dead ! Yes, there could be no doubt. Murdered! Yes, for there stood the open and rifled box which had held the money. "She's killed, Rob Nettleby! She's murdered!" Midge cried, rushing headlong from the room ; " but he can't have got far. I heard him going out. Come !" She was down the stairs with wonderful speed, fol- lowed by the horrified Nettleby. Midge unlocked and flung open the hall-door, and rushed in the same headlong way out. There was a man under the trees, and ho was running. With the spring of a tigress Midge was upon him, her hands clutching his collar, and her dreadful yell 190 A CRIME. of " Murder !" piercing the stillness of the night The grasp of those powerful hands was not to be easily shaken off, and Rob .Nettleby laid hold of him on the other side. Their prisoner made no resistance ; he was too utterly taken by surprise to do other than stand and stare at them both. " You villain! you robber ! you murderer !'' screamed Midge, giving him a furious shake. " You'll hang for this night's work, if anybody hung yet ! Hold him fast, Rob, while I go and send your brother to Speckport after the p'lice." The address broke the spell that held their captive quiet. Indignantly endeavoring to shake off the hands that held him, he angrily demanded what they meant. Rob Nettleby, with a shout of astonishment, released his hold he had recognized the voice. Midge, too, loosed her grasp, and backed a step or two, and Charley Marsh, stepping from under the shadow of the trees into the moonlight, repeated his question with some asperity. " Charley !" Midge gasped, more horror-stricken by the recognition than she had been by the murder. ' What the deuce is the matter, Nettleby?" Charley demanded, impatiently. " What is all this row about ?" "There has been a murder done," said the young man, so confounded by the discovery as to be scarcely able to speak. " Mrs. Leroy has been murdered !" Charley recoiled with a white face. " Murdered ! Good heavens ! When ? By whom ?" " To-night just now." He did not answer the last query he thought it super fluous. To his mind, Charley Marsh was as good as caught in the act. " And Nathalie ! Where is she ? Is she safe 2" " She is in Lady Leroy's room.'' Charley only waited for the answer, and made a pre- cipitate rush for the house. The other two followed, neither daring to look at the other or speak followed him up-stairs and into the chamber of the tragedy. All was FOUND GUILTY. 191, as it had been. The ghastly and discolored face of the murdered woman was there, even the pillow, horrible to look at. But going partly across a chair as she had fallen, all her golden hair tossed about in loose disorder, and her face white, and fixed, and cold as marble, Nathalie lay near the center of the room. There, by herself, where the dreadful sight had first struck her, she had fainted entirely away. CHAPTER XVII. FOUND GUILTY. R. YAL BLAKE sat in his office, in that inner room sacred to his privacy. He sat at that littered table, writing and scissoring, for they went to press that day, and the editor of the Speckport Spouter was over head-and-ears in work. He had just completed an item and was slowly re- perusing it. It begins in a startling manner enough : " Mysterious murder ! The night before last a most shocking tragedy occurred atRedmon House, being no less than the robbery and murder of a lady well known in our town, Mrs. Leroy. The deceased owned and occupied the house, together with her ward, Miss Nathalie Marsh, and one female servant. About eleven o'clock on the night of the 15th, this servant was alarmed by the sound of footsteps on the stairs, and aroused a young man, Robert Nettleby, who chanced to be staying in the house, and they proceeded together to discover the cause. On entering the chamber occupied by Mrs. Leroy, they found her dead; the protruding tongue and eyeballs, and purple visage, telling plainly her death had been caused by stran- gulation. A box, containing a large sum of money, eight thousand pounds, we believe, was found broken open and 192 FUUND GUILTY.. rifled. The assassin escaped, and no clue to him has u yet been discovered, but we trust the inquest which is to be held on the premises this morning will throw some light on the subject. It is a most inhuman affair, and, we are sure, no effort will be wanting on the part of the of- ficials concerned to root out the heart of the matter, and punish the barbarous perpetrator as he deserves !" Mr. Blake read this last neatly-rounded period with a complacent face, and then pulled out his watch. " Ten o'clock !" he muttered, " and the inquest com- mences in half an hour. Busy or not busy, 1 must be present." Speckport was in a state of unprecedented excitement. A murder and people did murder one another some- times, even in Speckport always set the town wild for a week. Even the civic elections were nothing to it ; and there having been a dearth of bloodshed lately, the tragedy at Redmon was greedily devoured in all its details. Like a rolling snowball, small enough at first, but increasing as it goes along, the story of the robbery and murder nad grown, until, had Midge heard the recital, as correctly re- ceived in the town, she would have stared aghast. Crowds had flocked up Redmon l^oad the whole of that livelong day following the murder, and gazed with open-mouthed awe on the gloomy and lonely old house gloomier and lonelier than ever now. Crowds were pouring up still. One would think from their morbid curiosity they expect- ed the old house to have undergone some wonderful transformation. The Speckport picnics were nothing to it. Mr. Blake, going along at his customary swinging Eace, speedily reached No. 14 Great St. Peter Street, and jtting himself in with his latch-key, went up-stairs to his sleeping-apartment, to make some alteration in his toilet before proceeding to Redraon. There was no one in the house ; for Miss Blake had been absent on a visit to some friend out of town for the past few days, and Val took his meals at a restaurant. Thinking himself alone, there- fore, Mr. Blake, standing before the glass, idjusting an FO UND G UIL TT. 193 obstinate and painfully stiff collar, was not a little sur- prised to hear the street-door open and shut with a slam, then a rapid rusli up-stairs, a strong rustling of silk in the passage, and his own door flung violently open. Mr. Blake turned round and beheld his sister, in a state of perspira- tion, her face red with heat and haste, anger in her eyes and in every rustle of her silk gown. " It's not true, Val !" she burst out, before that gen- tleman could speak ; " it can't be true ! They never can have been such a pack of fools !" " What can't be true ? Who's a pack of fools ?" " All Speckport ! Do you mean to say they've really gone and taken up Charley Marsh ?" "Oh, is that it?" said Mr. Blake, returning to his toilet. " They haven't taken him up that I know of. What brings you home ? I thought you weren't coming until Saturday." " And do you mean to say you thought I could stop one moment after I heard that poor old thing was dead, and Charley Marsh taken up for it. If you can be un- feeling and cold-blooded," said Miss Jo, turning from deep pink to brightest scarlet, " I can't." " My dear Jo, don't make such a howling ! Charley Marsh isn't taken up, I tell you." " But he's suspected, isn't he ? Doesn't all Speckport point at him as the murderer ? Isn't he held to appear at the inquest ? Tell me that." " Yes," said Mr. Blake, looking critically at his cravat, " he is. Is that collar straight, Jo ?" Miss Jo's only answer was a withering look. " And he can talk of collars at such a time ! And he pretended he used to be a friend of that poor boy !" " Don't be a fool, Jo," said Yal, testily. " What can I do ? I don't accuse him !" " You don't accuse him !" retorted Miss Jo, with sneering emphasis. " That's very good of you, indeed, Mr. Blake ! Oh no, you don't accuse, but you stand up there, like like a cold-blooded kangaroo" (Miss Blake could think of no better simile in the heat of the moment) ' fixing your collar, while all Speckport's down on him, 9 194 FOUND GUILTY. and no one to take his part! You won't accuse him, indeed ! Hadn't you better ran up and do it now I Where's Natty ? Answer me that." Miss Jo turned so fiercely upon her brother with this query that Mr. Blake wilted at once. " At home with her mother !" " Poor dear girl !" and here Miss Jo softened into tears ; " poor dear child ! What a shock for her ! How does she bear it P "She has been ill and hysterical ever since. They don't suppose she will be able to give evidence at the inquest." "Poor dear Natty! And how does Mrs. Marsh take it?" " Very hard. Betsy Ann had to run to the nearest druggist's for fourpence-worth of smelling-salts, and she has been rocking, and reading, and smelling at it ever since." " Ah, poor dear !" said sympathetic Miss Jo, whose first fury had subsided. " Does she know they suspect Charley 4" " Of course not. Who would tell her that ? Oh, I say, Joanna, you haven't heard that about Miss Rose, have you ?"' " What about Miss Rose ? Nobody suspects her of the murder, do they ?" " Not exactly ! She is going away." " Going where ?" " To England ! hand me that vest, Jo with Mrs. Major Wheatley." Miss Jo sat agape at the tidings. " It is very sudden," said Val, getting into his Sunday waistcoat. "Miss Rose had notice of it day before yesterday it was that night, the night of that terrible aifair at Redmon, you know, that it was proposed to her. She declined then, although the terms were double what she gets now, and the work very much less ; but yester- day afternoon she accepted." " She did ! What made her change her mind 2" FOUND GUILTY. 195 " Well, Mrs. Marsh told her, I believe, that now Lady Leroy was gone, and Nathalie come into her fortune, there would no longer be any need to keep the school, and that, in point of fact, it would break up. Of course, Miss Hose at once accepted the other offer, and leaves in a very few days." " Direct for England ?" " Yes, that is to say, by way of Quebec. Mrs. Major "Wheatley is a very great lady, and must have a com- panion for herself, and a governess for her little girl, and Miss Rose suits to a T. It's a very good thing for the little school-mistress, but she will be missed here. Tho poor looked upon her as an angel sent direct from heaven, to make their clothes and buy their blankets, and look after them when sick, and teach their young ones for nothing." " Well, I am sure ! I declare, Yal, I'm sorry ! She was the nicest little thing !" " So she was," said V al, " and now I'm off ! Don't you go howling about the town, Jo, and making a fuss about Marsh; if he is innocent, he will come out all square don't you be afraid." "If!" screamed Miss Blake; but her brother was clattering down-stairs half a dozen steps at a time, and already out of hearing. Droves of people were still flocking out the Red- mon road, raising blinding clouds of dust, and discussing the only subject proper to be discussed then in Speckport. Yal's long strides outstripped all competitors ; and arriving at the red brick house, presently ran the blockade of a group of some two hundred idlers, and strode into the house as one having authority. As Mr. Blake entered, Dr. Leach stepped forward and joined him, with a very grave face. " How are they getting on ?" Val asked. " They are getting on fast enough," the doctor answered, in a dissatisfied tone. " They've been examin- ing me. I had to describe that last interview witli her," jerking his thumb toward the ceiling, " and prove to their 196 FOUND GUILTY. satisfaction she came to her death by strangling, and in no other way. They hr,d Natty up there, too." " Oh, she is better, then." " Not much ! but she had very little to tell, and Laura Blair has driven her off again. They have de- tained Mrs. Marsh she does not know for what, though and will examine her presently." " To find out the cause of Charley's absence from home that night ! Do you know, doctor, I begin to think things look black for Charley." " Ah ! you might say so ?" said Dr. Leach, with a significant nod, " if you knew what I do." Val looked at him. " What you do ! Do you mean or pretend to say " " There ! there ! there ! Don't speak so loud. I may tell you, Blake you're a friend of his and would do nothing against him. Read that." He handed him a note. Val read it with a blank face. It was the note sent by Cherrie to Charley, which Ann had told him of, and a verbatim copy of that given Cherrie by Captain Cavendish. " How did you get this ?" Val asked, with a still whiter face. " It was sent by that gadfly, Cherrie, to the shop, the evening of the murder. Her sister brought it, and, Marsh being out, gave it to the boy. Now, what do you think the young rascal did ? Why, sir, broke it open the minute the girl's back was turned, and read it. As luck would have it, I pounced in and caught him in the act. You ought to have seen his face, Blake ! I took the note from him arid read it myself, not knowing it was for Marsh, and I have it ever since. I meant to give it to him next day, and tell him what I have told you; but next day came the news of the murder, and underhand whispers of his guilt. Now, Val, what do you think of it? Isn't the allusion to Lady Leroy's money plain enough ?" " That bit of paper might hang him," Val emphat- ically said, handing it back. " What do you mean to do with itr FOUND GUILTY. 197 " There is only one tiling I can do with it, as a con- scientious man and that is, hand it over to the coroner. I like the boy, but I like justice more, and will do my duty. If we only had that Cherrie here, she might throw some light on the business." " What can she mean by that allusion to state-rooms 1" said Val. " Can they have meant to run off together in the steamer, and was Greentown only a ruse ? I know Charley lias been spooney about her this long time, and would be capable of marrying her at a moment's notice." " Blake, do you know 1 have been thinking she is hiding somewhere not far off, and has the money. The police should be set on her track at once." " They will, when that note is produced. But, doctor, you seem to take it for granted that Charley is guilty." "How can I help it? Isn't the evidence strong enough ?" "Circumstantial, doctor, circumstantial. It seems hard to believe Charley Marsh a murderer." " So it does, but Scripture and history, ever since the times of King David, are full of parallel cases. Think of the proof think of this note, and tell me what you infer candidly yourself." " The note is a staggerer, but still Oh, hang it !" cried Mr. Blake, impatiently, "I won't believe him guilty as long as I can help it. Does he say nothing in his own defense ?" " Not a syllable, and the coroner and jury are all in his favor, too. He stands there like a sulky lion, and says nothing. They'll bring him in guilty without a doubt." " Who have been examined ?" "All who saw Lady Leroy that day Miss Marsh, Midge, myself, Lawyer Darcy, and Tom Oaks, who swore roundly when asked that Marsh knew of his pay- ing the money that day, for he had told him himself. He also swore that he knew Charley to be over head and ears in debt debts of honor, he called them. Debts of dishonor, I should say." 198 FOUND GUILTY. " I think I'll go in 1 Can we speak to Charley, I wonder ?" " Of course. He is not held precisely as a prisoner, as yet. They have Midge up again. I never knew her name was Priscilla Short, until to-day." " What do they want with her a second time 2" "She was the first to discover the murder. Her evidence goes clear against Marsh, though she gives it with the greatest reluctance. Come, I'll go in with you." The two gentlemen went in together, and found the assemblage smiling at some rebut of Midge's. That wit- ness, with a very red and defiant face, was glaring at the coroner, who, in rather a subdued tone, told her that would do, and proceeded to call the next witness, Robert Nettleby. Robert TTettleby took his place, and was sworn, in reply to the questions put to him, he informed his hearers that he had hpard nothing until the yells of Midge aroused him from sleep, and, following her up-stairs, he found her in Miss Marsh's room. "Had Miss Marsh retired?" the coroner wanted to know. Mr. Nettleby was not sure. If, by retiring, the coroner meant going to bed, no ; but if he meant going asleep, yes. She was sitting by the window, dressed, but asleep, until Midge aroused her by her screams. Then she started up, and followed them into the room of Mrs. Leroy, whom they found dead, and black in the face, as if she had been choked. Midge had run down stairs, and he had run after her, and they saw some one running under the trees, when they got out. Midge had flown out and collared him, and it proved to be Mr. Charley Marsh. Here the coroner struck in. " He was running, yon say : in what direction ?" Mr. Nettleby couldn't say positively was inclined to think he was running toward, not from them. Couldn't swear either way, for it was a queer, shadowy kind of a night, half moonlight, half darkness. They had all three gone back to the house, Mr. Marsh appearing very much FOUND GUILTY. 199 shocked at hearing of the murder ; and on returning to the room of the deceased, had found Miss Marsh in a fainting-fit. They brought her to with water, and then her brother had taken her to her mother's house in Speck- port, in a gig. He and Midge had gone to his father's cottage, where they had remained all night. Further than that Mr. Nettleby knew nothing, except and here lie hesitated. "Except what, sir?" the coroner sharply inquired. " Remember you are upon oath." "Well, sir," said Bob, "it isn't much, except that when we eame back to the room, I picked this up close to the bed. It looked as if it belonged to a man, and I put it in my pocket. Here it is." He produced from his coat-pocket, as he spoke, a glove. A gentleman's kid glove, pale-brown in color, and consid- erably soiled with wear. Val started as he saw it, for those were the kind of gloves Charley Marsh always wore he had them made to order in one of the stores of the town. The coroner examined it with a very grave face there were two letters inside, " C. M." "Do you know to whom this glove belongs?" the coroner asked. " I know I found it," said Nettleby, not looking at it, and speaking sulkily, " that's all I know about it." " Does any one you know wear such gloves ?" " Plenty of gentlemen I've seen wear brown kid gloves." " Have you seen the initials, * C. M.,' inside this glove?" " I have." " And on your oath, recollect are you not morally certain you know its owner 2" Nettle by was silent. " Speak, witness," the coroner cried ; " answer the question put to you. Who do you suspect is the owner of this glove ?" " Mr. Marsh ! Them letters stands for his name, and he al \vavs wears them kind of gloves." 900 FOUND GUILTY. " Had Mr. Marsh been near the bed, after your return to the room together, before you found this glove ?" " No ; I found it lying close by the bedside, and he had never been nearer than the middle of the room, where he was trying to fetch his sister to." Robert Nettleby was told he might stand down, and Mr. Marsh was called upon to identify his property. Charley, who had been standing at one of the windows listening, in gloomy silence, and closely watched by two policemen, stepped forward, took the glove, examined it, nanded it back, and coldly owned it was his. How was he going to account for its being found by the bedside of the murdered woman ? Mr. Marsh was not going to account for it at all he knew nothing about it. He always had two or three such pairs of gloves at once, and had never missed this. Amid an ominous silence, he resumed his place at the window, staling out at the broad green fields and waving trees, bathed in the golden August sunshine, and seeing them no more than if he had been stone-blind. Mrs. Marsh was the next witness called, and came from an adjoining room, dressed in black, and simpering at find- ing herself the cynosure of so many eyes. Mrs. Marsh folded one black-kid-gloved hand over the other after be- ing sworn, with a mild sigh, and prepared to answer the catechism about to be propounded. The coroner began wide of the mark, and asked her a good many questions, that seemed to have little bearing on the matter in hand, all of which the lady answered very minutely, and at length. Presently, in a somewhat roundabout fashion, he inquired if her son had been at home on the night of the murder. " No ; he not been at home, at least not until he had come driving home with Natty, both of them as pale as ghosts, and no wonder, though they quite made her scream to look at them; but when she had heard the news, she had such a turn, it was a mercy she hadn't fainted herself, and she hadn't half got over it yet." Here Mrs. Marsh took a sniff at a smelling-bottle she carried, and the ammonia being strong, brought a tear FOUND GUILTY. 201 into each eye, which she wiped away with a great show of pocket-handkerchief. " What time had her son left the house before return- ing with his sister ?" " After tea. He had been home to tea, which in itself was so unusual a circumstance, that she, Mrs. Marsh, felt sure something was going to happen. She had had a feel- ing on her all day, and Charley's conduct had increased that feeling until she was perfectly convinced something dreadful was going to happen." " In what manner had her son's conduct augmented her presentiments ?" " Well, she did not know exactly, but Charley had be- haved odd. He had come over and talked to her before going out, telling her he had been bad, but meant to be good, and turn over a new leaf for the future ; and, bid- ding her take his part if ever she heard him run down, which she meant to do, for Charley was a good boy as ever lived, in the main, only he- had been foolish lately ; but mothers, it is well known, can forgive anything, and she meant to do it ; and if he, the oorouer, was a mother, she would do it herself." "Was her sou in the habit of stopping out nights?" " !Not until lately ; that is, within the hist two weeks, since when he used to come home in a dreadful state of drink, worrying her nearly to death, and letting all her advice go in one ear and out of the other." Mrs. Marsh was shown the glove, and asked if she knew it. Yes, of course she did ; it was one of Charley's ; he always wore those kind, and his initials were inside. The coroner examined her further, but only got wordy repetitions of what she had already said. Everything was telling terribly against Charley, who stood, like a dark ghost, still moodily staring out of the window. Val Blake crossed over and hud his hand heavily on his shoulder as Mrs. Marsh left the room. " Charley, old boy ! have you notliing at all to say for yourself ?" Charley lifted his gloomy eyes, but turned away again in sullen silence. 9* 203 FOUND GUILTY. " Ton know they will c.iarge you with this crime, and you know you are not guilty. * Can you not prove your- self innocent ?" " How ? 'Will they take my word for it 2" " Explain why you were found in the grounds at that hour of the night." " They have akeady asked me to do so, and I have al- ready declined." "But tliis is folly this is madness! "What motive could you possibly have for being there at such an hour ?" Charley was silent. Val laid his hand on his shoulder with a kindly look. " Charley, will you not tell me ?" "No." ' " You know I am your friend." " You will not be so long. Those fellows over there will settle the matter shortly to their own satisfaction, and I am not going to spoil their sport." " Charley, said Val, looking him steadily in the face, " where is Oherrie 2" Charley Marsh's face, white and haggard an instant previously, turned scarlet, and from scarlet whiter than before. But he lifted his eyes fearlessly to Yal's face, roused to eagerness at last. " Where is she 2" he repeated. " Do you know 2" " No ; but I think you do." "Why do you think so?" " That's not the question ! Where is she 2" "I don't know." "What!" " 1 don y t know. I tell you I don't ! She is a false- hearted, lying, treacherous " His face was white with fury. His name, called by the coroner, restored him to himself. Turning round, he saw that gentleman holding out to him a letter. It was Charley's fatal note, given to him by Dr. Leach, while Yal and Charley had been speaking. "Do you know this, Mr. Marsh?" the coroner asked. Charley glanced over the note, the coroner stili hold- ing it. It was all written on the iirat page, in a pothook- FOUND GUILTY. 203 and-hanger fist ; an 1 Charley turned crimson for the sec- ond time, as he finished it and read the name at the bottom. "Do you know anything of this, Mr. Marsh?" the coroner repeated. " No," Charley coldly and briefly said. " You recognize the writing and the name ?" "Yes." " The writer of this, Cherrie Nettleby, alludes to money which she says will do yon and her more good than it ever did Lady Leroy. To what money does she refer ?" Charley thought of the bank-note he had taken from her through sheer necessity, and once more the blood rushed in a scarlet tide to his face, ebbing again, and leav- ing him white as ashes. Coroner, jury, and spectators saw his changing face, and set it down to conscious guilt. "To what money does she refer?" reiterated the coroner. " Sir, I decline answering that question." " Indeed ! Are you aware, Mr. Marsh, such a refusal tells very much against you 'C Charley smiled coldly, contemptuously. " I am quite aware, sir, every circumstance tells very much against me. Nevertheless, I refuse to answer that and any other question 1 choose." " The boy is either mad," thought Val Blake, " or else guilty. In either case, his doom is sealed !" The coroner now explained to his court how the letter came into the hands of Doctor Leach, and read it aloud, handing it over to the jury for their inspection when he had finished. The allusion to his taking state-rooms for them both puzzled all who knew of the girl's departure for Greentown ; bat was set down by them, as it had been by Val, as a blind to deceive her friends. Ann Nettleby was next called, and, in a state of great trepidation, related Charley's call at the cottage and in- quiry for Cherrie. Informed the coroner, in reply to his question, that Mr. Marsh was " after" Cherrie, a constant visitor at their house, and had asked Cherrie not long 204 FOUND GUILTY. before to run away with Mm to the States. Had not heard from her sister since her departure, but supposed she was up in Greentown. One or two other witnesses were called, who had noth- ing to relate concerning the murder, but a good deal about Mr. Marsh's late dissipated habits and gambling-debts. When these witnesses were gone, Mr. Marsh was called upon, and requested, if he had anything to say in his own behalf, to say it. Mr. Marsh had but little to say, and said that little with a recklessness that quite shocked the assemblage. The secret of his bitter tone and fiercely-scornful indifference they had no clue to, and they set it down to the despera- tion of discovered guilt. He informed them, in that reckless manner, flinging his words at them like a defiance, that Ann J^ettleby's testimony was correct, that he had called at the cottage between eight and nine on the night of the murder, and on leaving her had gone straight to the old house, and remained in the grounds until discov- ered by Midge and Rob Kettleby. What had taken him there, what his motive in lingering, was what Cherrie meant in her note, and all else concerning his motives and actions he refused to answer. He was a drunkard, he was a gambler, he was in debt " his friends" with sneering emphasis, " have given his character with perfect correct- ness. But for aU that, strange as it might seem, incredible as he knew they would think it, he had neither robbed nor murdered his sister's benefactress. Further than that he had nothing to say." He returned to the window again, flashing fierce de- fiance on every hand, and the coroner summed up the evidence. He was an old man, and had known Charley Marsh since he was a pretty little fair-haired, frolicsome boy, and he would have given a good round sum in hard cash to be able to find him innocent. But he could not, and justice must be done. He recapitulated hi? irregular conduct on the evening of the murder, as related by his own mother, his lingering in the grounds from dark until discovered by Priscilla Short and Robert Xettleby, con- fessed by himself ; his glove found at the bedside, as if FOUND GUILTY. 205 dropped in his haste and alarm ; his knowledge of tho large sum of money paid the deceased that afternoon by Mr. Oaks ; his knowledge, also, of the house, as proved by his entering the back-window, found open, and of its lonely and unprotected state ; and lastly, this note of Cher- ne Nettleby's, with its distinct allusion to the money of Mre. Leroy, to benefit him. It was a pity this girl was not here but she soon would be found ; meantime, the case was perfectly clear without her. It was evident rob- bery, not murder, had been the primary instigation ; but the unfortunate woman awakening, probably, had fright- ened him, and in the impulse of the moment he had endeavored to stifle her cries, and so strangled her. Perhaps, too, his sister being her heiress, and inheritrix of all she possessed, he had persuaded himself, with the sophistry of guilt, that he had some right to this money, and that he was only defrauding his own sister, after all. His debts were heavy and pressing, no way of paying them open, and desperation had goaded him on. He (the coroner) trusted that the sad case of this young man, once so promising, until he had fallen into evil habits, would be a warning to others, and an inducement not to stray away from the path of rectitude into that broad road whose end was disgrace and ruin. The money stolen had not been found, but there had been ample time given him to con- ceal it. He begged the jury to reflect on the evidence they had heard, consult together, and return a verdict according to their conscience. The jury retired from the room, and in the awful silence which followed, you might have heard a pin drop. Charles Marsh, in this supreme crisis of his life, still stood looking out of the window. He neither moved nor spoke, nor looked at any one, nor betrayed the slightest sign of agitation ; but his teeth were rigidly locked, and the palm of his strong right hand was bleeding where he had clenched it, in that silent agony, until the nails had sunk deep into the flesh. He had been reckless and defiant, and braved it out with a high hand ; but Charles Marsh had had the misfortune to be born with a keenly sensitive heart, and a pride that had lain latent under all his care- 206 FOUND GUILTY. \ less life ; and what he felt in that hour of disgrace and degradation, branded as a thief and a murderer before the friends who knew him all his life, was known only to Heaven and himself. The jury were not long away. Evidently, his case had been settled in their minds before they had left their seats. And in that dread silence the foreman, Mr. Blair, with a grave, sad face, stood up to announce their verdict. It was only one word the terrible word, " Guilty." There was a swaying sound among the crowd, as if they had drawn breath for the first time. That dismal vord fled from lip to lip like wildfire, until it passed from the room to the crowd in the hall, and from them to the swaying mob without. It was quite a lively scene, in fact, out thers, where that big crowd of men stood broiling under the meridian sun, when the verdict was announced, and the inquiries as to how "young Marsh" behaved and looked were many and eager. The question was not very easily answered. Young Marsh, standing by that sunny window, was so screened by the towering figure of Mr. Yalentine Blake, that the gaping and exasperated throng craned their throats and stood on tip-toe for nothing. They would see him, however, when he came out to enter the cab, already in waiting, that was to convey him in the custody of the constables into town, and it was worth while waiting even for that fleeting glimpse. Five, ten, fifteen, twenty minutes passed. The ex- pectant crowd were getting angry and impatient ; it was shameful, this dallying. But two or three policemen are out now with their red batons and brass buttons of author- ity, clearing a way for the gentlemen who are coming out, and for the cab which is to draw up close to the front door. * Still, the mob press forward, the coroner and jury are departing; and now the prisoner's coming. But a new disappointment is in store for them ; for when lie comes, he has his hat pulled so far over his eyes, and springs in so quickly, that they don't even get that fleeting glimpse of him they are crushing each other to death to obtain. The constables follow; it is pleasant even to see them ; the blinds are pulled down ; the cab drives off rap- THE DAttEENING SKY. 207 idly, and the crowd go home, ravenous for their dinner. And Charles Marsh is on his way to Speckport jail, to await his trial for the willful murder of Jane Leroy 1 CHAPTER XYHl. THE DARKENING SKY. HE day after the inquest, the funeral took place. As the clock of Speckport cathedral chimed in sonorous sweetness the hour of ten, all that was earthly of Mrs. Leroy was placed in the hearse, and the gloomy cortege started. A great many carriages followed the mistress of Itedmon to her last long home ; and, in the foremost, two ladies, robed in sable, and vailed in crape, rode. The outward mourning was for the dead, the deeper deuil of the heart for the liv- ing for him who, on this wretched August day, was a prisoner in Speckport jail, awaiting his trial for the great- est crime man can commit, doomed to suffer, perhaps, the greatest penalty man can inflict. Nobody in all the long line of carriages talked ; they crouched into corners, and shivered, and were silent, and sulky, and cross, and uncomfortable, and gaped, and wished the thing was well over, or that they had never come. They got their wish after a while. The last sod was beaten down, and the carriages rattled back into the foggy town all but three or four; and they irove back to the eerie old house, never so lonely and desolate as now. One ceremony was yet to be gone through that ceremony the reading of the last will and testament of Mrs. Leroy. Here, where it had been written, in the ghostly reception- room, where the inquest had taken place, and where the rats and black beetles had it all their OWM way, it was to 208 THE DARKENING SET. be read. It was this that brought Mrs. Marsh, who had been ill and hysterical ever since she had heard the result of the inquest, to the funeral at all. To her it was a great and joyful thing this wealth that after to-day was to be theirs, and not even in her grief could she forego the pleasure of being present. Heaven knows, it was noth- ing of the sort brought her daughter the silent agony she had endured since yesterday can never be told ; but she had hope yet. She had hope in this very wealth that was to be hers to help him. Young as she was, she knew enough of the power of money to be aware it can do al- most anything in this world, and smooth the road to the next ; and she trusted in its magic power to free her im- prisoned brother. They all went into the silent and for- lorn house together; Mr. Darcy, who was to read the will, and whose face was distressed and troubled to the last degree ; Mr. Blair, as an intimate friend of the family ; Mr. McGregor, Senior, and Dr. .Leach ; Mrs. McGregor and Mrs. Blair were with Mrs. Marsh, and Miss Mc- Gregor and Miss Blair were deeply sympathetic with Miss Marsh the heiress ! and Mr. V al Blake, with his sister on his arm ; and Midge, who had been at the v signing of the will, brought up the rear. The shutters of the closed rooms had all been opened, and the casements raised, for the first time in many a day, and the pale light of the foggy morning poured in. Law- yer Darcy took his seat at a table, and laid out on it a legal-looking document tied with red tape. The others seated themselves around the apartment; and Nathalie Marsh, in her deep mourning-robes, and her thick black crape vail down over her face, took her seat beside one of the open windows, and leaned her forehead on her hand, as if it ached. Long afterward, when she was gone from them for- ever, they remembered that drooping black figure and bowed young head, with one or two bright curls, like lost sunbeams, shimmering out from under her crape bonnet. Long afterward, they thought of how she had sat that dull and miserable day, suffering as these patient womanly martyrs only suffer, and making no sign. THE DARKENING SKY. 209 Lawyer Darcy seemed strangely reluctant to commence his task. He lingered and lingered, his face pale and agitated, his lips twitching nervously, and the lingers that untied the document before him, trembling. His voice, too, when he spoke, was not quite steady. " I am afraid," said the lawyer, in that unsteady voice, " that the reading of this will will be a shock a disap- pointment ! I know it must astonish all, as it did me, and I should like to prepare you for it, before it is read." There was a surprised and alarmed murmur, but no one spoke. " You are all aware," the lawyer went on, keeping his eyes resolutely from that drooping figure at the win- dow, " that when Mi's. Leroy made her will after coming to Speckport she bequeathed all she possessed to her ward, Miss Marsh. I drew up the will, and she made no secret of lier intentions." There was another painful pause. Yal Blake broke it. " Of course," he said, impatiently, " we all know Mrs. Leroy left Miss Marsh heiress of Redmon." " But you do not know," said Mr. Darcy, " that a short time ago in fact, a few days before her tragical death, she revoked that first will and made a new one." "What?" the cry was from Val Blake, but no one heeded him ; every eye was strained upon the lawyer. " Made a new one," the lawyer repeated, still averting his eyes from the black form at the window; " a new one, entirely different ; leaving, I am sorry to say, Redmon away from Miss Marsh in point of fact, disinheriting her." There were two little feminine shrieks from the Misses Blair and McGregor, a hysterical cry from Mrs. Marsh, but the bowed figure at the window never stirred. In the unnatural stillness of her attitude, her face hidden behind her crape mask, there was something more fearful than any outbursts of wild womanly distress. " The new will was made, as I told you," continued Mr. Darcy, " but a few days before her death ; mada wliilst smarting under a sense of anger, and what she 210 THE DARKENING BET. called ingratitude. Miss Marsh bad offended her, dis- obeyed her in a matter on which she had set her heart, and for this she was going to disinherit her. I expostu- lated, entreated, did all I could, but in vain. She was ob- stinate, and this new will was made, which I now hold in my hand." Mrs. Marsh's face had turned as white as that of a dead woman, and great beads of cold sweat stood on her forehead. But she sat rigidly still, listening, and feeling as though she were in some dreadful dream. " I drew up the will," pursued Mr. Darcy, " and Midge yonder and old Nettleby signed it. 1 fancied when her first resentment cooled, she would see the injustice of her act, and retract it. I was right ; the day preceding the night of her death, hearing she was ill, I called to see her, and she told me to come the next morning, and a third will should be made, leaving all to Nathalie as at first. Next morning she was dead." To the dark form, whose drooping face was pitifully hidden by the black vail, did any memory come of the words spoken to her by the dead woman that fatal night, and which had then been so mysterious : " I'll make it all right, Natty ! I'll make it all right 1" Did she know what was meant now ? "And do you mean to say, Mr. Darcy," Yal Blake cried, astonished and indignant, " that Nathalie Marsh ia not the heiress of Redmon ?" " I do ! this will disinherits her ! It is a crying wrong, but no fault of mine." " And who, then, is the heir ?" asked Mr. McGregor. " She bequeaths all she possesses, unconditionally, to her brother, Fhilip Henderson, or, in case of his death, to his children. I will read the will." Amid that profound and impressive stillness, the law- yer read the last will and testament of Jane Leroy. it was concise enough, and left the whole of her property, real and personal, without conditions, to her brother, Philip Henderson, and his heirs, with the exception of five pounds to Miss Nathalie Marsh, to buy a mourning- ling. , r THE DARKENING SKY. 211 Mr. Darcy hesitated over this last cruel passage, and felt inclined to leave it out ; but he did not, and tliere was a suppressed murmur of indignation from every lip on hearing it. Poor Mrs. Marsh was catching her breath in hysterical gasps, and being fanned and sprinkled with cold water, and the palms of her hands slapped by Miss Jo and the two married ladies. And still the vailed figure at the window sat rigidly there, uttering no cry, shedding no tears. There are griefs too deep for words, too intense for tears, when we can only sit in mute and stony despair, while the world reels under our feet, and the light of the sun is blackness. To Nathalie Marsh, the loss of fortune was the loss of everything brother, lover, home, happi- ness the loss of all to which she had looked forward so long, for which she had endured so much. And now, she sat there, like a figure carved in ebony ; and only for the ghastly pallor of her faoe in the indistinct glimpses of it they could catch through the vail, could they tell that she even heard. It was Yal Blake who again broke the silence that followed the reading of the will. " I protest against this will !" he indignantly cried. " It is unjust and ungrateful ! You should never have produced it, Mr. Darcy. You should have read the former will." " You are jesting, Mr. Blake ! "WTiile regretting as much as you can possibly do this unfortunate change, my duty is sacred, and by this will we must abide. Mrs. Marsh seems very ill ; I think she had better be conveyed home." No one ventured to speak to Nathalie, her unnatural manner awed them ; but when her mother was supported from the room, and she arose to follow, good naturod ^vliss Jo was beginning a homily on resignation, and on its being all for the best, perhaps, in the end. Her brother, how- ever, cut her short with very little ceremony, and handed Miss Marsh in after her mother, and seating himself by the coachman, they started off rapidly. He might have 218 THE DARKENING SKY. spared himself the trouble; good Miss Jo might have preached for an hour, and Nathalie would not have heard one word of it. She sat looking straight before her, see- ing nothing, hearing nothing, conscious of nothing, save only that dull and dark despair at her heart. Midge, who had come with them in the carriage, waited on Mrs.Marsh, and cried quietly all the way, bestowing anything but blessings on the memory of her late mistress. Mr. Blake assisted both ladies into the house when they reached Cottage Street. Mrs. Marshy who was very ill and in a state of hysterics, he carried in his arms and laid on the sofa. Nathalie entered the parlor, closed the door, and, still wearing her bonnet and mantle, sat down by the window that looked out on the blurred and misty street. She had flung back her vail, and in her white and ghastly face and dilated violet eyes you could read a waiting look. Nathalie was waiting for one, who, by some secret prescience, she knew would soon come. Doctor Leach entered the cottage soon after their re- turn, prescribed for Mrs. Marsh, and departed again. Had he been able to minister to a mind diseased, he might have prescribed for Nathalie, too ; but that not coming within his pharmacopoeia, he left without seeing her. It was dusk when he for whom she waited came. The dull wet day was ending in a duller and wetter evening, and the tramp, tramp of the long-roaring waves on the shore made a dull bass for the high, shrill soprano shrieks of the wind. The lamps were flaring through the foggy twilight in the bleak streets, when Captain Cavendish, in a loose overcoat, and bearing an umbrella, wended his way to that house of mourning. He had not been two hours in Speck port, but he had heard all that had transpired. Was there one in the town, from the aristocratic denizens of Golden Itow and Park Lane to the miserable dwellers in filthy back-alleys and noisome water-side streets, that did not know, and were not discussing these unhappy events with equal gusto ? The robbery and murder of Mrs. Leroy, the inquest, the sentence and imprisonment of Charley Marsh, the will, and the disinheriting of Nathalie, all were as well known in the obscurest corner THE DARKE2TING SET. 213 of Speckport as in that unhappy home to which he was going. In the course of that long afternoon Midge had only once ventured into the- parlor, and that was in fear and trembling, to ask her young mistress to take a cup of tea and some toast which she brought. Nathalie had tasted nothing since the day before ; and poor Midge, with tears in her fretful eyes, urged it upon her now. The girl looked at her out of a pair of hollow eyes, unnaturally large and bright, in a vague way, as if trying to comprehend what she said ; and when she did comprehend, refusing. Midge ventured to urge ; and then Nathalie broke out of her rigid, despairing stillness, into passionate impatience. " Take it away !" -she cried, " and leave me alone ! Leave me alone, I tell you !" Midge could do nothing but obey. As she quitted the room with the tray, there came a knock at the front door. She set down the tray and opened it, and the tall form of the young English officer confronted her. Midge had no especial love for Captain Cavendish, as we know ; but she was aware her young lady had, and was, for the h'rst time in her life, glad to see him. It was good of him to come, she thought, knowing what had happened ; and perhaps his presence might comfort her poor Miss Natty, and re- store her to herself. " Yes," Midge said, in answer to his inquiry ; " Miss Marsh was at home, and would see him, she thought. If he would wait one minute she would ascertain." She returned to the parlor to ask. But Nathalie had already heard his voice, and was sitting up, with a strained white face, and her poor wasted hands pressed hard over her heart. She only made an assenting motion to Midge's question, should she show him in, and a negative one when she spoke of bringing a lamp. Through all her torpor of utter misery, she was dimly conscious of a change in her- self ; that she was haggard and ghastly, and the beauty which had won him iirst to her side, utterly gone. That gloomy twilight hour was best belitting the scene so soon to take place; for her prophetic heart told her, as surely 214 THE DARKENING SKY. as if she had i-ead it in the Book of Fate, that this meet- ing was to be their last. Midge admitted him, and closing the door behind him, retired into a distant corner of the hall, and throwing her apron over her head, cried quietly, as she had done all day. She would have given a good deal if the white painted panels of the parlor door had been clear glass, and that she could have seen this man comforting her beloved young lady. Much as she had disliked him, she could have knelt down in her gratitude, and kissed the dust oif his feet. Even in the pale, sickly half-twilight of the dark eve- ning, Captain Cavendish could see the haggard cheeks, the sunken eyes, and the death-like livid pallor of the girl's face, and was shocked to see it. He had expected to find her changed, but not like this ; and there was real pity for the moment in his eyes as he bent over her and took her hand. He started to find it cold as ice, and it lay in his passive, and like a bit of marble. " Nathalie," he said, "my darling ! I am sorry ; I can- not tell you how sorry I am for you. You have suffered indeed since I saw you last." She did not speak. She had not looked at him once. Her dilated eyes were fixed on the blackening night ' 1 only reached Speckport an hour ago," he went on, " and I can never tell you how deeply shocked 1 was to hear of the dreadful events that have taken place since my departure. Is it ail 1 rue ''" " Yes all !" she said. Her voice sounded strange and far-off, even to herself, and she was aware it must sound hollow and unnatural to him. " All is true ! My brother is in prison, accused of mur- der, and I am a beggar I" Her hand felt so icily deathlike in his, that he dropped it with a shiver. She still sat looking out into the deep- ening gloom, her white, set face gleaming marble-white against her black dress and the darkening room. Captain Cavendish rose up from the seat he had taken, and began pacing rapidly up and down, heartily wishing the scene wits over. 1 know/' said the hollow voice, so unlike so unlike THE DARKENING SKY. 215 the melodious voice of Nathalie, "that all between us must end now. Disgrace and poverty must be my portion from henceforth, and you will hardly care to many so fallen and degraded a creature as I am. From all that binds you to me, Captain Cavendish, I free you now !" In the depths of her heart, unseen in the darkness of despair even by herself, did any feeble ray of hope that great gift of a merciful God still linger ? If so, the deep and prolonged silence that followed her words must havcj extinguished the feeble glimmer forever. When Captain Cavendish spoke, and it was some time before he did so, there was a quiver of shame in his tones, all unusual there. Very few ever had a better opinion of their own merits, or were less inclined to judge hardly of themselves, than George Percy Cavendish, but she made him despise him- self now, and he almost hated her for it. " You are generous, Miss Marsh," he said cold and cruel words, and even he felt them so to be, "and I thank you for that generosity. Loss of fortune would be nothing to~ me that is to say, I could overlook it though I am not rich myself, but this other matter is different. As you say, I could hardly marry into a family stained with unjustly let us hope the brand of murder. 1 shall ever esteem and respect you, Miss Marsh, as the best and bravest of women, and I trust that you will yet make happy some one worthier of you than I am.'' Is murder, the murder of the body, when a man plunges a knife into his fellow-man's breast, and leaves him stark and dead, the greatest of all earthly crimes? Earthly tri- bunals consider it so, and inllict death on the perpetrator. But is there not another murder a murder of the heart committed every day, of which we hear nothing, and which man has never made a law to punish. There are woundfl which leave little outward trace ; but the patient bleeds inwardly, yet bleeds to death for all that, and it is the same ultimatum, death, by a different means. But there is a higher tribunal ; and perhaps before that, the sins over- looked by man shall be judged and condemned. Captain Cavendish took his hat and turned to depart. He felt exceedingly uncomfortable, to say the least of it. 216 THE DARKENING BKY. He wished that black figure would not sit so petrified and stone-like, he wished that white face gazing out into the night would look a little less like the face of a corpse. He wished she would flame up in some wrathful outburst of womanly fury and insulted pride, and order him to depart, and never show her his false face again. He wished she would do anything but sit there, in that frozen rigidity, as if slowly turning to stone. " Nathalie !" he said, venturing to take her icy fingers again, " will you not speak one word to me before I go ?" She withdrew her fingers, not hastily or in anger, but never looked at him. " I have nothing to say," her unnatural voice replied. " Then good-bye, Nathalie !" "Good-bye!" He opened and closed the parlor door, opened and closed the front door, and was gone. He looked at the window of that dark room as he strode by, and fancied he saw the white face gleaming on him menacingly through the gloom. The white face was there, but not menacing. AVnatever she might feel in the time to come, when the first terrible shock of all this was over, she could feel nothing so petty as resentment now. Her anguish was too supreme in this first dreadful hour. The world to her stood still, and the blackness of desolation filled the earth. "All for love, and the world well lost!" had been her motto. It was for his sake she had risked everything, and verily, she had her reward 1 THE FLIGHT. 17 CHAPTER XIX. THE FLIGHT. |RS. MAJOR WHEATLY was a very fine lady, and lived in a very fine house two or three miles out of town. Having secured a traveling companion and a governess for her daughter, in the person of Miss Rose, the little Spcckport school-mistress, she had desired that young per- son to come out to their place immediately, and assist in the packing and other arrangements, preparatory to start- ing. Miss Rose had obeyed, and being out of town had heard nothing of the inquest and the verdict until that night, when the major drove in, after dusk, with the news. Mi's. Major Wheatly, like any other fine lady, was greatly addicted to news, and received a severe shock in her nerv- ous system by the manner in which her paid companion received the intelligence. They were all sitting at tea when the major blurted out the story, and his conviction that " the young scamp would be hung, and serve him .right," and Miss Rose had fallen suddenly back in her chair in a violent tremor and faintness. All the next day she had gone about so pale and subdued that it gave Mrs. Wheatly the fidgets to look at her ; but whatever she felt, she had wisely kept to herself, and made her moan in- wardly, as dependents who know their places always should. " Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof ' ' that day brought its own evil tidings. The major returning at his usual hour of the evening from town, announced the as- tounding intelligence that Miss Nathalie Marsh was disin- herited, and the broad lands of Redmon given to another. Mrs. Major Wheatly sipped her tea and ate her buttered toast, and was deeply sympathetic. She had met the pretty, golden-haired, violet-eyed heiress often in society, and had admired and liked her, as most people did, and 10 218 THE FLIGHT. was as sorry for her as was consistent with the dignity of so great a lady. " Of course Captain Cavendish must recede now," she eaid : " he paid her very marked attentions, but of course he will not marry a penniless bride. Were they engaged, I wonder ?" "Cavendish is a fortune-hunter," said the major. " Miss Marsh is a very nice girl, and a very pretty one, and altogether too good for him. No fear of his marrying her, my dear; he wouldn't marry the Venus Celestis her- self, without a handsome dowry. "Mrs. Wheatly," Miss Rose said, "I must go into town to-morrow morning, to see my friends and say good- bye." She was so pale and tremulous saying this, that the lady hastened to assent, nervously, lest she should make another scene. " I am going in about nine o'clock," the major said, " and will drive you. Harris will take you back." " And you must not stay long, Miss Rose," his lady languidly said ; " remember we start at half -past two, and there is so much to be doire." The clock on the sitting-room mantel of that silent house on Cottage Street was pointing to half-past nine, when Betsy Ann, with fuzzy hair and sleepy face, hastened to answer a knock at the froni door. She stared sleepily at her visitor, who came hurriedly in. " Is she here, Betsy Ann ? Miss Marsh ?" " Yes'm," Betsy Ann said, " she's up in your room, and Miss Laura Blair and Midge, they've been and sot up with her all night, and me and Miss Jo Blake we've been sitting up with Mrs. Marsh. Midge, she's gone to bed now, and you'd better go up-stairs." Miss Rose ascended the stairs, and tapped at the door that had been her own. It was opened by Laura Blair, looking pale and fagged. " Is it you, Miss Rose ?" she said, in a low voice, kiss- ing her. " I was afraid you were not coming to say good- bye." THE FLIGHT. 219 "I could not come sooner, and can stay only an hour now. How is she ?" " There is no chamre. She has lain all night as she ia 1-55 lying now. Miss Rose looked at the bed, tears slowly swelling up and filling her soft brown eyes. Nathalie lay among the white pillows, her amber tresses trailing and falb'ng loose all about, her hands clasped over her head, her hag- gard face turned to the window overlooking the bay, her wide-open blue eyes staring blankly at the dim gray sea melting away into the low gray sky. "She lies like that," Laura softly said, " all the time. We sat up with her all night, but she never slept, sho hardly moved ; whenever we went near the bed, we found her eyes wide open and vacant, as they are now. If she could only talk or cry, she would be better, but it makes one's heart ache to look at her." " Does she not talk ?" " She will answer you if you speak to her, but that is all. She is quite conscious, but she seems to be in a sort of torpor. I will leave you with her, and lie down for half an hour. She was very fond of you, and perhaps you can do more with her than I could." Laura departed ; and Miss Rose, going over to the bed, stooped down and kissed the cold, white face, leaving two bright tears upon it. " Nathalie, dearest," she said, " do you know me ?" Her large, melancholy eyes turned upon her sweet, tender face. " Yes," she said, in that voice so unlike her own, that it startled her hearer. She seemed so unlike herself every way, that Miss Rose's tears rained down far faster than they would have done at any outbreak of grief. " You are ill, my darling," Miss Rose faltered through her tears. "I wish I could stay and nurse you back to health, but I am going away to-day going, perhaps, never to come back." " Going away ? Oh, yes. I remember !" She turned wearily on the pillow, still gazing out over the wide sea, as if her thoughts were far away. 220 THE FLIGHT. " I am very sorry for you, dear, dear Nathalie ! Very, very sorry for you! It seems to me, sometimes, there is notning in all this world but suffering, and sorrow, and death." " Death !" Nathalie echoed, catching with sudden and startling vehemence at the word. " Miss Rose, are vou afraid to die ?" The question was so sudden and so strange, that Miss Rose could not for a moment answer. A wild gleam of light had leaped into the sick girl's eyes, and irradiated her face so unnaturally, that it struck her companion with terror. " Afraid to die ?" she faltered. To die, Nathalie 2" " Yes," Nathalie repeated, that abrupt energy yet in her voice; "you are good and charitable, better than any other girl I know, and you ought not to be afraid to die. Tell me, are you ?" She laid hold of Miss Rose's wrist, and looked wildly into her frightened face. The girl tried to still her beating heart and answer. "I am not good, Nathalie. I am an erring and sinful creature; but, trusting in the great mercy of God, I think I shall not be afraid to die when it shall please him to call me. We must rely on his mercy, Nathalie, on that infinite compassion for our misery that made him die for us. If we thought of his justice, we might all de- spair." Nathalie turned away, and looked out again over the dark, tossing bay. The sweet voice of Miss Rose broke the stillness. "To the just, Nathalie, there is no such word as death ! To quit this world, to them, is only passing from earth to Heaven in the arms of angels. Why should we ever grow to love this world, when day after day it is only pub.sing from one new trouble and sorrow to another ?" "Sorrow!" Nathalie repeated, in a voice sadder than any tears. " Yes, sorrow, sorrow, sorrow ! There is nothing left now but that." " lleuvcn is left, my darling," Miss Rose whispered, her fair face radiant. " Oh, look up, Nathalie ! When THE FLIGHT. 221 all the world deserts us, tliere is One left who will never turn away when we cry out to him. "We may turn our backs upon him and forget him in the hour of our hap piness and prosperity, but when the world darkens around us, and all earthly love fails, he will never leave us or forsake us, but will lead us lovingly back to a better and purer bliss. Remember, Nathalie, the way to heaven is the way of the Cross. It is a hard and thorny one, per- haps ; but think of the divine feet that have trodden it before us." '' Stop, stop, stop !" Nathalie impatiently cried out, "why do you talk to me like this! I am not good I am only miserable and despairing, and I want to die, only I am afraid !" She moved away her face ; but Miss Rose, bending over her still, kissed once more the averted face. " There was a time, Nathalie," sho said softly, " when I wus almost as miserable as you are now, when, God for- give me, I prayed in my passionate and wicked rebellion to die too. There, was a time, Nathalie, when I was rich and nattered, and beloved and happy as happy as we can ever be with the blind happiness of a lotus-eater when we never think or thank the good God from whom that happiness comes. I thought myself an heiress as you did, Nathalie ; my father was looked upon as a rich and honor- able man, and his only daughter the most enviable girl in all the city of Montreal. It was balls and parties, and the theater and the opera, every night ; and riding and driv- ing, and dressing and shopping all day long. I had my carriage to ride in, a fine house to live in, servants to wait on me, and rich dresses and jewels to wear ; and I thought life was one long holiday, made for dancing and music, and sunshine and joy. I had a lover, too, whom I thought loved me, and to whom 1 had given my whole heart, and we Avere on the verge of being married. Are you b'sten- ing to me, Nathalie*" " Yes," Nathalie said. She had been listening intently, forgetting for the iirst time her own sorrow*, to hearken to the story, so like her own. " Well, Nathalie, in one day, almost as you have done, 222 THE FLIGHT. I lost all father, lover, fortune, honor. My father went out from breakfast, hale and well, and was carried home two hours afterward, struck dead. Congestion of the brain they said it was. I was so frantic at first, I could realize nothing but his death, but I was soon sternly com- pelled to listen to other bitter facts. Instead of being an heiress, I was a beggar. I was far poorer than you, for I was motherless and without a home to shelter me. The creditors seized everything house, furniture, carriages, horses, plate, pictures and turned me, in point of fact, into the street. I had been educated in a convent, and 'the good nuns gave me a home ; but for that, I might have gone to the almshouse, for the friends of prosperity are but frail reeds to lean upon in adversity. He whom I was to have wedded, Nathalie, cast me off; he could never disgrace his English friends by bringing to them as his wife the daughter of a wretched defaulter. Dearest Nathalie, I need not tell you what I suffered you are feeling the the same anguish now and I was rebellious and despairing, and wished impiously for nothing but death. The nuns, with the sweetness and patience of angels, as they are, used to sit by me for hours, telling me that blessed are they who mourn and are chastened ; but I could not listen. Oh ! it was a miserable, miserable time ! and there seemed no light for me either in earth or heaven. If I had been '"cursed with the curse of an accomplished evil prayer,' and died then in my wicked despair, I shud- der to think of what would have been my fate. But that merciful and loving Father had pity on me in spite of myself, and it is all over now, and I am happy. Yes, Nathalie, happy, with a far better and more rational hap- piness than I ever felt in the most joyous days of my prosperity ; and I have learned to thank God daily, now, for what I then thought the greatest misery that could ever befall me. I wished to take the vail ; but the nuns knew the wish proceeded from no real vocation, but from that weary heart-sickness that made me so disgusted with the world, and would not consent, at least not then. I was to go out into the world again, and mingle in its ceaseless strife once more ; and if at the end of a year the desire THE PLIGHT. 223 was as strong as ever, I was to go back to that peaceful haven, like the dove to the ark, and be sheltered from the storms of life forever. So I came here, Nathalie ; and I am happy, as I say happy, as with Heaven's help you will one day be. I labor for a sacred cause, and until that is accomplished, I shall enter no convent it is to pay my father's debts. They are not so very large now ; and in three or four years, if life and health be granted me, I hope to accomplish my task. " And now, .Nathalie, you have heard my story ; it is not a very romantic one, but in many ways it is similar to your own. This fever of wretchedness will pass, as mine has done, if you only pray. All the secret lies there, pray ; and he who has said ' Seek and ye shall find,' will not refuse you peace." Her face was like the face of an angel. Nathalie looked into the inspired eyes, and felt ho\v sinful and lost she was beside this heroic girl this simple, womanly martyr, kissing meekly the rod which struck her this patient, humble soul, rebelling not, but thanking God alike for the joy and suffering it pleased him to send. She felt, through all the dull torpor of suffering, how un- worthy she was beside her ; but she could not, in that first bitter hour, imitate her. She could not ; she only turned away again in gloomy silence. 41 Yon will think of all this, dearest Nathalie," the soft, tender voice went on ; " for all this pain, like every other earthly pain, must pass away. The great lesson of life is endurance ; and all, from the king to the beggar, must learn it." She rose, as she spoke, to go, for more than an hour had passed, and kissed the cold and averted face again. " i must leave you, Nathalie," she said, her tears fall- ing on that colorless face. " Good-bye, and God bless and comfort you." " Good-bye," was the only response ; and Miss Rose left the room. Laura Blair met her in the lower hall. " Are you going 2" she asked ; " the gig is waiting for you." 2S4 THE FLIGHT. * Yes ; but I think I should like to see Mrs. Marsh, to say good-bye." " She is asleep, and so is Miss Blake. I will say it to both of them for you. I am very sorry you are going, Miss Rose. Do you think you will ever come back '$" " Oh, yes, I hope so ! If I send you my address, Miss Blair, will you write and tell me how how all my friends get on ?" " Yes, with pleasure." Betsy Ann came out to bid farewell, and Laura kissed her, and watched her as she entered her gig and was driven away. Miss Rose had no time to bid good-bye to any one else ; but when she reached the station early in the afternoon, in the carriage, with Major and Mrs. and Miss Wheatly, she found all her pupils assembled, in Sunday attire, waiting to say farewell. Mrs. Wheatly shrugged her shoulders at the scene, and stared through her eye-glass, and was relieved when they were all seated in the car and the scene was over. As they took their place, a gentleman on the platform leaned his elbow on the window, and lifted his hat in salutation to the ladies. " Hallo, Blake !" said the major, nodding familiarly, " come to see us off ?" " No" said Val ; " I've come to see myself off. I'm going to take a couple of holidays and look at the coun- try. Keep a place for me, Miss Rose ; I want to talk to you. I'll be in in a brace of shakes." It is probable a brace of shakes meant fifteen minutes, for at the expiration of that period of time, and just as the train was in motion, Mr. Blake lounged in, laden with oranges, peaches, and newspapers, which he distrib- uted promiscuously, and then took a seat beside Misa Rose. It was pleasant to have Val for a traveling com- panion, for he knew every inch of the country, and wag so full of stories and anecdotes as to be perfectly fascinat- ing. He talked of the murder, asserted his belief in Charley's innocence, in spite of any amount of circum- stantial evidence, and his firm conviction that the mystery would be speedily cleared up; his present journey, lie hinted, being taken to bring alxmt that desirable result. THE FLIGHT. 235 The fact was, Mr. Blake had of his own choice turned amateur detective, and was on the track of Miss Cherrie Nettleby, and positively resolved never to stop until he had hunted that young lady down. A telegram had been, dispatched to Greentown the day before, and the answey Val had expected returned ; Cherrie had never been near her relations in Greeutown at all. The reply threw the family at the cottage into consternation, but Val reassured them by expressing his resolution to tind her, if she was above ground. From his inquiries at the station, he had found out from the clerk, who knew her (who did not know Cherrie '*) that she had taken a through ticket to the terminus, thirty miles beyond Greentown. The con- ductor remembered very well the pretty girl with the dark eyes and curls, and rosy cheeks ; had found her doz- ing every time through the night he had passed in that car ; remembered her ticket was for S , the terminus, but was positive she had got out before they reached the final station. Where or when she had left, he could not say ; it was after night, and passengers were getting out and coming in at every station, and she could easily de- part among them unnoticed. He did not know .whether she had gone as far as Greentown ; but he did not remem- ber seeing her after they passed that place. Val got out at nearly every station where they made any stop, and inquired for the pretty girl with the dark eyes and curls, but without success. At Greeutown, he bade Miss Uc:i p:iutry pouring out the tea, when she suddenly laid down the teapot, and turned round Z46 MRS. BUTTERBY'S LODGINGS. to look at her companion. It was not an exclamation ' Miss \\ T ade had uttered, it was a sort of cry ; ana sh was holding the paper before her. staring at it in blauk amaze. i " What is the matter ?" Miss Johnston inquired, in her calm voice. Miss Wade looked up, a sudden and strange flush pass- ing over her colorless face. " Nothing," she said, slowly. " That is I mean I saw the the death of a person I knew, in this paper." She held it up before her face, and sat there while the actress drank her tea and ate her toast, never moving or stirring. Miss Johnston left the pantry, put on her bon- net and shawl, and took up her bundle as if to go. " I beg your pardon, Miss Wade," she said, " but it is time for us to go." Miss Wade arose, with the paper still in her hand. Two bright spots, all unusual there, and which strong ex- ^itement alone could bring, burned on either cheek, and a strange dusky tire shone in her eyes. "I do not think I will go to the theater to-night, Miss Johnston," she said. " My head aches. I will take this paper, if you will let me, and read it in my room for a little while, and then go to bed." The actress assented, looking at her curiously, and Miss Wade passed down the dark stairs to her own room. There was a lamp on the table, which she lit, then she locked the door; and with that same red spot on each cheek, and that same bright light in each eye, sat down with the paper to read. But she only read one little para- graph among the advertisements, and that she read over and o^er, and over again. The paper was the Montreal True Witness, some two or three weeks old, and the para- graph ran thus : " INFORMATION WANTED. Of Philip Henderson or hid heirs. When last heard from he was in New York, but is supposed to have gone to Canada. He or his descend- ants will hear of something to their great advantage by applying to John Darcy, I3arrister-at-Law, Speckport." TEE HEIRESS OF REDMON. 247 CHAPTER XXTT. THE HEIRESS OF EEDMON. T is three days by steamer and rail-cars from New York to Speckport ; but as steam never traveled half as fast as story-tellers, we are back there in three seconds. Dear, foggy Speckport, I salute thee ! In a grimy office, its floor freshly sprinkled, its win- dows open to admit the March-morning sunshine, in a leathern-covered armchair, before a littered table, Mr. Darcy, barristcr-at-law, sits reading the morning paper. It is Jie "Daily Snorter," and pitches savagely into the " Weekly Spouter," whose editor and proprietor, under the sarcastic title of "Mickey," it mildly insinuates is an ignorant, blundering, bog-trotting ignoramus, who ought still to be in the wilds of Connemara planting potatoes, instead of undermining the liberty of this beloved province, and { sampling the laws of society under his ruthless feet, by asserting, as he did yesterday, that a distinguished mem- ber of the Smasher party had been found lying drunk in Golden Row, and conveyed in that unhappy state to his residence in. that aristocratic street, instead of to the watch- house, as he should. Much more than this the " Daily Snorter," the pet organ of the Smasher party, had to say, and the anathemas it fulminated against " that filthy sheet," the " Spouter," and its vulgar, blockheaded, addle-pated edi- tor, was blood-curdling to peruse. Mr. Darcy was deep in it when the office door opened, and Mr. Val Blake lounged carelessly in. Mr. Darcy looked up with a nod and a laugh. " Good morning, Blake ! Fine day, isn't it ? I am just reading this eulogy the 'Snorter* gives yon." "Yes," said Mr. JJlake, mounting the back of a chair as if it were the back of a horse, and looking the picture 24 THE HEIRESS OF REDMON. of calm serenity. " Severe, is it ? Who do you suppose I had a letter from last night ?" " How should I know 2" " You won't faint, will you ? It was from Charley Marsh !" Mr. Darcy dropped the " Snorter," and stared. " Char ley Marsh ! It's not possible, Blake ?" " Yes, it is. I am on my way to Cottage Street at this present writing, to tell his mother." " Well, this is an astonisher ! And where is the boy ?" " You'd never guess. A captain in the Southern army." " You don't say so ! How did he ever get there ?" " You see," said Yal, " it's a long letter, and he ex- plains everything. After he broke jail that time (of course, Turnbull helped him off), he skulked in the woods for two or three weeks, visited occasionally by a friend (Turnbull again}, and through him heard of Nathalie's death. At last, he got the chance of a blockade-runner. The ' Stonewall Jackson ' was leaving here, and he got on board, ran the blockade, and found himself in Dixie. There he was offered a captainship, if he would stay and tight a little. He accepted, and that's the whole story. 1 must tell the mother. It will do her more good than fifty novels and fifty thousand blue pills. Jo went into hysterics of delight when she heard it at breakfast, and I left her kicking when I came away." " Does he say anything at all about the murder ?" " Oh, yes. I forgot that. He wants to know if Cherrie has turned up yet, and says he may thank her for all his trouble. He was up at Redmon that night to meet her. She had promised to elope with him, but sne never came. He protests his innocence of the deed, and I believe him." " Humph !" said Mr. Darcy, refiectingly. " It is most singular Cherrie does not turn up. I dare say she could throw light on the subject, if she chose." " 1 don't despair, yet," said Yal. " I'll find her before I stop, if she's above ground. No news yet, I suppose, from the heirs of Redmon ?" " None ; and I am sick and tired of advertising. Not THE HEIRESS OF REDMOK 248 a New York or Canadian paper I have not tried, and all alike unsuccessfully. I believe the man's dead, and it's of no use." ' Well," said Mr. Blake, dismounting from the chair, " I'm off. I must get back to the office after I've seen Mr.-;. Marsh, and give the ' Snorter ' such a flailing as it won't get over for a month of Sundays." Off went Mr. Blake like a long-legged steam-engine ; and Mr. Darcy's office boy entered with a handful of let- ters from the post-office. The lawyer, laying down his paper, began to break the envelopes and read. The first three were business communications, brief and legal, in big buff envelopes. The fourth bore a different aspect. It was considerably stouter. The envelope was white ; the writing, a lady's delicate spidery tracery ; the post-mark New 1 ork. The lawyer surveyed it for a moment in grave surprise, then broke it open and began to read. The let- ter was a long one three sheets of note-paper closely written ; and before he had got to the end of the first, Mr. Darcy, with a sort of shout of astonishment, began at the beginning again. Once, twice, three times, and Mr. Darcy perused the letter; and then rising, with the rest unopened, began pacing up and down the floor. The windows of the office faced the street, and, glancing out, he saw Mr. Blake striding past presently, as if shod with seven-league boots. Mr. Darcy put his head out of the window and hailed him. " Hallo, Blake ! Come up here a moment, will you ?" Mr. Blake looked up, ran up-stairs, and entered the office." "You'll have to be quick, Mr. Darcy," he said. " Time's precious this morning, and my conscience ia uneasy until I give the ' Snorter ' fits. Anything up ?" " Yes. The heir of Redinon has turned up at last 1" "By Jove!" cried Yal, "you don't say so? Where ig he?" " It's not a he. I should have said the heiress of Red- mon has come to light. I have had a letter from Philip Henderson's daughter this morning." " And where's Philip himself '*" 11* 250 Til!-: HEIRESS OF REDMON. " Where Heaven pleases. The man's dead, and has been these three years. No wonder he never answered our advertisements." " But if, is a wonder this daughter of his did not ?" " She never heard it until the day before she wrote, and then by the merest chance, she says. She is very poor, I fancy, though she does not exactly say so, and without the means to come on here." "Where is she?" "In New York. Mrs. Leroy told me her brother resided in Yonkers, with his wife and two daughters, she believed, and the writer of this letter corroborates that statement. They did live in Yonkers, she says, and were in affluent circumstances for a number of years, until she, the .writer, was thirteen years old, when they became in- volved in debt, and everything was seized by the creditors. Henderson, the father, went to Canada. Mrs. Leroy told me she heard he had gone there, but they never held any- correspondence. He went to Canada and died there about three years ago. The youngest daughter died about the same time, and the mother shortly after their loss of for- tune. The writer of this letter, then, is the only survivor of the family, and the rightful heiress of Mrs. Leroy's fortune. She speaks of Mrs. Leroy, too ; says her father had an only sister, who married a New York Jew of that name, for which low alliance, her father ever afterwards refused to have anything to do with her. She refers me to several persons in Yonkers, who can confirm her story, if necessary ; though, as she has not been there since she was a child of thirteen, and is now a young lady of twenty, they would hardly be able to identify her. She works for her living, she says as a teacher, I presume and tells me to address iny reply to ' Station G, Broadway.' Her etory bears truth on the face of it, I think. Here is the letter read it." Mr. Blake took the lady-like epistle, and, apparently forgetful of his late haste, sat down and perused it from the date "New York, March 7th, 1862," to the signature, " Yours respectfully, Olive W. Henderson." He kid it down with a thoughtful face. THE HEIRE8B OF REDMON. 861 " Her statement is frank and clear, and coincides in every particular with what Mrs. Leroy told you. I don't think there is any deception, but you had better write to Yonkers and ascertain." "I shall do so: and if all is right, I will forward money to Miss Henderson to come here at once. I am heartily glad to be rid of the bother at last. What will Speckport say ?" "Ah, what won't it say ! It's an ill wind that blows nobody good ; and what killed poor Natty Marsh is the making of this girl. I wonder if she's good-looking. I shouldn't mind making up to her myself, if she is." " You might make down again, then. She wouldn't touch you with a pair of tongs. How did Mrs. Marsh take the news ?" " She cried a little," said Yal, turning to go, " and then went back to ' Florinda the Forsaken,' I having dis- turbed her in the middle of the ninety-eighth chapter." Isodding familiarly, Mr. Blake took his departure, and Mr. Darcy sat down to write to Station G, Broadway, and to Yonkers. The very winds of heaven seemed to carry news in Speckport, and before night everybody at all concerned knew that the heiress of Redmon had turned up. Before the expiration of a fortnight, Mr. Darcy re- ceived an answer from Yonkers. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Henderson li;id resided there with their two daughters some years before, but he had absconded in debt, and his wife had left the place, and died shortly after. Harriet and Olive, they believed, were the names of the children; but they knew nothing whatever of them, whether they were living or dead. Mr. Henderson, they had read in the papers, had died very suddenly in Canada commuted suicide, they believed, but they were not certain. Mr. Darcy, upon receipt of these letters, forwarded a hundred dollars to Miss Henderson, desiring her to come on without delay to Speckport, and take possession of her property. The hunt for the heirs had given Mr. Darcy considerable trouble, and he was very glad to be rid of the 52 THE HEIRESS OF REDMON. bore. He directed the young lady to come to his house immediately upon -landing, instead of a hotel ; if she sent him word what day she would come, he would be at the boat to meet her. Mr. Val Blake, among less noted people, went down ,to the wharf one Tuesday afternoon, nearly a fortnight after Mr. Darcy had dispatched that last letter containing the hundred dollars, to J^ew York. It was late in March now, a lovely, balmy, June-like day ; for March, having come in like a lion, was going peacefully out like a lamb. There was not a shadow of fog in Speckport. The sky was as blue as your eyes, my dear reader unless youi eyes happen to be black with billowy white clouds sail- ing like fairy ships through a fairy sea. The soft breezes and warm sunshine rendered fans unnecessary, and the bay was a sheet of sapphire and gold. The wharf, a su- perb wharf, by the way, and a delightful promenade, was thronged. All the pretty girls in Speckport and, oh ! what a lot of pretty girls there are in Speckport were there ; so were the homely ones, and all the nice young men, and the officers with canes under their arms, staring at the fair Speckportians. Young and old, rich and poor, lined the wharf, sitting down, standing up, and walking about, attracted by the beauty of the evening, and the re- port that the new heiress was coming in that day's boat. Mr. Val Blake, with his Lands in his trowsers' pockets as usual, and his black Kossuth hat pushed far back on his forehead, not to obstruct his view, also as usual, lounged down through the crowd, nodding right and left, and joined a group near the end of the wharf, of whom Miss Jeannette McGregor, Miss Laura Blair, Miss Catty Clowrie, and Captain Cavendish formed prominent fea- tures. Two or three more officers and civilians hovered around, and way was made for Mr. Blake. " Oh, Mr. Blake, do you suppose we'll know her when she lands ?" eagerly inquired Miss McGregor. " I am dy- ing to see what she is like !" " Darcy's going on board after her," said Val, " you'll see him linking her up the wharf. I say, Laura, Bill told me you had a letter from Miss Rose." THE HEIRESS OF RKLtHOX. 253 " Why, yes, didn't you know ? And she is Doming back with Mrs. Wheatly, and I am so glad !" " Have you been corresponding with Miss Rose all this time, Laura T inquired Miss Clowrie. " No ; this is the lirst letter I have received. I sent her the ' Spouter,' containing Nathalie Marsh's death, to Quebec, and she wrote back in reply. This is all I have heard of her until now. She says she has had scarcely a moment to herself." " Do you know, Laura," said Miss McGregor, "I used to think she was half in love with Charley Marsh before that terrible affair of his. lie was a handsome fellow, and she must have seen a great deal of him, living in the same house." " One might fall in love with Charley without living in the same house with him, mightn't they, Catty i" asked Mr. Blake, with a grin ; " but it's all nonsense in saying the little school-mistress cared about him. She was too much of a saint to fall in love with any one." There's the boat !" cried Captain Cavendish; "com- ing round Paradise Island!" " And there goes Darcy down the floats," echoed Val. " \V;iteh well, hi- lies, and you will behold the heiress of liedmon in a jilly." The steamer swept around the island and floated gracefully up the harbor. In twenty minutes she was at the wharf; a little army of cabmen, armed with whips, stood ready, as if to thrash the passengers as they came up. A couple of M. P.'s, brass-buttoned, blue-coated, and red-batoned, stood keeping order among the rabble of b< >ys, ready to tear each other's eyes out for the privilege of carrying somebody's luggage. Our party flocked to the edge of the high wharf overlooking the floats, up which the travelers must come, and strained their necks and eyes to catch sight of the heiress. Mr. Darcy had ifoue on board the lirst moment he could, and the passen- gers were flocking out and up the floats. Some of them, who had been to Speckport before, or had heard from others that it was one of the institutions of the place for the population of the town to flock down on such occa- 254 THE HEIRESS OF REDMON. sions, passed on indifferently ; but others, more ignorant, looked, up in amazement, and wondered if all those people expected friends. Most of the passengers had gone, when there was an exclamation from more than one mouth of " Here she is !" '* There's the heiress with Mr. Darcy !" " Look, she's coming !" and all bent forward more eagerly than before. Yes, Mr. Darcy was slowly ascending the floats with a lady on his arm, a tall lady, very slender and graceful of figure, wealing a black silk dress, a black cloth mantle trimmed with purple, a plain dark traveling bon- net, and a thick brown vail. The vail defied penetration the eyes of Argus himself could not have discovered tlie face behind it. " Oh, hang the vail !" cried Captain Cavendish ; " they ought to be indicted as public nuisances. The face be- longing to such a figure should be pretty!" " How tall she is !" exclaimed Miss McGregor, who was rather dumpy than otherwise. " She is a perfect giantess !" " Five feet six, I should say, was mademoiselle's height," remarked Val, with mathematical precision. " I like tall women. How stately she walks !" " I suppose she'll be putting on airs now," remarked Mi.-s McGregor, with true feminine dislike to hear an- other woman praised ; " and forget she ever had to work for her living in New York. Or perhaps she'll go back there and take her fortune with her." " You wouldn't be sorry, Jeannette, would you ?" said Laura. " She's a terrible rival, I know, with her thirty thousand pounds, and her stately stature. Yal, I wish you would find out what she is like before you come to our house this evening. You can do anything you please, and I am dying to know." "All right," said Val ; "shall I drop into Darcy's, and ask Miss Henderson to stand up for inspection, in order that I may report to Miss Blair?" " Oh, nonsense ! you can go into Mr. Darcy's if you like, and see her, without making a goose of yourself." " And I'll go with him, Miss Laura," said Mr. Tom Oaks, sauntering up. " Blake has no more eye for beauty than a cow, or he would not have lived in Speskport all THE HEIRESS OP REDMON. 25 S these years, and be a single man to-day. We'll both drop in to Darcy's on our way to you, Miss Blair, with a full, true, and particular account of Miss Henderson's charms." " Oh, her charms are beyond dispute, already," said Captain Cavendish ; " she has thirty thousand, to our cer- tain knowledge." " And of all charms," drawled Lieutenant the Honor- able Blank, " we know that golden ones are the most to your taste, Cavendish. You'd better be careful and not put your foot in it with this heiress, as they tell me you did with the last." Very few ever had the pleasure of seeing Captain Cavendish disconcerted. He only stared icily at his brother-officer, and offered his arm to Miss McGregor to lead her to her carriage, which was in waiting, while Mr. Oaks did the same duty for Laura. Mr. Blake saw her led off under his very nose, with sublimest unconcern, and lounged along the wharf, watching the deck-hands getting out freight, with far more interest than he could ever have felt in Laura's pretty tittle-tattle. If that lady felt disappointed, she knew the proprieties a great deal too well to betray it, and held a laughing flirtation all the way up the wharf with Mr. Tom Oaks. " You will be sure to tind out what the heiress is like/' she said, bounding into the carriage. " I shall never know a moment's peace until I ascertain." ' I will go to Darcy's with Blake," answered Tom ; " that's all I can do. If she shows it is all right ; if she don't, a fellow can't very well send word to her to come and exhibit herself. Adieu, mesdemoiselles !" The two gentlemen tipped their chapeaux gallantly as the carriage rattled off up the hilly streets of Speckport ; for every street in Speckport is decidedly " the rocky road to Dublin." Mr. Oaks hunted up Mr. Blake, and led him off from the fascinating spot, where the men were noisily getting out barrels, and bales and boxes. " I'll call round for you, Blake," he said ; " and we'll drop into Darcy's, promiscuous, as it were, before going to Laura's. I want to see the heiress myself, as much as the girls do." 2Co THE HEIRESS OF RE DM ON. Mr. Blake was of much too easy a nature to refuse any common request; ami when, about seven o'clock, Mr. Oaks, magnificently got up in full evening costume, partly concealed by a loose and stylish overcoat, called at Great St. Peter's Street, he found the master of No. 16 putting the finishing touches to a characteristically loose and care- less toilet. The two young men sallied forth into the brightly starlit March night, lighting their cigars as they wentf, and conjecturing what Miss Henderson might be like. At least Mr. Oaks was, Mr. Blake being constitutionally in- different on the subject. " What's the odds ?" said Val; "let her be as pretty as Venus, or as ugly as a blooming Hottentot, it makes no difference to you or I, does it ?" "Perhaps not to you, you dry old Diogenes," said Tom ; " but to me it's of the utmost consequence, as I mean to marry her, should she turn out to be hand- some." Mr. Blake stared, for Mr. Oaks had delivered himself of this speech with profoundest gravity ; but as they were at the lawyer's door, there was no time for friendly re- monstrance on such' precipitate rashness. Val rang, and was shown by the young lady who answered the bell, and did general housework for Mrs. Darcy, into the parlor. Mr. and Mrs. Darcy were there, and so was the new heir- ess, to whom they were presented in form. She still wore her black silk dress, and lay back in a cushioned rocker, looking at the bright coal-fire, and talking very little. It was very easy to look at her ; had she been a tall statue, draped in black, it could scarcely have been easier; and the two gentlemen took a mental photograph of her, for Mi.-.-> Blair's benefit and their own, before they had been two minutes in the room. " We were on our way to Miss Blair's tea-splash," Mr. Blake explained, " and dropped in. You're not coming, ] suppose?" No, a note-apology had been sent. They were not going. Mrs. Darcy was saying this when the young lady looked suddenly up. THE HEIRESS OF P.EDMON. 257 " I beg yon will not stay on my account," ?he said. " I am rather fatigued, and will retire. I shall be sorry if my arrival deprives you of any pleasure." She had a most melodious voice, deep, but musical, and her smile lit up her whole dark face with a luminous brightness, most fascinating, but not easily described. 'You know the magnetic power some of these dark faces have, of kindling into sudden light, and ho\\^ bewitching it is. Mr. Oaks seemed to find it so ; for she was gazing with an entranced absorption that rendered him utterly oblivious of all the rules of polite breeding. Mr. and Mrs. Darcy hastened to disclaim the idea of her presence depriving them of any pleasure whatever, as people always do on these occasions, and repeated their intention of not going. Messrs. Blake and Oaks accord- ingly took their leave, and sallied forth again under the quiet stars for the residence of Miss Laura Blair. The pretty drawing-room of Laura's home was bright with gaslight and flowers, and fine faces and charming toilets, and red coats, for the officers were there when they entered. "What Mr. Blake had denominated a " tea- splash " was a grand birth-day ball. Miss Laura was just twenty-one that night. She danced up to them as they entered, looking wonderfully pretty in rose-silk, and float- ing white lace, white roses in her hair and looping up her rich skirt. " So you have come at last !" was her cry, ad- dressing Tom Oaks, and quite ignoring Mr. Blake the little hypocrite ! " Have you seen Miss Henderson C " Yes," said Val, taking it upon himself to reply, " and she's homely. Her nose turns up." There was a cry of consternation from a group of ladies, who came fluttering around them, Miss Jo, tall and gaunt, and grand, in their midst. " Homely !" shouted Mr. Oaks, glaring upon Val. "You lying villain, I* 11 knock you down if you repeat such a slander. She is beautiful as an angel ! the loveliest girl I ever looked upon." Everybody stared, and there was a giggle and a flutter among the pretty ones at this refresliingly frank confession. 858 THE HEIRESS OF BEDMON. " Nonsense !" said Yal. " You can't deny, Oaks, but her nose turns up !" " I don't care whether it turns up or down !" yelled Mr. Oaks, " or whether she's got any nose at all ! I know it's perfect, and her eyes are like the stars of heaven, and her complexion the loveliest olive I ever looked at!" ' " Olive !" said Mr. Blake. " I'll take my oath it's yellow, and she's as skinny as our Jo there." " I'm obliged to you, Mr. Blake, for the compliment, I'm sure !" exclaimed Miss Jo, flashing fire at the speaker ; "and I think you might have a little more politeness than running down the poor young lady, if her nose does turn up. Sure, she is .not to blame, poor creature! if she is ugly!" " But, I tell you, ma'am," roared Mr. Oaks, growing scarlet in the face, "she is not .ugly! She's beautiful ! She's divine ! She's an angel ! that's what she is!*' "Well," said Mr. Blake, resignedly, " if she's an angel, all I've got to say is, that angels ain't much to my taste. She is not half as pretty as yourself, Laura ; and now I want you to dance with me. after that." Miss Blair, with a radiant face, put her pretty white hand on Val's coat-sleeve, and marched him off. A quad- rilie was just forming, and they took thoir places. "So she's really not handsome, Vul? What is she like?" " Oh, she's tall and thin, and straight as a poplar, and she has big, flashing black eyes, and tar-black hair, all braided round her head, and a haggard sort of look that I don't admire. I dare say, Lady Macbeth looked some- thing like her; but she is not the least like poor Nathalie Mar Ah! poor Nathalie ! dear Nathalie !"' Laura si^he-l. "It seems like yesterday since that night last May. at J^uimette McGregor's, when she was the belle and the js of Bsdnion, we all thought, and Captain Caven- dish came for the lirst time. I rsmember, too, Miss Hose arrived that night, and we were asking Charley poor Charley ! what she looked like. AnoTnow to think of TEE HEIRESS ENTERS SOCIETY. 259 all the changes that have taken place ! I declare, it seems heartless of us to be dancing and enjoying ourselves here, after all !" " So it is," said Val, " and we are a heartless lot, I expect ; but, meantime, the quadrille is commencing, and as you have not taken the vail yet, Miss Blair, suppose you make me a bow, and let us have a whack at it with the rest !" CHAPTER XXIII. THE HEIRESS OF REDMON ENTERS SOCIETY. PRETTY room Brussels carpet on the floor y marble-topped table strewn with gayly-bound books and photograph-albums, chairs and sofas cushioned in green billiard-cloth, hangings of lace and damask on the windows, a tall Psyche mirror, a dressing-table, strewn with ivory-backed brushes, perfume bottles, kid gloves, and cambric handkerchiefs; and marble mantel, adorned with delicate vases tilled with flowers. You might have thought it a lady's boudoir but for the pictures on the papered walls pictures of ballet- dancers and racehorses, with one or two Indian scenes of pig-sticking, tiger and jackal hunts, and massacres of Sepoys, and the pistols and riding-whips over the mantel, and the gentleman standing at the window, looking out. He wore a captain's uniform, and nothing could have set off his line figure so well; and this lady-like apartment was his, and told folios about the man's tastes and char- acter. He stood looking out on the lamp-lit street, with people passing carelessly up and down, not looking at them, but thinking deeply thinking how the best-laid plans of his life had been defeated by that invincible Fate, which was the only deity he believed in, and laying fresh plans, so skillfully to be carried out as to bame grim Madam *60 THE HEIRESS ENTERS SOCIETY. Fate herself. He was going to a party to-night a party given by Mrs. Darcy, to introduce the new heiress of Red- mon to Speckportian society. Captain George Percy Cavendish, standing at the window, looking abstractedly out at the starlit and gaslit street, was thinking. No one had wished more to see the heiress than he. She was the fashion, the sensation, the notoriety of the day. What eclat for him, not to speak of the solid advantages in the way of dollars and cents, to carry off this heiress, in fair and open combat, from all competitors. Tom Oaks, the most insensible of mankind, had seen her but once, and had gone raving about her ever since. Then, she was the heiress of Kedinoa, and Captain Cavendish had vowed a vow long ago, that Red- mon and its thousands should be his, in spite of the very old Diable himself. Did he think remorsefully of that other heiress who had staked all for him, and lost the game ? I doubt it. A little toy of a clock on a Grecian bracket struck ten. There had been a noisy mess-dinner to detain him, and he was late ; but he did not mind that. Mr. Johnson, his man, appeared, to assist him on with his greatcoat, and Captain Cavendish started to behold his fate ! The drawing-room of the lawyer's house was filled when he entered he being himself the latest arrival. He stood near the door for some time, watching the figures passing and re-passing, gliding in and out of the dance for they were dancing glancing from one to the other of those pretty mantraps, baited in rainbow-silk, jewelry, and artificial no were, for the capture of such as he. He was looking for the heiress, but all of those faces were familiar, and almost all deigned him their sweetest smiles in passing for was there another marriageable man in all Speckport as handsome as he* While he waited, Lieutenant the Honorable L. H. Blank, in a brilliant scarlet uniform, ap- proached with a lady on his arm, and Captain Cavendish knew that he was race to face with the heiress of Redraou ! She had been dancing, and the lieutenant led her to a seat, and left her to fulfill some request of hers. Captain Cavendish looked at her, with aa electric thrill flashing THE HEIRESS ENTERS SOCIETY. $61 through every nerve. Tom Oaks was right when he had called this woman glorious. It was the only word that seemed to fit her. with her dark Assyrian bennty, her flam- ing black eye, and superb wealth of dead-black hair. Yes, she was glorious, this black-eyed divinity, who was dressed like the heroine of a novel, in spotless white, floating like a pale cloud of mist all about her, and emblematic of vir- gin innocence, perhaps ; only this dark daughter of the earth would hardly do to sit to an artist for an ideal Innocence. She was dressed with wonderful simplicity, with a coronal of vivid scarlet berries and dark-green leaves in the shining braids of her black hair, and a little diamond star, shining and scintillating on her breast. Her nose might turn up, her forehead might be too broad and high, her face too long and thin for classic beauty, but with all that she was magnificent. There was a streaming light in her great black eyes, a crimson glow on her thin cheeks, and a sort of. subtle brilliant electricity about her, not to be described, and not to be resisted. This flashing-eyed girl was one of those women for whom worlds have been lost dark enchantresses not to be resisted by mortal man. While Captain Cavendish stood there, magnetized and fascinated, a ringing laugh at his elbow made him look round. It was Miss Laura Blair, of course ; no one ever laughed like that, but herself. "Love at first sight, is it?" she asked, with a wicked look ; " come along, and I'll introduce you." A moment after he was bowing to the dark divinity, and asking her to dance. Miss Henderson assented, with a bewitching smile, and turned that dark entrancing face of hers to Laura. " Do you know i wanted you, and have sent my late partner off in search of you. I suppose the poor fellow is scouring the house in vain. They arc going to take me to Redmon and around the town to-morrow, it seems, and I want to know if you will conic ?' Come! Laura's sparkling face answered before her words. The enchantress had "fascinated her as well as the rest ; and, in a superb and gracious sort of way, she seemed Sea THE HEIRESS ENTERS SOCIETY. to have taken a fancy in turn to the laughter-loving Blue- nose damsel. While Laura was speaking, Lieutenant Blank came up, looking dazed and helpless after his search ; and directly after him, Mr. Tom Oaks, who had been hovering around Miss Henderson all the evening, like a moth round a candle. Mr. Oaks wanted her to dance, and glared vindic- tively upon Captain Cavendish on hearing she was engaged to that gentleman, who led her off with a calm air of superiority, very galling to a jealous lover. The dance turned out to be a waltz, and Miss Hender- son waltzed as if she had indeed been the ballet-dancer envious people said she was. She floated it was not mo- tion and the young officer, who was an excellent waltzer himself, thought lie never had such a partner before in his life. Long after the rest had ceased, they floated round and round, the cynosure of all eyes, and the handsomest pair in the room. Tom Oaks, looking on, ground his teeth, and could have strangled the handsome Englishman without remorse. As he stood there glowering upon them, Mr. Darcy came along and slapped him on the back. " It's no use, Oaks. Y"ou can't compete with Caven- dish! Handsome couple, are they not?" Mr. Oaks ground out something between his teeth, by way of repl} 7 , that was very like an oath, and Mr. Darcy went on his way, laughing. Standing there, scowling darkly, Mr. Oaks saw Captain Cavendish lead Miss Hen- derson to the piano. Miss Henderson was a most brilliant pianiste, and quite electrifled Speckport that night. Her white hands swept over the ivory keys, and a storm of music surged through the room, and held them spell-bound. Those who had stigmatized her as a ballet-dancer and a dress-maker were staggered. Ballet-dancers and dress- makers, poor things ! don't often play the piano like that, or have Mendelssohn's and Beethoven's superbest compo- sitions at their finger-ends. In short, Miss Henderson bewitched Speckport that night, even as she had bewitched poor Tom Oaks. Never had a debut on the great stage of THE nETKESS ENTERS SOCIETY. 263 life been so successful. Where the witchery lay, none could tell ; she was not beautiful of feature or complexion, yet half the people there thought her dazzlingly beautiful. In short, Olive Henderson was not the sort of woman fire-side fairies and household angels and perfect wives are made of, but the kind men go mad for, and rarely marry. She was so brightly beautitul thai she defied criticism ; and she moved in their midst a young empress, crowned with the scarlet coronal and jetty braids, her diamond-star scintillating rays of rainbow fire, and that smiling face of hers alluring all. Even that slow Yal Blake felt the spell of the sorceress, recanted his former heresy, and protested he was as near being in love with her as he had ever been with any one in his life. The confession was made to Laura Blair, of all people in the world ; but the glamour was over ht)r eyes, too, and she heard it without surprise, almost without jealousy. " Oh, she's splendid, Yal," the young lady enthusias- tically cried. " 1 never loved any one so much in my life as I do her ! How could you say she was ugly ?" " Upon my word, 1 don't know," responded Mr. Blake helplessly ; " I thought she was at the time, but she don't seem like the same person. How that Cavendish does stick to her, to be sure." The cold pale dawn of the April day was lifting a leaden eye over the bay and the distant hill-top, when the assembly broke up. It was four o'clock of a cold and winter morning before the lights were fled, the garlands dead, and the banquet-halls deserted. Speckport was very quiet as the tired pleasure-seekers went wearily home, the chill sweeping wind penetrating to the bone. Leaning against a lamp-post, opposite Mr. Darcy's house, and gazing with ludicrous earnestness at one parti- cular window of that mansion, was a gentleman, whom the fold and uncomfortable dawn appeared to affect but very little. The gentleman was Mr. Tom Oaks, his face flushed, his hair tumbled, and his shirt-bosom in a limp and wine- splashed state, and the window was that of Miss Hender- son's room. Heaven only knows how these mad lovers find out things; perhaps the passion gives them some 864 TH3 HEIRESS ENTERS SOCIETY. mysterious indication ; bat he knew the window of her room, and stood there watching her morning-lamp burn, with an absorption that rendered him unconscious of cold and sleet and fatigue. While he was gazing at the light, with his foolish heart in his eyes, a hand was laid on his shoulder, and a familiar voice sounded in his ear : " I say, Oaks, old fellow ! What are you doing here ? You'll be laid up with rheumatic fever, if you stand in this blast much longer." Tom turned round, and saw Captain Cavendish's laugh- ing face. The young officer was buttoned up to the chin, and was smoking a cigar. " It's no affair of yours, sir,' ' cried Mr. Oaks, rather more fiercely than the occasion seemed to warrant. " The street's free, I suppose !" " Oil, certainly," said the captain, turning carelessly away ; " only Miss Henderson might consider it rather im- pertinent if she knew her window was watched, and there is a policeman coming this way who may possibly take you up on suspicion of burglary." It is not improbable, if Captain Cavendish had not already been some paces olf, Tom's nst would have been in his face, and his manly length measured on the pave- ment. Tom never knew afterward what it was kept him from knocking the Englishman down, whom he already hated with the cordial and savage hatred of a true lover. But the captain was not knocked down, and \valkcd home to his elegant rooms, a contemptuous smile on his lips, but an annoyed feeling within. He was so confoundedly good-looking, he thought, this big, blustering, noisy Torn Oaks, and so immensely rich, and women had such re- markably bad taste sometimes that u Oh, osliaw !" he impatiently cried to himself, " what am I thinking of to fear a rival in Tom Oaks that over- grown, blundering idiot. What a glorious creature she is! iJy Jove ! If she were a beggar, those eyes of hers might make hei fortune !" Early in the afternoon of the next day, the plain dark carryall of the lawyer, containing himself and Miss Hen- deison, drove up to Mr. flair's for Laura. THE HEIUESS ENTERS SOCIETY. 205 Laura did not keep them long waiting; she ran down the steps, her pretty face all smiles, and- was helped in and driven off. Miss Henderson lay back like a princess among the cushions, a black velvet mantle folded around her, and looked languidly at the beauties of Speckport as Laura pointed them out. Queen Street stared with all its eyes after the heiress, and the young ladies envied Miss Blair her position, the cynosure of all. The windows of Golden Row were luminous with eyes. \ If the heiress of Redmon had been the pig-faced lady, she could hardly have attract- ed more attention. But she might have been a duchess, instead of an ex-seamstress, she was so unaffectedly and radically indifferent ; she looked at banks, and custom- houses, and churches, and squares, and men, and women, with listless eyes, but never once kindled into interest. Yes, once they did. It was when they reached the lower part of the town, Cottage Street, in fact, and the bay, all alive with boats, and schooners, and steamers, and ships, came in sight, its saline breath sweeping up in their faces, and its deep, solemn, ceaseless roar sounding in their ears. The heiress sat erect, and a vivid light kindled in her wonderful eyes. " Oh, the sea !" she cried ; " the great, grand, beautiful sea ! Oh, Laura ! I should like to live where its voice would sound always, night and day, in my ears !" She had grown so accustomed to hear every one the night before call Miss Blair Laura, that the name came involuntarily, and Laura liked it best. " It is down here Nathalie MarsU used to live," Laura said ; " there is the house. Poor Nathalie !" " Mrs. Darcy was telling me of her. She was very pretty, was she not 3" " She was beautiful ! Kot like you," said Laura, pay- ing a compliment with the utmost simplicity ; " but fair, with dark blue eyes, and long^ golden curls, and the love- liest singer you ever heard. Every one loved her. Poor Natty !" Tears came into Laura's eyes as she spoke of the friend she had loved, and through their mist she did not see how Olive Henderson's face was darkening. 12 206 THE HEIRESS ENTERS SOCIETY. ki I never received such a shock as when I heard she was missing. I had been with her a little before, and she had been talking so strangely and wildly, asking me if I thought drowning was an easy death. It frightened me ; but i never thought she would do so dreadful a deed." " There can be no doubt, I suppose, but that it was sui- cide?" " Oh no ! but she was delirious ; she was not herself my poor, poor Natty ! They talk of broken hearts if ever any one's heart broke, it was hers !" The strange, dark gloom falling like a pall on the face of the heiress, darkened, but Laura did not notice. " Was it," she hesitated, and averted her face ; " was it the loss of this fortune V " That, among other things ; but I think she felt most of all about poor Charley. Ah ! what a handsome fellow he was, and so fond of fun and frolic every one loved Charley ! I suppose Mrs. Darcy told you all the story '.'' " Yes. You are quite sure it wasn't he, after all, who committed the murder?" " Sure !" Laura cried, indignantly. " I am certain ! If everybody hadn't been a pack of geese, they would never have suspected Charley Marsh, who wouldn't hurt a fly ! No, it was some one else, and Val I mean Mr. Blake says if ever Cherrie Nettleby is found, it will be sure to come out !" " And Mr. Blake supports Mrs. Marsh, Mrs. Darcy says. That is very good of him." Laura's eyes sparkled. " Good ! Val Blake's the best, the kindest-hearted, and most generous fellow that ever lived. He lias that off- hand, unpolished way, you know ; but at heart, he is as gos, and fearful of her depriving Spi-r-k- ot the light of lier beautiful countenance, by nying unewhore, resolved she should like Redmon, and re- side there. AceonJuiidy, about a week after Miss llen- der,-on had gone to the cottage, he had gotten-up a pic- nic to Redmou a select picnic, with the military baud and a platform for dancing. The picnic day had dawned in cloudless splendor. Coquettish April, iinding she must yield in spite of all her tears and guiles to her fairer sister, May, seemed resolved to put up with the ine . ith a good grace ; and the day was more like sunny June than early spring. Before ten in the morning the party were on the grounds, swinging among the trees, dancing on the 276 THE ENCHANTRESS. shaded platform, wandering among the grand old woods, or fishing in the clear streams running through them. The string band, perched up in a gallery, played away merrily ; and what with sunshine and music, and gay laughter and bright faces, ftedmon was a very different- looking place from the Redrnon of a few weeks before. Miss Henderson had driven Laura Blair up in a little pony-carnage she had purchased, and owned that Red- anou was not so lifeless after all. But she did not enter into the spirit of the tiling with any great zest. Laura whispered it was one of her " dark days" to those who no- ticed the silent, abstracted, almost gloomy manner of the heiress. She danced very little, and had walked moodily through the quadrille, chafing at its length, and then had broken from her partner, and gone wandering off among the trees. Laura Blair made up in herself for all that was wanting in her friend. She was everywhere at once ; now flying through a crazy cotillon ; now on the swings, flashing in and out among the trees ; now superintending the unpacking, and assisting Mrs. Hill and Catty Clowrie to set die table. The cloth was laid on the grass ; the cold hams and fowls ; the hot tea and coffee ; the pies, and cakes, and sandwiches ; the hungry picnickers called, and great and mighty was the eating thereof. After dinner, the house was to be explored, the sight of ghosts, Mr. Darcy considered, being unfavorable to di- gestion. Some weak-minded persons declined with a shiver ; they had no desire for cold horrors then, or the nightmare when they went to bed ; and among the num- ber was Captain Cavendish. He had no fancy for explor- ing ratty old buildings, he saidj he would lie on the grass, and smoke his cigar while they were doing the house. Did any thought of unfortunate Nathalie Marsh obtrude itself upon the selfish Sybarite as he lay there, smoking his cigar, on the fresh spring grass, and looking up through the leafy arcades at the serene April sky? Did any thought of the old days, and she who had loved him so true and so well, darken for one moment that hard, hand- some mask his face? Did any more terrible recollection of a ghostly midnight scene that old house had witnessed, TEE ENCHANTRESS. 277 come back, terribly menacing? Who can tell ? The past is haunted for the whole of us ; bat we banish the specter as speedily as possible, and no doubt Captain Cavendish did the same. Miss Henderson, of course, was one of the party, lean- ing on Mr. Darcy's arm; but her face was very pale, and her great eyes filled with a sort of nameless fear, as she crossed its gloomy portal. Laura Blair clung tightly, with little delightful shudders of apprehension, to the arm of Mr. Yal Blake, who took it all unconcernedly, as usual, and didn't put himself out any to reassure Miss Blair. The house had a damp and earthy odor, as of the grave; and their footsteps echoed with a dull, dismal sound, as foot- steps always do in a deserted house. Dark, dreary, and forlorn, it looked, indeed, a haunted house, and every voice was silent in awe ; the gayest laugh hushed ; the most fearless feeling a cold chill creeping over him. Eats ran across their path ; black beetles swarmed every- where; the walls were slimy, and fat bloated spiders swung from vast cobwebs wherever they went. It was all dismal, but in the chamber of the tragedy most dismal of all. They hurried out of it almost before they had entered it, and went into the next room, the room that had been Nathalie's. In the darkness, something caught Yal Blake's eye in one corner. lie picked it up. It was " Paul and Virginia," bound in blue and gold ; and on the title-page was written, in a man's hand: ' To Nath- alie, from hers in life and death G. P. C." The book passed from hand to hand. No one spoke, but all knew those initials, and all wondered what the heiress thought of it. That young lady had not spoken one word since they had entered the house, and her face was as white as the dress she wore. But they had seen enough now, and they hurried out, heartily thankful when the front door boomed slowly behind them, and they were in the sun- shine and fresh air once more. Every tongue was atouce unloosed, and ran with a vengeance, as if to make up for lost time. Captain Cavendish started from the grass, ilung away his cigar, and approached. 278 THE ENCHANTRESS. " Well, ladies well, Miss Laura," he asked. " have you seen the ghost ?" "Yes," said Laura, gravely. "Here is a ghost we found in Nathalie's room. I presume you have the best right to it !" She handed him the book before them all, and every eyo was turned upon him as he glanced at the title-page. His face changed, in spite of all his self-control, turning nearly as colorless as Miss Henderson's. _" I believe I did give Miss Marsh this once," he said, trying to be at his ease, " I suppose you gave the rats a rare frigjit ! There's the music. Miss McGregor, I be- lieve I have this dance 2" The band was playing the "Aline Polka," and no mortal feet could resist that. All the girls were soon whirling about like teetotums, and the elderly folks sat down for a game of euchre on the grass. Olive Hender- son, declining, coldly, a dozen eager aspirants for the honor of her hand in the polka, strolled off unsociably herself, as she had done before. They were too busy en- joying themselves to notice her absence at first, and only one followed her. That one was poor Tom Oaks ; and to him, in hsr absence, the sun was without light, the world empty, since the universe held but her. She did not hear him she was leaning against a tree, looking out with that darkly-brooding face of hers, over the spreading fields and wood, sloping down to the sea, and all her own. Looking out over that wide sea, with a dreary stare, that told plainly all the wealth she had inherited, all the love and admiration she had won, had not the power to make her happy. Her white dress fluttered in the spring breeze ; her shawl, of rich gold-colored crape, fell in loose, graceful folds, like sunlight-drapery, around her, held to- gether with one little brown hand. Her head was bare, and the shining profusion of thick black hair was^wisted in great serpent-like coils around her head. She looked more sultana-like than ever, holding that mass of glowing f olden drapery around her, a woman to command a king- ^ om, not to be wooed for a household-angel; but that poor Tom Oaks was down on the grass at her feet, before she THE ENCHANTRESS. 279 knew he was near, imploring her to take pity upon him. Heaven only knows what he said Tom never did ; but he was pouring out his whole heart in a vehement out- burst of passionate pleading. The man had chosen ar vmpropitious moment. "Get up, Mr. Oaks," the cold sweet voice said; " don't make such a scene ! Hush ! some one M r ill hear you." She might as well have told a rushing waterfall to hush. Tom got up, pleading vehemently, passionately, wildly, for what seemed to niin poor, foolish fellow ! more than life. " No, no, no !" she said, impatiently ; " go away, Mr. Oaks. It is of no use." It seemed like the old parable of asking for bread and receiving a stone. Tom Oaks turned away, but some- thing in his despairing face touched her woman's heart. She laid her hand lightly on his arm, and looked com- passionately into his white face. " I am sorry," she said, in a voice that faltered a little , " I am sorry ! I did not think you cared for me like this, but I cannot help you ! You must forget me, Mr. Oaks !" There was one other witness to this little love-passage besides the birds, singing their songs, in the green branches. Captain Cavendish had seen Tom Oaks follow Olive Henderson off the grounds, and knew, by the pre- science of jealousy, as well what was going to happen, as he did after the scene was over, lie had followed the young man, and, in the tangled green heart of the wood, had heard every word, and watched the white and am her figure flit out of sight, lie leaned against a tree no\v, al- most as pale as Tom Oaks had been. But if she should refuse him, too! It was the iirst time in his life he had ever asked himself that question ; and he had made love, and offered marriage even, to more than Winnifred and Nathalie Marsh. What if she should refuse him like this { Pride, love, ambition, all were at stake with Cap- tain Cavendish now, and what if he should lose her? He set his breath and clenched his hand at the thought. 280 TEE ENCHANTRESS. "I will not lose her!" lie said to himself. "I will not ! I should go as mad as that idiot on the grass there is, if I lost that glorious girl !" He might have gone after her, and proposed on the spot, had he not possessed so fully that sixth sense, tact. Like the lady immortalized in the Irish poem of " Paddy, Would You Now," she must be taken when she was " in the humor," and tlrat most decidedly was not to-day. So he strolled back to the rest, and had the satisfaction of seeing her waltzing with his superior officer, Major Mar- wood, who was unmarried, and rich, and one of her most obedient very humble servants. The picnic was to wind up with what Mr. Blake called a " danceable tea," at Mr. Darcy's, whither they all drove, in the pleasant April twilight, and the handsome captain enjoyed the privilege of sitting beside the heiress in the pony carriage, to the great envy of every one else. They drove very slowly, watching the moon rise in a long glory of silvery radiance over the sleeping sea, while he told her of Italian moon-rises, and Alpine sunsets, he had gazed upon ; and she listened, lying back with half-vailed eyes, and a longing sensation of pleasure in it all at her heart. Was she in love with Captain Cavendish ? No ; but she liked him best of all her admirers ; and there were few women who would not have listened with pleased interest to those vivid word-pictures of far-off lands, and looked with admiration, at least, into that pale, high-bred, classically handsome face. Captain Cavendish retained his advantage all that even- ing, and left competitors far behind. He sang duets with Miss Henderson, danced with her, took her in to supper, and folded the shawl around her when tiiey were going home. She might be the veriest iceberg to-morrow, the haughtiest and most imperious Cleopatra; but she was gentle, arid graceful, and all feminine sweetness to-night. Uis hopes were high, his heart all in a glow of thrilling ecstasy, as he went home, under the serene stars. The cup of bliss was almost at his lips, and the many slips were quite forgotten. Tiie afternoon following the picnic, Olive sat in her THE K8GI1ANTREB8. 281 cottage drawing-room entertaining some callers. The callers were Major M-irwood, 'Lieutenant Blank, and Captain Cav- endish. Mrs. Darcy, who was spending the day with her, sat at a window crotcheting, and playing propriety, with Mrs. Hill and Mrs. Hill's niece, Miss Clowrie. Somehow this young lady was very fond of dropping in to see her ;.aunt, and staying for dinner, and often all night. The heiress sat at the piano, playing some exquisite "song without words," when a servant entered and ushered in Miss Blair. The officers, who had been there some time, took their departure, and Laura burst out into thanks- giving.^ '.Xow, thank goodness! they're gone. Run up and get your* hat, Oily, and come down to see the boat come in." " I don't care about seeing the boat come in," said the heiress, lazily, lying back in a fauteuil. " I feel comfort- able where I am." " But you must come, I tell you !" cried Laura, " there's a lot of delegates coming from somewhere, about some- thing, and everybody will be there, and I want to see them." Miss Henderson laughed at this lucid explanation. " 1 shan't go," she said. Miss Blair changed from the imperative mood to the potential, exhorting, entreating.. "Now, Oily, don't be hateful, but go and put your things on, like a darling. I am just dying to go, and I can't go without you, so do come, there's a dear !" " But don't you see I have company," laughed Olive ; " I can't be rude ; I can't leave them." " Nonsense, Olive, my love," cut in Mrs. Darcy ; "you don't call Catty and I strangers, 1 hope. Go down to the wharf; the sea-breeze will sharpen your appetite for dinner." " A very romantic reason, certainly," said Olive, saun- tering out of the room, however. " You had better come too, Miss Clowrie." This was said for politeness' sake, for the attorney's daughter was no favorite with the heiress. Catty, only 282 THE ENCHANTRESS. too glad to be seen in public with Miss Henderson, accept- ed at once, and went up to dress. " Is it true, Laura," asked Mrs. Darcy, " that Miss Rose came back last night ?" " Yes," said Laura, " she called this morning, and i was so glad to see her. She looks extremely well. Eng- land must have agreed with her." " Where is she stopping ? I should like to see her." " At House, with Mrs. and Major Wheatly. She told me she would be at the boat this afternoon, when she would sec all the old faces, if Speckport had not changed greatly in her absence." " Tell her to call and see me," said Mrs. Darcy ; (( I always liked Miss Rose. 1 think she has the sweetest face 1 ever saw." " Now, then, Laura," exclaimed Olive, appearing at the door with Catty, " I am ready, and I hear the steamer blowing." The three young ladies walked down to the wharf, which, as usual, was crowded. One of the tirst persons they met was Val Blake, watching the passengers, who were beginning to come up the floats, running the gauntlet of all eyes. He was telling them something about Tom Oaks, who had started off up the country, when he stopped in the middle of what he was saying with a sort of shout of astonishment, and stared at a gentleman coin- ing up the floats, with a valise in one hand, and an over- coat across his arm. ' Is ow, of all the people coining and going on the face of the earth," cried out Mr. Blake, in his amazement, " whatever has sent Paul Wyndham to Speckport *" The next instant he was off, flinging the crowd right and left out of his way, and arresting the traveler with a Biedge-haminer tap on the shoulder. The girls laughingly watched him, as he shook the stranger's hand as vigorous- ly as if lie meant to wrench it off, crying out in a voice that everybody heard : " Why, Wyndham, old fellow ! what the deuce drove you here 2" Mr. WyMiiham smiled quietly at his impetuous friend, and walked uway with him to a cab, which they both en- THE DOUBLE COMPACT. 283 terod, and Olive Henderson, still laughing at Mr. Blake, looked carelessly after them, and never dreamed that she had met her fate. No ; who ever docs dream it, when they meet that fat 3 iirst ! So Paul Wyndham passed Olive Henderson, and the curtain of the future shrouded the web of life destiny was weaving. She forgot him as soon as seen, and turned to Laura, who was speaking animatedly. "Look, Oily! there's the Miss Rose you have heurd me speaking of so often that little girl with the black silk dress and mantle, and black straw hat, talking to Miss Blake. Look ! hasir t she the sweetest face ! I'll call her over." The crowd of men, women and children, thronging the wharf and floats, were strangely startled a moment after, and every eye turned in one direction. There had been a long, wild, woman's shriek, and some one had reeled and fallen to the ground like a log. There was a rushing and swaying, and startled talking among the people ; and Dr. Leach, coming along, took the Rev. Augustus Tod by the button, and wanted to know what was the matter. ."Miss Olive Henderson had fainted," the Rev. Augus- tus said, with a startled face. " She had been standing on the wharf, apparently quite well, only a second before, when she had suddenly screamed out and fallen down in a fainting-fit. It was really quite shocking." CHAPTER XXV. THE DOUBLE COMPACT. LIVE HENDERSON lay on a sofa in her bed- room, her face half buried among the pillows, her cloud of tar-black hair all loose and dis- ordered, falling about her, and still wearing the out-door dress of yesterday. Bright streaks of crimson glory, in the dull dawn sky, heralded the rising 284 THE DOUBLE COMPACT. of another sun, of another day to the restless, feverish little planet below. Dressed in that uncomfortable attire for repose, Olive Henderson, while the red morning broke, lay there and slept. Stuff ! It was more stupor than sleep, and she had only sank into it half an hour before, from sheer physical exhaustion. Those in the cottage had been disturbed all night long, by the sound of restless footsteps pacing up and down the chamber where she now ^ay, up and down, up and down, ceaselessly, the live-long night. When they had lifted her up, and carried her home in that death-faint, and Dr. Leach had brought her to, her first act had been to turn every soul of them out of her room, Laura Blair included, to lock the door, and remain there alone by herself, ever since. Everybody wondered ; Catty Clowrie, most of all, and tender-hearted Laura cried. That sympathizing confidante had gone to the locked door, and humbly and lovingly entreated " Oily " to let her in ; but Oily turned a deaf ear to all her en- treaties, and never even condescended to reply. Mrs. Hill felt deeply on the subject of refreshments if hex young lady would but partake of some weak tea and dry toast, or even water-gruel, and go to bed comfortable, and sleep it off, she would be all right to-morrow ; but to shut herself up, and her friends out, was enough to give her her death. Catty Clowrie said very little, but she thought a good deal. She had remained all night at the cottage, and had listened to that troubled footstep, and had mused darkly, instead of sleeping. At day-dawn the restless pacing had ceased, and Olive Henderson lay sleeping, a deep, stupor-like sleep. Her face, lying among the pil- lows, contrasting with, her black hair, looked ghastly white in the pale dawn, and her brows were drawn, and her position strangely wretched and unnatural. Mrs. Hill came to the door several times and tried to get in, but in vain. Her feeble knocks failed to awake her young mistress from that deep sleep, and the sun was high in the purple arch outside, before the dark eyes slow- ly opened to this mortal life again. She sat up feeling Btiif, and cold, and cramped, and unrefreshed, and put the black cloud of hair away from her faae, while memory THE DOUBLE COMPACT. 285 stepped back to its post. With something like a groan she dropped her face once more among the pillows, but this time not to sleep. She lay so still for nearly half an hour, that not a hair of her head moved, thinking, think- ing, thinking. A terrible fear came upon her, a horrible danger threatened her, but she was not one easily to yield to despair. She would battle with the rising tide, battle fiercely to the last, and if the black waves engulfed her at the end, she would die waging war against relentless doom, to the close. Olive Henderson rose up, twisted her disordered tresses away from her face, searched for her ink and paper, and sat down to a little rosewood desk, to write. It was very short, the note she rapidly scrawled, but the whole pas- sionate heart of the girl was in it. " For God's* sake come to me !" (this abrupt note be- gan) " every second is an age of agony till I see you. I thought you were dead as Heaven is my witness, I did, or I should never have come here ! By the memory of all the happy days we have spent together, by the memory of your dead father, I conjure you be silent, and come to me at once ! H." The note had neither date, address, nor signature, save that, one capital letter, but when it was folded and in the envelope, she wrote the address: "Miss W. Rose, House, Queen Street, Speckport." Then, rising, she exchanged the crumpled robe in which she had slept for one of plain black silk, hastily thrust her hair loose into a chenille net, put on a lon<* black silk mantle, a bonnet and thick brown vail, placed the letter in her pocket, and went down stairs. There wus no possibility of leaving the house unseen ; Mrs. Hill heard her opening the front door and came out of the dining-room. Her eyes opened like full moons at the sight of the street costume, and the young lady's white, resolute face. " My patience, Miss Olive, you're never going out ? " Yes," Miss Henderson said, constraining herself to 286 THE DOUBLE COMPACT. speak quietly. " My head aches, and I think a walk in the air will do it good. I will be back d'rectly." " But, do take something before you go. Some tea, now, and a little bit of toast." " No, no ! not any, thank you, until I come back." She was gone even while she spoke; the thick vail drawn over her face, her parasol up, screening her effectu- ally. Catty Clowrie, watching her from the window, would have given considerable to follow her, and see where she went. She had little faith in that walk being taken for the sake of walking ; some covert meaning lay hidden beneath. " I declare to you, Catty," exclaimed Mrs. Hill, coming back, " she gave me quite a turn ! She was as white as a ghost, and those big black eyes of hers looked bigger and blacker than ever. She is turning bilious, that's Avhat she's doing." Miss Henderson walked to Queen Street by the most retired streets, and passed before the hotel, where Major and Mrs. Wheatly boarded. She had some idea of put- ting the letter in the post-office when she started, but in that case Miss Rose would not receive it until evening, and how could she wait all that time, eating out her heart with mad impatience? There was a man standing in the door- way of the ladies' entrance, a waiter, and quite alone. With her vail closely drawn over her face, Miss Henderson approached him, speaking in a low voice : " There is a young lady a governess, called Miss Rose, stopping here is there not ?" " Yes, ma'am." " Is she in now ?" " Yes'm." " Will you please give her this letter ! give it into her o\vn hand, and at once !" She gave him the letter, and a fee that made him stare, and was gone. The man did not know her, and Olive d home without once meeting any one who recor- 11 J mzed her. Miss Catty Clowrie did not leave the cottage all that day. She was sewing for Mrs. Hill ; and, seated at the THE DOUBLi: COMPACT. 287 dining-room window, she watched Miss Henderson fur- tively, but incessantly, under her white eyelashes. That young lady seemed possessed of the very spirit of since her return from her walk. It had not her ranch good, apparently, for it had neither biv. back color nor appetite ; and she wandered from room to room, and aip-stairs and down-stairs, with a miserable fe- verish restlessness, that made one fidgety to look at her. And all the time in her dark oolorlessiace there was only one expression, one of passionate, impatient waiting. Wait- ing, waiting, waiting ! For what * Catty Clowriro green- ish-gray eyes read the look aright, but 'for what was she waiting? " I'll find it out, yet," Miss Clowrie said, inwardly. " She is a very fine lady, this Miss Olive Henderson, but there is an old adage about * All that glitters is not gold.' I'll wait and see/' There were a great many callers in the course of the morning, but Miss Henderson was too indisposed to see any of them. Even Miss Blair was sent away with this answer, when she came ; but Miss Henderson had left word, Mrs. Hill said, that she would be glad to see Miss Laura tomorrow. Miss Henderson herself, walking up and down the drawing-rcom, heard the message given, and the door closed on her friend, and then turned to go up-stairs. She stopped to say a word to her housekeeper as she did so. " There is a person to call to-day, Mrs. Hill," she said, not looking at the pilot's widow, " and you may send her up to my room when she comes. It is Miss Rose, Mi's. Major Wheatly's governess!" Her foot was on the carpeted stair as she said this, and ; he ran up without giving her housekeeper time to reply. y Clowrie, industriously sewing away, listened, and compressed her thin lips. ''Miss Hose coming to see her, and admitted to a pri- vate interview, when every one else is excluded ! Urn in m ! That is rather odd ; and Miss Rose is a stranger to her or is supposed to be ! I wonder why she fainted at sight of Miss Rose, on the wharf, yesterday, and why 288 THE DOUBLE COMPACT. Miss Rose's face turned to pale amazement at sight of her. She did not ask any questions, I noticed ; but MHS Rose was always discreet ; and no one observed her but myself, in the hubbub. There is something odd about all tl: She threaded her needle afresh, and went on with her sewing, with the patient perseverance of all such phleg- matic mortals. Mrs. Hill came in, wondering what Miss Henderson could possibly want of Miss Rose, but her niece could throw no light on the subject. " Perhaps she wants a companion," Miss Clown e re- marked ; " tine ladies like Miss Henderson are fall of freaks, and perhaps she wants some one to play and sing and read to her, when she feels too lazy to do it herself." Catty Clowrie had read a good many novels in he- life, full of all sorts of mysteries, and secret crimes, and wicked concealments, and conspiracies very romantic and unlike every day-life but still liable to happen. She had never had the faintest shadow of romance, to cover rosily her own drab-hued life no secret or mystery of any sort to happen to herself, or any of the people among whom she mingled. The most romantic thing that had ever oc- curred within her personal knowledge was the fact of this new heiress, this Olive Henderson, rising from the offal of New York, from the most abject poverty, to sudden and great wealth. Miss Clowrie sat until three o'clock, sewing at the din- ing-room, window. Luncheon-hour was two, but Miss Henderson would not descend, and asked to have a cup of strong tea sent up, so Mrs. Hill and her niece partook of that repast alone. As the clock was striking three, a young lady, dressed in half-mourning, came down the street and rang the door-bell ; and Catty, dropping her work, ran to open it, and embrace with effusion the visitor. She had not spoken to Miss Rose before since her return, and kissed her now, as though she were really glad to see her. " I am so glad you arc back again, dear Miss R< the young lady cried, holding both Miss Rose's hands in hers ; " you cannot think how much we have all missed /you since you went away !" Now, it was rather unfortunate for Miss Clowrie, but TER DOUBLE COMPACT. 289 nature, who will always persist in being absurdly true to herself, had given an insincere look to the thin, wide month, and a false glimmer to the greenish-gray eyes, and a clammy, limp moistness to the cold hand, that made you feel as if you had got hold of a dead fish, and wished to drop it again as soon as possible. Miss Eose had taken an instinctive aversion to Miss Clowrie the first time she had seen her, and had never been quite able to get over it since, though she had conscientiously tried ; but she never betrayed it, and smiled now in her own gentle smile, and thanked Miss Clowrie in her own sweet voice. She turned to Mrs. Hill, though, when that lady appeared, with a far different feeling, and returned the kiss that motherly old creature bestowed upon her. " It does my heart good to see you again, Miss Rose," the housekeeper said. " I haven't forgotten all you did for me last year when poor, dear Hill was lost, going after that horrid ship. You can't think how glad I was when I heard you were come back." "Thank you, Mrs. Hill," the governess said. "It is worth while going away for the sake of such a welcome back. Is Miss " she hesitated a moment, and then went on, with a sudden fiush lighting her face ; " is Miss Hen- derson in ?" " Yes, my dear ; I will go and tell her you are here." The housekeeper went u'p-stairs, but reappeared almost immediately. "You are to go up-stairs, my dear," she said ; "Miss Henderson is not very well, and will see you in her own room." Miss Rose ascended the stairs, entered the chamber of the heiress, and Catty heard the door closed and locked after her. As Mrs. Hill re-entered the dining-room, she found her gathering up her work. " I left the yokes and wristbands in your room, aunt," she explained. " I must go after them, and I'll just go up and finish this nightgown there." There were four rooms up-stairs, with a hall running between each two. The two on the left were occupied by Miss Henderson, one being her bedroom, the other a 13 290 THE DOUBLE COMPACT. bath-room. Mrs. Hill had the room opposite the lieiress, the other being used by Rosie, the chambermaid. Miss Clowrie (one hates to tell it, but what is to bo done ?) went deliberately to Miss Henderson's door, and applied first her eye, then her ear, to the key-hole. Ap- plying her eye, she distinctly beheld Miss Olive Hender- son, the heiress of Redmon, the proudest woman she had ever known, down upon her knees, before Miss Rose, the governess the ex-school-mistress ; holding up her closed hands, in. wild supplication, her face like the face of a corpse, and all her black hair tumbled and falling about her. To say that Miss Catty Clowrie was satisfied by this sight, would be doing no sort of justice to the subject. The first words she caught were not likely to lessen hex astonishment wild, strange words. " I thought you were dead ! I thought you wero dead !" in a passion of consternation, that seemed to blot out every thought of prudence. " I thought you were dead ! As Heaven hears me, I thought you were dead, or I never would have done it." Miss Rose was standing with her back to the door, and the eavesdropper saw her trying to raise the heiress up. " Get up, Harriet," she distinctly heard her say, though she spoke in a low voice ; " 1 cannot bear to see yon like this ; and do not speak so loud some one may hear you." If they had only known of the pale listener at the door, hushing her very heart-beating to hear the better. But Miss Henderson would not rise ; she only knelt there, white and wild, and holding up her clasped hands. " I will never get up," she passionately cried. " I will never rise out of this until you promise to keep my secret. It is not as a favor, it is as a right I demand it ! ' Your father robbed^my mother and me. But for him I would have never known poverty and misery and God only knows the misery that has been mine. But for him, I should never have known what it is to suiler from cold and hunger, and misery and insult ; but for him I would have been rich to-day ; but for him my mother might still be alive and happy. He ruined us, and broke her heart, THE DOUBLK COMPACT. 291 and I tell you it is only justice I ask ! I should never have come here had I not thought you dead ; but now that I have come, that wealth and comfort have been mine once more, I will not go. I will not, I tell you ! I will die before I yield, and go back to that horrible 'ife, and may my death rest forever on your soul !" Catty Clowrie, crouching at the door, turned as cold as death, listening to these dreadful words. Was she awake was she dreaming ? Was this Olive Henderson the proud, the beautiful, the queenly heiress this mad creature, uttering those passionate, despairing words. She could not see into the room, her ear was at the keyhole strained to a tension that was painful, so absorbed was she in listening. But at this very instant her strained hear- ing caught another sound Rosie, the chambermaid, com- ing along the lower hall, and up-stairs. Swift as a Hush, Catty Clowrie sprang up, and darted into her aunt's room. She did not dare to close the door, lest the girl should hear her, and she set her teeth with anger and suppressed fury at the disappointment. Rosie had come up to make her bed, and set her room to rights, and was in no wise disposed to hurry over it. She sang at her work ; but the pale-faced attorney's daughter in the next room, furious with disappointment, could have seen her choked at the moment with the great- est pleasure. Half an hour passed would the girl i go? Yes yes, there was Mrs. Hill, at the foot of the stairs, calling her, and Rosie ran down. Quick as she had left it, Catty was back at her post, airing her eye at the keyhole once more. The scene she beheld was not quite so tragic this time. The heiress aud the governess were seated opposite one another, an inlaid table between them. There was paper and ink on the table ; MIS.S ller.dcrson held a pen in her hand, as if about to write, and Miss Rose was speuking. Her voice was sweet and low, as usual ; but it had a linn cadence, that showed she was gravely in carnwst now. " You must write down these conditions, Harriet,'' she was saying, " to make matters sure ; but no one shall ever see the papers, and I pledge you my solemn word, 292 THK DOUBLE COMPACT. your secret shall be kept inviolable. Heaven knows I have done all I could to atone for my dead father's acts, and I will continue to do it to the end. He wronged your mother and you, I know, and I am thankful it is in my power to do reparation. I ask nothing for myself but others have rights as well as you, Harriet, and as sacred. Two hundred pounds will pay all the remaining debts of my father now. You must give me that. And you must write down there a promise to pay Mrs. Marsh one hundred pounds a year annuity, as long as she lives. Her daughter should have had it all, Harriet, and neither you nor 1 ; and the least you can do, in justice, is to pro- vide for her. You will do this ?'' " Yes yes," Miss Henderson cried ; " that is not much to do ! I want to do more. I want you to share with me, Oily." " No," said Miss Rose, " you may keep it all. I have as much as I want, and I am very well contented. 1 have no desire for wealth. I should hardly know what to do with it if I had possessed it." " But you, will come and live with me," Miss Hender- son said, in a voice strangely subdued ; " come and live with me, and let us share it together, as sisters should." That detestable housemaid again ! If Catty Clowrie had been a man, she might have indulged in the manly relief of swearing, as she sprang up a second time, and fled into Mrs. Hill's room. This time, Rosie was not called a\vay, and she sat for nearly an hour, singing, at her o.hamber window, and mending her stockings. Catty Clowrie, on lire with impotent fury, had to stay where she was. Staying there, she saw Miss Henderson's door opened at last; and, peeping cautiously out, saw the two go down-stairs together. Miss Rose looked as if she had been crying, and her face was very pale, but the n'eive crimson of excitement burned on the dark cheeks and flamed in the black eyes of Miss Henderson. It was the heiress who let Miss Rose out, and then she came back to her room, and resumed the old trick of walking up and down, up and down, as on the preceding night. THE DOUBLE COMPACT. 293 Catty wondered if she would never be tired. It was all true, then; and there was a dark secret and mystery in Olive Henderson's life. "Olive!" Was that her name, and if so, why had Miss Rose called her " Harriet." And if the governess's name was Winnie, why did the heiress call her Oily ?" Catty Clowrie sat thinking while the April day faded into misty twilight, and the cold evening star glimmered down on the sea. She sat there thinking while the sun went low, and dipped into the bay, and out of sight. She sat thinking while the last little pink cloud of the sunset paled to dull gray, and the round white moon came up, like a shining shield. She sat there thinking till the din- ner-bell rang, and she remembered she was cold and hun- gry, and went slowly down-stairs still thinking. To her surprise, for she had been too absorbed to hear her come out of her room, Miss Henderson was there, beautifully dressed, and in high spirits. She had such a passion for luxury and costly dress, tlr's young lady, that she would array herself in velvets and brocades, even though there were none to admire her but her own servants. On this evening, she had dressed herself in whire, with ornaments of gold and coral in her black braids, broad gold bracelets on her superb arms, and a cluster of scarlet liowers on her breast. She looked so beautihil with that tire in her eyes, that Hush on her cheek, that brilliant smile lighting up her gypsy face, that Mrs. Hill and Catty were absolutely dazzled. She laughed a clear, ringing laugh at Mrs. Hill's profuse congratulations on her magical recovery. " You dear old Mrs. Hill !" she said, " when you are better used to me, you will cease to wonder at ray eccen- tricities! It is a woman's privilege to change her mind sixty times an hour, if she chooses and I choose to assert all the privileges of my sex !" She rose from the table as she spoke, still laughing, and went into the drawing-room. The gas burned low, but she turned it up to its full Hare, and, opening the piano, rattled off a stormy polka. She twirled round presently, and called out : 294 THE DOUBLE COMPACT. "Mrs. Hill!" Mrs. Hill came in. " Tell Sam to go up to Miss Blair's, and fetch her here. Let him tell her I feel quite well again, and want her to spend the evening, if she is not engaged. He can take the gig, and tell him to make haste, Mrs. Hill." Mrs. Hill departed on her errand, and Miss Hender- son's jeweled fingers were flying over the polished keys once more. Presently she twirled around again, and called out: "Miss Clowrie." " I wish Laura would come !" Miss Henderson said, pulling out her watch, " and J wish she would fetch a dozen people with her. I feel just in the humor for a ball to-night." She talked to Catty Clowrie vivaciously, and to Mrs. Hill, because she was just in the mood for talking, and rattled off brilliant sonatas between whiles. But she was impatient for Laura's coming, and kept jerking out her watch every five minutes, to look at the liaur. Miss Blair made her appearance at last, and not alone. There was a gentleman in the background, but Miss B. rushed with such a frantic little scream of delight into the arms of her " dear, darling Oily," and so hugged and kissed her, that, for the first moment or two, it was not very easy to see who it was. Extricating herself, laughing and breathless, from the gushing Miss Blair, Olive looked at her companion, and saw the amused and handsome face of Captain Cavendish. " I hope I am not an intruder," that young officer said, coming forward, " but being at Mr. Blair's when your message arrived, and hearing you were well again, I could not forbear the pleasure of congratulating you. The Piincess of Speckport can be ill dispensed with by her adoring subjects." Some one of Miss Henderson's innumerable admirers had dubbed her " Princess of Speckport," and the title was not out of place. She laughed at his gallant speech, and held out her hand with frank grace. "My friends are always welcome," she -said, and here she was interrupted by a postman's knock at the door. THE DOUBLE COMPACT. 295 " Dear me ! who can this be ?" said Mrs. Hill, looking up over her spectacles, as Rosie opened the door. It proved to be Mr. Val Blake. That gentleman being very busy all day, had found no time to inquire for M' Henderson, until after tea, when, strolling out, with his pipe in his mouth, for his evening constitutional, he \. stepped around to ask Mrs. Hill. Miss Henderson appeared in person to answer his friendly inquiries, and Mr. Blake came in, nothing loth, and joined the party. Some one proposed cards, after a while ; and Mr. Blake, and Miss Blair, and Mrs. Hill, and Mi^s (Jlowrie, gathered round a pretty little card-table, but Miss Hen- derson retained her seat at the piano, singing, and playing operatic overtures. Captain Cavendish stood beside her, turning over her music, and looking down into the spark- ling, beautiful face, with passionately loving eyes. For the spell of the sorceress burdened him more this night than ever before, and the man's heart was going in great {>] tinges against his side. lie almost fancied she must lear its tumultuous beating, as she sat there in her beauty and her pride, the red gold gleaming in her black braids and on her brown arms. It Lad always been so easy before for him to say what was choking him now, and he had said it often enough, goodness knows, for the lesson to be But there was this difference he loved this black- eyed sultana; and the fever called love makes a coward of the bravest of men. He feared what he had never feared before a rejection ; and a rejection from her, even the thought of one, nearly sent him mad. And all this while Miss Olive Henderson sat on her piano-stool, and sang " Hear me, Noruia," serenely un- conscious of the storm going on in the English officer's breast. He had heard that Very song a thousand times better sung, by Nathalie Marsh. Ah! poor forgotten ^Nathalie ! but he was not listening to the singing. For him, the circling sphere seemed momentarily standing still, and the business of afe suspended. He was per- fectly white in his agitation, and the hand that turned the leaves shook. His time had come. The c;i:\l party wero too much absoibed in scoring their points to heed them, 299- THE DOUBLE COMPACT. and now, or never, he must know his fate. What he said he never afterward knew but Miss Henderson looked strangely startled by his white face and half incoherent sentences. The magical words were spoken; but as the self-possessed George Cavendish had never spoken thus before, and the supreme question, on which his life's destiny hung, asked. The piano stood in a sort of recess, with a lace-draped window to the right, looking out upon Golden Row. Miss Henderson sat, all the time he was speaking, looking straight before her, out into the coldly moonlit street. Xot once did her color change no tremor made the scarlet flowers on her breast rise and fall no flutter made the misty lace about her tremble. She was only very grave, ominously grave, and the man's heart turned sick with fear, as he watched her unchanging face and the dark gravity of her eyes. She was a long time in replying all the while sitting there so very still, and looking steadfastly out at the quiet street ; not once at him. When she did reply, it was the strangest answer he had ever received to such a declaration. The reply was another question. " Captain Cavendish," she said, " I am an heiress, and you pardon me have the name of a fortune-hunter. If I were penniless, as I was before this wealth became mine if by some accident I were to lose it again would you say to me what you have said now ?" "Would he ? The answer was so vehement, so passion- ate, that the veriest skeptic must have believed. His des- perate earnestness was written in every line of his agitated face. " I believe you," she said ; " I believe you, Captain Cavendish. I think you do -love me ; but I I do not love you in return." He gave a sort of cry of despair, but she put up one hand to check him. " I do not love you," she steadily repeated, " and I have never loved any one in this way. Perhaps it is not in me, and I do not care that it should be : there is misery enough in the world, Heaven knows, without that ! I do not love you, Captain Cavendish, but I do not love any THE DOUBLE COMPACT. 297 one else. I esteem and respect yon ; more, I like you : and if you can be content with this, I will be your wife. If you cannot, why, we will be friends as before, and '' But he would not let her finish. He had caught her hand in his, and broke out into a rhapsody of incoherent thanks and delight. " There, there !" she smilingly interposed, " that will do ! Our friends at the card-table will hear you. Of one thing you may be certain : I shall be true to you until dcatli Your honor will be safe in my hands; and this friendly liking may grow into a warmer feeling by-and-by. I am not very romantic, Captain Cavendish, and you must not ask me for more than I can give." But Captain Cavendish wanted no more. He was supremely blessed in what he had received, and his hand- some face was radiant. k 'My darling," he said, "I ask for no more! I shall think the devotion of a whole life too little to repay you for this." " Very well," said Miss Henderson, rising ; " and now, after that pretty speech, I think we had better join our friends, or my duty as hostess will be sadly neglected." She stood behind Miss Laura Blair for the rest of the evening watching the fluctuations of the game, and with no shadow of change in her laughing face. She stood there until the little party broke up, which was some time after ten, when Mr. Blair called around for Laura himself. Miss Laura was not to say over and above obliged to her pa for this act of paternal ailection since she would have infinitely preferred the escort of Air. Blake. That gentleman hooked his arm within that of Captain Cavendish, and bade Aiiss Blair good-night, with seraphic indifference. Miss Henderson's bedroom windows commanded an eastward view of the bay, and when she wont up to her room that night, she sat for a long time gazing out over the shining track the full moon made for herself on the tranquil sea. " Gaspereaux mouth 7 ' had come around again, and the whole bay was dotted over with busy boats. 13* 298 THE DOUBLE COMPACT. She could see the fishermen casting their nets, now in the shadow, now in the glittering moonlight, and the peaceful beauty of the April night tilled her heart with a deep, sweet sense of happiness. Perhaps it was the first time since her arrival in Speckport she had been really happy a vague dread and uncertainty had hung over her, like that fabled sword, suspended by a single hair, and ready 1o fall at any moment. But the fear was, gone, she was safe now her inheritance was secure, and she was the promised wife of an honorable gentleman. Some day, perhaps, he might be a baronet, and she "my lady," and her ambitions heart throbbed faster at the thought. She sat there, dreaming and feeling very happy, thinking of the double compact ratified that most event- ful day, but she never once thanked God never gave one thought to him to whom she owed it all. She sat there far into the night, thinking, and when she laid her head on the pillow and fell asleep, "it was to act it all over in dreamland again. Some one else lay awake a long time that night, think- ing, too. Miss Clowrie, in the opposite chamber, did not sit up by the window ; Mrs. Hill would, no doubt, not have permitted it, and Miss Clowrie was a great deal too sensible a person to run the risk of catching cold. But, though she lay with her eyes shut she was not asleep, and Olive Henderson might not have dreamed quite such happy dreams had she known how dark and ominous were the thoughts the attorney's pale daughter wai thinking. MR. PAUL WYNDEAM. J299 CHAPTER XXVI. MR. PAUL WTNDHAM. JN the morning after the day fraught with so many events to the heiress of Redmon, the mother of the late heiress sat in the sitting- room of her pleasant seaside home, reading a novel. The firelight shone on her mourning- n>\vn- skinned women raise the very old diable herself, if you stroke them the wjjj^ig way. They are something like big black cats. I tell you, Blake, I don't believe she cares about that military pop 1 ' n jay, Cavendish." "Don't you," said Mr.' Blake, with his hands in his pockets. " Of course, if you say so it must be so." A'o; but I really think so. " Are his family any thing in England f ' '* It is currently believed he is next heir to a baronetcy. But the baronet got married in his old days, and there is a little shaver ia petticoats to cut Master George out. Still, he Urea in hope. The new baronet has the measles and 806 MR. PAUL WTNDHAtf. the mumps, an i the whooping-cough, and the scarlatina, and the chicken-pox, and a tribe of other diseases, his teeth included, to struggle through, before he reaches man's estate. There is no telling but Cavendish may be a baronet yet." "That is it, then !" said Wyndham. "It is for his prospective baronetcy the girl has promised to marry him. Pride and ambition, the two sins that hurled Lucifer from heaven to hell, are strong in that woman." " Oh, come ho\v," said Val, starting up, " I think we had better get out of this, and drop the subject. It strikes mo your language is rather forcible, Mr. Wyndham ; and there is no telling what you may work yourself up to, if you keep- on. It wouldn't be healthy for you, I'm think- ing, if Miss Henderson heard you." "Nevertheless," Paul Wyndham persisted, flinging uway his smoked-out weed, " I shall many Miss Hender- son." The two friends walked away together to the office in Queen Street Mr. Blake disdaining all reply to the last remark. On their way they met Captain Cavendish, mounted on his favorite bay, and looking the very beau ideal of a military i icier, slowly cantering beside the pretty pony- carriage where the Princess of Speckport sat in state. The contrast between the handsome officer on horseback and the young author on foot was great ; but Mr. Wyndham bowed to the soldier and his fair friends with undisturbed placidity. " You see !" said Mr. Blake, signiricantly. " I see," serenely answered Mr. Wyndham ; " and I repeat, I shall marry Miss Olive Henderson !" There way nothing at all of boasting in the tone of Mr. Paul Wyndham in saying this simply one of deep, quiet determination. You had only to look at his face that pale, steadfast face if you were any judge of physi- ;y, to perceive that his assurance to Mr. Blake, of seldom failing in any undertaking, was no idle bravado, lie was one of those men of iron inflexibility, of invincible daring, of ovei mastering strength of will, bending all MR. PAUL WTNDHAM. 807 other wills to their own. Men of the Napoleon Bonaparte stamp, made to sway empires, and move about other men, kings and knights, queens and bishops, as they please, on the great chessboard of life. Mr. Val Blake, knowing Paul Wyndham, had some dim perception of this ; but he- knew, too, that Olive Henderson was no ordinary woman. He had a strong will, and so had she ; but it was only a woman's will after all, and with it went womanly weak- ness, passion, and impulse, and the calm, passionless man was the master-mind. " But I think she will baffle him here, after all," Mr. Blake said to himself, as he ceased thinking about the matter. "I don't believe Olive Henderson will ever marry Paul Wyndham, not but what he's a great deal better fellow than Cavendish, after all !" It seemed as though he was right, for a whole week passed before Mr. Wyndham and Miss Henderson met again. The engagement of the heiress with Captain Cavendish, though not formally announced, was pretty generally known ; and it was rumored that the wedding was to take place early in June. May had come in, draped in a sodden sheet of gray wet fog; but the villa at liedmon went steadily up, despite of wind and weather. Landscape-gardeners were turning the potato-patches and broad meadows and turnip-fields into a little heaven below, ^nd the place was to be completed in July, when Mrs. Grundy said the happy pair would be returning from their bridal-tour, and take up their abode therein. Mr. Paul Wyndham heard all this as he smoked hia cigars and wrote away placidly at his new novel, and was in nowise disturbed. Mr. Val Blake heard it, and grinned as he thought of the egotistical young author .getting baffled for once. Miss Henderson's innumerable admirers heard it, and gnashed their teeth with impotent, jealous fury, and, lastly, Miss Henderson herself heard it, and frowned and laughed alternately. "This horrid gossiping town of yours, Laura !" she said impatiently ; ji "how do they find out everything as soon as one knows it one's self, I wonder 1 I wish people would mind their own business and let me alone 1" 808 MR. PAUL WYNDHAM. " Great people must pay the penalty of greatness, niv dear," Miss Blair answered, philosophically ; " andf, besides, it is only a question of time, so don't get into a gale about it! It doesn't matter much whether it is known this minute or the next." The conversation between the young ladies took place in Miss Henderson's room, and while dressing for a ball. It was to be a very grand ball indeed, given by the officers, and to which only the tiptop cream of the cream of Speck- port society was to be invited. Of course Miss Hender- son was the first lady thought of, and of course her friend Miss Blair came next; but Mr. Yal Blake, who didn't be- long to the creme at all, was to be there too. But Mr. Blake was such a good fellow, and hand and glove with the whole barracks, and was so useful to puff their con- certs and theatricals-in the " Spouter," and praise the bass of Lieutenant the Honorable L. II. Blank, and the tenor-solo of Captain "G. P. Cavendish, etc., etc., that it would have been an unpardonable breach to have omitted him. Mr. Paul Wyndham, whose fame as an author had by this time reached Speckport, was also to be there ; and the ball was expected to be the most brilliant thing of the season. As far as weather went, it was rather a failure already. The dismal, clammy fog had subsided at last into rain, and the rain lashed the windows of Miss Henderson's room, and the wind shrieked about the cottage, and roared out at sea as if bent on making a night of it. The heiress, with Rosie, the maid, putting the finishing touches to her toilette, stood listening to the storm, and drearily watch- ing the reflection of her own face and ligure in the tall glass. She had taken a fancy to be grandly somber to- night, and wore black velvet and the diamonds Speck- port talked so much of, ablaze on throat and arms. There were blood-red flowers in her tar-black hair, and in her bouquet which lay on the dressing table, but she looked more superb in her sable splendor than ever. Was Miss Laura Blair, with her commonplace pretti- ness of fair skin, pink cheeks, and waving brown hair, laying herself out as a foil to the black-eyed siren ? She MR. PAUL WYNDHAM. 30* was dressed in white moire antique, gemmed with seed- pearls, and with a train of richness that swept half \\?\j across the room. She had white roses in her hair, on her breast, and in her bouquet. She wore pearl bracelets and necklace, and looked fair a-3 a lily a vivid contrast to her black and crimson neighbor. Miss Henderson sent Rosie out of the room, and stood listening in silence for a while to the raging of the storm. Presently she turned to Laura, who was all absorbed settling her laces and jewels, with a rather singular in- quiry on her lips. " Laura," she said, abruptly, " what is the matter with me to-night ? Why am I afraid to go to the ball C Miss Blair turned round and gazed aghast at this question. The shadow ths^sometimes lay on her friend's face was there now, like a dark vail. "Dear me, Oily! I'm sure I don't know what you mean ! Afraid to go to the ball ?" " Yes," repeated Olive, " afraid ! I feel as though something were going to happen ! I have a presentiment that some misfortune is before me ! I have had it all day!" " It's the weather, dear," said Laura, retiring to the toilet, " or else it's indigestion. Don't be foolish !" Olive Henderson was in no laughing humor, but she did laugh, half fretfully, though, at this reply. " If the weather, and it's not the indigestion, Miss Blair," she said, "it is the moral barometer giving warning of a coming storm it is coming events casting their shadows before I have half a mind not to go to the ball to- night." " Nonsense, Oily !" exclaimed Laura, in some alarm, knowing very well Olive was just the girl not to go if she took it in her head. " how absurd you ;uv. Presentim pooh! You've been reading sonic German trash' what you've been doing, and you have caught some absurd German silliness! I should like to see you t stay away from the ball, the last, the best, the bright, the season, and you looking divine, too, in that black SlO J'B. PAUL WYNDHAM. velvet ! What could possibly happen you at the ball, I should like to know 't" Miss Henderson and Miss Blair were rather late in arriving nearly every one was there before them. There were two gentlemen who came considerably late, but no one noticed them much, being only Mr. Val 11 lake and his New York friend, Mr. Paul Wyndham. Mr. Blake was fond of dancing, and was captured by Miss Blair al- most as soon as he entered, and led off ; for Miss Laura did make love to this big stupid Yal in pretty roundabout feminine fashion, as women have a way of doing all the world over. Mr. Wyndham did not dance, and as he was not at liberty to smoke, the ball was rather a bore than otherwise. He stood leaning against a pillar, watching the dancers ; his pale, grave, quiet face* and thoughtful gray eyes ever turned in one direction. A great many more gentlemen's faces turned presently in the same quarter, for the loadstone of the ball shone there, magni- ficent, in black velvet, and with eyes that outshone her diamonds. Was there rapport between them ? Was it some inward magnetism that made the belle of the ball, in the height ot her triumph and power, aware of this fixed, steadfast gaze, and uneasy under it ? Flatterers and sycophants surrounded her on every hand, but she had to turn restlessly away from them and look over every now and then to that pale, watchful face, and those fixed, grave gray eyes. Paul Wyndham still watched her. She grew nervous- ly miserable at last, and enraged with herself for becom- ing so. If this strange man stared rudely, what was it to her ? She would take no further notice of him, she would not look at him ; and saying this to herself, she floated away in the waltz, with her eyes persistently fixed on her partner or on the floor. The waltz concluded, and Miss Henderson, being tired and hot, her partner led her to a seat, and left her to get an ice. It was the first time all that evening she had been. for a moment alone, and she lay back among the cushions of her chair and listened to the raging of the storm with- out. MR PAUL WYNDHAM 811 The seat was in the recess of a bay window, partly ghut out from the room by scarlet drapery, and she was glad to think she was alone. Alone! No, for there op- posite to her stood Paul Wyndham, his magnetic eves fixed with powerful intensity on her face. A cold thrill of fear, vague and chilling, crept through every vein she would have risen, in undefined panic, but he was by her side directly, speaking quietly the commonest of com- monplace words. " Good evening, Miss Henderson. I trust I see you well and enjoying yourself. It is the first time I have had the pleasure of approaching you, you have been so surrounded all the evening." She did not speak ; a cold bend of the head answered him, and she rose up, haughty and pale. But he would not let her go ; the power of his fixed gaze held her there as surely as if she had been chained. " I fear," he said, in that quiet voice of his, " I fear you thought me rude in watching yon, as I must own to having done. But I assure you, Miss Henderson, it was no intentional rudeness ; neither was it my admiration, which, pardon me, is great ! I watched, Miss Hendt because I lind you bear a most startling, a most wonderful resemblance to a person a young girl I once knew in New York." She caught her breath, feeling the blood leaving her face, and herself growing cold. Paul Wyndham ; took his pitiless eyes off her charming face. " In saying I knew this young girl," he slowly went on, " I am wrong ; I only saw her in the city streets. You fame from New York, but you could not have known her, Henderson, for she was abjectly jx)or. She lived in :; mean and dirty thoroughfare called Minetta Street ; she l.uiiredin a house filled with rough factory- women, and !>y one Mrs. Butterby ; and the young woman's name \vr,s Harriet Wade." A moment after Mr. Wyndham said this, he came out of the curtained recess, and crossed the ballroom rapidly. On his way he met Laura Blair, and paused to speak. " I am going for a glass of water," he said, " for Miss 81 a MR. WYNDHAM'8 WOOING. Henderson. I was talking to her at that window when she was taken suddenly ill. You had better go to her, Miss Blair I am afraid she is going to faint." CHAPTER XXYII. MB. WYNDHAM'S WOOING. BLEAK and rainy morning in Speckport a raw and windy morning, with a sky all lead- color, except where it was inky black. A wild, wet, rainy day, on which nobody wanted to stir out if they could help it. An utterly black and miserable day, that which followed the officers' ball. On this wretchedly wet and windy day Olive Hender- son sat at her chamber window, and looked out over the black and foam-crested bay. The room looked very cozy and pleasant, with its -soft, warm, bright-hued Brussels carpet, its cushioned easy-chairs and lounges, its white- draped bed, its pretty pictures and tables, and bright coal fire burning in the glittering steel grate, its costly window- draperies of lace and damask, looking all the more pleasant and luxurious by contrast with the black, bleak day out- side. A delightful room this bad May morning, a room to bask and luxuriate in, this chamber of Olive Henderson. But Olive Henderson herself, sitting by the window, staring blankly out, seemed to take very little enjoyment in its comfort and beauty. She wore a white loose muslin wrapper, tied carelessly round the slender waist with a crimson cord, its every fold, as it hung straight about her, telling how indifferently the simple toilette had been made. All her profuse black hair was drawn away from her face, haggard and worn in the gray morning light, and Mil. V.'TNDHAM'S WOOING. 313 fastened in a great careless knot behind. Bnt, souehow, the stateliness that was a part of herself characterized her as strikingly in this primitive simplicity as when robed in velvet and diamonds last night. Perhaps Semiramk,, Queen of Assyria, when in trouble with foreign parts, wore white muslin wrappers, and her black hair dishevel- ed, before her subjects, and managed to look Queen Scrni- ramis withal. It isn't likely, you know, but she may. Rain, rain, rain ! How ceaselessly it lashed the win- dows, and how piteonsly it beat on the heads of the poor little newsboys, passing up and down Golden Row, and chanting, disconsolately, "Morning Snorter," the "Sn-o-o-or-ter!" Perhaps, looking up at the curtained- window, where the young lady sat, these newsboys thought it was a fine thing to be Miss Olive Henderson, the heiress of Redmon, and live in a handsome house, with servants to wait on her, and nothing to do but play the piano, and drive about in her carriage all day long. But, I am pretty sure, there was not a pug-nosed urchin coming there that particular morning, who was not a thousand times happier than the heiress of Redmon. Discovered disgraced in the power of this man this stranger! Liable to be exposed as a liar and a < to the world at any hour ! Liable to have all this wealth and luxury, for which she had done so much for which she had risked her very soul torn from her at any instant, and she herself thrust out to fight the battle of life, with poverty and labor and misery once more. She Ei-emed to have grown old in four-and-twenty hours, with her hag- gard cheeks and great hollow eyes. She had sat as she was sitting now for hours, her hands clapped loosely in her lap, her vacant gaze fixed on the wretched day, but seeing nothing. Only yesterday, and she had been so sure, so secure, so hapny, and now and now ! She had not fainted the night before. Laura Blair found her lying back ghastly and white in her chair, but cot insensible. The ballroom had been filled with con- sternation, and she was so surrounded immediately that Mr. Wjndham, returning with his glass of water, .w.ld find no possibility of approaching her. They had led her 14 314 MR. WYNDHAVS WOOI3Q. into the ladies' dressing-room, and Captain Cavendish had gone for a cab ; and when she was a little better, they took her home, and the rest went back to the ballroom. People began to think that in spite of Miss Henderson's apparent physical perfection, ehe was subject to fainting-iits, and pitied her very much, as they resumed their dancing. But the eclipsed belles of Speckport rejoiced, I am. afraid, in their wicked little hearts, that the conqneress was gone,* and held up their pretty heads, which had drooped in the sunlight of her shining presence before. Once at home, Miss Henderson professed herself per- fectly restored, and insisted on Laura and her mamma, who had been their chaperone, and Captain Cavendish, going back to the ball once more. " I shall do well enough now," she said, wearily. "' I am very foolish, but Her voice died away, and her head drooped forward on her arm. Captain Cavendish bent tenderly over her, as she lay on a sofa, with a pale and anxious face. " My darling," he said, " I am afraid you are very ill. Let me go for Dr. Leach this may be something serious." But Miss Henderson positively refused, and insisted on their returning to the ball. " I shall lie down and go asleep," she said, " and I will be quite restored to-morrow. Go at once." "I shall go," the captain said, holding her hands, "but not back to the ball. Do you think there could be any pleasure for me there, and you absent, Olive? Good night, my love get rid of this white face before I see you to-morrow." Olive Henderson slept that night, but it was more like stupor than healthful sleep, and she awoke with a dully tli robbing headache, and a numbing sense of mi.very at her heart. She had arisen in the black and wretched d-.;wn of that miserable May morning, and had sat staring vacantly out at the ceaseless rain, and dark and turbid sea. IShe was not thinking she was sitting there in a dull torpor of despair, waiting for the end. ^ There was a knock at the door. It had to be repeated MR. WYNDTTAirR WOOING. ,315 two or ihrce times before she comprehended what it meant, and then she arose and opened the door, it was 1 the housemaid ; and the girl recoiled at sight of her, as if she had seen a ghost. " My patience, Miss ! how bad you do look ! I am afraid you are worse than you was last night." " K"c. What is it you want ?" " It's a gentleman, Miss, that has called, and is in the drawing-room, although it is raining cats and dogs." She presented a card to her mistress, and Olive read the name of " Paul Wyndham." She turned sick at sight of that name that name so lately heard for the first time, but so terribly familiar now ; and looked at the girl with a sort of terror in her great black eyes. " Is this man is this Mr. Wyndham here ?" " Down in the drawing-room, Miss, and his overcoat and umbrella making little streams of rain-water all along the hall. Will you go down, Miss P Olive Henderson's hand had closed on the pasteboard with so convulsive a pressure, that the card was crushed into a shapeless mass. Her stupor was ending in a sort of sullen desperation. Let the worst come, it was Fate : she was powerless to battle with so formidable a fop. Vv r hatever brought this man now, his coming was merci- ful ; the most dreadful certainty was better than this hor- rible suspense, which had mad3 the past night a century of misery. liositi, the pretty housemaid, watched hrr young Lilly's changing face, as she walked rapidly up and down, her .-iaring straight before her with a fierce and fev liistor, and her lips so rigidly set, Eosie saw all this, and v marveled thereat. A gentle-man had railed very earl v "on a very wet morning; l:ut that was no r you ventured to ask, when she thought the silence had ' long enough. v riie voice of the girl drew Olive out of her darkly- brooding fit, and she turned to close her door. 316 MR. WYNDHAM 1 S WOOfNQ. " Yes,' ? she said. " Tell him I will be down in five minutes." She walked to the glass, and looked at herself. I dare say Lady Jane Grey and Mary Queen 6f Scots did the eame before they were led to the block ; and I doubt if either wore a more ghostly face at that horrible moment than the girl standing there did now. She smiled in bit- ter scorn of herself, as she saw the haggard face and the hollow, burning eyes. " I look as if I had grown old in a night," she said. ' Where is the beauty now that so many have praised since I came here ?" She made no attempt to change her dress, but with the loose white muslin wrapper trailing in long folds around her, and girdled with scarlet, she descended the stairs, and entered the drawing-room. Mr. Paul Wyndham was sitting at a window, watching the ceaseless rain beating against the glass. At that very window, looking out at the silvery moonlight, she herself had sac a few nights before, while she promised Captain Cavendish she would be his wife. Perhaps she thought of this as she swept past, a la princesse, just deigning to acknowledge her visitor's presence by her haughtiest bow. She conld not have acted otherwise, had a hundred for- tunes depended on it, and she did not sit down. She stood beside the mantel, her arm, from which the flowing white sleeves dropped away, leaning on it, her eyes fixed steadily upon the man before her, waiting m proud silence for what he had to say. Any one else might have been disconcerted ; but Mr. Wyndham did not look as if he was. He looked pale and quiet and gen- tlemanly, and entirely self-possessed. " You do not ask the object of my visit, Miss Hender- son," he said, " although the hour is unfashionably early, and the day not such as callers usually select. But I pre- nime you have been expecting me, and are not surprised." " I am not surprised," she said, coldly. " I thought that at this hour I should be most certain of finding you at home and alone. Therefore, I have MR. WYNDHAM'S WOOING. 817 coine, knowing that after what passed last night, the sooner we come to an understanding the better." "How have you found out my secret?" she abruptly demanded. " You never knew me in New York?" " That ia my secret, Miss Henderson I presume you prefer being called by that name that is my secret, and you will pardon me if I do not reveal it. I do know your secret, and it is that knowledge which has brought me to this place." " And knowing it, what use do you intend to make of it ?" He smiled slightly. " You are very straightforward, Miss Henderson. It is almost as easy getting on with you as if you were a man. I foresee that we shall settle this little matter pleas- antly, after all." Olive Henderson contracted her black brows, and reiterated her question. "Knowing this secret, sir, what use do you intend making of it?" " That depends upon yourself, madam." How ?" " I shall keep your secret, Miss Henderson," Paul Wyndham said, "I shall keep it inviolably; you shall still be Olive Henderson, heiress of Ileduum, the lady paramount of Speckport, on one condition." Her heart boat so fast and thick that she had to p her hands over it to still its tumultuous throbbing. Her hollow, burning black eyes never left his face, they were strained there in suspense too intense for words. " You are aware, Miss Henderson," the cold, clear, yet melodious voice of Paul Wyndham went on, "of the position in which you stand. You have usurped the place of another your stepsister you have assumed a name which does not belong to you, and you have come IK dupe the people of this place, to pass yourself oil' for \vhat you are not, and possess yourself of wealth to which you have no shadow of claim. In doiri<* this, Miss I lender- son, you must be aware you are guilty of a felony, pun- ishable by law, punishable by trial, imprisonment, and 318 MS. WYNDHAW8 WOOING. life-long disgrace. All ibis you know, and knowing it, must be aware how entirely and irrevocably you are in my power !" " Irrevocably and completely in my power," the piti- less voice went on, " you see it yourself as well as I. You know also much better than I do, the misery, the shame, the degradation exposure must bring. Your name pub- lished, your crime published far and wide, yourself the scoff and jeer of every boor in the town, the horrors of a jail, of a criminal cell, of a public trial before gaping thousands, of " Paul Wyndham stopped. It was not a cry she had uttered, but a gasping sob, telling more of the unutterable agony, the intense misery she was suffering, than any wild outbreak of womanly shrieks. She put out her hands with a passionate cry. Paul "Wyndham looked at the disturbed, crouching form, convulsed with despairing agony, with Heaven only knows how much of pity in his face. " Miss Henderson ! Miss Henderson !" he cried, " i did not mean I did not think what I said would affect you like this. I only told you what might be, but it never will be, for you will listen to what I have yet to say, and I never will reveal your secret to a living soul !" She lifted her head, and looked at him as a hunted stag might, with the knife at its throat. " Mr. Wyndham," she said, with that dignity which is born of extreme misery, " what have I ever done to you that you should come here and torment me like this 2" Paul Wyndham turned away from that reproachful face, with a dark shadow on his own. " Heaven knows, Miss Henderson, I hate the nccess: ty which compels me to cause you this pain, but it i.s a necessity, and I must do it ; you never have wronged me I have no wish to give you a moment's suffering, but a fatality against which I am powerless, urges me on. I hate myself for what I am doing but what can I do what can I do ?" He seemed to ask himself the question, as he sprang MR. WYNDHAM' 8 WOOING. 318 up and took, like herself, to walking excidedly up and down. His face was so darkly troubled that Olive Hen- derson looked at him with searching, wondering eyes. " 1 do not understand yon," she said, chilled with a new fear, u does any one but yourself know my set ; She was still sitting, and never ceasing to M'atch him. Paul Wyndham leaned against the mantel, as she had done a moment before, and looked down at her. " Miss Henderson, I can tell you nothing but that your secret is safe with me if you will comply with the condition I have to name. You may trust me; 1 shall never reveal it !" " And that condition is " There was a pause, during which Olive could have counted the raindrops on the window or the loud beating of her heart. Paul Wyndham's large, clear, bright gray eyes stead- ilv met her own. u The condition is, that you become my wife." She gave a cry, she was so utterly astonished, and sat staring at him, speechless. "Your wile!" S!K) slowly said, when her returned senses enabled her to speak. c - Yes, Miss Henderson, my wife ! I am no more in- sensible to the power of wealth than you are. You have risked everything for the future ; you can only hold it no\v, on condition of becoming my wife !" Olive Henderson rose up, white and dehant " I never will !" she said, "I never will! I will lose every shilling of it, I will die before I consent !" "Oh, no!" Mr. Wyndham said, quietly," do not think you will, when you come to reflect. It is not pleas- ant to die when one is young and handsome and prosper- ous, particularly if one has not been very good, and not at all sure of going to Heaven. You will not die, Miss Henderson ; you wi'l keep the fortune and marry me. " I never will !" she vehemently cried ; " what i you mv stepsister, the real Olive Henderson, were alive, that I have seen her lately, and that she has made over everything to me. What if 1 told you th. 320 MR. WYNDHAM'S WOOING. lie smiled incredulously. " You do not believe me, but I swear to you I state the truth. Olive Henderson lives, though I thought her dead ; and I have seen her, I tell you, and she has con- Rented to my keeping all." " Well," said Mr. Wyndham quietly, " supposing, for argument's sake, what you say to be true, it does not alter your position in the least. Should I go to a lawyer and tell him your story, the arrest, the exposure, the disgrace all follow as inevitably as ever. The rightful heiress may, as you. say, be alive, and willing you should usurp her birth- right, though it does not sound very likely ; but even if BO, Harriet Wade is too_ proud a woman to incur life-long disgrace and humiliation, when she can avert it so easily." She turned away from him, dropped into her seat, and laid her hand on a table near. The action, the attitude, told far more than words, of the cold, dark despair thick- ening around her. She never lifted her head. She was suffering, as other women have suffered, dumbly. " In asking you to be my wife, Miss Henderson," Mr. Wyndham still continued, " I make no pretense of being in love with you myself. I am not I may as well tell you plainly and I shall never ask love from you. In Becoming my wife, you will go through a legal ceremony that will mean nothing. I shall never intrude upon you one single moment out of all the twenty-four hours, unless you desire it, or when the presence of others makes our being together unavoidable. We may dwell under the same roof, and yet live as far apart as if hemispheres divided us. Believe me, I shall not force myself upon you against your will ; but for your own sake, Miss Hen- derson, and to still the whispers of busy tongues, it would be as well to keep your sentiments regarding me to your- self, as well we should be apparently on cordial terms. Are you listening, Miss Henderson '$" He really thought she was not. She was lying so still, so rigid, with her poor white face on the table, and the thick coik of her dead-black hair unloosing them- MR. WYNDHAM'8 WOOING. 821 eelves, and trailing and twining about her like black snakes. She was not hysterical now ; she was lying there in a sort of dumb anguish, that none but very proud and sensitive hearts, crushed to the very dust in shame and humiliation, can ever feel. " Miss Henderson," Mr. Wyndham repeated, looking at the drooping, girlish tigure, its very attitude speaking so much of supreme misery, *'I am waiting for my answer." She lifted her head and looked at him, with spmething the look of a deer at bay. " Have you no pity P she said. " Will yon not spare me? I am only a girl, alone in the world, and you might pity me and l)e merciful. I have done wrong, I know, but Heaven alone knows what I have suffered from poverty, and the degradation it inevitably entails. I was tempted, and 1 yielded ; but I think I never was so miserable in the worst days of my suffering as I have been at times since I came here. 1 am not good, I know, but I am not used to wickedness and plotting like this, and I think I am the most miserable creature on the face of this wide earth. But I never wronged you, sir; and you might pity me and spare me." Her head dropped down again with a sort of sob, and the pitiful pleading was touching to hear from those proud lips. If i'aul Wyndham had possessed the h: heart that ever beat in a man's breast since the da .Nero, I think it must have been touched by the .-iuht of that haughty spirit so bowed and crushed before him. llis face showed no sign of whatever he might feel, but his clear voice shook a little as he replied. it is of little u-c, M.i>s Henderson, for me to say how deeply I do pity you how sorely against my will i wage this unequal warfare, since the battle must go on all the same. It would only sound like mockery were 1 ' how grieved I am to give you this pain, since I should still remain inexorable." " Will nothing bribe you 2" she asked. " Half tk wealth I possess shall be yours if " H* 322 MR WYNDHAM'S WOOING. She had lifted her face ag;ain in eager hopefulness, but he interrupted with a gesture. " I said I was inexorable, Miss Henderson, and I must repeat it. Besides," he added, with a slight smile, that showed how credulous he was about the story, " the real heiresfc, though she might make over the fortune to you, might object to your handing the half of it over to a stranger. No, Miss Henderson, there is only the one alternative be my wife, or else " " Or else you will tell all? y ' He did not speak. He stood, quietly waiting his an- swer quiet, but very inflexible. Olive rose up and stood before him. " Must you have your answer now ?" she asked, " or will you not even give me a few hours respite to think it over?" "As many as you please, Miss Henderson." " Then you shall have it to-night," she said, with strange, cold calmness. " I promised Miss Blair to go to the theater you will see me there, and shall have your answer." Mr. Wyndham bowed, and with a simple "Good morning," walked out of the room. As he shut the door behind him, he felt as though he were shutting Olive Henderson in a living tomb, and he her jailer. "Poor girl! poor girl!" he was thinking, as he put on his overcoat ; " what a villain I must seem in her eyes, and what a villain 1 am, ever to have consented to this. But it is only retribution after all one ill turn deserves another." Paul Wyndham walked to his hotel through the drenching rain and cold sea-wind, and Olive Henderson listened to the tumult of the storm, with another storm quite as tumultuous in her own breast. The play that night was the " Lady of Lyons." There is only one theater in Speckport, so Mr. Wyndharrt was no't likely to get bewildered in his search. The first act was half over when he came in, and looked round the dress circle, and down in the orchestra stalls. In the glare of the gas- light Olive Henderson looked superb. Never had her mag- MR WYNDHAM'S WOOING. 823 nificent black eyes shone with such streaming luster as to- night, and a crimson glow, quite foreign to her usual com- plexion, beamed on either cheek the crimson glow, rouge, worn for the first time in- her life ; and though she was a New York lady, she had the grace to be ashamed of the paint, and wear a thin black vail over her face. She took her eyes off Mademoiselle Pauline for a moment, to lix them on Mr. Wyndham, who came along to pay his respects, and to find a seat directly behind that of the heiress, but she only bent her head in very distant acknowledgment of his presence, and looked at Pauline again. The curtain fell on the first act. Miss Henderson was very thirsty that feverish thirst had not left her yet, and Captain Cavendish went out for a glass of ice-water. Laura was busy chattering to Mr. Blake, and Paul Wynd- ham bent forward and spoke to the heiress, who never turned her head. " I have come for my answer, Miss Henderson," he said ; " it is * Yes,' I know." "It is 'Yes,' Mr. Wyndham, and, with my consent, take the knowledge that I hate and despise you more than any other creature on the face of the earth." She never turned while saying this. She stared straight before her at the row of gleaming footlights. The music was croaking out, every one was talking busily, and not one of the" young ladies who looked enviously at tho beautiful and" brilliant heiress, nor the men who worshiped her at a distance, and who hated the young New Yorker for the privilege; lie enjoyed of talking to her not one of them all dreamed ever'so faintly of that other play being enacted oil: the st, Captain Cavendish came back with the water, the play went on, but I doubt if Olive Henderson heard a word, or knew whether they were playing "Othello' 1 or the "Lady of Lyons," but none of the others knew that; that serviceable misk, the human face, is a very good screen for the heart. The play was over, and they were all going out. Mr. Wyndham had not addressed her since, but she knew he was behind her all the time, and she knew nothing else. 334 MR. WYNDHAWS WEDDING. He was bj her side as they descended the stairs, and the cold night-wind struck them on the face. She was leaning on the arm of Captain Cavendish, but how was that con- quering hero to know it was for the last time ? " I will have the pleasure of calling on you to-morrow, JMass Henderson," he distinctly said, as he bowed an adieu and was lost in the crowd. CHAPTER XXYIIL ME. WYNDHAM' s WEDDING. APTAIN CAVENDISH, sitting at the window of his room in the hotel, stared at the red sun- set with a clouded face and a gloomy abstrac- tion of manner, that told how utterly its lurid glory was lost upon him. Captain Cavendish had been sitting there since four in the afternoon, thinking this over and over again, and never able to get beyond it. His day of retribution had come. He was feeling the torture he had so often and so heartlessly made others feel ; he was learning what it meant to be jilted in cold blood. Olive Henderson had turned out the veriest, the most capricious, the most heartless of flirts, and Captain Cavendish found himself incontinently snubbed ! He had asked for no explanation yet, but the climax had come to-day. He had ridden over to escort the heiress on her breezy morning gallop, and had found Mr. Wyndham just assisting her into the saddle. She had bowed distantly to him, cut her horse a stinging blow across the neck, and had galloped oif, with Paul Wyndham close beside her. Catty Clowrie looked out of the cottage window, and laughed a voice- less laugh, to see the captain's blank consternation. " Tit for tat !" Catty said ; "you are getting paid back in your own coin, Captain George Cavendish !" MS. WYNDIIAM'S WEDDING. 325 So, while the fierce red sun blazed itself out in the purple arch, and the big round yellow moon rose up, like another Venus, out of the bluish-black bay, Captain Cavendish sat at his window, telling the same refrain over and over in his mind, as perseveringly as ever any holy monk told the Ave Maria on his rosary : " What has changed her? what has changed her* what has changed her?" The moon was high in the sky before he roused him- self from his long and somber musing-fit, and, pulling out his watch, looked at the hour. " Half -past seven," he said ; " they were to start at eight, and she promised to go. I shall ask for an ex- planation to-night." He rang for his servant, and desired that young man, when he appeared, to fetch him his overcoat. Mr. John- ston brought that garment, and assisted his master into it, and the captain put on his hat arid gloves, and with his cane under his arm (for, of course, as an officer Mg time deciding; for somehow Olive Henderson, with all her inborn love of dress, did not seem to take much interest in the matter. " We'll settle it all again, Laura," she said, impatiently, "there's no hurry six weeks is a long time. Come, and let us have a drive." As the young ladies entered the little pony-can-' Mr. Wyndham rode up on his Iniy, looking his lust, as good riders always do on horseback. Laura, who was on very friendly, not to say familiar, terms with the young author, held out her hand. " Accept my congratulations," she said, " I am to be bridemaid-in-chief on the happy occasion; and, next to 334 MR. WYNDHAM'S WEDDING. being married myself, there is nothing we girls like better than that !" Mr. Wyndham smiled, lifted her hand to his lips gal- lantly, and made some complimentary reply ; but there was no rapture in his face, Laura noticed, even although his bride-elect, in the dark splendor of her beauty, sat be- ioi:e him among the rich cushions, like an Egyptian queen. ' lie does not love her," thought Laura ; " he is like all the rest ; he wants to marry her because she is hand- some, and the fashion, and the heiress of Iledmon. I wonder, if I were in her place, if that stupid Val would ever come to the point. I know he likes me, but the tire- some creature won't say so." Mr. Wyndham had but just left Mr. Blake's office, after having bewildered that gentleman with the same news Olive had imparted to her friend. Mr. Blake's hands were very deep in his pockets, and lie was whistling a dismally perplexed whistle, as the young author left his sanctum. " It's very odd !" Mr. Blake was thinking, " it's very odd, indeed ! He said he would do it, and I didn't believe him, and now it's done. It's very odd! 1 know she doesn't care about him, rather the reverse ; and then, she was promised to Cavendish. What can she be marrying him for? Wyndham, too, he isn't in lovo with her; it's not in him to be in love with 'any one. What ctm he want marryiugher ? It can't be her money at least, it's not like Paul Wyndham, if it is. And then he's a sort of novel-writing hesrnit, who would live on bread and water as fast as turtle-soup, and doesn't care a button for society. It's odd it's uncommonly odd !" Speckport found it odd, too, and said so, which Mr. Blake did not, except to himself. But then the heiress v. hh the imperious beauty and flashing eyes was a singular !;3ing, anyhow, and they put it down as the last coquetry (it iny Lady Caprice. And while they talked of it, and conjectured about it, and wondered if she would not jilt him for somebody else before the day came round while Speckport gossiped ravenously, Mr. Wyndham was a daily visitor at the cottage, and Speckport beheld the betrothed MR. WYNDHAM'S WEDDING. 333 pair galloping together out along the lovely country-roads and over the distant tree-clad hills, and saw the new villa at Redmou going up with magical rapidity, and ihu bleak and dreary grounds being transformed into a I land of beauty. All the head dressmakers and miliin the town were up to their eyes in the wedding-?plt- aad such a lot of Miss Henderson's dear flvehundrc! been invited to the wedding that the miracle was how the cottage was going to hold them all. Spcckport knew all about the arrangements beforehand ; how they were married in Trinity Church, being both IIigh-( 'ir.irc-h pie; how they were going on a bridal-tour through the Canadas, and would return toward the close of when the villa would be ready to receive them. Speckport talked of all this incessantly, and of the five bridemaids; of whom Laura Blair, Jcannette W and Miss Tod, were the chief; and while they talked, the day came round. A dull and depressing day, with a my yellow fog that stuck to everything, and a bleak wind that reddened the pretty noses of the bridemaids, and made them shiver in their white satin shoes. Tin church was crowded. Young and old, gentle and su all flocked to see the beautiful black-eyed h set so many unhappy young men crazy, married at I:, the man of her choice. The dismal weather had no > on her, it seemed; for she swept up the aisle, leanin. the arm of Mr. Darcy, who was to play papa, in a whose splendor electrified Speckport, and which had imported direct from Paris; all in white, an im; floating all around her like a silvery t. .-mdalized Speckport said, for all, look a bit HL Where was the drooping of the long the paling and flushing cheek; wL graces of virginhood \ Was it not pi-iety to walk up the aisle with her h-.-ad e; iiright and detiaut, her lips compressed, and her never varying? It was the vulgarity and brazenm the New York grisette breaking out, or the spangk-s and sawdust of the circus-rider. But Speckport said all this under their breath; and when it was all over, and the C3G MR. WYNDHAM'S MOTHER. names down in the register, kissed the bride, at least fe- male Speckport did, the beings in broadcloth and white vests only looking as if they would like to. And then they drove back to the cottage ; and Miss Henderson no, it f was Mrs. Wyndham now went to her room at once to put on her traveling-dress, for the steamer started in half an hour. There was a great crowd on the wharf to see them off ; and the bride and bridegroom stood to be looked at he, pale, quiet, and calm; she, haughty and hand- some, and uplifted to the end. So it was all over, and the heiress of Redmon was safely married at last ! The news came out in next day's " Sponter," with a string of good wishes from the editorial chair for the happy pair. Two young men Captain George P. Cavendish, in the reading-room of a Montreal hotel, and Mr. Tom Oaks, in an Indian's tent up the country, where he shot and fished read it, and digested the bitter pill as best they might. Some one else read it, too ; Mr. Wynd- ham, with his own hands, posted the first copy of that particular " Spouter" he received to a young lady, who read it with strange eagerness in her own room in a quaint New York hotel. A lady who read it over and over and over again, as often and as eagerly as Miss Wade had read that advertisement long before in the Canadian paper shown her in Mrs. Butterby's lodgings, by the pale actress. CHAPTER XXIX. MB. WYNDHAM'S MOTHER. R. WYNDHAM and Miss Henderson had had but one confidential interview after that first one, during the length of their brief engage- ment. It was the day after the evening at the theater. Mr. Wyndham had called early and found the heiress waiting for him in the drawing-room. ME. WYNDHAM'8 MOTHER. 337 There was no terror, no humiliation in her manner now, nothing but reckless, scornful detiance, and fierce pride, with which she seemed to dare him and Fate to do their worst. " I was afraid of you yesterday, Mr. Paul "Wyndharn," she said, with an unpleasant laugh. " I shall never be afraid of you again. I see that it is of no use to struggle against Destiny Providence, good people would say, but I make no pretense of goodness. The French have a saying that embodies the character of the nation : ' < onnons nous des roses avant qu'elles ne se fleurissent.' I take that for my motto from henceforth, and crown my- self with roses before they fade. I shall dress and spend money and enjoy this fortune while 1 may when it why, let it go, I, shall know what to do when that time comes !" Mr. "Wyndham bowed in grave silence, and waited to hear all she might have to say. "To retain this wealth," she went on in the same reckless tone, and with her black deriding eyes seeming to mock him, " I consent to marry you ; that is, 1 consent to go through a civil and religions ceremony which the world will call a marriage, and which to us will simply mean nothing but an empty form. It will give you a right to my money, which is all you want ; it will give you a right to dwell under the same roof, but no right ever to intrude yourself upon me for one second, except when" others are present and it is necessary to avoid suspicion. The world will call me by your name ; but I shall still remain Olive Henderson, free and unfettered free to come and go and do as I please, wirhout interfer- ence or hindrance from you. Do I make myself under- stood ?'' "Perfectly," Mr. Wyndham said, coolly, " and ex- press my views entirely. " I am delighted wiih your good . Miss Henderson, and I foresee we shall make u model couple, and get on together famously. ]S"o\v, as to oiir wedding arrangements. Wlien is it to be :'' ' Whenever you please," she said, scornfully ; " it is a matter of perfect indifference to me." 15 338 STff. WrXDHAWfi. MOTHER. ' I do not like to hurry you too much, but if the end of June " Olive made a careless gesture with her ringed hand: " TW will do ! One time is as good as another." 1 "And our bridal tour? There must be a bridal tour, you know, or people will talk." " I told you," she said, impatiently, " it was of no con- sequence to me ! Arrange it as you please I shall make no objection." " Then suppose we go to Canada for a couple of months ? The villa at Redmon can be ready upon our return." And this tender tete-a-tete between the plighted pair settled the matter. And in due time the solemn mockery was performed by the Kev. Augustus Tod, and Mr. and Mrs. "Wyndham departed on their wedding tour. The upholsterer had received his orders, and the villa would be in readiness upon 'their return, and there would be a famous house-warming, to which half Speckport was to be invited. About three weeks after the amicable adjust- ment of affairs between the author and the heiress, Mr. "Wyndham made a little investment in landed property on his own account. There was a delightful little dwelling, known as " Rosebush Cottage," for sale. A real bijou of a cottage, painted cream color, with vivid green window- shutters and door, and with a garden in front that was a perfect sea of roses crimson roses, and monthly and damask roses, and bridal roses, all kinds bloomed here, until the air became faint with perfume; and behind there was a gnarled old orchard, where applo-trees and plum-trees nearly covered the creamy cottage with their long green arms. This delicious Rosebush Cof;.'--o \vas ' for sale ; and Mr. Wyndham, who had for some time been quietly on the look-out for just such a place, became its purchaser. When asked what he could possibly want of it, Mr. Wyndham answered it was for his mother. " For your mother -'' exclaimed Mr. Blake, when Mr. Wyndham first told him. " You never mean to say, "Wyndham, your mother is going to exchange the genial MR. wy:\J)i:.::>rx MWIIEU. 831 and spicy breezes of Westch ester County for our bleak province hey ?" " Westch ester County is a delightful place, no doubt," responded Mr. "Wyndham ; " but in my absence, it is only vanity and vexation of spirit to my poor mother. What are all the Westcheeter Counties in America ta her with- out her Paul, her only one ! ] shall send for her as soon as I return from Canada, to come here." " Perhaps she won't come,'"' said Val ; " perhaps she will think of the old adage, ' My sou's my son till he gets him a wife,' and prefer remaining where she is." "No," said Mr. Wyndham, ''my mother knows her son will be her son all the days of his life. She i.- much changed, Blake, since you knew her; she never was very fond of society, as you are aware ; but of lat has become a perfect recluse, shutting herself in and shutting the world out. Rosebush Cottage will mak< a very nice hermitage, I think, and it is conveniently near Redmon. The next thing is to look out for a comp and trustworthy servant not a young girl, you k giddy and frivolous, but a quiet and sensible woman, who would not object to the louelii. Mr. Blake put on his considering-cap. "There's Midge," he said, ' she's out of place, stopping with us you saw her at our house last n you remember; but I'm afraid she mightn't suit." "That little dwarf, do you mean? She would d-> well enough, as far as looks are concerned, if that if only objection." " But that isn't the only objection," said Val ; " m< the pity, for she is perfectly trustworthy, ana can work like a horse. As for the loneliness, she would rather j> re- fer it ou that very account." " Then what is the objection C " Why, you see," said Mr. Blake, " we're none of us per- fect in this lower world, and Midgr. though but one re- move from an angel in a general point of view, has yet her failings. For instance, there's her temper." "Bad?" inquired Mr. AVyndham. Mr. Blake nodded intelligently. 340 MR. WYNDHAM'S MOTHER. " It never was of the best, you know ; but after she lost Nathalie Marsh, it became well, she is never kept in any place over a week, and then she comes to us and makes a purgatory of No. 16 Great St. Peter Street, until she finds another situation. I'm afraid she wouldn't, do." Mr. Blake, smelling audibly at the roses as he said this, did not see the sudden change that had come over Mr. Wyndham's faee^nor the eagerness hardly repressed in his voice when he spoke. "She was formerly a servant, then, of this Miss Nathalie Marsh, of whom I have heard so many speak since I came here ?" " Yes, for years, and devotedly attached to her. Poor Natty ! I think Midge felt her loss ten degrees more than her own mother ; but grief, I regret to say, hasn't a sweetening effect on Midge's temper." " Still I think I shall try her," said Paul Wyndham, carelessly. " My mother is very quiet and easy, and I don't believe they will quarrel. I will see Midge about it this very day." Which he did accordingly, sending her off at once to keep the cottage until his mother's arrival. The up- holsterer furnishing Redmon Villa had his orders for Roseb'ish Cottage also, and both were to be in readiness when September came round. Oiive Henderson heard with extreme indifference of the expected arrival of Mr. Wyndham's mother, from the lips of Miss Jo Blake, next day. " Ah ! is she *" the heiress said, suppressing a yawn ; " well, as she is to reside a mile and a half from Retlmou, I don't suppose she will be much trouble to me. If the mistress be like the maid, Laura," said the heiress, turn- ing with a scornful laugh to her friend, " I am likely to have a charmin^ mamma-in-law." Good Miss Jo, who thought the motheriess heiress would rejoice at the tidings she brought her, was scan- dalized at the speech. Indeed, Miss Jo the best of women and old maids did not approve of Miss Hender- son's capers at all. She had always thought her too proud ; MS. WYNDHAM'S MOTHER. 341 for Miss Jo's simple Irish belief was, that we earthly worms have no business at all with tlr.it sin which drove Lucifer, Star of the Morning, from Paradise, and was sorry to see her favorite Laura so much taken up with the queenly coquette. u Laura was such a nice little girl, Yal," Miss Jo said, to the editor of the " Speckport Spouter," across the tea- table that evening ; " and now, I am afraid, she will fall into the ways of that young girl, whom everybody is run- ning crazy after. If Miss Henderson was like poor Natty, or that little angel, Miss Rose, now!" " How is Miss Rose, Jo <" asked Val ; " I haven't seen her this month of Sundays ?" " She isn't out much," said Miss Blake ; " Mrs. Wheatly keeps her busy ; and when she does come out, it's to Mrs. Marsh's she goes, or to see her poor pensioners. Miss Henderson asked her to be one of her bridemaids, I hear, but she refused." " Stuff !" said Val, politely. "Miss Henderson isn't the woman to ask a governess to be her bridemaid. Xot but that Miss Rose is as good as she is !" As good !" cried Miss Jo, in shrill indignation, "she'a fifty thousand times better. Miss Rose is a little pale- faced angel on the face of the earth ; and that rich young woman with the big black eyes is no more an angel than I am !" Miss Jo manifested her disapprobation of the he; by not going to see her married, and by declining an invi- tation to the wedding-breakfast ; neither of which slights, had she known of them, which she didn't, would have troubled the high-stepping young lady in the least. But Miss Jo was destined to become an heiress her- self ; for, a fortnight after the great wedding, and jusr as Speckport was getting nicely round after the she received another staggerer in the news that a groat for- tune had been left to Miss Jo Blake. Thirty thousand pounds, the first startling announcement had it ; thirteen, the second ; and three, the final and correct one. Yes; Miss Jo had been left the neat little sum of three thousand pounds sterling, and was going home to 343 MR. WYNDHAM'8 MOTHER. take possession of the fortune. An old maiden aunt, after whom Miss Joanna had been named, and from whom she had long had expectations as all Speckport had heard a million times, more or less had died at last, and left Miss Jo the three thousand and her blessing. Upon receiving the tidings, Miss Blake was seized with a violent desire to revisit the scenes of her infantile sports, and gave warning of her intention of starting in the first vessel bound for Liverpool. " And it's not in one of them dirty steamboats I'll go," said Miss Jo, decisively, " that's liable to blow up any minute ; but I'll go in a ship that's_ slow and sure, and not put a hand in my own life by trusting to one of them new-fangled inventions !" Mr. Blake expostulated with his sister on the impro- priety of leaving him alone and unprotected to the mer- cies of heartless servant-girls. Miss Jo was inexorable. " If you don't like Keeping house and fighting with the servants." said Miss Blake, " go and board. If you don't like boarding, why, go and get married ! it won't hurt your growth any, I'm sure !" As Mr. Blake was on the wrong side of thirty, and had probably done growing, there was a great deal of sound truth in Miss Jo's remark. Mr. Blake, however, only stood aghast at the proposal. " It's time you were getting married, Val," pursued Miss Jo, busily packing ; particularly now, that I'm going to leave you. You're well enough off, and there's lots of nice girls in Speckport who would be glad to snap at yon. Not tliat I should like to see you marry a Bluenose Lord forbid ! if it could be helped ; but there's Miss Rose, or there's Laura Blair, both of them as nice girls as" jou will find. Now, why can't you take and marry one of them f ' Mr. Blake was beyond the power of replying. JIo could only stare in blank and helpless consternation at his brisk, match-making sister. " I would rather you took Miss Rose," pursued Miss Blake, " she's the best of the two, and a rock of sense ; but Laura's very fond of you, and where are you going now 2" MM. WTNDHAM^B MOTHER. 843 Tor Mr. Blake had snatched up his hat and started out, banging the door after him. The first person he met, turni:ig the corner, was Mr. Blair. > you're going to lose Jo, Blake," he said, taking his ami. "Laura tells mo she is off next week in the * Ocean Star. ^ What are you going to do with yourself when you lose her ?" " Become a monk, I think," said Mr. Blake, hclple.- " I don't know anything else for it ! Jo talks of board- ing, but I hate boarding-houses, and where else can I go "Come to us," died Mr. Blair, heartily. "Mrs. B. thinks there's nobody like you, and you and I will have a tine chance to talk things over together. Come to us, old boy, and make our house your home !" Mr. Blake closed with this friendly offer at once, on condition that the ladies of the house were satisfied. '" .No danger of that," said Laura's father; " they will v be in transports. Come up this evening and have a smoke with me, and see if they don't." Launi Blair's eyes danced in her head when her father told them the news ; but the little hypocrite affected to object. u it will make so much trouble, pa," the young lady Baid, in a dissatisfied tone, " trouble for ma and me, J mean. I wish he wasn't coming." Mr. Blair listened to the shocking fib with the great- est indifference. He didn't care whether she liked it or not, and said so, with paternal frankness. So Miss Jo kissed everybody and departed, and YaJ translated his Lares and Penates to Mr. Blair's ; at least, Buch of them as were not disposed of by public auction. Speckport was just settling its nerves after this, when it was thrown into another litUe flutter by the unexpected return of Captain Cavendish. Yes, Captain Cavendish, the defeated conqueror, came back to the scene of his defeat, rather swaggering than otherwise, and carrying things with a high hairl. 1' haps the gallant captain wanted to K knort how little he cared for being jilted ; perhaps ]:; u-,i:iiud to see what kind of life Mr. and Mrs. Wyndliam would lead 844 MR. WYjfDHAM'8 MOTHER. together; perhaps he found himself too well known as a roue and gambler in Montreal ; or perhaps he was not tired bleeding young Alick McGregor and young Speck- port generally, in that quiet house in Prince Street. He was back, anyway, handsome, and nonchalant, and un- principled us ever. Miss Blair received a letter from her friend three weeks after her departure, dated Niagara. Mrs. Wynd- ham was not a good correspondent, it seemed ; her letter was very brief and unsatisfactory, and she only mentioned her husband once, and then merely to say Mr. Wyndham was well. She signed the letter simply, " Olive," not using her real name, and told Laura that Montreal was tiresome and the Canadians stupid. Miss Blair sent her half a quire of note-paper by way of answer, recording every item of information, and every possible scrap of news, and imploring a speedy reply. But Olive never replied, although August wore itself out while Laura waited. On the last day of that month, Mrs. Hill re- ceived a telegram from Portland, Me., from Mr. Wynd- ham, informing her ker master and mistress woulfc arrive next day. It was a glorious September afternoon that on which the wedded pair returned from their short bridal-tour. The steamer swept up to the crowded wharf in a sort of sun- burst of glory, and the air was opaque with amber mist, as if it were raining impalpable gold-dust. Not a sign of fog in the cloudless blue sky ; it might have been Venice instead of Speckport, so luminously brilliant was sky and earth that afternoon. The passengers poured out of the steamer, and came op the bustling floats, where cabmen, porters, hotel-run- ners and the steamer-hands were making a Babel of dis- cord, and the passengers wondered to see the crowd of people looking curiously dosvn upon them from the wharf above. Laura Blair stood straining her eyes for a sight of her friend. Olive Henderson, with her dangerous gift of fascination, had won the girl's love as it had never been won before, and Laura had missed her sadly during these two last months. As she stood impatiently waiting, MR. WTNDHAM'3 MOTHEK. 345 she was thinking of that pleasant March evening when Olive Henderson hud first come to Speckport, and they had watched her walk up these very floats, stately and tall, leaning on Mr. Darcy's arm, and wearing a vail over her face. And while Laura thought of it, and could scarcely believe it was only six mouths ago, she saw the same Olive Olive Wyndham now coming toward her on her husband's arm. She was not vailed this time, although a long drab gossamer vail floated back from the pretty jockey-hat she wore, and Laura saw how pale and 1 and spiritless she looked. The next moment, she had ihrown her arms impetuously around her, and was kissing her rapturously. [y darling Oily ! my darling Oily !" she was crying out. " Oh, how glad I am to see you again !" Her darling Oily did not return the embrace very en- thusiastically, though her face lit up at sight of her friend. Laura shook hands with Mr. Wyndham, who was smiling at her effusions, and then turned again to the friend she loved. " Oh, Oily ! how dull it has been since you went away, and how cruel of you never to write to me ! Why didn't you write 2" " Writing is such a bore," Olive said, drearily. " 1 hate writing. Is that the carriage waiting up there?" " Yes," said Laura ; " and liow did you enjoy your travel ? You look pale and tired." " I am tired to death," Mrs. Wyndham said, impa- tiently, " and I have not enjoyed myself at all. Every place was stupid, and I am glad to ,be home ! Do let us get out of this mob, Mr. Wyndham !" Mr. Wyndham had paused for a moment to give some directions about the baggage, and his wife addressed him so sharply that Laura stared. Laura noticed during the homeward drive how seldom she spoke to her husband, and how cold her tone always was when she adtir him. But Mr. Wyndham did not seem to mind much. He talked to Laura and Mr. Wyndham knew h>\v to talk and told her about their travels, and the places they 15* 346 MR. WYNDHAM'S MOTHER. had been, and the people they had met, and the adven- tures they had encountered. " Olive reigned Lady Paramount wherever we went," he said, smiling (he never called her Mrs. "Wyndham or " my wife," always Olive). " Our tour was a long suc- cession of brilliant trhimpns for her." Olive merely shrugged -her shoulders disdainfully, and looked at the swelling meadows as they drove along Bed- mon road. A beautiful road in summer time, and the Nettleby cottage was quite lost in a sea of green verdure, sprinkled with red stars of the scarlet-runners. Ann Kettleby stood in the door as they drove by in a cloud of dust in that doorway where pretty Cherrie used to stand, pretty, flighty little Cherrie, whom Speckport was fast learning to forget. And Redmon! Could Mrs. Leroy have risen from her grave and looked on Redmon, she might well have stared aghast at the magical changes. A lovely little villa, with miniature peaks and turrets, and a long piazza running around it, and verdant with climbing roses and sweetbrier. A sloping velvety lawn, on which the draw- ing-room and dining-rooms windows opened, led from the house to the avenue ; and fair flower-gardens, where fountains played in marble basins, and bees and butterflies disported in the September sunshine, spread away on all sides. Beyond them lay the swelling meadows, the dark woods ; and, beyond all, the shining sea aglitter in the summer sunshine. The groom came up to lead away the horse, and Mrs. Hill, in a black silk dress and new cap, stood in the doorway to receive them. The dark, sunless face of Olive lit up and became luminous for the first time as she saw all this. "How pretty it is, Laura!" she said. " I am glad I am home." The servants were gathered in the hall to welcome their master and mistress as they entered arm-in-arm. The upholsterer had done his work well, the drawing- room was one long vista of splendor, the dining-rocm al- most too beautiful for eating in, and there was a conserva- tory the like of which Speckport had never seen before. MR. WYNDHAM'S MOTHER. 847 Mrs. Wyndham had a suite of rooms, too sleeping-room, dressing-room, bath-room, and boudoir all opening into one another in a long vision of brightness and beauty, and there was a library which was a library, and not a mockery and a delusion, and was lined with books from floor to ceiling. Speckport had been shown the house, and pronounced it perfection. Olive Wyndham forgot her languor and weariness, and broke out in her old delighted way as she went through it. "How beautiful it all is!" she cried, "and it is all mine my own ! I am going to be happy here I will be happy here!" Her black eyes flashed strangely upon her husband walking by her side, and the hand clenched, as if she defied Fate from henceforth. " I hope so," Paul Wyndham said, gravely. " I hope, with all my heart, you may be happy here." Laura looked from one to the other in silent wonder. Mr. Wyndham turned to her as they finished the tour of the house. " I suppose Rosebush Cottage is hardly equal to this, Miss Laura * Have- you been there lately C " Yes," said Laura. " Val and I he stops with us now, you know went through it last week. The rooms are very pretty, and the garden is one wilderness of roses ; and Midge reminds me of Eve in Eden, only there is no Adam.*' " And Midge does not exactly correspond with our ideas of our fair first mother," laughed Mr. Wyndham. " I must go there to-morrow and see the plac?. Will you come, Olive?'' "Xo, thank you," she said, coldly, "Rosebush Cot- tage has very little interest for me." A^aiii Laura stared. " Why is she so cross ?" she thought. " How can she be cross, when he seems so kind 2 How soon do vou ex : pect your mother, Mr. Wyndham?" she said aloud. "This is Friday I shall leave on Monday morning for New York to fetch her." 848 MR. WYNDHAM'B MOTHER. There was an announcement that dinner was ready, and nothing more w..s said of Mr. Wyndham's mother. He rode over to Rosebush Cottage early next morning, attended only by a big Canadian wolf-hound, of which animals he had brought two splendid specimens with him, and told Midge he was going to leave him as guardian of the premises. Before he left the cottage, he called Midge into the pretty drawing-room, and held a very long and very confidential interview with her, from which she emerged with her ruddy face blanched to the hue of a sheet. Whatever was said in that long conversation, its effect was powerful on Midge; for she remained in a dazed and bewildered state for the rest of the day, capable of doing nothing but sitting with her arms folded on the kitchen-table, staring very hard at vacancy with her little round eyes. Mr. Wyndharn departed for New York on Monday morning, taking the other big dog, Faust, with him. Mrs. Wyndham took his departure with superb indifference it was nothing to her. John, the coachman, was of as much consequence in her eyes as the man she had prom- ised to love, honor, and obey. She did not ask him when he was coming back what was it to her if he never came ? but he volunteered the information. " I will be back next week, Olive," Be said. "Good-bye." And Olive had said good-bye, icily, and swept past him in the hall, and never once cast a look after him, as he drove down the long avenue in the hazy September sunshine. The house-warming at Redmon could not very well come off until Mr. Wyndham's return ; and the prepara- tions for that great event being going on in magnificent style, and Olive eager for it to take place, she was not sorry when, toward the close of the following week, she learned her husband had returned. It was Miss McGregor who drove up to the villa to make a call, and related the news. "The boat got in about two o'clock, my dear Mrs. Wyndham," Jeannette said, " and Mr. Wyndham and his mother came in her. I chajaced to be on the wharf, and VERT MYSTERIOUS. 349 I saw tliem go up together, and enter a cab and drive off. I am surprised they are not here." " They drove to Rosebush Cottage, I presume?" Olive said, rather haughtily. k> Every tiling is in readiness for Mrs. Yv'yudhain there." " Wiiat is she like, Jeaunette'*'' asked Laura, -who waa always at Kedmon, familiarly. "I suppose she was dressed in black f ' u Yes," Miss McGregor said, "she was dressed in black, and wore a thick black vail over her face, and they had driven oil' before any one had time to speak to them. ]S r o doubt, she would be present at the house-warming, and then they could call on her afterward." But Mrs. Wyndham, Senior, did not appear at the house-warmkig ; and society was given to understand* very quietly, by Mr. Wyndham, that his mother would receive no callers. Her health forbade all exertion or ex- citement, it appeared. She seldom, if ever, cro.-^-d her own threshold, from week's end to week's end ; and it was her habit to keep her room, and she did not care to be disturbed by any one. Her health was not so very poor as to require medical attendance; but Mr. Wyndham owned she was somewhat eccentric, and he liked to humor her. Spcckport was quite disappointed, and said, it thought Mr. Wyndham's mother was a very singular person, indeed ! CHAPTER XXX. VERY MYSTERIOUS. HE house-warming at Redmon was such a house-warming as Speckport never saw be- fore; for, as Mr. Blake with his customary good sense remarked, ' 'When Mrs. P. Wyna- ham did that sort of thing, she did do^it." In the luminous darkness of the September evening, the 350 VERT MYSTERIOUS. carriages of the guests drove through the tall iron gates up the back avenue, .ill aglow with red, and blue, and green lamps, twinkling like tropical fireflies among the trees. The whole front of the beautiful villa blazed with illumination, and up in the gilded gallery the musicians were filling the scented air with delicious melody, it was not Kedmon, this ; it was fairy -land ; it was a scene out of the Arabian Rights, and the darkly-beautiful lady in ruby velvet and diamonds, welcoming her friends, was the Princess Badelbradour, lovely enough to turn the heads of a brigade of poor Aladdins. Society went through the house that night, and had the eyes dazzled in their heads by the blinding radiance of light, and the glowing coloring and richness of all. The ladies went into raptures over Airs. Wyndham's rooms, and the literary people cast envious eyes over the book-lined library, with its busts of poets, and pictures of great men, dead and gone. There was a little room opening off this library that seemed out of keeping in its severe plainness with the magnificence of the rest of the house a bare, severe room, with only one window, looking out upon the vel- vety sward of the lawn at the back of the villa ; a room that had no carpet on the floor, and very little furniture, only two or three chairs, a baize-covered writing-table, a leather-covered lounge under the window, a few pictures of dogs and horses, a plaster head of John Milton, a se- lection of books on swinging shelves, a bureau, a dress- ing-table, a lavatory, a shaving-glass, and a sofa-bedstead. Except the servants' apartments, there was nothing at all so plain as this in the whole house ; and when people asked what it was, they were told by Mrs. Hill, who showed the house, that it was Mr. Wyndham's room. Yes, this was Mr. Wyndham's room, the only room in that house he ever entered, save when he went to dinner, or when visitors required his presence in the drawing- room or library. His big dog Faust slept on a rug i the table, his canaries sung to him in their around the window, he wrote in that hard leathern arm- chair beside the green-baize table,- he lay on that lounge Tinder the open window in the golden breeze of the VERT MYSTERIOUS. 851 September weather, and smoked endless cigars ; late into the night his lamp glimmered in that quiet room ; and when it went out after midnight, he was sleeping the sleep of the just on the sofa-bedstead. The servants at Redmon talked, as servants will talk, abou' the palpable estrangement between master and mi^ about their never meeting, except at dinner, when there ahv.t.ys was company ; for Mrs. Wyndham breakfasted in the boudoir, and Mr. Wyndham never ate luncheon. He wns quite hermit-like in his habits, this pale, inscrutable young author one glass of wine sufficed for him he was out of bed and at work before the stable-boys or scullery-maids were stining, and his only extravagance was in the way of cigars. From the day he had married Olive Henderson until this, he had never asked or received one stiver of her money ; he had more than sufficient of his own for his simple wants and his mother's, and had Olive been the hardest virago of a landlady, she could hardly have brought in a bill against him, even for board and lodging, for he more than repaid her for both. He was ahvays courteous, genial, and polite to her too polite for one spark of her affection ; ahvays deferring to her wishes, and never attempting in the smallest iota to inter- fere with her caprices, or thwart her desires, or use his husbandly authority. She was in every way as much her own mistress as she had ever been ; so much so that sometimes she wondered, and found it impossible to realize that she was really married. No, she was not married ; these two had never been united either in heart or desire ; they were bound together bj a compact never mentioned now. What had he gained by this marriage '( Olive some- times wonderingly asked herself. He told her, or as good ns told her, he wanted her for her money; but now that money was at his disposal, and he never made use of it. What had he married her for? 'How proud you must be of your husband, Mrs. Wyndham!" other" women had said to her, when abroad ; and sometimes, in spite of herself, a sharp pang cut to the center of her haughty heart at the words. Why, these very women had as much right to be proud of him, to 852 VERY MYSTERIOUS. speak to him, to be near him, as she had. Proud of him ! She thought she had cause to hate him, she was wicked enough to wish to hate him, but she could not. Neither could she despise him ; she might treat him as coldly us she pleased, but she never could treat him with contempt. There was a dignity about the man, the dignity of a gen- tleman and a scholar, that asserted itself, and made her respect him, as she never had respected any other man. Once or twice a strange thought had come across her ; a thought that if he would come to her and tell her he was growing to love her, and ask her not to be so cruelly cold and repellent, she might lay her hand on his shoulder with the humility of a little child, and trust him, and yield herself to him as her friend and protector through life, and be simply and honestly happy, like other women. But he never did this ; his manner never changed to her in the slightest degree. She had nothing to complain of from him, she had every cause to be grateful for his kindness and clemency. And so she shut herself up in her pride, and silenced fiercely her mutinous heart, and sought happiness in costly dress and jewelry, and womanly employment, and incessant visiting, and party-giving, and receptions, and money-spending and failed miserably. Was she never to be happy? She had everything her heart could desire a beautiful house, servants to -attend her, rich garments to wear, and she fared sumptuously every day ; but for all that, she was wretched. I do not suppose Dives was a happy man. There is only one receipt in this wide world for happiness, believe me, and that is goodness. We may be happy for a brief while, with the brief happiness of a lotus-eater ; but it cannot last it cannot last! and the after-misery is worse than anything we ever suffered before. Olive Henderson had said she would be happy, she had tried to compel herself to be happy ; and thought for a few poor minutes, sometimes, when she found herself the belle of some gay party, dancing and laughing, and reigning like a queen, that she had succeeded. But " Oh, the lees are bitter, bitter !" Next day she would know what a ghastly mockery it had all been, and she would watch Paul Wyudham, mounted VERY MYSTERIOUS. 353 on his pony, with his dog behind him, riding away to his mother's cottage, with a passionately rebellions and bittor heart, and wonder if he or any one else in the wide world would really care if they found her lying on the floor of lier costly boudoir, stark and dead, slain by her own hand. Paul Wyndham appeared to be very fond of his mother, if he was not of his wife. He rode over to Rose- bush Cottage every day, rain or shine, and sometimes staid there two or three days together. Mr. Wyndhani's mother, for all her age and her ill-health, could play the piano, it seemed. People going past R< >-<.- bush Cottage had often heard the piano going, and played, too, with masterly skill. At first, it was thought to be Mr. Wyndhara himself, who was quite a musician, but they soon found out the piano-playing went on when he was known to be at Redmon. Olive heard all this, and, like Speckport, would have given a good deal to see Mr. Wyndhani's mother; but she never saw her. She had asked him, carelessly, if his mother would come to the house-warming, and he had said " Xo, she never went out ;" and so the house-warming had come off without tier. There was one person present on that occasion whom Speckport was surprised to see, and that was Captain Cavendish. Captain Cavendish hud received a card of invitation, and, having arra} T ed himself in his uniform, made his appearance as a guest, in the house he once hoped to call his own. TJiose floating stories, whi- by the servants, and current in the town, of the cold dis- union between husband and wife, had reached Mm, and delighted him more than words can tell. After all, then, she had loved him ! Doubtless she spent her nights in weeping and mourning for his loss, fit to tear her black hair out by the roots, in her anguish at having lost him. He was very late in arriving at Redmon, purposely late ; and he could imagine her straining her eyes toward the drawing-room door, her heart throbbing at every i're.-h announcement, and turning sick with disappointment when she found it was not he. Would she betray any 354 VERY MYSTERIOUS. emotion when sue met him ? "Would her voice falter, her eves droop, her color rise, or her hand turn cold in hi? own? Oh, Captain Cavendish ! you might have spared your- self the trouble of all these conjectures. Not one poor thought had she ever given you ; not once had your imago crossed her mind, until you stood bowing before her ; and thsn, when she spoke to you, every nerve was as steady as when, an instant later, she welcomed old Squire Tod. Her eyes were following furtively another form, nothing like so tall, or stately, or gallant as your own, Captain Caven- dish; another form that went in and out through the crowd the form of her husband, who welcomed every one with a face infinitely kind and genial, who found partners for forlorn damsels, who stopped to talk cour- teously to neglected wall-flowers, and who came to where his wife stood every now and then, and addressed her as any other gentleman in his own house might address his wife, showing no sign of coldness or disunion on his part, at least. Captain Cavendish was disappointed, and all Speck- port with him. Where was the cold neglect on Mr. Wynd- hanvs part, they had come prepared to see and relish \ where the haughty disdain of the neglected and resentful wife? They were calmly polite to one another, and what more was required ? As long as Mr. Wyndham did not beat her, or Mrs. Wyndham showed no sign of intending to elope with any other man, Speckport could see no reason why it should set them down as other than a very well- matched couple. It was noticeable that Mr. Wyndham that night paid rather marked attention to one of the lady guests present; but as the lady wore black bombazine and crape, a widow's cup, and was on the frosty side of tit'ty, no scandal came of it. The lady was poor Mrs. Marsh, who had come, nothing loth, and who simpered a good deal, and was fluttered and flattered to find herself thus honored by the master of Redmon. " Her story is a very sad one, Olive," he said ; " I VERY MYSTERIOUS. 355 am glad you settled that annuity upon her ; it does you credit. 1 ' Olive said nothing ; but a dark red streak flashed across her face a burning glow of shame. She was thinking of Mrs. Major Whcatly's governess what \vonld Paul Wyndham say of that pale little girl if lie knew all ? Mrs. Wyndham had repeatedly invited Miss Hose to Redmon ; and Miss Rose had conic two or three times, but never when there was company. Mr. Wyndham led Mrs. Marsh in to supper, and pat beside her, and tilled her plate with good tilings, and talked to her all through that repast. His wife, sitting between Major Wheatly and the Rev. Augustus Tod, still watched him askanee, and wondered what he could find to say to that insipid and faded nonentity, who sim- pered like a school-girl as she listened to him. JJut shortly after conducting Mrs. Marsh back to the ballroom, and seeing her safely seated at a card-table, he disappeared, and was nowhere to be seen. Every one was so busy dancing, and flirting, and card-playing, that his absence mite unnoticed no, not quite, his wife had observed it. It was strange the habit she had insensibly contracted, of watching this man, for whom she did not care or per- suaded herself she did not of listening for his voice, his step, and feeling better satisfied, somehow, to see him in the room. Where had he gone to? What was he doing? How could he be so rude as to go and leave their guests ? She grew distrait, then fidgety, then feverishly and fool- ishly anxious to know what he could be about, and who lie was with ; and gliding unobserved from the crowded ballroom, she visited the dining-room, the library, prcj><-d into his own room, which she never condescended to en- ter; all in vain. Mr. Wyndham was nowhere to be seen. " It is very strange!"' said Mrs. Wyndham to liei knitting her black brow always her habit when annoved. " It is most extraordinary conduct ! I think ho might show a little more attention to his guests." The library windows opened on the velvet kwn, and were opened now to their widest extent, to admit the cool night air. She stepped out into the pale starlit night, her 356 VERT MYSTERIOUS. rich ruby velvet dress aad starry diamonds glowing dimly in the luminous darkness. As she walked across the lawn, glad to be alone for a moment, a figure all in white flew past her with a rush, but not before she had recognized the frightened face of Laura Blair. "L'aura!" she said, "is it you? "What is the mat- ter?" Laura stopped, and passed her hands over her beating heart. " I have had such a scare ! I came out of the conser- vatory five minutes ago, on to the lawn to get cool, when I saw a figure that had been standing under the trees dart behind one of them, as if to hide. The person seemed to have been watching the house, and was trying to hide from me. It frightened me, and I ran." Olive Wyndham was physicially as brave as a man : she never screamed, or ran, or went into hysterics, from palpable terror. Now, she drew Laura's arm within her own, and turned in the direction that young lady had come. " You little goose," she said, " it was some of the peo- ple here, out to get cool like yourself. We will go and see who they are." " I don't believe it is any of the people here. I think it was a woman in a long cloak, with the hood over her head. Oh, I had rather not go !" " Nonsense ! it was some of the servants, or some curi- ous, inquisitive straggler, come to " She stopped, for Laura had made a warning gesture, and whispered. " Look there !" Olive looked. l)irectly opposite the house, and shrinking behind a clump of cedar trees, on the edge of a thickly-wooded portion of the grounds, she could see a figure indistinctly in the star- light the figure of a female it looked, wearing, as Laura said, a long cloak, with the hood drawn over the head and shrouding the face. They were in deep shadow them- selves, and Laura hid her white dress behind some laurel bushes. Olive's curiosity was excited by the steadfast manner in which the shrouded iknire watched the house through those large, lighted windows, Olive knew the VERY MYSTERIOUS. 357 person could distinctly sec into the drawing-room, if not distinguish the people there. " Laura," she whispered, " I must find out who that is. I can get round without being seen you remain and wait for ins here." Keeping in the shadow, Olive skirted the lawn and round the cedar clump, without being seen or heard by the watcher. She glided behind the stunted trees ; but though she was almost near enough to touch the singular apparition, she could not see its face, it was so shrouded by the cowl-like hood. While she stood waiting for it to turn round, a man crossed the lawn hurriedly, excitedly, and, with a suppressed exclamation, clasped the cloaked figure in his arms. Olive hardly repressed a cry the man was her husband, Paul Wyndham ! ' My darling !" she heard him say, in a voice she never forgot a voice so full of infinite love and tenderness, that it thrilled to her very heart" my darling, why have you done this? I have" been searching for you everywhere since I heard you were here. My love ! my love ! how could you be so rash f ' , " I was so lonely, Paul, without you !" a woman's voice answered a voice that had a strangely-familiar sound, and Olive saw the cloaked figure clinging to him, trustingly. " I was so lonely, and I wanted to see them ail. But I am very cold now, and I want to go home !" "I 'shall take you home at once, my darling: Your carriage is waiting at the gate. Come, I know a p;ith through this wood that will lead us out it will not do to go down the avenue. Oh, my dearest ! never be so rash again ! You might have been seen." They were gone ; disappearing into the black cedar woods, like two dark specters, and Olive Wyndham came out from her place of concealment, and stood an instant or two like one who has been stunned by a blow. Laura Blair rose up at her approach with a startled face, and saw that she was ghastly white. " Oily 1" "Laura said, in a scared voice, " wasn't that Mr Wyndham who went away with with that per- son?" ' 858 VERY MYSTERIOUS. Olive Wyndham turned suddenly upon her, and grasp- ed her arm, with a violence that made Laura cry out with pain. "Laura Blair !'' she cried, with passionate fierceness in her voice, " if ever you say a word of what you have seen to-night, I will kill you !" With which remark, Mrs. Wyndham walked away, stepped through the library window, and into the house. She was in the drawing-room when poor Laura ventured in, sitting at the piano, enchanting her guests with some new and popular music, but with a face that had blanched to a sickly white. She might play, she might talk, she might laugh and dance, but she could not banish that frozen look from her face ; and her friends, looking at her, inquired anxiously if she was ill ; no, she said she was not ill ; but she had been out in the grounds a short time be- fore, and had got chilled that was all. Half an hour later, Mr. Wyndham re-appeared in the drawing-room, with a calm face that hid his secret guilt well. Some of the people were already beginning to de- part, and his absence was unknown to all save two. Once he spoke to his wife, remarking on her paleness, and tell- ing her she had fatigued herself dancing ; and she had laughed strangely and answered, yes, it had been a delight- ful evening all through, and she had never enjoyed L< so much. And then she was animatedly bidding the last of her guests good-night, and the lights were lied, the gar- lands dead, and the banquet-hall deserted. And Paul Wyndham bade her good night, and left her alone in her velvet robes and diamond necklace, and splendid misery, and never dreamed that he was found out. Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham did not meet again until Sun- day. The next day, Friday, the young author had gone over to .Rosebush Cottage with his MSS. and fishing-rod, and there spent the rest of the week. The dissipation at Red'iion, the constant round of dressing, and visiting, and party-giving, knocked him up, he told Val Blake, and un- fitted him ior work ; and, at the cottage, he could recruit, and smoke, and get on with his writing. Speckport saw Mrs. Wyndham driving, and riding, and VERY MYSTERIOUS. 359 promenading through its streets, that day and the next, beautifully dressed and looking beautiful, but Speckport never once dreamed of the devouring jealousy that had eaten its way to lier inmost heart, and must hitherto be added to her other tortures. Yes, Olive Wyndham was jealous, with the fierce jealousy of such natuies as hers and your dark women can be jealous of your fair women, with a vengeance. And as real jealousy without love is simply an impossibility, the slow truth broke upon Olive Wyndham that she had grown to love her husband. How it had come about. Heaven only knows ; she had honestly clone her best to hate him. But that mischk little blind god, flying his arrows at random, had shot one straight to her haughty heart. This, then, was the B of ail her anxiety and watchfulness, though she had never suspected it she might have been a long time in suspect- ing it, but for the discovery made in the grounds that night. She loved him who would never love her. She knew him indifferent to herself ; but while she thought him equally indifferent to every one else, she had not cared much; but now, but now! Who was this woman who had stepped between her and the man to whom she was married { Who was she? who was she? she asked herself the miserable question a hundred times a minute she could think of nothing else but she never could answer it. In all Speckport she could not fix upon any one she kiM'W Paul Wyndham was likely to address such words n- had heard to. How their memory thrilled her tones so full of passionate love it made her grind her teeth to think of them. "If I had her here, whoever she is." ^le thought, '"I could tear the eyes out of her head, and send her !> him streaming blood! Oh, who can sire be? who can she be ;'' It was Catty Clowrie who first changed the course of her ideas, and set her off at a new tangent. Catty was sewing at the villa; and, as Mrs. Wyndham, in her mis- erable restlessness, wandered from room to room, she came at last to a pleasant vine-grown glass porch at the back of 360 VERT MYSTERIOUS. the house, where Miss Clowrie sat stitching away in the afternoon sunshine. An open book lay beside her, as if she had just been reading, and Olive saw it was Mr. Wynd- ham's volume of travels. She took it up with a strange contradictory feeling of tenderness for the insensate thing. " How do you like it ?" she asked, looking at his por- trait in front, the deep, thoughtful eyes gazing back at her from the engraving, with the same inscrutable look she knew so well. " I think it is lovely," said Catty. " I wish I could finish it, but I must get on with my work. Mr. Wynd- ham must be wonderfully clever ; his descriptions set the places before you as if you saw them." Olive sat down, and began talking to this girl, whom she instinctively disliked, about her husband and her hus- band's books. Catty, snapping off her thread, asked at last: " Mr. Wyndham is not at home to-day, is he ? I haven't seen him." "No," said his wife, carelessly, " he has gone over to Rosebush Cottage." Miss Clowrie gave an unpleasant little laugh. " Of course he is at Rosebush Cottage ! Every one knows Mr. Wyndham never goes anywhere else ! If he had a Fair Rosamond shut up there, he could not be fonder of going there. Mr. Wyndham must be very much at- tached to his mother." There was a long blank pause after her cruel speech, during which the mistress of Redmon -never took the book from before her face. She felt that she was deadly pale, and had sense enough left not to wish Catty Clowrie to see it. She rose up presently, throwing the book on the ground as she did so, and walked out of the porch with such fierce rebellious bitterness in her heart, as never at her worst of misery had she felt before. A Fair Rosa- mond ! Yes, the secret was out ! and what a blind fool she must have been not to have seen it before! It was no sickly old mother Paul Wyndham had shut up in Rose- bush Cottage, but a fair inamorata. It was she, too, whom they had seen in the grounds the previous night ; she who, VERT MYSTERIOUS. 361 wearied of her pretty prison without him, and fall of cu- riosity, doubtless, had come to Redmon. " I was so lonely without you, Paul !" she remembered the sweet and strangely-familiar voice that had said those words, and the tender caress which had answered them; and she sank down in her jealous rage and despair in her own room, hating herself and all the world. Oh, my poor Olive ! Surely retribution had overtaken you, surely judgment had fallen upon you even in this life, for your sins of am- bition and pride ! Mrs. Wyndham was not much of a church-goer, but rather the reverse. She had a heathenish way of lolling in her boudoir Sundays, and listening with a dreamy sen- suous pleasure to the clashing of bells, and falling asleep when they ceased, and awakening to read novels until dinner-time. But sometimes she went to the fashionable Episcopal church, and yawned in the face of the Kev. Augustus Tod, expounding the word rather drawlingly in his white surplice, and sometimes she went to the cathedral with Laura Blair. She took the same sensuous, dreamy pleasure in going there that she did in listening to the bells, or in reading O\ven Meredith's poetry. She liked to watch the purple, and violet, and ruby, and amber glows from the stained-glass windows on the heads of the faithful; she liked to listen to the grand solemn music of the old church, to inhale the floating incense, and listen to the chanting of the robed priests. And best of all she liked to see the Sisters of Charity glide noiselessly in through some side- door, with vailed faces and bowed heads, and to weave romances about them all the time high mass was going on. Matter-of-fact Catholics about her wondered why Mrs. Wyndhitm stared so at the Sisters, and it is probable the Sisters themselves would have laughed good-naturedly had they known of the tale of romance with which the dark- eyed heiress invested them. But. it was not to look at the nuns though she did look at them, alm<>- e she were one too. and at rest from the great world -strife it was not to look at them she had come to the catlr.-;!ral to- day, but to listen to a celebrated preacher somewhere from 16 303 VERY MYSTERIOUS. the United States. Laura Lad told her he was a Jesuit those terrible Jesuits! and Olive had almost as much curiosity to see a Jesuit as a nun. So she drove to the cathedral in her carriage, and sat in Mr. Blair's cushioned pew, and watched the people filling the large building, and listened to the grand, solemn strains of the organ touched by the masterly hand ; and all listlessly enough. But suddenly her heart gave a quick plunge, and all list- lessness was gone. There, coming up the aisle, behind the sexton, was a gentleman and a lady ; a gentleman whose step she would have known the wide world over, and a lady she was more desirous of seeing than any other being on earth. It was Mr. Wyndham and his mother, and dozens of heads turned in surprise and curiosity, to look at that hitherto invisible mother. But she was in- visible still, at least her face was, for the long black crape vail she wore was so impenetrably thick, no human < could pierce it. They saw she was tall and very slender, although she wore a great double black woolen shawl that would have made the slightest girlish form look clumsy and stout. She bent forward slightly as she walked, but the stoop was not the stoop of age Olive Wyndham saw that. Mr. Wyndham, hat in hand, his mother hanging on his arm, his pale face gravely reverent, entered the pew the sexton indicated, after his mother. Tt was directly in front of Mr. Blair's, facing the grand altar, and the jealous wife had an excellent chance of watching her husband and his companion. Paul Wyndham was not a Catholic he did not pre- tend to be anything in particular, a favorite creed with his countrymen, I think but he was a gentleman ; so he rose and sat and knelt as the worshipers about him did, and never once turned his back to the altar to stare at the ^ choir. Mrs. Wyndham, Senior, made no attempt to raise hor vail during the whole service. She knelt most of the time with hsr face lying on the front rail of the pev, if in prayer a good deal to the surprise of those wko saw her and imagined her not of their faith. Olive never took her eyes off her the Sisters of VERY ?.:~3TERIOUS. 803 Charity, tlie swinging censers, the mitred bishop, the robed priests, the solemn ceremonies, the swelling music, were all unheard and nnseen that woman in front ab- sorbed every sense she possessed. Even when the Jesuit mounted to the pulpit, she only gave him one glance, and saw that he was tall and thin and sallow, and not a bit oily and Jesuit-like, and returned to her watching of Mr. Wyndham's mother. That lady seemed to pay attention to the sermon, if her daughter-in-law did not, and a very impressive sermon it was, and one Olive Wyndham would have done well to heed. He took for his text that solemn warning of our Lord, " What will it avail a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul ?" and the hearts of his hearers thrilled within them with wholesome fear as they listened to the discourse which followed. " You are here to-day, but you may be gone to-morrow. O my brethren !'' the sonorous voice, which rang from aisle to aisle, like the trump of the last angel, cried ; " the riches you are laboring so hard to amass you may never enjoy. The riches for which you toil by day and by night mean nothing if your poor span of existence permits you to accomplish them. Stop and think, oh, worldlings, while time remains. Work while it is yet day, for the night is at hand, and work for the glory which shall las 1 : for eternitj'. The road over which you are walking leads nowhere, but ends abruptly in the yawning grave. The famvi for which you suffer and struggle and give U]> and rest, will be when over but a hollow sound, heard for on:; poor, pitiful moment, ere your ears are stilled in death, and your laurel crown dust and ashes. The great of this world who made kings their puppets, and the nations of tho earth their toys have lived their brief space and are gone, and what avails them now the glory and the great- ness they won ? The fame of Shakespeare, of Alexander, of Napoleon of France, of a Byron, and a Milton, and all other great men great in this life remains to p<-r,-rity, but what availed it all to them at the judgment-seat of God. There, at that awful tribunal, where we all must stand, nothing but their good works if they ever did good works could softeii the rigor of Divine Justice. 64 VERY MYSTERIOUS. The world is like an express-train, rushing madly on, with a fathomless precipice at the end ; and you laugh and sing on your way to it, consoling yourself with the thought, ' At the last moment I will repent, and all will be \vell.' But the Divine Justice has answered yoa beforehand terribly answered you ' You shall seek me and you shall not find me. and you shall die in your sins !' ' : The sermon was a very long one, and a very terrible one, likely to stir the dead souls of the most hardened sin- ner there. It was noticeable that Mr. Wyndhanrs mother never lifted her head all the time, but that it lay on the pew-rail, and that she was as immovable as a figure carved in ebony. Olive Wyndham had to listen, and her cheek blanched as she did so. Was this sermon preached for her ? Was she bartering her immortal soul for dross, so soon to be taken from her ? And then a wild terror took possession of her, and she dared think no longer. She could have put her fingers to her ears to shut out the inexorable voice, thundering awfully to her conscience : " You shall seek me and you shall not find me, and you shall die in your sins." There was a dead silence of dumb fear in the cathedral when the eloquent preacher descended, and very devout were the hearers until the conclusion of mass. Then they poured out, a good deal more subdued than when they had entered, and Olive had to go with the rest. Mr. Wyndham and his mother showed no sign of stirring, nor did the} 7 leave their pew until the last straggler of the congregation was gone. The carriage from Kosebush Cottage was waiting outside the gates, and Mr. Wyndham assisted his mother in, and they drove oif. Olive dined at Mr. Blair's that day, and heard them discussing the sermon, and the unexpected appearance of Mr. Wyndham and his mother. Olive said very little the panic in her soul had not ceased. The shortness of time, the length of eternity that terrible eternity ! had never been brought so vividly before her before. Was the express-train in which she was flying through life near the end near that awful chasm where all was blackness jiud horror? Human things flittered away earthly VERY MYSTERIOUS. 365 troubles, gigantic before, looked puny and insignificant seen in the light of eternity so soon to begin, never to en 1 ! She had been awakened she never could sleep again the blind, heathenish sleep that had been hers all her life, or woe to her if she could. Mr. Blake and Miss Blair walked home with her in the hazy September moonlight. They found Mr. Wyndhara sitting in one of the basket-chairs in the glass porch, looking up at the moon as seen through the smoke of his cigar, and Olive's inconsistent heart throbbed as if it would break from its prison and fly to him. Oh, if all this miserable acting could end ; if he would only love her, and let her love him, she would yield forever the wealth that had never brought her happiness, and be his true and loving wife from henceforth, and try and atone for the sins of the past. She might be a good woman yet, if her life could only be simple and true like other women, and all this miserable secresy at an end. But, though the silken skirt of her rich robe touched him, they could not have been further apart if the wide world divided them. She could have laid her head down on the table there, and wept passionate, scalding tears, so utterly .forlorn and wretched and lonely and unloved did she feel. She could not talk something rose in her throat and choked her but she listened to Mr. Wyndham telling in his quiet voice how he had persuaded his mother to go out that day to hear the famous preacher, and how he thought it had done her good. Val and Laura did not stay long, but set out on their moonlit homeward way. Aim Nettleby sat in her own doorway, and Yal paused to speak to her. " Xo news of Cherrie, yet, Ann?" Ann made the usual reply, " No," and they walked on, talking of lost Cherrie. "I'lltitid her out yet,'-' Mr. Blake said, determinedly. " I don't despair, even though well, what's the matter <" Laura had uttered an exclamation, and clun< suddenly to his arm. Redmon road was lonely, as you know, and not a creature was to be seeu; but Laura was pointing to whore, under the trees, in the moonlight, a woman V.MS 806 VAL'S DISCOVERT. standing still. A woman or a spirit, which ? For it was robed in white from head to foot, and a shower of pale hair drifted over its shoulders. The face turned toward them as they approached, a face as white as the dress, and Laura Blair uttered a loud shriek as she saw it, reeled and would have fallen, had not Val caught her in his anus. Val had turned white himself, for the pale shadow under the trees had worn the dead face of Nathalie Marsh ! As Laura shrieked it had vanished, in a ghostly manner enough, among the trees, and Val Blake was left standing giping in the middle of Redmon road, holding a fainting dy in his arms. CHAPTER VAL'S DISCOVERY. R. BLAKE was in a predicament. Some men there are who would by no means turn aghast at being obliged to hold a fair, fainting dam- sel in their arms, but Mr. Blake was none of these. Should he lay her down on the road while he went for help, or should he carry her to the Nettleby Cottage? Yes, that was the idea ; and Mr. Blake lifted the fair fainted in his stalwart arms, and bore her off like a man. The cottage was very near, and Mr. Blake was big and strong ; but for all that he was in a very red and panting state when he gave a thundering knock nt the cottage-door. One hundred and twenty pounds of female loveliness is no joke to carry, even for a short dis- tance ; and he leaned Miss Blair up against the door-post in such a way that she nearly toppled over on Miss Ann jSTcttleby's head, when that young lady opened the door. Ann screamed at the sight, but Mr. Blake pushed past her with very little ceremony. VAL'S DISCOVERY. 867 " She's only fainted, Ann ! Don't make a howling. Get some water, or hartshorn, or something, and bring her to." Miss A nn Nettleby was a young lady of considerable piesence tf mind, and immediately began to apply re- storativcs. Whether it was that nature was coming round of her own accord, or from the intrinsic merit of burnt feather held under her nose, and cold water doused in her face, Miss Blair, with a long, shivering sigh, consented at last to come to, and looked around her with a blank, bewildered stare. " Well, Laura," said Yal, stooping over her, " how do you find yourself, now ?" At the sound of his voice, recollection seemed to flash vividly across Laura's mind. She was lying on the couch in the front room ; but she started up with a scream, her eyes dilating, and, to Mr. Brake's dismay, flung herself into his arms. " Oh, Val !" she cried, Clinging wildly to him, " the ghost ! the ghost ! I saw the ghost of Nathalie Marsh." Ann Nettleby's eyes grew as round as saucers. k ' The ghost of Nathalie Marsh !" she repeated. "Lor! Miss Laura, you haven't seen her ghost, have you !" " Come, Laura, don't be frightened," said Val, sooth- ingly, though sorely perplexed himself. "There is no ghost here, at all events. Perhaps you had better go back to iiedmon, and stay with Mrs. Wyndham all night." But Laura, gasping and hysterical, protested she would not venture out that night again for all the world, and ended the declaration by falling back on the lounge in a violent lit of hysterics. Val seized his hat and made for the door. " You look after her, Ann," he said, " and I'll run up to Kodrnon for Mi's. Wyndham. She'll die before morn- ing if she keeps on like this." Mr. Blake's long limbs never measured oil the ground BO rapidly before, as tii'.-y did now the distance between the cottage and the villa, in the whole course of his 868 VAV8 DISCOVERY. life, Yal Blake had never received such a staggerer as lie had this night. He did not believe in ghosts ; he was as devoid of imagination as a pig ; he had not eaten a heavy Supper, nor drank one single glass of wine, yet he had seen the ghost of Nathalie Marsh ! They had not been talking of the dead girl ; they had not been thinking of her ; yet she had stood before them, wearing the face, and looking at them out of the blue eyes they knew so well. It was all very fine to talk of the freaks of the sense of vision, of optical illusions, and all that sort of thing. It was no illusion, optical or otherwise. Nath- alie Marsh was dead and buried, and they had seen her ghost on Redmon Road. The servant who answered Mr. Blake's ring looked rather surprised, but showed him into the library, and went in search of his mistress. Olive came in, wearing the dress in which they had left her, and Yal told his story with blunt straightforwardness. Olive's black eyes opened to their widest extent^ " Seen a ghost ! My dear Mr. Blake, do I understand you aright ?" Mr. Blake gave one of his nods. " Yes. It was a ghost, and it frightened Laura into a fit ; and she's in one still, down there at Nettleby's. It was a ghost, I'll take my oath of it ; for it had Nathalie Marsh's face, and Nathalie Marsh is dead and buried." There was a slight noise at the door. Olive Wynd- nam's quick ear recognized it, and she turned round. Mr. Blake followed her eyes, and saw Paul Wyndham standing in the doorway. But what ailed him ? His face was always pale; but it looked ghastly at this mo- ment, turning from its natural hue to an awful ashen white. " Hallo, Wyndham !" cried Yal, " what's gone wrong with you ? You look as if you had seen a ghost your- self." "There is nothing the matter with me," said Mr. Wyndham, coming quietly forward. "What is that about ghosts, and where have you left Miss Blair f " At Nettleby's, fit to die of fright. We saw a VAL' 8 DISCOVERY. 369 woman who has been dead for more than a year, on the road ; and Laura screamed out, and dropped down like a stone !" " My dear Blake !" " 1 wanted her to come up here," pursued Yal, "and stay all night, but she went off into strong hysterics in the middle of what I was saying; so I left her with Ann JSettleby, and came up here for Mrs. Wyndham." " 1 will go to her at once," Olive said, ringing the bell ; " but, Mr. Blake, I don't understand this at all. Seen a ghost! It is incomprehensible !" " Just so !" said Mr. Blake, with constitutional com- posure, " but it's true, for all that. Nathalie Marsh is dead, and buried over there in the cemetery ; but, for all that, I saw her as plainly this night on Redmon road as ever I saw her in my life !" There was something in Mr. Blake's manner that carried conviction with it, and Mr. Blake was not the man to tell a cock-and-bull story, or let himself be easily de- ceived. Had Laura Blair, a fanciful and romantic girl, alone told the story, every one would have laughed in- credulously, but Val Blake was another story. Matter-of- fact Val had no fancies, natural or supernatural, and told his story witli a resolute air of conviction now that per- plexed 'his hearers. Mr. Wyndham affected to laugh ; but, somehow, the laugh was mirthless, and his face and lips remained strangely colorless. "It was some one playing a practical joke, depend upon it," he said ; " perhaps that imp of mischief, Sam's brother. As to ghosts why, Blake, where have your wits gone to 2" " All right," said Yal ; " I don't ask you to believe it, you knew ; but if it wasn't Nathalie Marsh's spirit, then it was .Nathalie Marsh in the flesh, and we have all been deceived, and the woman buried in Speckport cemetery is not the woman I took her to be." Paul \Vyndham turned round suddenly, and walked to the window and looked out. He turned round so sud- denly that neither his wife nor his friend saw the awful change that came over his face when these words were 10* 870 VAL'S DISCOVEHT. said. A servant brought Mrs. Wyndham her hat and shawl, aud he did not turn round again until they were leaving the room. Olive's heart stood still at sight of the white change in his face. " You are ill, Mr. Wyndham," she said, looking at him sharply and wistfully. " You're as pale as a ghost," said Mr. Blake ; " don't come with us what's the matter ?" Mr. Wyndham gave them his former answer, " Noth- ing," and watched them walking down the moonlit avenue together, until they were out of sight. Then he left the room, put on his hat and overcoat, locked his own door, and dropped the key in his pocket, and followed them. Half an hour later, while Olive and Val were persuading Laura to come with them to Redmon, he was knocking at the door of Rosebush Cottage, and being ad- mitted by Midge, whose ruddy face wore a look of blanched consternation at sight of him. Mr. Yal Blake walked home in the moonlight alone. As he passed the spot where, under the tree, the ghostly- white figure with the hazy hair and deathlike face had stood, he felt a cold thrill in spite of himself ; but the spot was vacant now not a soul, in the flesh or out of it, was to be seen on Redmon road. Mr. Blake, as I said, walked home in the moonlight alone, and astounded the whole Blair family by the unearthly tidings. For good Mrs. Blake's sake he omitted that part concerning Laura's fainting-fits merely saying she was frightened, and he had thought it best to leave her at Redinon. Mrs. Blair turned pale, Master Bill grinned, and Mr. Blair pooh- poohed the story incredulously. " A ghost ! What nonsense, Blake ! I always thought you a sensible man before ; but if you draw the long bow like that, I shall have to change my opinion." " Yery well," said Val, in nowise disturbed at having his veracity doubted, " seeing's believing ! You may think what you please, and so shall I !" Before it took its breakfast next morning, Speckport bad heard the story the astounding story that the ghost of Nathalie Marsh had appeared to Mr. Blake and Miss VAL J S DISCOVERY. 871 Blair on Redmon road, and had frightened the young lady nearly to death. Speckport relished the story amaz- ingly it was nothing more than they had expected. How could that poor suicide be supposed to rest easy in her grave ! Mrs. Marsh, over her eternal novels, heard . it, and cried a little, and wondered how Mr. Blake could say such cruel things on purpose to worry her. Captain Cavendish heard it, an/1 laughed incredulously in Mr. Blake's face. " Why, Val," he cried, " are you going loony, or get- ting German, or taken to eating cold pork before going to bed? Cold pork might account for it, but nothing else could ever excuse you for telling such a raw-head-and- bloocly-bones story as that, and expecting sensible people to believe it. As to Laura, any gatepost or white birch tree in the moonlight would pass for a ghost with her." Mr. Blake was entirely too much of a philosopher to waste his time in controversy with these unbelievers. Ho knew well enough it was no gatepost or white birch he had seen, but the subject was full of myctery and per- plexity, and he was glad to let it drop. It could not be Nathalie Marsh ; he nad seen her dead and buried ; and ghosts were opposed to reason and common sense, and all the beliefs of his life. It was better to let the subject drop then ; so he only whistled when people laughed at him, or cross-questioned him, and told them if they didn't believe him the less they said about it the better. But the strung;.; story was not so soon to die out. Mr. Blake, about a fortnight after, was suddenly and i! pec ted ly confirmed. Tho ghost of Nathalie Marsh had been seen again this time in Speckport Cemetery, kneel- ing beside her own grave ; and the person who saw it had fled away, shrieking and falling in a fit at thcse.x door. It was the sexton's nephew, a lad of fifteen or thereabouts, who, going at nightfall to close the cemetery- gates, hud seen some one kneeling on one of the graves. This being nothing unusual, the boy had gone over, to desire the" person to leave, when, to" his horror, it slowly turned round its face the face of one buried there a 872 VAL^S DISCOVERY. twelvemonth before. With an unearthly yell, the lx>y turned tail and fled, and had been raving delirious ever since. The alarmed sexton had gone ont to prove the truth of the incoherent story, but had found the ceme- tery deserted, and no earthly or unearthly visitant near the grave of the doomed girl. Here was a staggerer for Speckport ! People began to look blankly at each other, and took a sudden aver- sion to being out after nightfall. The " Snorter " and the " Bellower " and the " Puffer " reluctantly recorded this new marvel, confirming, as it did, the truth of Mr. Blake's story ; but opined some evil person was playing off a practical joke, and hinted to the police to be on the look-out, and pin the ghost the first opportunity. It was the talk of the whole town the boy was dangerously ill, and young ladies grew nervous and hysterical, and would not stay a moment in the dark, for untold gold. Laura Blair was worst of all ; she was hysterical to the last de- gree, and shrieked if a door shut loudly, and fell into hysterics if they left her alone an instant night or day. Olive Wyndham's dark face paled with terror as she listened. Was the dead and defrauded heiress rising from her grave because her earthly wrongs would not let her rest there ? Would she appear to her next ? Was it superstitious fear that had taken all the color and he never at best had much to spare out of Paul Wyndham's face, and left him the ghost of his former self. The servants at Redmon could have told you how little he ate, and perhaps that accounted for his growing as thin as a shadow. A dark look of settled gloom over- shadowed his pale face always now. He spent more of his time than ever at his mother's cottage, and when asked what was the matter was he ill ? he answered no, but his mother was. Why, then, did he not have medical advice, sympathizers asked; and Mr. Wyndham replied that his mother declined she was very peculiar, and positively refised. What did he suppose was the matter with her ? and Mr. Wyndham had told them it was her nervous system she was hypochondriacal in fact ; and he made the admission very reluctantly, and with a pain- VAL'S DISCOVERY. 373 ful quivering about the mouth she was not quite her- self her mind had lost its balance. And the sympa- thizers going their way, informed other sympathizers that- all old Mrs. Wyndhain's oddities were accounted for the woman was mad ! Speckport pitied poor Mr. Wyndham, saddled with an insane mother, very much, whon they saw his pale, worn face, and that gloomy look that never left it. Olive pitied him, too; and would have given the world, had it been hers to give, to comfort him in his great trouble ; but she was nothing to him, and her heart turned to gall and bitterness, as she thought of it. No, she was nothing to him, she scarcely ever saw him at all now, and he seemed unconscious of her presence when they were to- gether. But it was a relief to know the secret of Rose- bush Cottage however dreadful that secret was, it were better than the iirst diabolical thought suggested by Catty Clowrie. Once Olive Wyndham, in the humility born of this new love, had descended from the heights of high and mightyclom on which she dwelt, and ate humble pie at her cold lord's feet. She might have left the unsavory dish alone her humility was no more to him than her p-de, and she had been repulsed. Not rudely, or un- kind U\ Mr. Wyndham was a gentleman, every inch of him, and would not be harsh to a woman ; but still she was repulsed, and her proud heart quivered to its inmost core with the degradation. She had found him, one evening on entering the .library, sitting alone there, his forehead bowed on his hand, a look that was so like despair on his face ; but she forgot everything but that she loved him, and that he was suffering a sorrow too great for words to tell. II ad she not a right to love him, to comfort him was she not his wife ? She would not listen to her woman's nature, which revolted, and ordered her sternly back. She only knew that she loved him ; and she went over and touched him lightly on the shoulder. It was the first time they had ever so met therefore the look of surprise which came into his eyes when he looked up, was natural enough, lie U74 VAL'S DISCOVERT. rose up, looking with that quiet air of surprise on the downcast eyes and flushed face, and waited silently. u Mr. Wyndham," she said, her voice trembling so, her words were scarcely intelligible. "I I am sorry to see you in such trouble ? Can can I do anything to alleviate it ?" " Thank yon !" he said, " No !" "If," still tremulously, " if I could do anything for your mother visit her " She broke down entirely. In Mr. Wyndham's face there was nothing but cold surprise. " You are very good," he said, " but you can do nothing/' He bowed and left the room. And Olive, humbled, repulsed, morlrtied to death, hating, for the moment, her- self and him and all the world, flung herself upon a sofa, and wept such a scalding rush of tears, as only those proud, sensitive hearts can ever shed. They might have been teal's of blood, so torn and wounded was the poor heart from whence they sprang; and whe.i they dried, and she rose up, they had left her like a stone. Bet wee n 'Nathalie Marsh's ghost and Mr. "Wyndham's inad mother, Speckport was kept so busy talking, it had scarcely time to canvas the movement, when Captain George Cavendish announced his intention of selling out and going home. Mr. Blake was the only one, with the exception of some milk-and-water young ladies who were in love with the dashing Englisher, whom the announce- ment bothered ; and it was not for the captain's sake, but for poor lost Cherrie's. Where was Cherrie ? Val had vowed a vow to tind her out, but this turn of affaire knocked all his plans in the head. ' ; If he does go," said Yal to himself, " I'll send him off with a flea in his ear! I must find Cherrie, or Charle} T Marsh will be an exile forever !" ' Bat how ?" Mr. Blake was at his wit's end think- ing the matter over, and trying to hit on some plan. He was still thinking about it, when he sallied oft' to the post- ofiice for his papers and letters, and encountered Mr. Johnston, the captain's man, coming out with a handful YAL'S DISCOVERT. 37o of letters. He was sorting them as lie walked, and never noticed that he dropped one as he passed Mr. Blake. Val picked it up to return it, glancing carelessly at the superscription as he did so. II is glance Avas magical a red flush crimsoned his sallow face, and he turned it over to look at the postmark. Then he saw Mr. Johnston had 1 it, and was turning round he dropped it again, and walked on, and the captain's valet pounced upon it and walked off. Blake strode straight to his boarding-house, informed Mr. Bhdr sudden business required him to go up the country for a week or so, scrawled off a note to his fore- man, flung a few things into a valise, and started for the cars. He was just in time to take a through ticket to S , before the evening train started, and was whirled off in the amber haze of a brilliant September sunset. It was past midnight Avhen the train reached the terminus, but Mr. Blake was not going to stop at S . The steamer which started at eight next morning for Charlottetown, Prince Edward's Island, lay at the wharf, and Mr. Blake went on board immediately, and turned in. AV T hen the boat skirted next morning, he \vas strolling about the deck, smoking a pipe and watching the pas- sengers come on board. There were not many, and he knew none of them, which AVUS just Avhat he wanted. It was a long, delightful day on the Gulf ; and in the yellow glory of another sunset, Mr. Blake landed in Charlotte- toAvn, and, valise in hand, sauntered up to one of the principal hotels. Mr. Biake took his tea, and then set off for a ramble through the town. A quiet tOAvn. with grass-grown red- clay streets, and only a I'CAV stragglers abroad. A beauti- ful tOAvn, with a feAv quiet shops, and a droAVsiness per- vading the air, and a general stillness and torpor pervad- ing everywhere. Val retired early ; but he arose > also, and Avas out Avith his hands in his pocket and a - in his mouth, wandering about again, staring at the Gov- ernment House and the Colonial Buildings, and the fiy- speckecl books in the stationers' shops, and the deserted drygoods'-stores, and going into the cathedral where morn- 376 VAL'S DISCOVERT. ing-service was going on, and contemplating the pretty nuns of Notre Dame reading their missals with devoutly downcast eyes, in their pew. He was out again the mo- ment he had swallowed his breakfast and made a few in- quiries of the clerk, traversing the town-streets once more. These inquiries of his were concerning a lady, a young lady, he told the polite clerk, a friend of his whom he was most anxious to find out, but whose precise residence he was ignorant of. He was pretty certain she was in Char- lottetown, but he could not exactly tell where. Perhaps the clerk had seen her a black-eyed young lady with black curls and red cheeks, and not tall ? No ! the clerk did not remember ; he had seen a good many black-eyed young ladies in his time, but he did not know that he had seen this particular one. Mr. Blake pursued these inquiries in other places, -chiefly in drygoods' or milliners' stores, and in one of these latter, the lady in attendance informed him that she knew such a person, a young lady, a Miss Smith, she believed, who used to shop there, and generally walked by every afternoon. Mr. Blake never went home to dinner that day. It was a hot, sunshiny day, and he lounged about the milli- ner's shop, attracting a good deal of curiosity, and suspicion that he might have designs on the bonnets. But Val did not care for their suspicious ; he was looking out for some one he felt sure would be along presently, if she were liv- ing and well. The watch was a very long one, but he kept it patiently, and about three in the afternoon he met with his reward. There, swinging along the street, with the old jaunty step he remembered so well, was a black- eyed, black-ringleted young lady, turban on head, parasol in hand. Mr. Blake bounced up, walked forward, and accosted her with the simple remark sublime in its sim- plicity "How are you, Cherrie?" CEERRIE TELLS THE TRUTH. 877 CHAPTER XXXII. OHEERIE TELLS THE TRUTH. T was a fortunate thing, perhaps, that that quiet, grass-grown Charlotte Street was almost de- serted ; else the scream and recoil witli which Cherrie our old and long-lost- sight-of friend, Gherrie received this salutation, might have attracted unpleasant attention. Mr. Blake took the matter with constitutional phlegm. "Oh, come now, Cherrie, no hysterics! How have you been all these everlasting ages?" "Mis-tcr Blake?" Cherrie gasped, her eyes starting in her head with the surprise. " Oh, my goodness ! What a turn you gave me !" t; Did I T said Yak " Then I'll give you another ; for I want you to turn back with me, and take me to wherever you live, Mrs. Smith. That's the name you go by here, isn't it f" "Who told you so?" "A little bird ! I say, Cherrie, you've lost your red cheeks ! Doesn't Prirfce Edward's Island agree with you ?'' Cherrie had lost her bright bloom of color ; but save that she was much thinner and paler, and far less gaudily dressed, she was the same Cherrie of old. "Agree with me!" exclaimed Cherrie, in rather a loudly-resentful tone, considering that they were on the street. "I hate the place, and I am nearly moped to death in it. I never was so miserable in all my life as 1 have been since I came here !" "Then why didn't you leave it?" inquired Mr. Blake. "Leave it!" reiterated Cherrie, like an angry echo. " It's very easy to say leave it ; but when you have no money or nothing, it's not quite so easy doing it. I've been used shamefully ; and if ever I get back to Speck- 378 CHERRIE TELLS THE TRUTH. port, I'll let some of the folks there know it, too I Did ne send you ?" 'Who?" " You know well enough ! Captain Cavendish !" "He send me!" said Val. "I should think not. There isn't a soul in Speckport knows whether you arc ali^e or dead ; and he takes care they shan't, either. I have been trying to find you out ever since you left ; and I have asked Captain Cavendish scores of times, but he jil \vays vowed he knew nothing about you that you had run off after Charley Marsh. It was only by chance I saw a letter from you to him the other day, posted here, and I carted off in a trice. Why didn't you write to your folks, Cherrie ?" " I daren't. He wouldn't let me. He told me, if I didn't stay here and keep quiet, he never would have any- thing more to say to me. I have been shamefully used!" and here Cherrie began to cry on the street " and I \vi&h I was dead. There !" " Perhaps you will before long," said Val, significantly. Cherrie looked at him. "What?" " Perhaps you won't be let live long ! You'll have to stand your trial when you go back, for helping in ths mur- d'ji' of Mrs. Leroy ; and maybe they'll hang you! ISTow, don't go screaming out and making such an infernal row on the street will you ?" Cherrie did not scream. She suppressed a rising cry, and turned ashen white. " I had nothing to do with the murder of Mrs. Leroy," she said, with lips that trembled. " You know I hadn't. You know I left Speckport the afternoon it happened. IL ou have no business saying such things to me, Val Blake," She laid her hand on her heart while she spoke, as if to still its clamor. Val saw by her white and parted lips how that poor, fluttering, frightened heart was throbbing. " Oh, yes ; I know you left Speckport that afternoon, Cherrie ; but you and Cavendish had it all made up before- hand. You were to write Charley that note, and appoint CHERRIE TELLS THE TRUTH. 379 a meeting in Kedmou grounds, promising to run away with him, and making him wait for you there, while Ca- vendish got in through the window, and robbed the old woman. Yon never intended meeting Charley, you know ; and you are just as much accessory to the murder as if you had stood by and held the lamp while he was chok- ing Lady Leroy." They had left the dull streets of the town, and were out in a lovely country road. Swelling meadows of golden grain and scented hay spread away on either hand, until they melted into the azure arch ; and the long, dusty road wound its way under pleasant, shadowy trees, without a living creature to be seen. Cherrie, listening to these terrible words, spoken in the same tone Mr. Blake would have used had he been informing her the day was uncom- monly line, sank down on a green hillock by the roadside, and, covering her face with her hands, broke out in a p;i> ion of tempestuous tears. He had taken her so by surprise he had given her no time to prepare the sight of him had brought back the recollection of the old pleas- ant days, and the wretched dullness of the present. She was weak, and sick, and neglected, and miserable ; and now this last turn was corning to crush her. Poor Cherrie sat there and cried the bitterest tears she had ever shed in her life; her whole frame shaking with her convulsive sobs. Her distress touched Val ; for pretty Cherrie had always been a favorite of his, despite her glaring faults and folly ; and a twinge of remorse smote his conscience at what he had done. '* Oh, now, Cherrie, don't cry ! People will be coming along, and what will they think? Come, get up, like a good girl, and we'll talk it over when we get to your house. Perhaps it may not be so bad after all." Cherrie looked up at him with piteous reproach through her tears. " Was it for this you wanted to find rue out so bad, Mr. Blake? Was it to make me a prisoner you came over here?" "Well," said Val, with another twinge of conscience, ''ye-e-es, it was partly. But you must recollect, Cherrie, 3SO CRERE1E TELLS THE TRUTH. you have done worse. You let Charley Marsh poor Charley ! who loved you a thousand times better than that scamp of an Englishman be sentenced for a deed he never committed, when you could have told the truth and freed him. Worse still, you helped to inveigle him into as horrible a plot as ever was concocted." ' I couldn't help it !" sobbed Cherrie. " I didn't want to do it, but he made me ! I wish I had ran away with Charley that night. He never would have left me like this'/' " No ; that he wouldn't ! Charley was as true as steel, poor fellow ! and loved you as no one ever will love you again, in this world ! He is a soldier now, fighting down South ; and perhaps he's shot before this ; and if he is, his death lies at your door, Cherrie." Cherrie's tears flowed faster than ever. " As for Cavendish," went on "Val, " he's the greatest villain unhung! Not to speak of his other atrocities his gambling, his robbing, his murdering, his breaking the heart of Nathalie Marsh he has been the biggest rascal that ever lived, to you, rny poor Cherrie." " Yes. he has !" wept Cherrie, all her wrongs bleeding afresh. " He's a villain, and I hate him. Oh dear me, I wish I was dead !" " You don't know half the wrong he has done yon and means to do," said Val. " Come, Cherrie, get up, and I'll tell you about it as we go along. Do you live far from this j" "No; it's the first house you meet; the dullest old place on the face of the earth ! He wouldn't let me leave it ; and I know they despise me, and think I'm no better than I ought to be. There never was a girl in this world so ill-used as I have been ! Why did he marry me, if he i- a-hamed of me? Why can't he stay with me as he ought to stay with his wife ?" " His wife !" repeated Val, staring at her as they walked along. "Why, Cherrie, is that all you know about it? Hasn't he told you that you are not his wife ?" " Not his wife !" skrieked Cherrie. " Val Blake, what do you mean ?" CHEREIE TELLS THE TRUTH. 381 "Bless my soul !" cried Mr. Blake, appealing in dismay to the scarecrows in the fields, " I thonglit he had told her. Why, you unfortunate Cherrie, don't you know the mar- riage was a sham one ;'' Cherric gasped for breath. The surprise struck her speechless. " I thought you knew all about it !" said Val ; " I'll take my oath I did ! Why, you poor little simpleton, how could you ever be idiot enough to think a fellow like Cavendish would marry the like of } 7 ou! If you had two grains of sense in your head," said Mr. Blake, politely, "you must have seen through it. lie planned the whole thing himself a sham from beginning to end !" "It isn't! it can't be! I don't believe it! I won't believe it !" panted Cherrie, recovering her breath. " You helped him. and the minister was there ; and I am his wife, his lawful wedded wife. You are only trying to frighten me to death." " No, I'm riot," said Val ; " and you're no more his wife than I am. The minister wasn't a minister, but a fellow who played the part. If you hadn't been the great- est goose that ever lived, Cherrie, you couldn't have been so taken in!'' Cherrie's breath went and came, and her tears seemed turned to sparks of tire, as she turned her eyes upon her Companion. "And you helped him to do this, Mr. Blake f " Well," Cherrie, what could I do? If I hadn't helped him. some one else would ; and, anyhow, you would have run away with him, marriage or no marriage. Now, don't deny it you know you would !" " And you mean to say I'm not married to Captair Cavendish t" "Yes, I do. 1 only wonder lie hasn't let you iind it out long ago. Ho came to me and persuaded me to help him, telling me you were ready to run off with him any time he askt-1 y ;i, which I knew myself. I'm sorry for it now, but it can't be helped." " Very well, Mr. Blake," said Cherrie, whose cheeks were red, and whose eyes were Hashing, "you may both 382 CHERRTE TELLS THE TRUTH. be proud of your work. Yon are fine gentlemen, both of yon. to distress a poor girl like me, as you have done. But I'll go back to Speckport, and I'll tell every soul in it how I have been taken in ; and I hope they'll tar and feather the two of you for what you have done." a Well," said Mr. Blake", in a subdued tone, " we de- serve it, I dare say, but Cavendish is the worst after all. Why, Cherrie, my girl, you don't know half the wrong he has done you. He would have been married three mouths ago, if the lady had not changed her mind and married another man/' " Would he ?" said Cherrie, vindictively, between her closed teeth. " Oh, if ever I get a chance, won't I pay him off ! Who was the lady ?" " The new heiress of Redmon Miss Henderson she was then, Mrs. Wyndham she is now. He was crazy about her, as all Speckport can tell you ; and he asked her to marry him ; and she consented first, and backed out after- ward. You never saw any one in the state he was in, Cherrie ; and he started off to Canada, because he couldn't bear to stay in the place and see her married to another man.'' " But he's back, now," said Cherrie. " I had a letter from him two weeks ago, with a couple of pounds in it. He's the meanest, stingiest miser on the face of the earth, and I have to write and write, before I get enough from him to pay my board. I haven't had a decent dress these six months ; and I can't leave the place, because I never have enough to pay my way back. I'm the worst-treated and most unfortunate creature in the whole world !" And here poor Cherrie's tears broke out afresh. " And that's not the worst, either," pursued Mr. Blake. ' Do you know what has brought him back to Speckport, ;; you say ? Of course, you don't you are the last he \vould tell; but it is because he is selling out of the army, a:j:l going back to England for good, fle wants to be rid of you entirely : and once he is there, and married to some one else with a fortune, many a tine laugh he will have at you." " Never !" cried Cherrie, wrought up to the right pitch CHERRTE TELLS THE TRUTH. 383 of indignation ; "never shall lie leave Speckport, if 1 can help it ! I'll tell nil, if I vais to hang for it myself, sooner than let him get off like that, the villain !" " But you won't hang for it, Cherrie, if yon tell ; it's only if you refuse to tell, that you are in danger. Who- ever turns Queen's evidence gets off scot free, you know; and if you only do what is right, and take my advice, which means the same thing, you may triumph over Cap- tain Georgh Percy Cavendish yet." " I'll do it ! : said Cherrie, her lips compressed and her eyes flashing, and the memory of all her wrongs surging back upon her at once. " I'll do it, and be revenged on the greatest scoundrel that ever called himself a gentle- man ! But, mind, Val Blake, I must be sure that this is all true I must be sure that I am not his wife." " It will bo very easy convincing you of that, once you are back in Speckport. Yon shall hear it from his own lips, without his knowing you are listening. Oh, is this the place 2" For Cherrie had stopped before a little farmhouse, garnished with a potato garden in front, and adorned with numerous pigsties on either hand. She led the way to the front room of the establishment ; which was carpetless, and curtninless, and unfurnished, and impoverished-look- ing enough. " Well," Val said, " this is rather different, Cherrie, from the days when you used to dress in silks and sport gold chains, and do nothing but flirt, and be petted and made love to from week's-end to week's-end. But never mind the worst's over, now that I've found you out, and you'll have good times yet in Speckport." "If it hadn't been for you," sobbed Cherrie, "it never would have happened. I hate you, Mr. Blake 1 There !" " Now, Cherrie, you know right well you would have run away with Captain Cavendish that time, married or not married. Oh ! you may deny it, and perhaps you think so now ; but I know better. But he's the greatest rascal that ever went unhung, to use you as he has; and SS4 CHEBRIC TELLS THE TRUTH. if you had the spirit of a turnip, you would be re- venged/' " I will !" cried Cherrie, clenching her little fist reso- lutely ; " I will ! I'll let him see I'm not the dirt under his feet! I've stood it long enough! I'll stand it no longer !" Mr. Blake's eyes sparkled at the spirited declaration. " That's my brave Cherrie ! I always knew you were spunky ! You shall hear from his own lips the avowal of his false marriage, and then you will go before a magis- trate and swear to all you know about that night of the robbery and murder. There is a steamer to leave Char- lottetown to-morrow, at nine. Will you be ready if I drive up here for you ?" " Yes," said Cherrie ; " I haven't so much to pack, goodness knows ! and I'm sick and tired of this place. How's all our folks '? It's time to ask." " They are all well, and will be very glad to get pretty Cherrie back again. Speckport's been a dull place since you left it. Cheer up, Cherrie ! There's bright days in store for you yet." Cherrie did not reply, and she did not look very hope- ful. She was crying quietly ; and "Val's heart was touched as he looked at the pale, tear-stained face, and thought how bright and pretty and rosy and smiling it used to be. He bent over her, and well, I shouldn't like Miss Blair to know it but Mr. Blake deliberately kissed her ! "Keep up a good heart, little Cherrie; it will be all right yet, and we'll fix the flint of Captain Gr. P. Caven- dish. I'll drive up here for you at eight to-morrow. Be all ready. Good-bye." Cherrie was all ready and waiting at the gate, next morning, when Mr. Blake drove up through the slanting morning sunlight, dressed in her best. She was in con- siderably better spirits than on the previous day, and much more like the Cherrie of other days, glad to get home and eager for the journey. The lady passengers, during tho day, asked her if " the tall gentleman " was her husband. That gentleman had a great deal to tell her ; of poor Na- thalie's death, and Charley's flight; of the new heiress, TELLS THE TRUTH.\ 385 who had turned so many heads, and had given the worst turn of all to Captain Cavendish ; of that gentleman's de- spair when shn married Mr. Wyndham ; of the changes and gay doings at Redmon ; and lastly, of Nathalie's ghost. This last rather scared Cherrie. What if Nathalie should appear to her to her, who had wronged her so deeply tii rough her brother. u Oh, no !" said Mr. Blake, to whom she imparted her fears ; " I don't think she will, if you tell the truth ; or, at al] events, she will be a most unreasonable ghost if she does. You tell all, Cherrie, and Charley will come back to Speckport ; and by that time you'll have got your red cheeks back again, and who knows what may happen?" Mr. Blake whistled as he threw out this artful insinua- tion ; but Cherrie caught at it eagerly, and her face lit up. Charley's handsome visage rose before her blue-eyed, fair-haired Charley who had always loved her, and never would have treated her as Captain Cavendish had done. Who knew what might happen ! Who, indeed ! I'll tell the whole truth," said Cherrie, aloud. " I'll tell everything, Mr. Blake, when I'm once sure I'm not Caji'aln Cavendish's real wife. I know I did wrong to treat poor Charley as I did ; but I will do all I can now to make up for it." They reached S at dark, and remained there all night and the following morning. They might have gone down to Speckport in the eight P.M. train ; but Yal pre- ferred to remain for the two A.M., for reasons of his own. " If we land in Speckport at noon, Cherrie," he said, ' ; we may be seen and recognized. We will go down in the afternoon and get there about nine, when it will be dark, and you can pass unnoticed. I don't want Captain Cavendish to find out you are there, until I am ready." So Cherrie, thickly vailed, took her place in the ear, after dinner ; and was whirled through the pleasant coun- try, with its liclds and forests and villages, toward good old Speckport that dull, foggy town that her heart had grown sick with longing many a time to see. There were no lamps lit in tho streets cf Speckport that night. When, tho waning September moon shone i? 386 CHERRIE TELLS THE TRUTH. out in such brilliance, surrounded by such a crowd of stars .is persuaded one to believe all the constellations were Ham ing at once, gas became superfluous, and the city fathers spared it. The vailed lady was handed out by Mr. Blake; a proceeding which considerably excited the curiosity of some of Mr. Blake's friends, loafing around the platform. " Blake can't have got married up the country, can he ?" drawled out Lieutenant the Honorable L. H. Blank to young McGregor. " Who's the woman ?" " Blessed if I know," replied Alick. Val hurried his charge into a cab, sprang in after her, and gave the order, " Wasson's Hotel." " It's a new place, and not much patronized," he ex- plained to Cherrie. " You won't be recognized there ; and I'll tell them to fetch you your meals up to your room. And to-morrow, Cherrie, I want you to come round to my office at about eleven. Come in the back way off Brunswick street, you know ; so you won't have; to pass through the outer office, and be recognized by Clowrie and Gilcase, and the rest of 'em. I'll be waiting for you ; and if Cavendish doesn't drop in, which he does to kill time about that hour every day, I'll send for him, and you'll hear his confession without being seen." Mr. Blake walked home that night, chuckling inwardly all the way. " I said I would pay you off, Cavendish," he solilo- quized, " for leading Charley Marsh astray, and cutting up those other little cantrips of yours ; and I think the time has come at last I really think, my dear boy, the time has come!" It was some time after ten when Mr. Blake presented jiimself at Mr. Blair's, and found the family about retir- ; \.f for the night. Laura was not at home, she was up at :on Laura's mamma said stopping with Mrs. WyndhauL, who seemed to be very unhappy. " What was she unhappy about ?" Mr. Blake inquired. I3ut Mrs. Blair only sighed, and shook her head, and hinted darkly about hasty marriages. " Eh 2" said Val, " Wyndham doesn't thrash her, does CHERItlE JELLS THE TRUTH, 387 he ? She's big and buxom, and he's only a little fellow ; and I think, on the whole, she would be a match for him in a free fight !" Mr. Blair laughed, but Mrs. Blair looked displeased. " My dear Mr. Blake, how can you say such things ? Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham are not a happy couple, that is clear ; but whose is the fault I cannot undertake to say. He is greatly changed of late. I suppose he worries about his mother." " Oh, his mother! Has anybody seen that most mys- terious lady yet ?" " Not that I am aware of ! He has not even called in medical advice." " And the ghost," said Yal, lighting his bedroom-lamp, " has it been figuranting since 2" "No," said Mr. Blair; "the ghost hasn't showed since you left. I say, Blake, did you settle your country-busi- ness satisfactorily ?" " Very !" replied Mr. Blake, with emphasis. " I never settled any business more to my satisfaction in the whole course of my life !" Mr. Blako was in his office bright and early next morning, hard at work. At about eleven he descended the stairs, and opened the back door, which fronted on a dull little street, through which a closely- vailed female figure was daintily picking her way. Val admitted the lady, and ran before her up-stairs. " Up to time, Cherrie, there's nothing like it! I sent Bill Blair round to Cavendish's rooms to tell him to look in before twelve, and I expect them back every moment. By Jove ! there's his voice outside now. Get in here quick, and sit down! There's a crack in the partition, tli rough which you can see and hear. Not a chirp out of you, now. Come in !" Mr. Blake raised his voice ; and in answer, the door opened, and Captain Cavendish, smoking a cigar, lounged in. Val gave one glance at the buttoned door of the little closet in which he had hidden Cherrie, and nodded famil- iarly to his visitor. a Good-morning, captain ! find a chair. Oh, pitch 383 CHERRIE TELLS THE TRUTH. the books on the floor they're of no account. I'm to notice them all favorably in the ' Spouter ' the author sent a five-dollar bill for me to do it !" " Young Blair said you wanted to see me," remarked the captain, tilting back his chair, and looking inquiringly through his cigar-smoke. " Why, so I did. I heard before I went up the coun- try a rumor that you were going to leave us going to leave the army, in fact, and return to England. Is it so ?" " Yes. I'm confoundedly tired of Speckport, and this from-hand-to-rnouth life. It is time I retired on my fortune, and I am going to do it." "How?" " "Well, I mean to return home run down to Cumber- land, and saddle myself on my old uncle. He was always fond of me as a boy, and I know is yet, in spite of his new wife and heir. Perhaps I may drop into a good thing there heiresses are plenty." " I should think you had got your heart-scald of that," said Val, grinning. " You bait your hook for heiresses often enough, but the gold-fish don't seem to bite." Captain Cavendish colored and frowned. " All heiresses are not Miss Hendersons," he said, with a cold sneer. " I might know what to look for from your Bluenose and Quaker tradesmen's daughters. I shall marry an English lady one whose father did not make his money selling butter or hawking fisli." " Oil, come now, Cavendish ! You have been in love in Speckport Don't deny it !" " I do deny it," said the captain, coldly. "Nonsense ! You were in love with Nathalie Marsh." " Never ! Azure-eyed and fair-Jiaired wax dolls never were any more to my taste than boiled chicken ! I never cared a jot for Nathalie Marsh." " "Well, you did for Olive Henderson you can't deny that ! She is not of the boiled chicken order, and all Speckport knows you were mad about her." " Speckport knows more than its prayers. I did ad- mire Miss Henderson I don't deny it; but she had tho temper of the old devil, and I am glad I escaped herl" CHE ERIE TELLS THE TRUTH. 389 " And Cherrie have you quite forgotten Cherrie ? You were spooney enough about her." " Bah !" said Captain Cavendish, with infinite con- tempt ; u don't sicken me by talking of Cherrie! I had almost forgotten there ever was such a little fool in exist- ence !'' " And y 311 never cared for Cherrie, either ?" Captuin Cavendish broke into a laugh. " You know how I cared for her. The woman a man can marry is another thing altogether !" " Some far higher up in the world than Captain Cav- endish have stooped to fall in love and marry girls aa poor as Cherrie. You never could, I suppose ?" " Never ! The idea is absurd ! I wouldn't marry a girl like Cherrie if she had the beauty of the Yenus de Medicis!" u Did you ever undeceive Cherrie about that marriage affair ? Did you let her know she was not your wife f ' " Not 1," said Captain Cavendish, coolly. " I never took so much trouble about her ! I was heartily sick of her before a week !" " Well, it seems hard," said Yal. "Poor little thing !" She was very fond of you, too." ki Stuff ! She was as fond of me as she was, or would be, of any other decently good-looking man. She was ready to rim off with any one who asked her, whether it were I, or young Marsh, or any of the rest. I know what Cherrie was made of." " And so she thinks she is still your wife?" 4 " I don't know what she thinks !" exclaimed the young officer, impatiently; "and what's more, I don't care! What do you talk to mo of Cherrie Nettleby for ? I tell you I know nothing about her !" c ' And I tell yon I don't believe it," said Yal. " You have her hid away somewhere, Cavendish; and if you are an honorable man, yon will tell her the truth, and provide for her before you leave Speckport." Captain Cavendish might have flown into a rage with any other man, but he only burst into a loud laugh at Yal. 890 CHERRIE TELLS THE TRUTH. " Tell her the truth and provide for her 1 Why, you blessed innocent, do you suppose Cherrie, wherever she is, has been constant to me all this time ? I tell you I kno\v nothing of her, and care nothing! Make your mind easy, old fellow! the girl is off with somebody else long before this ! What's that 3" Captain Cavendish looked toward the buttoned door of the closet. There had been a strange sound, between a gasp and a cry, but Mr. Blake took no notice. "It's only the rats! So you will leave Speckport, and do nothing for Cherrie \ Cavendish, I am sorry I ever had a hand in that night's work!" " Too late now, my dear boy !" laughed the English- man. " Make your mind easy about Cherrie ! She's just the girl can take care of herself ! If ever she comes back to Speckport, give her my regards !" lie pulled out his watch, still laughing, and arose to go. " Half-past eleven I have an engagement at twelve, and must be off. By-by, Blake! don't fret about Cherrie !" Mr. Blake did not reply, and his face was very grave as he shut and locked the door after his visitor. "You're a greater villain, Captain Cavendish," he said to himself, " than even I took you to be ! Come out, Cherrie have you heard enough 2" Yes, she had heard enough ! She was crouching on the floor, her hands clenched, her eyes flashing. She leaped up like a little tigress as he opened the door. " Take me to a magistrate !" she cried. " Let me tell all I know ! I'll hang him ! I'll hang him, if I can !" " Sit down, Cherrie," said Val, " and compose your- self. It won't do to go in such a gale as this before the authorities. Tell me first. By that time you will bo settled !" An hour afterward, Mr. Blake left his office by the back-door, accompanied by the vailed lady. Cherrie had toldalL OVERTAKEN. 891 CHAPTER XXXIH. OVERTAKEN. R. BLAKE had made little notes of Cherrie'e discourse, and had the whole story arranged in straightforward and business-like shape, for the proper authorities. lie did not lead his fair companion straight to those authorities, as she vindictively desired, but back to her hotel. "I think I'll hand over the case to Darcy, Cherrie," he snid ; " and he is out of town, and won't be back till to morrow afternoon. - There's no hurry Cavendish won't leave Speckport yet awhile. We'll wait until to- morrow, Cherrie. ('he-rrie had to obey orders; and passed the time ,ing the pa-s<.>rs-by under her window. There were plenty of pas><-rs-by. fur the window fronted on Queen Street, and Cherric knew almost every one. It was hard sometimes to hide behind the curtain instead of tin-owing open the casement and hailing those old friends who brought back so vividly the happy days when she had been the little black-eyed belle, and Captain Caven- dish was unknown. It seemed only like yesterday since she had tripped down that sunlit street, in glittering silk, with all the men bowing, and smiling, and tipping their hats jocosely to her ; only yesterday since the good-look- ing young dry goods clerks vaulted airily over the counters to do her bidding. And now, and now ! She never c ould be what she had been again. And to this man, this false and treacherous Englishman, for whom she had sacrificed noble-hearted Charley Marsh, she owed it all. She set her teeth vindictively, and clenched her little fist at the thought. " Bat I'll pay him for it ! I'll teach him to des; nv! 1 only hope they may hang him the villain! lj:!i\l labor tor life would not be half punishment enough for him !" 892 OVERTAKEN. They talk of presentiments ! Surely, there never'was such a thing, else why had George Cavendish no dim foreshadowing of the doom darkening so rapidly around him. He had told Val Blake he had an engagement;. So he had ; it was in Prince Street, with Mr. Tom Gules, who had returned to Speckport, and who was goin^ the road to rain faster than any victim Captain Cavendish had ever in hand before. It was growing dusk when they left the gambling-hell; and Mr. Oaks was poorer and Captain Cavendish richer by several hundred pounds than when they entered. The gorgeous coloring of the sunset yet flared in the sky, though the crimson and amber were flecked with sinister black. Captain Caven- dish drew out a gold hunting-watch, and looked at the hour. " Past six," he said, carelessly ; " I shall be late at Redmon, I fear. The hour is seven, I believe. Do you drive there this evening ?" " Xo," said Mr. Oaks, with a black scowl, " I hope my legs will be palsied if ever they cross the threshold of that woman ! I'm not a hound, to fawn on people who kick me !" Captain Cavendish only smiled he rarely lost his temper and went off to his hotel, whistling an opera air. He passed under Cherrie's window ; but no pre- science of the flashing black eyes above troubled the serenity of his mind. He was walking steadily to his fate, as we all walk blindly, unconsciously. Captain Cavendish was the last to arrive at Redmon all the other guests were assembled in the drawing- room when he entered, and they had been discussing him and his departure for the last quarter of an hour. The dinner party at Redmon was a very pleasant one ; and every one, except, perhaps, the stately hostess her- 'self, was very gay and animated. Mr. Wyndham, de- spite the trouble he was in about his poor mad mother, was the most entertaining and agreeable of hosts. The ladies, when they flocked back to the drawing-room, enthu- siastically pronounced Mr. Wyndharn " a perfect love !" and declared they quite envied Mrs. Wyndhaina husband who could tell such charming stories, and who was so de OVERTAKEN. 393 lightfully clever and talented. And Olive Wyndham smiled, and sat down at the piano to do her share of the entertaining, with that dreary pain at her beating and re- bellious heart that never seemed to leave it now. Yes, it \vu.s a very pleasant evening ; and Captain Cavendish I'unnd it so, and lingered strangely, talking to his h< iifrcr all the rest had gone. Lieutenant the Honorable L. 11. Blank, who was waiting for him on the graveled drive outside, grew savage as lie pulled out his watch and saw it wanted only a quarter of twelve. ( 'on found the fellow !" he muttered, " does he mean to stay all night talking to Mrs. "Wyndham, and I am sleepy. Oh, here he is at last ! I say, Cavendish, what the dickens kept you ?" Captain Cavendish laughed, as he vaulted into his saddle. " What's your hurry, my dear fellow ? I was talking to Mrs. Wyndham, and common politeness forbade my cutting the conversation short." " Common bosh ! Mrs. Wyndham was yawning in your face, I dare say ! My belief is, Cavendish, you are as much in love with that black-eyed goddess now as ever.'' "Pooh! it was only a flirtation all through; and I would as soon flirt with a married lady any day as a single one. She looked superb to-night, did not she, in that dress that flashed as she walked was it pink or white and that ivy crown on her head?" u She always looks superb ! I should like to fetch such a wife as that back to old England. A coronet would sit well on that stately head." A strangely-bitter regret for what he had lost smote the heart of Captain Cavendish. It might have been, lie might have brought that black-eyed divinity as his wife to England, but for Paul Wyndham. Why had she preferred that man to him ? " I wonder if she loves him ?" he said aloud. "Who? her husband? Do you know, Cavendish, she puzzles me there. She treats him with fearfully frigid politeness, but she never ceases to watch liim. U 17* 894 OVERTAKEN. he were any kind of man but the kind he is, I should saj she was jealous of him. lie is a capital fellow, anyhow, and I like him immensely." They rode through the iron gates as he spoke, which clanged noisily behind them. The night was not very bright, for the moon struggled through ragged piles of black cloud, and only glimmered with a wan and pallid light on the earth. The trees loomed up black against the clear sky, and cast vivid and unearthly shadows across the dusty road. A sighing wind moaned fitfully through the wood, and the trees surged and groaned, and rocked to and fro restlessly. It was a spectral night enough, and the young lieutenant shivered in the fitful blast. " I feel as if I had taken a shower-bath of ice-water," he said. " Wasn't it somewhere near here that Yal Blake saw the ghost 2 Good Heavens ! What's that ?" As he spoke, there suddenly came forth from the shadow of the tree, as k' it took shape from the blackness, a figure a woman's figure, with long disordered fair hair, and a face white as snow. Captain Cavendish gave an^awful cry as he saw it ; the cry startled his horse only a half-tamed thing at best and, with a loud neigh, it started off like an arrow from a bow. The horse of Lieutenant Blank, either taking this as a challenge, or frightened by the sudden appearance of the woman, pricked up its ears and fled after, with a velocity that nearly unseated his rider. The lieutenant overtook his companion as they clattered through the streets of the town, and the face of Captain Cavendish was livid. "For Heaven's sake, Cavendish!" cried the young man, " what was that? What was that we saw ?" " It was Nathalie Marsh !" Captain Cavendish said, in an awful voice. " Don't speak to me, Blank ! I am going mad !" He looked as if he was, as he galloped furiously out of sight, waking the sleeping townsfolk with the thunder of his horse's hoofs. He had heard the story of the ghost, and had laughed at it, with the rest ; but he had iieard it in broad daylight, and the most timid of us can laugh at ghost-stories then. He had not been thinking OVERTAKEN. 895 of her, and lie had seen her he had seen her at midnight true ghostly hour on the lonesome Kedmon road, with her death-white face and streaming hair ! He had seen her he had seen the ghost of Nathalie Marsh ! Mr. Johnston, the sleepy valet, sitting up for his mas- ter, recoiled in terror as that master crested the threshold of the room. Captain Cavendish only stared vaguely as the man spoke to him, and strode by him and into his room, with an unearthly glare in his eyes and the horrible livid ness of death in his face. Mr. Johnston stood appalled outside the door, wondering if his master had committed a murder on the way home nothing less could excuse his looking like that. Once, half an hour after, Captain Cav- endish opened his door, still "looking like that," and ordered brandy, in a voice that did not sound like his own ; and Mr. Johnston brought it, and got the door slammed in his face afterward. The usually peaceful slumbers of Mr. Johnston were very much disturbed that night by this extraordinary con- duct on the part of his master. He lost at least three hours' sleep perplexing himself about it, for never since ho had had the honor of being the captain's man, had that gentleman behaved so singularly, or exhibited so ghastly and deathlike a face. When, in the early watches of the morning, he presented himself at his master's door with towels and water, it was in a state of mingled curiosity and terror ; but lie found there was no call for the latter emotion. Beyond looking uncommonly pale and hollow- eyed (sure tokens of a sleepless night), Captain Cavendish vvas perfectly himself again; and whether this was owing to the brandy he had drank or the exhilarating effect of tlu* morning sunshine, Mr. Johnston could not tell, but he was inclined to set it down to the brandy. Even the pale- ness and hollow-eyedness was not noticeable after he had shaved and dressed, and partaken of his breakfast, and sauntered out, swinging his cane and smoking his cigar, to kill thought in the bustling streets of the town. Val Blake, standing in his office-door, hailed him as he passed. "How are you, Cavendish? Heavenly morning, 396 OVERTAKEN. isn't it? Have you any particular engagement for this afternoon ?" " This afternoon ? What hour F " Oh, about three. You must postpone your engage- ments to accommodate me." " I have none so early. I dine with the mess at six. What is it F " A little surprise that I have in store for you. Drop into Darcy's office about five, and we'll give you a little surprise !" " A little surprise ! Of what nature, pray ?" " Honor bright !" said Yal, turning to run up-stairs. " I won't tell. Will you come ?" " Oh, certainly ! It will kill time as well as anything else." He sauntered on unsuspiciously, never dreaming ho was sealing his own fate. Val Blake had no compunctions about entrapping him. He was so artful a villain he must be taken by surprise, or he might baffle them yet. " So slippery an eel," argued Mr. Blake to liimself, " must not be handled with gloves. He may as well walk into Darcy's -office himself, as be brought there by a couple of police-officers." Captain Cavendish returned to his hotel early, and avoided all places where he was likely to meet Lieutenant Blank. Of all people, he wanted to shun him from hence- forth ; of all subjects, he ne\ r er wanted to speak of the terrible fright he had received the previous night. So he returned to his rooms, and smoked and read, aud wrote letters, and dined at two, and as the town clock was striking five, he was opening the door of Mr. Darcy's office. And still no presentiment of what was so near dn \vned darkly upon him ; no weird foreboding thrilled in nameless dread through his breast ; no dim and gloomy shadowing of the awful retribution overtaking him so fast, made his step falter or his heart beat faster as he opened that door. Perhaps it is only to good men that tlieii angel-guardians whisper in that " still small voice " those. mystic warnings, that tell us poor pilotless mariners on the sea of life of the shoals and quicksands ahead. Perhaps OVERTAKEN. 30"< it is only men like this man, whose souls are stone-blind, that cannot see dimly the hidden shipwreck at hand. lie MW nothing, felt nothing ; he walked in carelessly, MI. Mr. Darey, old Squire Tod, and Mr, Blake, sitting close together and talking earnestly, lie wondered why they all looked so grave, and why two constables, who had iKX-n looking out of a window, should place themselves one on each side of the door, as if on guard, as he c-ime in. lie wondered, but nothing more. Mr. Darcy an.-e very gravely, very gravely bowed, and presented him with a chair. "Good afternoon, gentlemen," he said, indifferently, " I have dropped in on my way to the mess-room, at the request of Mr. 13 lake, who told mo there was a surprise in store for me here." " There is, sir," replied Mr. Darcy, in a strange tone. "There is a surprise in there for you, and not a very pleasant one, either. Mr. Blake was quite right." Something in his voice chilled Captain Cavendish, for the first time ; but he stared at him haughtily, and pulled out his gold hunting-watch. "I dine at six," he said coldly. " It is past live now. I beg you will let me know what all this means, as i: possible. I have no time to spare." " You will make time for our business, Captain Caven- dish ; and as for the mess-dinner, 1 think you must post- pone that altogether to-day." " Sir," cried Captain Cavendish, rising ; but Mr. I) returned his gaze stonily. " Sit down, sir, sit down ! The business that rendered your presence here necessary is of so serious a nature 50 very serious a nature, that all other considerations must yield before it. You will not go to the mess-dinner, 1 re- peat. 1 do not think you will ever dine at the mess-table again." The face of Captain Cavendish turned ghastly, in spite of every effort, and he turned with a look of suppressed fury at Val Blake. " You traitor!" he said, "you have done this. You* invitation was only a snare to entrap me." 398 OVERTAKEN. " Honest men, Captain Cavendish," said Mr. Blake, composedly, " fear no snare, dread no trap. It is only criminals, living in daily dread of detection, who need fear their fellow-men. I preferred you should enter here of your own accord, to being brought here handcuffed by the officials of the law." Every drop of blood had left the face of the English- man ; but ho strove manfully to brave it out. " I cannot comprehend what you mean by these in- sults," lie said. " Who dare talk to me, an English officer and a gentleman, of handcuffs and crimes?" "We dare," leplicd Mr. Darcy. "We, in whom the laws of the land arc invested. These laws you have vilely broken, Mr. Cavendish for I understand you have sold out of the service, and have no longer claim to military rank. In the name of the law, George Cavendish, I arrest you for the willful murder of Jane Leroy!" It was an utter impossibility for the white face of the man to grow whiter than it had been for the last ten minutes ; but at the last words he gave a sort of gasp, and caught at the arms of the chair on which he sat. If they had wanted moral conviction before of his guilt, they wanted it no longer it was written in every line of his bloodless face, in every quiver of his trembling lips, in every choking gasp of breath he drew. They sat looking at him with solemn faces, but no one spoke. They were waiting for him to recover from the shock, and break the silence. He did break it at last ; but in a voice that shook BO, the words seemed to fall to pieces in his mouth. "It is false !" he said, trying to steady his shaky voice. " I deny the charge. Cnarley Marsh was tried and found guilty long ago. lie is the murderer!" "Charley Marsh is an innocent man you are the murderer. Your own face is your accuser," said Mr. Darcy. " I never saw guilt betrayed more plainly in all my life. You murdered Jane Leroy yes, strangled her for her pitiful wealth." " Who has told you this infernal story ?" exclaimed the infuriated captive, glaring upon the lawyer. "Has that d d scoundrel found " lie stopped suddenly, OVERTAKEN. 899 nearly choking himself with his own words, and the phlegmatic lawyer finished the sentence. " Found Cherrie ? yes ! You see there is no hope for you now. Here, Cherrie, my girl, come out !" There was a door standing ajar opposite them, that looked as if it led into some inner and smaller office. As the door opened wide, the prisoner caught a glimpse ol two men, only a glimpse; for the next moment Cherrie stood before him. The last faint glimmer of hope died out in his breast at sight of her with that vindictive look in her face. " Oh, you villain !" screamed Cherrie, shaking her fist at him, her black eyes flashing fire. " You mean, lying, deceitful villain ! I'll fix you off for the way you have treated me! I'll tell everything I have told if, and I'll tell it again, and again, and again; and I hope they'll hang you, and I'll go to sec you hung with the greatest pleasure, I will !" Here Cherrie, who had not drawn breath, and was scarlet in the face, had to stop for a second, and Mr. Darcy struck in : " Hold your tongue, Cherrie ! Not another word 1 Stick to facts abuse is superfluous. You sec, Captain Cavendish, with the evidence of this witness, nothing more is needed but drawing out a warrant for your arrest. She is prepared to swear positively to your guilt." " I don't doubt it," said Captain Cavendish, with a bitter sneer ; " such a creature as she is would swear to anything, I dare say. We all know the character of Clierrio .Nettleby." " Silence, sir !" thundered Mr. Darcy; "you are the very last who should cast a stone at her you, who have deliberately led her to her ruin !" " He told me I was his wife," sobbed Cherrie, hysteri- cally, " or I never should have gone. I never kue\v it was a sham marriage, until Mr. Blake told me so down in Charlottetown. \\^e were married in the Methodist meet- ing-house, and I thought it was a minister; and Mr. Blake was there, and I thought it was all right 1 Oh, 400 OVERTAKEN. dear me !" sobbed Cherrie, the hysterics growing alarm ing ; ''everybody was in a wicked plot against me, and I was only a poor girl, and not up to them ; and I wish I had never been born so there !" Squire Tod and Mr. Darcy turned with looks of stem inquiry upon Mr. Blake. u What does this mean ?" asked old Squire Tod. " You never said anything about this, Blake." " No," said Val, perfectly undisturbed ; " I only told you Cherrie had run away with Captain Cavendish." ' That is my irreproachable accuser, you see," said Captain Cavendish, with sneering sarcasm. " What that woman says is true ; I did inveigle her into a sham mar- riage, but Mr. Val Blake managed the whole affair got the church and the sham clergyman, and deceived that crying fool there fifty times more than I did ; for she trusted him !" Squire Tod's face darkened into a look of stern sever- ity as he turned upon Val. "Mr. Blake," he said, "I am more astonished and shocked by this than anything I have heard yet. That you should be guilty of so base and unmanly an act you, whom we all respected and trusted as to entrap a poor weak-minded child (for she was only a child) to misery and ruin ! Shame, shame on you, sir, for such a coward's act !" Very few people ever suspected Val Blake of dignity. One would have thought he must have shrunk under these stern words, abashed. But he- did not he held his head proudly erect he rose with the occasion, and was dignified. " One moment !" he said, " wait one moment, squire, before you condemn me ! Gentlemen," he rose up and threw wide the door of the room from which Cherrie had emerged, " gentlemen, please to come out." Everybody looked, curious and expectant. Cherrie ceased the sobbing to look, and even Captain Cavendish forgot for a moment his supreme peril, in waiting for what was to come next. Two gentlemen, the Reverend Mr. Drone, of the OVERTAKEN. 401 Methodist persuasion, and another clerical and white neck-clothed gentleman, ame out and stood before the company. Mr. Drone was well known, the other was a stranger, a young man, with rather a dashing air, consid- ering his calling, and a pair of bright, roving dark eyes. O.iptain Cavendish had only seen him once in his life be- fore, but he recognized him instantaneously. ki You all know Mr. Drone, gentlemen," said Yal, "this other is the ileverend Mr. Barrett, of Narravillc. Mr. Barrett, it is a year since you were in Speckport, is it not T 14 It is," replied Mr. Barrett, with the air of a witness under cross-examination. " Will you relate what occurred on the last night of your stay in this town, on the occasion of that visit *" " With pleasure, sir ! I am a minister of the Gospel, gentlemen, as you may see," said Mr. Barrett, bowing to the room, k ' and a cousin of Mr. Drone's. I had been settled about two years up in Narraville last summer, when I took it into my head to run down here for a week or so on a visit to Mr. Drone. I had known Mr. Blake for years, and had a very high respect for his uprightness and integrity, else 1 never should have complied with the singular re- quest he made me the day before I left." " What was the request?" asked Mr. Darcy, on whom a new light was bursting. "He came to me," Said Mr. Barrett, "and having drawn from me a promise of strict secrecy, told me a somewhat singular story. A gentleman of rank and po- sition, an English officer, had "fallen in love with a gar- dener's pretty daughter, a young lady with more beamy than common sense, and wanted to entrap her into a sham marriage. He had intrusted the case to Mr. Blake, whoso principles, he imagined, wore as loose as his own, and Mr. Blake told me he would inevitably-succeed in his diaboli- cal plot if we did not frustrate him. Mr. Blake's pro- posal was, that I should marry them in reality, while letting him think it was only a mockery of a holy ^ ordi- nance. He urged the case upon me strongly ; he said the 402 OVERTAKEN. man was a gambler, a libertine, and a fortune-hnnter ; that he was striving to win for his wife a most estimable young ladj Miss Marsh for her fortune merely; that if he succeeded, she would be miserable for life, and that this was the only way to prevent it. He told me the man was so thoroughly bad, that all compunctions would bethiov/n away on him; and at last I consented. To prevent a gr< crime, I married them privately in Mr. Drone's church. Mr. Blake was the witness, and the marriage is inserted in the register. I told Mr. Drone before I left, and he con- sented to keep the matter secret until such time as it was necessary to divulge it. I married George Percy Caven- dish and Charlotte Nettleby the night before I left Speck- port, and took a copy of the certificate with me ; and I am ready to swear to the validity of the marriage at any time and in any place. I recognize them both, and that man and woman are lawfully husband and wife !" Mr. Barrett bowed and was silent. Poor Cherrie, with one glad cry, sprang forward and fell on her knees before Mr. Val Blake, and did him theatrical homage on the spot. Yal lifted her up, and looked in calm triumph nt the baffled Englishman, and saw that that gentleman's face was purple with furious rage. "Liar!" he half screamed, glaring with tigerish eyes as ho heur^ Mr. Barrett, "it is false ! You never per- formed it I never saw you before !" " You have forgotten me, I dare say," said Mr. Bar- rett, politely, " but I had the pleasure of marrying you to this lady, nevertheless. It is easily proved, and i am pre- pared to prove it on any occasion." " You may as well take it easy, Cavendish," said Val. "Cherrie is your wife fast enough! Don't cry, Cherrie, it's all right now, and you're Mrs. Cavendish as snre as Church and State can make you." "It's a most extraordinary story," said Squire Tod, "arid I hardly know what to say to you, Blake. How came yon to let him' get engaged to Miss Henderson, knowing this if' '" Oh," said Val. carelessly, " Miss Henderson never cared a snap about him ; and then Paul Wyndhain came OVERTAKEN. 408 along and cut him oat, just as I was getting ready to tell the story. I meant to make him find Clierrie before he left Spockport, and publish the marriage; only Provi- dence let me lind her out myself, to clear the innocent, and bring this man's guilt home. I had to keep Cherrio in the dark, as I never would have got that confession out of her." u Well," said Mr. Darcy, rising, " it is growing dark, and 1 think there is no more to be done this evening. Burke, call a cab. Captain Cavendish, you will have to exchange the mess-room for the town-jail to-night." Captain Cavendish said nothing. His fury had turned to black, bitter sullenness, and his handsome face was dis- turbed by a savage scowl. " You, gentlemen, and you, Mrs. Cavendish," said Mr. Darcy, bowing to Cherrie, and smiling slightly, " will hold yourselves in readiness to give evidence at the trial. J think we will have no difficulty in bringing out a clear ease of willful murder." An awful picture came before the mind of the scowl- ing and sullen captain. A gaping crowd in the raw dawn of a cheerless morning, a horrible gallows, the dangling rope, the hangman's hand adjusting it round his neck, the drop, a convulsed tigure quivering in the air in ghastly agony, and then Great beads of cold sweat broke out on his forehead, and his livid face was contracted by a spasm of mortal agony. Then he saw the two clergy- men, Mr. Blake, and Cherrie standing up to go. "I think I'll take you home, Cherrie," said Val, "I'll get another cab for you! Won't they open their eyes when they see you, though ?" Mr. Blake and Cherrie departed, followed by the two clergymen; and no one spoke to the ghastly-looking man, sitting, guarded by the constable, staring at the floor, with that black, desperate scowl, that so changed his face that his nearest friend would hardly have known it. Cherrie trembled and shrank away as .-.he passed him, and did not breathe freely until she was safely seated in the cab beside Val, and rattling away through the streets on her way home. 404 OVERTAKEN. Home ! how poor Cherrie's heart longed for the peace of that little cottage where those who loved her, and had mourned her, dwelt. . She was crying quietly, as she sat silently away in a corner, thinking what a long, and wretch- ed, and forlorn, and dreary year the last had been, and what a foolish girl she had been, and how much she owed to Yal Blake. Mr. Blake did not disturb her reflections; he was thinking of wronged Charley Marsh, exiled from home, branded as a felon. The cab, for which Mr. Darcy had sent one of the con- stables, drew up at the office door, as Mr. Blake's drove away; and the prisoner, between the two officials, with Mr. Darcy following close behind, came down-stairs. Captain Cavendish had gone down-stairs very quietly between his two guards, neither speaking nor offering the slightest resistance; but his eyes we.re furtively taking in everything, and the captive's instinct of flight was strong upon him. One of the constables went forward to open the cab-door, the other had but a slight grasp of his arm. The murky darkness, the empty street, favored him. With the rapidity of lightning, he wheeled round, struck the constable a blinding blow in the face with his list, that forced him to release his hold, and, like a flash, he sped off, turned sharp round a corner, and was gone ! The whole thing had been the work of two seconds. Be- fore any one among them could quite comprehend he had really gone, he was entirely out of sight. The next instant, the still street was in an uproar, the two constables and Mr. Darcy, shouting for assistance as they went, started in pursuit. The corner round which Captain Cavendish had cut, and which they now took, led to a dirty waterside street, branching oil into numerous wharves, crowded with hogsheads, bales, barrels, and piles of lumber, affording a secure and handy hiding-place for any runaway. It was like looking for a needle in a hay- stack even in daylight ; and now, in the thick fog and darkness, it was the wildest of wildgoose-chases. They ran from one wharf to another, collecting a crowd about them wherever they went ; and all the time, he for whom OVERTAKEN. 408 they were searching was quietly watching them in a black and filthy alley, that cut like a dirty vein of black mud from that waterside street to the one a'oove. Drawing his hat far down over his eyes, Captain Ca- vendish started up the alley, and found himself again in the street he had left. The cab still stood before the olh'ce door of Mr. Darcy ; he gave it one derisive glance as he strode rapidly along, and struck into another by-street. If he could only make good his escape ; if he could balile them yet ! Hope sent his heart in mad plunges against his side if he could only escape ! Suddenly, a thought flashed upon him the cart. There had been a picnic that day, and an excursion train, he knew, left at half-past seven to fetch the picnickers home. If he could only gel to the depot in time, he might stay in hiding about the country until the first hue and cry was over, then, in disguise, make his way to S , and take the steamer for Quebec. He had a large sum of money about him ; he might do it he might escape yet. He palled out his watch as he almost ran along, twenty- live minutes past seven; only live minutes, and a long way oil' still. He tied through the dark streets like a mad- man, but no one knew him, and reached the depot at last, panting and breathless. A crowd lingered on the plat- form, a bell was clanging, and the train was in motion. Desperation goaded him' on ; he made a furious leap on boaivl, and there was a wild cry of horror from the by- standers, an awful shriek of " O my God!" from a falling man, and then all was uproar, and confusion, and horror, and dismay. Whether in his blind haste he had mi his footing, whether the darkness of the night dec. him, whether the train was moving faster than he had supposed, no one ever knew ; but he was down, and ground undor the re nurse less wheels of the terrible Juggernaut. The train was stopped, and everybody il.-ckcd around in consternation. Two of the Ijrakonicn lifted up some- thing something that had once been a man, but which was crushed out of all semblance of humanity mm-. No one there recognized him ; they hail only heard that one agonized cry wrung from the unbelieving soul in that hor- 406 THE VESPER riblo moment giving tlie lie to his whole past life hut they had heard or knew nothing more Some one brought a door ; and they laid the bloody and mangled mass upon it, and now raised it reverentially on their shoulders, and carried it slowly to the nearest house. A cloth was thrown over the white, staring face, the only part of him, it seemed, not mangled into jelly; and so they carried him away from, the spot, a dreadful sight, which those who saw never forgot. CHAPTER XXXIY. THE VESPER HYMN. E was not dead. He was not even insensible. While they carried him carefully through the chill, black night, and when they carried him into the nearest house, and laid him tenderly on a bed, the large, dark eyes were wide open and fixed, but neither in death nor unconsciousness. It was a hotel they had carried him to ; and one of the pretty chambermaids, who owned a sentimentally-tender heart, and read a great many novels, cried as she looked at him. " Poor fellow !" she said, to another pretty chamber- maid ; " it's such a pity, ain't it and he so handsome ?" u Who is he, I wonder ?" the other chambermaid want- ed to know ; but no one could tell her. " He looks like an officer," some one remarked ; " I think I've seen him in the toVn before, and I'm pretty sure he's one of the officers." " The doctor will know, maybe," suggested the land- lord. " Poor fellow ! I'm afraid it's all up with him. I don't think he can speak." He had never spoken but that once, when the soul of the infidel, in that supreme moment of mortal agony, in epito of the infidel creed of his life, had uttered that awful THE VESPER IIYMN. 407 invocation " O my God !" But the power of spcccli was not gone, nor of hearing; he retained all h: . ; ;ll ,l, -xly enough, did not seem to suffer much. 11;' lay quiescent, his dark eyes wide open, and staring vacantly .snuight ahead, his dark hair, dabbled with blood, falling loose on the pillow and around his bloodless face. They had drawn a white spread over him ; and he had a strangely corpse-like look, with his white set face, and marble like rigidity. But life burned yet in the strained, wide-open eyes. The doctor came it was Dr. Leach ; and he knew him immediately, and told the gaping and curious bystanders who he was. He was very much shocked, and moro shocked still when the white spread was drawn awav, and the terrible truth revealed. The eyes of the wounded man followed him as he made his examination, but with no eagerness or hopefulness only with a dull and awful sort of apathy. k Do you know me, Captain Cavendish ?" Dr. Learn asked, tenderly touching the heavy, dark hair falling over his face. "Yes. How long ?" He did not finish the sentence, not because he was una- ble to do it, but that he evidently thought he had finished it, and his eyes never once left the physician's face. Dr. Leach looked very sadly down in the dark, inquir- ing eyes. "My poor fellow!" he said, "it is hard, I know, and for one so young and so far from all your friends. It is hard to die like this; but it is Heavens will, and we must submit." "How long?" repeated the sufferer, as if he had not heard him, and with that steady, inquiring gaze. " You mean, how long can you last ? I am afraid I urn afraid, my poor boy, but a short time ; not over three hours at the most." The dark, searching eyes turned slowly away from his face, and fixed themselves on vacancy as before ; but ho showed no signs of any emotion whatever. Physical and mental sense of suffering and fearing seemed alike to havo 408 THE VESPER HTMI\. forsaken Mm in this last dreadful hour. He had been a bad man ; the life that lay behind him was a shameful record. He had been a gamester, a swindler, a libertine, a robber, and a murderer ; and now 'he was dying in his, sins, in a dull stupor, without remorse for the past or fear of the awful future. Dr. Leach stooped over him again, wondering at his unnatural apathy. " Would you like a clergyman, my poor boy?" he said. " No !" " Is there any one you would like to see ? Your time is very short, remember." Captain Cavendish turned to him with something like human interest in hisglance, for the first time. " I should like to see Val Blake," he said, " and Mr. Darcy." " I'll send for them," said the doctor, going out, and dispatching a couple of messengers in hot haste. " He wants to make his will, I suppose," Dr. Leach thought, as he returned to the bedroom. " Poor fellow ; and Val Blake was his friend !" Dr. Leach had requested one of the messengers to go for the army-surgeon before he came back. He knew the case was utterly hopeless, but still it was better to have the surgeon there. He found his patient lying as he had left him, staring blankly at a lamp flaring on a table under the window, while the slow minutes trailed away, and his short span of life wore away. His last night on earth ! Did he think of it as he lay there, never taking his eyes from the lamp-flame, even when the doctor came to his bedside again and held something to his lips. " My dear," Dr. Leach said, feeling as though he were speaking to a woman, and again stroking back his hair with a tender touch ; " hadn't you better see a clergyman \ You are dying, you know." " Did you send for them ?" said Captain Cavendish, looking at him. " For Blake and Darcy ? Yes. But will I not send for a clergyman too 2" ' ? THE VESPER HYMN. 409 " Would yon like me to read to you, then ? There is a Bible on the table ?" "No." He sank back into his lethargic indifference once more and looked at the lamp again. Dr. Leach sighed as he sat down beside him, to watch and wait for the coming of the others. They came at last Val Blake and Mr. Darcy know- ing all beforehand. Their presence seemed to rouse him. "Dr. Leach would have left the room, but the lawyer de- tained him. " Vou may as well stay," he said, " it can make no difference to him now if all the world hears him. It is not his will it is a confession he lias to make." Mr. Darcy was rig] it. Strangely enough he wanted to do that one act of justice before he went out of life, and he seemed to make an effort to rail} 7 , and rouse himself to do it. The doctor gave him a stimulant, for he was per- ceptibly sinking, and the lawyer sat down to write nut the broken sentences of that dying confession. It was not long; but it wa.s long enough to triumphantly vindi- cate Charley Marsh before any court in the world, and just as it was completed the surgeon came. But a more terrible visitor was there too, before whom they held their breath in mute awe. Death stood terrible and invisi- ble in their midst, and no word was spoken. They stood around the bed, pale and silent, and watched him go out of life Avith solemn awe at their hearts. There was no f:-i'.'htfnl death struggles he died peacefully as a little child, but it was a fearful deathbed for all that. The soul of the unbeliever had gone to be judged. " God be mer- ciful to him !" Dr. Leach had said, and they had all ans- wered, u Amen." They drew the counterpane over the marble face, beautiful 'in death, and left the room to- gether. All were pale, but the face of Va! Blake was ghastly. He leaned against an open wimluw. with a feel- g of deadly sickness at his heart. It was all BoawfoL BO suddenly awful ; they, poor erring mortals, had judged ami condemned him, and now he ha3 gone before 13 410 THE VESPER HYMN. Great Judge of all mankind and the dark story had ended in the solemn wonder of the winding-sheet. " Speak nothing but good of the dead," a pitiful old proverb says. ' We were friends once," val Blake thought. tk I never want to speak of him again.'' The body of the dead man was to be taken to his hotel. The surgeon and Mr. Darcy volunteered to ar- 1 range it, and Dr. Leach and Yal left. The dor-tor had his patients to attend to, and Yal was going to tell Cherrie. She was his wife and ought to k-nwn. C .me back, Charley, and cheer us again with the sight of your honest sonsie face." It took some time for Speckport to recover thoroughly from the severe shock its nervous system had received m the death of Captain Cavendish, and the various wonder- ful facts that death brought to light. It was fully a month before the wonder quite subsided, and people could talk of other things over the tea-table. Cherrie, the bereaved, was safely back again in the 414 THE VESPER HYMN. parental nest. Creditors had flocked in with the dead man's long bills ; and when all was settled, nothing was left for the widow. But some good men among them made up two hundred pounds, and Mrs. Wyndham added another hundred, and the three were presented to Mrs. Cavendish, with the sympathy of the donors. It was a little fortune for Cherrie, though a pitiful ending of the brilliant match she had made ; and she took it, crying very much, and was humbly thankful. Once more she tripped the streets of her native town, and her crape, and bomba- zine, and widow's cap, were charmingly becoming ; and when the roses began to return to her cheeks, she was prettier than ever. The town was quiet, and October was wearing away. The last week of that month brought a letter from Char- ley Marsh a letter that was not like Charley, but was very grave, almost sad. " Under God, my dear Val," he wrote, " I owe the restoration of my good name to you. I know all you have done for me and mine my poor mother has told me ; but I cannot thank you. I am sure you do not want me to thank you ; but it is all written deep in my heart, and will be buried witli me. I am coming back to Speckport ah ! .dear old Speckport ! I never thought it could be so dear ! I shall be with you in November, and perhaps I may say to you then what I cannot write now. I am coming back a man, Val ; I went away a hot-headed, passionate, un- reasoning boy. I have learned to be wise, I hope, and if the school has Jbeen a hard one, I shall only remember its lessons the longer. I am coining back rich ; blessings as well as misfortunes do not come alone. 1 have been left a fortune you will see an account of it in the paper I send you. Our colonel, a gallant fellow, and a rich Geor- gian planter, has remembered me in his will. I saved his life shortly after I came here, almost at the risk of my o\vn, I believe. They promoted me for it at the time, and I thought I had got my reward ; but I was mistaken, lie died last week of a bayonet-thrust, and when his will was read, I found I was left thirty thousand dollars. He was a childless widower, with no near relatives ; so no one ia THE VI HYMN. 415 wronged. You see I shall not Lave to fall back upon Dr. Leach's hand on my return, and my mother need depend no more on Mrs. Wyndham's generosity. I am very grate- ful to that lady all the same." " I believe I'll show this letter to Father Lcnnard," said Val to himself; "he asked me on Sunday if I had heard from Charley lately, and told me to letliim know when I did. Charley was always a favorite of his, since the day when he was a little shaver and an acolyte on the altar." Mr. Blake was not the man to let grass grow under his feet when he took a notion in his head ; so he started off at once, at a swinging pace, for the cathedral. The Octo- ber twilight was cold and gray. A dreary evening, in which men went by with pinched noses and were buttoned up in greatcoats, and women had vails over their faces, and shivered in the street a melancholy evening, speak- ing of desolation, and decay, and death, and the end of all things earthly. Mr. Blake, to whom it was only a rawish evening, strode along, and reached the cathedral hi the bleak dusk. The principal entrances were all closed, but he went in through a side door, and looked into the side chapel for the priest. Not finding him, he entered the cathedral through one of the transepts, but neither was Father Len- nard there. The gray twilight shone but dimly through the painted windows, and the long and lofty aisles were very dim and shadowy. There was but one light in the great church a tiny lamp burning on the grand altar a lamp that never went ont by night or day. Two or three shadowy female figures knelt around the altar-rails in silent prayer, and Val thought one of them looked like ]\J is.-: Rose. He knew she was in the habit of coming in the twilight here; but something else had caught his attention, aud he turned away and went on tiptoe down the echoing nave, staring up at the choir. Some one was singing softly there singing so softly that it seemed but the sighing of the autumn-wind, and seemed to belong tc it. But Ya! had a quick ear, and the low melancholy cadences struck him with a nameless thrill. What wu.s there that sounded so strangely familiar in that voice? It 416 THE VESPER HYMN. was a woman's voice a sweet, full soprano, that could rise to power at its owner's will. But what did it remind him of? A though t flashed through him a sudden and startling thought that brought the blood in a red gush to his face, and then left him cold and white. He softly ascended the stairs, the low, mournful voice breaking into a sweetly-plaintive vesper hymn as he went. Yal Blake trembled from head to foot, and a cold sweat broke out on his face. He paused a moment be- fore he entered into the choir, his heart beating faster than it ever had beat before. A woman sat before the organ, not playing, but with her fingers wandering noiselessly over the keys, her face upraised in the ghostly light. She looked like the picture of St. Cecilia, with a cloud of tressed hazy golden hair falling about that pale, earnest, upraised face. Her mantle had fallen back a white cashmere mantle, edged with ermine and lined with blue satin and she sung, unconscious, as it seemed, of all the world. Val Blake stood like a man paralyzed struck dumb and motionless and the sweet voice sang on : " Ave Mariu! Oh, hear when we call, Mother of Heaven, who is Saviour of all; Feeble and fearing, -we trust in thy might; In doubting and darkness thy love be our light. Let us slee"> on thy breast while the night-taper burns. And wake in thine arms when the morning returns 1 Ave Maria! Ave Maria! AveMurial audinos!" The singing ceased, the fingers were motionless, and the pale face drooped and sunk down on the pale hands. 'And still Yal Blake stood mute, motionless, utterly con- founded. For there before him, with only the moonlight shadow of her former loveliness left, sat and sang, not the dead, but the living, Nathalie Marsli 1 " NEVERMORE 7" 417 OHAPTEK XXXY. QUOTH THE RAVEN, 'NEVERMORE!'' 1 OW long Mr. Yal Blake stood there, staring at that sight of wonder, neither he nor I ever knew; but while it drooped in a strange, heartbroken way over the instrument, and iie stood looking at it, powerless to speak or move, a hand was laid on his shoulder, and looking round he >;i\v the pale face of Paul Wyndham. Pale always, but deadly white, Mr. Blake saw, in the spectral October gloaming. " Blake," he said, in a hoarse whisper, that did not sound like Paul Wyndhaui's peculiarly clear and melodious voice, " if ever you were my friend, be silent now ! Help me to get away from here unseen." Some dim foreshadowing of the truth dawned on the slow r mind of Val Blake. The ghost of Nathalie Marsh the invisible and mysterious woman shut up in Rosebush Cottage could they, after all, be connected, and was the mad mother only a blind. The question passed through Val's mind in a vague sort of way, while he watched Paul "Wyndham bend over the drooping figure, as tenderly as a mother over the cradle of her first-born. His voice too, had changed when he spoke to her, and was infinitely gentle and loving. " My darling," he said, " you must not stay here. I have come to fetch you home." She lifted up her head at once, and held out her arms to him, like a little child that wants to be taken. All the pale, misty hair floated softly back from her wan face. Oh! how altered from the bright face Val Blake once knew, and the blue eyes she lifted to his face had a strange, meaningless light, that chilled the blood in the veins of the looker-on. " Yes, take me away," she eaid, wearily ; but in Nat'ia- 17* 418 ' NEVERMORE!" lie Marsh's own voice. " I knew you would come. Where's Midge ? I am cold here." " Midge is at home, my darling. Here is your mantle stand up while I put it on." She arose ; and Yal saw she was dressed in white a sort of white cashmere morning-gown, lined with quilted blue silk. Mr. Wyndham arranged the long white mantle around the wasted iigure, drawing the hood over the head and face. Ghostly enough she looked, standing there in the gloom ; and Val knew she must have heen dressed in the same manner on the night she so startled him and Laura. But Mr. Wyndham, who wore a long black cloak himself these chilly evenings, took it off and arranged it over her white robes, effectually concealing them, as he drew her forward. " Go down-stairs, Blake," he said, " a cab is waiting outside the gates. Come with us, and I will tell you everything." Mr. Blake mechanically obeyed, lie was not quite sure it was not all the nightmare, and not at all certain he was not asleep in his own room, and dreaming this singular little episode, and would awake presently to smile at it all. He went down-stairs in silent bewilderment, never speaking a word, ami hardly able to think. Natha- lie Marsh was dead or at least some one was dead, and buried out there in the cemetery, that he had taken to be Nathalie Marsh how then did she come to be walking down-stairs behind him, supported by that extraordinary man, Paul Wyndham ? The cathedral was quite deserted when they got down, and the sexton was just locking it up for the night. He stared a little at the three forms going by him ; but he was an old man, with sight not so good as it might be, and he did not recognize them. They met no one within the inclosed grounds. At the side gate a cab stood wait- ing ; Mr. Blake opened the door, and Mr. Wyndham helped in his silent companion, who yielded herself, " pas- sive to all changes." " Come with us, Blake," Mr. Wyndham said, as he 'NEVERMORE!* 419 entered and seated hi nself by the lady. " Rosebush Cot- tage, driver. Make liaste !" Not a word was spoken during the drive. The slight figure of the woman lay back in a corner, her head droop- ing against the side of the carriage. Paul Wyndham sat by her, looking at her often, but not addressing her ; and Mr. Blake, in a hopeless morass of doubt and mystification, sat staring at the living ghost, and wondering when he was going to wake from liis dream. The distance was short. In ten minutes they stopped in front of the pretty cottage, from whose curtained windows a bright light shone. The roses in the garden were dead long ago, and only gaunt stalks and bare vines twined themselves, like ugly brown snakes, where the climbing roses grew. A queer figure stood at the gate an ugly, dwarfed, and unwieldy figure, with a big head set on no neck at all, and a broad, florid face, and little pin-hole eyes. But the eyes were big enough to express a great deal of anxiety ; and she flung the gate open and rushed out as the carriage door opened and Mr. Wyndham got out. " Have you found her ?" she cried. " Oh, dear ! oh, dear! Where was she, now,?" Mr. Wyndham did not notice her. " Get out, Blake," he said ; and Midge recoiled with a cry of consternation at sight of Val's towering form. The next instant, he had lifted the lady out in his arms, as if she were a Ixiby, and carried her within the gate. " Tako her into the house," he said, sternly. " 1 shall talk to you about this again !" Midge obeyed meekly Val wondered as much at that meekness as at anything he had seen yet and led the passive girlish creature into the house. Mr. Wyndham paid and dismissed the cabman, and held the gate open for Val. "Come in, Blake," he said gravely; "the time has come when my secret can be no longer kept, and I would sooner tell it to you than to any other human being in existence." 420 "NEVERMORE I" "Tell me," sail Yal, finding voice for the first time, " is that really Nathalie Marsh <" " She was Nathalie Marsh she is Nathalie "Wyndhain now. She is my wife !" Mr. Blake fairly gasped for breath. " Your wife !" he exclaimed, " are you going mad, Mr. Wyndham ? Olive is your wife !" " No," said Paul Wyndham, with cold sternness, " she is not she never has been. The compact I made with her was a formal matter of business, which gave me the right to dwell under the same roof with her, but never made me her husband. She and I understand each other perfectly. Nathalie is my wife my dear and cherished wife, and was so before I ever came to Speckport." " Then, Mr. Wyndham," said Val, with gravity, " you are a scoundrel !" " Perhaps so. Come in." Yal Blake took off his hat and crossed the threshold of Rosebush Cottage for the first time since it was in- habited. "And your mother was only a myth?" he asked, as Mr. Wyndham closed and locked carefully the front door. * " Only a myth. My mother is in Westchester County yet." Yal asked no more questions, but looked around him. The hall was long, with beautiful proof-engravings, and lit by pendant chandeliers. There was a door to either hand Midge came out of the one to the left, still wear- ing that anxious face. " Xow, then," said Mr. "Wyndham, sternly, " how did this happen ?" " It wasn't my fault," snapped Midge, her usual man- ner returning. " I did my best, and she'd behaved her- self for so long, I'd no idee she was going to scud off again. The door wasn't open ten minutes, and I was out in the kitchen bakin' the pies, and when I came back she was gone. I put after her and met you, and I couldn't help it now : so talk's of no use. W here did you find her?" " NE VERM01UJ r 4:31 " In the cathedral. She was speaking of it this morn- ing, and asking me to take her there, so I knew she would make for that.-' " \Vhat made you fetch him here?" inquired Midge, poking one stubby index-linger at Mr. Blake. ' He saw her and recognized her before I did. Get out of the way, Midge, we are going in." Midge went away, snorting to herself, and Mr. Wynd- ham opened the door, and preceded Mr. Blake into the dvawing-room of the cottage. Such a pretty drawing- room, lit by the rosy blaze of a clear coal-lire in a grate of shining steel, and pendent chandeliers of glittering glass and frosted silver. A small, high-ceilings! room, the wails hung with white and gold paperhungings, and adorned with perfect gems of art. The windows were draped in blue satin and white lace, and there was a Brussels carpet on the floor, where violets, and bluebells, and morning-glories ran wild on a white ground, and looked like pale spring flowers blooming in a snow bank. The chairs were of white enameled wood the legs and back touched up with gold, and cushioned in blue satin. There were inlaid tables, laden with superbly bound books of beauty, annuals, albums, and portfolios ol en- gravings ; and a rosewood piano stood in one corner, with the music scattered about. There was an open door to the left, loading into a bed-room furnished in. much the same style; but Val scarcely looked at it all his atten- tion was taken by the white girlish form lying back in a : carved and gilded chair in front of the fire. AVhat a wreck she was! The transparent skin, the hollow cheeks, the sunken eyes, the w r asted little hands, the shadowy figure what a wreck of the blonde loveliness of other days. Her head lay back among the blue satin pillows, her hands dropped listless over the arms of the chair, and her eyes were fixed on the leaping jets of flame, in a meaningless stare. She never turned to look at them whey they came in ; she did not even turn when V ai Biake crossed over and bent above her. "Nathalie," he said, a little tremor in his voice; "Nathalie, don't you know rnei" 422 " NEVERMORE r She lifted her blue eyes vacantly to his face, mur- mured an inarticulate something, moved her head restless- ly, and then went back to staring at the fire. Val rose up, white even to his lips. " Wyndham, what is it ?" he asked, afraid, while he spoke, to hear the answer. "Why does she look like that r Paul Wyndham was leaning against the mantel, hjs head drooping. Now he lifted it, and Yal saw the dark despair that tilled his eyes. " Its meaning," he said, " has nearly broken my heart. If I have done wrong, I have been terribly punished, and even you, Blake, might be merciful now. My poor dar- ling's mind is gono !" There was a pause, a pause of mute consternation on Val's part. Mr. VVyndham bent over Nathalie, with that look of unspeakable tenderness that made his face some- thing new to Val a face entirely new. " My darling, you are tired, I know," he said, " and want to go to bed. Don't you, Natty?" The old name! It brought a pang to Val's heart to hear it. Paul Wynclham spoke to her as he would have spoken to a child of three years ; and Val thought he would sooner she were indeed lying under the sods in the cemetery than see her as he saw her now dead in life. " Yes, Paul," she said, rising wearily, but at once. " Or, perhaps," Mr. Wyndham said, looking at her thoughtfully, "you would like to sing before you go. You told me the other day, you know, you always slept better if you sang before going to bed." " Oh, yes !" Nathalie said, her face lighting suddenly with animation. " What shall I sing, Paul ?" " Anything you like, my dearest." He led her to the piano, and opened it, while she took her seat on the stool, and ran her fingers lightly over the keys at random. Val Blake closed his eves to listen. How long how long ago it seemed since" he had heard Nathalie Marsh's melodious voice ringing through the cathedral-aisles! The thin fingers wandered off into a ' NE VERMORE!" 423 plaintive little prelude, that had something wild and melancholy in its wailing minor key. The song was as sadly-sweet as the air, and the voice that sung was full of pathos. * # *- * * The song died out as mournfully as the last cadence of a funeral-hymn, and the pule singer arose. "I am very tired, Paul," Nathalie said, in a spiritless sort of way, " and I think my head is aching. Tell Midge to come." He rang the bell and put his arm round her to lead her away. " Say good night to Mr. Blake, Nathalie. You re- member Val Blake, don't you, my darling?" u Yes," she said ; but the smile she turned upon him was meaningless, and as cold as moonlight in snow. d-nigh*l" Something was choking Val's voice, and his answering good-night was very husky. Paul AVyndham led her into the inner room, and Midge bustled in after the old fashion, and Nathalie was Jeft in her charge to be un- dressed for the night. Mr. Wyndham left the room and returned presently, bearing wine and cigars., ' If I am what you called me a while ago, Blake," Mr. Wyndham said, with a smile that hud very much of sadness in it, ' there arc extenuating circumstances that may lighten my guilt." ' \Vrong is wrong," said Mr Blake, gravely, "and no extenuating circumstances can make it riglit. You are a bigamist, by your own confession, and you know how the civil law punishes that." " N . ea, Blake, I know it," said Mr. Wyndham, "and, knowing it, I have risked all to win her, my poor lost darling within that room ! Heaven knows, I have hardly had a day's peace since. The broad road may be strewn with roses, us preachers say it is, but the thorns in the liowers sting very sharply sometimes, too." Mr. Blake made no reply to this aphorism. He was lighting his cigar, with a listening face, waiting for the story his companion had to tell. Midge came out of the 424 " NS VERMORE / bed-room while lie waited, threw more coal on the fire, and left the room. But still Paul Wyndham did not begin, lie was smoking, and looking thoughtfully into the red fire and the falling cinders, and the ticking of an ormolu clock on the chimney-piece, and the dreary sigh- ing of the night-wind without alone broke the silence. The clock struck eight, and Val lost patience. " Well, Wyndham, why wait ? Go on. I am waiting to hear this most extraordinary affair explained." " You all ho e in Speckport thought Nathalie Marsh committed suicide did you not?" said Mr. Wrndham, looking up. " It is such a charitable place this town of yours, and your good people are so wonderfully ready to place the worst construction on everything, that you never thought she might have fallen in by accident did you r " It looked very suspicious," said Val. " Heaven knows how some of us pitied her, poor girl ! but still " " But still you gave her credit for suicide. Let me restore her character. She never for a moment thought of self-destruction. I have her own solemn word for it. She was heart-broken, despairing my own injured dar- ling ! but all the teachings of her life told her suicide was the only crime for which God has no mercy. She never thought of suicide on the night she wandered down to the old wharf. Most miserable she was. Perhaps the wretched night was in harmony with her great trouble ; but she did not go there to look for death. She missed hor footing on the slimy, rotten plank, and fell in, and fr >:u that moment her story as far as you know it ends." Yal nodded. He was smoking, and it was too much trouble to remove the cigar to speak. " She was saved almost by a miracle. A passing boat heard the splash and her cry for help, and rowed to the spot. Tiiey saw her as she arose, and saved her, and one man on board recognized her. The man's name was Cap- tain Locksley. Do you remember it 2" " Locksley 1" cried Val. " Captain Frank Locksley of the ' ' Nil VEXXORR /" 425 'Southern Cross?' Know him? Yes, as well as I know von ! lie was over head and ears in love with Nathalie, himself/' " Yes, I know, lie recognized her, and would have returned with her to the shore; but she positively re: to go. She would die, she cried out, if she did not get from this horrible place. Captain Locksley took her on board of his ship. There was a woman there, thi- ef tha steward, a 1 , id -he took charge of the poor, (!; girl. Captain Locksley sailed that night, lie was off on a three- vear.-,' voyage; but on his way he was to touch at New York. The evening before they reached that city, he made an offer of his hand to the poor girl he had saved. He knew her story. He loved her and pitied her ; but she refused. She only wanted to be away from Speck- port. She would remain in New York. One place was a as another, and a great city the best of all ; but her lot was du.-r and ashes. She would never marry, she told him. Captain Locksley had a cousin, the wealthy manager of a fashionable Broadway theater, and, as a fav- or, the manager consented to receive Nathalie into his corps. Her role was a very simple one walking lady at first, coming on only to stare at the audience at first. But my poor girl's beauty, though the shadow only of the brightness that had been, made her rise. She took minor parrs, and they made her sing when they found what a superb voice she possessed. Her voice, the manager told me once, might make her fortune at least it would have made the fortune of any other woman ; but my darling had lost life, and with it all ambition. She never would be a good actress, but the audience looked at her a \ deal ; and the mournful melody of her voice, whethe. talked or sang, had a charm for all. It paid the man so he kept her, and doled out her weekly pittance, and she took it uncomplainingly. 1 have sometimes wondered since how it was no one from Speokport ever saw and r nized her ; but, I dare say, if they did, they would merely set it down as an odd chance resemblance. They were all so certain of her death, and then the false name and the disguising stage-dresses helped to bafile them. It was at 426 ' ( NEVERMORE 7" the theater I first met hor. They took my dramas when I turned dramatist, and I was always there. She attracted me from the beginning. She interested me strongly the first time I saw her, and I found myself pitying her some- how without knowing anything about her. I could not thinking of her after. The pale face and mournful blue eyes haunted me wherever I went. I found out she was called Miss Johnson, and that she lodged in a shabby house in a shabby street ; and that was all any one heard. But of toy own knowledge I knew she was good and fair, and that great sorrow, not sin, had darkened her young life. Why K was I loved her, I never could tell. It was my fate, I suppose; for my struggles were vain, and only left me more helplessly entangled. The manager laughed at me ; my friends talked of acts of lunacy and genteel private lunatic asylums for me; but it was all useless. 1 loved her, and was not to be laughed out of it, and one night the truth broke from me. I begged her to tell me s!;.- was and to become my wife ; but she refused. She refused, Blake, to do either; but she was very gentle and womanly saying the cruel words. She was very grateful to me, she said, my poor dear! but die could not be un- just enough to take me at my word. The fancy for her i soon leave me. She was not worthy to be the wife of any good man. 1 must forget her. I must never fcix-ak to her like tliis again. Blake, 1 went home that night in a sort of despair. I hated and despised myself for my pitiful weakness. I tried to conquer myself, and miserably. I could not stay away from the theater. I coutd not forget her. I could not do anything I ought to do. I went to the house where she lodged, and found out aii they knew about her there. It was very little; but it was all good I made the manager tell me again lilj cousin, Captain Locksley, had told him of her, and 1 ascertained that Captain Locksloy was an honorable and truthful man. He had said she had undergone a great de.il of trouble, and had met with heavy fortune, but t'Utit she was the best and purest of beings, and he trusto.l hi; cousin would always be her true ir He told him he had long loved her, and that he had asked ' ' NE VERM ORE / 427 her to be his wife, a.icl she had refused. I knew, there- fore, there was nothing worse th:m worldly misfortune in the past life of the woman I had loved: Once a-ain I sought her out, and implored her to leave her hard life and he my wile, keeping her past life secret if she chose; and once again 1 was refused. "After that second refusal,'' Mr. Wyndham fill-owing his smoked-out cigar in the lire, and light in other, "I gave up hope entirely. There was such a steady, inflexible resolution on her poor, pale, worn face, that "a lespairing conviction of the uselessness of all further attempts came upon me. Still I could not o away I despised myself for my pitiful weakness but 1 could' not, Blake, I could not ! I loved her, and I was a v. ineso'iite coward, and lingered about the theater only to g"t a word from her, a look at her, as she went pu follow her at a distance through the city streets, v she got safely home. I despaired, but I could not lly. And one cold March* morning, as I sat at the window of my hotel, staring dreamily out, she passed by; try!: li.x my thoughts on the manuscript before me, and unable to think of arfy thing but the pale -actress, a waiter came in and handed me a letter. It was a very large letter, in a strange female hand I had never seen before ; but i knew it was from her my darling! I tore oil the envelope; it contained half a dozen closely-written sheets, and was signed "Nathalie Marsh." I knew the actress only as Miss Johnson; but I never thought it was her real name. 1 knew now what it was. It was a very long letter : told me where she came from, and why she was here, an actress. She told me her whole story; her sad, pitiful story of wrong and suffering ; the fortune she had the brother wrongfully condemned; and the treachery the false, cruel, shameful treachery of the man she had Joved and trusted. She told me all, in a simple, truthful, earnest way that went to my heart; and then she told me ns for telling it. I was her only friend, she said. I had always been good and kind to her my poor, little, forlorn lamb ! and she trusted and believed in me. She did not i>jve me ; she never could io- r e any one again ; but 428 "NE VERM ORE /' she honored and esteemed me, and if I could be content with that, she would be my wife faithful and true until death on one condition." Paul Wyndham paused. He had been gazing dreamily into the lire whilst talking, but now he looked hesitatingly at Val Blake. " I hardly know how to go on," he said, " without in- volving others, whom I have no right to name, but I must, I suppose ; there is no alternative after the discov- ery you have made to-night. Another had become pos- sessed of the fortune that should have been hers ; a fortune that was hers by every law of right and justice. Another, who had no claim upon it, except, perhaps, that of mere chance and the new heiress had been a fellow-lodger of hers in Minetta street. She was young and handsome, and had been a lady. I knew her by sight, for she had accompanied my darling often to the theater. She would go to Speckport ; she would possess the thousands that should have been my Nathalie's the 'fatal thousands for which her heart had been brokea, her young life ruined. She would be honored and flattered and happv ; she would marry, perhaps, the very man who had so wronged her- self, lie was a notorious fortune-hunter ; she was sure he would be a,t her feet in a month, and was almost equal- ly sure he would be accepted. She could not endure the thought not that she loved him now that had all gone long ago ; but she wanted to baffle him, to make him suf- fer as he had made her suffer, and to possess after all a portion of the wealth which should ha,ve been all hers. She would be my wife, she said, if I would bring this about. She knew a secret in the life of this new heiress that placed her completely in her power, and she coniided that secret to me. She would be my wife as soon as I pleased, if I would only help her in this scheme if, after our marriage, I would go to Speckport, compel the heiress into a formal union with myself that should mean nothing but a business compact on either side, and so baffle Cap- tain Cavendish, and win for my lawful wife after all the fortune that was hers by right. You stare, Blake; it sounds very extraordinary and improbable, but it is the ' ' NE VERMORE /' 429 simple truth, nevertheless, and I saw no reason to see \vhy it could not be carried out The secret I held placed the heiress utterly in my power and would force her to comply with my every wish. Mind, Blake, it was not tlu: s<>rt o'f secret that causes divorce cases; it was a crime commi no doubt; a crime of falsehood ai.d ambition, n. shame, else that woman at lledmon would never for one poor instant, under any temptation whatever, have borne my name. "I read the strange letter over a half a dozen times, and Val, old boy, I consented. You don't need to tell me how miserably weak and despicable it was. I know it all, and knew it then just as well. But I want you to think of me at my best. If the heiress had been a g woman, I would have lain down and died sooner than disturb her; but I knew she was not. I knew she v. bad, boid, crafty, ambitious creature, without a heart ; with only a cold, calculating brain, capable of committing a great crime for her own ends; and I had no pity for her. 1 consented, for 1 loved my poor, pale girl with a passionate devotion you never can realize, and felt all her wrongs burning iu my own breast, and longed to take them upon myself and go forth and avenge her. I did riot know then, as I do now, that it was a diseased brain that prompted that letter. I did not know tiiat rea>on had loft her throne, with that constant brooding on one theme, and that my love was mad when she asked me to commit a crime. 1 did not know. I wrote her a long answer, promising anything, everything, if she would be my wife. J\ly poor girl ! Mv poor, poor Nathalie I" 1 Mr. Blake sat staring stoically at the coals, making comment whatever on" anything he heard, even when Paul Wyndliam made that pause, with a face full of tender pity and love. ;> We were married, Val," lie said, looking up again, "and the month that followed was the happiest 1 knew. Our marriage was very recent, and I took my darling on a Southern tour, hoping that would make her forget the past and be happy. But it did n iiing could ever make her happy, she said, but seeing retribu- 430 " NEVERMORE J tion fall on the unjust, and returning to her native town. Not openly, that was out of the question but in secret, wherj she could know for herself that her wrongs had lyjon avenged. So I left her in New York, and c:\i\\. i . and, Blake, you know the rest. I did frustrate that !u;l man, of whom I do not wish to speak since he is load. I did marry the heiress, or we went through the ceremony that our friends took to be such. We under- stood each other perfectly from the first. I found her pre- cisely what I had thought her a bold, ambitious woman, reveling in wealth that was the birthright of another ; ready to marry a man for whom she did not eare a jot. because she hoped he' would some day place a coronet on her head. I had little pity for such a woman, and lie- sides, I was bound by a solemn promise to my dear one, who never would see me again if I failed. I married the heiress of Rsdinon, and had a legal right to share the wealth that should have been all my own true wife's. I purchased this cottage I brought Nathalie here I se- cured the services of her faithful old servant, and Speck- port thought it was my sick mother ! " Very slowly some dim shadow of the truth came into my mind very slowly -for I turned cold with horror only at the thought. Her mind was going I saw it now and the horror arid anguish and despair of that dis- covery is known only to Heaven and myself. 1 had been so happy in spite of all happy in this cottage with my darling wife and now my punishment was coining, and w;is heavier than I could bear. My own act brought on the crisis. I was always urging her to let me take her out I knew it would do her good; but she had such a dread of discovery that I never could persuade her. Yua remember the Sunday you saw us at the cathedral. She h.id often said she would like to go there, and that day I persuaded her to go, to hear the popu)->r preacher. Tho sormon was a fearful one you recollect it and it com- ! the work remorse and suffering had begun. My wife was a hopeless lunatic from that day. O my love 1 my love ! surely your punishment was greater than your sin !" "NEVERMORE!" 43 J Val did not speak. The white anguish on Paul Wyndham's face was beyond all wordy consolation. "It was after that she took to wandering out. She was haunted by one idea now the sin she had conni: ist Olive ; anl tormented by a ceaseless desire tolind her out, and kneel at her feet for forgiveness. She wan- dered to the Iledmon road on the night you saw her first, \vith some such idea, and lied in terror at Laura's scream. Midge had followed and found her, and Jed her home. From that time, Midge had to watch her ceaselessly to keep her in ; but sometimes, in spite of all, sue wlong im- prisonment is the penalty. You are a Irgamist, sir. The i:v\vs of this matter-of-fact land recognize no romantic glossing over of facts. You have married two wi That humbug about one marriage meaning nothing, being only a business arrangement, is cnly bosh. You are a bigamist, Mr. Wyndham, and you cannot expect me to hoodwink your crime from the eyes 01 tho land." 432 NE VERM ORE / "No," said Mr. Wyndham, bitterly, "I expect nothing. You will turn Rhadamanthus, and have justice, though the heavens fall, I dare say. You will publish my misdoings on the house-tops, and at the street-corners. It will be a rare treat for Speckport, and Mr. Val Blake will awake all at once, and find himself famous !" Mr. Blake listened with the same face of stone. " I will do what is right and above-board, Mr. "Wynd- ham. I will have no act or part in any plot as long as I live. The only one I ever had a hand in was that affair of Cherrie's, and I was sorry enough for that afterward. If Nathalie Marsh were my sister, I could scarcely care more for her than I do ; but I tell you I would sooner know she was dead and buried out there, than living, and as she is. I am sorry for you, Mr. "Wyndham, for I had some faith in you ; but it is out of all reason to ask me to conceal such a crime as this." " I ask for nothing," Paul Wyndham said, more in SOITOW than in anger. "I am entirely at your mercy. Heaven knows it does not matter much what becomes of me, but it is hard to think of her name iny poor dear ! dragged through the slime of the streets." Perhaps Val Blake was sorry for him in his secret heart for it was a kindly heart, too, was Val's but his face did not show it. He lifted his hat, and turned to go. " I shall be as merciful as is compatible with justice," he said ; " before I make this matter known to the proper authorities, you shall be warned. But there arc others who must be told to-morrow. She must have medical advice at once, for she is evidently dying by inches ; her mother must know, and " His hand was on the lock of the door as he stopped, and faced round " and the woman you have wronged. As to your secret power over her, you need not make such a mystery of it. I know Avhat it is !" " You !" Pan! "Wyndham said, turning his powerful gray eyes upon him. " You, Blake ! Impossible !" Mr. Blake nodded intelligently. " She is not the true heiress ! Ah ! I see I am right 1 "NEVERMORE!" 433 I have had reason to think so for some time past ; but I never was sure until to-night. Oh, yes ! I know the secret, and I know more. I think I can put my hand on one who is the heiress, before to-morrow's sun goes down." There flashed through Paul Wyndham's mind what Olive had said, in that first stormy interview they had held, about the true heiress, who had made over to her the true estate. "What if it had been true ? " Who is it ?" he asked. " You cannot ! She is dead !" " Not a bit of it. She is worth half a dozen dead people yet ! I shall see her to-morrow, and find out if I am not right." " See her to-morrow ! Then she is in Speckport ?" " To be sure she is! I will visit the other one, too Harriet, you know. She must be told at once." " You know her name ! Blake, who has told you all this?" " Not now !" said Yal, opening the door ; " some other time I will tell you. You are at liberty to make what use of your time you please. You have between this and to- morrow." " I shall not make use of it to fly," said Mr. U yndham, coolly; " whatever conies, I shall stay hero :-nd meet it. I have only one request to make be as tender with that poor girl at Redmou as you can. I do not think B happy, and I believe she is a far hotter woman than I took her to be. lam so IT v for the wrong I have .lone her, but it is too late in the day for ail that now. not ask you to spare me, but do spare her T " I shall not add to the truth be sure of it. (rood night!" "Good night!" Paul Wyndham said, locking and closino- the door after him, and returning to the r>m they had left. So it was all over, and tin ry lie had dreaded and foreseen all along, had com all over, and the scheme of his life was at an c He had been happy here oh, very, very happy! the wife he loved, and who had trusted and clung to him, 18 434 DRIFTING OUT. as a timid child does to a father. How often he had sat in this very room, reading to her dreamy, misty Shelley, or Byron, or Owen Meredith, and she had sat on a low stool at his feet, her blue eyes looking up in his face, her hazy gold hair rippling loose about her, like a cloud of sunlight, or with that golden head pillowed on his knee, while she dropped asleep in the blue summer twilight, listening. Yes, he had been unspeakably happy there, while Gome one had sat uuthonght of at Red men, eating out her own heart in her grand miserable solitude. He had been very happy here ; but it was all over now, and his life seemed closing black around him, like a sort of iron shroud. It would all pass, and he would exist for years, perhaps, yet, and eat, and drink, and sleep, and go on with the' dull routine of existence, but 3iis life was at an end. He had sinned, and the retribution that always follows sin in this world, or the next, had overtaken him. He had been happy here, but it was gone forever never- more to be nevermore nevermore ! CHAPTER XXXVI. DRIFTING OUT. Mrs. Major Wheatly's pretty drawing-room in their new house in Golden Row sat Miss Yv r inuie Ro?e, the governess. Sho is d : in slight mourning, very simple, as becomes a governess, but iitting the small, light iiguro with exquisite neatness, and she is counting time for Miss Wheatly, who sits strumming out her music-lesson at the piano. Mrs. 1 vYh <.>n a sofa at the window, dawd- ling over a novel and looking listlessly at the passers-by, and wishing some one would call. She started up, think- ing her mental prayer wad granted, as a servant entered DRIFTING OUT. 435 with a curd. But it was not for her. It was handed to the governess. " Mr. Blake !" said Miss Rose, hesitatingly. " This cannot bo for me, Margaret." " O yes'm, it is ! He requested particularly to see Mis.-; Rose." " Is it Mr. Blake ?" inquired Mrs. Wheatly. " What can he want with you, I wonder?" Miss Rose smiled as she got up. " I am sure I 4pn't know. I may go down, I sup pose ?" " Oh, certainly, my dear !" said Mrs. Wheatly, yawn- ing. ''And ask him if he has heard from his si lately. Stop your strumming, Louisa, it makes my lu'ad ache'." Mr. Blake was sitting in what was called the morning- room, and shook hands with Miss Rose when she came in. But how strangely grave he was ! What could he wa::t with her? Her heart fluttered a little as she looked at him. "My dear young Lady!" he began, with an ominously grave face, "it is very serious business that brings mo here this morning. Are you quite sure uo one can hear u .- '.'' Awful beginning ! The little governess turned pule as she listened. - Xo one," she faltered. "What is it you mean, Mr, Blake?' 3 " My dear," said Mr. Blake, as if he were speaking to n. young lady of ten years, "don't look so frightened. I want to a.;k"you a question, and you must pardon in sounds impertinent. Is your name, your family-! really Rose *" The governess uttered alow cry, and covered her face with both hands. " I am answered," said Val. " Your name is Hen son Olive Henderson; and you should be 1; Rvdmon, lasteadof of the person whose name is Harriet, and who reigns there now. Oh, my dear young l:idyjiu\v is this ? Is there no one in the world to be trusted 'i 436 DRIFTING OUT. She rose from her seat suddenly, and sank on her knees at his feet with a gushing sob. " I have done wrong," she cried, " for all deceit is wrong ; and though Kose is my name, it is not my father's. But oli, Mr. Blake ! if you only knew all, I don't think you would blame me so much. It was not I who changed it. It has been the name by which I have gone for \ and I could not resume my rightful one without suspi- cion and explanation that involved the honor of the dead ; and so I was silent. No one was wronged by it no one in the wide world ; and I did not think it so very wrong." She sobbed out as she spoke, in a sudden outbreak of distress. Val stooped kindly and raised her up. ' My dear child, I only doubted you for a moment. You are too good to willfully deceive any one to their harm. But you must calm yourself and listen to me ; for right must be done to all. Who is that woman at Red- mon ? Is she your stepsister ?" The governess's only reply was to clasp her hands piteously. "Oh, Mr. Blake, what have you done? How have you fonnd this out? Oh, I am so sorry, so very sorry ; for you don't know the misery you will make !" " Misery ! Do you mean to yourself r 3 " No, no ! but to her. Poor Harriet ! Oh, Mr. Blake, who can have told you this ?' 3 " Sit down and calm, yourself, my dear Miss Kose, and you shall hear all. Do you recollect one day, very shortly after your return here, visiting Miss Henderson at her cottage down the street here ? 33 " Yes, yes." *' You and she had along conversation in her chamber that day, part of which was overheard. Miss Catty Clow- rie was in the house ^,t the time, and she overheard how, I don't pretend to say ; but she heard enough to ex- cite her suspicions that all was not as it should be. She heard you addressed as 'Oily', and heard you call Henderson ' Harriet.' She saw her down on her knees before you, pleading desparately for something, Miss DRIFTING OUT. 437 Clowrie could not quite make out what ; and she heard you promise to comply with her request, on condition oi her paying over to Mrs. Marsh a certain annuity Vll this looked very odd, you know; and Miss Clowrie, who is^good deal of an attorney, they tell me, scented a criminal case. She consulted with her father on the suh- ject, and was* overheard by her brother Jacob, who is in my office. Juke communicated the story next morniii" in confidence to Bill Blair, and Bill related it in conlH di-nee to me. I cross-questioned Jake, and got out of him all he knew, and then pooh-poohed the story, and told them Catty must have liecn dreaming. But the an- nuity was paid, and I suspected the whole thing at . It was none of my business, however, so I held my toni and as Mr. and Miss Clowrie hadn't facts enough to go upon, they held theirs, too, and waited for somethi: turn up. There is the story to you, Miss Eose ; and now why on earth, if you are the true Olive Henderson, have you slaved here as a governess, while you let another, who had no right, usurp your place and wealth ?" She governess lifted her head with some spirit. "It is no slavery, Mr. Blake! They are very kind to me here, Mr. Blake, and I have every reason "to bo happy ; and Harriet has a right, a strong right, which I never mean to dispute, to possess whatever be: me. She is no usurper, for I have made over to her fully and sincerely the legacy bequeathed to Philip llendi- "I understand. You are very generous and i- ficing, Miss Kose but still she has no right there, and-- But .Miss R -se interrupted, clasping her hands in passion- ate appeal. '' Oh, Mr. Blake, what are you going to do ? Oh, I entreat of you, if you have any regard for me or p<>,>r Harrier, not to reveal what you know. Indeed, ind<- want it ! What should I do with half that m.: I have everything I want, and am as happy as tin- n c;:uno into them at her mother's passionate words and kisses. Miss Rose, throwing oil her hct and mantle, knelt beside 444 DRIFTING OUT. her and dipped the cloths in vinegar and water, and hud them on the burning brow of the poor stricken girl. "Y al looked ii quiringly at Mr. Wyndham. " Shu must have taken cold last evening in the church," he answered, in a low tone ; " she became delirious in the Anight, and has continued so ever since." " I'll be off for the doctor at once," said Val, briskly ; "she's in a bad way, I know. I'll fetch Div Leach, he was their family physician, and won't tell." Energetic Mr. Blake stalked out of the room without more ado. Paul Wyndham followed him to the door. " They know ?" he inquired, motioning toward the room they had quitted. "All. about it," said Yal, "and so does that unhappy young woman at E-edmon, and if she doesn't commit suicide before night it will be a mercy. And oh, Wynd- ham, by the way, you had better not show yourself. It isn't a very creditable affair, you know, to any of the parties concerned, and the best atonement you can make is to keep out of sight." He strode off, without waiting for a reply, in search of Dr. Leach, and had the good fortune to find that gentle- man taking his dinner. Mr. Blake Irsrried him through that meal with little regard to calm digestion, and on the road had to relate, for the fourth time, the story, of which he was by this time heartily sick. Dr. Leach listened like a man who cannot believe his own ears. " Bless my soul !" he exclaimed, " is it a story out of the Arabian Nights you are telling me ? Nathalie Marsh alive, and Mr. Wyndham' s wife! The mother all a hoax, and the young woman at Redmon a what is she, Blake?" " Blamed if I know 1" replied Mr. Blake ; "but, what- ever she is, Nathalie was the first wife. It's a very un- common story, but it is true as preaching for all that, only I am getting tired of telling it so often." " Well, well, well ! Wonders will never cease ! Natty returned to lift, Cherry back in Speekport, and Charley DRIFTING OUT. 445 coming! Why, Val, we will have the old merry time all over again before long *' " I am afraid not ! I am afraid poor Nathalie is be- yond even your skill, doctor. She was almost at death's door before, and this fever will finish her." Mr. Wyndham was not in the room when the doctor and Val returned. Mrs. Marsh and Miss Jiuse wer, keeping cooling applications to the hot forehead, but noth- ing could cool the fever that consumed her. Val drew Miss Eose aside as the doctor bent over his patient "Where is Wyndham?" he asked. "I don't know. He has not been here since you left." " What do you think of her ?" nodding toward the fever-stricken girl - n the lounge. The governess, \vhose experience among the sick poor made her no unskillful leech, looked out of the window through a mist of tears. " We have found her to lose her again, I fear. Look at Dr. Leach's face ! Can you not read his v. there ?" Tho old physician certainly was looking seriously grave, and shook his head ;it .Mrs. Marsh's eager < tioning. " We must hope for the best, ma'am, and do what we can. The result is in the hands of Providence." " Then you think there is danger, doctor?" said Val, coming forward. " Imminent danger, sir ! It is typhoid fever, and a very serious case, too. A strong constitution would stand a chance, but she has no constitution at all. Gone, sirl gone ! she is as feeble as an infant.'' " Then there is no hope at all '"' "None!" replied Dr. Leach, solemnly; "she will never leave this room aliva And better so, better so than as she was." "Yes," said Val, sadly; "it is better as it is I My dear Mrs. Marsh, don't distress yourself so. Think that her mind is entirely gone, and never could be restored, I 446 DRIFTING OUT. believe, and you will be thankful that her earthly troubles are so nearly ended." Dr. Leach was giving directions in a low tone to Miss Rose, and Yal, at his desire, lifted the slight form of the sufferer in his strong arras, carried her into the inner room, and laid her on the" bed. u I will call in again before night," said the doctor. ' Remember my directions, Miss Rose. Come, Blake ; you're going, I suppose '(" " Yes ; in a moment. I want to see Wyndliam." Paul Wyndliam was walking up and down the hall as they came out, his pale face expressive of but one thing intensest anxiety. Dr. Leach, with a stiff bow, passed on and went out, but Val halted. "Well?" Mr. Wyndliam asked, eagerly. " No hope," said Val ; " no earthly power can save her. It's typhoid the most malignant kind. She will die, thank God !" Paul Wyndliam leaned against the wall and covered his face, with a bitter groan. "As to you," pursued Val, sternly, " you must leave this house at once, and enter it no more. Do not forget that we are acting criminally in screening you from the law, and that we can eni'orc-e pur commands. Go at once, and do not come here again until all is over !" He left the house as he spoke, and joined the doctor, who had gained the highroad. Some people passing stared to see them coining from Rosebush Cottage, and sur- mised Mr. Wyndhaui's mad mother must be worse than ever." " How long can she last, doctor ?" Yal asked, before they parted. " iS ot over two weeks, I fancy, at the most. This fever will carry her off at once." Late in the evening Dr. Leach returned, and found Kathniie worse. Mr. Wyndliam had left the co> after taking one last look at the wife he loved so p;: ately. The agony in his face had gone to Airs. M heart, and she cried now, as she spoke of it to the doctor. DRIFTING OUT. 441 'Yes, I dare say," the old man returned, shortly "he s very sorry, no doubt, but he's a villain for all that and, only for poor NattyB sake, I'd have him arrested for bigamy this minute !" Miss Rose did not go home that night; she wonld never leave Nathalie now. She sent a note to Wheafly by the doctor, explaining that it wa- typhoid, and that she feared to bring the infectioi. the family. All further explanation she left to the tor, only desiring that her clothes might be sent t. Mrs. Marsh dispatched a similar message to BHM Ami, and before night everybody knew that Mr. Wyndham'i mother was very bad, that Dr. Leach and Val ll'lake had been there, and that Mrs. Marsh and Miss lio>u were staying to take care of her. And what did Speckport say to all this? Oh, Speck- port had a great deal to say, and surmise, and impure. How was it, Speckport wanted to kno\v, in the lir.M j that Mrs. Marsh and Miss Eose should be es|" lectcd as the sick woman's nurses? To which Dr. I replied that Miss Hose, being such a capital hand at the business, and so fond of it into the bargain, he thought that there was no one in the town so fitted for the I and Mrs. Marsh, having nothing else to do, could play propriety and read 7iovels there as well as in Street. "What was Air. AVyndham's mother like, was she a violent lunatic, and was her present dise:;s<' in Speckport further inquired. To which Dr. Lea-h said, Mrs. Wyndham was the wreck of a very ham; woman, that she was not violent, only imbecile, and that her fever was highly infectious, and mace it extremely dangerous for anyone but the physician audnmv enter the house; on which account Mr. AVymlham v. absent himself from Iledmon, and Mrs. Olive iVoin I bush Cottage, until all was over. After which om: phrase the doctor would hurry away, and Sperkpori satisfied. Mr. Blake, to be consistent, took up his quarters . where, and visited the cottage every day to impure. Paul Wyndham, who was stopping at the Farmer's Hotel, very 448 . DRIFTING OUT. near the cottage, came two or three times a day to ask, but no one invited him to enter, and a sense of honor for- bade his intruding. The answer to all inquiries was con- tinually the same, "No better." No, [Nathalie was no better never would be better in this world \ She lay tossing on her feverish bed, raving wildly, consumed with burning heat, never resting night or day. All the scenes of her life were acted over again in that burning chasm. Now she babbled of her schoolgirl-days, her mathematics and her music, or berrying and nutting frolics with Char- ley. Now she was with Captain Cavendish, loving and trusting and happy ; and now she was shrieking out again that she saw the murdered woman, and covering her eyes to shut out the ghastly sight. Now the days of her misery had come ; now she was at sea with Captain Locks- ley, and in the New York lodging-house ; now on the stage, making rambling, incoherent speeches, and singing songs. Now she was with Paul Wyndham, his wife ; now she was in the cathedral listening to the stern preacher. And here she would shriek out, and toss her arms wildly, and ask them to take her to Redmon, that she must tell her all she must! she must! And Miss Rose and her mother would have to hold her down by force to prevent her from rising from the bed in her ex- citement, and soothe her with promises that she should go there only to wait a little while. And the poor sufferer would fall back exhausted, and perhaps go back to the old days when she played with Charley, a child. DIES IR^ DIES ILLA. 449 CHAPTER XXXYII. DIES IR^E, DIES ILLA. HE November day broke bleak and gloomy. The dismal dawn was laden with thick, sodden fog, and wretched, drizzling rain. The wind, full of the wail of coming winter, was cold and raw ; and the sky, seen dimly through the fog-bank, was of sullen lead, the earth black and dreary; and the sea and the fog so mixed that you could hardly tell where one began and the other ended. In the Farmers' Hotel, a rambling wooden building, standing by itself on a quiet country road, all was .-till as the cjrave at this early hour of the miserable Kovemlx.^ morning. Even in the kitchen and halls there was ;. no step, and the servants slept the sleep of the just in their own dormitories. Perhaps of all in the house the man who stood at his chamber window, blurred and smeared with clammy wet, and stared hopelessly out through the full blank of fog and mist, was the only one astir in the house. In the murky dawn of this bad November morning, Paul Wyndham, with hollow creases under his eyes, and deep plowshares of silent suffering about his mouth and forehead, stood looking out of the stained window, at the flat waste of desolation without. It was hardly two poor weeks, but it seemed a lifetime; and a horrible numbness was coming over him and blunting a 1 Is, , pain. Would it always go on like this-this dull. blank in life would it lost forever ? All things were 1 ,e to look unreal, and lose their signincam- o-nn , seemed palpable or as it used to be He was <-on that the crisis had come ; that in the long black slnggi watches of that wet November night a battle had bee fought between life and death, in the cottage w lighted window he could see from his own ; but only c 450 DIES IR^E, DIES ILLA. scions in a dull, numb sort of way, to which the sharpness of the torture had given force. The pale, cold dawn crept shining in while he stood there blankly staring out at the hopeless dreariness, and he roused himself from his torpor by a great effort at last. A loud-voiced clock somewhere in the silent house struck six as he put on his overcoat and hat and went down stairs. Paul Wyndham waded on through the sea of mud, in the cold morning rain, not meeting a soul, until he stood before Rosebush Cottage. The red light in the window burned still ; but had that other light, that light of a beloved life, gone out in the night ? It had been the crisis of the fever that low, miserable, burning, delirious fever, in which for so many weary days and endless nights, the poor, unconscious sufferer had tcssed. Ah! that dreary time of probation when the faithful watchers had seen her sink day by day ; when they had to force her clenched teeth apart to admit teaspooufuls of beef-tea ; when they had listened with aching hearts to her meaning- less babble, or the songs the weak voice sang. But that sad time of waiting had dragged itself out, and the night came which must end all suspense. Does hope ever en- tirely leave the human heart, until the blank face actually grows rigid and the death-rattle sounds ? Those sad and silent watcher? in that darkened room hoped against hope through the slow lingering hours of that night. They were all there Dr. Leach, Val, Mi's. Marsh, Miss Rose, and Midge, all mutely watching the pale shadow of ^Nathalie lying so still and whito on tho bed. You might have thought her dead had you entered, and looked at her lying with closed eyes, and no perceptible respiration. But she was only sleeping, and a faint breath still came from the colorless lips sleeping a sleep from which the doctor, at least, knew she could only awake to die. Ho had a strong hope she might awake free from fever, and that reason might return before the last hour. lie sat by the bedside, holding her wrist in his fingers, never taking his eyes off her face. Mrs. Marsh had fallen asleep quietly in her chair, and Mr. Blake was dozing ; so when, as the pale DIES IRJE, DIES ILL A. 451 morning broke, and the blue eyes opened to life once more, there was only the doctor and Miss liose to bend over her. " Nathalie, darling !'' the governess said, with trem- bling lips, ''don't you kn<>\v i The bine eyes turned upon the sweet face with the 3lear light of restored reason, and a faint smile dawned on the wasted face. "Miss Hose," she said, in a voice so faint that it sounded scarcely above a whisper. ; - You here ?' " I am here," too. Natty," said the physician. " Don't you know the old doctor f Yes. she knew him she knew them all when thev came crowding around Her, and looked up at them witn faint wonder in her fever-dimmed blue i " I have been ill, haven't IT she said, feebly, glancing at her poor, transparent, wasted hands. "Have i been ill " Xot verv long, Xatty dear," her mother a: .g her, '-"only two weeks, and you will be better soon now. won't she, doctor?" But Dr. Leach did not reply. How could he deceive that dying girl \ She looked into his grave, sad face, and a solemn shadow fell c i her own, a shadow of the dark truth. " Oh, doctor!" she cried out, "am I dying i lie bent over Hr, and stroked away tenderly the lull dark hair off her forehead. " \[y poor child ! my dear child ! God knows 1 would save you if I could ; but the power of life and death in higher hands. Has this world been such a place to vou that you should wish to stay in i of that better world, my poor little jrirl, that h. the i'ravc. It would be cruel in me to deceive vou i, IShe drew the hand he held out of his sudden turned her face away from them. | into strong Bobbing, but the doctor sternly hushed her. Bi \ the dulled, dying ear caught the sound, and she tur *? hern a^ii:'- ' How iouii have I to live ?" she asked. 4U2 DIES IRj DIES ILLA. He could not tell an untruth with those earnest eyes fixed on his face, and his voice was husky as he replied : " Not long ! not long, my poor girl ! But long enough to prepare for the world to which you are going." " Will I die to-day ?" Her mother's sobs broke out again; but Nathalie looked only at the doctor. " Yes, dear child, you will last to-day, I think ; but try and be calm, and not disturb yourself at the shortness of the time." Her hands dropped in a kind of collapse of despair. " So soon, so soon !" she said, " and so much to do - so much to atone for !" " Shall we send for a clergyman ?" the doctor asked. " Shall I fetch you Father Lennard ?" inquired Val, stooping over her. Her face brightened a little. The gray old priest had baptized her, an infant, had confirmed her a young girl, iind she had loved and reverenced him more than any one else on earth. " Yes, yes," she said, eagerly. " Bring Father Len- nard. Oh, how short the time is, and so much to be done." Mr. Blake found Father Lennard at home, and had to go over again the weary story of wrong-doings and false- hood. He was a very old man ; his hair had grown gray in his holy calling, and he was long used to tales of sorrow and sin sorrow and sin, that go so surely hand in hand. He had learned to listen to such recitals as a pitiful doc- tor, who knows all the ailments poor human nature is subject to, does to. stories of bodily suffering tenderly, sadly, but with no surprise. He had known Nathalie Marsh from babyhood ; he had had a father's affection for the pretty, gentle, blue-eyed little girl, who had knelt at his confessional so often, lisping out her childish faults ; he had moaned for her tragic fate ; and he had nothing but pity, and prayer, and sorrow for her now. Mrs. Marsh and Miss Roso were in the room with the dying girl when they returned ; Mrs. Marsh sitting at tho foot of the bed, weeping incessantly, and the pale gover- DIES J/?^, DIES ILLA. 453 ness kneeling beside the pillows, holding the cold thin hands in hers, and reading prayers for the sick out missal. Both arose when the" Father cute-rod, and the dying face lit up with a sudden light of recommit ion and hope. " My poor child ! my poor baby !" the old man s tenderly, bending over her. " Is it thus I find my little Natty asrain \ Thank God that reason has returned to you in your last hours." The mother and friend of the dying girl quitted the room, leaving the old priest alone to prepare the departing soul for its last great journey. Miss Rose knelt in silent, fervent prayer all the time ; but Mrs. Marah poor weak sou l Icould do nothing but sit and cry. Val had i> Mr. Wyndham in the kitchen, leaning against the wooden chimney-piece, with a white, despairing face ; and. j>r him in spite of his misdoing, turned comforter as bes could He walked up and down the hall restlessly between whiles, feeling in the solemn hush of the house as i: were in the tomb. His watch, which he was perpetually ierkino- out, pointed to ten ; and he was thinking i would hare to run down to the office presently, when, openin^ the parlor-door to announce that intention, Ii saw Father Lennard come out of the sick-room. "Well, Father >" Val said, anxiously. All is well, thank God 1 She is quite resigned now and if sincere contrition ever atoned for si. u hers will surely be pardoned. Are you in a hurry Vail "I should be very much hurried indeed, Hither, could not do anything you or she may desire ! 1U "Will vou go to Redmon,and fetch that unhappy yonn* lady her?. The poor chiU says ? he cam,, until she has heard her pardon her. I'll o-o "said Val, " but im not so si; ham till come. You 'see she is. one of i your JTUIJ, high-stepping people, and is m such 1 tha ^"mego with you, Mr. Blake," cried Miss Kose, starting up ; "I think she will- come with me. 454 DIES /ff.-X; DIES ILL A.. " All right, then ! Put jour bonnet on while I run round and make Peter get out the buggy." The buggy came round to tho front door, and Yal assisted the governess in and drove off. Father Leonard returned to the sick-room, and sat there holding the hand of the dying, whose sad, sunken blue eyes never left his face, and talking of that merciful Redeemer, who once said to another poor sinful creature, * Xoither do I condemn thee!" Nathalie lay, clasping a crucifix to her breast, her pale lips moving in cc:: inward prayer, while she listened, her face calm and beau- tiful in its holy hope. The hours that intervened seemed very short, and then the carriage wheels crunched over the gravel, and Nathalie caught her breath with a sort of gasp. " Oh, Father, do you think she has come ?" " I trust so, dear child ! I will go and see." As lie entered the drawing-room, the front door opened. Val stalked in, followed by Miss Rose and yes, by a figure stately and tall, dressed very plainly, and closely vailed. The priest knew that majestic figure, although the face, seen dimly through the vail, w. changed that he hardly knew it. ' You may go in," he said, in reply to Miss Rose's appealing look ; " she is waiting for you." As the door closed upon the tall vailed form, and the two woman, united to the same man, were face to face, Father Lennard took his hat to go. " I shall return again in the afternoon," he said ; " I would stay all day it I could, but it is impossible.'' " I will drive you into town," said Val ; " Peter can fetch the traps back. Oh, here's the doctor !" Dr. Leach opened the garden-gate as they came out, and lifted his hat to the clergyman. " How is she ?" he asked. " Failing f.i _;t," said Father Lennard. " 1 do not think she will wear the night through !" " You are coming back, I suppose ?" " I shall endeavor to do so. 1 promised her I would, poor child !" DIES IR^ DIES ILLA. 455 The doctor wont into the drawing-room, where Marsh, tlirough her tears, told him wiio The old doctor looked dissatisfied. "They'll astute ,,-jr too much 1 know they will with their crying and taking on. If they stay lou-r I will go and turn them out !" lie waited for a quarter of an hour, watch in hand frowning impatiently at the dial-plate, and then the chamber-door reopened and the hai tame < >ut. The swollen eyes of the governess told how she had weeping, but the other had dropped her vail once > and was invisible. Dr. Leach bowed to he. I on without seeming to see him. followed her to the door, and looked wistfully out at the wet, foggy November weather, and the hopeless slouch of mud. ' Ton cannot walk back, Harriet. I will send P to Redmon for the carriage. You will get ; :h of cold to walk there, unused as you are to walkii " What does it matter 2" she said, in -lv hol- low voice, " the sooner I get my death the better. I f I could only die like her, I should rejoice however soon it came !" "But, Harriet " But Harriet was gone, even while she spoke, walking rapidly through the drizzling rain and clammy mud- whohadhad a fastidious horror of mud on herdaisitv and knowing nothing of either. All that her nature had been roused into life by that d; ! , but still that utter sense of despair soul. Her life was done there wa3 no future for h in all the wide universe there was not such miserable woman as herself, she thought . un- loved, and alone. There were not many people abroad that 1 her day; but those who were, and who re<- Wyndham through her vail, and bow. felt themselves outraged at receiving the cut direct. never saw them she walked straight forward to that stately home that was hers no longer, as people walk in 456 DIES 77k#, DIES ILLA. sleep, with eyes wide open and staring straight before her, out seeing nothing. Dr. Leach went into the sick-room as the others left it ; but he returned presently, frowning again. " Where is the fellow to be found P he asked, im- patiently ; "she will excite herself in spite of all I on: She must see him, she says, if only for ten minutes." " Is it Mr. Wyndham ?" asked Miss Rose ; and the doctor nodded crossly. It was the first time that the dying girl had spoken of him ; and Miss Rose, who knew he was In the house, left the room without a word. " Oil, he is here, is he ?" said Dr. Leach. " I might have known it ! Hem ! Here he comes P Paul Wyndham followed the governess into the par- lor, looking so haggard that even the old doctor pitied him. " N"ow, Mr. Wyndham," he said, " my patient is not to be unnecessarily excited, remember ! I give you just ten minutes, not a second more P Mr. Wyndham bowed his head and passed into the chamber; and Dr. Leach, watch in hand, planted himself at the door, and grimly counted the minutes. When the ten had passed, he opened the door. " Time's up," he said ; " say good-bye, Mr. Wyndham, and come out !" They were all merciful enough not to look at him as he obeyed. Dr. Leach went in and found poor Nathalie lying with her eyes closed, clasping her crucifix, her lips still moving in voiceless prayer. Shu looked up at him with her poor, pleading c;> The old doctor departed, and the two women were left alone with the dying wife of Paul Wyndham. Rose sat by the bedside, reading, in her sweet, low voice, the consoling prayers for the sick, while poor, weak, use- loss Airs. Marsh only rocked backward and forward in the rocking-chair, moiming and crying in feeble h! ness. And Paul Wyndham, in the room on the other side of the hall, walking restlessly up and down, or ping to gazo out of the window, or running to Midge DIES IRJB, DIES ILLA. 457 every five irinutes to go and inquire how she was felt and suffered as men only can feel and suffer once in a lifetime. The leaden hours of the twilight deepened into night black, somber, starless. With the night came the wind and fell the rain. The storm had been gathering sul- lenly all day, and broke with the night fast and fu The rain lashed the windows, and the melancholy autumn winds shrieked and wailed alternately around the cottage, waking a surging roar in the black cedar woods beyond. The feeble hands still fold themselves over the precious crucifix that " sign of hope to man" but the power of speech has gone. She cannot move, either; her eyes and lips are all that seem alive, but her sense of hearing remains. She hears the sound of carriage-wheels outside, and hears when Father Lennard, Dr. Leach, and faithful Yal enter the drawing-room. The old priest, takes Miss Koso's place, to administer the last solemn rites to the dying, and Nathalie smiles faintly up in his face and kisses the cross he holds to her lips. Val Blake goes into the room where he knows Paul Wyndham must be, and finds him lying as Midge found him a quarter of an hour before. He stoops down and finds he is asleep Ah ! when had he slept night or day before ? and his face looks so haggard and heart-broken in r. that Val says " Poor fellow !" and goes softly out. And so, with death in their midst, the faithful watchers sit and keep vigil, while the stormy night wore on. Ah! Heaven strengthen us all for that dread death-watch, when we sit beside those we love, and watch and wait for the soul to take its light. J>o one spoke, except in In. shed whispers, and the roaring of the wild storm sounded awfully loud in the stillness. They can hear the voice of the old priest as ho read", or tal!. prays with that fluttering spirit, already in th<> shadow of the valley of death. As the watch of Val pom; eleven, Miss Rose glides softly out, with a f and tells them to kneel, while Father Lennard iv::.Ls the prayers for the dying. So they kneel and bow their heads with awe-struck spirits, while the solemn and 20 458 CROOKED WATS. beautiful prayeis of the old church are read, and thrill as they hear that awful adjuration: "Depart Christian soul, out of this world !" and then, as it is finishing, there is a pause. "What does it mean 2 The service for the dying is not ended. A moment later and they know Father Lennard goes on, but it is prajers for the dead he renders now, aud they know all is over ; and Yal Blake leans his head on his arm and feels it grow wet, while the sad and solemn voice of the old priest goes on. Then they all arise, Father Lennard reverentially closes the blue eyes, that have looked their last on this mortal life, and there is a wild outbreak of motherly love from poor Mre. Marsh ; and Miss Rose, with her face buried in the pillow, is crying as she has not cried for many a day ; and Val and the old doctor go softly in and look on the beautiful dead face, and think of the bright, happy Nathalie Marsh of last year for whom all the world might have prophesied a long and happy life and feel that neither youth, nor health, nor beauty, nor all the glory of the world, can save us one hour from death. CHAPTER XXXVIII. OUT OF THE CROOKED WAYS. JSD so all was over; and Speckport found out that the poor, miserable creature, Mr. "Wynd- ham's mother, was dead. It must have been a merciful release for her, poor soul ! said ; but the fever was infectious,, and they sympathized at a respectful distance. But Mr. Y. ham s wife left Redmon and wont to the cottage as soon as she heard it, and staid there through all the weary time that intervened between the death and the burial. There had been a consultation about the funeral and the CROOKr.D WAYS. 459 grave, and it was decided that that other grave, marked with the white cross, and bearing the name of Xalhal' should not bo disturbed. By-and-by, Val s.:id, the D can be erased; to .' I tind I <-m't stay away you somelu^w. "Jlow's everybody '." -Pa and ma are well, if you mean them body/ So poor Mr. Wyndham's mother has gone t 'Mr. Blake nodded. " And what is Mr. AVyndham going to do with that love of a cottage now, I wonder 2" 4CO CROOKED WAY ft. " 1," said Mr. Blake, imperiously, " am going to pur- chase that love of a cottage myself!" " You ! Why, Val ! What will you ever do with a house?" "Live in it, Miss Blair, like any other Christian!" " Oh, yes ; of course ; I suppose you will send for Miss Jo to keep house for you again ?" " Why, no," said Mr. Blake, thoughtfully. " I think not. Do you know, Laura, what I have been thinking of lately ?" " Ts T o ; how should I ?" " Well, then," said Yal, in a confidential tone, " I have been thinking of getting married ! You need not mention it just yet, until I see more about it. In fact, I have not asked the lady yet, and don't know what she may say." " And who is the happy lady, pray ?" " A particular friend of mine," nodded Val, sagely, " and of yours, too, Laura. The nicest girl in Speckport." " It is Miss Rose," thought Laura, with a sudden sink- ing of the heart. " He always admired her, and they have been so much together lately !" "I'll buy tin cottage from Wyndham as it stands," pursued Val, serenely unconscious of the turn Miss Blair's thoughts had taken, " and fetch my wife there, and live in clover all the rest of my life. So hold yourself in lead mess. Miss Laura, to dance at the wedding." Miss I.iura might have replied but for a sudden chok- ing sensation ill the throat, and the entrance of her portly mamma. Under cover of that lady's entrance, she made her exit, and going up to' her room, flung herself, face downward, on the bed, and cried until her eyes wcve as red as a ferret's. And all the time Mr. Blake was in a state of serene complacency at the artful way in which he had prepared her for what was to come. " I couldn't speak much plainer," he thought, blandly. u How pretty she looked, blushing and looking down. Of course I'll get married. I wonder I never thought of it before. Dear little Laura! I'll never forget the h'rst CROOKED WAYS. 461 time I heard her sing, 'We won't go home till morning!' I thought her the jollicst girl then I ever met." Mr. Blake was a gentleman in the habit of ?trik : while the iron was hot. He called round at ti; rapped Master Bill Blair over the head with the tongs f< r standing on his hands instead of his feet, and then started oil for the Farmer's Hotel, without more ado, and was ushered by a waiter into Mr. Wyndham's room. " Blake, I owe you more than I can ever repay, 1 ' ho said; ''you have been my true friend through all this miserable time; and believe me, I feel your go- much as a man can feel, even though I cannot expr Plo-e (loci, this trouble of my life shall make me a butter man, if I can never be a happy one." "Oh, you'll be happy," said Mr. Blake. "Get into the straight path again, Wyndham, and keep tin- don't set up for a "preacher, goodness knows! but you may depend there is nothing like it," 'The straight path!" Paul Wyndham repeated, with a wearv, regretful sigh ; " yes, I have been sadly out of the straight path of truth and honor and rectitude into the crooked ways of falsehood and treaehe: ceit Heaven help me, it never was with a . heart ! No one on this earth could ever despise me 1 so much as I despised myself all the time I' 1 -A) 1 ri"hl," cried Val, cheerily, "it's never too late to mend. Keep straight now, and we can all forgive I forget the past I suppose you will be for leaving i Sh Mmmedia'tely. This is Tuesday-I shall depart ia rin -'wm S youV' said Val, lighting a cigar ; " that soon t What are you going to do with Rosebush Gott - "The cottalrc! Oh, I shall leave it as ,t .s-tl.at ,*, shut it up. In time-a year or two, perhaps- turn and sell it, if any one will purchase. ^ " Don't wait a year or two. Dell it now. "Who wants it?" I do," said Val, with one of his nods. You ' What do you want of the place, may I 4G2 CROOKED WAYS. " "Well, now, I don't see any just cause or impediment to my possessing a house any more than the rest of man- kind, that everybody should be so surprised. I want the house to live in, of course what else ?" Paul Wyndham looked at him and smiled. The great trouble of his life had changed him to a grave, sad man ; but being only human, he could still smile. " I wish you joy with all my heart ! Laura has said yes, then 2" " Why, no, not exactly that is to say, I haven't asked her out-and-out yet. I wanted to settle about the house first. But I gave her a pretty broad hint, and I guess it's all right. I think I should like to live there particularly, and now what will you take for it as it stands ?" Mr. Wyndhain arose, opened a desk, and took out a bundle, of papers, which he laid before Val. " Here is the deed and all the documents connected with the place. You can see what it cost me yourself. Here is the upholsterer's bill, but you must deduct from that, for it is only second-hand furniture now. I leave the matter entirely to yourself." With such premises, bargaining was no very difficult matter ; and half an hour after, Val had the deed in his pocket, and was the happy owner of Rosebush Cottage. ' You stay here, I suppose, until Thursday,'' he said, rising to go. "Yes? " And how about that poor girl at Redrnon ? What is to become of her ?" Mr. Wyndham laid his hand on Yal's shoulder, and looked very gravely up in his face. "Val, before she died, in that last brief interview, she spoke of Harriet, and I gave her a promise then which I shall faithfully keep. The devotion of a whole life can scarcely atone to her for the wrong I have done her ; but if she will accept that atonement, Ileaveii knows it will make me happier now than anything else on earth. If she does not utterly loathe and hate me if she will be my wife in reality, as she has hitherto been in name \ve wil) CROOKED WAYS. 464 leavo this place together; and whether my life be long or short, it shall be entirely devoted to her atone." Yal's faco turned radiant. He seized Mr. Wyndham'a other hand, and shook it with crushing heartiness. ly dear "Wyndhum ! My dear old boy ! I always knew your heart was in the right place, in spite of all your shortcomings. Oh, you'll be all right no v! You've got the stuff in yon that men are made of !" "With which Mr. Blake strode off, fairly beaming with delight, and whistling all the way home. J! g up the outer steps at a bound, rang the bell with emp! and shouting past the astonished servant, bolted whirlwind- >n into the dining-room. At first he thought there was no one there, but, disturbed by the n< .nee, from a sofa before the tire, and from out a heavi pillows, Laura lifted up her head and looked at him. Poor Laura! That feminine luxury, a "real good cry," had brought on a raging headache, and now her face flushed, her eyes dim and heavy, and her head throb and hot. She dropped that poor but aching head ag as she saw who it was, with a rebellious choking in throat, and a sudden tilling of the e ' Oh, I say, Laura," cried Mr. Blake, in considerable consternation, "you're not sick, are you? What's the matter f My head aches," Laura got out, through her tears. "Poor little head!" Mr. Blake piteously remarl and Laura sobbed outright; "don't cry, Laura, it will ho better before you are twice married. Look, here's a plas- ter I've brought you for it !" He put the deed of llosebush Cottage in her feverish hand. Laura stayed her tears, and looked at it, blankly. u What is it 2* she asked. " Can't you see '( It's the deed of Rosebush Cott;.. I've bought it, furniture and all and the furniture is pretty, Laura from Paul Wyndham. I'll let you b *. <* * .-.. j i _ - ^t c*. " 4G4 CROOKED WATS. " Why, didn't I tell you this morning ? I'm going to be married that is, if YOU will have me, Laura !" Happy Laura ! Such a rosy tide swept over her fair face, and dyed it radiant red to the roots of her hair " Oh, Yal ! I thought it was Miss Rose." Yal stared. "Miss Eose! What the dickens put that in your head ? I never thought of Miss Rose I meant you all the time. Is it all right, Laura P All right ! He need hardly have asked that question seeing the radiant face before him. Laura laughed and cried, and blushed, a-.d forgot all about her headache, and for the next fifteen minutes was completely and perfectly happy. It was one of those little glimpses of Eden that we poor pilgrims of the desert sometimes catch fleetingly as we wander wearily through long dreary wastes of sand of sluggish marshes, or briery roads. Transient gleams of perfect joy, when we forget the past, and ask nothino- of the future when we hold the overflowing cup of bliss to our lips and drink to our heart's content. : Dinner on the table!" Somebody made this an- nouncement in a stentorian voice, and Yal insisted on Laura's taking his arm, and accompanying him to the dining-room. Papa and Mamma Blair and Master Bill were waiting there; and Mr. Blake, ever prompt and busi- ness-like, led the blushing and shrinking fair one to the parental side, and boldly demanded their blessing. To say that Mr. and Mrs. Blair were astonished, would be doing no sort of justice to the subject ; to say they were delighted, would be doing still less ; and Miss Laura was formally made over to Mr. Blake before grace was said. Dinner was only a matter of form that day with Miss Blair her appetite was effectually gone ; and even Yal mat- I ter-of-fact, unromnntic, unsentimental Yal ate considera- bly less underdone roast-beef than usual, and looked a good deal more across the table at the rosy, smilino- face of his vis-a-vis than at the contents of his plate. But din- ner was over at last, and an extra bottle of crusty old port drank to the happy event ; and then Papa Blair buttoned up his overcoat and set off to business again, and Master CROOKED WATS. 465 Bill started full gallop for the office, to retail the news to Mr. Clowrie ; and Mamma Blair went about her don concerns, and the lovers were alone together. But Mr. Blake was not at all " up ' in the role of Jlomeo.and beside Laura at the window, looking at the pale moon rising, and using his toothpick. " What a lovely night !'' Laura said ; for all the world, so lately a howling wilderness, was moonlight and couleur do rose to het now, with plain Yal Blake standing by her side. " How beautifully the moon is rising over the 1 " Yes," said Mr. Blake, eying it with the ;. and excitement, and uproar. Mks Blair, clinging confid- ingly to Mr. Blake's arm, watched the ] ra making way through the tumult to where the < wait- when all of a sudden she dropped the arm .-lie held, with a little shrill feminine scream, and darting forward, plumped head foremost into the arms of ing up the wharf, valise in hand. To say that Mr. Blake stared aghast would bo a mild way of putting it; but .--tare he undoubtedly did, with might and main. The gentle- man wore a long, loose overcoat, heavily furred, and his face was partially shaded by a big, black, California hat ; but Yal saw the handsome, sun-browned face beneath for all that, with its thick, dark mustathe and beard. O-uld it be? surely not, with all those whiskers and that brown skin; and yet and yet, it did look like : but by this time Laura had got out of the mustachcd straiiL sleeves, and was back, breathless with excitement, besidt the staring editor. 20* 466 CROOKED WAYS. " Oli, Yal ! it's Charley ! it's Charley Marsh ! Charley Marsh !" Charley, sure Quough, in spite of the whiskers and the sun-brown. Yal was beside him in two strides, shaking both hands as if he meant to wrench the arms from their sockets. " My dear boy ! my dear boy ! my dear boy !" was all Mr. Blake could get out, while he spoke, and shook poor Charley's hands ; and Laura performed a little jig of ecstasy around them, to the great delight of sundry small boys looking on. As for Charley himself, there were tears in his blue eyes, even while he laughed at Yal. '" Dear old Yal!" he said, "it is a sight for sair een to look at your honest face again ! Dear old boy ! there is no place like home !" " Come along," cried Yal, hooking his arm in Charley's. " The people are gaping as if we had two heads on us ! Here's a cab ; get in, Laura ; jump after her, Charley. Xow, then, driver, 8"o. 12 Golden Row !" " Hold on !" exclaimed Charley, laughing at his phleg- matic friend's sudden excitement, '' I cannot permit myself to be abducted in this manner. I must go to Cottage Street." " Come home with us first," said Yal, gravely. " I have something to tell you something you ought to know before you go to Cottage Street." " My mother !" Charley cried, in sudden alarm ; " she is ill something is wrong." " ]S r o, she's not ! Your mother is well, and nothing is wrong. Be patient for ten minutes, and you'll find out what 1 mean !" The cab stopped with a jerk in front of Mr. Blair's ; and, as they got out, a gentleman galloped past on horse- back, and turned round to look at them. Yal nodded, and the rider, touching his hat to Laura, rode on. ' Where is Mr. Wyndham going, I wonder ?" said Laura. " To Redmon, I think," Yal answered. " Come in, Charley ! Won't the old folks stare, though, when they Bee you I" CROOKED WATS. 407 Miss Rose her name is Rose, you know hud pone from Rosebush Cottage to Redmon, at the earnest en- treaties of her half-sister. She had wished to return to Mrs. Wheat ly's, and let things go on as before ; but Har- riet Wade the only name to which she had any right K had opposed it so vie lently, and pleaded so passionately, that she had to have her way. " Stay with me, Olive, stay with me while I am here!" had been the vehement cry. " I shall die if I am left alone !" "Very well, I will stay," her sister said, kissing her; " but, please. Harriet, don't call me Olive, call me Winnie. I like- it best, and it is the name by which they know me lere." So Winnie Rose Henderson went to Redmon her own rightful home, and hers alone and on the night of Charley .Marsh's return, when Paul Wyndham entered the house, her small, light ligtire crossing the hall was the first object he saw. She came forward with a little womanly cry at sight of him. " Oli, Mr. 'Wyndham, I am so glad you have come! I want you to talk to Harriet, She is going away." " Going away ! Wh> "Back to New York, she says anywhere out of this. Back to the old life of trouble and toil. Oh, Mr. Wynd- ham. talk to her. All I s:iy is useless. But you have in- fluence over her, I kn\v. u Have 1 r Mr. Wyndham said, with a sad. incredu- lous smile. "What is "it you want her to d. Miss Hen- derson '." "I want you to make her .-ray here. I want you to persuade her to let everything | : the gover :' " ^ regards myself and h Mr. 'Wyndham t-.ok her hand and looked down at her, with that giv . -!iil to make this poor reparation. Harriet, my poor, \vmngi-d girl, if you will take her place, if you will be to me what the world here has for so many months thought you what she really was if you will be my wife, my dear and cherished wife, I will try what a lifetime of de\ will do to atone for the sorrowful past. Perhaps, my poor dear, you will be able to care for me enough in time to forgive i ne almost to love me and Heaven knows j will do my best to be all to you a husband should be beloved wife !" He stopped, looking at her; but she did not stir, only the hand holding the screen trembled violently, and the fluttering breast rose and fell faster than ever. "Harriet," he said, gently, "am I so hateful ; that you will not even look at me? Can you never give 'me for what I have done 2" She dropped the screen and rose up, her face all wet with a rain of happy tears, and held out both han him all pride gone forever now. "I do not forgive you," she said. "I love you love never has anything to forgive. O Paul, I hare I you ever since you made me your wife I So Paul Wyndham found out at last what other, known "so long,' and took his poor forlorn wife to ns an, with a strange, remorseful sort ol tenderness, th love, was near' akin to it. So while the hrc bin n, d u , and cast weird shadows on the dusky, book-lined d th November wind wailed without, these two : and have ; 470 IN HOPE. united before, ?at side by side, and talked of a future tliat wns to be theirs, far from Speckport and those who had heard the sinful and sorrowful story of the past. By and by, a servant coming in to replenish the fire found them sitting peacefully together, as he had never seen his master and mistress sit before, and was sent to find Miss Rose and bring her to them. And I think Har- riet herself was hardly happier in her new bliss than her gentle stepsister in witnessing it. So, while Charley Marsh, up in Yal Blake's room, that cold November night, listened in strange amazement to all that had been going on of late to the romance- like story in which his unhappy sister had played so prom- inent a part the two sat in the luxurious library at Red- mon in this ne\v happiness that had come to them from Nathalie Marsh's grave ! CHAPTER XXXIX. IN HOPE. the pale November sunlight of the next morning, in the plain, dark traveling-carriage from Redmon, a little party of four persons drove rapidly along the country-roads to a quiet little out-of-the-way church, some fifteen miles out of rown. They were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wynd- liam, Mr. Blake, and Miss Rose Henderson ; and in the quiet church a quiet ceremony was performed by s, license, which made Paul AVyndhain and Harriet Wade man and wife, beyond the power of earthly tribunals to dispute. The clergyman was quite young, and the parties were all strangers to him, and lie had a private opinion of his own that it was a runaway match. There were no witnesses but the two, and when it was over tjiey drove back again to Redmon, andjlarriet's heart was at peace at IN HOPE. 471 last. She bad a trial to undergo that day a great humi- liation to endure but it was ;i voluntary humiliation; ;md with her husband hers now she could undergo any- thing. The old, tierce, unbending pride, too, that had been her sin and misfortune all her lii'e. had i. tened and subdued, and she owed to the society she liad deceived the penance seif-inllicted. Val Blake had all the talking to himself on the v. home, and, to do him justice, there wasn't much si during the drive. He was talking of Charley M who had come home a far liner fellow than he had ; away, a brave and good and rich man. They were all to meet that evening at a quiet dinner- party at lied mon a fare \vcll dinner party, it was under- stood, given by Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham, before iheir de- parture from Speckport to parts unknown. The in guests were Mrs. Marsh and her son. Dr. Leach, Mr. Blake, and Miss Blair, Father Leimard (the old }>; and Mr. Darcy (the lawyer;. A very seleet lev and all but Mr. Darcy acquainted with the story of 'lie woman who had died at liosebush ( story of the true and false heiress. II enlightened this evening, and Harriet Wyndham waspuli- licly to renounce and hand over to her half-si>tcr, \\ inni- ired Hose Henderson, the fortune to which she n 1 a claim. That was her humiliation ; but with her husband by her side, she was great enough for that or anvthing else. So the wedding dav pass-.-d very quietly at l; and in the pale early twilight th- . Among the first to arriye was Mrs. Marsh and her the next to appear was Val, with Laura tacked under his arm- and Laura, with a little feminine scream ol dropped into Mrs. WyndliamV arms, and rained upon lady a shower of gushing i " (jth what an a<*c it is since 1 have seen i Oily before'/ 1 Miss Blair cried, "and 1 have been fairy dying for this hour to arr ' Miv. Paul Wyndham kissed the rosy rapturous 1 co, 473 IN HOPS. with that subdued and chastened tenderness that had come to her through much sorrow ; and her dark eyes tilled with tears, as she thought, perhaps, loving little Laura might leave Redmon that night with all this pretty girl- ish Jove gone, and nothing but contempt in its place. Half an hour after, all the guests had arrived, and were seated around the dinner table ; but the party was not a very gay one, somehow. The knowledge of what had passed was in every mind ; but Mr. Darcy was yet in ignorance, and he set the dullness down to the recent death of Mr. Wyndham's mother. Once, too, there was a little awkwardness Wyndham, speaking to Miss Rose, had addressed her as Miss Henderson, and Mr. Darcy stared. " Henderson !" he exclaimed, " you are talking to Miss Rose, Wyndham ! Are you thinking of your courting days and Miss Olive Henderson?" But Mrs. Wyndham and her half-sister colored, and everybody looked suddenly down at their plates. Mr. Darcy stared the more ; but Paul Wyndham, looking very grave, came to the rescue. ' Miss Rose is Miss Rose Henderson ! Eat your dinner, Mr. Darcy ; we will tell you all about it after." So, when all returned to the drawing-roorn, Val Blake told Mr. Darcy how he had been outwitted by a girl. IX ot that Mr. Blake put it in any such barbarous way, but glossed over ugly facts with a politeness that was quite unusual in straightforward Val. But Mrs. Paul Wyndham herself rose up, very white, with lips that trembled, and was brave enough and strong enough to openly confess her sin and her sister's goodness. She looked up, with pitiful supplication, in the face of her husband, as she finished, with the imploring appeal of a little child for pardon; and he put his protecting arm around her, and smiled tenderly down in the mournful black eyes, once so defiantly bright to him. Mr. Darcy 's amazement was beyond everything. " Bless my soul !" was his cry, "and little Miss Rose is Miss Henderson, after all, and the heiress of Redmon." Miss Henderson, on whom all eyes were admiringlj IN HOPS. 473 bent. was painfully confused, and shrank so palpably, that the old lawyer spared her, and no one was sacrile-i, m .s enough t-> tell the little heroine what they thought of her noble conduct. And when .Mrs. Marsh burst unexp. ly out in a glowing eulogy on all her goodness, not 01 ;lf and Nathalie, but to all who were poor and friend- less in the town, the little heiress broke down and < So no more was said in her hearing, and the gentlemen gathered together, and talked the matter over apart the ladies, and settled how the news was to be taken to Speckport. It was late when the party broke np, and good-night and good-bye was said to Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham, who were ^ to leave to-morrow at eight. Val and l/mra promised to be at the boat to see them off; and they were down true to their word, before the Red m on carriage ar- rived. Charley was there, too, and so was Chen-:< crape to the eyes, looking very pretty in her wk weeds, and all in a flutter at the thought of seeing Ch again. But this bearded and mustached and g : - ing young man was not the hot-headed, though Charley her pretty face had nearly ruined for life ; and as he held out his hand to her, with a grave, almost s;id smile, Cherrie suddenly recollected all the evil she had oatod her, too, and that tlie ion would eventually go, in spito of Mrs. prsh family. But ir was only gossip, thk an.l no knew ior certain, an.l Mr. . I eon had always IK.VH the hj-.-r ..!' . . _ And jus; about this time, too. S rt found thing else io talk about no tees si matter, indeed, than the marriage of Valentino Blake, KS< IM I Amelia Blair. Such a snapper of a dav as tin- day was cold enough to freeze the leg otf an iroi but for all that, the ing cathedral was half iii!,.,! with curious Speckportoniaus, straining ih-.-ir necks to se bride and bridegroom, and their aiders and .- Blake .-rood it like a man. and looked ahno.^ in his neatly-fitting wildiii:r suii : ;uid (..'li'arl byliis^side looked like a young prince any prince that ever wore a cr<>\vn, poor Cherrie thought, LO made eyes at him from her pew. There was a wedding-breakfast to be eaten at Mr. Blair's, and a very jolly breakfast it was. And tl \ . iilake exchanged her hridal-irear for a tr and was handed into the carriage: that was I to the railway station, by her husband; and \\ maids wwre kissed all round hy the bride, and . Avas said, and the happy pair were fairly si.. bridal tour. It took Speckport a week to fairly di-v-t this mar and by the end of that time it <;ot another drir;al>!e mor- sel of gossip to swallow. Charley Marsh wa* ^n\\^ awav. He was a rich man, now; but for all that he w to bo a doctor, and was off to New York right finish his medical studies and get his dipl Ji was a miserably wet and windy day, that which preceded the young man's departure. that lowered the spirits of the them feel life was a cheat, and not what it is cracked up to be, and wonder how they could over laugh and enjoy 476 /JV HOPE. themselves at all. A dreary day to say good-bye ; but Charley, buttoned up in his overcoat, and making sunshine with his bright blue eyes and pleasant smile, wenr through with it bravely, and had bidden his dear five hundred adieu in the course of two brisk hours. There was only one friend remaining to whom he had yet to say ' ; that dear old word good-bye ;" and in the rainy twilight he drove up the long avenue of Redmon, black and ghastly now, and was admitted by Mrs. Hill herself. " Oh, Mr. Charley, is it you ?" the good woman said. " You're going away, they tell me. Dear me, we'll miss you so much !" " That's right, Mrs. Hill ! I like my friends to miss me ; but I don't mean to stay away forever. Is Miss Hen- derson at home ?" " She is in the library. Walk right in !" Charley was quite at home in Kedmon Villa. The library door stood ajar. Some one was playing, and he entered unheard. The rain lashed and blustered at the windows: and the wail of the wind, and sea, and woods made a dull, roaring sound of dreariness without ; but a coal-tire glowed red and cheery in the steel grate ; and curtained, and close, and warm, the library was a very cozy place that bad January day. The twilight shadows lurked in the cornel's ; but, despite their deepening gloom, the visitor saw a little, slender, girlish shape sitting before a small cottage-piano and softly touching the keys. Old, sad memories seemed to be at work in her heart ; for the chords she struck were mournful, and she broke softly into singing at last a song as sad as a funeral-hymn : " Rain ! rain ! rain ! On the cold autumnal night ! Like tears we weep o'er the banished hope That fled with the summer light. " O rain ! rain ! rain ! You mourn for the flowers dead ; But hearts there are, in their hopeless 'woe, That not even tears may shed ! AY HOPE. < 77 " O rain ! rain I rain ! You fall on the new-made grave Where the loved one sleeps that our bitter prayew Were powerless to save ! " O fall ! fall ! fall ! Thou dreary and cheerless rain ! But the voice that sung with your summer-chime Will never be heard again I'' The song died away like a sigh ; and she arose from tha instrument, looking like a little, pale spirit of the twi- light, in her flowing white cashmere dress. The firelight, flickering uncertainly, fell on a y.u- figure leaning against the mantel, and the girl recoiled with a faint cry. Charley started up. " I beg J mir pardon, Miss Henderson Winnie '' had all grown to call her Winnie of late)." " 1 am a I have startled you ; but you were singing when I in, and the song was too sweet to be broken, I am r late, but I wanted to sa}' good-bye licru last." "Then you really go to-morrow >" she said, not I- ing at him. "How much your mother will m'^- v.,u \" " Yes, poor mother ! but," smiling slightly. "I send her a box.fnll of all the new novels when I New York, and that will console her. 1 \\ else would miss me, Winnie." Is a woman ever taken by surprise, I wonder, in tli cases? Does she not always know beforehand when that all-important revelation is made that it is coming, pa; larly if she loves the narrator? I am pn-r though she may feign surprise ever so well. She i:r mail meekly under at t' eyo not that ihat lady is any of yore. Oh, no ! She thinks there is nobody like him in this little planet of ours; only sh* nda keeping their proper place. and act- up to this She is becoming more and more lit f:illy literary, In.. : right hand are daily steeped t.. Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham are in >.V\v V very busy. Char! house last winter, and Bays ho never - ;\v a ha; loving husband and wii'e. Mr. Wyndhai,! in the literary \vorld ; and ^[r>. Wyhdhain '. admired in society, as much, perhaps, i'or L and good: r her beauty. Th. y are :. peaee; and so v/o leave them. Cherrie ^eliieby (nobody thinks of e;d!i '' Cavendi-i be married next week. '!' man' int (rShaufflinessy, a big i four in his stockings, v.-irh rosy clieeks, ;;nd enrly hair. A \\\\c -h.ukin- geant O'tShan v.-irh ;i h- adores the ground (. 'herri^.: And Charley i.; married, a;id li:q>i>ier t:. 1i-Il. IN-, is rich and lion- good, awl is a great man in S|. And his \vife buT v<-n kiiov/ Iior ,nd v.-i!l bo th ,-a hci ; . Mrs. M . as much a- ever: and i- ' a Tie of Inxi queens it over thr There is a <]uii-t lilt -if in the country w i rles ?-.iar.-h and his wife visit very . they never leave without loving eaeh other 1 feeiino- more resolute, with God's help, tc walk down to 480 ry HOPE. the grave in the straight and narrow path that leads to salvation. They are only human. They have all erred, and sinned, and repented ; and in that saving repentance they have found the truth of the holy promise : " There shall be light at the eventide." THE END. mm.