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Title: A Mad Marriage. A Novel.
Author: Fleming, May Agnes (1840-1880)
Date of first publication: 1875
Edition used as base for this ebook:
   New York: G. W. Carleton;
   London: S. Low, Son, 1876
Date first posted: 6 October 2010
Date last updated: 6 October 2010
Project Gutenberg Canada ebook #634

This ebook was produced by:
Brenda Lewis, woodie4
& the Online Distributed Proofreading Canada Team
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available by the Internet Archive/American Libraries




  POPULAR NOVELS.

  By May Agnes Fleming.


  1.--GUY EARLSCOURT'S WIFE.
  2.--A WONDERFUL WOMAN.
  3.--A TERRIBLE SECRET.
  4.--NORINE'S REVENGE.
  5.--A MAD MARRIAGE.
  6.--ONE NIGHT'S MYSTERY.
  7.--KATE DANTON. (_New._)

         *       *       *       *       *

  "Mrs. Fleming's stories are growing more and more popular every day.
  Their delineations of character, lifelike conversations, flashes of
  wit, constantly varying scenes, and deeply interesting plots,
  combine to place their author in the very first rank of Modern
  Novelists."

         *       *       *       *       *

  All published uniform with this volume. Price $1.75 each, and sent
  _free_ by mail on receipt of price, by


  G. W. CARLETON & CO., Publishers,
  New York.




  A

  MAD MARRIAGE.

  A Novel.




  BY

  MAY AGNES FLEMING,

  AUTHOR OF

  "GUY EARLSCOURT'S WIFE," "A WONDERFUL WOMAN,"
  "A TERRIBLE SECRET," "NORINE'S
         REVENGE," ETC.




  "_Such a mad marriage never was before_."
                            Taming of the Shrew.




  NEW YORK:

  _G. W. Carleton_ & _Co_., _Publishers_.

  LONDON: S. LOW, SON & CO.,
  MDCCCLXXVI.




  Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1875, by

  G. W. CARLETON & CO.,

  In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.

  JOHN F. TROW & SON, PRINTERS,
  805-813 EAST 12TH ST., NEW YORK.




                                 CONTENTS.


  CHAPTER                                                       PAGE

      I.--Joan Kennedy's Story--"The House that Wouldn't Let"     9

     II.--A Woman with a Secret                                  18

    III.--The Decree of Divorce                                  25

     IV.--A Strange Ending                                       32

      V.--At Caryllynne                                          42

     VI.--Gordon Caryll's Story                                  50

    VII.--How Lord Viscount Dynely Died                          72


  PART II.

      I.--In the Royal Academy                                   78

     II.--Terry                                                  88

    III.--Madame Felicia                                        100

     IV.--Lady Dynely's Thursday                                107

      V.--Love Took Up the Glass of Time                        117

     VI.--"The Lord of the Land"                                130

    VII.--A Week's Reprieve                                     142

   VIII.--"Who is She?"                                         151

     IX.--Telling Terry                                         162

      X.--Thinking It Out                                       174

     XI.--At the Picnic                                         181

    XII.--"They Shall Take Who Have the Power"                  190

   XIII.--Lightly Won, Lightly Lost                             200

    XIV.--"Once More the Gate Behind Me Falls"                  214

     XV.--"Stay"                                                224

    XVI.--"Gordon Caryll"                                       230

   XVII.--Through the Sunset                                    237

  XVIII.--Killing the Fatted Calf                               246

    XIX.--How the Old Year Ended                                263


  PART III.

      I.--How the New Year Began                                273

     II.--"La Belle Dame Sans Merci"                            292

    III.--In the Streets                                        307

     IV.--Donny                                                 317

      V.--What Love's Young Dream Sometimes Comes to            325

     VI.--At the Varieties                                      335

    VII.--"After Many Days"                                     346

   VIII.--A Morning Call                                        357

     IX.--"The Parting that They Had"                           367

      X.--"If any Calm, a Calm Despair"                         375

     XI.--M. Le Prince                                          385

    XII.--At the Bal d'Opera                                    393

   XIII.--After the Ball                                        400

    XIV.--Chez Madame                                           408

     XV.--"How the Night Fell"                                  416

    XVI.--"Loyal au Mort"                                       424

   XVII.--How the Morning Broke                                 438

  XVIII.--While it was Yet Day                                  446

    XIX.--"Post Tenebr, Lux"                                   454




A MAD MARRIAGE.




CHAPTER I.

JOAN KENNEDY'S STORY--"THE HOUSE THAT WOULDN'T LET."


It lay down in a sort of hollow, the hillside sloping up behind, crowned
with dark pine woods, shut in by four grim wooden walls, two dark
windows, like scowling eyes, to be seen from the path, and was known to
all as "THE HOUSE THAT WOULDN'T LET."

It stood neither on street nor high road. You left the town behind
you--the queer, fortified, Frenchified town of Quebec; you passed
through St. John's Gate, through St. John's street-outside-the-gate, to
the open country, and, a mile on, you came upon a narrow, winding path,
that seemed straggling out of sight, and trying to hide itself among the
dwarf cedars and spruces. Following this for a quarter of a mile,
passing one or two small stone cabins, you came full upon
Saltmarsh--this house that wouldn't let.

It was an ugly place--a ramshackle place, the lonesomest place you could
see, but still _why_ it wouldn't let was not so clear.

The rent was merely nominal. Mr. Barteaux, its owner, kept it in very
good repair. There was a large vegetable garden attached, where, if you
were of an agricultural turn, you might have made your rent twice over.
There was game in the woods; trout in the ice-cold brooks; but no
venturous sportsman took up his abode at Saltmarsh. It wasn't even
haunted; it looked rather like that sort of thing, but nobody ever went
exactly so far as to affirm that it _was_. No ghastly corpse-lights ever
glimmered from those dull upper windows, no piercing shrieks ever rent
the midnight silence, no spectre lady, white and tall, ever flitted
through the desolate rooms of Saltmarsh. No murder had ever been done
there; no legend of any kind was connected with the place, its history
was prosy and commonplace to a degree. Yet still, year in, year out, the
inscription remained up over the dingy wooden gateway, THIS HOUSE TO BE
LET; and no tenant ever came.

"Tom Grimshaw must have been mad when he built the beastly old barn,"
the present proprietor would growl; "what with taxes, and repairs, and
insurance, there it stands, eating its own head off, and there it may
stand, for what I see, to the crack of doom. One would think the very
trees that surround it say, in their warning dreariness, as the
sentinels of Helheim used in Northern mythology:

"'Who passes here is damned.'"

If this strong language rouses your curiosity, and you asked the
proprietor the history of the house, you got it terse and lucid, thus:

"Old Tom Grimshaw built it, sir. Old Tom Grimshaw was my maternal uncle,
rest his soul; it is to be hoped he has more sense in the other world
than he ever had in this. He was a misogynist, sir, of the rabidest
sort, hating a petticoat as you and I hate the devil. Don't know what
infernal mischief the women had ever done him--plenty, no doubt; it is
what they were created for. The fact remains--the sight of one had much
the same effect upon him as a red scarf on a mad bull. He bought this
marshy spot for a song, built that disgustingly ugly house, barricaded
himself with that timber wall, and lived and died there, like Diogenes,
or Robinson Crusoe, or any other old bloke you like. As heir-at-law, the
old rattle-trap fell to me, and a precious legacy it has been, I can
tell you. It _won't_ rent, and it _has_ to be kept in repair, and I wish
to Heaven old Tom Grimshaw had taken it with him, wherever he is!"

That was the history of Saltmarsh. For eight years it was to be let, and
hadn't let, and that is where the matter began and ended.

Gray, lonely, weather-beaten, so I had seen the forlorn house any time
these twenty years; so this evening of which I am to write I saw it
again, with the mysterious shadow of desolation brooding over it, those
two upper windows frowning down--sullen eyes set in its sullen, silent
face. From childhood it had had its fascination for me--it had been my
Bluebeard's castle, my dread, my delight. As I grew older, this
fascinating horror grew with my growth, and at seven-and-twenty it held
me with as powerful a spell as it had done at seven.

It was a cold and overcast February afternoon. An icy blast swept up
from the great frozen gulf, over the heights of Quebec, over the bleak,
treeless road, along which I hurried in the teeth of the wind. In the
west a stormy and lurid sunset was fading out--fierce reds and brazen
yellows paling into sullen gray. One long fiery lance of that wrathful
sunset, slanting down the pines, struck those upper windows of
Saltmarsh, and lit them into sheets of copper gold.

I was in a hurry--I was the bearer of ill news--and ill news travels
apace. It was bitterly cold, as I have said, and snow was falling. I had
still half a mile of lonesome high road to travel, and night was at
hand; but the spell of Saltmarsh, that had never failed to hold me yet,
held me again. I stood still and looked at it; at those two red
cyclopean eyes, those black stacks of chimneys, its whole forbidding,
scowling front.

"It is like a house under a curse," I thought; "a dozen murders might be
done inside those wooden walls, and no one be the wiser. Will any human
being ever call Saltmarsh home again, I wonder?"

"This house is to let?"

I am not nervous as a rule, but as a soft voice spoke these words at my
elbow, I jumped. I had heard no sound, yet now a woman stood at my side,
on the snow-beaten path.

"I beg your pardon; I have startled you, I am afraid. I have been here
for some time looking at this house. I see it is to let."

I stepped back and looked at her, too much surprised for a moment to
speak. To meet a stranger at Saltmarsh, in the twilight of a bitter
February day, was a marvel indeed.

I stood and looked at her; and I thought then, as I think now, as I will
think to the last day of my life, that I saw one of the most beautiful
faces on which the sun ever shone.

I have said she was a woman--a girl would have been the fitter word;
whatever her age might have been, she did not look a day over seventeen.
She was not tall, and she was very slender; that may have given her that
peculiarly childish look--I am a tall young woman, and she would not
have reached my shoulder. A dress of black silk trailed the ground, a
short jacket of finest seal wrapped her, a muff of seal held her hands.
A hood of black velvet was on her head, and out of this rich hood her
richer beauty shone upon me, a new revelation of how lovely it is
possible for a woman to be. Years have come and gone since that evening,
but the wonderful face that looked at me that February twilight, for the
first time, is before me at this moment, as vividly as then. Two great,
tawny eyes, with a certain wildness in their light, a skin of pearl, a
red mouth like a child's, a low forehead, a straight nose, a cleft chin,
the gleam of small, white teeth, rise before me like a vision, and I
understand how men, from the days of Samson the Strong, have lain down
life and honor, and their soul's salvation, for just such women as this.
Surely a strange visitant to the house that wouldn't let, and in the
last hour of the day.

All this in a moment of time, while we stand and face each other. Then
the soft voice speaks again, with a touch of impatient annoyance in its
tone:

"I _beg_ your pardon. You heard me? This house is to let?"

I point to the sign, to the legend and inscription affixed to the gate,
and read it stoically aloud: "This house to be let."

"Evidently my lady is not used to being kept waiting," I think, "whoever
she is."

"Yes, yes, I see that," she says, still impatiently; "there is no one
living in it at present, is there?"

"Madame," I say, briefly, "no one has lived there for eight years."

The wonderful tawny black eyes, almost orange in some lights, and whose
like I have never seen but in one other face, dilate a little as they
turn from me to the dead, silent house.

"Why?" she asks.

I shrugged my shoulders.

"Need one ask that question, madame, after looking at the house? Who
would care to live in so lonely, so lost a place as that?"

"_I_ would. No one would ever think of coming here."

She made the answer almost under her breath, more to herself than to me,
her pale face turned toward the house.

Its pallor struck me now, not the pallor of ill health, or of natural
complexion, but such fixed whiteness, as some extraordinary terror may
once in a lifetime blanch a human face.

"No one would ever think of coming here," I repeated, inwardly. "I
should think not indeed. Are you in hiding then, my beautiful young
lady, and afraid of being found out? You are lovelier than anything out
of a frame. You are one of the rich and elect of the earth, or you would
not be dressed like that, but _who_ are you, and what are you doing here
alone and at this hour?"

The last red light of the sunset had entirely faded away. Cold, gray,
and overcast the wintry sky spread above us like a pall, and over Cape
Diamond, with its citadel crown, swept the icy wind from the frozen St.
Lawrence. One or two white flakes came sifting down from the fast
drifting sky--night and storm were falling together, and it was still
half a mile to my home.

"If you desire any information about this place, madame," I said, "you
had better apply to Mr. Barteaux, No. -- St. Louis Street, Quebec; he is
the present owner. It is to let, and he will be very glad of a tenant.
Good-evening."

She made no reply, she did not even seem to have heard. She stood, her
hands in her muff, her eyes fixed with a strangely sombre intensity on
the blank wooden wall, her profile gleaming cold and white in the steely
twilight. I know little of passion or despair, but surely it was most
passionate despair I read in those fixed, sightless eyes.

I turned and left her. I was interested of course, but it would not do,
to stand mooning here and let night overtake me. Once, as I hurried
along the deserted road, I looked back. The small lonely figure still
stood as I had left it, motionless, a black speck against the chill
darkness of the wintry sky.

"Something wrong there," I thought; "I wonder who she is and what has
brought her here. None of the officers' wives or daughters--I have seen
all of them at the major's. One thing is certain, Mr. Barteaux will
never rent Saltmarsh to a slip of a girl like that."

And then the mysterious young lady and all connected with her slipped
from my mind, for the red light from my mother's cottage streamed far
afield, and the ill tidings I was bringing home filled my whole
thoughts.

In this strange record which it becomes my duty to write, a few words of
myself must be said, and may as well be said here and done with. I was
Joan Kennedy then, and am Joan Kennedy still. I was seven-and-twenty
years of age, and the sole support of a feeble old mother and a sister
of twelve. My mother who had been a governess in her youth, and in her
native city of Glasgow, had educated me considerably above the station I
filled, giving me a very thorough English education, and teaching me to
speak French with a fine Scottish accent. At my father's death, ten
years before, I went out to service, and in service I had remained ever
since. This night, as I hastened homeward through the snowy darkness, my
errand was to tell my mother and sister that I had lost my place, and
had no present prospect of being able to get another. That is Joan
Kennedy's whole past and present history, so far as _you_ need know it.

The darkness was all white with whirling snow as I opened the cottage
door and entered. All was bright and cosy here. A large red fire burned
on the hearth, the tea table was spread, a little snub-nosed teapot
wafted its incense alow and aloft, my mother sat knitting in the ingle
nook, and my pretty sister Jessie sang, as she stitched away, at the
table. At sight of their snow-powdered visitor both dropped their work
in amaze.

"Joan!" Then Jessie's arms were around my neck, and my mother's poor old
face lit up with delight; "Joan! in this storm, and at this time of
night and alone! _Are_ you alone, Joan?"

"Who is likely to be with me, little Jess? Yes, I am alone; and you are
likely to have more of my delectable society than perhaps may prove
pleasant or profitable. Mother dear, I have lost my place."

"Joan!"

"I am not to blame, mother, believe that. Only (it is not a pleasant
thing to tell) Mrs. Englehart has taken it into that supremely foolish
head of hers to be jealous of me--of poor, plain Joan Kennedy! The
major, a kind old soul, has spoken a friendly word or two in passing
and--behold the result! Don't let us talk about it. I'll start out
to-morrow morning and search all Quebec, and get a situation or perish
in the attempt. And now, Mistress Jessie, I'll take a cup of tea."

I threw off my shawl and bonnet, laughing for fear I should break down
and cry, and took my seat. As I did so, there came a loud knock at the
door. _So_ loud, that Jessie nearly dropped the snub-nosed teapot.

"Good gracious, Joan! who is this?"

I walked to the door and opened it--then fell back aghast. For firelight
and candlelight streamed full across the face of the lady I had seen at
the House to Let.

"May I come in?"

She did not wait for permission. She walked in past me, straight to the
fire, and stood before it. Furs and silks were coated with the
fast-falling snow. She drew her hands out of her muff, tossed it aside,
drew off her gloves, and held to the blaze two small white hands, all
twinkling with rings. Mother sat speechlessly gazing at this dazzling
apparition. Jessie stood with eyes and mouth agape, and my own heart, I
must confess, fluttered nervously as I looked. Who was she, and what
did she want? For fully a minute she stood staring at the fire, then
feeling that some one must say something, I took heart of grace, and
said it.

"You have been caught in the snow-storm," I ventured, drawing near. "I
was afraid you would. Will you please to sit down?"

She took no notice of the proffered politeness. The tawny eyes turned
from the fire to my face.

"Will you tell me your name?" was the strange young lady's abrupt
question.

"Joan Kennedy."

"You are a single woman?"

"I am, madame."

"You live here--in this house, with----" a pause and a stare at mother
and Jessie.

"With my mother and sister--yes, at present. As a rule I live at service
in Quebec."

"In service?" Another pause and a stare at me. "Joan Kennedy, would you
live with _me_?"

This was a leading question with a vengeance. "With you, madame?" I
gasped.

"With me. I want a maid, a companion, what you will. Wages are no
object--to a trustworthy person. I will give anything she asks. I am all
alone--all alone--" her lips trembled, her voice died away; "all alone
in the world. I have had great trouble and I want some quiet place to
live--some quiet person to live with me, for awhile. I am going to take
that house to let. I was overtaken by the storm, just now, and followed
you here, instead of going back to the hotel. I like your face--you look
as though you may have had trouble yourself, and so could feel for
others. I wish you would come and live with me. I have told you I am in
dreadful trouble--" she paused, a sort of anguish coming over her face:
"I have lost my husband," she said with a great gasp, and covering her
face with both hands broke out into such a dreadful crying as I never
heard or saw before.

"Oh, poor dear!" said my mother. For me, I stood still and looked at
her. What could I say--what could I do? Great sobs shook her from head
to foot. A widow! I glanced at her left hand. Yes, there among the
diamonds gleamed that plain band of gold that has brought infinite bliss
or misery to millions of women--a wedding ring. It lasted not two
minutes. Almost fiercely she dashed away her tears and looked up.

"My name is Mrs. Gordon," she said; "as I tell you, I am all alone. I
came to Quebec yesterday, I saw that house advertised, and so came to
see it. It suits me, and I will take it for the next six months at
least. Some one must live with me there. I like your looks. Will you
come?"

Would I come? would I live in the House to Let? I stood gasping--the
proposal was like a cold douche--it took my breath away.

"I will pay any wages to a suitable person--_any wages_," emphatically
this; "and in advance. It is a lonely place, it suits me the better for
that, and you don't look like a young woman afraid of bogies. If you
won't come," haughtily, "of course I shall find some one else."

"I--I have not refused," I gasped; "--it's all so sudden. You must let
me think it over. I will tell you to-morrow."

Her mood changed--she lifted a face to mine that was like the helpless,
appealing face of a child--she held up two clasped hands.

"_Do_ come," she said piteously; "I will pay you anything--anything! I
only want to be quiet for awhile, and away from everybody. I am all
alone in the world. I have lost my husband--lost him--lost him--"

"The lady is going to faint!" screamed Jessie.

Sure enough! whether the heat of the fire had overcome her, or the
"dreadful trouble" of which she spoke had broken her down, she swayed
unsteadily to and fro, the words dying on her lips, and I caught her as
she fell.

So it was that the first tenant of the House to Let came into my home,
and into my life, to change it utterly from that hour.




CHAPTER II.

A WOMAN WITH A SECRET.


Mrs. Gordon did not leave our cottage that night--did not leave it for
two whole weeks, and then the house that wouldn't let was let at last,
and Saltmarsh had a tenant.

It would be of little use at this late day to detail all the arguments
she used to win me for her attendant and companion--the most
irresistible argument of all was wages, treble, fourfold what I had ever
earned before, and paid in advance. Of her and her story I had very
serious doubts, but beggars must not be choosers. I took her money and
became her paid companion.

For hours that night, after mother and Jessie were in bed, I sat beside
Mrs. Gordon, listening to the story she told of herself. Brief, vague,
and unsatisfactory to a degree, that story was. She had been an orphan
from childhood. She was not wealthy, but she had sufficient; great
trouble had suddenly come upon her, and she had lost her husband after
four months of wedded life. That was all.

"Lost your husband!" I repeated, curiously, looking at her. "Do you mean
that your husband is dead?"

A simple and natural question, surely; but her face, pale before, turned
of a dead whiteness from brow to chin.

"Dead of course," she answered, huskily; "for pity's sake, don't ask me
questions. It is only a week ago, and I cannot bear it. Only a week, and
it seems like a century. And to think--to think of all the long, lonely,
empty years that are to come! Never to hear his voice, never to see his
face more!"

And then she broke down again and wept--oh, how she wept! My heart was
full of compassion, and yet--only dead one week, and running away like
this, not in mourning, not a friend in the world, rich, young and
beautiful. A queer story on the face of it--a very queer story indeed.

Who is to gauge the power of woman's beauty? If she had been a plain
young person, I believe ten pounds a week would not have tempted me to
take up with her and bury myself alive at Saltmarsh. But her wonderful
beauty fairly fascinated me, her lovely face won me, even against my
better judgment.

"And if that face can make a fool of you, Joan, my dear," I said to
myself, as I went to bed, "what awful havoc it must make among mankind!
How very unpleasant for poor Mr. Gordon to die and leave it, and how
desperately fond she must have been of him, to be sure!"

"You will let me stay here until the house yonder is ready," she said
next morning, with the air of one not used to being refused. "I dislike
hotels--people stare so. I will make you no trouble, and I want to be
perfectly quiet, and quite alone."

It was curious to see her with her lovely face, her elegant dress, her
diamond rings, and her dark flowing hair, so strangely out of place in
our small, bare, homely house. I hardly know whether she should have
stayed or not, but our poverty pleaded for her, and I consented to all
she proposed. To take the house for her, to see it furnished, to attend
to everything, while she herself kept absolutely out of sight.

My new duties began at once. I went to Mr. Barteaux, and abruptly
informed him I had a tenant for the House to Let.

"A widow lady, sir," I said; "a Mrs. Gordon. Any reasonable rent she is
willing to pay, and I am engaged to live with her."

"Bless my soul!" said Mr. Barteaux. "You don't say so! A tenant at last.
A widow lady, eh? How many in family, Joan?"

I knew the vision before Mr. Barteaux's mind's eye. A florid matron of
fifty, with half-a-dozen strapping boys and girls.

"No family, sir. Quite a young widow. You must close the bargain with
me, Mr. Barteaux; her loss is recent, she is in trouble, and doesn't
feel like transacting business herself. There are no references;
instead, she will pay in advance if you choose."

We closed the bargain there and then; and that very day Saltmarsh was
thrown open to the sunshine and free winds of Heaven. What an odd,
awesome feeling it gave me to go with my mysterious new mistress through
the gruesome apartments, silent and forsaken so long. Four, out of the
ten rooms the house contained, were chosen to be furnished and fitted
up, papered, painted, whitewashed, carpeted, curtained. All fell to me,
and all was done in two brief weeks, and well done, though I say it, and
Mrs. Gordon and Joan Kennedy, it was known to all Quebec, were
domesticated at Saltmarsh.

I wonder now, as I sit here and look back at that strange time, that
even poverty could have tempted me to endure the life I led all those
dreary months. The listless, lonely days spent in reading or rambling
through the empty, echoing rooms, the long awesome nights when the winds
held high carnival without and the rats high jinks within. No one ever
came to the house, except a stout Frenchwoman, who did our washing and
general drudgery, coming every morning and going every night. For me, my
position was a sinecure, nothing to do, and treble wages for doing it,
but the hardest work for all, that I ever did in my life.

And my mistress! Well, the days, and the weeks, and the months went by,
and she was as great a mystery as ever. Where she had come from, how
long she meant to remain, whither she intended going, were all sealed
secrets to me. She never wrote letters, she never received any. She
could not have been much more dead to all the world outside our wooden
walls if she had been in her shroud and coffin.

She spent the heavy, aimless days sitting mostly at her chamber
window--a dark-draped, slender figure, a dreary, lovely face, two great,
hopeless eyes, a total wreck of life. The story of her life, whatever it
had been, no common one be sure, was ended for the time; the play was
over, the lights out, and nothing left but to sit and look at the
curtain. A woman young as she was, of the wrong sort, of the silent,
secret sort, a woman with something on her mind, a woman with a secret.

Two things I discovered--only two. One, that her husband was not dead,
but deserted; that she had run away from him and was hiding here, in
horrible dread of his ever finding her out. Secondly, that in spite of
this running away and this constant terror, she still loved him, with a
passionate and most despairing love.

I had gone into her room one night, and found her sitting holding a
picture before her, and gazing on it as if entranced. It was her
principal occupation. I had often found her so before, but the picture
itself I had never seen. To-night, however, she called me to her in her
abrupt way.

"Joan," she said, "come here."

She had been crying, I could see--silently and miserably. I went and
looked over her shoulder at the picture.

Photography was in its infancy in those days--every family had not its
picture gallery. This was a daguerreotype--the portrait of a young,
dashing-looking and rather handsome man. A beardless and boyish face,
yet a very manly one, looking up at you with frankly smiling eyes.

"It is all I have left," she said, with tremulous lips. "I will never
see him again. I loved him and I have spoiled his whole life. It would
have been better for him he had died than ever looked in my face."

"Indeed," was my rather stupid answer. But I was used to her extravagant
talk and not much affected by it. "He is a friend of yours, madame?"

She looked at her picture, and over her face there dawned a light that
made her beauty radiant.

"He is my husband!" she answered.

I drew back and looked at her--aghast, I must confess.

"Your husband!" I repeated. "Oh--_was_ your husband, you mean? You told
me he was dead."

"Dead to me. Oh, Joan! dead to me, but alive and well. Alive and well;
and though I should live to be a hundred, I may never see his face
again. Never again; and there are times when I would lay down my very
life only to look upon him once more."

"You love him and--he has left you?" I ventured.

"I love him--and I left _him_. I love him with all my heart, and I have
fled from him, and buried myself here for fear of him. I wonder I don't
go mad, or die. Once I thought I would without him; but somehow life
drags on and on, and one is a coward, and afraid to end it one's self.
He loved me once, Joan--ah, dear Heaven, yes! he loved me and made me
his wife; and now, and now, Joan, if ever he finds me, I believe he will
take my life."

I looked back at the frank, fair, boyish face.

"He take your life!" I said; "that bright-faced boy! No, Mrs. Gordon,
murderers don't look like that."

"He is the truest, the noblest, the bravest of men, a loyal friend and a
gallant gentleman."

"And yet his wife runs away from him, and says if ever they meet he will
take her life."

She scarcely seemed to heed me. She laid her head on her folded arms as
though she never cared to lift it again.

"Ah! let me alone," she said. "_You_ know nothing about it. If I could
but die and make an end of it all! Only this, Joan," she looked up
suddenly, swift, dark terror in her eyes; "I dreamed last night he was
searching for me--that he was here. He came and stood before me, stern
and terrible, holding my death-warrant in his hand! Don't let him come!
don't let anyone come! If ever we meet, I believe in my soul he will
kill me."

Was Mrs. Gordon going mad? that was the very serious question uppermost
in my thoughts when I went to bed that night, and for many nights after.
It was a very queer and uncomfortable affair altogether, and the sooner
I got out of it the better; and just as I was beginning to think of
tendering my resignation, behold the climax all at once came of itself.

March, April and May had passed--it was the close of June. I had gone
into the city one afternoon for our weekly store of groceries, finished
my purchases, and, basket on arm, was going home. My way led up St.
Louis Street; and passing the office of Mr. Barteaux, I saw him in his
own doorway, deep in conversation with a stranger. A look at that
stranger, and with one great jump my heart was in my mouth. For it was
the original of the picture--it was Mrs. Gordon's husband. "The hour and
the man were come!"

Neither saw me. I paused a second and looked again. The same, beyond
doubt; the same, with a difference--worn and haggard, set and stern--the
same, yet _that_ was the face of a frank, happy boy, this of a reckless,
desperate man. A straw hat was pulled over his eyes, a gray summer
overcoat was buttoned up--a soldier and a gentleman, that was evident at
a glance.

I turned up a side street and hastened breathlessly on. My first duty
was to my mistress. I must tell her that what she dreaded had come--that
the husband from whom she had fled, was here. I walked at my utmost
speed, and in half an hour was at Saltmarsh.

"She said he would kill her!" I thought, turning hot and cold; "and who
knows that he will not? He would not be the first husband that has
killed a runaway wife."

I ran through the rooms, all flurried and breathless, calling out her
name.

She was not in any of them. Of late, since June had come, the fine
weather at times had tempted her out. This, most unfortunately, was one
of the times. I knew pretty well where to find her--on the river bank
below there was a strip of yellow sand, where she was fond of walking up
and down in the sunshine. She was sure to be there now.

I rushed out, looking wildly around. Yes, there was the tall, soldierly
figure in the straw hat and summery overcoat, coming rapidly toward me
at a swinging pace.

I declare I almost screamed, so nervous and overwrought had I become.

If he was before me--if he came upon her suddenly, the shock alone might
kill her, for she was far from strong of late. I turned and fled
headlong down the steep hillside path, still calling her name. Yes,
there, quite alone, pacing slowly up and down the sandy riverside path,
looking at the fast-flowing water, Mrs. Gordon walked.

She paused in her slow walk, and turned to me in wonder at my break-neck
descent.

How beautiful she was! even in that supreme moment, I remember that was
my first thought.

"For pity's sake, fly!" I cried out; "fly at once. He is here!"

She laid both her hands suddenly over her heart. Across her face there
flashed the electric light of a great and sudden joy.

"Who?" she said, almost in a whisper.

"Your husband, the man whose picture you showed me. Fly at once if you
are afraid of him. I saw him, I tell you he is coming. Oh, Heaven!--he
is _here_!"

I fell back in consternation. Yes, he had followed me; he was coming
down the path, he was here.

I turned to my mistress. Would she faint? would she fly? Neither.

Who is to understand men's wives! Terror was there, in that wild, white
face, it is true, but over and above it all, such rapture as I never
before saw in the face of man or woman. She loved him and she saw him
again--all was said in that.

He walked down the path. She came a step forward, with that transfigured
face, and held out to him both arms with an eloquent cry:

"Gordon! Gordon!"




CHAPTER III.

THE DECREE OF DIVORCE.


It had come. I could do no more. Nothing remained for me but to retreat
into the background, and wait with bated breath and beating heart for
this play of "powerful domestic interest" to play itself out.

He had descended the steep, hillside path and stood on the strip of
yellow sand, face to face with the wife who had deserted him. The full
light of the June afternoon fell upon his face as he stood there before
her, a face more hollow-eyed and haggard, more worn, than it had even
looked to me first. A face set and stern, with little of mercy or pity
in it.

He waved her back. Only the slightest motion of his hand, but she shrank
and shivered like a child who has got a blow.

"No nearer," he said in a voice as cold and steady as the chill gray
eyes that looked upon her. "Unless your sense of hearing has become
dulled since the night of Lovell's death, when you played eavesdropper
so well, you will be able to hear all I have to say, where you stand. I
will not detain you long, and you need not wear that frightened face. I
am not going to kill you--the time for all that is passed. But let me
tell you this: If you had _not_ played eavesdropper that memorable night
five months ago, if you had not fled as you did, if I had found you
before me when I returned, you would never have lived to see the
morning. The greatest fool that ever walked the earth I had been--if you
and I had met that night I would have been a murderer as well."

All this he said in a slow, self-repressed sort of tone, but the deep
gray eyes that watched her were full of such hatred as no words of mine
can tell.

"Spare me, Gordon," she answered, with a sobbing cry.

"Spare you?" he repeated, with cold scorn; "have I not said so? I would
not lift a finger to harm a hair of your head, or to save your life if I
saw you drowning in the river yonder. You are as dead to me as though I
had gone home and strangled you that eventful night. The madness of love
and rage, alike, are past forever. I have cut you off utterly and
absolutely from my life. You have been in hiding here, they tell me, in
daily dread of your life no doubt. Let us end all that. You are free to
come and go where and how you will. After to-day I will never look upon
your face again of my own free will, alive or dead."

She gave a shrill cry, like a culprit under the lash, her hands still
held out to him in dumb agony.

"I have not even come to Quebec now in search of you," the cold,
pitiless voice went on; "don't think it. I came to visit General
Forrester, stationed yonder at the Citadel, before leaving this accursed
Canada forever--accursed since in it I met _you_."

Her outstretched hands went up, with a dull moaning sound, and covered
her face.

"Would you care to know how I found you out, and why I came?" he slowly
went on. "Listen: Last night at mess the fellows were speaking of a
widow lady, a most mysterious widow lady, young and beautiful, so rumor
said, who had taken a desolate old house in a marsh, and there shut
herself up, hidden from mortal man and light of day. Her name was _Mrs.
Gordon_. Where she came from, who she was, why she had come, no man
could tell. Before the name was uttered I knew it was you. Knew that
when you fled from Toronto you fled here; knew that the lost woman who
had been my wife was found."

Her hands dropped. For the first time she stood upright before him and
looked him full in the face, stung, it would seem, into turning at bay
by these last words.

"Who had been your wife!" she cried, passionately; "who _is_ your wife,
Gordon Caryll! Nothing," a sort of exultation lit her face as she said
it, "nothing but death can ever alter that!"

For fully a minute he stood silently looking at her, a smile on his
lips, a pitiless triumph in his eyes.

"Nothing can change that?" he repeated; "nothing but death? Well, I will
answer that before we part. Let me go on. I knew it was you, this woman
they talked of, and I said to myself: 'I will find her to-morrow; I will
look upon her face once more, for the last time, and I will see _what_
there was, if I can, in its wax-doll beauty, its yellow-black eyes, its
straight nose and silken hair, to turn men into blind, besotted fools.'
Take down your hands, Rosamond, and let me look at you."

She had shrank from him, from his smile, in some nameless, dreadful
fear, that made her cover her white face once more. She dropped her
hands now, at his bidding, looking up with dilated eyes.

"Gordon, have mercy on me. I love you!"

Again she stretched forth her hands to him with that piteous cry. Again
he motioned her imperiously back, his lips set, his eyes pitiless, his
face like stone.

"Stand still!" he ordered.

She obeyed.

For fully two minutes this strange tableau was before me, and all
unseen, in my obscure nook, I stood gazing with an interest that held me
rapt and spellbound. He, drawn up to his full height, his face like
white stone, so hard, so cold, that chill, half smile still on his lips.
She, half cowering before him, her lovely, colorless face uplifted, her
eyes full of dreadful terror, her loose, feathery hair blowing in the
wind,--young, fair, innocent to _see_, at least. So they stood--stern
young judge, quivering little criminal, until it grew almost too much
even for my nerves to endure.

"You are a beautiful little woman, Rosamond," he said, at length; "one
of those exceptional women, who, like Ninon de L'Enclos, will be
beautiful at eighty. And that fair face of yours will do its devil's
work, I don't doubt, to the end of the chapter. To possess that face for
four short months I have lost all that man holds dear--name, honor,
home, friends, fortune--all. For the name that _you_ have borne and
disgraced, I will bear no longer. I have sold out--do you know it? my
father has disinherited me--I am the laughingstock of all who ever knew
me. I look back and wonder at my own infatuation. I loved you--I trusted
you. Oh, God!" he cried out, a spasm of anguish distorting his face; "I
_married_ you--you! You played your game well, you and Lovell. It was
your trade; and with such a fool as I, it was an easy game enough. But
you had cause to fear, and you knew it--I say again you did well to fly.
I went out from Lovell's death-bed a madman--if I had found you on my
return, by the light above us, I would have murdered you!"

She shrank back from him, trembling with pure physical terror now, from
head to foot.

"No need to tremble--no need to fear _now_," he went on, his voice
losing its sudden fury, and sinking to its former cold monotone; "I have
told you all that is past and done with. But before we part, I should
like to hear once from your own lips, just once (not that I doubt) that
Major Lovell's story was true."

Her only answer was to cower still farther away, and with a great,
heart-wrung sob, to bury her face once again in her hands.

"Ah, hide it," he said bitterly; "hide it forever from the sight of
man--the fairest, falsest face ever made. But speak--if such lips as
yours can speak truth, and tell me that Lovell's story was true."

"Gordon! have mercy."

"Was it true?"

"I loved you, Gordon! As there is a heaven above us, I loved you with
all my heart."

He half laughed--even in that moment.

"Your heart--_yours_! What witty things are said by accident! Never mind
your heart or your love. I know what both are worth. Answer my question.
Was Lovell's story true. One word--yes or no."

"Gordon, I was faithful. Oh! _what_ shall I say to him to--"

"Was it true? Yes or no?"

"Gordon, I swear--"

"Was it true?" he cried, his eyes flashing fire; "no more words! Yes or
no."

"Yes, but--"

"That will do. We won't waste words about it. You would swear black was
white, I daresay, but keep your histrionic talents for the New York
stage again--you may need them before long. Let us get back to what you
said a moment ago. 'You are my wife--nothing but death can change that.'
Do me the favor to look at this."

He drew a newspaper from his pocket and handed it to her. Something in
his face as he did so frightened her as nothing had frightened yet. Her
hands shook--she strove to open the paper and failed. She looked at him
with piteous eyes and trembling lips.

"I can't," she faltered; "Gordon, what is it?"

"It is a decree of divorce," he answered, in his cold, sombre voice.
"One week after Lovell's death and your flight, I instituted a suit for
divorce, and obtained it. You can read the details in that paper, at
your leisure--it may help while away an hour. This is what has kept me
in Canada so long. In two days I leave it forever. Chance has brought us
together this once, for the last time."

He paused, half turned away, then suddenly stopped. She had made some
kind of gesture, but it was not for that; she had said "_wait!_" in a
hoarse whisper; but it was not that. It was the ghastly change that had
come over her face as he struck his last merciless blow. For a moment, I
think, it startled even him.

"This is true--this that you tell me--this--divorce?"

She spoke the words in a husky, breathless sort of voice, her face all
distorted, clutching the paper hard.

"It is perfectly true," his chill voice answered. "Read and see."

"I am no longer your wife?"

"You are no longer my wife--thank Heaven and the merciful law of the
land."

"After this day, you never mean to see or know me again?"

"I never mean to see you again if it be in my power, alive or dead."

"Then hear _me_!" She drew herself upright, her small figure seeming to
dilate and grow tall. "Lovell's story was true--true I tell you in every
particular except this: that I married you for your rank, and your name,
and your wealth. I married you for these, it is true; but beyond these,
because I loved you with all my heart. Oh, yes, Gordon Caryll! even such
women as I am can love; and in deed, and thought, from the hour you
placed this ring on my finger, I was your true and loyal wife. I would
have gone with you to beggary--I would have died, if need were, for your
sake. Now I am divorced and cast off forever, you say. Well, then we
_shall_ meet again one day, so surely as we both live. This cold-blooded
divorce I will never forgive. Go, Gordon Caryll! but remember this, one
day or other, so surely as we both stand here, I will make you suffer
for this!"

He laughed as he listened--a low, contemptuous laugh, that would have
goaded any infuriated woman to madness.

"You do it very well, Rosamond," he said; "but so many years' hard
practice on the stage of the Bowery Theatre could hardly fail to tell.
For the rest, it is rather wasted on an unappreciative audience at
present. If I should be so unfortunate as ever to meet you again, I
trust, even then, to be able to take care of myself."

He turned without another word and left her, striding up the steep path,
and never once looking back.

She stood where he left her, watching him out of sight, the color fading
from her face, the life from her eyes. So, standing motionless there,
she saw him pass from view, heard the last echo of his footsteps die
away. Then I came forward, for the look on her face frightened me. She
turned to me slowly, the fatal paper held in her hand.

"I dreamed he came with my death-warrant," she said; "here it is."

And then without word or cry to warn me, she went down in a dead faint
on the sands.

How I brought her to, how I got her home, I can never tell. I did it
somehow, and laid her on her bed as the June moon rose and the stars
came out. Old Bettine, the French charwoman, was still pottering about
the kitchen. In her charge I left my mistress, and fled into town for a
doctor. For she was very ill--so ill that it seemed doubtful whether she
would ever live to see day dawn.

The clocks of Quebec, high up in steeples, silvered by the quiet summer
moonlight, were chiming eleven as our first visitor entered
Saltmarsh--the doctor.

And when the lovely June morning dawned, and the swallows twittered in
the eaves, Gordon Caryll's child lay in my arms, and Gordon Caryll's
divorced wife lay white and still, with Life and Death fighting their
sharp battle above her pillow.




CHAPTER IV.

A STRANGE ENDING.


Life won. Days passed, two weeks went by, and the struggle was at an
end. Pale and shadowy that marvellously fair face lay among the pillows,
but all doubt was at an end. Mrs. Gordon would live.

Saltmarsh was a deserted house no longer. A ponderous nurse had come
from Quebec, the doctor was a daily visitor, and old Bettine spent her
nights as well as her days with us. There was nothing to fear any more;
the man she had longed for and feared had come and gone, to come no more
forever. The baby fell almost entirely to me--a charge as pleasant as
novel, for I must own, spinster that I am, to a tender weakness for
babies. It lay in my arms all day; it slept in its crib by my bedside at
night.

"The smallest mite of a baby _I_ ever see," observed Mrs. Watters, the
fat nurse; "and I've seen a regiment of 'em, little and big, in my day.
I should say now it wouldn't weigh five pounds."

It _was_ small. A tiny, black-haired, black-eyed speck, its pink dot of
a face looking weird, lit by those black, blinking eyes.

One thing was strange--was unnatural. From its birth its mother had
never seen it, never asked to see it. One evening, when Bettine had
called nurse down to supper, and I sat watching in her room, she spoke
of it for the first time.

It was a lovely July night, under the brilliant summer moon, the St.
Lawrence ran between its green slopes like a belt of silver light. The
white, misty moonlight filled the chamber, the lamp had not yet been
lit, and the pale glory illumined the face, whiter than the lace and
linen against which it lay. She sat partly up in bed, propped by
pillows, gazing with dark, sombre eyes out at that radiance in Heaven
and on earth--that glory from the skies upon river and shore. For more
than an hour she had been sitting motionless, her dark, brooding eyes
never leaving the fairy scene, as though she saw her own future life
over there beyond that shining river. In the dim distance, baby lay in
its crib fast asleep; deepest silence reigned within and without. That
silence was suddenly and sharply broken by the shrilly, feeble wail of
the child as it awoke. As I rose and crossed the room to take it, she
spoke: "Joan, bring it here."

"H'm! high time for you to say it," I thought, but in silence I obeyed.
There had been something revolting to me in her utter want of
mother-love; in her unnatural indifference; I carried it to the bedside
and stooped to place it beside her.

"No, no," she said with a quick, petulant gesture of repulsion; "not
there; I don't want it. I always hated babies. I only want to look at
it."

"Shall I bring in the lamp?" I asked.

"No; the moonlight will do. What a dot of a baby! Joan, who is it like?"

"It has your eyes," I answered; "beyond that it is impossible to tell.
Mrs. Watters says, though, it is your very 'moral.' It is certainly the
tiniest baby that ever was born."

"My very moral," she repeated, with a feeble laugh. "I hope so! I hope
it may be like me. I hope it may never resemble _him_, in any way. I
hope it may live to help avenge its mother yet!"

I was silent--shocked and scandalized beyond power of replying. Here was
a Christian woman and mother, just saved from death, talking like some
heathen, of revenge!

"Is it a girl or a boy?" she inquired next, after a pause.

"Girl," I answered, shortly. "It is time you asked."

She glanced at me in surprise, but in no displeasure.

"Why should I ask? It didn't matter much. A girl! If it had only been a
boy; and yet, who can tell, if she is like me, and is pretty, she may do
great things yet. She may help _me_. That will do, Joan. Take it away."

She turned her face from the light, and lay for a long time still,
brooding over her own thoughts--dark and wicked thoughts I well knew.
Whoever or whatever this Mrs. Gordon might be, she was not a proper or
virtuous woman, that seemed pretty clear--a wife whose husband had been
forced to put her away--a mother who only looked forward to the future
of her child as an instrument of vengeance on its father. There are some
services that no wages can repay--to my mind this was one. The moment
Mrs. Gordon was well enough to be left, that moment I would leave her.

"And what will become of you with such a mother, Providence only knows,"
I apostrophized the little one on my lap. "You poor, little, spectral,
black-eyed mite! I wish you belonged to me altogether."

From that evening Mrs. Gordon rallied, and asserted her power once more
as mistress of the house. Her first act of sovereignty was to dismiss
the nurse.

"All danger is over, the doctor tells me," she said to Mrs. Watters a
few days after. "Joan Kennedy can take care of me now. I shall not
require you any more. Joan, pay Mrs. Watters her due. She leaves
to-night."

Mrs. Watters left. Next morning Mrs. Gordon asserted herself still
further--she insisted upon being dressed and allowed to sit up. She had
her way, of course, and I wish I could tell you how fair and youthful
and lovely she looked. Youthful! I declare, whatever her age really was,
she did not look a day over sixteen. But there was that in her quick,
black eyes, in her colorless face, in those latter days, not pleasant to
see--something I could not define, and that confirmed me in my
resolution to leave her very soon. Of her child, from the evening of
which I have spoken, she took not the slightest notice. I truly believe
she never once looked at it again; when it cried she had it impatiently
removed out of hearing. She sat thinking--thinking steadfastly, with
bent brows and compressed lips, of what--who could tell?

"I'll give her warning to-morrow," I said resolutely to myself; "my
month is up in a week. I'll never live another with you, my pretty,
mysterious little mistress."

Her eyes lifted suddenly, and fixed themselves on my face as I thought
it. Did she divine my very thoughts? The faint smile that was on her
lips almost made me think so.

"Joan," she said, in her pretty, imperious way, "come here, child; I
want to talk to you. You have been a good and faithful companion in all
these dreary, miserable months, to a most miserable and lonely woman.
Let me thank you now while I think of it, and before we say good-by."

"Good-by!" I repeated, completely taken aback. "Then you are going
away?"

"Going away, Joan; high time, is it not? All is over now--there is
nothing to fear or hope any more. One chapter of my life is read and
done with forever. The day after to-morrow I go out into the world once
more, to begin all over again. Up to the present my life has been a most
miserable failure--all but four short months." She paused suddenly; the
dreary, lovely face lit up with a sort of rapture. "All but four short
months--oh, let me always except that--when he made me his wife, and I
was happy, happy, happy! Joan, if I had died three weeks ago when _that_
was born, you might have had engraven on my tombstone the epitaph that
was once inscribed over another lost woman; 'I have been most happy--and
most miserable.'"

I listened silently, touched, in spite of myself, by the unspeakable
pathos of her look and tone.

"All that is over and done with," she said, after a little. "I am not to
die, it seems. I am going to begin my life, as I say, all over again.
Nothing that befalls me in the future can be any worse than what lies
behind. It does not fall to the lot of all women to be divorced wives at
the age of eighteen."

She laughed drearily. She sat by the window in her favorite easy-chair,
looking out while she talked, with the rosy after-glow of the sunset
fading away beyond the feathery tamarac trees and the low Canadian
hills.

"I feel something as a felon must," she dreamily went on, half to
herself, half to me, "who has served out his sentence and whose order of
release has come, almost afraid to face the world I have left so long. I
did not come to this house a very good woman, Joan--that, I suppose,
you know; but I quit it a thousand times worse. I came here with a human
heart, at least, a heart that could love and feel remorse; but love and
remorse are at an end. I told him I loved him and had been faithful to
him, and he laughed in my face. Women can forgive a great deal, but they
do not forgive that. If he had only left me--if he had not got that
divorce, I would never have troubled him--never, I swear. I would have
gone away and loved him, and been faithful to him to the end.
Now--now--" she paused, her hands clenched, her yellow eyes gleaming
catlike in the dusk. "Now, I will pay him back, sooner or later, if I
lose my life for it. I will be revenged--that I swear."

I shrank away from her, from the sight of her wicked face, from the
hearing of her wicked words,--the horror I felt, showing, I suppose, in
my face.

"It all sounds very horrible, very shocking, does it not?" she asked,
bitterly. "You are one of the pious and proper sort, my good Joan, who
walk stiffly along the smooth-beaten path of propriety, from your cradle
to your grave. Well, I won't shock you much longer, let that be your
comfort. The day after to-morrow I go, and as a souvenir I mean to leave
_that_ behind me."

She pointed coolly to the crib in the corner.

"You--you mean to leave the baby?" I gasped.

"I--I mean to leave the baby," she answered, with a half laugh,
parodying my tone of consternation; "you didn't suppose I meant to take
it with me, did you? I start in two days to begin a new life, as a
perfectly proper young lady--young lady, you understand, Joan? and you
may be very sure I shall carry no such land-mark with me as that of the
old one. Yes, Joan, I shall leave the baby with you, if you will keep
it, with Mrs. Watters if you will not."

"Oh, I will keep the baby and welcome," I said; "poor little soul!" and
as it lay in its sleep, so small and helpless, so worse than orphaned at
its very birth, I stooped and kissed it, with tears in my eyes.

"You are a good woman, Joan," she said, more softly; "I wish--yes, with
all my soul, I wish I were like you. But it is late in the day for
wishing--what is done is done. You will keep the child?"

"I will keep the child."

"I am glad of that. It will be well with you. One day or other I will
come and claim it. Don't let it die, Joan; it has its work to do in the
world, and must do it. I will pay you, of course, and well. The money I
had with me when I came here is almost gone, but out yonder, beyond your
Canadian woods and river, there is always more for busy brains and
hands. The furniture of these rooms I leave with you to sell or keep, as
you see fit. Wherever I may be, I will give you an address, whence
letters will reach me."

"And you will never return--never come to see your child?" I asked.

"Never, Joan,--until I come to claim it for good. Why should I? I don't
care for it--not a straw--in the way you mean. One day, if we both live,
I will claim it; one day its father shall learn, to his cost and his
sorrow, that he has a child."

That evil light flashed up into her great eyes for an instant, then
slowly died out: but she spoke no more--her folded hands lay idly on her
lap, her moody gaze turned upon the rapidly darkening river and hills.
The rose light had all faded away--the gray, creeping, July twilight was
shrouding all things in a sombre haze. The baby awoke and cried; I had
its bottle ready--I lit the lamp and lifted it. As it lay in my lap,
placidly pulling at its feeding-bottle, its big black eyes fixed
vacantly upon the ceiling, its mother turned from the window and stared
at it silently.

With its little white face, and large black eyes, and profusion of long
black hair, it looked more like some elfish changeling in a fairy tale
than a healthy human child.

"It's a hideous little object," was Mrs. Gordon's motherly remark, after
that prolonged stare; "but ugly babies they say sometimes grow up
pretty. I want it to be pretty--It must be pretty. Will it, do you
think, Joan? Will it really look like me?"

"I think so, madame--very like you. More's the pity," I added, under my
breath.

"Ah!" still thoughtfully staring at it, "is there any birthmark? The
proverbial strawberry on the arm, or mole on the neck, you know? that
sort of thing?"

"It has no mark of any kind, from head to foot."

"What a pity; we must give it one, then. Art must supply the
deficiencies of nature. It shall be done to-morrow."

"_What_ must be done? Mrs. Gordon, you don't surely mean--"

"I mean to mark that child so that I shall know it again, fifty years
from now, if need be. Don't look so horrified Joan,--I won't do anything
very dreadful. One marks one's pocket-handkerchiefs--why not one's
babies? You may die; she may grow up and run away--oh, yes, she may! If
she takes after her mother, you won't find it a bed of roses bringing
her up. We may cross paths and never know each other. I want to guard
against that possibility. I want to know my daughter when we meet."

"For pity's sake, madame, what is it you intend to do?"

"You have seen tattooing, Joan, done in India ink? Yes. Well, that is
what I mean. I shall mark her initials on her arm to-morrow, exactly as
I mark them on my handkerchief, and you shall help me."

"No, madame," I cried out in horror, "I will not. Oh, you poor little
helpless babe! Madame! I beg of you--don't do this cruel thing."

"Cruel? Silly girl! I shall give it a sleeping cordial, and it will feel
nothing. So you will not help me?"

"Most assuredly I will not."

"Very well--Bettine will. And lest your tender feelings should be
lacerated by being in the house, you may go and pay your mother and
sister a visit. By the by, you don't ask me what its name is to be,
Joan."

"As I am to keep it, though, supposing you don't kill it to-morrow, I
shall be glad to know, Mrs. Gordon."

"I don't mean to kill it--never fear; I don't want it to die. If it had
been a boy, I always meant--in the days that are gone, mind you--to have
called it for its father."

She paused a moment, and turned her face far away. On _this_ point, even
she could feel yet.

"It is a girl, unluckily," she went on again, steadily, "but I will
still call it for him. Gordon Caryll--a pretty name, is it not, Joan? an
odd one too, for a girl. Until I claim it, however, and the proper time
comes, we will sink the Caryll, and call it Kennedy. Kennedy's a good
old Scotch, respectable name--Gordon Kennedy will do. As I said,
to-morrow I will mark the initials 'G. C.' upon its arm; and whatever
happens, years and years from now, if my daughter and I ever meet, I
shall know her always, and in all places, by the mark on her arm."

I could do nothing. My heart sickened and revolted against this cruelty,
but she was mother and mistress, and could do as she pleased. I would
not stay to see the torture; Bettine might help her or not, as she
pleased; I would go.

Next morning, immediately after breakfast, I quitted the house, and
spent the day at mother's. In the gray of the summer evening I returned,
to find the deed done, the babe drugged and still asleep, lying in its
crib, the arm bound up, Bettine excited, Mrs. Gordon composed and cool.

"Did it cry?" I asked, kissing the pale little face.

"Ah, but yes, mademoiselle!" Bettine cried, in her shrill, high French
voice; "cried fit to break the heart, until madame double drugged it,
and it lay still. The arm--the poor infant--will be sore and inflamed
for many a day to come. It is a heart of stone. Mam'selle Jeanne--the
pretty little madame."

That was our last evening in Saltmarsh--a long, quiet, lonesome evening
enough. I distrusted her--in some way I feared and disliked her; and yet
I felt a strange sort of compassion for the quiet little creature,
sitting there so utterly desolated in her youth and beauty--wrecked and
adrift on the world at eighteen.

She sat in her old place by the window so still--so still--the fair face
gleaming like marble in the dusk, the dark, mournful eyes fixed on the
creeping darkness shrouding the fair Canadian river and landscape. It
all ended to-night--the peace, the safety, dreary though it may have
been--and to-morrow she must go forth out into the great, pitiless
world, with only her beautiful face and her wicked heart to make her
way. What dark story lay behind her? I wondered; and was this fair,
forsaken wife most to be pitied or blamed?

The hours of the evening crept on--ten, eleven; she never stirred. And
when, sometime before midnight, I crept away with my baby to my room,
the motionless little figure was there at the window still.

Next morning dawned cloudless and fair. Bettine was up betimes to
prepare breakfast--for the last time I served my little mistress. She
was dead silent through it all, and ate it in her travelling suit of
dark gray, all ready to depart. There was a train at nine; it was
half-past eight now, and the cabriolet ordered from Quebec was at the
door. She stooped for a moment over her babe; but even in this parting
hour she never kissed it, and my heart hardened against her once more.

"It is as Bettine says," I thought; "she has the face of an angel and
the heart of a stone."

Even as I thought it, she arose and looked at me--that charming smile
upon her charming face, that had bewitched me against my will the very
first time we met, that bewitched me out of my hot anger once again. She
held out her hand.

"Good-by, my solemn Joan. Don't think too badly or me when I am gone--a
poor little woman with whom life has gone hard. You are a good girl, and
I shall always keep a grateful remembrance of you in my none too tender
heart. Take good care of my baby--you shall be amply rewarded. I _may_
come back years from now to look at it--who knows? At all events you
will hear from me monthly. And, if we never meet again, let me thank you
once more for your faithful and patient companionship all these months."

They were the last words she ever spoke in Saltmarsh. In the yellow
sunshine of the soft summer day Mrs. Gordon passed out of the House to
Let, and out of my life forever. I watched her enter the cab, caught one
last glimpse of a pale, lovely face, of a little gloved hand waving from
the window, then the driver cracked his whip, and they were whirling
away in a cloud of dust to where quaint, gray, silent old Quebec slept
in morning quiet, the golden sunshine flooding its steep streets, its
tin roofs, its lofty spires, its high stone walls. Mrs. Gordon was gone.

Before nightfall I had taken the baby home and dismissed Bettine. Part
of the furniture I kept, part I sent into Quebec and sold. Late in the
evening I carried the key to Mr. Barteaux, with his rent, and on my
return my own hands replaced the placard over the gate. Saltmarsh was
once more a "House to Let."

She had come among us a mystery--she left us a greater mystery still. I
write this record for the child's sake--one day it may need it. I feel
that the story I have told does not end here, that it is but the prelude
to what is to come. So surely as that woman and this child live and
meet, trouble--sad and deep trouble to that man Gordon Caryll--will come
of it. I say again I write this for the child's sake. One day, even what
I have set down here may be of use to her. If I die I will place it in
safe hands, to be given to her, and so I sign myself

                                                           JOAN KENNEDY.




CHAPTER V.

AT CARYLLYNNE.


Many miles away, many miles of land, many leagues of sea, far beyond
that "city set on the hill," Quebec, far away in fair England, lay the
broad domain of Caryllynne, Gordon Caryll's ancestral home.

It lay in one of the brightest, sunniest of the sunny sea-side shires, a
fair and stately inheritance, stretching away for miles of woodland and
meadowland, to the wide sea, sparkling in the late August sunshine, as
if sown with stars.

Under a massive Norman arch, between lofty iron gates, you went up a
sweep of broad drive, with a waving sea of many-colored foliage on
either hand, slim, silver-stemmed birches, copper beeches with leaves
like blood-red rubies, sombre pines, hoary oaks, graceful elms, and
whole rows of prim poplars, those "old maids of the wood." Far away this
brilliant forest of Caryllynne stretched to the emerald cliffs above the
bright summer sea, to the little village nestling between those green
cliffs, a village which for two centuries had called the Squire of
Caryllynne, lord.

You went up this noble avenue for a mile or more past the picturesque
Swiss cottage that did duty as a gate lodge, past green and golden
slopes of sward, past parterres bright with gorgeous autumnal flowers,
to the Manor house itself, an irregular structure of gray stone,
turreted and many-gabled and much ivy-grown. There was a stately portico
entrance, a flight of shallow-stone steps, and two couchant stone dogs,
with the ancient motto, "_Cave canim_." It was a very old house, one
portion as old as the reign of the greatly-married-man, Henry the
Eighth. A gift, indeed, from his Most Christian Majesty to Sir Jasper
Caryll, Knight, and cousin of Katherine Parr, on the happy occasion of
his last marriage.

Sir Jasper Caryll, Kt., had been sleeping beneath the chancel of
Roxhaven Church for three hundred odd years, with a brass tablet above
him recording his virtues; and many Carylls had been born and married,
and had died, within those gray stone walls since. The old, old business
of life, "Hatching, Matching, and Dispatching," had gone on and on
within those antique chambers; and Mistress Marian Caryll, widow of the
late Godfrey Caryll, reigned now in the Manor alone.

The old house had been modernized. Plate-glass windows, a tessellated
hall, velvet-carpeted stairways, conservatories gay with flowers, these
made the ancient dwelling bright. Flowers, indeed, were everywhere, in
gilded vases in half a hundred nooks, in swinging baskets from the
ceilings, and over all the amber August sunshine slanting like golden
rain.

The last light of the brilliant autumn day was falling softly over sea
and woodland, meadow and copse; the western windows of the Manor, facing
seaward, glinted through the trees like sparks of fire. The sweet,
tremulous hush of eventide lay over the land, as through the park gates
a pony phaeton dashed up the long, tree-shaded drive. Two black
high-steppers, a dainty little basket carriage, and a lady sitting very
erect and upright, driving with a strong, firm hand--a lady in sweeping
crapes and sables--in widow's weeds--the mistress of this fair domain.

A groom came forward to hold the horses. As she flung him the reins and
stepped out you saw that Mrs. Caryll was a very tall and stately lady,
bearing her forty years of life well. A tall, pale, rather cold, rather
stern, rather haughty lady, handsomer perhaps in her stately middle age
than she could ever have been in youth.

"I have driven the ponies very fast from Dynely Abbey, Morgan," she said
to the groom; "see that they are slowly exercised and well rubbed down.
Has the post arrived?"

The man made a sort of half military salute, as to his commanding
officer.

"Post came 'alf an hour ago, ma'am. I'll attend to the ponies, ma'am,
all right."

Mrs. Caryll passed on with a slow and measured sort of tread up the
stone steps, past the great couchant dogs, along the vast domed hall,
hung with suits of mail and antlered heads, up the wide stairway and
into her own rooms. The rose light of the sunset filled those elegantly
appointed apartments, and lying upon an inlaid table the mistress of the
Manor saw what she looked for--a sealed letter. Her heart gave a bound,
cold and well disciplined as it was, but (it was characteristic of the
woman) before taking it up, she slowly laid aside her bonnet and veil,
drew off her gloves, and then deliberately lifted it. A moment she
paused to glance at the free flowing writing she knew so well, then she
opened and read:

                                          LONDON, _August 25th, 18--_.

     MY DEAREST MOTHER:--I have arrived but this moment. By the first
     train I leave for home. I write this simply to announce my coming.
     I will be with you almost as soon as my note. I know that in spite
     of all you will grant me this last interview at least.

                                         Your affectionate son,

                                                         GORDON CARYLL.

She crushed the brief letter in her strong white hand. Her fixedly pale
face, even in the glow of the sunset, seemed to grow paler, her firm
lips set themselves in one tight unpleasant line.

"'My dearest mother!' 'Your affectionate son,'" she said, bitterly,
looking at the letter. "Yes, I will see him--he is right--for the last
time. After to-night I shall be as though I never had a child."

She folded the letter, laid it aside methodically in a drawer with many
others. Slow, methodical habits had become second nature to Mrs. Caryll.
"Yes," she thought, "I will see him once more--once more. Whatever he
may have to say in his own defence I will hear. To him and to all
mankind I trust I shall always do my duty. But come what may, after
to-night I will never see him again."

She looked at her watch--the train that would possibly bring him was due
even now. In a little time he would be with her. For two years she had
not seen him--he had been her darling, the treasure of her heart, the
apple of her eye, the "only son of his mother, and she was a widow." Her
whole soul cried out for him, and she stood here, and crushed down every
voice of nature, and calmly resolved after this once to see him no more
forever.

She walked across the room, and paused before the chimney-piece. Two
pictures hung above it--the only two this room contained--two portraits.
One, the one at which she looked, was the portrait of her husband,
painted twenty years ago, in the gallant and golden days of his youth, a
present to his bride. A handsome face; the Carylls had ever been
handsome men; and this proud, self-contained woman had loved her husband
with a great and deathless love. Now, he too lay in Roxhaven church;
only a month ago they had laid him there, glad to escape by death the
shame brought upon him by an only son.

"There are some things that Heaven itself will not ask us to forgive,"
was her thought--"this is one of them."

Beneath this portrait hung the other, a smaller one, of her son. Two
years ago that had been painted, on the eve of his departure for Canada
with his regiment. The frank fair face of the lad of twenty, gray-eyed
and yellow-haired, smiled at her from the canvas. With a resolute hand
she took it down, and turned it with the face to the wall. A little
thing again, but it told how small the mercy Gordon Caryll might expect
when he stood before his mother.

It had grown dark--the pale August moon rose up the misty sky. The
trees, waving faintly in the salt sea wind, cast long, slanting shadows
across the dusty whiteness of the high road, as from the town beyond,
from the brightly lit station, a fly from the railway drove through the
gates and up the moonlit avenue to the house. A young man sprang out,
paid and dismissed the man, and paused a moment in the pallid light to
look about him. Only two years since he had stood here last--two years.
Nothing had changed--nothing but his life, and the hot fever of his own
youthful fancy--the fair, treacherous face of a woman had spoiled that
forever.

He lifted the heavy bronze knocker and sent the echoes ringing dully
down the great hall. The man who opened the door, an old family servant,
started back with a cry of surprise and delight.

"Sure to goodness, if it isn't Mr. Gordon come back!"

"Mr. Gordon come back--bad shillings always came back, don't they? How
are you, Norton? Is my mother in?"

"Yes, Mr. Gordon. In her own rooms. You know the way--"

"Go and tell her I am here, Norton, and be quick about it, will you?
I'll wait."

The man stared, but obeyed. Gordon Caryll stood in the long, echoing,
deserted hall, staring moodily out at the moonlight, and not at all
sure, in spite of his letter, whether his mother would deign to see him
or not. But his doubts were speedily set at rest. Norton reappeared.

"My mistress will see you, Mr. Gordon, sir. She bids you come to her at
once in her morning room."

He waited for no more; she would see him; he had hardly dared hope it;
she _might_ forgive him--who knew? He ran lightly up the stairs and
tapped at the familiar door.

"Come in," his mother's calm voice said, and, hat in hand, he entered.

Mother and son stood face to face. A cluster of wax-lights lit the room
brilliantly. In their full glow Mrs. Caryll stood, her tall figure
upheld at its tallest, her widow's weeds trailing the carpet, her
widow's cap on her dark, unsilvered hair, her face like a face cut in
white stone. In that moment, if he could have but seen it, she bore a
curious, passing likeness to himself as he had stood, pale and
relentless, before the girl who had been his wife.

"Mother!"

She made a sudden, hasty motion for him to stand still and back, a
motion again like his own as he had repelled his most miserable wife. He
obeyed, closing the door, and knowing his whole fate in that second of
time.

She stood for fully a minute, silently looking at him, never softening
one whit. She saw the cruel changes those two years had made plainly
enough, the youthful face grown grave and worn, the hollow eyes, the
colorless cheeks. He had sinned, but he had also suffered. Well, it was
right; here and hereafter is not suffering the inevitable penalty of
sin?

"Mother," he said, "forgive me."

She made a motion of her hand toward the picture above the mantel.

"You know that he is dead?" were her first words.

"I know it. Oh, mother, I acknowledge all my wrongdoing, my shame, my
sin, if you will call it so. I was mad. All I could do to atone, I have
done. Mother, forgive me, if you can!"

"Forgive you!" Her eyes blazed out upon him for one moment with a lurid
fire. "I will never forgive you so long as we both live!"

He walked over to the low mantel, laid his arm upon it, and his bowed
face on his arm. She stood and looked at him, her breast heaving with
strong, repressed emotion, her eyes glowing like fire in her pale face.

"For three hundred years," she said, in that tense tone of suppressed
passion, "the Carylls have been born, have lived and died beneath this
roof, brave men, noble gentlemen always. It was left for my son to bring
shame and dishonor at last. The name was never approached by disgrace
until you bore it. Your grandfather married a duke's daughter; you, the
last of your name, take a wife from the sweepings of New York city--an
actress--a street-walker--a creature whose vile, painted face was
displayed nightly in the lowest theatre of the worst of American cities.
_My_ son, did I call you? I take it back. After to-night I have no son!"

He never moved; he never spoke. His hidden face she could not see. That
very silence was as oil to fire.

"One month ago your father died--died of your shame. You stand there as
much his murderer as though you had stabbed him to the heart. He died
unforgiving you--every rood of land, every shilling of fortune left away
from you. Not an inch of Caryllynne is entailed--that you know--not one
farthing of the noble inheritance that was your birthright shall you
ever possess. The name you dishonor is yours beyond power to recall; but
that alone--not one thing more. And after to-night you never cross this
threshold again."

Still no reply--still he stood like a figure of stone.

"You say you have atoned," his mother went on, in that low, passionate
voice. "Atoned! That means you have dragged the name of Caryll through
the mire and filth of a divorce court--that your story and hers, that
lost wretch, is in the mouths of all men in Canada and England. Your
atonement is worse than your crime. Your atonement shall last your life
long. Now go! All I wish to say, I have said--I will never forgive
you--I will never look upon your face again!"

The very words he had spoken to his divorced wife! What fatality was at
work here? She ceased speaking, and Gordon Caryll lifted his haggard
face and looked at her--to the day of her death a look to haunt her with
a pain sharper than death itself.

"It shall be as you say," he answered, very quietly. "I don't think I
expected anything else--I suppose I deserve nothing better. I will not
trouble you again. For the name I have dishonored, have no fear--it
shall be dishonored by my bearing it no more. I leave it behind with all
the rest. Good-night, mother, and good-by."

And then he was gone. The door closed gently behind him, and she was
alone. Alone! she would be alone her life-long now.

She was ghastly white--ashen white to the lips. But--she had done her
duty! That thought must console her in all the long, lonely years to
come. She stood for nearly half an hour in the spot where he had left
her, stock-still. Then she slowly turned, walked across the room, lifted
a velvet curtain, and entered what seemed an oratory. Over a sort of
altar, a painting of the Madonna di San Sisto hung--an exquisite copy;
and the heavenly mother, with the serene, uplifted face, holding the
child-Christ in her arms, was there before the earthly mother, who for
one rash act, had cast her only son off forever.

On a prayer-desk, before this altar, a Bible lay. At random she opened
it--in a blind sort of way seeking for comfort. And this is what she
read:

"Behold the king weepeth and mourneth for Absalom. And the victory that
day was turned into mourning unto all the people, for the people heard
say that day how the king was grieved for his son. But the king covered
his face, and the king cried with a loud voice, 'Oh, my son Absalom! Oh,
Absalom, my son, my son!'"




CHAPTER VI.

GORDON CARYLL'S STORY.


His trial was over, his sentence was passed, and Gordon Caryll went out
from his mother's presence an outcast and banished man.

"All for love, and the world well lost," he said to himself, with
something that was almost a smile. "Ah, well! Come what will, I have
been blessed. For four months I had my fool's paradise--let that thought
console me, in all the years of outlawry that are to come."

He did not leave the house directly. On the landing he paused a moment
irresolute, then turned, ran up another stairway, opened one of the many
doors that flanked the long corridor, and entered the rooms that had
been his own. Only the moonlight lit them, but that was brilliant almost
as day. With that slight, sad smile on his lips he walked through them.
Everywhere traces of his dead father's pride in him, his mother's love
for him, were scattered with lavish hand. More luxurious almost were
those rooms than his mother's own.

"They will serve for my mother's heir," the young soldier
thought--"whoever that may be. Lucia Dynely's little son Eric, very
likely. She was always fond of Lucia; so, for that matter, was I. My
pretty cousin! It is but seven miles distant, and there is time and to
spare. Suppose I look her up for the last time before I go forth into
the outer darkness, and be heard of no more?"

He selected a few trifles, a picture of this mother, another of this
"Cousin Lucia" of his thoughts, a gold-mounted meerschaum pipe--then
with a last backward glance of farewell at the pretty moonlit rooms, he
ran down the stairs, out of the silent house, the great door closed with
a clang behind him, and all was over.

He made his way to the stables, startling grooms and stable boys as
though he had been a ghost.

"Saddle Dark Diamond, Morris," he ordered; "I'm going to Dynely Abbey,
and will leave him there behind me. You can go over for him to-morrow."

He vaulted lightly into the saddle, cantered down the avenue, out of the
great gates, and beyond the far-stretching park that was never to call
him master.

As he stopped for one last look, never, it seemed to him, had the old
ancestral home looked so noble and desirable as on this August night,
under the yellow light of the summer moon.

"A fair and stately heritage to yield for a girl's face," he thought,
bitterly. "May my successor be wiser than I, and be kept from that
maddest of all man's madness--loving a woman!"

His horse was a fleet one--he spurred him on to a gallop. For miles, as
he rode, the woods of Caryllynne stretched, on the other hand the
cottage lights twinkled, the village forge flamed forth lurid red, old
familiar landmarks met him everywhere, and far beyond the broad sweep of
the silver-lighted sea.

Less than half an hour brought him to his destination, Dynely Abbey, the
seat of Viscount Dynely--a huge historic pile, that long centuries ago
had been a Cistercian monastery, in the days when the "Keys and Cross
and Triple Crown" held mighty sway through all broad England. As he rode
at a gallop up the entrance avenue, in view of the great gray Abbey,
pearly white in the moonlight, his horse shied at some white object, so
suddenly and violently as almost to unseat his rider. Gordon Caryll
laughed as he leaped off and patted him soothingly on the head.

"So ho, Diamond! Easy, old fellow. Does the sight of my pretty Cousin
Lucia, in her white dress and shawl, upset your nervous system like
this?"

He threw the bridle over a tree, and advanced to where a lady, in a silk
dinner dress, and wrapped in a white fleecy shawl, stood.

"Lady Dynely," he said, lifting his hat, "good-evening."

She had been slowly pacing, as though for an evening constitutional,
round and round a great ornamental fish-pond. As horse and rider
appeared she had paused in some alarm--then, as the unexpected visitor
approached, and the bright light of the moon fell on his face, she had
uttered a low cry of great surprise and delight, and held out to him
both hands.

"Gordon!" she cried. "Oh, Gordon! Can it be you?"

She was a pretty woman--three-and-twenty, perhaps, with a fair blonde
face, a profusion of pale blonde hair, a tall, willowy, fragile figure.
The fair face, the pale blue eyes, lit up now with genuine delight.

"I, Lady Dynely. You hardly looked for me to-night, did you? And yet,
you must have known I would come."

Her color rose. She withdrew the hand he held still.

"I did not know it. How could I tell? Your mother was here to-day--she
said nothing about it. When did you come?"

"Two hours ago. And as to-morrow morning, by the first train, I leave
again for good, I ran the risk of not finding you at home, and rode over
to say good-by. By the way, it's rather a coincidence, but one August
night two years ago, you and I shook hands and parted on this very spot.
You were dressed in white that night, too, I remember, and looked as you
always do look, _belle cousine_, fair and sweet, and pale as a lily."

Again her color rose, but the blue, startled eyes fixed themselves on
his face.

"Say good-by--leave for good!" she repeated. "What is it you mean?
Gordon, have you seen your mother?"

"Yes, Lucia, I have seen my mother. I have just come from Caryllynne. I
have bidden farewell to it and to my mother forever."

She stood looking at him in painful silence--that sensitive rose-pink
color coming and going in her cheeks. In the crystal moonlight she could
see the great and saddening change in him. She clasped both hands around
his arm, and looked up at him with soft, pitiful eyes.

"Gordon--cousin," she said, gently, "is it true, this story they tell,
that is in the papers, that all London rang with before we left? It must
be true, and yet--oh, Gordon! unless you tell me with your own lips I
_cannot_ believe."

"Then I tell you," he moodily answered, "it is true."

"That you married an actress--an--oh, Gordon!" she said passionately, "I
would rather see you dead!"

"You are not alone in that, I fancy," he said, with a drearily reckless
laugh. "All the same, I have done it. All the same, too, I have had
enough of reproach and bitterness for one night--it is my last,
remember--don't you take up the cry against me. Those gentle lips of
yours, _ma belle_, were never made to say cruel things. We have been
good friends always--let us so part."

She sighed wearily, her hands still loosely clasped his arm, her blue,
pitying eyes still fixed on his face. His gloomy gaze was bent on the
water-lilies in the pond, whose pale heads he was mercilessly switching
off with his riding whip.

"I am sorry--I am sorry. But your mother, Gordon, surely she pities you
and forgives you. I know how stern and resolute she can be where she
thinks her duty is concerned; but you, her only son, whom she loves so
dearly--"

"She has disinherited and cast me off forever. It is all right, Lucia. I
don't deny the justice of my sentence, only you see one looks rather for
mercy than for justice from one's mother."

"But she does not mean it--she speaks in anger. She will repent and call
you back."

He smiled--a slow, hard, inexorable smile.

"It is a little late for all that. What is done is done. I will never go
back. She says truly, I have disgraced the name--the only atonement I
can make is to renounce it. She has ordered me from her sight and her
home forever--one does not wait to be told that twice."

"How could she--how could she!" his cousin murmured, the soft blue eyes
filling and brimming over; "you, her only son--all she has left--whom
she loved so dearly. Oh! how could she do it! Gordon, I, too, have a
son, my little Eric, and I love him so devotedly, so entirely, that I
feel, I know, no crime he could commit, though it were murder itself,
could ever for one second change that love. Do what he might--yes, the
very worst man can do, I would still love him and take him to my heart."

Her pale face glowed, her pale eyes lit, her voice arose. Her cousin
looked at her tenderly.

"I can believe that," he said; "but you see, Lucia, there are mothers
and mothers--and Viscountess Dynely and Mrs. Caryll are of two very
different orders. I never did prefer the Spartan sort myself, ready to
run the knife through their nearest and dearest at a moment's notice.
Still, I repeat, my sentence has been deserved, and is just."

"Gordon, tell me all about it, will you? I know so little, I read the
papers, of course, but still--"

"Is it worth while, Lucia? It is not a pleasant or profitable story. Do
you really care to know?"

"Gordon!"

"Oh, I know all your affectionate interest in me and my concerns,
fairest cousin, and I don't mind boring you with the details of a young
fool's folly. Folly! good heaven above! What a fool I was! What a
gullible, wooden-headed, imbecile idiot I must have been!"

"You--you loved her, Gordon?"

"Well, yes, I suppose it was love, that blind and besotted fever her
beauty and her witcheries threw me into. She was a sorceress whose
accursed spells sent every man she met under sixty straightway out of
his senses. Why she threw the rest over for me (she had half the
battalion at her feet) was clear enough. I was the youngest, the
richest, and the greatest ass in Toronto. She turned scores of other
heads, but not to that pitch of idiocy which proffers wedding rings. I
had only seen her six times when I asked her to marry me--you may
faintly guess the depth and breadth of my imbecility when I tell you
that."

"She was handsome, Gordon?"

"She was more than handsome, Lucia. She had a _beaut du diable_ whose
like I have never seen--that no man could resist--a dark,
richly-colored, Southern sort of beauty, of the earth earthy. She was
small and slender, with a waist you could snap like a pipe-stem, two
large black eyes, like a panther's, precisely, and a smile that sent you
straight out of your senses. All the fellows in Toronto raved of
her--she was the toast of the mess, the talk of the town. Only the women
fought shy of her--they took her gauge by intuition, I suppose. Before
she had been a week in Toronto, Major Lovell and his daughter were _the_
topic, in ball-room, and boudoir, and barracks."

"She was a Miss Lovell?" Lady Dynely asked, in a constrained sort of
tone. One hand still rested on his arm, and as they talked they walked
slowly round and round the fish-pond. In the days that were gone she had
been very fond of her dashing boy cousin and playmate--very fond--with
sisterly fondness she told herself--nothing more.

"You will hear. I had been a year in Toronto before she came, a dull and
dreary year enough, with nothing but the daily drill, the parade, the
routine of military life, the provincial balls and dinner parties, the
provincial flirtations with dark Canadian belles to break the monotony.
All at once she came, and everything changed. Major Lovell brought his
daughter among us--and it seemed to me my life began. He was a
disreputable old duffer enough, this Lovell, a drunkard, a sharper at
cards, a rooker at billiards, living on his half-pay and his whole wits.
He was a widower, with a daughter out in Bermuda with her mother's
friends, who declined to live with her rascally old father. He was in
the habit of disappearing and reappearing in Toronto at odd times--this
time, after a longer absence than usual, he reappeared with his
daughter.

"He met me one bleak autumn night lounging aimlessly down one of the
principal streets, dressed for a heavy sacrificial dinner party, yawning
at the boredom in prospective, wishing all civilian dinner-givers at the
deuce, and, willy-nilly, he linked his seedy old arm in mine.

"'En route for Rogers', dear boy?' he said, with a grin, 'and looking
ennuied to death even at the thought of what is in store for you. Why
make a martyr of yourself, Gordon, my lad--why sacrifice yourself on
the altar of acquaintanceship? Throw over the bloated timber merchant,
come to my lowly wigwam, and let's have a friendly game at cart, I'll
give you a deviled kidney, and a glass of sherry--you can drop in at
Rogers' when the heavy feeding's over. Besides,'--after a pause, this,
and with a sidelong glance--'I want to show you my little girl--bless
her! She's come to keep house for her old dad at last.'

"I made some faint resistance--only faint, and yielded. I had a weakness
for cart; the major was past-master of the game, although he made his
lessons rather expensive to youngsters like myself.

"'Neville and Dalton and two or three more of Yours are coming,' he
said, as he inserted his latch key. 'Rosie will give you a bit of supper
by and by, and sing you a song, if you like that sort of thing. Come in,
Gordon--come in, my boy, and thrice welcome to the old man's modest
mansion.'

"And then I was in, out of the cold, dark Canadian night, in a fire-lit,
lamp-lit parlor, looking with dazzled eyes down upon the loveliest face,
I thought, that firelight or sunlight ever shone on.

"She had sprung up at our entrance--she had been crouched in kittenish
fashion on the hearth rug, and two big, wonderful eyes, of tawny
blackness, were looking up at me. I thought of Balzac's 'Girl with the
Golden Eyes'--these were black or yellow, just as the shifting firelight
rose or fell. As I stood staring in a stupefied trance of wonder and
admiration, the major's fat, unctuous old voice droned in my ear.

"'Rosamond, my child--my young friend, Mr. Caryll, of Caryllynne, Devon,
England, and Her Majesty's--the Royal Rifles, Toronto, Canada. Gordon,
my boy--my little daughter Rosie.'

"Then a little brown hand slipped out to me, the dark luminous eyes and
the red dimpling lips smiled together.

"'I am very pleased to meet Mr. Gordon Caryll of ---- what's all the
rest, papa? Very pleased to meet anybody, I'm sure, in this cold, nasty,
dreary Canada.'

"'You don't like Canada then, Miss Lovell?' I managed to stammer. 'I am
sorry for that. We must try and change your opinion of it before long.
What with skating and sleighing, it isn't half a bad place.'

"She pouted and laughed like a child. She was singularly childish in
form and face, hardly looking sixteen.

"'Not half a bad place! Where you grill alive three summer months and
shiver to death nine winter ones. Oh, my dear Bermuda! Where the hearts
were as warm as the climate, and the faces as sunny as the skies. No
fear of being lonely, or miserable, or neglected there. If papa would
let file, I would go back to-morrow.'

"'But papa won't,' the major put in with a chuckle; 'papa can't spare
his one ewe lamb yet. Mr. Caryll here, I am sure, will do his best to
make time pass, little one. Hark! I hear a knocking in the south
entry--the other fellows at last.'

"Then with much laughter, and stamping and noise, three or four military
men came clattering in out of the cold and damp darkness, and were
presented to 'My daughter, Rosamond.'

"I don't know how it was with them; I can answer for myself--from the
first moment I looked on Rosamond Lovell's face I lost my head. You know
me well enough. Lucia," the speaker broke off with a half laugh, "to
know I never do that sort of thing by halves. But this was different
from anything that had gone before. I looked on those wonderful dusky
eyes only once, and said to myself, 'I will win Rosamond Lovell for my
wife, if it be in the power of mortal man to win her.'

"I lost no time in setting about my wooing. No wonder the other fellows
laughed. They admired old Lovell's daughter, too, no doubt--that was a
matter of course--but not to the depth of lunacy. They left that for me.
I declined cart, I declined deviled kidney, declined the doubtful
sherry--I was sufficiently intoxicated already. The peerless Rosamond
smiled upon me but shyly; she was not accustomed to such sudden and
overpowering devotion--timid angel! Still, she did smile, and let me
accompany her to the distant corner where the piano stood, while the
other men played for ponies in the distance, and the major with great
impartiality fleeced all alike. She played for me on the jingly piano;
she sang for me in a rich contralto.

"I can see her now as she sat there that first fatal night, in a pink
dress, white roses in her belt and in her bosom, the lamplight streaming
across her rich, dusk loveliness. Paugh! the smell of white roses will
turn me sick all my life.

"It was late when we broke up, and Miss Lovell, shrinking pettishly from
the other men, held out her hand with a soft good-night to me. I went
out from the warm, bright room, into the black, rain-beaten midnight,
with head and heart in a whirl. The others, not too pensive over their
losses at first, chaffed me clumsily, but the hospitable major had bled
them all so freely at cart, that their deadly, lively jokes soon
lapsed into moody silence. To-morrow evening, they were to go back for
their revenge, and the friendly major had asked me too.

"'Though you _did_ throw us over, Caryll, my boy,' he said in his big
debonnaire voice, 'you'll keep little Rosie from moping herself to
death. Yes, yes, come to-morrow and fetch her the new songs. She has a
passion for music, my little one, and a voice that would make Lind look
to her laurels if the poor old dad could afford to cultivate it.'

"I tossed feverishly through the dark morning hours. 'Rosamond!
Rosamond!' I kept repeating; 'there is music in the very name, music in
her voice when she speaks, music celestial in her tones when she sings.
And to think that my little white "Rose of the World" should be daughter
to such a confounded old cad as that. But I will marry her and take her
home to Caryllynne and my mother,' I thought; and I could picture to
myself my mother's whole heart going out in love and welcome, to her
son's fair young bride. I didn't much fear a rejection--I was
constitutionally sanguine, and she had been as kind as heart could
desire. Unless--and I grew cold and hot at the mere fancy--unless she
had left a lover behind in Bermuda.

"'At the very earliest possible hour next morning, I made an elaborate
toilet and sallied forth for conquest. I purchased an armful of music,
and presented myself at Major Lovell's dingy little cottage. The major
was out--Miss Rosamond was in--that was what the grimy maid-of-all-work
told me. I entered the parlor, and Rosamond was there to meet and
welcome me, more fresh, and youthful, and lovely in the broad, bright
sunshine, than even under the lamplight last night.

"'Oh, what quantities of music! Oh, how kind of me! All the songs she
liked best. Oh, how could she ever thank me enough!'

"'By letting me come to--to see you every day. By--caring for me a
little. By letting me say how happy it will make me to be welcomed here
by you.'

"Stammering over this speech, blushing and floundering like any other
hobbledehoy in the agonies of calf-love, I lifted her hand to my lips,
_ la_ Sir Charles Grandison, and kissed it.

"I can imagine now how she must have been laughing inwardly at the green
young fool she had hooked. But private theatricals were in her line, her
maidenly confusion and embarrassment were done to the life.

"I lingered for hours, while she tried over the songs, and dimly
realized two facts: that her knowledge of piano-forte music was but
meagre after all, and that she had really very little to say for
herself. Only dimly; I was much too far gone to realize anything very
clearly, except that she was the loveliest little creature the Canadian
sun shone on.

"That evening I was back. Again Rosamond and I had our corner, our
singing and our _tte--tte_; again that old wolf, Lovell, fleeced
those big innocent military lambs--as a shearer his sheep. That was the
story over and over for a week--at the end of that time, I walked up to
Major Lovell one forenoon, and demanded the priceless boon of his
daughter's hand. The old rascal's start of amazement and consternation
was capital.

"'His daughter! his Rosie! his little girl! And only a week since we had
met! The difference in our positions, too! _What_ did I mean!' Here the
major inflated himself like an enraged turkey-cock, and glared fiercely
out of his fiery little eyes. 'Not to insult him, surely! A poor man he
might be--alas! was, but always an officer and a gentleman.'

"Here he stopped sonorously to blow his nose. 'Very little of a
gentleman,' I remember thinking, even then.

"'Have I taken a viper into the bosom of my family?' pursued the old
humbug, melodramatically. 'You, Mr. Gordon Caryll, sir, are heir to a
large estate and fortune--the last of an ancient and distinguished line;
it is also true that I am but one remove from a pauper, still--'

"'Good Heaven, Lovell!' I cried out, impetuously cutting short this
rhodomontade. 'What bosh are you talking? I mean what I say, I mean it
more than I ever meant anything in my life. Insult--nonsense! I love
your daughter, and I ask you to give her to me for my wife. We have
known each other but a week, it is true. What of that? Love is not a
plant of slow growth--it can spring up like the gourd of Jonas, fully
grown in a night.'

"I think I must have read that somewhere. It struck me even at the time
as sounding rather absurd, and I looked to see if the major was
laughing. No doubt the old villain was, for he had turned away to the
window, and was elaborately wiping his eyes.

"'And she--my Rosamond,' he said, at length, in a voice husky with
emotion and much whiskey-punch--'my little one, who, only a year ago, it
seems to me, played with her dolls, and--and marbles, and--er--that sort
of thing, can it be that she is indeed a woman, and returns
your--er--'pon my life, very flattering passion?'

"I smiled exultantly as I recalled a little scene of last night, in that
musical nook of ours, the lamp turned low, the music at a stand-still,
and 'I mark the king, and play,' 'Your deal, Deverell,' 'Five to one on
Innes,' coming from the unromantic cart players at the other end--a
scene where I, holding Miss Rosamond Lovell's two hands in mine, had
poured forth a rhapsodical story of consuming passion. And the hands had
not been drawn away, and, as the exquisite face drooped in the dim
light, she had whispered that which had made me the happiest man on
earth.

"'Yes,' I told the major, 'that was all right; she had consented to be
my wife--nothing was needed but his sanction. And I hoped he would agree
to the marriage being at once. What need was there of delay? I was of
age, and two months over--what need of waiting? I wanted to make sure of
my prize.'

"It was the most out-and-out case of insanity on record. I was
mad--sheer mad. I cannot account for my besotted folly in any other way.
The old fox made a feint of not consenting at first. She was too
young--our acquaintance was so scandalously short--what would Toronto
say? What would my father and mother say? The thing was not to be
thought of.

"But I would listen to nothing. What did it matter _what_ Toronto said?
Toronto might go hang! My father and mother had no thought but for my
happiness; their ultimate consent was all right. For the rest, if he
dreaded the world's tongue, let the marriage be private, just as private
as he pleased, and in a month, or two months, or whenever I could get
leave of absence, I and my wife would sail for England. When the thing
was inevitable, talk would die out. Marry my darling I must; life
without her was insupportable, etc., etc., etc.

"I grow sick at heart, Lucia, when I recall that time. And yet I was
blindly, insanely happy--with that utter bliss that in the days of
our first youth and grossest folly we can only know. We were
married. Rosamond had but one female acquaintance, a young lady
music-teacher--she, of course, was bridesmaid, and Singleton, of
Ours, was best man. We were married in the cottage parlor, one dark
autumnal morning, all on the quiet. Clergyman, groomsman,
bridesmaid, all promised secrecy. Rosamond remained at the cottage
with her father as before. I kept my rooms in the town. I did not
write to announce my marriage--time enough for all that, I thought.
I would get leave of absence and take Rosamond home--they would have
to look in her face but once, to forget my rash haste, her poverty
and obscurity, and take her to their hearts forever.

"But days and weeks and months slipped away--four passed; and leave had
not yet been obtained. As might be expected, our secret had leaked out,
and was our secret no longer. The story of my mad marriage was whispered
throughout the town, and only my blindness was upon me still, I must
have seen the looks of pity that met me at every turn--pity blended with
amusement and contempt. But I saw nothing, suspected nothing, and when
the blow came, it fell like a thunderbolt, indeed.

"I have said this girl I had married was a perfect actress--I say it
again. Love itself she could counterfeit to the life; she fooled me to
the top of my bent; she made me believe her whole heart was mine. Her
face lighted when I came, saddened when I went, ay, after four months of
matrimony she held her dupe as thoroughly duped as on the first day.
Something preyed on her mind, _that_, at least, I saw. She looked at me
at times as though she feared me; she looked at the major as though she
feared him. The old fellow had taken to drinking harder than ever, had
been at death's door with delirium tremens more than once since my
marriage, and in his cups (I learned after) babbled of what he had done.

"'We hooked him, sir,' the tipsy major would hiccough, winking his
bleary old eyes, and tottering on his rickety old legs, 'hooked him like
the gonest coon! Oh, Lord! what fools young men are! a pretty girl can
twist the biggest of you gallant plungers around her little finger. I've
known regiments of fools in my lifetime, but that young ass, Caryll--oh,
by Jupiter! _he_ puts the topper on the lot.'

"It was the major himself who threw up his hand, and showed me the game
he had played at last.

"He had caught cold after a horrible fit of D. T., and I suppose his
devil's race was run--typhoid fever supervened, and the gallant major
was going to die. Rosamond, with him still, nursed him faithfully and
devotedly, and tried with all her power to keep me from seeing him at
all.

"'You can do no good, Gordon,' she would plead; 'keep away--don't go
in. You may catch the fever. He wants no one but me.'

"The bare thought of my entering the sick room seemed a perpetual terror
to her. She would have no nurse, she would wait upon him herself, she
almost tried by force to keep me from seeing him. Off and on he was
delirious; as a rule he had his wits about him though, and would grin
like a satyr to the last.

"'She's afraid I'll peach, Caryll,' he whispered to me one day, with a
wink. 'Blessed if I won't, though. _I_ never cared about her, and it
would be a shame, a cursed shame, to go off hooks, you know, and not
tell.'

"'Not tell what?' I asked, sternly.

"'Never you mind, Gordon, my boy, you'll hear it all fast enough. You
ain't half a bad sort, hanged if you are, and I'm sorry--yes, I'm sorry
I did it. It was a devilish unhandsome trick for one gentleman to play
on another; but it was good fun at the time, that you'll be forced to
admit yourself. Hush-h! here she comes, not a word to _her_. I'll tell
you all by and by.'

"I was bewildered--half startled also; but I set it down to delirium.
She came in, looking with quick, apprehensive eyes from his face to
mine.

"'Has he been talking?' she asked.

"'Nothing _you_ would care to hear, Rosie, my girl,' he cut in, with a
feeble chuckle; 'not a word about you--ask him if you like.'

"I set it all down to delirium. 'Whom the gods wish to destroy they
first make mad.' My madness had lasted over four months--I was destined
to become sane again.

"The major sank lower and lower. His last hour was near. Rosamond never
left him when she could; she still strove with all her might to keep us
apart. I sometimes wonder now she did not hasten his end. She was quite
capable of it, I believe.

"One night I was to dine in the town. I had left the cottage and nearly
reached my destination. It was a stormy February night, the streets
white with drifting snow, a sleety wind blowing piercingly cold. Some
unaccountable depression had weighed upon me all day; my wife was
strangely changed of late; I could not understand her. The major was
very low, almost at his last. What if he died while I was absent,
Rosamond and the servant-maid all alone. I turned hastily back; I would
share my dear girl's vigil, I thought--nay, I would compel her to go to
bed and to sleep; she was utterly worn out, and I would watch alone.

"I returned to the house, and entered softly. The maid-servant was alone
in the sick room. Miss Rosamond had fallen asleep at her post from sheer
weariness, and had been persuaded to go to her own room and lie down.

"'You did quite right,' I said; 'I will share your watch. I don't think
he will last out the night.'

"The sick man's eyes opened--a cunning leer in them to the last.

"'Don't you, Gordon, my boy--don't you think I'll last out the night?
Then, by Jove! it's time to make a clean breast of it. Where's she? Your
wife?'

"'Up-stairs in her own room, asleep.'

"'That's right. When the cat's away the mice can play. Send that woman
back to the kitchen--I've a word or two for your private ear.'

"I obeyed. The woman went.

"'Now lock the door, like a good fellow, and come here. Sit close, for
my wind's almost gone, and I can't jaw as I used. And I say! look here,
Caryll! no violence, you know. I'm an old man, and I'm dying, and I'm
sorry--yes, blessed if I ain't--that I ever fooled you as I did. All the
reparation I can make, I will make--that's fair, surely. Now, listen,
here, Caryll; this has been a put-up job from first to last. Rosamond's
not my daughter!'

"'Not your--'

"I sat staring at him aghast.

"'Not my daughter--no, by George! My daughter, the one in Bermuda, you
know, is in Bermuda still, and a deuced hard-featured young woman--takes
after her mother, and wouldn't touch her disreputable old dad with a
pair of tongs. No, Gordon, lad, the girl you've married isn't my
daughter. I don't know who's daughter she is. She doesn't know herself.
She's your wife--worse luck; but she's nothing to me.'

"I sat stunned, dumb, listening. If my life had depended on it, I could
not have spoken a word.

"'I'll tell you how it was, Caryll,' the dying old reprobate went on.
'Give us a drop of that catlap in the tumbler first. Thanks. It was in
New York I met her first--in New York, just a month before I brought her
here. Strolling down the Bowery one night I went into a concert-room, or
music-hall, of the lowest sort. Bowery roughs, with their hats on and
cigars in their mouths, were lying about the benches yelling for
"Rosamond" to come out and give them a song. Presently the wretched
orchestra began, the green baize drew up, and, in a gaudy, spangled
dress, a banjo in her hand, tawdry flowers in her hair, "Rosamond" came
bounding forward, smiling and kissing hands to her vociferous audience.
So I saw her for the first time--I swear it, Caryll--the girl you have
made your wife!'

"'She sang song after song--you can imagine the highly-spiced sort of
songs likely to suit such an audience. They applauded her to the echo,
stamping, clapping, whistling, yelling with wild laughter and delight,
and all the while I sat, and stared, and wondered at her beauty. For
tawdry, and painted, and brazen as she was that night, her beauty, in
all places and at all times, is a thing beyond dispute. It was then,
sitting there and looking at her, that the plot came into my head, put
there by _her_ guardian angel, the devil, no doubt. This is what it was:

"'Take that girl off the stage, clothe her decently, drill her in her
part for a week or two--she's a clever little baggage--take her back to
Toronto, and pass her off as your daughter. She's got the beauty and
grace of a duchess, and there's more than one soft-headed, soft-hearted
fool among the fellows there, who will go mad over her black eyes, and
be ready to marry her out of hand before she's a month among them.
There's that young chap, Caryll, for instance--oh, yes. Gordon, my boy,
I pitched upon you even then--he's the heir to one of the finest
fortunes in the kingdom, and last man on earth likely to doubt or
investigate. The thing's worth trying. Of course, when the fish is
hooked _I_ come in for the lion's share. Ecart's not an unprofitable
amusement, but there may be better things in this wicked world even than
cart.

"'It was a brilliant idea--even you must own that. I lost no time in
carrying it out. I hunted up Rosamond behind the scenes. Good Ged! such
scenes! and there and then had a long and fatherly talk with her. She
gave me her history frankly enough; she had no parents, no friends to
speak of, no relations. She never _had_ had a father so far as she knew,
and her drunken drab of a mother had died two years before. She was
sixteen, and had made her debut a year before, under the friendly
auspices of a negro minstrel gentleman, who had taught her to strum the
banjo and play upon the piano.

"'I said nothing of my plan that night. I slept upon it, and found it
rather strengthened than otherwise by that process. I hunted up Mlle.
Rosamond (in private life they called her Sally) next morning, in her
Bowery attic, and laid my plan before her. Gad, Caryll, how she jumped
at it! Her eyes glittered at the mention of the fine dresses and gay
jewelry--she had ambition beyond her sphere, had devoured a great deal
of unwholesome light literature, and was equal to anything. I found her
cleverer even than I had dared to hope--the girl had been more or less
educated at a public school, and could actually talk well. The negro
minstrel gentleman thrashed her when he got drunk; she was tired of her
life and Bohemian associates, to call them by no fouler name, of this
dirty Quartier Latin of New York, and eager and ready to go.

"'What need to waste words, Caryll--the thing was an accomplished fact
in three weeks. The rest you know--"we came, we saw, we conquered,"
more's the pity--for _you_. The little Bowery actress played her part
_con amore_--the pretty little yellow-eyed spider wove her web, and the
big, foolish fly walked headlong in at first sight. You married her!'

"He paused a moment, and motioned me to give him his cordial. The clammy
dew of death was upon his face already, his voice was husky and gasping,
but he was game to the end and would finish. I held the drink to his
lips in a stupid, dazed sort of way, far too stunned to realize what I
heard as yet.

"'You married her, Gordon,' he went on, 'and--give the devil his due--I
believe she's fond of you. That wasn't in the bond, but she is, and her
efforts of late days to have me die and "make no sign" were worthy a
better cause. But I ain't such an out-and-out bad 'un as that,
Caryll--'pon my word I ain't; and then, money can't do a man any good
when he's going to die. So I've made a clean breast of it, my boy, and
you can do as you please. You're awfully spoony on her, I know, and if
you like, why, say nothing about it; stick to her through thick and
thin. Other men have married girls like Rosie--and she's fond of you, as
I say, poor little beggar, and you can take her to England and no one
will be the wiser. The fellows here won't peach; they know it, Caryll;
the thing's leaked out somehow, and--'

"He stopped. I had risen to my feet. I don't know what he saw in my
face, but he held up both hands with a shrill cry of horror, not to kill
him. The next I remember, I was out in the black, storm-beaten street.
It was close upon midnight. At that hour and in that storm there was no
one abroad in Toronto. A wheel of fire seemed crashing through my brain,
some nameless, awful horror had fallen upon me. In a stupefied way I was
conscious of that--of no more. And then--all in an instant it seemed to
me the night had passed and the morning had broken. I had spent hours in
the freezing streets. With the morning light the mists of my brain
seemed to clear, and the full horror of this most horrible thing came
upon me--this unheard-of, shameless deed.

"The girl I had loved, had trusted, had married, was the vile thing he
made her out--the offcast of the New York streets. And the man who had
blindly loved her she had fooled and laughed at from first to last! A
very demon of fury seemed to enter me then. I turned, and went
home--with but one resolve--to have her life, and then end my own.

"She was not there. She had seen my first entrance; she had stolen down,
listened, and heard all; she had gone back to her room, dressed herself
for the street, taken all her money and jewels, and fled. They told me
all this--three or four of our fellows were there, and a strange, gloomy
hush lay over the house. Major Lovell was dead.

"After that, for a week or two, all is chaotic. I did not end my life--I
hardly know how I was kept from that last coward's act--the fact
remained. They buried Lovell; and in a quiet way, the story of old
Lovell's plot, and old Lovell's daughter, was over the town.

"I made no attempt to follow her. The first paroxysm of fury passed, a
sullen, dull reaction set in. I filed a suit for divorce. A mere
separation would not do--every tie must be cut that bound me to her. I
wrote home, telling my father and mother all--all--hiding nothing. Then
my leave came, and I quitted Toronto forever. Months passed. I lived in
hiding in Montreal; then the decree of divorce was granted--I was free!

"I was going home. Before quitting Canada to return no more, I went to
Quebec to visit my mother's old friend and my godfather, General
Forrester. My story had rung through Quebec, of course--was it not
ringing over the length and breadth of the land? But the kind old
general made no mention of it, and insisted upon my joining them the day
of my arrival at mess.

"I agreed. I had lived a hermit life for five months--I longed to see
familiar faces once more. At the mess dinner, while jokes and stories
were being bandied round, some one jovially proposed the health of the
'Sleeping Beauty of the Enchanted Palace,' and it was drunk with
laughing enthusiasm. I naturally made inquiry concerning this celebrated
lady, and learned, that in the present instance, her mortal name was
Mrs. Gordon, a youthful widow of fabulous beauty and wealth, who had
come to Quebec five months before, and had shut herself up in a deserted
old rookery, to weep in silence, no doubt, over the dear departed. Like
a flash the truth came upon me.

"'Most thrilling indeed, Ercildoun,' I said; 'here's towards her? Which
are we to drink--_belle_ blonde, or _jolie_ brunette?'

"'Brunette, brunette! a picture by Titian. Eyes like sloes, and hair
like that what's-his-name's wing!' shouted Ercildoun.

"The toast was rapturously taken up. I was as hilarious as any of them.
There are times when thought _must_ be drowned, no matter how.

"Next day I deliberately hunted her down. Her servant was pointed out to
me on the street; I followed her. And walking up and down by the river
side, in the summer sunset, I came full upon the girl who had been my
wife.

"I believe at first she imagined I had come to kill her. I speedily
reassured her. What need, Lucia, to speak of that interview? It was
brief, indeed. I have looked my last, I hope, on the woman who was for
four months my wife. I hope--and yet, so surely as I stand here, I
believe she will cross my path again. She vowed it, as we parted that
night, and for good or for evil she is one to keep her word."

The story was told rapidly, at times almost incoherently, but told. He
stood beside her in the moonlight, with colorless face and eyes full of
passionate despair.

"The remainder you know," he said, after a pause; "the shame that broke
my father's heart and sent him to his grave--that has parted my mother
and me forever. For the rest, whatever fate befalls me in the time to
come, it is a fate richly earned. I blame my mother in no way. Your son
Eric, or General Forrester's baby daughter, will inherit Caryllynne in
my stead. So let it be. I go from here to-night, in all likelihood
forever. Before the week is out I shall have left England."

She had turned her face away from him, but he knew that her tears were
falling.

"Where do you go?" she asked.

"To India. I have exchanged into a regiment ordered out at once. When
one's life comes to an end at home, it is well to be of some service
abroad. And so, Lucia, my best cousin, you at least will bid me good-by
and good speed before I go."

He took both her hands, looking down into the fair, drooping face.

"And you," he went on, "are _you_ happy, Lucia? You are pale and frail
as a shadow. Tell me, does Dynely--," he paused. She drew her hands from
his clasp, her face still turned away.

"I made a mercenary marriage," she answered, sudden coldness and
hardness in her tone; "that you know. All the happiness such marriages
bring, I have. While I possess my boy, my Eric, I can never be utterly
miserable, Gordon!" She looked up suddenly, her fair face crimsoning.
"You knew Lord Dynely before his marriage--you were with him one autumn
in Ireland, were you not? Tell me--" she stopped.

"Well, Lucia? What?"

"It may be only fancy, but I _have_ fancied there is some--some secret
connected with that Irish summer. It is seven years ago--you were only a
boy at the time. Still--" again she paused confusedly.

"Well?"

"There was no one, no girl, no peasant girl to whom Lord Dynely paid
attention that summer in Galway? I have heard a rumor--" for the third
time she broke off, afraid, it seemed, to go on.

Her cousin looked at her in some surprise.

"You know what Lord Dynely is--was, I mean, in his bachelor days," he
said, quietly, "an admirer of every pretty girl he met, whether peeress
or peasant. There were many handsome Spanish-looking women to be seen
that long ago summer we spent fishing at the Claddagh, on the Galway
coast. His lordship admired them all, I am bound to say; I am also bound
to say, impartially, so far as I could see. Don't take fancies into your
head, Lucia--facts are enough. And now I must go. By Jove! how the time
has flown! I have kept you here an unconscionable time in the falling
dew. Good-by, Lucia, keep a green place in your memory for the black
sheep of the flock. Kiss little Eric for me. Once more, good-by."

Holding her hands in his, he bent down and touched her cheek. She broke
suddenly into a passionate sob.

"Oh, Gordon, cousin, it breaks my heart to see you go!"

He smiled.

"It is best so," he said.

He dropped her hands, turned with the words, walked rapidly away, and
disappeared.




CHAPTER VII.

HOW LORD VISCOUNT DYNELY DIED.


Half an hour had passed away, and still Lady Dynely paced slowly where
her cousin had left her, heedless of falling dew, her thin dinner-dress
damp and heavy already in the night. In the days that were gone she had
been very fond of her boy cousin, three years her junior in actual
years, twenty in worldly wisdom and judgment. There had never been any
thought of love or love-making, marrying or giving in marriage, between
these two; she had given Viscount Dynely her hand of her own free will,
and yet, the sharpest, keenest pang of actual jealousy she had ever
felt, she had felt when she first heard of Gordon Caryll's marriage. Not
a very fierce pang, though, after all--it might have been said of her as
of Lady Jane, in the poem:

    "Her pulse is calm, milk-white her skin;
    She has not blood enough to sin."

It had been considered a very brilliant match, _the_ match of the season
indeed, when Lucia Paget won Alexis, Viscount Dynely and twentieth Baron
Camperdown. She had been taken up to London at eighteen, and presented
by her kinswoman, the Countess of Haldane. She was tall, slim and white,
fair and fragile as a lily, "a penniless lass wi' a lang pedigree"--a
trifle insipid to some tastes, but she suited Lord Dynely. He came home
from a yachting cruise around Norway and the Hebrides, presented himself
suddenly in Vanity Fair, the most desirable prize of the mall, with
mansions and estates in four counties, a villa at Ryde, a shooting-box
in the Highlands, and an income that flowed in like a perennial golden
river. He was a prize that had long been angled for (his noble lordship
was in his five-and-fortieth year), maids and matrons had put on their
war paint, and set their wigwams in order, long and many a day ago, for
him. But in vain; his scalp-lock hung at no belt. He admired all,
ballerinas, as a rule, more than baronesses, actresses more than
duchesses. But his day came at last; he saw Lucia Paget, by no means the
beauty of the season, and after his own impetuous fashion, where his own
gratification was concerned, threw up the sponge to Fate at once, and
surrendered at discretion. He proposed, was accepted, and the
wedding-day named, before Vanity Fair could recover its breath. It was
the wonder of the day--that pale, insipid nonentity--that blas,
fastidious, worn-out rou--_What_ did he see in her?

    "There were maidens in Scotland more lovely by far,
    Who would gladly be bride to the young Lochinvar."

But he had passed them all by, and thrown the handkerchief at the
indifferent feet of this pale-haired lass. Before the end of the season
they were married.

He was very much enamored of his bride, there was no denying that.
Fickle, in his fancies, to a proverb, he was yet loyal here. He took her
over the Continent for a year, then returned to England, with them
"little Eric;" and Lord Viscount Dynely was the fondest of fathers as
well as the most devoted of husbands. But from the birth of his son a
change came over him. He took a habit of falling into moody, darksome
reveries, he dropped mysterious and unpleasant hints of some wrongdoing
in the past, he spoke gloomily of his infant heir and some sin, sinned
against _him_. Lady Dynely grew pale as she listened--it was no common
wrongdoing of a man of the world of which he hinted--it was something
that might influence the future of his son, of herself--some crime
against them both. He spoke a woman's name in his disturbed,
remorse-haunted slumbers--"Maureen"--his wife could catch. What did it
mean? She had never loved her husband, she had always been a little
afraid of him--she grew more and more afraid of him as the years went
on. Years did go on. Eric was five; the secret, whatever it might be,
was Lord Dynely's secret still. Only once he had said to her:

"Lucia, if I die before you, I have something to tell you that you won't
like to hear. People always make death-bed confessions, don't they? On
the principle, I suppose, that come what may, they are past hurting. I
wonder if they sleep any easier in their six feet of clay, for owning
up? I'll write it down, and leave it sealed with my will, and then if
I'm cut off in a hurry (and it is an interesting trait in the Dynely
succession that we always _are_ cut off in a hurry), it will come to
light all the same. There's one consolation," he said with a short,
reckless laugh, "you never cared over and above for me--it was the title
you married and the settlements, and you'll have them, you know, to the
end of the chapter, so you won't break your heart."

He had whistled to his dogs and walked moodily off, saying no more; and
his wife, listening with pale cheeks and dilated eyes, asked no
questions. She was not strong, either mentally, morally, or physically;
she shrank from pain of all sorts, with almost cowardly fear. If Lord
Dynely had wicked secrets, she wanted to hear none of them--she desired
no confessions--it was cruel of him to talk of making them. As he had
kept his dreadful masculine secrets in life, let him keep them in death.

She stood vaguely thinking this where Gordon Caryll had left her,
looking like some spirit of the moonlight in her white robes, her light,
floating hair, and colorless face. And even while she thought it, the
messenger was drawing near to summon her to hear that secret told.

The stable clock chiming loudly eleven awoke her from her thoughtful
trance. She started. How late it was, how chilly it had grown! She
shrank with the first sensation she had felt of cold and damp, and
turned to go. But she stopped, for the sylvan silence of the summer
night was loudly broken by the ringing clatter of horses' hoofs dashing
up the avenue. Was it Gordon coming back? Little things disturbed
her--her heart fluttered as she listened. Horse and rider came in view;
the man espied her and vaulted off. No, this small, middle-aged man,
was not her tall cousin, but Mr. Squills, the village apothecary.

"My lady!"

He took off his hat and stood bowing before her. In the moonlight my
lady could see the frightened look the man's face wore.

"What is it?" she asked.

"Oh, my lady--I don't want to alarm you, I'm sure--they told me to break
it to you, but it's so hard to break things. There's been an accident,
my lady. The 9.50 express from Plymouth, and don't let me frighten you,
my lady--his lordship was in it, and----"

She laid her hand over her heart, turning for a moment sick and faint.
Then she rallied.

"Lord Dynely was on that train? There was an accident, you say. Was
he----"

"Oh, my lady, prepare yourself. It--it's a dreadful thing to break
things to----"

"Was Lord Dynely hurt?" she asked.

"Yes, my lady, very badly hurt, I'm sorry to say."

"Dangerously?"

"We're afraid so, my lady. Mr. Glauber is with him, and they've
telegraphed to London for Doctor--"

"He is alive?" she interrupted, her voice sharp with horror and pain.

"Alive, my lady, but--it is best you should know the truth--he won't be
alive by morning. The clergyman is with him, but he calls, my lady,
continually for you."

"Where is he?"

"At the inn, in the village--the 'Kiddle-a-wink.' And, my lady, there is
not a moment to lose."

She turned from him and ran to the house. On the way she met one of the
grooms, and ordered the carriage at once. She fled up to her room, threw
a dark mantle over her white evening-dress, put on her bonnet with
trembling fingers, and turned to depart. A sudden thought came to
her--she turned into an adjoining room--the nursery, where her boy lay
asleep.

The night-light burns low; he lies in his downy, lace draped bed, a
lovely baby-vision of health and beauty. Flushed, dimpled, his golden
curls falling over the pillow, a smile on the rosy lips--he is a sight
to make any mother's heart leap. She stoops and kisses him with
passionate love. "Oh, my baby, my angel!" she whispers, "you are all I
have on earth. While I live, no harm, that I can avert, will ever come
to you."

Then she flits out of the room--out of the house. The carriage is
waiting, and in a moment more she is rapidly whirling through the still,
white midnight to the village inn where her husband lies dying.

They lead her to the room. Physician and priest fall back, and give way
to the wife. The wounded man lies propped by pillows, his head bandaged,
his face awfully bloodless and ghastly in the wan light. She has heard
no details of the accident, she has asked none. He is dying--all is said
in that.

His eyes light as they turn on her, but his brow is frowning.

"Send them all away," are his first words.

She motions them out of the room. She sinks on her knees by the bedside.
Her dark drapery slips off; her white dress, her soft laces, her fair,
floating hair, seem strangely to contradict the idea of death. She is
trembling from head to foot--her teeth chatter with nervous horror, her
eyes fix themselves, all wild and dilated, upon his face. She never
speaks a word.

He lies and looks at her--a long, steadfast, frowning gaze.

"I am dying," he says; "you know it. You never cared for me--no,
never--not even in your wedding hour. You never cared for me--why should
I care for _you_? Why should I hesitate to tell you the truth?"

It has been the thorn in his rose-crowned life--this fact, that the
portionless girl he married, never gave him her heart.

"Tell me now," he says, still with that dull, frowning gaze, "I was too
great a coward ever to ask you before--tell me now--you married the rank
and the rent-roll, not the man?"

"I did wrong," she says, huskily, "but I have tried to do my duty as
your wife. Forgive me, Alexis."

"Ah!" he answers bitterly, "we have both something to forgive--it makes
us quits. I have been a coward, a coward to you, a coward to _her_. It
is hard to say which has been wronged most. But you shall hear the truth
now, and you shall do as you see fit after. Draw near."

She bends closer above him. He takes her hand in his cold fingers, and
whispers, hoarsely and brokenly, his death-bed confession.

Half an hour passes, an hour, another, and still from that closed room
there is no sound. It is very strange. Mr. Glauber, the doctor, and Mr.
Texton, the rector, think uneasily, looking at their watches, outside.
It is quite impossible Lord Dynely, in his fast-sinking state, can be
talking all this time--impossible, also, that he can have fallen asleep.
Presently Mr. Texton takes heart of grace, and taps at the door. There
is no reply. He taps again. Still silence. He opens the door and goes
in. Lord Dynely has fallen back among his pillows, dead, that frown
forever frozen on his face; my lady still kneels by the bedside--as
rigid, as upright, as white, as cold, as though turned to stone.

"My lady!" She does not speak or stir. "My dear Lady Dynely," the rector
says, in an unutterably shocked tone.

She moves for the first time, and lifts two sightless eyes to his face.
He holds out his arms, for she sways unsteadily, and catches her, as
without word or sound she slips heavily back, and faints away.




PART SECOND.




CHAPTER I.

IN THE ROYAL ACADEMY.


The brilliant noontide of a brilliant May day was passed--all London
looked bustling and bright under a sky as cloudless as that of Italy. In
Trafalgar Square there was a mighty gathering of carriages, an army of
coachmen and footmen in liveries, of all sorts and colors, for it was
the opening day of the Royal Academy.

The rooms were full--full to repletion, filled with a jostling crowd of
well-dressed ladies and gentlemen, but then "a mob is a mob though
composed of bishops." Languid, dilettante-looking swells, with
eye-glasses; painters with long hair, and picturesque faces; art
critics, book and pencil in hand; academicians, receiving
congratulations; picture dealers, marking the quarry on which they meant
presently to swoop; stately dowagers, sweeping their silken trains over
the crimson drugget; slim, young English girls, with milk-and-rose
complexions and gilded hair.

The clock of St. Martin's-in-the-fields was striking four as there
entered two ladies and a gentleman, who moved slowly through the swaying
throng, and who, even there, attracted considerable attention. One of
the ladies was approaching middle age, a fair, pale, pensive, _passe_
looking woman, with a stamp of high rank on every faded feature, in
every careless gesture. _She_ was not the attraction. The escort was a
very tall, very broad-shouldered, very powerful-looking young man,
muscular Christianity personified, with a certain military air, that
bespoke his calling, a thick, reddish beard and mustache, reddish,
close-cropped hair, and two light, good-humored eyes. _He_ was not the
attraction. Terry Dennison's face was as well known about town as
Landseer's couchant lions around Nelson's pillar, in the square beyond.
It was the third of the trio, a girl, tall and slender, and very
graceful, with a figure that was rarely perfect, and a way of carrying
herself that was altogether imperial. A dark beauty, with a warm,
creamy, colorless skin, two vivid, hazel eyes, a profusion of hazel
hair, arranged _ la mode_, a handsome, decided, square-cut mouth, and a
general air of imperious command that said to all

    "Incedo Regina!
    I move a queen."

She was dressed _en passant_, as it were, with a careless simplicity
that was the perfection of high art. An Indian muslin robe, a scarf of
black lace, caught up on one shoulder with a knot of yellow roses--on
her head a touch of point-lace, with just one yellow rose over the ear,
and in her pearl-kidded hand a bunch of the same scented yellow roses.

A covey of idle, elegant dandies of the Foreign Office, and guardsmen,
lounging in one of the door-ways, put up their glasses and turned to
look again, roused for the moment almost to interest.

"Something new in Vanity Fair," one said, "and the best thing I've seen
this season. Know who she is, any one?"

No one knew.

"Altogether new, as you say, Danby. Jove! what a regal air! There is
nothing on the walls--not a nymph or goddess of them all, with a
lovelier face. _Who_ is she?"

"Her companion is Lady Dynely," remarked a third.

"And her escort is Terry Dennison. He has placed them before _the_
picture of the year, that thing by Locksley, and has left them. Here he
comes. I say, Dennison! who is she?"

"Who is who?" asked Mr. Dennison, the sandy-haired and whiskered young
man, approaching. "'Who is she?' isn't that the question the cynical
old French party always asked, when any fellow he knew came to grief?"

"Don't be analytical, Terry, it isn't your _mtier?_. Who is that lady
you accompany? Handsomest thing out."

"That," answered Terry, thoughtfully stroking his beard, "is my Lady
Dynely; and where have you kept your eyes all these years not to know
it--"

"That will do. We don't want chaff. Who is that girl?"

"All yellow roses and black lace, like a picture by Titian," another
murmured.

"Who is she, Terry?" chorus all.

"Oh!" said Terry, opening his light blue eyes with an innocent air,
"that's what you mean, is it? That girl is France Forrester."

"France? Named after the dominion of his Imperial Majesty, Nap the
Third?"

"Her name is France--Frances, if you like it better," answered calmly
Mr. Dennison.

"But who is she? _Who_ is she, Terry? She's new to all of us, and the
handsomest debutante of the season. Open the mysteries a little, old
man; and end our agonizing suspense."

"There's nothing mysterious about it," responded Terry Dennison with a
suppressed yawn; "she is France Forrester, as I say, only child and
heiress of the late General Forrester, distant connection of Lady
Dynely, and adopted daughter and heiress of Mrs. Caryll, of Caryllynne.
'To her that hath shall be given.' I have spoken!"

"Like an oracle. Go on--tell us more."

"There's no more. Her mother a French Canadian, from whom mademoiselle
inherits her gypsy skin and _beaux yeux_, died when she was six. Her
father placed her in a Montreal convent, and there she lived until she
was fifteen. Then _he_ died, left her a fortune, and made Mrs. Caryll
her guardian. That was three years ago; and if your limited knowledge of
arithmetic will permit you to add three to fifteen you will come at Miss
Forrester's age. Mrs. Caryll, then and at present in Rome, had her ward
conveyed to the Eternal City. Until two months ago she moved and had
her being there--now she has come over, to come out under the auspices
of Lady Dynely. I wish you fellows wouldn't make me talk so much," says
Terry, with a sudden sense of injury, "the thermometer is high, and I
ain't used to it."

Then Mr. Dennison strolls away, and the four men from the F. O. stand
and gaze with languid interest at the Canadian-Roman beauty and heiress.

"Safe to make a hit," one said; "haven't seen anything so thoroughbred
for three seasons. What with mademoiselle's beauty and grace, and _that_
poise of the head, and two fortunes tacked to her train, and her twenty
quarterings (they're an awfully old family, the Forresters), she ought
to make a brilliant match before the season ends."

"Ah! I don't know," another responded, "it doesn't always follow. The
favorite doesn't always win the Derby. Mrs. Caryll's heiress--him-m! I
say, Castlemain! You ought to know--wasn't there a son in that family
once?"

"Gordon Caryll--very fine fellow--knew him at Oxford," Castlemain
answered, "commission in the Rifles--old story that--sixteen years
ago--all over and forgotten for centuries."

"Dead?"

"Don't know--all the same--extinct. Made a horrible mesalliance out
there in Canada--scandal--divorce--exchanged--went to India--never heard
of more. _Sic transit_--fate of all of us by and by. Deuced slow this,"
struggling with a yawn; "I say--let's hook it."

The quartette move on, others take their place, and the men, one and
all, turn for a second look at the fair, proud-looking beauty. With Lady
Dynely, she still stands where Mr. Dennison has left them, gazing at the
picture that has made the hit of the year. It is by an artist unknown to
fame and Trafalgar Square--it is marked in the catalogue "No. 556--_How
The Night Fell_."

It is not an English scene. Tall, dark hills in the background lift
pine-crowned heads to the sky, clumps of cedar, and tamarac, and spruce,
painted with pre-Raphaelite fidelity, dot these dark hill-sides. A broad
river, with the last red light of dying day glinting along the water,
and over hillside and tree-top and flowing river, the gray darkness of
coming night shutting down. On the riverside two figures stand, a man
and a woman. One red gleam from the western sky falls full upon the
woman's face, a face darkly beautiful, but all white and drawn with
woman's utmost woe. Passionate despair looks out of her wild eyes at the
man who stands before her. Her hands are outstretched in agonized
appeal. For the man, he stands and looks at her, one hand slightly
upraised as if waving her off. His face is partly averted, but you can
guess the hatred that face shows. You see that her doom is sealed beyond
redemption. Over all, the creeping night is darkening land, and river,
and sky.

The two ladies gaze in silence for a time--Lady Dynely looking weary and
rather bored--Miss Forrester's fine eyes bright with admiration. She is
new to general society as yet, and when eye, or ear, or heart are
delighted, the expressive face shows it.

"It is beautiful," she says in a low voice; "there is nothing like it in
the rooms. Look at that wonderful effect of light on the woman's face,
and slanting along the river, and the gray darkness that you can almost
_feel_ there beyond. Those trees are tamarac--can it be a Canadian
scene. 'How The Night Fell,'" she reads from her catalogue. "Lady
Dynely, I must know the painter of that picture."

"My dear France!"

"'G. Locksley.' H-m-m--a new candidate, probably. Certainly I must know
him. In Rome, we--Mrs. Caryll and I--made a point of taking up every
young artist who appeared. She was known as the patroness of art. Our
rooms on our art-reception nights used to be crowded. The man who
painted that is a genius."

"Mrs. Caryll was the patroness of struggling artists for this reason, I
fancy--her son was a devotee of art once himself, and studied for a year
in Rome before entering the army."

"Her son," Miss Forrester repeated dreamily, "Gordon Caryll. Perhaps so,
she very seldom spoke of him, poor fellow. What a very striking scene it
is!" looking again at the picture through her closed hand; "there is a
fascination for me in the anguish and despair of that woman's face. A
beautiful face, too. I wonder if the artist painted his picture from
life?"

"My dear France, no. They are all imaginary, are they not--suggested by
books, or something of that kind?"

"Ah, I don't know. Artists, and poets, and novelists, all turn their
sorrows to account in these latter days," says Miss Forrester cynically;
"they paint their woes in oil and water colors, write them in
hexameters, and make money of them. Like Lord Byron, if they weep in
private, they certainly wipe their eyes on the public."

"My dear child," says Lady Dynely, looking shocked, "where have you
learned your cynicisms so young?"

Miss Forrester laughed.

"I am but a debutante," she answered gayly, "not come out yet before the
footlights; but I have seen a deal of life, I assure you, behind the
scenes. Here comes Terry." She glances over her shoulder. "If the artist
of 'How the Night Fell,' be present, Terry shall fetch him up and
introduce him."

"But, France--"

Miss Forrester laughs again--a very sweet, low laugh. She is unlike most
English girls--in fact, she is _not_ an English girl. She has her French
mother's blood and vivacity, as well as her dark complexion, and dark
eyes, with something of the frank-spirited independence of an American
girl. With these and her late Roman experiences, she is a bundle of
contradictions, and a bewilderingly charming whole.

"But, Lady Dynely," she repeats, "I warned you fairly in Rome what you
might expect when you consented to become a martyr, and bring me out. I
have had my own way ever since I was born, and always mean to--if I can.
I have lived in a perpetual atmosphere of artists for the past three
years--the long-haired Brotherhood of the Brush have been 'the playmates
of my youth--the friends of my bosom.'" Here, catching sight of Lady
Dynely's horrified face, Miss Forrester breaks off and laughs again, the
sweetest, frankest, merriest laugh, that ever came from rosy lips.

"What's the joke?" asks Mr. Dennison, sauntering up; "I don't see
anything in that black, glowering man, and that woman of the woeful
countenance to excite your ill-timed merriment, Miss Forrester."

"Terry," says Miss Forrester, "do you know the artist?"

"Miss Forrester, it is the proud boast of my life that I know every one.
Locksley? Yes, I know him--he's in the rooms now, by the same token.
Look yonder--talking to Sir Hugh Lankraik, the great academician--very
tall, very fair man. Crops his hair, and doesn't look like an
artist--more of the heavy-dragoon cut than anything else. See him?"

"Yes," the young lady answered. She saw, as Terry Dennison said, a very
tall, very fair man, with blonde hair and beard, a complexion fair once,
tanned to golden brown, two grave, gray eyes, and a thoughtful, rather
worn, face--a man looking every day of his seven-and-thirty years. Not a
particularly handsome face, perhaps, but a face most women liked.
Whether Miss Forrester liked it or not, who was to tell?

"Not bad looking?" commented Terry interrogatively. Mr. Dennison
belonged to that large _nil admirari_ class to whom the acme of all
praise of mortal beauty is "not bad looking."

"Women admire him, I believe," pursues Dennison, "but he rather cuts the
sex. I give you my word, he might be the pet of the petticoats all this
season after that picture, but he won't. Lives for his art--capital
fellow, you know, but doesn't care for women."

"Interesting misogynist! Bring him up here, Terry, and introduce him."

"France!"

"Is your hearing deficient, Mr. Dennison? I said, bring him up here and
introduce him."

"Now, France, what has that poor fellow ever done to you? He cuts the
fair sex, and is a happy and successful man! Do let him be. I know the
havoc you made among those painting fellows in Rome, but you can't
expect to do in London as the Romans do. She made it a point--I give
you my word, Lady Dynely--of breaking the heart of every young artist in
the Eternal City, and now she wants to add poor Locksley, as harmless a
fellow as ever breathed, to her 'noble army of martyrs!'"

"Little Terry Dennison! will you hold your tongue and fetch Mr. Locksley
here?"

Miss Forrester lifts her gold-mounted eye-glass and looks at him. Miss
Forrester's brilliant, hazel eyes are not, in the slightest degree,
short-sighted; she merely wears this eye-glass as a warrior his sword.
When she particularly wishes to annihilate any one, she lifts it, stares
speechlessly for five seconds, and the deed is done. Mr. Dennison knows
the gesture of old, and shows the white feather at once.

"Mr. Locksley's picture pleases me. I wish to know Mr. Locksley."

"Yes'm, please'm," says Terry, meekly; "hanything else?"

"Mr. Locksley has ceased talking to Sir Hugh. Lady Dynely admires 'How
The Night Fell,' and does him the honor of permitting him to be
presented. You understand, little Terry?"

Terry Dennison, from the altitude of his six feet, looks down upon his
dashing little superior officer, with a comical light in his blue eyes,
laughs under his orange beard, and turns to obey.

"As the queen wills," he says; "but, alas! poor Yorick! He never did me
any harm--Locksley, I mean, not Yorick. It is rather hard _I_ should be
chosen, as the enemy to lead him to his doom." He makes his way to where
the painter of the popular picture stands, and taps him on the shoulder.
"If you are not done to death with congratulations already, Mr.
Locksley, permit me to add mine. There is nothing else on the walls
half-a-quarter so good. Lady Dynely is positively entranced, has been
standing there for the last half hour. Will you do her the pleasure of
coming and being presented?"

"Lady Dynely!" The artist paused for a moment with an irresolute look,
and glanced doubtfully to where her ladyship stood.

"My dear fellow," Terry cut in in some alarm, "don't refuse. I know you
give 'em all the cold shoulder, but you will really be conferring a
favor in this instance. She--Lady Dynely I mean of course--is quite wild
on the subject of art and artists. Never heard her so exercised as on
the subject of that picture of yours."

"Lady Dynely does me too much honor," said the artist smiling gravely,
and Dennison linked his arm in his own, and bore him off in triumph.

"Lady Dynely, permit me--the artist whose picture you so greatly admire,
Mr. Locksley. Mr. Locksley--Miss Forrester."

Both ladies bowed graciously. Lady Dynely addressed him.

"It is the gem of the collection--but Mr. Locksley must be weary of
hearing that," she said.

"An artist never wearies of such pleasant flattery," Mr. Locksley
smilingly answered; "and whether false or true, the flattery is equally
sweet."

"And like all sweets unwholesome," said Miss Forrester with her frank
laugh, "so we will spare you. But it is wonderful--wonderful--that
woman's face. Where did you find your model, Mr. Locksley?"

"The face--the whole picture--is painted from memory," was his answer,
very gravely made.

The moment he had spoken first, Lady Dynely had turned, and looked him
full in the face. What was there in his voice and face so oddly
familiar? That face, bronzed and bearded, was not like any face she
knew, yet still--. He stood talking to France Forrester, while she
thoughtfully gazed, striving in vain to place him.

"How goes the enemy?" Terry cried, pulling out his watch; "ten minutes
of five. Lady Dynely, there was talk of a Keswick flower show--"

"And we are overdue--we must go instantly, France. Mr. Locksley, let me
congratulate you once more on your success--I am sure it is but the
forerunner of even greater things. I have some examples of the old
Italian school, which I shall be very happy to show you, if you care to
see them. I am at home every Thursday evening to receive my friends."
She gave him her card, and took Mr. Dennison's arm. Miss Forrester
murmured some last, gracious words, bowed with easy grace, and moved
away with her friends.

"How your ladyship stared," was her remark, as they entered the barouche
and were whirled away; "have you ever met this Mr. Locksley before?"

"I have never met Mr. Locksley before, I am quite sure," her ladyship
answered; "it is not a face to be easily forgotten. It is a striking
face."

"A very striking face," Miss Forrester agrees decidedly. "He reminds you
of some one, possibly?"

She hesitates a moment--then answers:

"Of one who must have died, in exile, years ago. When he spoke first, it
was the very voice of Gordon Caryll."




CHAPTER II.

TERRY.


At the window of one of her private rooms, Lucia, Lady Dynely, sits in
deep and painful thought. The fair, smooth brow is knit, the delicate
lips are compressed, an anxious worried light is in her pale-blue eyes.
It is Thursday evening; she is dressed early for her reception, and in
her flowing silks and soft, rich laces, looks a very fair patrician
picture. But the slender, ringed hands are closely locked, as in
physical pain; mentally or bodily, you can see, she suffers as she sits
here.

The twilight of the May day is closing--a soft primrose light fills the
western sky--a faint young moon lifts its slender sickle and pearly
light over the Belgravian chimney-pots--a few stars cluster in the blue.
A silvery haze hangs over the streets--the "pea-soup" atmosphere of
dingy London is softly clear for once, and the gloomy grandeur of these
West End stuccoed palaces is tenderly toned down. The room in which Lady
Dynely sits is her sleeping room, an apartment as beautiful and elegant
as wealth and taste can make a room. About it, however, there is this
noticeable--there is but one picture. That picture is a portrait,
painted _en buste_--it is as though that portrait were held so dear no
other picture must be its companion. It is a portrait of Eric Alexis
Albert, Lord Viscount Dynely, and twenty-first Baron Camperdown.

You pause involuntarily and look at his pictured face; it is one that at
any time or in any place must strike the most casual observer, if only
for its beauty. Either the artist has most grossly flattered his
subject, or Eric, Viscount Dynely, is an uncommonly handsome man. The
face is beautiful--with the beauty of a woman--its great drawback that
very womanliness. The curling hair is golden, the eyes sapphire blue to
their deepest depths, the features faultless, the smiling mouth sweet
and _weak_ as a girl's. There in its nook of honor this portrait hangs
by night and day in Lady Dynely's room, the last object her eyes look on
at night, the first that greets them when they open to the new day. He
is her idol--it is not too much to say that--her hope--the very life of
her life. At present he is abroad, has been for over a year, and is
expected home now daily. His majority comes in August, and it is to be
celebrated down at Dynely with feasting and rejoicing, with the slaying
of huge bullocks, and the broaching of mighty vats of ale.

But to-night in the misty May gloaming it is not altogether of her
darling and her idol my lady sits thinking. Surely all thoughts of him
should be bright and pleasant--is not his majority at hand--is he not to
marry her pet, France Forrester, and live happy ever after? But the
thoughts she thinks as she muses here are neither pleasant nor bright.

All her life long, Lady Dynely has been a weak woman, timid and
vacillating, good, gentle, charitable, but wanting "back bone." Her son
inherits that want. You may see it in his smiling, painted face. Her
mind drifts about irresolutely now. She thinks, first of all, of the
grave, bearded artist, met yesterday in the Royal Academy.

How like these deep grave eyes to other eyes, passed forever out of her
world--how like and yet how unlike. How like the voice--deeper, graver
in its timbre, and still the same. Even a slight trick of manner,
characteristic of Gordon Caryll, in shaking impatiently back his fair
hair, this artist had. It was odd, it was almost painful, this passing
likeness, and yet it made her well disposed toward this Mr. Locksley,
made her absolutely anxious lest he should fail to put in an appearance
at her reception to-night.

Gordon Caryll! all at once as she sits here, that long ago moonlight
night is before her again. She sees the huge fish-pond, a sheet of
silver light at their feet; she sees his tall figure casting its long
shadow on the velvet sward, sees herself, pale and shivering, clinging
to his arm, as she listens to that sombre story of man's reckless
passion and woman's shameful deceit. Again his hands clasp her own,
again his farewell sounds in her ears.

"I will take nothing--not even my name. I leave it behind with all the
rest when I sail for India next week."

He had gone; and far away under the burning Indian sky, six feet of
ground held perhaps what had once been the cousin she loved.

"Ah, poor Gordon!" she sighs, and then for a while her train of thought
breaks, and there is a blank.

It is taken up again; that same night and her husband's death-bed is
before her. The dimly-lighted chamber of the inn, the man wounded unto
death, and she kneeling beside him, listening to his dying words. Dying
words so dreadful to hear, that, in the soft warmth of her room now, she
shivers from head to foot as she recalls them. That terrible night has
stamped its impress upon all her after life.

Slowly and wearily her mind goes over all that came after. The solemn
and stately funeral, the sad droning service, the bare bowed heads of
the mourners, and she herself in her widow's weeds, white and
shuddering, but weeping not at all, her little azure-eyed golden-haired
boy by her side. He is dressed in black velvet, but not a shred of
crape, and people wonder a little at this strange neglect. His mother
would have it so--almost passionately she had torn off the band and
shoulder-knot of crape they had placed upon the baby viscount, and had
caught him to her breast, crying wildly:

"Oh, my Eric! my baby! my baby!"

They buried the dead lord of Dynely Abbey--laid him beneath the chancel
of Roxhaven Church, where scores of dead-and-gone Dynelys lay. There was
a tablet of wonderful beauty and cost erected above him, with a long
inscription, setting forth his virtues as a man, a magistrate, a
husband, a father. "And his works do follow him," said the glowing
record. Was it in bitter satire they had added _that_, she wondered, or
was it ominously prophetic?

All was over, and then into Lady Dynely's life came a weary gap--a
blank of months. Months when she sat alone in the grand, luxurious,
lonely rooms, white and still, never crying, never complaining, borne
down by the weight of some great and hidden trouble. Her health failed
under it. By spring she was the veriest shadow, and the family physician
shook his professional head, and ordered immediate change; Italy, the
south of France, a milder climate, cheerful society, change, etc., etc.
She refused at first peremptorily, then all in a moment changed her
mind, left little Eric in charge of his governess and the housekeeper,
and started upon her travels. Not to Italy or France, though; but, to
the intense disgust of her maid, to Ireland. Ireland, of all places in
the world, and to the wildest of all wild Ireland--Galway.

She had some object in view--Hortense, the maid, could see that; some
object that lent a glow to her pallid cheeks, a light to her dim eyes,
an energy to her listless movements, that marvellously astonished that
handmaiden. In the _claddagh_ on the Galway coast her Irish journey came
to an end.

She left her maid behind her the day of her arrival in the town, and
went on alone to this wild village of Galway fishermen. She made her way
to the cabin of one Mickey Gannon, and came among them, in their squalor
and their poverty, almost as a visitant from another world. Her apology
for entering came to hand readily enough.

"It had begun to rain"--her seal jacket was drenched; "might she seek
shelter here for a few minutes, until the storm abated? She was a
tourist exploring the west." That was her faltered excuse.

They gave her the best seat and the cordial welcome for which the Irish
heart is famous, and which bursts out even in their national motto,
_Cead mille failthe_. They gave her the place by the fire, and drew back
in respectful silence to gaze at the pale, fair English lady.

There seemed to be a dozen children, more or less, swarming about the
cabin. With keen anxiety in her eyes, Lady Dynely looked from face to
face, and finally her gaze lighted and lingered on one. It was a little
lad of seven, rather more of a tatterdemalion, if possible, than even
the rest, with a shaggy crop of red, unkempt hair, and two big blue
eyes, round with wonder as midnight moons.

"Are all these children yours?" she asked the matron of the house; but
that lady shook her head; she could not speak a word of the Sassanach
tongue.

"But, sure Biddy can spake the English illegant," suggested the father
of the family; and Biddy was summoned--a strapping lass with rose-red
cheeks, gray eyes, jet-black hair, and a musical brogue--a very siren of
western Ireland. Biddy came, made a bashful courtesy to the quality, and
stood waiting to be questioned. My lady repeated her query.

"Are all these your brothers and sisters, my good girl?" with a smile;
"so many of them there are."

"All but one, yer ladyship--the red-headed gossoon beyant in the corner.
He's me sisther's chile," responded bashful Biddy.

"Oh--you have a married sister then?" Lady Dynely said.

"Not now, yer ladyship--sure she's dead, God be good to her, an' it's
poor Terry's an orphan this many a day."

"An orphan?" her ladyship repeated, still gazing very earnestly at
Terry, who, quite overcome with bashfulness, put one grimy finger in his
mouth and turned a very dirty little face to the wall. "It is rather
hard upon your father, having to provide for his grandchildren, isn't
it? Is--" Lady Dynely paused, and over her pale face there flushed a
crimson light,--"is the lad's father dead?"

Biddy shook her head, and her blue, handsome eyes flashed angrily.

"I don't know, yer ladyship, an', savin' yer presence, I don't care. Oh!
but it was the misfortinit day for this house whin that black-hearted
villain iver set fut in it!"

"Did he--" again she faltered--"surely he did not deceive your sister?"

Biddy looked at her, and drew her fine figure--a figure that had been
left, like Nora Crena's, to "shrink or swell as Heaven pleases"--to its
full height.

"Desave her, is it? He was her husband, if that's what yer ladyship
manes, married by Father O'Gorman, himself, in the parish chapel beyant.
Oh, faith! he knew betther than to come palaverin' here widout the ring.
He was an Englishman--bad cess to him wheriver he is--kem here for the
fishin' one summer, an' met Maureen on a summer evenin', comin' home
from a fair. Oh, wirra! that he iver laid eyes on her! sure from that
day he was at her heels like her very shadda."

"Was she handsome, this sister of yours?" Lady Dynely asked, with
curious interest in this lowly romance.

"The purtiest girl in Galway, an' that's a big word. Och! but wasn't he
afther her hot fut, mornin's, noon, an' night, an' niver a day's pace
wud he give her, till she said the word, an' they wint up to Father
O'Gorman, an' were married."

"And then?"

"An' thin he tuk her away wid him, an' for a year or more we seen nor
heerd nothin' av aither av thim. Sure poor Maureen cud naither read nor
write. An' thin all at wance she kem back one fine mornin' wid Terry
there, a weeny baby in her arrums, an' from that day to this we niver
seen hilt nor hair av her fine English husband. The curse o' the crows
an him this day!"

"He deserted her?"

"Sure he did. What else cud ye expect, a fine illegant gentleman like
that, as bould as brass an' as rich as a lord, an' herself wid nothin'
at all but two blue eyes an' a purty face."

"A lord, did you say?" Lady Dynely repeated. "Surely he was not--"

"I don't know what he was," said Biddy, shortly; "no more did Maureen.
He called himself Dennison, an' was married by that name. But, maybe it
wasn't--sure the divil himself cudn't be up to the desate av him. Och!
Father O'Gorman warned her, but she wudn't be warned. An' that day six
months, afther she kem back, she died here wid Terry in her arrums, an'
a prayer for _him_, the villain av the world, on her lips."

"And the child remains here since? A fine boy, too. Come here,
Terry--here's a shilling for you."

But Terry, altogether aghast at such a proposal, shrank away into his
corner and glued his grimy countenance to the wall.

"Arrah! Come here, Terry, come here, avic, an' spake to the lady," said
Biddy, in persuasive accents. Then, as the dulcet tones produced no
effect, she whipped him up bodily with one strong, round arm, and bore
him over to be inspected.

"Sure, thin, he's dirtier than a little baste," said Biddy, with
considerable truth. "It's himself does be rowlin' undher the bed wid the
pig from mornin' till night."

Lady Dynley smiled in spite of herself. Terry's face was really
picturesque, frescoed so to speak, with dirt. She held out a handful of
loose silver, which Terry grabbed with ravenous eagerness.

"Would you part with the child?" she asked, after a pause, and Biddy
regarded her with silent wonder. "I may as well acknowledge it," her
ladyship went on, her delicate face crimsoning painfully. "I once knew
this--this child's father. He has spoken of him to me, recommended him
to my care. Hush!" she said authoritatively as she saw Biddy about to
flame forth; "not a word. He is dead. In the grave let his sins rest
with him. Suffice it to say, I will take this boy and do better by him
than you can ever do. In fact--so far as I may,"--she paused, and grew
very white--"so far as I may," she repeated, steadfastly, "I will atone
for his father's wrong. If you decline to let him go--well and good--I
shall trouble you no more. If you consent, you shall be amply repaid for
all the trouble and expense of the past. I will take him, educate him,
and treat him in all respects as my own--yes, as my own son. Now, tell
your parents, and bring me word this evening. Go to the inn in the
village and ask for Lady Dynely."

She arose and left the cabin. The rain had ceased, and with the look of
one who had done a hard and humiliating duty, Lady Dynely went back.

That evening Biddy came. Her ladyship was very good, and they would
humbly accept her offer. It had been a hard season in the Claddagh--only
for that they would never have let Terry go. There was but one
stipulation--Terry must be brought up in the faith of his mother.

Next day Lady Dynely started on her return journey, with Terry washed
and clothed, and looking a new little being, in her train. She went to
Dublin, and there for good and all dismissed the maid who had
accompanied her. All clew to Terry's antecedents must be lost. In the
Irish capital she engaged another who would act as nurse to Master
Terence, and maid to herself for the present, and pursued her journey to
England.

She went to Lincolnshire, and there left her charge. It was her native
place, and the Vicar of Starling was an old friend. With the vicar and
his family the lad was placed. The vicarage lay down in the dreary fen
country, with flat, dank marshes all about it--the flat sea, lying gray
and gloomy beyond the sandy coast. He was a poor man, rich only in many
daughters, and Lady Dynely's proposal that they should bring up Terry
was gladly accepted. Her account of him was brief. He was Terence
Dennison, the orphan son of a distant cousin of her late husband. An
Irish cousin--a very distant cousin--still a cousin, and as such, with a
claim upon Lord Dynely's widow. He was poor and utterly alone in the
world. Would Mr. Higgins take him as one of his family, let him grow up
among them, educate him and accept in return--

The offer was munificent in Mr. Higgins' eyes--the bargain was closed
there and then, and little Terry Dennison's life began anew.

He could not tell these good people much about his early life--he was a
slow child, but they could easily see he had been brought up among the
very poor. Until he was fifteen he remained at the vicarage--then he
went to Eton with little Eric, Lord Dynely, and the two lads got
acquainted. That Christmas for the first time he spent the vacation at
Dynely Abbey, and thenceforth alternately passed his holidays at the
vicarage and the Abbey. It would be hard to say which the boy liked
best. At the vicarage, Mr. and Mrs. Higgins had been as father and
mother to him, and there was little Crystal, his baby sweetheart, the
prettiest fairy in all Lincolnshire. But at the old ancestral Abbey
dwelt the angel of his life, Lady Dynely. It was wonderful--it was
pathetic, the admiring love and veneration Terry Dennison had for this
lady. Of all women she was the most beautiful, of all women the best. He
could now realize all she had done for him, and it filled his slow soul
with wonder, the greatness of her goodness. From the depths of poverty
and misery she had descended like an angel of light to rescue him.

All that she did for her own son she did for him; he had even more
pocket money than Eric. This Christmas she gave him a gold watch, the
next a pony--she loaded him with costly presents and kindly words
always. Costly presents and kindly words, but never once--no, not once,
one caress. Instinctively she shrank from this boy she had adopted with
a look absolutely of repulsion--absolutely of terror at times. This
Terry did not notice. I have said he was slow, but his heart yearned
vaguely sometimes for just one touch of her white, slim hand on his
shaggy, tawny head--for just one of the kisses she lavished on her son.
He envied Eric--thrice happy Eric--not his beauty, not his title, not
his wealth; ah, no! but one of these motherly embraces showered on him
like rain. Eric shook her off, impatient, boy-like, of kisses and
fondling, and then Lady Dynely would see Terry's round, Celtic eyes
lifted wistfully to her face with the longing, pathetic patience you see
in the eyes of a dog. This love, little short of worship, grew with his
growth--to him she was the perfection of all that was purest, fairest,
sweetest, noblest, among women. He never put in words--most likely he
could not--one half the veneration with which she inspired him. And
partly for her sake and partly for his own, for the gallant and golden
beauty that charmed all hearts, he loved Eric, as once upon a time
Jonathan loved splendid young David--"With a love surpassing that of
women."

Terry grew to manhood, went up to Oxford, reached his majority, and then
his benefactress bestowed upon him the crown of his life, the desire of
his heart, a commission in a crack regiment. He could have cast himself
at her feet and kissed the hem of her garment, so grateful was he, but
he only turned very red indeed, and looked foolish and awkward, after
the fashion of your big-hearted men when they feel most, and stammered
incoherently two or three stupid phrases of thanks.

"No, don't thank me, please," Lady Dynely said hurriedly. "I can't do
too much for you, Terry. You--you are a relative of my late husband's,
you know. In doing this I am only doing my duty."

"Only her duty." Ah, she made him feel that, feel it ever. Always duty,
never love.

"Five hundred a year has been settled upon you, also," her ladyship went
on; "this, in addition to your pay, will probably suffice for you. Your
habits are not expensive, Terry," with a smile; "not like Eric's for
instance, who spends more in a month for bouquets and kid gloves than
you do in a year. But if it should _not_ suffice, never hesitate to draw
upon me freely, and at all times. My purse is open to you as to my own
son."

"Madame, your goodness overpowers me," is all poor Terry can answer, and
there is a choking sensation in his throat, and tears, actual tears, in
the boy's foolish blue eyes.

She sits and looks at him as he stands before her, big, broad-shoulders,
sunburned, healthy, not in the least handsome, not in the least graceful
or refined, with the grace and refinement that is her darling Eric's
birthright, but a gentleman from head to foot. She takes his hand and
looks at him with wistful eyes.

"Terry," she says, "I have done my best for you, have I not? I have
tried--yes, Heaven knows I have--to make you happy! And you are happy,
are you not?"

Happy! he--Terry! A curiously sentimental question, surely, to ask this
big dragoon, with his hearty face and muscular six feet of manhood. It
strikes Terry in that light, and he laughs.

"Happy!" he repeats. "The happiest and luckiest fellow in England.
Haven't a wish unsatisfied--give you my honor, wouldn't change places
with a duke. Happy! by Jove, you know I should think so, with a
commission and five hundred a year, and the pot I made on Derby, and--er
_your_ regard, you know, my lady. Because," says honest Terry, turning
very red again and floundering after the fashion of his kind in the
quagmire of his feelings, "your regard is worth more to me than the
whole world beside. I ain't the sort of a fellow to speak
out--er--um--what I feel, but by Jove! I _do_ feel you know, and I'm
awfully grateful and all that sort of thing, you know. And," says Terry,
with a great burst, "I'd lay down my life for you willingly any day!"

And then he pulls himself up, and shifts uneasily from one foot to the
other, and looks and feels thoroughly ashamed of himself for what he has
said.

"I know that, Terry," her ladyship answers, more touched than she cares
to show. "I believe it, indeed. You are of the sort who will go to death
itself for their friends. The motto of our house suits you--'_Loyal au
mort_.' One day I may call upon that loyalty, not for myself but for
Eric. One day, Terry, I may remind you of your own words, and call upon
you to redeem them."

"When that day comes, my lady," he answers, quietly, "you will find me
ready."

"Yes," she went on, not heeding him, "one day I may call upon you to
make a sacrifice, a great sacrifice, for Eric and for me. One day I
shall tell you--" She paused abruptly, and looked at him, and clasped
her hands. "Oh, Terry! be a friend, a brother to my boy! He is not like
you--he is reckless, extravagant, easily led, self-willed, wild. He will
go wrong--I fear it--I fear it--and you must be his protector whenever
you can. Let nothing he ever does, nothing he ever says to you, tempt
you to anger against him--tempt you to desert him. Promise me that!"

He knelt down before her, and with the grace a Chevalier Bayard might
have envied, the grace that comes from a true heart, lifted her hand to
his lips.

"Nothing that Eric can ever do, can ever say, will tempt me to
anger--that I swear. For his sake, and for yours, I will do all man can
do. You have been the good angel of my life. I would be less than man
if I ever forgot your goodness."

She drew her hands suddenly from his clasp, and bowed her face upon
them.

"The good angel of your life!" she repeated, brokenly. "Oh! you don't
know--you don't know!" Then as suddenly, she lifted her face, took
Terry's between her two hands, and, for the first time in her life,
kissed him.

He bowed his head as to a benediction; and a compact was sealed that not
death itself could break.

       *       *       *       *       *

With a start Lady Dynely awakes from her dream. The soft darkness of the
spring night has fallen over the great city; its million gaslights gleam
through the gray gloom; carriages are rolling up to the door, and Terry
Dennison goes down the passage outside, whistling an Irish jig. She
rises. As she does so, her eyes fall upon her son's picture. The light
of a street lamp falls full upon it, and lights it up in its smiling
beauty.

"My darling!" she whispers, passionately, "my treasure! what will you
say to your mother on the day when you learn the truth? It is due to
you, and ah! dear Heaven! it is due to _him_. Poor Terry! poor, foolish,
generous Terry!--who holds me little lower than the angels--who loves me
as you, my heart's dearest, never will--what will he think of me when he
learns the truth?"




CHAPTER III.

MADAME FELICIA.


Away beyond the stately and stuccoed palaces of Belgravia, beyond the
noise and bustle of the city, the fashion and gayety of the West End,
Mr. Locksley, the artist, stands watching the afternoon sun drop out of
sight beyond the green lanes, and quaint, pretty gardens of old
Brompton. His lodgings are here in a quiet, gray cottage, all overgrown
with sweetbrier, climbing roses, and honeysuckle. It is here he has
painted the picture that is to be his stepping-stone to fame and
fortune, "How the Night Fell."

He stands leaning with folded arms upon the low wicket-gate, among the
lilac trees and rose-bushes in the old-fashioned, sweet-smelling,
neglected garden, smoking a little black meerschaum, his friend and
solace for the past sixteen years. Profound stillness reigns. In the
west the sunset sky is all rose and gold light; above him, pale
primrose, eastward, opal gray. A thrush sings, its sweet pathetic song
in an elm-tree near, and artist eye and ear and soul drink in all the
tender hush and loveliness of the May eventide--unconsciously, though,
for his thoughts are far afield.

Two years have passed since this man's return to England from foreign
lands, and during these two years he has looked forward to one thing,
half in hope, half in dread, half in longing. That thing has come to
pass. It is yesterday's rencounter with Lucia, Lady Dynely. She is of
his kin, and he has yearned to look once more upon a kindred face, to
hear once more a familiar voice--yearned yet dreaded it too; for
recognition is the one thing he most wishes to avoid. The past is dead
and buried, and he with it. The world that knew him once, knows him no
more. It is a past of shame and pain, of sorrow and disgrace. It is all
over and done with--buried in oblivion with the name he then bore. In
that world few things are remembered long; a nine days' wonder; then the
waters close over the drowning wretch's head, and all is at an end.

In the park, lying back listless and elegant in her silks and laces, he
has seen Lady Dynely often during the past season; face to face never
before. He stands thinking dreamily of yesterday's meeting, as he leans
across the gate and smokes, and of his invitation of to-night.

"She did not know me," he thinks; "and yet I could see it, something
familiar struck her, too. Sixteen years of exile--twelve of hard
campaigning in India and America--would change most men out of all
knowledge. They think me dead beside--so I have been told. Well, better
so; and yet, dead in life--it is not a pleasant thought."

The blue, perfumy smoke curls up in the evening air; the thrush pipes
its pensive lay. He pauses in his train of thought to listen and watch,
with artist eye for coloring, the gorgeous masses of painted cloud in
the western sky.

"This Terry Dennison," he muses again, "who can _he_ be, and how came
Lucia to adopt him? It was not her way to take odd philanthropic whims.
A distant connection of the late viscount's--humph! That is easily
enough believed, since he resembles sufficiently the late viscount, red
hair and all, to be his own son. His own son!" Mr. Locksley pauses
suddenly; "his own son! Well, why not?"

There is no answer to this. The serenade of the thrush grows fainter,
the rosy after-glow is fading out in pale blue gray, the moon shows its
crystal crescent over the elm-tree. His pipe goes out, and he puts it in
his pocket.

"France Forrester, too," he says to himself; "the baby daughter of my
old Canadian friend, the general, grown to womanhood--Mrs. Caryll's
adopted daughter and heiress, _vice_ Gordon Caryll, cashiered. They will
marry her to Eric Dynely, I suppose, and unite Caryllynne and the Abbey.
A handsome girl and a spirited--too good, by all odds, for that
dandified young Apollo, as I saw him last at Naples. A girl with brains
in that handsome, uplifted head, and a will of her own, or that
square-cut mouth and resolute little chin belie her character. Still, I
suppose, a young fellow as faultlessly good-looking as Lord Eric needs
no additional virtues, and your women with brains are mostly the
greatest fools in matters matrimonial."

With which cynical wind-up Mr. Locksley pulls out his watch and glances
at the hour. Eight. If he means to attend my lady's "At Home" it is time
to get into regulation costume and start.

"I shall be an idiot for my pains," he growls, "running the chance of
recognition, and only invited as the newest lion in the Bohemian
menagerie. And yet it is pleasant to look in Lucia's familiar face once
more--to make one again in that half-forgotten world. Besides"--he adds
this rather irrelevantly as he starts up--"Miss Forrester interests me.
What a face that would be to paint!"

He turns to enter the house--then stops. A phaeton with two black,
fiery-eyed steeds, whirls up to where he stands, the reins are flung to
the groom, and a gentleman springs down, lifts his hat and accosts him.

"Mr. Locksley!"

He is a small, elderly, yellow man, shrivelled and foreign-looking, with
glittering, beady-black eyes. Beneath the light summer overcoat he wears
the artist catches sight of a foreign order on the breast. He speaks the
name, too, with a marked accent, as he stands, and bows and smiles.

"My name is Locksley," the artist replies.

The small, yellow man hands him his card. "Prince Csare Di Venturini,"
Mr. Locksley reads, and recognizes his interlocutor immediately. The
prince is perfectly familiar to him by sight, though for the moment he
had been unable to place him. He is a Neapolitan, the scion of an
impoverished princely house, and a political exile.

"At your excellency's service," Mr. Locksley says, looking up
inquiringly; "in what way can I have the pleasure of serving you?"

"That picture, 'How the Night Fell,' is yours, monsieur?"

Mr. Locksley bows.

"It is not sold?"

"It is not."

"It is for sale?"

Mr. Locksley bows again.

"It is not yet disposed of. Good! Then, monsieur, a lady friend of mine
desires to do herself the pleasure of becoming its purchaser, and I am
commissioned as her agent to treat with the artist. Its price?"

Mr. Locksley names the price, and inquires, rather surprised at the
suddenness and rapidity of this business transaction, if the Prince Di
Venturini will not come in.

"No, no--it is but the matter of a moment--he will not detain Mr.
Locksley." He produces a blank check and pen there and then, scrawls for
a second upon it, then with a low bow, a smile that shows a row of
glittering teeth, passes it across the little gate. The next instant he
has leaped lightly into the phaeton, and the fiery-eyed, coal-black
horses, that look as though they had but lately left the Plutonian
stables, dash away through the dewy darkness. Mr. Locksley stands with
his breath nearly taken from him by the bewildering swiftness of this
unexpected barter, and looks at the check in his hand. It is for the
amount named--the signature is his excellency's own, but he had said the
picture was for a lady.

"Who can she be, I wonder?" thinks the artist, pocketing the check and
going into the house; "a personage of rank, or--stay! this popular
danseuse from over the water, whose name rings the changes through
London, and whose beauty and whose dancing are the talk of the town. The
Prince is known to be the most devoted of her devotees--some men lay
heavy odds he'll marry her. I must drop in, by the by, some night at the
Bijou, and look at her. So, my picture is sold at my own price. Lady
Dynely's fashionable doors are thrown open to me--surely a turn in
fortune's wheel, this."

He laughs slightly. He is the possessor of more money this evening than
he has owned any time the past sixteen years. In the days that are gone
he has known poverty in its bitterest shape, the bitter poverty of a
man born to the purple and fallen from his high estate.

He divested himself of his picturesque, paint-stained, velvet blouse,
and got himself into a dress-coat and tie. All the while he kept
wondering vaguely who had purchased his picture. "If by any chance the
Prince is present at Lady Dynely's, I will inquire," he thought, as he
pocketed his latch-key and left the house; "I really should like to
know."

He really would, no doubt. Interested as he was in this unknown lady, he
would have been more interested probably had he been present in the
academy that afternoon.

The rooms, as usual, were filled; as usual, too, the centre of
attraction was "How the Night Fell." Very shortly after the doors were
thrown open there had entered a lady and gentleman--whose entrance
created a sensation, and who divided the interest with the pet picture
of the year. The gentleman was the Neapolitan Prince, the lady the most
popular danseuse in London, Madame Felicia.

She came moving slowly through the throng, seeing and enjoying the
sensation she created, a plump, rather petite beauty, her dark face lit
by two wonderful eyes, long, sleepy, yellow-black. She was of a beauty,
in a dark way, simply perfect, and she was dressed in the perfection of
taste. A silver-gray silk, with here and there vivid dashes of scarlet
and touches of rare old lace, the masterpiece of a masculine mantua
maker of the Rue de la Paix. Every eye turned to gaze after this lionne
of Coulisses, the most perfect dancer they said that ever bounded before
the footlights since the days of Taglioni. The Prince hung devotedly
upon her lightest word, but she turned impatiently away from him,
glancing with a scornful little air of disdain along the walls.

"Always the same," she said, pettishly; "simpering women, glowering
women, wax-doll misses with yellow hair and china-blue eyes, insipid as
their own nursery bread and butter. Bah! why does one take the trouble
to come at all?"

"Will madame condescend to look at that?"

He led her before _the_ picture--the group surrounding it fell back a
little. She lifted her eyes, bored, disdainful, then--a sudden stillness
came over her from head to foot. All languor, all ennui, fled from her
face, its rich coloring faded--she grew ashen gray to the very lips. So
for the space of fully five minutes she stood.

"How does madame find it?" the suave voice of the Italian asked.

She neither moved nor answered. She never took her eyes from the
picture. Slowly life and color returned to her face, slowly into the
great topaz eyes, sleepy and half-closed like a panther's, there came a
vivid light. One small gloved hand crushed her catalogue
unconsciously--as if fascinated she stood there and gazed.

"Thou art pleased with the picture then, madame?" Di Venturini said,
softly, in French.

"Pleased with it?" she repeated, a slow, curious smile dawning on her
lips. "Prince, I must have that picture!"

"But, if it is already sold? True, the star is not affixed, but----"

"I must have that picture!" madame repeated, with a flash of the black
eyes; "sold or not, I still must have it. How do they call the artist?"
She looked at the catalogue. "'G. Locksley.' The name is new--is it not,
Prince?"

"Altogether new, madame. If you really wish it, I will discover this M.
Locksley and purchase the picture if still in the market."

"I do wish it, Monsieur Prince. That picture I must have though it cost
half a fortune. 'How the Night Fell!'"

She turned back to it, and looked and looked as though she could never
look enough.

"It is an odd fancy," said Prince Di Venturini, after a pause; "an
absurd one, you may think, madame, but the face of that woman in the
picture is very like _yours_. Not one half so lovely, but very like,
nevertheless. Does madame perceive it?"

"Does madame not?" madame responded, that slow, sleepy smile still on
her lips. "Who could fail? And yet, mon Prince, you cannot fancy me with
_that_ expression, can you? He is leaving her--is it not? and her heart
is breaking. Bah! it is like the egotism of men, they desert us and we
die--or so they think! Prince, that picture must be mine before I sleep.
You hear?"

"And live but to obey!" with a most profound bow; "the picture shall be
yours!"

He escorted her to her carriage.

At sunset across the gate of the Brompton cottage the bargain was
struck, and "How the Night Fell" became the property of Madame Felicia,
the actress.




CHAPTER IV.

LADY DYNELY'S THURSDAY.


Brilliantly lit, brilliantly filled, Lady Dynely's elegant rooms were a
study of color in themselves for a painter when Mr. Locksley arrived. He
was rather late--dancing was going on, as he made his way to his
hostess' side to pay his respects.

In his ceremonial costume, the artist looked something more than well,
and that military air of his was more conspicuous than ever.

    "You may break, you may shatter the vase if you will,
    But the scent of the roses will hang round it still,"

quotes Miss France Forrester to Mr. Terence Dennison. "I would know the
stalk of a trooper (and have seen it more than once) under the cowl of a
monk. Your Mr. Locksley, Terry, is the most distinguished-looking man in
the rooms."

"I never said he was my Mr. Locksley. So you find the painter as
attractive as the painting, France, and you will be good to him, and
smile upon him, and turn his head, for the space of a week. The last
victim was the popular new poet, the Cheapside tailor's son. Ah! poor
Locksley!"

"Terry," Miss Forrester says severely, "small boys should never attempt
the sarcastic--you least of all--for some years to come. I am interested
in aspiring geniuses--as a soldier's daughter, in all soldiers. Where
did you say Mr. Locksley had served?"

"India and America. Indian mutiny, and American civil war, with great
distinction in both. A professional free-lance, and, I have heard, brave
as a lion."

"He looks it," France said, dreamily. "He has the true _air noble_.
Surely that man is well born, or else the old adage, that blood tells,
is false. And Lady Dynely says he resembles Gordon Caryll."

"Never saw Gordon Caryll," Terry sleepily responds, "Heard of him
though. Went to perdition for a woman, didn't he? A common case enough.
And you take him to your heart of hearts for that resemblance, don't
you, Miss Forrester? I know you have set up this Gordon Caryll as a sort
of demi-god, my hero-worshipping young lady."

She smiled, then sighed. She was looking brilliantly handsome to-night
in pink silk, pink roses in her brown hair, caught back by gleaming
diamonds. She had a love for bright colors and rich gems, and looked
with contempt on the white tulle and pale pearls of her young lady
friends.

"What clergyman was it said once when he introduced operatic airs into
his choir, that it was a pity the devil should have _all_ the good
tunes. On the same principle, I say it is a pity your married women
should monopolize the brightest colors and richest jewels. The English
Miss has been trampled upon long enough--let me be the heroine to
inaugurate a new era."

This is what Miss Forrester had said to Lady Dynely, this very evening,
when slightly remonstrated with on the subject of her magnificence. The
vivid colors, the vivid gems, the roses and laces, suited her dusk, warm
loveliness, and she knew it.

Terry had been her companion for the past hour. The Canadian heiress had
a very affectionate regard for Mr. Dennison, and made no secret of it.

"I am awfully fond of Terry," she was wont to say; "the best fellow
alive and the greatest simpleton ever created."

"She treats me like a small boy of ten, at home for the holidays," Mr.
Dennison would supplement with a groan.

They both pause for a moment while they discuss Mr. Locksley, and look
at him. Many others look, too. "How the Night Fell" has made a
sensation; they feel a languid interest in the painter.

"France," Mr. Dennison says, after that pause, "I have an idea."

"Have you, Terry? Cherish it then, my dear boy, for you are never likely
to have another."

"Madame," Terry responds, "your sex protects you! Here is my idea. What
if that fellow should be the long-lost heir of Caryllynne, returned to
the halls of his fathers, and all that sort of thing, once more, to cut
you out of a fortune. It would be uncommonly like a thing on the stage,
now wouldn't it?"

"Certainly like a thing on the stage," Miss Forrester disdainfully
replies; "therefore very unlike anything in real life. Ah, no! that
would be too good to be true. Gordon Caryll, poor fellow, is dead. The
likeness Lady Dynely sees, if indeed she sees any, is but a coincidence.
See, she is beckoning--let us go over."

They cross the room. Miss Forrester, with a frank smile of welcome, and
looking very bright and lovely, gives the artist a most gracious
greeting.

"I saw you were not dancing, France, and want you to do the honors of my
picture gallery. You could not have a better cicerone, Mr. Locksley.
France has lived as she says in an atmosphere of paintings all her
life."

"And familiarity breeds contempt," murmurs Mr. Dennison.

"Only in the case of stupid dragoons," retorts Miss Forrester. "How
often have I tried to impress upon you, Terry, that sarcasm isn't your
forte. I shall have much pleasure in displaying our art treasures to
your critical eyes, Mr. Locksley. I always feel _en rapport_ immediately
with artists--they were the staple of my acquaintance in Rome. It is the
hot-bed of genius. You have studied there, I can see."

"For three years, Miss Forrester. And," he smiles as he says it, and
Miss Forrester marvels to see how that smile lights up his dark, grave
face--"I have seen _you_ there many times."

"Indeed! But you must, of course; I spent half my life sketching in the
galleries. The very happiest days of my life were spent in Rome."

He looks down upon the dusk lovely face with gravely admiring eyes.

"But so little of your life has come," that gaze says to her, "you have
not yet begun to live."

"There is one thing about Rome which must strike the most casual
observer," says Dennison, suddenly, seized with a second idea, "and that
is, the lamentable dearth of Roman noses! They were snubs, give you my
word, when I was there, one half. My own," says Terry, glancing
complacently at an opposite mirror, "was the noblest Roman of 'em all!"

Miss Forrester giving the prominent feature Terry admired a rebuking tap
with her fan, led the way into an anteroom, hung with crimson velvet,
emblazoned with the arms and motto of the Dynelys:

"Loyal au mort."

He glances at these emblazoned splendors as he passes, and follows his
fair leader into a long gallery, hung from floor to ceiling with
pictures.

"Lady Dynely is a lover of art, and her collection is very fine. Here is
a face by Titian, one of the gems of the room."

"Doesn't look unlike you, France--'pon my word it doesn't--the eyes, the
hair, and the yellowish complexion--well, it isn't yellow, but you know
what I mean. One of his wives, isn't it? These old masters always had
three or four, hadn't they--one buried, 'tother come on. You ought to
marry a man of genius, France; you would make a capital wife for one,
wouldn't you? a sort of moral spur in his side, urging him on to
perpetual efforts. If he were in Parliament you would have him a
premier, if he were an artist you would have him a Michael Angelo, if
musical, a Beethoven, eh? wouldn't you?"

"I have seen geniuses," Miss Forrester makes answer, "I have also seen
their wives. And, my dear Terry, the wife of a man of genius is a social
martyr, who carries the cross while her husband wears the crown."

"And _vice vers_," says Terry; "or, stay--is it _vice vers_? The
husband of a woman of genius is a--"

"There are no women of genius," answers France, with a little sarcastic
shrug. "You monopolize all that. Women never write books, or paint
pictures, or carve statues. George Eliot, Rosa Bonheur, Miss Hosmer,
etc., all are myths. Genius is the prerogative of our lord and
master--Man."

"You infringe on your master's prerogative then," says Mr. Locksley,
smiling. "How very cynical you are pleased to be, Miss Forrester."

"I have always thought it a thousand pities France wasn't born in New
York," cuts in Mr. Dennison. "She could mount the rostrum, as they all
seem to do there, and spout until the welkin rang on the subject of
down-trodden woman and her natural enemy and tyrant--Man. She is
fearfully and wonderfully strong-minded, is Miss France Forrester. And
now if you can possibly survive half an hour without me, France, I'll
tear myself from your side. I am engaged for the next waltz, and I hear
the opening bars afar off."

Then Mr. Dennison saunters leisurely away, and Miss Forrester and Mr.
Locksley are alone among the pictures. They linger long, criticising,
admiring, talking of Rome, of art and artists, and the picturesque,
poetic life there. "I think I was born to be a Bohemian," she says, with
her frank laugh, "and have somehow missed my destiny. It is such a free,
bright, untrammelled sort of life, ever new and full of variety. Here it
seems to be over and over the same tiresome, treadmill round. I haven't
wearied of it yet in spite of my scepticism, the bloom is not yet
brushed off my peach, but I know that day will come. Mr. Locksley,"
changing tone and subject, abruptly, "is your picture sold?"

"Sold two hours before I came here," he answers, and tells her of the
hurried transaction over the garden gate.

"The Prince Di Venturini," she repeats; "and for a lady. Who can she be?
The prince is here to-night--I shall ask him. I am sorry it is sold.
Lady Dynely wishes very much to add it to her collection. The face of
that woman has haunted me ever since."

His bronzed face pales a little, a troubled look comes into his eyes.
She sees it, and her girlish curiosity deepens. She cannot understand
her interest in this man, her interest in that picture, but both are
there.

"Is she still alive?" she asks, carelessly--"your model?"

"Miss Forrester, I painted that picture from memory, as I think I have
told you."

"Then, your model was in your mind. But you have not answered my
question. Is the owner of that wonderful face still alive?"

"I beg your pardon. I believe not--I hope not."

"Mr. Locksley!"

"I hope not," he repeats, moodily. "A wicked wish, is it not, Miss
Forrester? But such women as that are better out of the world than in
it."

"How very beautiful she must have been," France says, dreamily; "even
with that tortured look you give her, she is beautiful still."

"She was. The most beautiful woman I ever saw."

It is not a flattering answer, but France Forrester is not offended. A
little out of the line of demure young ladyhood, she certainly might be
frank and outspoken at times to a startling degree, but honest as a
child and vain not at all.

"I wonder if you are her judge and accuser in that picture?" she thinks,
and looks up at him. "I wonder in what way that woman ever wronged
_you_?"

He catches her glance and understands it. A smile breaks up the dark
gravity of his face as he looks down at her.

"You honor my poor painting too much, Miss Forrester, by your interest,"
he says; "for the story it tells--that is over and done with many a long
year ago. The woman I have painted is one not worthy a second thought
from you--a woman who spoiled my whole life, whom I have reason to
believe dead, and whom, were she alive, I would go to the other end of
the earth sooner than meet. Why I painted that I hardly know--it was the
whim of a moment--that it would have the success it has met with I did
not dream."

She colors slightly, he seems to have rebuked her irrepressible
curiosity. There is a romance then in this man's life--girl-like, that
thought deepens her interest in him. A gentleman born she instinctively
feels he is, this artist who paints for his daily bread, who has been a
soldier of fortune for twelve years. Miss Forrester is by nature a
hero-worshipper, as Terry has said. And Mr. G. Locksley, whoever he is,
takes his place immediately on some vacant pedestal in her mind, to be
numbered among the heroes of her dreams henceforth.

They say no more about "How the Night Fell." They linger, though, yet a
little longer among the immortals in the long gallery. Mr. Locksley
seems in no haste, and France feels an odd, altogether new pleasure, in
lingering and listening to his grave, quiet remarks, an odd distaste for
returning to the perfumed warmth, and glitter, and crush of the outer
rooms. But they go there presently, for all that, and at her suggestion.
She will be missed, and she has a vague recollection that she has
promised the Prince Di Venturini a waltz.

"And I will find out who has purchased Mr. Locksley's picture," the
little diplomat says to herself; "it is evident he is as curious about
it as I am."

Prince Di Venturini is talking Italian politics eagerly to a knot of
starred and decorated gentlemen, but he breaks away, and comes up to
France as their waltz begins. As they float slowly away she plunges into
her grievance at once.

"It is unpardonable of you, prince, to have purchased the gem of the
Academy. I mean of course 'How the Night Fell.' I intended to have had
it myself."

"_Mais, Mon Dieu!_" cried the prince, in his shrill Neapolitan French.
"I did not purchase it. All the ladies fall in love with it at sight, I
believe. How fortunate are these artists."

"You did not purchase it!" France repeats in surprise. "Mr. Locksley
told me--"

"Ah, yes, Mr. Locksley told you, without doubt. Still, I did not buy the
picture for myself--I am not the pet of the public. I have not thousands
to throw away on a whim. It was Felicia."

"Felicia, the actress! the--"

"Star of the Royal Bijou Theatre. Yes, mademoiselle, and at a most
fabulous price. To wish and to have are synonyms with Felicia."

There is silence as they float around. Miss Forrester's dark,
rose-crowned head is lifted over the top of his small, yellow
excellency's two good inches. She feels it to be something more than
annoying--a positive adding of insult to injury, that this popular
danseuse should have won what she has lost.

It wears late; the evening ends. One by one coroneted carriages roll
away, and Mr. Locksley comes after some lofty personage, with ribbons
and orders, and takes leave of Lady Dynely.

"We hope to see you every Thursday, Mr. Locksley," that lady says, very
graciously, and Mr. Locksley murmurs his acknowledgment, and pledges
himself to nothing.

"How do you like your genius, France?" inquires Terry Dennison. "Does he
bear the ordeal of close inspection, or does distance lend enchantment
to the view, as in the case of the Cheapside tailor's son?"

"Mr. Locksley isn't a genius," Miss Forrester replies, trailing her silk
splendor up the stairs, "only a clever artist, who has painted one good
picture, and may never paint another. There are many such in all walks
of life, my dear child. Good-night, Terry--pleasant dreams."

"Good-night, France--morning rather; and my dreams will not be of you."

"Ingrate! Of whom then?"

"Of a little girl down in Lincolnshire. You don't know her, Miss
Forrester, and she would stand abashed in your regal presence. But, ah!
there's nothing like her under the London sun."

And Terry's blue eyes are absolutely luminous as he vanishes.

"Another heart gone!" reflects Miss Forrester, as she closes her door;
"and so it goes on. 'Men may come and men may go, but _that_ goes on
forever!' Poor, good, honest Terry! I hope your course of true love
will run smooth at least. You are one of the exceptional men who do make
the women you marry happy."

Miss Forrester rings for her maid, and her mind goes off at another
tangent.

"So Felicia has purchased Mr. Locksley's picture! The dancer has taste.
By the bye, we're due at the Royal Bijou to-morrow night. She is very
handsome; but these people owe all their beauty, I suppose, to paint,
and powder, and wigs. She dances exceptionally well, too; but she need
not have been in such haste buying that picture."

She pauses in her wandering thoughts. Her eye falls upon a letter lying
on her dressing-table, under the clustering wax-lights. It bears the
Roman post-mark, and, with a little exclamation of joy, Miss Forrester
snatches it up.

"From grandmamma!" she says.

Mrs. Caryll is in reality but her father's distant cousin, but so it
pleases France to call her. She breaks the seal and reads eagerly
through. After a few preliminary paragraphs, this is what the letter
said:

     "You say nothing, my dear France, of Eric's return. Has he _not_
     returned then? It is really unpardonable of him to linger so long,
     knowing you are in London. Oh, my daughter! I hope--I pray nothing
     may occur to break off this alliance. I am fond of Eric--I love
     you. To see you his happy wife is the desire of my heart. It is his
     mother's dearest wish also. In every respect it is most
     suitable--both dowered with youth and wealth and beauty. He loves
     you I am sure, France, and would have spoken before now had you let
     him. But you have laughed at him and made light of his wishes
     hitherto. And you are of so peculiar a nature, my dearest child, so
     unlike other girls of your age, so self-willed, and radical in your
     opinions, that I fear for you. Not that you would ever marry
     beneath you. I have no dread of that, you are far too proud; but
     you may meet some one whom your fancy will idealize, whom you
     cannot marry, and who will wreck the happiness of your life.
     Something--I do not know what, tells me this will be so. Guard
     against it--let your engagement with Eric be announced to the world
     immediately it takes place. And write at once, my dear, dear
     daughter, to your most affectionate

                                                       "MARIAN CARYLL."

She threw the letter aside with a quick gesture of irritated impatience.
As a rule, she was not petulant, and all Mrs. Caryll's wishes carried
force, but just now she felt intolerant of this husband thrust upon her,
whether she would or no.

"Eric Dynely," she said, "a masculine wax doll, a perfumed coxcomb, a
dandy of the first water! I hate dandies! I detest pretty men! I would
sooner marry Terry Dennison any day!"

One of the windows stood open; the soft, chill morning breeze stirred
the curtains of silk and lace; she put them aside and leaned out into
the fresh coolness, the faint light of the dawn glimmering on her pink
silk, her roses and diamonds.

"The day for this sort of marriage should have ended a century ago," she
thinks, full of impatient pain; "this kind of alliance should be left to
royalty. But _noblesse oblige_, it seems to be my fate. He is very well,
the best waltzer I know, the best second in a duet, he has the bow and
grace of a Beau Brummel--the good looks of an Apollo--what more can one
want? And yet one does. Loves me, does he, grandmamma? Ah, no! Eric,
Viscount Dynely, fell in love many years ago--with himself, and will be
the victim of that passion all his life. And after all the dreams and
the hero worship they laugh at, I am to marry Eric Dynely!"

Then through the mists of the morning there floats before her a face,
brown, bearded, grave, with deep lines of care and thought seamed upon
it, with threads of silver gleaming through the fairness of his hair, a
man who had been a leader of men, a man who had lived and suffered.

"You may meet some one your fancy will idealize, whom you cannot marry,
and who will wreck the happiness of your life."

Was Mrs. Caryll among the prophets?




CHAPTER V.

LOVE TOOK UP THE GLASS OF TIME.


The leafy greenness of May, the soft and veiled warmth of June, had
passed; the feverish noontides of July had come, and Lady Dynely's only
son had not returned from his idle wanderings to woo and win his bride.

To France Forrester this first season of hers had been bright and
beautiful as a fairy tale. She had been presented by Lady Dynely, had
created, as the critics of the Academy had predicted, a sensation. A
certain royal personage, whose approval was a patent right and seal of
popularity in itself, had condescended to place his gracious stamp of
approbation upon her, and Miss Forrester awoke and found herself "the
fashion." "The fashion!" these two magic words told the whole story.
Women slandered her fiercely, hated her bitterly, and copied everything
she wore, from her coquettish head-gear to her little boots. Men
diplomatized for the favor of a waltz, as they might for princely
preferment. In the ride, in the ball-room, and opera-box, Miss Forrester
was still the best surrounded lady of the assembly, the _belle des
belles_. "And _why_ is it?" her envious compeers asked. "It isn't her
beauty; there are scores more perfectly and classically beautiful than
she, with her dark skin and irregular features." Was it the dashing
independence of her manner, the careless audacity with which she looked
into their eyes, and laughed at their flatteries, and threw them lightly
over as whiffs of thistle-down? She was so thoroughly heart-whole, so
perfectly indifferent to their homage, that she piqued their
vanity--always a man's strongest feeling--and rendered them, by that
imperious grace of hers, her veriest slaves. Whether she talked Italian
politics to Prince Di Venturini, with his wizen, murky face, and beady
black eyes, or the newest opera with Signor Carlo Dolce, the new
Venetian tenor, whether she discoursed art with long-haired, dreamy-eyed
students, and stately academicians, or the latest Belgravian gossip with
a dashing military duke, it was all the same. She was interested in the
theme, not the man; her heart, if she possessed one, was triply clad in
steel--no one, it seemed, had power to touch it. And then, presently it
leaked out that she had been engaged for years to Lord Dynely, and that
the engagement would be publicly announced to all whom it might concern,
immediately upon his return to England. "He must have great faith in his
affianced," said the sneerers; he certainly seemed in no hot haste to
join her. This was after Miss Forrester had said "no" to two of the most
eligible gentlemen of the season, and who had followed her about the
summer through, like her lap-dog or her shadow.

This season, which had been such a brilliant career of victory to Miss
Forrester, had been a very busy one for Mr. Locksley the painter. Orders
flowed in--his fame and fortune seemed made. Madame Felicia sent by the
prince for a companion picture to "How the Night Fell." The Marquis of
St. Albans had ordered a Canadian winter scene. Lady Dynely wished to
have her own portrait painted for her son. The sittings for this
portrait necessitated many visits to the Brompton Studio, and Miss
Forrester was almost invariably my lady's companion. She wandered about
among the paintings at will, whilst the elder lady sat or lay back, and
listened with half-closed eyes to Mr. Locksley talking whilst he
painted. He talked well, and as he seemed to have been pretty much
everywhere, found subjects enough. Anecdotes of his Indian life, the
fighting, the campaigning, the pig-sticking, stories of the American
civil war, thrilling and vivid as truth could make them, of Canada, with
its brief, hot summers, and long, cold winters, until the hours of each
sitting were gone like a dream.

"Really, Mr. Locksley is a charming companion," Lady Dynely was wont to
say; "talks better than any man I know. What a traveller he has
been--been everywhere and seen everything."

It was a subject upon which Miss Forrester was suspiciously
reticent--Mr. Locksley and the charm of his conversation. And yet,
though she would not have owned it even to herself, those hours in the
Brompton cottage, sitting by the open window watching the afternoon sun
sink behind the tree-tops, leaving a trail of splendor behind, with the
scent of the summer roses perfuming the air, while Mr. Locksley painted
and talked, and Lady Dynely sat and listened, were the pleasantest hours
of her life. All were pleasant; this summer took a glory and a bliss
none other had known; but these were the foam of life's champagne.

She and Mr. Locksley met tolerably often elsewhere. He still attended at
intervals Lady Dynely's Thursdays, and there were literary and artistic
gatherings where Miss Forrester met him. It was curious on these
occasions to note the restless light in the great hazel eyes, the quick,
impatient glances at the door, the sudden stillness that came over her
when a new name was announced, the swift shade of annoyed impatience, or
the glad, quick light and warmth that spread over her face, as it was or
was not the name she wished to hear. And somehow--certainly it was not
Mr. Locksley's doing; he was the most modest, least presuming of
men--presently he found himself by Miss Forrester's side, holding the
little gloved hand she extended in frank, friendly greeting, and basking
in the sunshine of her sunniest smiles. In the park, too, leaning over
the rails, smoking his twilight cigar, Mr. Locksley was often favored
with a gracious bow from a certain coroneted carriage, and a dark,
lovely face, framed in a marvel of Parisian lace and rosebuds, shone
upon him for an instant like a dusk star. That tall, soldierly figure,
that bronzed, bearded face, that grave smile of recognition, Miss
Forrester would have known among ten thousand.

And still Lord Dynely did not come.

"It is _very_ strange--it is incomprehensible, it is most annoying,"
Lady Dynely said, over and over again, to herself, or to Terry, knitting
her blonde brows; "I can't understand. So fond as he used to be of
France, too, and see her now flirting with half the men in London."

"I don't call it flirting," Terry would respond. "France can't help
smiling on men and turning their heads any more than the
what's-its-name--sunflower--can help turning the sun. And if the sun
scorches and shrivels them a little, I don't see that the sun is to be
blamed either. Sounds poetical, that, don't it?" said Terry, rather
surprised at his own performance.

"It is unpardonable of Eric," Lady Dynely would retort, vexed, and
_almost_ angry with her darling; "and so I shall tell him when I write.
Here it is the end of July, and we go down to Devonshire next week. His
birthday is in August, and who is to tell us whether he will even come
then. Of course France must feel piqued, though she conceals her
feelings so well."

"Uncommonly well," says Terry. "So well that I for one am disposed to
think that she isn't in the least annoyed. Where is Eric loafing now?"

"Eric is still in Spain, and is evidently enjoying himself," says Eric's
mother, irritably.

"'The girls of Cadiz,'" hums Terry, under his breath. "Well, don't
worry. I'll go over and fetch him if you like."

"Nonsense, Terry! don't be a simpleton. What would France and I have
done all this summer without you for an escort? You have been the best
of boys, and I know you have been longing more than once to break away
and go down to Lincolnshire."

"Your pleasure must ever be first with me," Terry answers, but he
smothers a little sigh as he says it. Truth to tell, he _has_ been
longing many times to break away from flower show and opera, party and
park, dining and dressing, and all the rest of it, and rush down into
Lincolnshire, to the old vicarage of his boyhood, where his loadstar
shines. But Lady Dynely wills it otherwise, and Lady Dynely's lightest
word is law to Terry.

"If I could only have got off duty for a week--just a week," he had said
pathetically once to France, "I wouldn't so much mind. You see, she's
just the dearest, sweetest little darling in the world--"

"Of course," interrupts France, gravely.

"And I've been awfully fond of her ever since I wore roundabouts, and
she short muslin frocks, tied up on the shoulder, and I'm dying to tell
her the good news, my commission and the five hundred a year and--and
something else." Terry suddenly turns very red. "A fellow could marry
and keep a wife on his pay and five hundred a year, couldn't he, France?
Just a little suburban villa, you know, a pretty parlor maid, and a boy
in buttons, and a one-horse shay--eh? Couldn't they, France? My tastes
ain't expensive, as Lady Dynely said the other day, and she--ah France!
I see lots of girls, you know--jolly girls, and dashing girls, and
pretty girls, but not one--no, I give you my word, not one-half as good,
or sweet, or pretty, as my little Crystal!"

Miss Forrester is Terry's confidante; he gets on with her. For Lady
Dynely, much as he loves and venerates her, or rather because of that
great love and veneration, he stands in awe of her. But France
sympathizes with him, more than ever in these later days, and listens
dreamily, while Mr. Dennison pours forth the story of his love.

"What a good fellow you are, Terry," she says now regretfully. "It is a
pity to throw you away upon any insipid little country girl. (I know by
her photograph she is insipid.) I have half a mind to fall in love with
you myself."

"Oh, but don't, please!" says Terry, piteously; "let it be half a mind,
don't make it a whole one. If you insisted upon it, I should knock under
at once--women can always do what they please with me, and then two
clever people should never marry--it doesn't work; besides, you belong
to Eric."

"Do I?" France responds, gravely. "I am not so sure of that. Eric seems
in no hurry to come and claim his belongings."

"It's a shame," says Terry; "and so Lady Dynely has just been saying.
She's awfully angry. Eric deserves to be shot."

"'The absent are always in the wrong,'" Miss Forrester quotes. "I don't
see why my lady should be angry with Eric--I'm not. Let the poor boy
enjoy himself. But, for you, Terry, you shall go down to Lincolnshire
to-morrow, if you wish it. It is too bad, and too selfish of us, to keep
you tied to our apron-strings when the prettiest and sweetest girl in
England is pining for you among the Lincolnshire fens and marshes. I
shall speak to Lady Dynely, at once. Yours is the most aggravated case
of 'cruelty to animals' on record."

"No, no! It may annoy Lady Dynely--I would not for the world. My affairs
can wait," Terry remonstrates in alarm.

"So can ours. I am very fond of my lady, but I don't worship the ground
she walks on, as some people do. I shall ask her."

Miss Forrester kept her word. She sought out Lady Dynely, and broached
the subject at once.

"Lady Dynely, can't you let Terry off duty for a couple of weeks? The
poor fellow is falling a prey 'to green and yellow melancholy,' and the
'worm i' the bud is preying on his damask cheek.' In plain English, he's
in love; and now that your generosity has given him something to live
on, he naturally wants to go and tell her--wants to lay his hand and
fortune at her feet, and do the 'come, share my cottage, gentle maid'
sort of thing, you know."

France spoke lightly. Lady Dynely laid down her pen--she was writing
that indignant protest to Master Eric--and looked up with a face that
turned to the color of ashes.

"Wants to marry!--Terry!" was all she could say.

"Naturally. We have made him our 'fetch and carry' spaniel, I know; but
he is a man for all that. We have treated him as though he were a page
or footman; but he is a lieutenant of dragoons, and nearly twenty-four
years old. Not a Methuselah, certainly, but old enough to take unto
himself a wife if he wishes to perpetrate that sort of imbecility."

"Terry! a wife!" Then Lady Dynely sits still, and over the gray pallor
of her face a look of anger flashes. "It is absurd!--it is preposterous!
Terry with a wife! Why, he is only a grown-up baby himself. I will not
hear of it."

"He is more than three years older than Eric," says Miss Forrester, her
eyes kindling at this injustice. "When it is Eric's lordly will to take
a wife, you won't put in that plea of youth, will you?"

"The cases are altogether different--there is no comparison," says Lady
Dynely, coldly. "Who is the girl?"

"She is one of the Miss Higginses. There are nine Miss Higginses," says
France, with a slight shudder. "She is the youngest but one, poor thing.
Terry and she have been in love with each other ever since they ate pap
out of the same bowl and wore pinafores. And I think it is a little too
bad, Lady Dynely," concludes France, indignantly, "that poor Terry can't
have a wife if he wants one."

"Send Terry here," is Lady Dynely's answer. "I will speak to him on this
subject."

"And don't be too hard on the poor fellow," pleads France, imploringly.
"Oh, Lady Dynely, he loves you as it is the fate of few mothers to be
loved. So well that I believe if you order him to give up this girl, to
go away and turn Trappist, he will obey you. As you are strong, be
merciful--don't be hard on Terry."

Then she goes, and Terry comes. He looks uncommonly foolish and guilty,
much as he used to do when caught apple-stealing down in Lincolnshire
long ago, and was called up before the vicar to answer for his crime.
Her ladyship is still pale, very pale, her lips are set, her eyes look
anxious, the hands that are folded in her lap tremble nervously at his
approach.

"What is this, Terry?" she asks, and her clear voice is not steady. "Is
it a jest of France's, or do you really wish to--"

"Marry Crystal Higgins? Yes, Lady Dynely, with your permission," Terry
answers, looking up firmly enough.

"You really wish it?"

"I really wish it, with all my heart."

"Silly boy," Lady Dynely says, "what folly is this? You are too young.
Oh, yes, Terry, you are--you are ten years younger than your years--in
spite of all you have lived in the world, you are as ignorant of it as a
girl in her teens. I don't object to that; I like you the better for it
indeed. But you are not up to the rle of Benedick, the married man. And
besides, the income that is sufficient for you, with your simple habits,
will not suffice for a wife and family. I can't conceive of you in love,
Terry, you who treat all the young ladies of your acquaintance with an
indifference as unflattering as I am sure it is sincere."

"I love Crystal," is Terry's answer, and his blue eyes light. "I have
loved her pretty much, I think, since I saw her first."

"And she--"

"Oh, I don't know--she likes me, that I am sure of. She is only
seventeen, Lady Dynely, and knows nothing of the world beyond the
vicarage, the village, and her native marshes. And yet I think when I
ask her to be my wife she will not refuse."

"You mean to ask her then?"

"With your permission, Lady Dynely."

She lays her hand on his head; her lips tremble.

"You are a good boy, Terry; it would be difficult to be hard to you if
one wished. But I don't wish. I only ask this--postpone your visit for a
little, don't ask her to be your wife until--until Eric comes."

He lifts her hand and kisses it.

"It shall be as you please," he answers.

"Until Eric comes," she repeats, and that grayish pallor is on her face,
that troubled look in her eyes. "I have something to tell him--something
to tell you. When that is told you shall do as you please--you will be
absolutely your own master thenceforth."

"You are not angry, Lady Dynely?" Terry asks, in a troubled tone.

"Angry! with you? Ah, no, Terry; you have never given me cause for anger
in your life." She sighs heavily; she thinks of one, as dear to her as
the very heart beating in her bosom, who has given her cause for anger
often enough.

"It is a compact between us. You will wait until I have told you what I
have to tell before you speak?"

"I will wait," he answers. And then, with a troubled, mystified look on
his face he goes out. "Something to tell; what can it be?" Mr. Dennison
wonders. He is not good at guessing; mysteries have never come near his
simple life, and they sorely perplex and upset him when they do. For
Lady Dynely, she drops her face in her hands with a passionate cry.

"I have put it off so long," she sobs, "and now the day is here--is
here."

"Well," says Miss Forrester, imperiously, "has your superior officer
given you leave, Mr. Dennison?"

Terry explains--stammering a good deal. Not just yet--he is to wait
until Eric comes home.

"Until Eric comes home! Grant me patience!" is Miss Forrester's prayer.
"Now what under the sun has Eric to do with it? If Lady Dynely could,
the whole world would revolve at Eric's pleasure, the sun only shine
when it was his sovereign will. I need not ask, Mr. Dennison, if you
mean to obey?"

"You need not, indeed, Miss Forrester," he answers, coolly; "I mean to
obey."

She looks at him curiously--almost pathetically--and yet with admiration
too.

"I think better of my fellow-men, Terry, since I have known you. You
give me an exalted idea of human nature. I thought gratitude an extinct
virtue--went out with the dark ages--you teach me my mistake. You love
and venerate Lady Dynely in a way that is simply wonderful."

"She has done so much for me," Terry says, "no gratitude can ever repay
her."

"Yours will, don't be afraid. You will have chance enough of showing
it." Miss Forrester has thrice the worldly wisdom of poor Terry. "How
was it all? Your relationship to the Dynely family seems somehow such a
hazy affair. What was your life like before she came for you?"

But on this point Terry's recollections are misty. A troubled look
crosses his face--it was all wretchedness and squalor that he vaguely
remembers, also that those with whom his early years were spent were
kind to him, in a rude sort of way. Out of this blurred picture, the
rainy day upon which she entered their hovel, like a very angel of
light, with her fair face and rich garments, stands out clear. She came,
and all his life changed. No mother could do more for a son than she had
done for him.

"Could they not?" Miss Forrester says, rather doubtfully, thinking how
differently the lives of Eric and Terry are ordered. But she will not
throw cold water on his enthusiasm. It is beautiful in its belief and
simplicity, this worship of Lady Dynely in a world where gratitude is
the exception, not the rule.

"But why did she do it? And what claim have you really upon her?" she
asks.

Here Terry is "far wide" again. His father was some sort of relation of
the late Lord Dynely, that much her ladyship told the Vicar of Starling,
and that meagre scrap is all Mr. Dennison knows of himself or his
history.

"Curious," France says, thoughtfully, looking at him. "Lady Dynely is
the last to adopt a ragged child through a whim and do for him as she
has done for Terry. There is something on the cards we don't see, and
something I fancy not quite fair."

So all thought of going down into Lincolnshire and making the eighth
Miss Higgins blessed for life, was given up by Mr. Dennison for the
present, and he resumed his "fetch and carry" duties as France called
them, and dutifully escorted his two lady friends everywhere. Even down
to the Brompton studio, which bored him most of all, for he didn't care
for pictures, and Mr. Locksley--a good fellow enough--was monopolized by
the ladies and had no time to attend to him. The bright brief
season--for Parliament closed early that year--was at its end, all the
world of western London were turning their thoughts countryward, the
last sitting for Lady Dynely's portrait was to be given. While she sat,
Miss Forrester prowled about as usual among the pictures, and lo!
brought one to light that was a revelation.

She had seen them all again and again. The Canadian winter scene for
the Marquis, a view from the heights of Quebec, with the river a
glistening ribbon of frozen silver-white, and the ice cone of
Montmorency Falls piercing the vivid blue sky--the glimpses of green
Virginian forests, picturesque negro quarters, rich sketches of northern
autumnal forests, all gorgeous splashes of ruby-red maple and orange
hemlock, and anon a glimpse of Indian life, dusky white-veiled Arabs,
and dreary sketches of sandy plain. The companion picture for Madame
Felicia was not yet begun. And thus it was that suddenly France came
upon her treasure-trove.

It was hidden from view in a dusky corner covered by half a dozen larger
canvasses--a little thing, merely a sketch, but struck in with a bold
hand, with wonderful gradation of light and shade. This is what she saw:

An old-fashioned garden; a tangled mass of roses and heliotrope and
honeysuckle; a night sky, lit by a faint, new moon; the dim outline of a
stately mansion rising in the background over the black trees; a girl in
a white dress, her face uplifted to the night sky. In the dim distance,
a darker shadow among the shadows, his face entirely obscured--the tall
figure of a man stands unseen, watching. The face of the girl is
France's own. The blood rushed to her forehead as she looked, with a
shock, she could hardly have told--whether of anger or joy. She
understood the picture in a moment, and in that moment understood
herself. The figure in the background was _his_--and he was bidding her
a last farewell. That look of passionate love, of passionate
despair--how dared he! With the crimson of conscious guilt still red in
her cheeks, her eyes flashed. Did he suspect what until this moment she
had never suspected herself? A suffocating feeling of shame, of terror,
seized her. Did he suspect--did he dare suspect that she had stooped to
care for him unsought?

Yes, stooped! Was he not a nameless, struggling artist, one of the
toilers of the earth? And she--and then France stopped and knew in her
inmost soul that though he were a beggar, he was the one man of all men
born to be her master.

She sat like one in a trance looking at it--heedless how time flew,
until suddenly a slip of paper attached to the back caught her eye.

It was a short printed poem that told the story of the picture.
Mechanically she took it and read:

    "So close we are, and yet so far apart;
      So close I feel your breath upon my cheek;
      So far that all this love of mine is weak
    To touch in any way your distant heart;
    So close, that when I hear your voice I start
      To see my whole life standing bare and bleak:
      So far, that though for years and years I seek,
    I shall not find thee other than thou art."

She laid it down. There was a step behind her, and then lifting her eyes
they met his full. He turned quite white, and made a motion as though to
take the picture from her hand.

"Miss Forrester! I did not mean that you should see that."

"So I presume. You must pardon me for having seen it, all the same. May
I ask for which of Mr. Locksley's patrons is this?"

"Miss Forrester does me less than justice," he answered; "I have not
been so presumptuous as that. This picture is not to leave my studio.
Have you seen the poem? Yes--well, the fancy took me to put the story it
told on canvas. Almost in spite of me the girl's face became yours. It
is but an instant's work to dash it out if it displeases you."

"The picture is your own; you will do as you please," she said,
frigidly. "_Ma mre_, is the sitting over at last? Shall we go?"

"Your picture, France?" Lady Dynely said, glancing at the apple of
discord, and putting up her glass. "Really; and very well done. 'The
Last Parting.' But what a despairing expression you give her, Mr.
Locksley. Who ever saw France with such a look as that?"

"No one, mother mine," France said, gayly. There were times when she
called Lady Dynely by this title and thus gladdened her heart. "Nor ever
will. But these artists have such vivid imaginations."

"I should like you to paint France's portrait, really," said her
ladyship. "I have none. What do you say? Throw over your engagements and
come down to Dynely and do me this favor."

"It is quite impossible, madame," the artist answered, moodily, standing
by his handiwork and looking down at it with gloomy eyes.

And then all of a sudden a change came over Miss Forrester. The look of
hauteur broke up, disappeared, and a smile like a gleam of sunshine
after a storm lighted her face.

"No one ever says impossible to Lady Dynely," she said, in her old,
imperiously charming tone; "least of all with that look. And I really
should like to see myself as others see me, on canvas. _That_ is not I,
for I could by no possibility ever wear such a look as that. You shall
paint my picture not once, but twice--once for Lady Dynely and once for
a dear old lady in Rome, who will prize it above rubies--Grandmamma
Caryll."

He looked up, a faint flush under the golden tan of his skin.

"You mean that?" he asked.

"Most certainly. Let Felicia wait, and you may follow us down to
Dynely."

"I shall take it as a favor," chimed in Lady Dynely.

There is a moment's pause, of strong irresolution, France can see. Then
he looks up and meets her eyes again.

"You are both very good," he says, quietly. "I will come."




CHAPTER VI.

"THE LORD OF THE LAND."


Walking up and down the pier of Saint-Jean-sur-Mer, on the Brittany
coast, under the broiling sea-side sun, waiting for the English packet
anchored out in the roads, is a young English gentleman. The July sky is
blazing blindingly here by the sea; the heat quivers like a white mist
over the water; not a breath of air stirs the chestnuts or laburnums,
and the streets of Saint-Jean lie all baked and white in the pitiless,
brassy glare of that fierce midsummer sun.

But in all this tropical dazzle and heat the young Englishman saunters
up and down, and looks cool and languid still. His summer suit of palest
gray is the perfection of taste; his boots, his gloves, perfection also;
and the handkerchief which he flirts once or twice across his face is of
finest cambric, embroidered with a coronet and monogram, and perfumed
with attar of violets. He is tall and very blonde, as shapely as a
woman, broad-shouldered, slender-waisted, long-limbed, and _very_
handsome. His complexion is delicate as a girl's; for such blue eyes and
blonde curls many a fair one might sigh with envy; very handsome, very
effeminate. He has a little golden mustache, waxed into minute points; a
straw hat is thrown carelessly on his fair hair. He is the most
beautiful, the most noble, the most perfect of all men, in one woman's
eyes at least. He is Eric, Lord Viscount Dynely. He walks up and down,
and waits for the boat which is to convey him across the channel, to his
home and the lady he is to marry. But he is in no hot haste about it; he
has put off the evil day as long as possible.

France Forrester is a pretty girl, an elegant girl, a clever girl; a
suspicion has entered Lord Dynely's handsome blonde head more than once
that she may be even cleverer than himself. _That_ is a drawback. In
common with all men of good taste and sense, he dislikes clever women; a
suspicion of blue in the stockings would outweigh the charm of the
daintiest foot and ankle on earth. Still it is a settled thing among the
powers that be, and poor France expects it, no doubt; and it is less of
a bore, on the whole, to yield gracefully, and sacrifice himself in his
youth and loveliness on the altar of filial duty, than make a fuss about
it. And, besides, as a wife, he really doesn't know any lady he would
prefer to Mrs. Caryll's heiress.

At half-past ten he came down to the pier; it is a quarter of eleven
now, as he sees by the small jewelled repeater he draws from his pocket,
and Lord Dynely frowns a little.

"Confound it!" he mutters; "she promised to be here at half-past, sharp,
and now it is a quarter of eleven. The boat starts at eleven. Won't she
come after all? and have I been ruining my complexion and eyesight in
this beastly glare for the last thirty minutes for nothing?"

Then he pauses, stops, smiles. _She_ is coming--a dark-eyed, coquettish
little Frenchwoman, charmingly dressed, and who possesses the good looks
that come from youth, good health, good taste, and fine spirits. She is
Lord Dynely's last flirtee, met at a Saint-Jean ball, where in ten
minutes she had waltzed herself completely into his fickle affections.
He had come to Saint-Jean, from his Spanish loiterings, with the
intention of crossing over at once, and lo! a fortnight had passed and
two merry black eyes and a vivacious French tongue had held him in rose
chains ever since. The two weeks' passion had grown _triste_ now, and he
was going, and madame had promised to trip down and bid him adieu on the
pier. Such was the gentleman decreed to become France Forrester's lord
and master.

The fifteen minutes pass; they talk very affectionately, he with his
tall, fair head bent devotedly over her, his eloquent blue eyes speaking
whole encyclopedias of undying devotion. He is one of those men who
naturally delight to play at love-making, and throw themselves into the
moment's rle with all the depth that is in them. One of those men born
to be worshipped by women, and to make them suffer mercilessly at his
hands. Not robustly bad in any way, but simply without an ounce of
ballast in him, body or soul.

Eleven strikes from all the clocks of Saint-Jean-sur-Mer--the fatal hour
has come. There are tears in madame's black, doll-like eyes as she
whispers adieu; beautifully pale, sad and tender Lord Eric looks. He
waves the perfumed coroneted handkerchief from the upper deck as long as
she is in sight, still mournful and pale to look upon despite the height
of the thermometer. Then he laughs, puts the handkerchief in his pocket,
lights a rose-scented cigarette, selects a shady spot on deck, orders
his valet to fetch him that last novel of George Sand, and in five
minutes has as completely forgotten the woman he has left as--the girl
he is going to.

He reaches London. It is a desert, of course. Everybody has gone. Some
three million are left, but they don't count. He looks in weary disgust
at the empty, sun-scorched West End streets, at the bleached parks, the
forsaken Ladies' Mile, and goes down at once to Devonshire. And in the
cool of a perfect summer evening he reaches the village station, and as
he is not expected, is driven in a fly, like an ordinary mortal, to the
Abbey gates. There is a garden party of some kind, he sees, as he
strolls languidly up to the house. This gentleman, who has not attained
his majority, has a certain weary and worn-out air, as though life were
a very old story indeed, and rather a tiresome mistake--the "nothing
new, and nothing true, and it don't signify" manner to perfection.

It is a most exquisite evening. Overhead there is a sky like Italy,
golden-gray in the shadow, primrose and pink in the light, a full moon
rising over the tree-tops, a few bright stars winking facetiously down
at grim old earth, a faint breeze just stirring the roses, and clematis,
and jessamine, and honeysuckle, and wafting abroad subtle incense, and
the nightingales piping their musical, plaintive vesper song. It is
unutterably beautiful, but to all its beauty Lord Dynely is deaf and
blind. It has been a hot, stifling day, _that_ he knows; it is rather
cooler now, that is all. What he does see is a group of fair English
girls, in robes of white, and pink, and pale green, playing croquet
under the beeches, and his tired eyes light a little at the sight.
Wherever and whenever Lord Dynely may light upon a pretty girl, or group
of them, all his earthly troubles vanish at once. It was a weakness,
many cynical friends said, inherited honestly enough from his late noble
father.

The group clicking the croquet balls did not see him, but as he drew
near, a lady standing on the terrace, gazing thoughtfully at the
twilight shadows, did, and there was a quick start, a quick uprising,
and a rush to meet him, a glad, joyful cry:

"Oh, Eric! my son! my son!"

He permitted her embrace rather than returned it. It was too warm for
powerful domestic emotions of any sort, Eric thought, and then women
always went in for kissing and raptures upon the smallest provocation.
He let himself be embraced, and then gently extricated himself, and
glanced backward at the group.

"A croquet party, mother!" he said. "Do I know them? Ah, yes, I see the
Deveres and the Dorman girls? Is France--? How is France? She is not
among them?"

"France is somewhere in the grounds. Oh, my boy! how good it seems to
have you at home again--how anxiously I have awaited your coming. We
expected you in London at the beginning of the season."

"We?" his lordship says, interrogatively.

"France and I. Do you know, Eric, that France has been the sensation of
the season, the most admired girl in London. Lord Evergoil proposed, and
was rejected; but, Eric, you ran a great risk."

"Did I? Of losing Miss Forrester? I could have survived it," he answers,
coolly.

"Don't say that, Eric--you don't mean it, I know," Lady Dynely says,
with a singularly nervous, frightened look. "You cannot do better--it is
impossible. She is of one of the oldest families in the kingdom; she is
handsome, accomplished, and fascinating, and she comes into two
fortunes, her own and Mrs. Caryll's. Eric, I shall break my heart if
you do not marry her."

"Hearts don't break, dear mother--physicians have discovered that; it is
an exploded delusion. And as to Miss Forrester's accomplishments and
fascinations, do you know I rather find that sort of young person hang
heavy on hand--I prefer people of less superhuman acquirements. For the
fortune--well, I may not be a Marquis of Westminster, but the rent roll
is a noble one, and its lord need never sell himself."

Lady Dynely has turned quite white--a dead, gray pallor--as she listens.
Is he going to throw over France and her fortune after all? Must she
tell him the _truth_ in order to make him speak? Before she can turn to
him again, he speaks, more cheerfully this time.

"Time enough for all that," he says; "don't look so pale and terrified,
mother mine. One would think I were a pauper, reduced to heiress-hunting
or starvation. Where is France? I will go in search of her, and pay my
respects."

"She went down the lime walk half an hour ago with Mr. Locksley."

"Mr. Locksley? A new name. Who is Mr. Locksley?"

"Mr. Locksley is an artist; he is painting France's portrait. He made a
hit at the Academy this year, and I prevailed upon him to come with us
down here."

"Oh, you did! And he is received _en famille_, I suppose, and France
takes solitary strolls with him, does she?" responds Eric, lifting his
eyebrows. "It seems to me, my good mother, you don't look after your
only son's interests so very sharply after all. The lime walk, did you
say? I will go and flush this covey at once."

He turns away. His mother stands where he has left her and watches the
tall, slender figure, the slow, graceful walk.

"He grows handsomer every year," she thinks, in her love and admiration.
"Go where I will I see nothing like him. Oh, my boy! if you only knew
that you may be a very pauper indeed. That on the mercy of Terry
Dennison your whole fortune may hang. If I could only summon courage and
end all this deception, and secrecy, and suspense at once. Terry is so
good, so generous, he loves me so; he is fonder of Eric than any
brother; he would rather die than give me pain. That is my only hope. If
the sins of the father _must_ be visited on the children, oh, let not my
darling be the one to suffer."

A selfish, a weak prayer, but passionately earnest at least. Her darling
had faded from her view, and her tear-filled eyes turned to another
figure taller still, with all the grace and elegant languor wanting,
only manly strength and vigor in their place. His deep laugh comes to
her at the moment, clear and merry as any school-boy's.

"Terry will have mercy," she thinks; "he is the soul of generosity, and
his wants are so simple, his ambitions so few. With his commission, his
five hundred a year, and the vicar's daughter for his wife, he will ask
no more of fate. I will tell him when he returns from Lincolnshire, and
I know, I feel, all will be well. And yet,"--her eyes went wistfully
over the fair expanse of park and woodland, and glade and terrace,
flower garden and fountains, all silvered in the radiance of the summer
moon--"it is a great sacrifice--a sacrifice not one man in a hundred
would make."

Meantime Lord Dynely had strolled down the lime walk, and emerged upon a
sylvan nook, commanding a view of forest near, and the distant shining
sea. Its soft wash reached the ear--the moon left a track of radiance as
it sailed up the serene sky. And this is the picture his lordship saw:

In a dress of gauzy white, Miss Forrester sat in a rustic chair, blue
ribbons floating, trailing roses in the rich brownness of her hair, a
great bunch of lilies of the valley in her lap, another cluster in the
bosom of her dress. Her coquettish "Dolly Varden" hat lay on the grass
beside her--her eyes were fixed, full of dreamy light, on the shining
sky and sea, and the man who lay on the sward at her feet, reading
aloud. Poetry, of course, Tennyson of course, and "Maud" as it chanced.

    "I said to the rose, 'The brief night goes
        In revel, and babble, and wine;
    Oh! young lord lover! what sighs are those,
      For one who will never be thine,
    But mine, but mine!' So I swear to the rose,
      'Forever and ever mine.'"

Pleasant first words to greet Lord Dynely's ears, pleasant tableau
vivant to greet his eyes.

Confound the fellow! A strolling artist, too. What presumption! Good
looking, no doubt; those painting fellows, with their long hair, and
picturesque faces, and velvet blouses, always play the mischief with
women. Reading poetry, at her feet. France Forrester's--whom he used to
think one of the proudest girls he knew. He had fancied her pining for
him, piqued at his absence. Certainly, flirtation was a game for two to
play at. She could amuse herself very well at home, it seemed, while he
amused himself abroad.

"Taking people by surprise is a mistake, I find," he said, advancing.
"If I don't disturb the exercises, Miss Forrester, perhaps you will turn
round and say good-evening."

He stood before her, holding out his hand, a smile on his lips. She half
arose, turning very pale.

"Eric!"

"Eric, Miss Forrester--at last. I have been standing for the last five
minutes enjoying the poetry and the very pretty picture you two make
here in the twilight. Pray present me."

"There is no need, Miss Forrester. Unless Lord Dynely's memory be of the
shortest, I think he will recall me."

Locksley arose to his feet as he spoke, and Lord Dynely saw him for the
first time. His face lit up--a look of real pleasure came into his
eyes--he grasped the hand of the artist with a genuine warmth, all
unusual with him.

"Locksley? My dear fellow, what a surprise this is, you know. My mother
mentioned your name, but it never occurred to me _you_ were the man. Who
would look for you in England?"

Locksley smiled.

"My headquarters is Italy, certainly; but I come to England,
nevertheless. I have been here two years."

"You have met before," France broke in; "you never told me, Mr.
Locksley."

"Was it necessary? I had the pleasure of doing Lord Dynely some slight
service two years ago, and saw a good deal of him for some weeks after.
But how could I tell he would remember? Two years is a considerable
time."

"Cynical, as usual--a Diogenes without the tub and cabbage leaves. A
slight service! Yes, I should think so. He saved my life, France--my
boat upset in a squall in the Bay of Naples, and only he took a header
gallantly to the rescue, the Dynely succession would then and there have
been extinct. Odd I didn't remember your name the moment I heard it, but
I am very pleased to meet you here all the same."

They had turned, and as by one impulse, walked back towards the house.
It was quite night now, the trees making ebony shadows across the ivory
light. The croquet players had adjourned to the house, and the balls and
mallets had given place to piano music and waltzing. On the portico
steps stood Terry, whistling and looking at the moon. He came eagerly
forward with outstretched hand, his honest eyes shining with pleasure.

"Dear old man!" he said, giving Eric's delicate digit a grip that made
him wince; "glad to have you back. Thought you were never
coming--thought some old Spanish hidalgo out there had got jealous, and
pinked you under the fifth rib in some dark corner. The _madre_ is
beside herself with delight."

"Softly, Terry--softly," says Lord Dynely, withdrawing his hand with a
slight grimace. "A moderate amount of affection I don't object to, but
don't let the grip of the muscular hand express the emotions of the
overflowing heart. They are tripping the light fantastic in there--shall
we join them?"

They enter the drawing-room--there are more greetings and a few
introductions. The lord of the land has returned--the seigneur of
Dynely, the master, is in the house, and his presence makes itself felt
directly. He is in excellent spirits--throws off his languor, forgets to
be blas, and waltzes like a student at Mabille.

France declines; it is too warm, she says; she will relieve Lady Dynely,
and play. Mr. Locksley makes his adieux speedily and departs.

"How have you come to pick up Locksley, France?" Eric asks, later on.

"Pick him up? I don't quite understand. He painted the picture of the
year, sold it for a fabulous sum, was overflowing with orders, and, as a
special favor to Lady Dynely, consented to throw over everything else,
follow us down here and paint my portrait."

She speaks with a certain air of constraint, which Lord Dynely does not
fail to notice.

"Ah, very kind of him, of course. Very fine fellow, Locksley, and very
clever artist, but a sort of reserve about him, a sort of mystery,
something on his mind and all that. One of the sort of men who have an
obnoxious wife hidden away in some quarter of the globe, like Warrington
and Rochester in the novels. I must see the portrait--is it a good one?"

"Very good, I believe--I have given but two or three sittings as yet."

"How long has he been here?"

"A fortnight."

A pause. He looks at her as he leans over the back of her chair. She is
slightly pale still, rather grave, but very handsome--_very_ handsome.
She has improved, Eric thinks, complacently, and dark beauties are his
style, naturally. A very credible wife, he thinks; a fine, high-bred
face to see at one's table; and if there be a trifle more brains than
one could wish, one can excuse that in a wife.

"I must get Locksley to make me a duplicate," he says, bending over her,
and putting on his tender look. "France, you have not said you are glad
to see me yet."

"Is it necessary to repeat that formula?" she answers, carelessly. "That
is taken for granted, is it not?"

"I was detained at Saint Jean," he goes on. "I have been longing to see
you once more; how greatly, you can imagine."

"Yes, I can imagine," France answers, and suddenly all her reserve gives
way, and she looks up and laughs in his face. "I can imagine the burning
impetuosity, the fever of longing with which you rushed across the
Pyrenees, across France, and home. Eric, that sort of thing may do very
well in Spain, but don't try it with me."

"Merciless as ever. Your London season has agreed with you, France. I
never saw you look so well. And the fame of your conquests have reached
even the other side of the Pyrenees. How others slew their thousands and
Miss Forrester her tens of thousands. How men went down before her
dark-eyed glances like corn before the reaper."

"My dear Eric," Miss Forrester replies, politely shrugging with a yawn,
"don't you find it fatiguing to talk so much? It was never a failing of
yours to make long speeches. But I suppose two years' hard practice of
the language of compliments must tell."

"Come out on the terrace," is what he says, and in spite of her faint
resistance he leads her there. He is growing more and more charmed every
moment--not deeply in love, just pris of this new and pretty face. He
is as much fascinated now as he was by madame last week, as he may be by
anyone else you please next, and thoroughly in earnest at the moment.
Why should he delay? Why not come to the point at once? Really, France
would do credit to any man in England.

The moonlight is flooding the terrace with glory, the trees are silver
in its light, the stone urns gleam like pearls, the flowers waft their
fragrance where they stand.

"Oh!" France sighs, "what a perfect night!"

"Yes," Eric assents, looking up with his poetic blue eyes to the sky;
"very neat thing in the way of moonshine. And moonlight hours were made
for love and all that; the poet says so, doesn't he, France?"

"_The_ poet, which poet? Don't be so vague, Lord Dynely."

"Ah, France, you may laugh at me--"

"I am not laughing; I never felt less facetious in my life. My principal
feeling, at present, is that it is half-past eleven, that I am tired
after two hours' croquet, and that I should--and will say good-night,
and go to bed."

"Not just yet." He takes her hand and holds it fast. "What a pretty hand
you have," he says, tenderly; "a model for a sculptor. Will you let me
put an engagement ring among all those rubies and diamonds, France? I
wanted to once before--in Rome, you remember, and you wouldn't allow
me."

France laughs, and looks at him, and draws away her hand.

    "There came a laddie here to woo,
        And, dear, but he was jimp and gay;
        He stole the lassie's heart away,
    And made it all his ain, Oh."

"You certainly lose no time, Lord Dynely. Really the haste and ardor of
your love-making takes one's breath away. I have more rings now than I
know what to do with--another would be the embarrassment of riches.
Eric, let us end this farce. You don't care a straw for me. You don't
want to marry me any more than I want to marry you. Why should we bore
each other with love-making that means nothing. It will disappoint two
good women a little--but that is inevitable. Go to your mother, like a
good boy, and tell her she must make up her mind to another
daughter-in-law."

His eyes light--opposition always determines him for right or wrong.

"I will never tell her that. I love you, France--have loved you
always--you alone shall be my wife."

"Eric, do you expect me to believe that?"

"I expect you to believe the truth. And if after all these years--after
what has passed between us, you mean to throw me over--"

"After what has passed between us!" she repeats, looking at him full, "I
don't understand that, Eric. What has ever passed between us?"

"You know I have loved you--you did not quite cast me off--you know it
has always been an understood thing we were to marry."

"And you mean to hold me to such a compact as that?"

"I mean I love you, and will be most miserable if you do not become my
wife."

"Ungenerous," she says, under her breath. "You will hold me to this
tacit understanding--to which I have never been a party, mind--whether I
will or no?"

He only repeats:

"I love you, France. I want you for my wife."

She stands looking at the softly luminous night, at the dark trees and
white shadows, her face pale, her lips set, her eyes darkly troubled.

"It is unfair--it is ungenerous," she cries out, presently, "to hold me
to a compact to which I have never consented. I will not do anything
dishonorable, but, Eric, it is most unkind. You do _not_ love me--ah,
hush--if you protested forever I would not believe you. I know you, I
think, better than you know yourself. You mean it at this moment--next
week you may forget my very existence. I am not the sort of wife for
you--you want an adoring creature to sit at your feet and worship you as
a god. There!" she turns impatiently away; "let me alone. I can give you
no answer to-night. The dew is falling; let us go in. I hate to grieve
Mrs. Caryll, I hate to disappoint your mother--for your disappointment,
if any there be, I don't care a whit."

"France, you are heartless," he says, angrily.

"No--I only speak the truth. Give me up. Let me go, Eric--it will be
better for us both."

"I will never let you go," he answers, sullenly. "If you throw me over,
well and good--I must submit--only it will not be like France Forrester
to play fast and loose with any man."

Her eyes flash upon him in the moonlight their angry fire.

"You do well to say that," she retorts. "You of all men! Give me a week;
I cannot answer to-night. If at the end of that time you are still of
the same mind, come to me for your answer."

She passes him, returns to the drawing-room, and leaves him on the
terrace alone.




CHAPTER VII.

A WEEK'S REPRIEVE.


Miss Forrester goes to her room and sits at the window, after the
fashion of girls, and looks out. She had never taken this affair of the
proposed alliance seriously for a moment before. She had said, and with
truth, that she understood Eric better than he understood himself.
Somewhere in his wanderings he felt he would come upon some gypsy,
girlish face, that would captivate his susceptible, romantic heart--no,
not heart--_fancy_; and very probably there might be an impromptu
marriage, and an end of all worry for her. He was just the sort of man
to sneer at matrimony, because it was a cynical, worldly, correct sort
of thing to do, and rush headlong into it upon the slightest
provocation. To be "off with the old love and on with the new," at a
moment's notice, was my Lord Eric's forte.

She had not disliked Eric, she had rather liked him, indeed--laughed at
his love-making, parodied his pretty speeches, mimicked his languid
drawl, and weary, used-up manner; treated him much as she treated Terry,
with a sort of fun-loving, elder-sister manner; only she had a real
respect for Dennison she never felt for Dynely.

"I never could marry such a man as you, Eric," she was wont to say. "You
have a great deal fairer complexion than I have, and I don't like dolly
men. You curl your hair; you wax that little callow mustache of yours;
you perfume yourself like a valet; you think more about your toilet and
spend longer over it than a young duchess; and you haven't an ounce of
brains in you from top to toe. Now if I have a weakness, it is
this--that the man I marry shall be a manly man and a clever man. You,
my poor Eric, are neither, and never will be. And besides you're too
good-looking."

"First time a lady ever objected to that in the man who adored her,"
Eric drawled.

"You're too good-looking," Miss Forrester repeats with a regretful sigh;
"and over-much good looks are what no man can bear. You're a coxcomb, my
precious boy, of the first water--a dandy _par excellence_. Why, you
know yourself," cries France, indignantly, "your sobriquet at Eton was
'Pretty Face?'"

"I know it--yes," Eric answers, with an irrepressible smile.

"Then you see it's quite impossible--utterly impossible and
preposterous, Eric," Miss Forrester was wont to conclude; "so let us say
no more about it. I don't object to your making love to me in a general
way--it's your only earthly mission, poor fellow, and to veto that would
be cruel. But let it be general--let us have no more foolish talk of
present engagements and prospective weddings, and that nonsense. Because
you know it can never be."

"Never, France--really?"

"Never, Eric--really; never, never, never. I wouldn't marry you if you
were the last man on earth, and to refuse involved the awful doom of
old-maidenhood. I like you too well ever to love you. And I mean to love
the man I marry."

"Really!" Eric repeats, lifting his eyebrows, and pulling the waxed ends
of the yellow mustache, intensely amused.

"Yes, Eric, with all my heart. Ah, you may smile in the superior
god-like wisdom of manhood, but I mean it. He is to be a king among
men--"

"_Sans peur et sans reproche?_" puts in young Lord Dynely.

"Without fear and without reproach. Yes, exactly. Not a man about town,
mind you; an elegant tailor's block, too much in love with himself ever
to love his wife; but a strong man, a brave man, a hero--"

"'I'm Captain Jinks, of the Horse Marines,'" hums Lord Dynely, that
popular ditty having about that time burst upon an enraptured world.

"A man I can look up to, be proud of, who will do something in the
world; anything but a handsome dandy who parts his hair in the middle,
who wears purple and fine linen, and whose highest aim in life is to lie
at young ladies' feet and drawl out the eternal passion that consumes
him--a gentleman whose loves are as numerous as the stars, and not half
so eternal."

In this spirited way Miss Forrester had been used to rebuff her would-be
lover, and did sometimes succeed in piquing Eric into deserting her in
disgust.

A young lady so strong-minded as this at sixteen, what was she likely to
be at twenty? He pitied her for her lack of taste--other girls went down
before those blue eyes of his, for which Miss Forrester expressed such
profound contempt. It had never really meant much with either of them
until this night on the terrace. And this night on the terrace Lord
Dynely had been in earnest at last.

In some way her honor was bound--more or less, while she had laughed at
the wished-for alliance, she had yet accepted it. Miss Forrester had a
very high sense of honor, and was an exceedingly proud girl. To play
fast or loose with any man, as Eric had said, was utterly impossible. In
no way was she a coquette. Men had admired her, had fallen in love with
her, had wanted to marry her; but the mistake had been of their own
making; she had never led them on. If, indeed, then, her honor and truth
stood compromised here, she must marry Eric. He did not love her--_that_
she knew as well now as she had known it always; if she married him, she
would be a most unhappy, unloved and neglected wife--that she also knew.
And yet if he held her to it, if Lady Dynely held her to it, if Mrs.
Caryll held her to it, what was she to do? To grieve those that loved
her was a trial to her generous nature, and she was of the age and the
kind to whom self-sacrifice, self-abnegation, look great and glorious
things. Yes, it would resolve itself into this--if Lord Dynely held her
to their compact, she must marry Lord Dynely.

And then out of the mist of the moonlight, the face of Locksley arose,
the grave, reproachful eyes, the broad, thoughtful brow, the firm,
resolute lips, hid behind that gold, bronze beard, France thought the
most beautiful on earth. She covered her face with both hands as if to
shut it out.

"I cannot! I cannot!" she said. "I cannot marry Eric. It is most
selfish, most ungenerous, most cruel to hold me to a promise I never
gave."

Then there came before her a vision--a vision of what her life might be
as Locksley's wife. With her fortune and his genius, loving and beloved,
what a beautiful and perfect life would lie before her.

Suddenly the carelessly spoken words of Eric came back to her:

"One of these mysterious men who have an obnoxious wife hidden away in
some quarter of the globe." She turned cold at the thought. Was there
anything in it--anything beyond a jealous man's malicious innuendo?
There was that strange picture, "How The Night Fell"--his own strange
remarks concerning it. Who was to tell what lay in the life behind him?
Somehow, he looked like a man who had a secret, who had lived every day
of his life, and that life no common one. She sighed; her train of
thought broke; she got up abruptly, closed the window, and went to bed.

She was looking pale next morning when she descended to breakfast, in
spite of the rose-pink cashmere she wore; a shade too pale, fastidious,
Eric thought, but very handsome, with the ease of high-bred grace in
every word and act; a wife, he repeated again, who would do honor to any
man in England. How well she would look at St. George's in bridal veil
and blossoms, white satin and Honiton lace, and how all the men he knew
would envy him. In his love-making, as in every pursuit of life, self
was ever uppermost with Lord Dynely.

"Is this one of the Locksley's painting days?" he asked after breakfast;
"because I want to see the picture. Does he come here or do you go
there? Does Mahomet come to the mountain, or does the mountain, etc.? I
must have that duplicate I spoke of, France. To possess the original
will not content me; I must have the counterfeit presentment also."

This in a tender whisper and a look from under the long, blonde
eyelashes that had done killing execution in its time. It missed fire,
however, so far as France was concerned.

"I doubt if Mr. Locksley will take time to paint duplicates, Eric. Men
who make their mark, as he has done, do not generally devote themselves
to portrait painting. Here he comes now."

Her color rose as she said it--her pale cheeks took a tint rivalling her
dress. Lord Dynely saw it and frowned. Mentally, that is; so ugly a
thing as a frown seldom marred the smooth fairness of that low brow.

"Capital fellow, Locksley," he said, carelessly. "Saw a great deal of
him at one time in Naples. Can tell a good story, and knock off a neat
after-dinner speech better than any man I know. The set he lived
among--painting fellows all--used to drop hints, though, about that
discarded wife. There is one somewhere, depend upon it, and Locksley
didn't act over and above well in the business, it was understood."

France turned upon him, herself again, a look of cool contempt in her
eyes.

"Eric, don't be ill-natured. I hate womanish men, and there's nothing on
earth so womanish as to slander absent friends. _We_ do that; but let us
retain the copyright."

And then she turns away and goes over to Mr. Locksley, looking proud and
lovely, and holds out her hand in cordial welcome.

"One may have a look at the portrait, I suppose, Locksley?" Eric
suggests, unabashed.

Mr. Locksley assents; and they adjourn to the painting-room--Terry, who
drops in, following in their wake. It is in an unfinished state as yet,
lacking in all details, but it is a beautiful and striking picture.

From a cloud of misty drapery the face looks vividly out, the lips
gravely smiling, the serene eyes earnest and luminous to their very
depths, an etherealized expression intensifying its beauty. He has
idealized it unconsciously--a handsome girl has sat to him--he has
painted a divinity.

France stands and looks, and her face flushes. Ah! she has never worn
that look. She knows she is of the earth, earthy--very little of the
angel about her, after all. And he has painted more an angel than a
woman.

"He'm," says Eric, with his hand over his eyes, critically, "very
good--very pretty, indeed. Paint a halo round her and call it St.
Teresa, or St. Cecelia at once--it looks like that sort of thing, you
know. It's a pretty picture, but it isn't you, France; that is not your
natural expression."

"No," France says, under her breath. "I am sorry to say it is not."

"And I prefer your natural expression," goes on Eric. "It is very well
done, as I said before, but it doesn't do you justice."

"And I think it is grossly flattered," puts in Terry, gruffly.

France bestows upon him a look of absolute gratitude.

"Flattered! I should think so, Terry. _That_ face Mr. Locksley has
painted out of his inner consciousness, and is what France Forrester
should be--what, I regret to add, she is not."

Mr. Locksley takes no part in the discussion; he goes steadfastly on
with his work. Terry yawns loudly, whistles in an aimless way, thrusts
his hands in his pockets, and stares at the artist's rapid movements,
until France, whose nerves he sets on edge, orders him peremptorily to
leave the room. Eric lingers, lounging in a deep window, looking
unutterably patrician and handsome in his black velvet morning coat,
contrasting so perfectly with his pearl-like complexion and fair hair.
He remains all through the sitting, he follows France out into the
Italian rose garden when it is over, he hangs about her like her shadow
all day, and makes tender little speeches when he can. At dinner it is
the same--in the evening it is worse. He is really and truly in earnest
for the time. Whilst he was sure of her he was indifferent--now that he
stands a chance of losing her he works himself into a fever of devotion.
She is in love with Locksley, Locksley with her--that he sees. That hit
about the hidden wife has stung. The green-eyed monster blows the slight
fire of his affection into a blaze. He will win and wear Miss Forrester,
or know the reason why. France endures it as long as she can. That is
not very long. At no time are patience and meekness her most notable
virtues; as Eric bends persistently over the piano for an hour at a
stretch, the slight thread of that patience gives way at last.

"Eric, do give me a moment's peace," she cries out. "Go and play chess
with your mother; go and talk to Terry or Mr. Steeves; go and make love
to Miss Hanford; go and smoke a cigar in the dew; anything, only leave
me alone."

He starts up, his pride fairly stung.

"As you please. As I am so disagreeable to you, suppose I take myself
away from the Abbey altogether."

"I wish you would," she answers cordially, "for this week at least. You
irritate me beyond measure haunting me in this way. Leave me alone,
Eric, if you really care for my decision."

"If I really care!" he reproachfully repeats.

"The more generous you are, the better your chances will be. When the
week is up, come back if you like, for--for your answer."

"France! and if that answer be favorable. If! Good Heaven, it must be,"
he cries.

"Then"--her voice trembles, she turns her face away from him in the glow
of the wax-lights--"then you will never more hear me complain of your
attentions."

He lifts her hand and kisses it.

"I will go," he says, gently. "Forgive me, France, but the thought of
losing you is so--"

"Don't," she says, in a voice that is almost one of pain. "Where will
you go?"

"To Lincolnshire--to Sir Philip Carruthers' place. I have had a standing
invitation to Carruthers' Court for the past two years."

"What's that about Lincolnshire?" Terry asks, appearing. "I'm off
there--are you on the wing again, Eric?"

"For a week, yes--to Carruthers'. You're a Lincolnshire man, Terry--do
you know it?"

"Do I not? It is three miles from Starling vicarage. Shall be glad to
meet you there, dear old boy. Capital fishing, best trout streams
anywhere, prime shooting a little later on. We will--"

    "'We will hunt the bear and bison, we will shoot the wild raccoon,
    We will worship Mumbo Jumbo in the Mountains of the Moon!'"

spouts France. "There are nine pretty Misses Higgins--aren't there,
Terry? Don't let Eric poach on your manor--it is in his line, you know."

France was herself again. The prospect of a week to quietly think the
matter out was a great deal. And who knew what even a week might bring
forth?

It was settled that they should go together; Lady Dynely's consent had
been won at last.

"But, remember," she said at parting, looking anxiously into Terry's
eyes, "you are to return in a week, and meantime you are to say nothing
to Miss Higgins. This I insist upon. When you have heard what I have to
say--"

He looked at her in anxious wonder. What could it be, he thought, to
make Lady Dynely wear that face of pale affright? What secret was here?
He would obey her in all things; she hardly needed the assurance, and
yet it was with a darkly troubled face she stood on the portico steps
and watched the two young men disappear.

"Thank fortune," France breathed devoutly, "we shall have a quiet week.
Men are a mistake in a household, I begin to find. Like yeast in small
beer, they turn the peaceful stream of woman's life into seething
ferment."

"France," the elder lady said, taking both the girl's hands, and looking
earnestly down into her eyes, "you are to give Eric his answer when he
returns--I know that. When does he return?"

"In a week."

"And the answer will be--"

"Lady Dynely, you have no right to ask that. When the week ends, and
Eric returns to claim it, the answer shall be given to _him_."

She dropped the hands and turned away with a heavy sigh.

"I will do my duty, I hope--I pray," France went on, quietly. "If Eric's
happiness were involved--if, indeed, he loved me, after the tacit
consent I have given all these years--I would not hesitate one moment,
at any sacrifice to myself. But he does not love me--he is incapable of
loving anyone but himself. Oh, yes! Lady Dynely, even you must hear the
truth sometimes about Eric. As a brother, I could like him well
enough--be proud of his good looks, his graceful manner, as you are; as
a husband, if he is ever that, I shall detest him."

"France!"

"I shock, I anger you, do I not? It is true, though, and he will tire of
me before the honeymoon is over. If we marry, it will be a fatal
mistake; and yet, if you all hold me to this compact, what is left me
but to yield?"

"You are a romantic girl, France; you want a hero--a Chevalier Bayard--a
Sir Launcelot. Dear child, there are none left. Like the fairies, they
sailed away from England years ago--went out of fashion with tilt and
tournament. You will marry Eric, I foresee, and make a man of him. He
will go into parliament, make speeches, and be a most devoted husband to
the fairest and happiest wife in England. Oh, France, take my boy! I
love you so well that I will break my heart if this marriage does not
take place."

"And I will break mine if it does," France answers, with a curious
little laugh. "Let us not talk of it any more, _ma mre_. We are due at
De Vere's, are we not? We have a week's grace, and much may happen in a
week. I have the strongest internal conviction that I will never be Lady
Dynely."




CHAPTER VIII.

"WHO IS SHE?"


Scene, an old-fashioned country garden of an old-fashioned country
house; time, the mellow, amber hour before sunset; dramatis person, a
young man and a young girl; names of dramatis person, Mr. Terence
Dennison, of Her Majesty's ----th Dragoons, and Miss Christabel Higgins,
eighth daughter of the Rev. William Higgins, Vicar of Starling, and
beauty of the family.

A beauty? Well, as Tony Lumpkin says, "That's as may be." If you liked a
complexion of milk-white and rose-pink, the eighth Miss Higgins had it;
if you liked big, childish, surprised-looking, turquoise blue eyes,
there they were for you; if you liked a dear little, dimpled, rosy
mouth, there it was also; if you liked a low, characterless forehead, a
round, characterless chin, and a feathery aureole of palest blonde hair,
the eighth Miss Higgins rejoiced in all these pretty and pleasant gifts.
If you fancied a waist you might span, a shape, small, slim, fragile as
a lily-stalk, little Crystal would have been your ideal, certainly.
Pretty? Yes, with a tender, dove-like, inane sort of prettiness, that
does its work with a certain sort of men. Mind, she had none; depth, she
had none; knowledge of this big, wicked world, she had none; in short,
she was man's ideal of perfect womanhood, infringing on no claim
whatever of the lordly sex. And Terry Dennison was her abject slave and
adorer.

She was seventeen this sunny August afternoon. It seemed to Terry he had
idolized her--idolized was the way Mr. Dennison thought it--ever since
she had been seven. She knew she was pretty--dove-like innocence to the
contrary--and rejoiced in that prettiness as thoroughly as any embryo
coquette. Had she not been caressed, and kissed, and praised for those
blue eyes and golden tresses ever since the days of bibs and tuckers?
Had she not seen her seven elder sisters snubbed and passed over, and
the cakes and the sugar-plums always presented to her? It would be so
forever, Crystal thought. In the eternal fitness of things it had been
ordered so--the seven elder Cinderellas worked in kitchen and chamber,
sewed, baked, and mended; she, like the lilies of the field, toiled not
nor spun. The cakes and sugar-plums of life were to be hers always; they
belonged by right divine to pretty people with pale yellow hair and
turquoise eyes. Let the snub-noses, and freckled complexions, and the
dry-as-dust colored hair do the work. She would marry Terry Dennison
some day, and be, as Terry was, an offshoot of the aristocracy. This
great lady, who was Terry's patroness and friend, would take her up,
would present her at court, would invite her to her parties, and the
world of her dreams would become the world of realities. She would see
this handsome Lord Eric Dynely, of whom Terry never tired talking--this
elegant Miss France Forrester, who was to marry him. And, who
knew--these beings of the upper world might condescend even to admire
her in turn.

Miss Crystal Higgins, strolling with her Tennyson or her Owen Meredith
in her hand through the old vicarage garden, had dreamed her dreams, you
see. That was the simple little life she had mapped out for herself. She
would marry Terry--that was settled. Terry had never asked her, but, ah!
the simplest little lassie of them all can read mankind like a book when
they have that complaint. Terry was in love with her, had always been;
she knew it just as well as Terry himself. And she liked Terry very
well; she wasn't in love with him at all, but still she was fonder of
him than of any other young man she knew; and he was a dragoon, and
_that_ threw a sort of halo over him. It was a pity, she was wont to
sigh, regretfully, that he was so homely; even being a dragoon could not
entirely do away with the fact that he was homely, and had red hair.
None of the heroes of Miss Higgins' pet novels ever had hair of that
obnoxious hue. Still one mustn't expect everything in this lower
world--papa and mamma instilled that into her sentimental little
noddle--it is only for beings of that upper world--like Miss Forrester,
for instance, to look for husbands handsome as Greek gods, titled,
wealthy. Less-favored mortals must take the goods their gods provide,
and be thankful. The wife of a dragoon, with five hundred a year, looked
a brilliant vista to the "beauty daughter" of the Vicar of Starling.

And now the question resolved itself. Why didn't Terry speak? He had
written of his good fortune, of Lady Dynely's boundless kindness, and
the Reverend Mr. and Mrs. Higgins congratulated themselves that
"Crissy's" fortune was insured. Crissy herself simpered and cast down
her blonde eyelashes, and saw with secret satisfaction, the sour and
envious regards of the seven elder Misses Higgins, who were verging
helplessly toward the sere and yellow leaf. Then Terry wrote of his
speedy visit. "And I really think, Christabel, my love," said Mamma
Higgins, "we might begin making up the outfit. It will take some time,
and of course he comes down with but one intention, that of proposing
immediately." And a few things were commenced. The first week of August
came, the big dragoon with it, his frank face and good-humored eyes
fairly luminous with delight at being with them again. Those eager,
loving eyes actually devoured Crystal; not for five minutes at a stretch
could they leave that pretty doll face. He haunted her everywhere, as a
big, lumbering Newfoundland might follow a little curled, silky King
Charles. He looked love, he hinted love, he acted love, in ten thousand
different ways, but he never spoke it. He blushed if she suddenly looked
at him, stammered if she suddenly addressed him, touched the little
lily-leaf hand she gave him with the timidity characteristic of big,
warm-hearted men, very far gone indeed; but beyond that he never got.
"Miss Crystal Higgins, will you marry me?" was a conundrum he never
propounded. And Mamma Higgins' matronly eyes began to look at him
wrathfully over her spectacles, the seven elder Misses Higgins to cast
sisterly, satirical glances after the beauty, and Crystal herself to
open those innocent turquoise orbs of hers to their widest, and wonder
what made Terry so awfully bashful. The last day but one of the visit
had come and Terry had not spoken.

It was Crystal's birthday, and there was to be a little fte; croquet in
the back garden--the family bleaching-ground on ordinary occasions--a
tea-drinking under the apple-trees afterward, and a dance by moonlight.

The company had begun to gather; but there were Mamma Higgins and the
seven other Misses Higgins to receive and entertain them, so Terry drew
his idol's hand inside his coat-sleeve, and led her away for a little
last ramble "o'er the moor among the heather."

"I go back to-morrow, and I cannot tell exactly how long Lady Dynely may
detain me, so let me gather my roses while they bloom," said Terry,
growing poetical, as many young gentlemen do when in love.

"It seems to me, Terry," said the eighth Miss Higgins, rather pettishly,
"you are a sort of companion for Lady Dynely's lap-dog, to fetch and
carry, to come and go, as you are told. You are too big, I should think,
to let yourself be treated like a little boy _all_ your life."

It was not often Mlle. Crystal made so determined a stand as this, or
uttered so spirited a speech. But mamma had told her this very day that
something must be done; that if she couldn't bring Terry to the point
herself, papa must ask his intentions. A little firing of blank
cartridge is very well, but if you want to bring down your bird, you
must use real powder and shot.

Terry's face flushed. He understood the reproof, and felt he deserved
it. Love may be blind, but not quite stone blind; he saw well enough
what was expected of him by the vicar's family, by the little beauty
herself, and knew he was exciting anger and blame for not doing what he
was dying to do. He deserved this reproof, and reddened guiltily. What
if Crystal knew it was by Lady Dynely's command he did not dare speak,
how she would despise him? And for the first time it occurred to him
that perhaps it was rather unkind of that best of women to have bound
him to this promise.

"I should never have come down here at all until I was free to say all
that is in my heart," he thought. "Oh, my darling! before the sun sinks
out of sight yonder, you would know life holds no thought half so sweet
as the thought of making you my wife."

She was looking very lovely in this roseate evening light--but Terry
thought when did she not look lovely? She wore flowing white muslin--she
was that sort of ethereal creature who seemed born to wear white muslin.
She had a bunch of roses in her breast, roses in her sash, roses in her
hand, and a heart-breakingly coquettish "Dolly Varden" on her head. She
had a cascade of white wax beads around her long, slim throat, and knots
of blue ribbon streaming from her golden locks. The yellow sunshine fell
full upon the perfect face without finding a flaw in it; the little
snowdrop of a hand rested on his arm; the soft, affectionate,
reproachful eyes looked up at him waiting in pathetic appeal.

"You know I like you; I know you love me; then why don't you say so,
Terry, and please mamma and me? You have only to ask and receive; I
think it is a little too bad of you to go on like this." That was what
that reproachful little look said, and Terry groaned in spirit as he saw
and understood and chafed against the fetters that bound him.

"See here, Crystal," he said, "there's something I want to say to
you"--Crystal's heart gave a little flutter beneath the roses, Crystal's
lips parted in an irrepressible smile--"but I can't say it just now."

He paused, for the smile faded away, and the light blue eyes looked up
in anger and alarm to his face.

"I can't say it just now," pursued Mr. Dennison, with a great gulp,
"because--because I've promised. I don't know why, I'm sure, but there's
something to be told, and I'm to go back and hear it before I return and
speak to _you_."

Lucid this, certainly. With dilated eyes and parted lips, Miss Crystal
Higgins was staring up at him, while Terry floundered hopelessly through
this morass of explanation.

"I'm going to-morrow," went on the dragoon; "I told her I would; but I'm
coming back--back immediately, mind. And then I shall have something to
say to you, Crissy, that I've been dying to say for the past year.
To-day I can explain no further. Only--you won't be angry with me,
Crystal, and you'll be patient, and trust me, and wait until I come
back!"

He looked at her imploringly--a woman blind, and deaf, and dumb, might
have understood all he meant. But Miss Crystal was a kittenish little
coquette, and her eyes were cast down now, and the rose-pink color had
deepened, and she was pulling her roses to pieces and scattering them
with a ruthless hand.

"I don't understand a word you are saying, Mr. Dennison," was her
answer. "What did we come here for, I wonder? Let us go back. I'm dying
for a game of croquet, and all the people must have come."

"Won't you promise me, then, Crystal?"

"Promise you what, Terry?"

"To wait until I return. To--to not forget me," says poor Terry, with a
sort of groan.

Miss Higgins laughs. When a girl's lover stands before her in an agony
of masculine awkwardness and bashfulness, that girl is immediately at
her ease.

"Wait until you return? I have no intention of running anywhere, you
stupid Terry. Forget you? Now how could I forget you if I tried, when
your name is a household word with the girls from morning until night?
Do let us go back and play croquet."

"Wait one moment, Crystal. I bought you this, this morning. Wear it for
my sake until I return, and then I will replace it with a diamond."

He produces from an inner pocket a tiny case, from the case a tiny ring
of pearls and turquoise only made for fairy fingers. But it slips easily
over one of Miss Christabel's.

"Wear it Crystal," he says softly, "for my sake."

And Terry kisses the little hand, and Crystal looks up in his face, and
they understand one another, and there is no more to be said. She is a
good little thing after all, and not disposed to play with her big,
awkward lover. It is all right; Terry is a dear, good fellow, and she
will tell papa not to demand his intentions.

They stand a moment still. Over the flat, distant marshes the August sun
is setting, turning the pools that lie between the reeds into pools of
blood. The distant sea lies sleeping in the tranquil light. It is very
pretty--quite Tennysonian, Miss Higgins pensively thinks; but her soul
is with the croquet players. "Let us go back, Terry," she is on the
point of saying for the third time, when she stops, surprised by the
look Terry wears. He is staring hard straight before him, a look of
mingled doubt, recognition, and pleasure on his face. Crystal looks too,
and sees coming towards them a man.

"It is!" says Terry, in delight. "By Jove! it is!"

"It is whom, Terry?"

"Eric. I wondered he hadn't looked me up before. He has been stopping at
Sir Philip Carruthers' place for the last five days. Yes, it _is_ Eric."

"Eric?"

"Yes, Eric--Lord Dynely, you know. No, by the bye, you don't know, but
you have heard of him often enough from me."

Yes, Miss Higgins certainly had, and looked with a little flutter again,
beneath the roses, at the young nobleman approaching, who had been
described to her by enthusiastic Terence Dennison "as the best-looking
fellow in England."

Miss Higgins looked, and saw a young man of twenty-one, with fair hair,
handsome blue eyes, a little golden mustache, and the worn-out air of a
centenarian, who has used up all the pleasures of this wicked world some
sixty or seventy years ago.

"Eric, old boy, glad you've looked me up at last," was all Terry said,
but his whole face lit as if the mere sight of the other were pleasant
to him. "Let me present you to Miss Crystal Higgins. Crystal, the friend
of my youth, the playmate of my happy childhood, as the novels have
it--Lord Dynely."

Lord Dynely lifted his hat and bowed with that courtly grace for which
he was celebrated. His languid eyes kindled as the warrior's when he
sees the battle afar off. Terry had said she was pretty. Pretty! Terry
was a Vandal, a Goth; the girl was a goddess!

"Are you a good one at croquet, Eric?" inquired Mr. Dennison. "If so,
you may come along. This is Crystal's birthday; there is a croquet party
at the vicarage, and good players are in demand. Crystal's past mistress
of the art; as the old song says:

    "'She's a hard un to follow,
      A bad un to beat,'

and as a rule, croquets _me_ off the face of the earth in two minutes
and a half."

"If Miss Higgins will permit me, I shall only consider myself too
happy," murmurs Dynely, with a look that has done its work before, and
that sets Crystal's foolish, rustic heart fluttering, and tremulous
blushes coming and going.

"Oh, yes, thank you!" is what she says, in her dire confusion of
blushes, and she clings unconsciously to Terry's arm, and feels that the
days of the demi-gods are not extinct, since this seraphic young
nobleman exists.

"Don't be afraid, Crissy," says Terry's loud, jolly voice, as he pats
the small clinging hand confidingly. "Eric's not half so ferocious,
bless you, as he looks! Heard from France or the _madre_ since you
came?"

Eric gives him a look and a frown. Terry has no tact. Is this a place to
talk of--h'm--France?

"I had a note from my mother by this morning's post," he answers. "She
bade me tell you not to fail in returning. That is why I looked you up.
Had I known you were dwelling in paradise," he adds, gayly, "I would
have hunted you up long ago."

They reach the vicarage. Lord Dynely is presented to Mr. and Mrs.
Higgins, the Misses Higgins and their guests, and strikes all the ladies
mute at once by his good looks, his courtly grace of manner, his
magnificent condescension. Yes, he can play croquet, and play it well.
He and the heroine of the fte come off triumphant in every game. They
play croquet, and that other classical game yclept "Aunt Sally," and he
lingers by Crystal's side, and for the one thousandth time his
inflammable fancy fires, and a new fair face enchants him.

They go to tea under the gnarled old apple-trees. There is a snowy
cloth, old-fashioned china cups of pearl and blue, fragrant tea,
home-made pound cake and jelly; and Eric, whose luncheon has been a
glass of sherry and a biscuit, and who has not dined, makes a martyr of
himself, and drinks the tea, and partakes of the pound cake and jelly
and helps the young ladies, and pays compliments, and tells pretty
little stories.

The moon has arisen before they have done, and they dance by its light
to the music of the jingly vicarage piano, upon which the nine Miss
Higginses have practised for the last twenty years. Then they adjourn to
the drawing-room, and there is more dancing, and presently it is eleven
o'clock, and the party breaks up.

"You go back to-morrow then, Dennison?" Lord Dynely asks, carelessly, as
they shake hands at parting.

"Yes; and you?"

"I remain two or three days longer. Carruthers wishes it, it's rather a
pleasant house, and he's a good fellow. Capital quarters you have here,
old man--a very seraglio of beauty."

"How do you like _her_?" Terry inquires.

"Which her? there are so many. Oh, the little queen of the revels, of
course. As charming a little woodland nymph as ever I saw. My taste
doesn't generally run to rustic beauties, but she's as sweet as one of
her own roses. When am I to congratulate you, Terry, my boy?"

"Soon, I hope," Terry answers, with a laugh and a happy light in his
eyes; and Lord Dynely looks at him with a curious smile as he rolls up a
cigarette to light him on his homeward way.

_She_ sees him to the gate--how he manages it no one can tell, but he is
exceptionally clever at these things. She goes with him to the gate and
gives him a shy little hand across it, the hand that wears Terry's ring.

"May I come again, Crystal?"

Her name comes naturally and he speaks it. It fits her somehow, and Miss
Higgins is a horrible cognomen for this pearl of price. What she
answers, the stars and Lord Dynely alone know. It is satisfactory,
doubtless, for that half-smile is still on his lips as he saunters,
smoking, home.

"The most charming little fairy I've seen this many a day," he thinks.
"And she is to marry Terry; big, uncouth, lumbering Terry. It would be a
sacrilege. How she blushes, and shrinks, and trembles--one sees so
little of that sort of thing that its novelty charms, I suppose. One of
those tender little souls whose heart a man could break as easily as I
knock the ash off this cigarette."

It is midnight when he reaches the Court. He goes to his room, but not
to bed. He sits staring abstractedly out, and smoking no end of
cigarettes. Wonderful to relate, he is thinking. It is something which,
on principle, Lord Dynely never does, but he does it to-night. The
result is the writing of a letter. He flings away his last cigarette,
sits down to his writing-desk, and dashes this off:

                                "CARRUTHERS COURT, _August 5th_, 1870.

     "MY DEAR FRANCE:--Since we parted I have been thinking over what
     you said, and I have come to the conclusion that you were right,
     that it _is_ unjust and ungenerous to hold you to a compact made
     without your consent. I love you devotedly--that I must ever do;
     but I shall never compel you to marry me if you do not love me in
     return. No, France, at any cost to myself, at any suffering--and
     that I shall suffer need I say?--I will resign all claim to your
     hand. Unless you feel that the devoted affection I offer, you can
     return, then far be it from me to force you into a loveless union.
     _I_ may be wretched, but you shall be free.

     "I see plainly now how selfish I have been in urging my claims upon
     you in the past. Unless your own heart responds, believe me, they
     shall never be forced upon you in the future. Write to me here--it
     will be less painful for both of us than a personal interview. If
     you can care for me, then call me back, and I will fly to you, with
     what joy you can imagine; if you find you cannot, then I bow my
     head and submit to your decision.

                                                "Ever devotedly,

                                                                "ERIC."

Here was a generous piece of composition! Lord Dynely actually felt in a
glow of admiration over his own nobility, generosity and self-sacrifice,
as he sealed and addressed it. Not every man would give up the girl he
loved in this heroic fashion and resign himself to life-long misery! Not
many, by Jove! and so France must think. Only--this in some alarm--she
was an odd girl; he hoped she wouldn't feel called upon to be equally
generous and insist upon accepting him whether or no.

By next morning's post this letter went off to Devonshire. The train
that would take away Terry started about 12:50. A few hours later,
irreproachable in the negligent elegance of his costume, Lord Dynely
presented himself at the vicarage door.

They were all very jolly girls, except the three eldest, who were
scraggy and old; but Crystal was a pearl among pebbles. She improved
upon acquaintance he found; she sang for him in a sweet mezzo-soprano;
she wandered with him in the garden, and inserted one of her rosebuds in
his button-hole. She was altogether delicious, and next day his lordship
came again.

That evening's post brought him a letter. He turned cold as he looked at
it--France's bold, firm hand, and the seal and crest of the Forresters.
It looked big and square, and belligerent, and altogether formidable.
Still it must be read--six crossed pages at the least, he thought with a
groan. Girls never lose an opportunity of inflicting that sort of thing
on their victims. He opened it. It consisted of three words--three of
the shortest in the language:

                                 "DYNELY ABBEY, Thursday, _August 7th_.

              "DEAR ERIC: _Who is she?_   Affectionately.

                                                              "FRANCE."




CHAPTER IX.

TELLING TERRY.


On the evening of the day that was to bring Terrence Dennison to the
Abbey, Lady Dynely sat alone by her chamber window waiting. It had been
a sultry August day; the air, even now, was oppressive, sky and
atmosphere heavily charged with that electricity which precedes a
thunderstorm. In the breathless gloaming, not a bough stirred, not a
leaf trembled, not the faintest puff of wind came to relieve the
oppressed lungs or cool the hot forehead. Lady Dynely leaned wearily
against the glass. At all times pale, she was almost ghastly in the
livid twilight as she sat here. She was waiting for Terry, and in all
the years that were gone, in all the years that were to come, she was in
all probability the only woman who had ever trembled or faltered at the
approach of Terry. It was not Terry she feared, but that which she had
to tell Terry, that which had lain on her conscience, destroyed her
peace of mind, embittered every day of her life for the past sixteen
years. A secret that, when given into her keeping first, had been the
secret of another's wrongdoing and cruelty, but which had since become
the secret of her sin. She was a good woman, a conscientious woman,
doing her duty to all men according to her light; a kind mistress,
charitable benefactress, a loving mother, a loyal friend. In all her
life she had wilfully wronged but one fellow-creature, and that one the
man who venerated and loved her above all women on earth--Terry.

But she was a weak woman, weak in her pride and the intensity of her
love for her son. That pride and that love had stood between her and
duty, had sealed her lips, and led her into sin. She had wronged Terry,
deeply and deliberately wronged him, and she had paid the penalty in a
remorse that never left her, that preyed on health of body and mind at
once, that made her life miserable. The burden of her guilt was a burden
to be borne no longer--this evening the truth should be told; then, come
what might, her conscience would be free.

But it was hard--how bitterly, humiliatingly hard, only her proud heart
knew. She dared not think of her dead husband, lest she should be
tempted to hate his memory; she dared not think of her son, and of the
passionate anger and reproach with which he would overwhelm her, should
this ever reach his ears. She hardly dared think of Terry--the loyal,
true-hearted lad, who trusted her so utterly, who believed in her so
implicitly, whose affection and gratitude were so profound. On all sides
the path was beset with thorns, but the path must be trodden.

"Help me, oh, Heaven!" was the bitter prayer of her heart; "my cross
seems heavier than I can bear."

There came a step she well knew down the corridor--the step for which
she waited and watched. There came a tap at the door. A moment she
paused to gather strength. Then, "Come in," she said, faintly, and
Dennison entered.

She shrank back into the shadow of the curtains. In the obscurity of the
twilit room he could not see the fixed pallor of her face; yet something
in her manner, as she sat there, startled him. He advanced and took her
hand.

"There is nothing the matter?" he anxiously asked. "You are not ill?"

"I am not ill," she answered, in that faint voice. "Sit down, Terry. I
am going to tell you a story to-night. I should have told you long ago,
but I have been a coward--a weak and wicked coward--and I dared not--I
dared not."

He seated himself on a hassock at her feet, and looked up at her in
silent wonder and alarm.

"You have trusted me, Terry, been grateful to me, loved me. Ah! my poor
boy! that trust and love of yours have been bitter to bear. I have
deserved neither from you--nothing from you but contempt and scorn."

"Lady Dynely!"

"I have prayed for strength," she went on, "but strength did not come. I
saw my duty to you and to Heaven, and to my own conscience, but I would
not do it. I have concealed the truth, and gone on in secrecy and
wronged you from first to last."

"Wronged me! my dear Lady Dynely!" he exclaims, in consternation. "Do
you know what you are saying?"

"Ah! do I not?" she answers, bitterly. "It sounds strangely, Terry; but
wait until you have heard all. Then you will despise me a thousand times
more than you have ever loved me."

"_That_ I will never do," he answered, steadily. "Tell me what you will,
nothing will ever alter the affection and gratitude I feel for you. It
has grown with my growth; it is part of my life; I could almost as soon
lose faith in Heaven. When I cease to believe in _your_ goodness I shall
cease to believe in all goodness on earth."

"Don't! don't!" she says, in a voice of sharpest pain. "Wait until you
hear. Terry, has it ever occurred to you to wonder why I took you from
the Irish cabin and charged myself with your care and education through
life?"

"Well," the young man answers, in a troubled voice, "at times--yes. But
I took it for granted the meagre story I heard of myself was the true
one. I am the orphan son of some distant connection of your late
husband, and, in your goodness of heart, you sought me out and provided
for me. That is the story, is it not?"

"Ah, no, no, no!--not the story at all. _My_ goodness of heart! What
bitter satire it sounds from your lips. A distant connection of my late
husband! Terry--you are his son!"

"Lady Dynely!"

"His son, Terry--his elder son!"

He sat stricken mute, looking at her. Was Lady Dynely insane? What was
this she was telling him? Lord Dynely's son? And then over Terry's face
there came a sudden, deep, burning flush. Lord Dynely's son.--And his
mother had been a peasant girl. What need to say more?--all the story
was told in that.

He dropped his face in his hands like a man stunned by a blow. There are
few men, even the worst, who do not venerate more or less, the memory of
their mothers. To Terry's simple soul she had been a tender, idealized
memory--to keep in his heart of hearts, to speak of never. And now his
father had been Lord Dynely!

"Lady Dynely," he said, huskily, "why have you told me this?"

She laid her hand upon his bowed head.

"It is not as you think, Terry," she said, sadly. "I know what you
mean--it is not that. Your mother was Lord Dynely's wife, as truly as
ever I was. You are Lord Dynely's son, as truly as Eric is. More--you
are Lord Dynely's heir."

He scarcely heard the last words, so swift and great a rush of joy and
thankfulness flooded his heart at the first.

"Thank Heaven!" she heard him whisper; "_that_ would have been hard to
bear. But--Lord Dynely's son! Oh, Lady Dynely, pardon me, but I find
this very hard to believe."

"It is a surprise, no doubt. But do you fully understand, Terry?--You
are not only Lord Dynely's son, but Lord Dynely's heir."

"His heir?" he repeated, bewildered.

"You are three years older than Eric. Do you not see? Your mother was
Lord Dynely's wife; you are not Terrence Dennison, but Viscount Dynely."

He lifted his head and looked at her, a sort of horror in his eyes. "And
Eric is--what?"

"Yes--what?" Eric's mother cried, wildly. "He is Eric Hamilton--the
younger son, with a portion about half of what he spends yearly for
cigarettes and bouquets. You are the heir and the lord of the land; he
is the younger son and brother. That is the secret I learned to my cost
sixteen years ago, by your father's death-bed--the secret of my
so-called generosity to you, the secret that has poisoned and blighted
my whole life. If I had been as strong in my wickedness as I am weak, I
would have kept it to the end, but that I could not do. It is told; a
load is off my soul at last; you know the truth, and my son and I are
at your mercy."

Then there was long and deep silence in the room. She was sitting
upright in her chair, her face gleaming out like marble in the gray
gloom, her slender hands clenched together in her lap, her eyes dry and
haggard, looking straight into vacancy. For Dennison, he sat stunned,
absolutely stunned, trying with his whole might to realize this. His
head was in a whirl. He Lord Dynely's eldest son and heir!--not Terry
Dennison, the dependant, the poor relation, but a peer of the realm!
Eric, lordly Eric, his younger brother, with no claim to the title he
bore, to the thousands he squandered! Not a powerful mind at any time,
never a deep-thinking brain at best, mind and brain were in a helpless
whirl now.

"Tell me all about it," was the first thing he said, in his dazed
bewilderment.

She drew a long, heavy breath, and set herself to the task. The worst
had been told--it was bitter almost as the bitterness of death, and yet
it was easier telling Terry than telling most men. Her secret had
weighed upon her so long, tortured her so unbearably, that she
absolutely felt a sense of relief already.

"Tell you all?" she repeated; "it seems very little to tell when all is
told. I suppose most of life's tragedies can be told in few words--this
certainly. On the night of Lord Dynely's death--sixteen years ago this
very night; was it not fit to choose that anniversary?--I learned it
first myself. I recall that night so well--like no other in all my life.
My cousin had come to me--you have heard of him, Gordon Caryll, poor
fellow!--to tell me his story. It was a brilliant moonlight night.
Arm-in-arm we walked round the fish-pond, while he told me his life's
tragedy, in brief, bitter words. I see it all," she said, looking before
her with dewy eyes, her voice softening, "like a picture. The white
light of the moon, the long, black shadows, the fish-pond like a sheet
of circular glass, the scent of the flowers, and the coolness of the
evening wind. There he said good-by--and he left me, my poor Gordon! and
I have never seen him since. That man, Locksley, reminds me of him
somehow; my heart warms to him whenever we meet for that chance
resemblance."

She paused. She had drifted from the thread of her story, thinking of
the soldier cousin from whom she had parted this night sixteen years
ago.

"He left me," she continued, after that pause, "and I still lingered out
there, thinking what a mistake life was for most of us, how we seem to
miss the right path, where happiness lies, and love and ambition alike
lead us astray. He had married for love--I for ambition; the end was the
same to both--darkest, bitterest disappointment. I had never cared for
Lord Dynely; he was many years my senior, and, though I never was a
sentimental girl, all the liking I ever had to give had been given to
Gordon Caryll. I had to do my duty as a wife in all things, but I was
not a happy wife, had never been; and, when they brought me word my
husband had met with an accident and lay dying, it was the horror we
feel for the merest stranger who meets a tragic end that filled me, not
the despairing sorrow of a loving wife.

"I hastened to him. He lay dying indeed--life was but just there when I
reached him. But he was a man of most resolute will; he would _not_ die
until he had seen me. He had been very fond of me--ah, yes! I never
doubted that, in his own selfish, passionate way, he was very fond of
his wife. He had spared himself all his life, but now that he lay dying
he would not spare me. Thorough and utter selfishness has ever been the
chief characteristic of his race--I wonder sometimes, Terry, how you
managed to escape."

She paused again and sighed. She was thinking of her son. Blindly,
devotedly as she loved and admired him, she could not be utterly blind
to his faults. Thoroughly and absolutely selfish all the Dynelys had
been, thoroughly and utterly selfish was the last Lord Dynely.

"As I knelt by his bedside there, Terry, he told me in few and broken
sentences the sad and shameful story. In his wanderings through Galway
he had met Maureen Gannon, a dark, Spanish-looking beauty, as many of
these Galway girls are, and, in his usual hot-headed fashion, he fell
in love with her. He had been noted for running recklessly after any
woman who struck his fancy his life long; another trait of his you seem
to have escaped and my poor Eric to have inherited. You know what Irish
girls are--the purest women under heaven--love-making that did not mean
marriage was utter madness. He was mad where his own selfish
gratification was concerned. He married Maureen Gannon."

Again she paused, catching her breath with a painful effort. It was
quite dark now, and the rising wind, precursor of coming storm, soughed
through the park. An elm just outside tapped with spectral fingers on
the glass. She shuddered as she heard it, and drew closer to her silent
and listening companion.

"He had called himself Dennison from the first, and under that name he
married her. The ceremony was performed in the little rustic chapel by
the parish priest. Of his class and friends there were naturally none
present; her humble friends and family--that was all.

"He took her away at once, and they saw no more of her at home until she
returned to die. She came back with you in her arms, and the story of
her life was at an end. It was such an old story--hot fancy at first,
cooling fancy after, coldness, indifference, utter neglect, and finally
desertion. She died, and you were left, and Lord Dynely was free to woo
and win another.

"I was that other. Of the girl whose heart he had broken, of his only
child in poverty and neglect in Ireland, I believe he never once
thought--until Eric was born, and then remorse and alarm awoke within
him for the first time. She had been his lawful wife, you were his
lawful son and heir. He loved me, as I say, in his selfish fashion; he
also loved little Eric, and a great fear of the future of his youngest
son began to come to him.

"But he told no one, he took no steps about you, he just drifted on to
the end, putting all troublesome thoughts away from him, as was the
habit of his life. Only when he lay dying this night, and thought that
in some other world he might have to atone for the crimes of this, he
turned coward--once more self became his first thought. What did it
matter what became of Eric or me so that he atoned and escaped the
consequences of his wrongdoing. He sent for me and told the truth.

"'You'll find it all down in writing in my desk,' he said. 'I've made a
clean breast of it. The marriage certificate and the youngster's
baptismal record are there too. The law might pick a flaw in an Irish
marriage like that, but, Lucia, when a man comes to die he sees these
things in another light from the law of the world. I couldn't meet that
poor girl in the next world, as I _may_, and look her in the face, and
know the wrong I've done her son. He's the heir, Lucia, mind that--not
Eric, poor little beggar. And I want you to do, when I am gone, what I
never had courage to do myself--the right thing by that little lad in
Ireland. My first marriage must be proven, and the young one come to his
rights. You are provided for in any case, as my richly dowered widow,
and your boy will have a younger son's portion. But the one in Ireland,
poor Maureen's boy, is the heir, mark that.'

"I knelt beside him, Terry, listening to this dreadful revelation,
frozen with a horror too intense for words or tears. I have loved Eric
from the day of his birth I think with fourfold mother love; he has all
I had; his father did not share my heart with him, as is the happy case
of most mothers. He was all I had on earth--all; and now I was called
upon to stand aside, to take him with me, and give his title and estates
to another woman's son. Terry," she cried out "he asked more than human
nature could give."

Her voice broke in that fierce, hysterical, sobbing cry. Dennison took
both her hands in his and held them in that strong but gentle clasp.

"I think he did," he answered sadly.

"He died as I knelt there," she went on, "his glazing eyes fixed
threateningly on my face to the end.

"'Mind,' he said to me, 'that you see justice done. I couldn't do it;
you must. I won't rest easy in my grave unless you promise. Promise me
you will seek out this boy, and see him righted before the world.
Promise.' They were his last words. But the promise was never given--I
couldn't speak--not to save his life as well as my own. I knelt there
stunned, stupefied, dazed, soul and body. While he still looked at me
the awful death rattle sounded. His eyes were fixed in ghastly threat on
my face when the film of death sealed them. I remember no more. Some
one, after a time, came to me, and I fell back and all was darkness.

"They buried him, and Eric and I went to the funeral as chief mourners!
They put black on my boy; I tore it off in horror. Mourning for the
father who had so bitterly wronged him--no! I wore it, but there was no
mourning, only fierce rebellion and passionate anger, in my heart. They
put up a marble tablet recording his social and domestic virtues, and
under the glowing record, '_His works do follow him._' Ah, yes, they
followed him--in bitterness and remorse and shame. I could have laughed
aloud at the hollow satire of it all. I believe my mind to a certain
degree gave way, my health began to fail. I had a horrible dread of this
man, dead in his grave; that night and its revelations haunted me like
some ghastly nightmare. I could not--would not obey. I trembled with
horror at refusing, it seemed so awful to deliberately disobey a dying
command. He couldn't rest easy in his grave, he had said, if I
disobeyed. A sickening, superstitious fear that he might rise from that
unquiet grave and pursue me, nearly froze me at times with terror. I
believe the struggle would have ended in insanity if it had gone on, but
the medical men ordered me to Italy for change of air. I went to Galway
instead, and found you. The rest you know. I compromised with my
conscience, paltered with the truth. As my own son you should be reared
and educated; share all his advantages--all but my affection. That, my
poor Terry, much as you deserved it, I could not give. The horror and
hatred I was wicked enough to feel for your father I was wicked enough
to feel for you. One day I thought, perhaps when I was dying myself I
would tell you; meantime your life should be as easy and pleasant as
money could make it. When we are wronged, not knowing we are wronged,
our loss is nothing. Eric should never give up his title and estates to
you, the son of an Irish peasant girl--his life should never be blighted
at the dying command of a cruel, and selfish, and sensual father. I
would _not_ tell the truth.

"I have said that ten thousand times, Terry, and the years have gone on,
and you are both men. His majority comes in a few days; France is to be
his wife, the girl in Lincolnshire yours. I vowed I would not tell, and
I am telling. I have prayed passionate, rebellious prayers, wearied
Heaven with them, to know the right, and be given strength to do it.
That strength has been given to me at last--my duty is done. You know
the truth--how shamefully all your life long you have been wronged and
cheated. Here are the papers Lord Dynely left; I am prepared to repeat
the story in any court in England. All that seems easy, but--when I
think of Eric, it breaks my heart."

Her voice died away in a choking sob. She knew so well Eric's passionate
anger, his fierce rage and protest; how he would do battle to the death
with his interloper; how he would, in his stormy, selfish wrath, curse
the father and hate the mother. Hate her! Ay, his life long; your weak
and selfish men are good haters always. Why had she not held her
tongue?--how dared she speak?--what were the cowardly dying fears of ten
thousand fathers to his birthright? Was this her pretended love for him?
Let it end how it might he would never forgive her, never see her face
again. She knew what would follow as well as she knew that she sat here.

She placed a packet in Terry's hand. He loosened his clasp of hers and
took it in dead silence. Even he, she thought in her bitter despair, was
turning against her already. And this is what it was to do one's duty.

"There is no more to tell," she said, in a stifled voice. "Go away,
Terry, and leave me alone."

He arose, but lingeringly, and stood looking at her. In the deep
darkness that now filled the room he could see but the outline of her
figure and the white, rigid gleam of her face.

"I don't know what to say yet," he began, in a constrained voice, that
did not sound like Terry's. "I feel stunned and stupefied. My head is in
a muddle. It is all so strange. You will give me to-night to think it
over--will you not?"

"What have I to do with it?" she answered, huskily. "All is in your own
hands now. You are master. You are Lord Dynely."

"You are not angry with me?" he asked, wistfully, still hesitating.

It was a question he had asked her many times in his life, when her look
of half-concealed dislike had repelled and chilled him, and he had
wondered timidly what he had done to vex her. Its wistful, boyish pathos
and simplicity went to her heart now.

"Angry with you!" she said, with a sob. "Oh my Terry! you never gave me
cause for anger in all your life."

"I am glad of that," he said, simply; "I hope I never will. And, Lady
Dynely," hesitating again, "my opinion cannot matter to you, of course;
but I hope you feel, I want you to feel, that I don't blame you in all
this. I understand how you must have felt--it was too much to ask of any
mother--you would have been more than mortal to have acted as he
commanded you."

She only looked up at him in the darkness with sad, hopeless eyes.
"_You_ would have done it, Terry," she said.

"No--I don't know. I am not very heroic, and it requires heroism to do
these things. I am an awkward, blundering sort of fellow, not much like
Eric, but I think I could more easily die than deliberately wrong any
one I cared for to gratify myself. You know what I mean, Lady Dynely.
Don't grieve too much over this; I can't bear to see you in trouble. All
will go well yet. Eric--Eric does not know, of course?"

"Not yet! oh, not yet! _That_ will be the hardest to bear of all."

He knelt on one knee, and for the first time in all his life touched his
lips to her cheek.

"Mother," he said, and love made Terry's voice like an angel's,
"mother, the best friend, the truest, man ever had, don't grieve. All
will go well. To-night I will think it over--to-morrow we will make an
end of it forever."

Then he arose softly and left her.




CHAPTER IX.

THINKING IT OUT.


That night, for the first time in the four-and-twenty years of his life,
Terry Dennison sat up until the "wee sma' hours ayont the twal," and
thought. Thought!--of all novel experiences, this surely was the most
novel in this supremely thoughtless young man's life. The good or the
evil of Terry's life, and there had been much of both, had alike been
unpremeditated; in all things he had acted naturally and involuntarily,
and without thinking of it beforehand. Now in a moment he was called
upon to settle the destinies of four lives--his own, Eric's, Lady
Dynely's and little Crystal's. A sort of smile came over his face as he
thought of it--he the arbitrator of brilliant Eric's whole future
life--he, Terry.

But the smile quickly faded as he entered the room and laid the little
packet her ladyship had given him down upon the table, and looked at the
yellow paper, the faded writing. The father who had wronged him so
greatly, who had so irreparably wronged his mother, and written
this--had striven to do him justice when that justice could no longer
annoy himself. He had served Satan all his life, and would make his
peace with Heaven at the last, at any sacrifice to those left behind. He
had lived a life of sin and sensualism, and would offer the dregs of
that bad life to his Creator. There was more a feeling of disgust in
Terry's breast than any other as he looked at the faded writing and
thought of him who had written it, dust and ashes years ago.

"And his works do follow him!"

He sat down and looked blankly before him. He was Lord Dynely's elder
son; no longer plain, impecunious Terry Dennison, a dependant on a
great lady's bounty, but Viscount Dynely, with estates and mansions in
half a dozen counties, a villa at Ryde, a rent-roll as long as his
lineage. And he could make Crystal, Lady Dynely. His face flushed for a
moment at that. All that might be spread before him, a glittering vista.
He was one of the least mercenary of men, but he had lived too long in
the world not to know the great and utter change it would make in his
life. One of the oldest titles in the United Kingdom, one of the noblest
incomes--that is what he was called upon to claim or resign to-night.
For a moment, as he thought of it, his heart beat quick. He was very
human after all, and this was no child's toy he must lay down or take
up. Men called Terry Dennison a good fellow--rather a simple soul,
perhaps, but a good fellow all the same. He had few enemies and many
friends, but in their liking for him there was more or less blended a
slight shade of contempt. He was one of them, but not of them. His
manners and habits were primitive to a degree. He wasn't a "plunger," as
they were to a man; didn't drink, to speak of; didn't gamble at all;
hunted down no woman, married or single, to her own destruction. He was
behind his age in all these things, in a most remarkable degree. Still
men liked him, and laughed with Terry, and at Terry, and never carried
their laughter too far. He was the soul of good-nature, but there was
that in his six feet of stature, his trained muscles, and scientific
British way of "hitting out straight from the shoulder," on occasions,
that commanded respect. In the annual battles between "Town and Gown,"
at Oxford, Dennison had ever been a host in himself. In all athletic and
field sports he stood his own with the best of them. He was a "mighty
hunter before the lord," down in the shires; but in the ball-room and
the boudoir, at court and at courting, Terry was decidedly a failure. He
never lost his heart for barronne or ballerina, duchess or actress; he
ran away with no man's wife, wasn't a fascinating sinner of any sort. He
had his failings, they were many--he had his virtues, they were many
too, and generosity stood chief among them. To give pain to a woman, to
_any_ woman--to a woman he loved and venerated, as he did Lady Dynely,
would have been impossible to him; and in asserting this claim before
the world he would simply break Lady Dynely's heart.

Wrong had been done. Yes; but, to Terry's mind, hardly by her. She loved
her handsome son, as few sons ever deserve to be loved, and Eric
Hamilton certainly did not. How, then, loving him, could she
deliberately, and at the command of a selfish and cowardly husband, hand
over his birthright to a stranger, and blight his whole life? Lord
Dynely had asked too much; it was not in frail human nature to do it. He
had been wronged, but not by her. Why, she might have left him all his
life in that Irish cabin by the wild Galway coast, to drag out the
wretched, unlettered life of a peasant. Who then would have been the
wiser? But she had come for him, and in all things done by him as her
own son. And now, at last, she had told him all, and, at all cost to
herself, was ready to prove the truth of her words. Then his thoughts
drifted to Eric. He saw Eric's rage and fury as plainly as he saw the
paper on the table, the blue eyes lurid with rage, the fair, womanish
face crimson with anger and rebellion. Eric would do battle to the
death, would contest every inch of the ground. The sympathy would be
with Eric; possession, the "nine points of the law," would be with Eric;
the glory and the power were Eric's;--what chance would he stand? There
would be an endless chancery suit, the kingdom would ring with the
scandal, the informal Irish marriage would be contested; perhaps in the
eye of the law, proven no marriage at all. And, meantime, Lady Dynely
would have broken her heart at the shame and publicity, and ended her
part of the tragedy. No, had he been ever so inclined, as selfishly bent
on his own interests as Eric himself, the thing was impossible on the
face of it. But he was not. It was really very little of a sacrifice to
him. He had no ambition whatever--he was, I have said, a most
commonplace young man. Life as he held it contented him. With his
commission, his five hundred a year, and Crystal for his wife, the world
might wag; he asked no more of fate.

With a long-drawn breath he broke from his reverie; with a motion of his
hand he seemed to dismiss the whole thing at once and forever.

He lit a cigar, opened the little packet and looked at the papers. The
marriage certificate, the record of his baptism, his father's brief,
terse confession of his own marriage to the Galway girl, under the name
of Dennison. He read them all gravely and tied them up again.

"Poor soul," he thought, "it was hard lines on _her_. No, my Lord
Dynely, you did harm enough in your lifetime; we won't let you do any
more in your grave."

He rose up, went to the open window and smoked away meditatively. What
was Crystal doing? Ah, asleep no doubt, little darling, his ring on her
finger and thoughts of him in her heart. He would go down to-morrow, and
tell her what had been in _his_ heart so long. He could see the dear
little face, dimpling and smiling, and blushing, hear the dear little
voice faltering forth its tender confession, and Terry's whole soul was
in one glow of love and gratitude and rapture. How happy he would make
her life, how devotedly he would cherish his little stainless lily, how
sweet it would be to care for her, and devote his whole existence to
her. Yes, to-morrow he would go down, and before Christmas they would be
married, and then--well, Terry was not imaginative--and then they would
live happy forever after.

Mr. Dennison was not an early riser. The early bird that catches the
worm was no kin of his. All the clocks and watches of Dynely were
sharply marking the hour of one, when, in freshest morning toilet,
shaven and shorn, he presented himself before Lady Dynely.

"My dear Lady Dynely," he began, and there stopped.

Good Heaven! what a ghastly, terrified face he saw. White with a pallor
like death, lips blue and parched, eyes haggard and hopeless. She had
slept not at all--she had spent the whole night in fevered pacing to and
fro, half maddened at the thought of what she had done, of what might
be. The world would know. Eric would know--there lay the bitterness of
death. Terry was generous, but to her the generosity that would hide
this from the world looked more than mortal.

She stood up and confronted him, one hand holding by her chair, her
haggard eyes fixed upon his face. So might look a terrified woman
waiting for sentence of death. She tried to speak--her dry lips
trembled, only a husky sound came.

He was by her side in a moment, holding both hands fast in his, full of
pity and remorse. How she had suffered. Why had he kept her in suspense
even for a single night? How little she knew him, when she could fear
him like this. It gave him a pang of absolute pain.

"Lady Dynely--my dearest mother--you did not think I could ever use the
secret you told me last night? If you did, then you have certainly
wronged me. I loved you too well, Eric too well, ever to dream of such
shameful, selfish ingratitude. Look here!"

He drew out the packet, took a match, struck it, and touched it to a
corner of the paper, then threw it in the grate.

She uttered a gasping cry--a cry he never forgot--then stood spellbound.

With fascinated eyes both watched the paper shrivel, then blaze up, then
a cloud of black drift floated up the chimney, and the record of the
Irish marriage was at an end.

"With that ends our secret," Terry said. "Living or dying, a word of
what you told me will never pass my lips."

She fell heavily forward, her arms around his neck, her face on his
shoulder, shaking from head to foot with dry, hysterical sobbing. He
held her close; neither spoke a word, and there were tears big and
bright in Terry's round blue eyes. Then very gently he put her back in
her chair and knelt down before her.

"Don't," he said, pleadingly; "it hurts me to hear you. How could you
think I would do what you feared? What a wretch you must have thought
me."

"A wretch! Oh, my Terry, my Terry! You are more an angel than a man!"

Terry laughed. It was all very solemn, but the idea of Terry Dennison in
the rle of angel, tickled the dragoon's lively sense of the ludicrous,
and that merry school-boy laugh of his pealed forth.

"I beg your pardon, Lady Dynely," Terry said, struggling manfully with
that explosion; "that's a little too good. You are the first, I give you
my word, who ever accused me of angelic qualities. And I don't deserve
it--oh, I assure you I don't--it isn't any sacrifice to me. I am not an
ambitious sort of fellow, nor a clever fellow, nor a brilliant fellow,
like Eric. As a dragoon, with five hundred a year and the dearest little
girl in England for my wife, I am a round peg, fitting neat and trim in
a round hole. As a nobleman, with title and estates, and the _noblesse
oblige_ business to do, I would be an object of pity to gods and men.
Eric was born a darling of fortune; I was born--plain Terry Dennison."

She looked at him with sad, yearning, wondering eyes. Her arms still
loosely clasped his neck as he knelt before her.

"Plain Terry Dennison!" she repeated; "Terry, you are the stuff heroes
are made of. Eric is not like you--ah, if he only were! Where did you
get this generous heart, this great, grateful son of yours? You have
your father's face--ay, you are like him to the very color of his hair.
You have his face--Eric, I fear--I fear his heart."

"Oh, Eric isn't half a bad fellow," responded Terry, uneasily. He was
uncommonly fond of Lady Dynely, but he was only a man, and the heroics
were becoming a little too much for him. "Don't let's talk about it any
more. Let all be as though you had never told, as though I were in
reality what I have all along considered myself--a distant connection of
a very grand family. If--," Terry's head drooped a little and his color
rose--"if it makes you ever so little fonder of me, Lady Dynely, then,
as the goody sort of novels say, 'I shall not have labored in vain.'"

She bent forward and kissed him, for the first time in her life, as
fondly as she might have kissed Eric.

"Who could help being fond of you, Terry? That girl in Lincolnshire is
a happy and fortunate girl, indeed I know you are dying to go back to
her, but just at present I feel as though I could not let you out of my
sight. My wonderful good fortune, your wonderful generosity, seem
altogether unreal. If I lose you I shall doubt and fear, and grow
wretched again. My nerves are all unstrung. Stay with me yet a few days,
Terry--the happiness of your life is all before you--until I have
learned to realize how blessed I am."

It was a far greater sacrifice, had she but known it, than the sacrifice
he made in resigning all claim to title and fortune. But he made it
promptly and gratefully.

"I will remain a week," he said; "as I have waited so long, a few more
days will not signify."

He wrote down to Lincolnshire. A week would pass before he could be with
them, but he was surely coming, and meantime he was "Hers devotedly,
Terry."

The order of release came at last. Armed with his ring, a half-hoop of
diamonds to fit the dearest little engagement finger on earth, Mr.
Dennison started, one bright August morning, on his way. The birds were
singing, the sun was shining, the grass was as green as though it had
been painted and varnished, the sky was without a cloud. So was his sky,
Terry thought; and in faultless summer costume, looking happy and almost
handsome, his long limbs stretched across on the opposite cushions of
the railway carriage, he was whirled away to Starling vicarage.

    "A frog he would a wooing go
    Whether his mother would let him or no,"

hummed Terry, unfolding that morning's _Daily Telegraph_. "I wonder what
my precious little girl is about just now! And, by the bye, I should
like to know why Eric doesn't come home. Egad! I should think France
wouldn't like it--home for an evening and off again, and stopping away
over two weeks. Is he at Carruthers' still, and what's the dear boy's
little game now, I wonder?"

What, indeed?




CHAPTER XI.

AT THE PICNIC.


With that brilliant light of the August afternoon pouring down over
everything like amber rain, Mr. Dennison opened the little wicket gate
and made his way into the vicarage. It was all ablaze with double roses,
and honeysuckle, and verbena, and geranium, and fuchsia, and the summer
air was sweet with drifts of perfume. All the windows and doors of the
vicarage stood open, but a Sabbath silence reigned. As his lofty six
feet darkened the parlor doorway, the only occupant of that apartment
looked up from her sewing with a little surprised scream. It was the
eldest and scraggiest of the three elder Misses Higgins.

"Lor!" cried Miss Higgins, "what a turn you gave me. Is it you, Terry?
Who'd have thought it? Come in. You see I wasn't expecting anybody
to-day, and all the rest are off but Belinda and me, and--"

"Off!" cried Terry, blankly; "off where, Arabella?"

"Off to the picnic. Oh, I forgot, you don't know. Sir Philip Carruthers,
Lord Dynely, and some of the gentlemen stopping at the Court, have
organized a picnic, and all the rest have gone. I and Belinda were
invited, but some one must stay home and do the work, while the others
gad. Belinda's in the kitchen, making jam--I'm sewing for Crystal. It's
always the way," said the elder Miss Higgins, bitterly; "'this little
pig goes to market, and this little pig stays at home.' I've been the
one to stay at home all my life."

"Where's the picnic, Bella?" asked Terry, briskly.

For a moment--a moment only--he had felt inclined to be disappointed at
this contretemps; now it was all right again.

"At Carruthers Court, of course," Bella answered. "They have had no end
of water parties, and garden parties, and croquet parties, and
junketings since you went away. Crystal's growing a regular gadabout,
and so I tell mamma. A chit of a child like that ought to be in the
nursery for the next two years, instead of flirting and carrying on with
gentlemen in the way she does. I never did such a thing when I was
a--oh, he's off. Another of little missy's victims, I suppose. What
fools men are."

The eldest Miss Higgins, aged thirty-five, was not vicious, as a rule,
but the blind neglect of mankind during the last fifteen years had
rather soured the milk of human kindness in her vestal bosom. She went
back to her sewing, and Terry went to the picnic.

The walk was a long one, the afternoon, as I have before remarked, hot.
The summer fields lay steeped in sunshine, the scarlet poppies nodding
in the faint breeze. Terry's complexion was the hue of the poppies by
the time he reached the festal ground. Tents and marquees everywhere
dotted the sward; the military brass band discoursed sweet music beneath
the umbrageous foliage; archery, croquet, dancing and other sports, in
which the youthful and frivolous mind delights, were going on. Girls in
white, girls in blue, girls in pink, girls in lilac and green, dotted
the velvet sward like gorgeous posies, but the girl of his heart Mr.
Dennison could nowhere behold.

"Ah, Terry, my lad," said the Rev. Samuel Higgins, extending one
clerical hand in a black thread glove, "how are you? When did you come?"

"Just now. Where's--I mean where are the girls?"

"Amelia, and Josephine, and Emiline are yonder, engaged in archery;
Cornelia and Victoria are playing croquet; Evangeline is with her
mother, and Elizabeth Jane was with me a moment ago. Arabella and
Belinda are at home," answered calmly the Reverend Samuel.

"I saw Bella. Where's Crystal?" asked Mr. Dennison, in desperation.

"Crystal is--ahem!" said the Reverend Mr. Higgins, looking meekly about
through his spectacles. "I don't see Crystal. Elizabeth Jane, my child,
where is Christabel?"

"Crissy's gone off for a sail with Lord Dynely, pa," answered in a pert
tone the seventh Miss Higgins, with a sharp glance at Mr. Dennison. "If
you want to find them, Terry, _I'll_ guide you."

Elizabeth Jane took Mr. Dennison's arm and led him briskly across
meadows, down woody slopes, to where, between two sloping hills, a broad
mere, a miniature lake, lay. And there, half-way out, went floating a
little white boat like a great water lily, and in that boat a young
gentleman and a young lady sat.

"That's Criss," said Elizabeth Jane, sharply, "and that's Lord Dynely. I
don't know what Lord Dynely's intentions may be, but if I were pa I
would ask."

Terry's face flushed. He turned suddenly and looked at her with a sharp
contraction of the heart.

"What do you mean, Lizy Jane?"

"This," said the seventh and sharpest of the Misses Higgins, "that Lord
Dynely comes a great deal too often to the vicarage, and pays a great
deal too marked attention to our Criss for an engaged man. He is an
engaged man, isn't he, Terry?"

"Yes--no--I don't know--Elizabeth Jane, you don't mean to say that
Crystal has--has"--his ruddy complexion turned white--"fallen in love
with Lord Dynely?"

"I don't know anything about it," retorted Elizabeth Jane, still
sharply; "I don't go mooning about myself, reading novels and poetry
books, week in and week out; I have my district visiting, and Bible
society, and Dorcas meetings to attend. I don't know anything about
falling in love and that sentimental rubbish," says Elizabeth Jane, her
black eyes snapping; "but I do know, if I were pa, I'd not have a gay
young nobleman loafing about my house from morning until night, flirting
with my prettiest daughter, taking moonlight rambles, and sunlight
rambles, and early morning rambles, and lying on the grass at her feet
for hours at a stretch, reading Meredith and Tennyson, and holding
skeins of silk for her, and singing duets with her, and--bah!" says
Elizabeth Jane, with snappishness, "if pa had three pairs of glasses he
wouldn't see what goes on under his nose."

"And they carry on like this!" Terry asked, in blank dismay.

"Like this! You ought to see them. You can't so much as mention his name
to Crystal but she blushes to the roots of her hair. I've told pa,
Bella's told pa--what's the use? 'Tut, tut, tut, children; let the
little one enjoy herself. He's only a good looking boy, she's only a
child.' That's what pa says. Queer sort of child's play, I think. And
ma, she's worse. We all know what ma thinks, that she'll have a 'my
lady,' for her daughter. I've no patience with such folly!" cries the
practical and matter-of-fact Miss Elizabeth Jane Higgins.

Terry stands dead silent. The ruddy heat has faded out of his
complexion, leaving him very pale. He looks with blank eyes at the
shining water. The little white boat has turned a wooded bend and
disappeared. Crystal is singing now.

Her sweet voice comes to them where they stand. The clear tenor tones of
Dynely blend presently with hers. They stand silent both, until the last
note of the music dies away.

"Come," says Elizabeth Jane, looking up in Terry's face, and not without
a touch of compassion in her own. She likes Terry; she is engaged to the
Rev. Edwin Meeke, her father's curate, whose name but faintly sets forth
his nature, and can afford to be sisterly and practical, and her liking
for the big dragoon is beyond reproach. "Only if you're a friend of Miss
France Forrester and our Crystal, drop Lord Dynely a hint to make his
vicarage visits more like angels', few and far between."

She leads him back. But the glory has gone out of the heavens, the
beauty from the earth. The sun no longer shines, or if it does, it
shineth not on Terry. For the first time in his life he is jealous.
Elizabeth Jane does with him as she pleases. She holds his arm and leads
him about, and talks to him in her sharp little staccato voice of the
house "Mr. Meeke" is furnishing--of the poor of the parish--of her
schools and societies, and it all falls dead flat on Terry's ears. He
hears as he might hear the drowsy ripple of a mill stream--he
comprehendeth not. "Crystal and Eric--Eric and Crystal," these united
names ring the changes over and over and over again in his dazed brain.

"There they are!" cries Elizabeth Jane, with another vicious snap of the
little dark eyes. "Pretty pair, aren't they?"

The seventh Miss Higgins did not mean it in that sense, but they _were_
a pretty pair. They came together over the grass. Eric, tall, languid,
elegant, handsome, in faultless summer costume, a straw hat pulled over
his eyes; Crystal, in pale rose-pink gauze, a little straw flat tilted
over her pretty Grecian nose, and a bunch of big fragrant water lilies
in her hand. It was a specialty of the prettiest Miss Higgins that you
rarely saw her except covered with floral decorations. They espied
Elizabeth Jane and her escort, and Crystal gave a little nervous start
and gasp for breath.

"Oh!" she said, in that frightened whisper, "it is Terry!"

"Ah, ya-as--so it is, Terry," drawled Lord Dynely, putting up his
eye-glass. "Where did he drop from? I say, little 'un, how are you?"

He sauntered up to Terry with the words, and held out one languid hand.
Terry took it, and dropped it, as if it burned him. For the first time
the sight of Lady Dynely's son gladdened neither his eyes nor his heart.

"Didn't expect you, you know. Glad to see you all the same. Awfully warm
work travelling it must have been. Just come?"

"Just come," Terry responded, coldly, his eyes fixed on Crystal's face.
That face was flushed and drooping; the shy, averted glance, the shy,
reluctant hand, smote him to the heart.

"You are well, Crystal?" he said. "You received my letter?"

"Oh, yes, thank you."

It is always Miss Crystal's formula when greatly embarrassed, and then
she stood blushing and downcast, tracing figures on the grass with her
white parasol.

"You don't ask after them at home, Dynely," said Terry, looking at him;
"your mother or Miss Forrester?"

"Don't I? It's too warm to ask for anything or anybody at an August
picnic. Thanks for your reminder. How are my mother and Miss Forrester?"

There was a certain defiance in the coolly insolent glance of Eric's
blue eyes, a certain defiance in the lazy drawl with which he repeated
Terry's words.

"They are well--wondering a little though what can keep you so long in
foreign parts. You were to be back in a week."

"Was I? I find my constitution won't stand the wear and tear of a
perpetual express train. And really, on the whole, I think I prefer
Lincolnshire to Devonshire."

Then he turns and says something in a lower tone to Crystal, at which
she laughs nervously, puts her hand within his arm, and turns to go.

"Ta, ta, Terry!" he says. "Amuse yourself well, only don't make your
attentions to Elizabeth Jane too marked, else the Reverend Edwin,
lamb-like as he is, may turn jealous. And jealousy is a frightful
monster to admit into the human heart."

They saunter away together as they came, and Elizabeth Jane's black eyes
snap again as they look after them.

"There!" she says, "what do you think of that?"

"I think I shall go and have some claret cup, if there is any going," is
Dennison's response. "I see Mr. Meeke coming, 'Liza Jane. You'll excuse
me, won't you?"

He hardly waits for 'Liza Jane's stiff "Oh, certainly." He rushes off,
takes a long draught from the iced silver tankard, but all the claret
cup that ever was iced will not cool the fire of love and jealousy that
is raging within Terry. He wanders away, he doesn't know
where--anywhere, anywhere out of the world. Presently he finds himself
far removed from the braying brass band, and sight and sound of the
picnicers, and flings himself face downward in the warm scented summer
grass.

He has lost Crystal!

Ay, lost her; though Eric should be playing his old game of fast and
loose with girls' hearts, wooing them this hour with his charming grace
and debonnaire beauty, to throw them away the next, Crystal is lost to
him all the same. If her heart has gone to Dynely or any other man, then
she goes with it. The heart that comes to him for life must have held no
other lodger. And she loves Eric--it has ever been an easy thing for all
women to do that--he has seen it in the first glance of her eyes, in the
first flush of her cheek. And Eric--what does Eric mean?

"By heaven!" Terry thinks, his eyes flashing, "he shall not play with
her, as he has done with so many. He shall not win her love only to
fling it contemptuously away; he shall not woo her, and tire of her, and
spoil her life, and break her heart as he has done with others. I'll
kill him with my own hand first."

The day wanes, the sun sets, the stars come out, the evening wind
arises. Terry gets up cold and pale, and looking as unlike Terry as can
well be conceived, and returns to the merry-makers. Dancing is going on
by the white light of the stars, in the great canvas tent, the band
blares forth a German waltz, and little Crystal is floating round and
round like a whiff of eider-down in Lord Dynely's practised arms. He
sees Terry, and smiles a curious sort of smile to himself. If Terry's
purpose in coming were printed on his forehead it could not be plainer
reading to Lord Dynely. He has seen his state from the first, he knows
as well as the dragoon himself, that he has come down to Starling
Vicarage to woo and win the flower of the flock. And Eric's arm tightens
around Crystal's slim, pink waist, his blue eyes look with an
intolerable light of triumph down into her fair, childish face.

"She shall never belong to him--to any man but me," he thinks. "I will
speak to-night, or that overgrown dragoon will to-morrow."

His fancy for Crystal has never cooled, never for a moment. He loves
her--or thinks he does--with his whole heart. She will not be half so
creditable a wife as France, he feels that he will tire of that sweet,
shy, dimpling baby face a month after marriage; still--have her he must
and shall. Opposition and a rival have but fired him; come what will,
this little village beauty shall be his wife. This very evening he will
speak.

The waltz ends; he draws her away with him, from the dancing booth, out
into the white, star-gemmed twilight. She is ever willing to go--to ends
of the earth, so that he leads the way. She has been living in a trance
of bliss ever since she saw Lord Dynely first.

"Oh, what a day it has been!" she sighs, swinging her hat by its rosy
ribbons, and looking up at the star-studded sky; "I never enjoyed myself
so much in my life."

"Particularly since Terry Dennison has come!" puts in his lordship.

"Oh, Lord Dynely!--Terry! as if I cared for Terry!" Crystal says, with a
pretty, petulant gesture.

"No? You are sure, Crystal? You don't care for Terry?"

"Lord Dynely, you know I don't."

"Then you do care for some one else. Who is it, little one? Such hosts
of lovers you have. You don't know how madly jealous I have been before
now."

She glances up at him quickly, almost angrily, to see if he is in
earnest. Eyes and lips are smiling--he is looking at her with a gaze she
cannot meet. She flushes rosy red and shrinks from him ever so little.
Then all at once he speaks.

"I love you, Crystal," he says; "I want you to be my wife."

       *       *       *       *       *

It is an hour later. The picnicers are beginning to disperse. Lord
Dynely is to drive Miss Crystal home in his phaeton. Everybody is
thronging to their carriages when they return to the starting spot.

What a face Crystal wears! transfigured with bliss. Lord Dynely is, as
he ever is, cool, languid, self-possessed, and outwardly at least, a
trifle bored. But in the phaeton, alone with Crystal, he is not in the
least bored.

"I shall speak to the dear old dad to-morrow," he is saying. "Of course
we know what the answer will be. And I must get you an engagement ring.
Let's see; give me this little blue and white concern as a guide."

"Oh!" Crystal cries, a sudden pain in her voice, "Terry gave me that!"

"Did he?" said Dynely, coolly, abstracting it and putting it in his
waistcoat pocket; "then we'll return it to Terry, and he can give it to
Victoria, or Evangeline, or Josephine, or any of the rest he fancies.
You wear no man's ring but mine henceforth forever."




CHAPTER XII.

"THEY SHALL TAKE WHO HAVE THE POWER."


They spend a very pleasant evening at the vicarage and end a delightful
day in a very delightful manner. Delightful at least to Crystal and her
lordly lover. They show little outward sign of the rapture within; but
Crystal's eyes keep that radiant light of great joy, and there is a half
smile of exultation and triumph in Eric's. They drink tea out of their
egg-shell china, and partake of lemon cakes and thin bread and butter,
and Crystal trips down to the gate, by her lover's side.

"I will be here to-morrow as early as common decency will allow, little
one," he says, taking the pretty dimpled face between both his hands,
"for that private interview with papa. Good-night, 'queen rose of the
rosebud garden of girls,' and dream of me."

Will she not? She watches him out of sight. How handsome he is! A very
king among men! How noble, how great, how good! So far above her, yet
stooping in his wonderful condescension to love her and make her his
wife. Oh, what a thrice-blessed girl she is! Surely some beneficent
fairy must have presided at her birth that she should be thus chosen the
elect of the gods.

Then she is aroused from her reverie, for the Rev. Edwin and Elizabeth
Jane are crunching over the gravel behind her.

"Are you going to stay mooning here all night, Crystal?" sharply
inquires the elder sister. "Do you know that the dew is falling, and
that your dress is grenadine? Where is _he_?"

"Lord Dynely has gone," Crystal answers, gently. "Good-night, Mr.
Meeke," and then she lifts two lovely, compassionate eyes to Mr. Meeke's
face.

Poor little fellow, she thinks, what a life Elizabeth Jane will lead
him, and how different her life is ordered from poor, plain Elizabeth
Jane's. She feels a great pity for them both, so hum-drum and
commonplace their wooing is; a great pity for the whole other eight, so
far less blessed than she.

"What have I ever done that I should be so happy?" she muses. "What can
I ever do to prove how thankful and grateful I am?"

She stops and recoils, a swift flush of pain and shame darkens her
lily-leaf face, for, tall and dark, Terry looms up before her.

"I've had no chance to say a word to you all day, Crystal," he says,
trying to speak cheerfully. "You have been so completely monopolized by
Dynely. It is a lovely night--let us take a turn around the garden?"

"What--at twelve o'clock? Oh, Terry!" she laughs, "I am dead tired
besides after the picnic. Some other time. Good-night."

She flies up the stairs lightly, a small roseate vision, kisses her hand
to him from the upper landing, and disappears.

The Rev. Mr. Higgins' nine daughters are paired off two by two. It is
Crystal's misfortune to be billeted with Elizabeth Jane. And when
Elizabeth Jane comes up, half an hour later, and finds her "mooning"
again, sitting, leaning out of the window, heedless of dew and
grenadine, the window is closed with asperity, and Miss Crystal ordered
peremptorily to "have done fooling and go to bed."

She goes, she even sleeps, but she wakes early, to find the sun of
another lovely day flooding her chamber, and a hundred little birds
trilling a musical accompaniment without, to Elizabeth Jane's short,
rasping snores within. Again Crystal thinks of the Rev. Edwin, and
laughs and shudders as she looks at Elizabeth Jane asleep, with her
mouth open, and pities him with unutterable pity. Yesterday's bliss
comes back to her as she springs lightly out of bed and dresses. To-day
he is coming to ask papa--in two or three hours at most he will be here.
She sings softly as she dresses, for very gladness of heart, and flies
lightly down the stairs, and out into the fresh, sweet summer morning.
All within is still and asleep, all without is awake and full of
jubilant life. The roses turn their crimson, pink and snowy faces up to
that cloudless sky, a hundred choirs of birds pour forth their matin
song; over all the sun rises in untold Summer splendor. Involuntarily
Mendelssohn's Hymn of Praise rises to her lips--"Let all that hath life
and breath sing to the Lord."

She runs down to the gate and leans over it, still singing. Her song
reaches another early riser, lounging aimlessly against an elm near by,
smoking a matinal cigar. He starts, flings the cigar away, and crashes
through the dewy Lincolnshire grass to join her. It is Terry. Who else
in that household of women smokes regalias at five in the morning?

Terry has not slept well--has not slept at all--and looks haggard and
anxious in this brilliant morning light. He pulls his straw hat farther
over his eyes to exclude the dazzling sun, and sees Crystal's sweet face
cloud, and hears her glad song die away as he joins her. A nervous,
troubled look fills the gentle eyes, the loveliest, he thinks, on earth.

"You were always an early riser, Crystal," he says, with a faint smile.
"I see you keep up your good habits. I hope you have quite slept away
yesterday's fatigue."

"Oh, yes, thank you," replies Miss Crystal. "I hope your dreams were
pleasant, Terry?"

"I neither slept nor dreamed at all," Terry answers, gravely.

She glances up at him shyly, then turns away and begins pulling
nervously at the sweetbrier growing over the gate. He takes one of the
little destructive hands and holds it fast, and looks at the finger upon
which he had placed the pearl and turquoise ring. "It is gone," he says,
blankly.

She snatches her hand away, half-frightened, half-petulant, and says
nothing.

"You promised to wear it, Crystal."

"I beg your pardon, Terry, I did not. You put it there, and I wore it
until--"

"Until--go on, Crystal."

But she will not, it seems. She turns farther from him and tears the
sweetbrier sprays wantonly.

"Until when, Crystal? Answer me."

"Until last night, then."

"And what became of it last night?"

He tries to see her face, but she holds it low over the fragrant
blossoms, and is silent again.

"Crystal! Crystal!" he cries out; "what does it all mean? Who removed my
ring?"

Then all at once she turns at bay and looks at him full.

"Lord Dynely took it last night. He had a right to take it. I can wear
no man's ring but his all the days of my life. I will give it to you
back to-day. I--I don't want to hurt you, Terry, but--I love _him_."

Her courage dies away as quickly as it came. She grows crimson all over
her pearl-white face, and returns once more to the suffering sweetbrier.

For Terry--he stands as a man who receives his death-blow--white, mute.
And yet he has expected it--has known it. Only that does not seem to
make it any the easier now.

The silence frightens her. She steals a look at him, and that look
frightens her more.

"Oh, Terry, don't be angry," she falters, the ready tears springing to
her eyes. "How could I help it? How could I--how could anyone help
loving him?"

"No," Terry answers, a curious stiffness about his lips, a curious
hardness in his tone; "you could not help it. I might have known it. You
are only a child--I thought you a woman. You could not help it; but
he--by Heaven, he's a villain!"

She started up--stung into strength by that.

"It is false!" she cried out, passionately. "How dare you, Terry
Dennison! You say to me behind his back what you dare not say to his
face. He is the best and noblest man that ever lived."

He turned and looked at her. He caught both her hands, and the blue eyes
looked up fearless and flashing into his own.

"You love him, Crystal?"

"With my whole heart--so well that if I lost him I should die."

"And he--he tells you he loves you, I suppose?"

"He tells me, and I know it. I know it as surely and truly as I stand
here."

He dropped her hands and turned from her, leaning his folded arms across
the pillar of the gate.

"He tells you, and you know it! I wonder how many score my Lord Dynely
has told that same story to in his one-and-twenty years of life? We live
in a fast age, but I doubt if many men go quite so fast as that. I
wonder what France Forrester will say to all this?"

The angry color faded out of her face, the angry light died out of her
eyes. She stood looking at him, growing ashen gray. She had utterly
forgotten that.

"Miss Forrester!" she responded, slowly; "I forgot! I forgot! And last
night he told me--he told me----"

"He told you nothing about her, I'll swear!" Dennison said, with a
short, mirthless laugh: "that it has been an understood thing from his
boyhood that he was to marry her; that he returned home three weeks ago
to ask her to be his wife; that he _did_ ask her, beg her, entreat her,
and that she sent him down here out of the way, pending her final
answer; that if that answer be favorable they are to be married next
spring in London. His mother told me. Whatever he told you last night,
Crystal, I am quite sure he did not tell you this."

"No," she said, in a voice like a whisper, her very lips blanched--"he
did not tell me this."

"There is one fortunate circumstance about it," the young man went on;
"he is a villain, but he won't break her heart. Incredible it may seem
to you, but all the beauty and attraction of your demi-god are quite
thrown away upon her. She doesn't care for him. She knows him to be
weaker and more unstable than water--the frailest of all broken reeds
for any woman to lean on--and will rejoice accordingly at being rid of
him. But for you, Crystal--you're not the first, nor the
hundred-and-first, he has sworn undying love to; and you'll not be the
last, that _I_ swear, if you give him a chance. If you care for Lord
Eric Dynely, and want to keep him, why, then, marry him out of
hand--strike while the iron is hot."

She said not a word. White and still she stood, all life and color
stricken out of eyes and face by his words.

As he looked at her the bitterness died out of his own soul in
compassion and remorse.

"Oh, Crystal, forgive me!" he said. "I am a brute! I ought not to say
such things to you. But--I loved you so--I have loved you all my life. I
trusted you, and I trusted him."

It was more than she could bear--her own pain and his. She turned
hastily away, down one of the garden paths, and vanished.

The day was six hours older--the vicarage clocks were striking
eleven--as Lord Dynely dismounted from "his red roan steed" at the
vicarage gate, and flung his horse's bridle over that very gate-post.
Before he could reach the house, a slim, white figure came gliding out
of one of the garden paths and beckoned him to approach.

"You, my darling," he said, gayly, "and on the watch for your devoted
knight's coming. I'm not late, am I? But early rising, as you understand
the term in this primitive wilderness, is _not_ my most prominent
perfection."

"Eric," she said, faintly. "I have something to say to you. Last night
when we were talking--when you told me you cared for me, you--you said
nothing of Miss Forrester."

His face flushed, his blue eyes flashed with the quick angry light ever
so ready to rise.

"Who has been talking to you?" he demanded. "But I need hardly ask. Mr.
Terrence Dennison, of course."

"I have known it this long time," she returned, shrinking from his angry
looks, trembling like a nervous child, yet resolute to go on, "only I
forgot it yesterday. Oh, Lord Dynely! You were very cruel to say such
things to me, and all the time engaged to marry her."

She broke down utterly for the first time with the words, and covering
her face with her hands, sobbed hysterically.

"Why did you ever come here--why did you make me love you--how could you
deceive me so? I knew I was not worthy of you. I was happy before you
came; I--"

"You would have married Dennison, and lived happy for ever after? Is
that what you are trying to say, Miss Higgins? Terry has been pleading
his own cause this morning, I see, and slandering me. Common gratitude
from the dependant of my mother's bounty might have kept him silent, if
nothing else; but gratitude is an obsolete virtue. Since you are so
easily influenced by him, it would be a pity to take you from him. Here
is his ring--let me replace it on your finger, and take back all the
nonsensical things I said to you last evening."

She uttered a cry like a child under the lash. At that sound all anger
died out within him, he caught her hands and held them in a fierce,
close clasp.

"I will never let you go," he said. "I swear it. My wife you shall be,
and no other's. You are mine--mine alone, and as mine I claim you. I
deny all Dennison's slanders. I am not engaged to Miss Forrester or any
other living woman. Miss Forrester is no more anxious to marry me than I
am to marry her. It is all my mother's doing and her guardian's--they
made the compact, but we will not ratify it. You I love, and you I will
make my wife. Where is your father?--in his study? Then I will go to him
at once, and make an end of all doubt."

He strode away, and, looking handsome and haughty, was admitted into Mr.
Higgins' private sanctum. In few and somewhat insolently authoritative
words he made known his errand. He loved his daughter Crystal, he wished
to make her his wife. Then he sat still, and looked at the clergyman. If
he expected the Vicar of Starling to be overpowered by the honor he was
doing him, he was mistaken.

Mr. Higgins sat aghast, literally aghast, and pushing his spectacles up
his forehead sat helplessly staring at the young wooer.

"My daughter! My daughter Crystal. _You_ want to marry her, Lord Dynely.
Oh, impossible! impossible!"

"And why impossible, sir, may I ask?" haughtily and angrily.

"Because--Lord bless my soul! because she's too young to marry any one;
because when she's two or three years older we're going to marry her to
Terry Dennison. It's been an understood thing always, always, that
Christabel was to marry Terry."

"And may I ask again, Mr. Higgins," cried Lord Dynely, still more
angrily, still more haughtily, "if you prefer Dennison to me?"

"Well--well--well, don't be angry, my dear young gentleman, don't be
angry. Bless my soul! _you_ marry Crystal! Upon my word and honor, I
never thought of such a thing--never! Prefer Dennison! well, in a
worldly point of view, you're the best match of course, but, then, we
know Terry, and he's one of the family, and he's a good lad--oh, a very
good lad! and I shouldn't be afraid to trust my little one to his
keeping."

"And you _are_ afraid to trust her to mine!" said lordly Eric, pale with
passion.

"No, no, not that either! Bless my soul, don't be so quick to jump at
conclusions. It's only this--I know him better than I do you--I trust
him entirely, and then it's been an understood thing always. Crissy has
no right to play fast and loose with Terry. Besides, there's your
cousin--no, she's not your cousin, I suppose, but it's all the same. I
mean, of course, Miss France Forrester."

"Well, sir," demands the exasperated young lord, "and what of Miss
France Forrester?"

"Why, this--you've been engaged to her, or so I have been told."

"Then, Mr. Higgins, you've been told an infernal lie," retorted Lord
Dynely, too utterly overcome with rage and exasperation to much mind
what he said; "I never was engaged to France Forrester or anyone else.
Am I to understand that you decline to accept me as the husband of your
daughter?"

"Oh, dear me," said Mr. Higgins, in a troubled tone, "I don't know what
to say, I'm sure. You've taken me so much by surprise--I always looked
upon her as belonging to Terry--"

This was growing more than Lord Dynely could bear. He rose to his feet,
exasperated beyond endurance.

"Oh, don't," said the vicar, piteously; "wait a little, my lord. What
does Christabel say? She is in love with you, I suppose?"

"She does me that honor, Mr. Higgins."

"It's a brilliant match for her, and yet," in that troubled tone, "I do
believe she would be happier married to----"

"Mr. Higgins, you insult me! I decline to listen longer. Good-morning."

"I beg your pardon, Lord Dynely. I had no intention of insulting you, I
am sure. If Crystal wishes it, and you wish it, why then--why then I
have no more to say. Only this, obtain your mother's consent. No
daughter of mine shall enter any family that considers her beneath them
or is unwilling to receive her. Obtain your mother's consent and you
shall have mine. Only"--this in a low voice and with a sorrowful shake
of the head--"I would rather it had been Terry."

Lord Dynely, quite pale with haughty surprise and anger, bowed himself
out. Opposition was crowding upon him, and he set his teeth, and swore
he would have her in spite of a thousand imbecile vicars, a thousand
match-making mothers. And Mr. Higgins sat blinking in a dazed way in the
sunshine, full of vague, apprehensive regrets.

"He's a fine young man--a handsome young man, well-born, well-bred,
titled and rich; and yet I am afraid of him. It's these brilliant young
men who break their wives' hearts as easily as I could my pipe-stem. It
will be a great match for one of my girls, but I would rather it were
Terry."

Leaning against the vine-clad porch, Lord Dynely came face to face with
Terry himself. He paused and looked at him, his blue eyes lurid with
anger and defiance.

"Well, little 'un," he said, with an insolent laugh, "you've heard the
news, I suppose? I'm to marry Crystal. Congratulate me, won't you? I've
been rather poaching on your manor, you see; but, if the dear little
girl has the bad taste to prefer me to you, what then? And all's fair in
love and war."

He turned to go before Dennison could speak, that defiant ring still in
eyes, and voice, and laugh.

"Can you tell me where I'll find her, Terry? Ah, I see her in the arbor
yonder. Don't look so seedy, dear old man--you know the adage that has
held good ever since the world began, that--

    "They shall take who have the power,
    And they shall keep who can."

His mocking laugh came back as he struck a Vesuvian, lit a cigarette,
and sauntered down the path to join Crystal.




CHAPTER XIII.

LIGHTLY WON, LIGHTLY LOST.


"Norton?"

"Yes, my lord."

"Pack my portmanteau, and hold yourself in readiness to accompany me by
the 9:50 train. I return to Devonshire."

"Yes, my lord."

"Tell them to have the trap round in fifteen minutes. Train starts in
half an hour. Can do the distance in the odd quarter."

"Yes, my lord."

"Hand me that tobacco pouch, Norton, that book of cigarette paper,
and----Come in."

All this multiplicity of directions Lord Dynely murmured in the
sleepiest, laziest of tones, his long, slender length stretched out upon
a sofa. His orders had been cut short by a tap at the door, and, in
answer to his invitation, Terry Dennison entered.

It was nine o'clock of the morning following that interview in the Vicar
of Starling's study. Only nine o'clock, and Lord Dynely, whose usual
hour of rising and calling for chocolate in bed was twelve, was up and
dressed. Not only dressed, but dressed for travelling, in most
unexceptional get up. He was, as has been said, a dandy of the first
water, as difficult to please in the fit of a coat as any young duchess
about her wedding robe. He found fault with Poole's most faultless works
of art, and the peculiar shade of necktie most becoming his complexion
had been known to painfully exercise his manly mind for hours.

As he lay now, every garment he wore, in make, and coloring, and
texture, was above reproach. To do him justice, his efforts were not in
vain, his dress always looked as though it were a part of himself.

He looked up gayly at Dennison's approach. He was in high good humor
this morning--at peace with all the world. Yesterday's irritation had
entirely passed away. Crystal's father might be exasperating to the last
degree, but Crystal herself was entirely satisfactory. And when Crystal
was his wife he would take care the Vicar of Starling and his family saw
uncommonly little of her. For Terry--well, looking at it
dispassionately, after an excellent dinner and a prime Manilla, he was
forced to admit that Terry, poor beggar! _had_ some little cause of
complaint. Something very like foul play had been done on his part,
something the codes of his order and his honor would hardly recognize.
Still, what was done, was done. Crystal he would resign to no man
living, and Dennison must make the best of it. This unexpected
opposition had but strengthened his passion; he had never been so
thoroughly in earnest before about any love affair in his life. He was
going to see his mother to-day and bring her to reason. She would prove
a little restive on his hands at first, on France's account, but he
would speedily bring her around. For France--well, he winced a little at
the thought of meeting France. To be laughed at was horrible, and he
could see France's dark, mischievous, satirical eyes, France's cynical
little laugh, hear France's sarcastic, cutting speeches. "Who was she?"
indeed. The girl must be a witch. Your sharp girl, your clever girl, was
an outrage on nature. Women were made for man's use, benefit and
pleasure; why, then, were half of them as man didn't like them? Crystal,
without two ideas in her pretty head and loving heart, was his ideal of
womankind. Yes, he would bring his mother round, fetch her down here to
see Crystal, have the marriage arranged to take place before Christmas,
all on the quiet, and spend the Winter rambling about sunny Italy. And
next season Lady Dynely would burst upon London the loveliest thing out,
a pride to her husband, an honor and credit to his taste.

All this in rambling, disconnected, self-satisfied fashion, Lord Dynely
had thought over last night. Now he lay rolling up a cigarette, with
white, practised fingers, a smile on his lips and in his handsome blue
eyes as he looked up at Mr. Dennison.

"How are you, Terry?" he said, genially. "Come in; knock those things
off the chair, and sit down. I'm in the midst of an exodus, you see--off
to Devonshire. Any commission for France or the madre?"

"I will send a note by you to Lady Dynely," Terry answered. He was
looking very grave, and rather pale, Eric could see at second glance,
his mouth set and stern under his tawny beard and mustache. "It may be
some time before I see her in person. I join my regiment this week at
Windsor."

"Ah! leave of absence expired? Be off, Norton, and order round the trap.
Only ten minutes to starting time now. Very inhospitable of me,
Terry--you don't pay morning calls at Carruthers Court often--but I
really must cut it short. Twenty-five minutes to starting time, and you
know what the drive to the station is."

"I won't detain you," Terry answers, setting his lips still harder under
his leonine beard. "I came to say a few words about Crystal."

Lord Dynely's cigarette was quite ready now. He looked up at his
companion with that slow, indolent smile of his that had so much of
latent insolence in it, struck a fuse and lit up.

"About Crystal? Let us hear it, Terry. You couldn't choose a more
interesting subject. How is the little darling this morning?"

"I won't say anything about your conduct in this matter, Lord Dynely,"
Terry began; "you know best whether it has been the conduct of a man of
honor or not. Crystal, perhaps, is not to blame."

"How magnanimous! 'Crystal is not to blame.' You have never asked her to
marry you, and because she honors me by her preference and acceptance,
she is not to blame. And don't you think--as her friend, now, Terry--she
makes a rather better match in marrying Lord Dynely than she would in
marrying Terry Dennison?"

That angry gleam was lighting again Eric's sleepy eyes, but his soft,
slow tones never rose as he spoke. He watched Terry from behind the
wreaths of scented smoke, and saw the flush that arose and overspread
his whole face.

"Yes," Terry answered, after a pause, in a slow, strange voice, "you are
right; she makes a better match in marrying Lord Dynely than in marrying
Terry Dennison. As I had never, in so many words, asked her to be my
wife, whatever may have been understood, I repeat I hold _her_ blameless
in this. She loves you--she never did me. I might have foreseen, but--I
trusted you both."

"Don't seem to see it," Lord Dynely drawled, looking at his watch. "Only
seven minutes, Mr. Dennison; very sorry to cut it short, I repeat,
but--"

"But you shall hear what I have come to say," Terry exclaimed, turning
upon him. "It is this: I know how you hold women--I know how it is you
have treated them--I know you hold it fair sport to win hearts and fling
them away. What I have come to say is--don't do it here. She has no
brother or father capable of protecting her. I will be her brother, if I
may be no more. For your mother's sake, you are the last man on earth I
would wish to raise my hand against, but this I say, this I mean--if you
trifle with Crystal as you have trifled with others, Eric, you shall
answer to me!"

He brought his clenched hand down upon the inlaid table, the veins of
his forehead swollen and dark, with the intensity of feeling within him.
Lord Dynely laughed softly, and flung his cigarette out through the open
window.

"Bon! But would it not be well to intimate as much quietly. You do it
very well, my dear boy, for an amateur; but one gets so much of that
kind of thing at the theatre, and they do it better there. You mean
well, I dare say--sentiments do you honor, and all that; but this
tremendous earnestness is in such deuced bad form--in August, of all
months, particularly."

"I have said my say," was Dennison's response. "It is part of your
creed, I know, to make a jest of all things; jest if you like, but hear
and remember. As surely as we both stand here--if there is any foul play
in this business, your life shall answer it. You shall not play with
her, fool her and leave her, as you have done with so many. You shall
not break her heart, and go unpunished of God and man. If all is not
open and above board here, you shall pay the penalty--that I swear."

"Time's up," said Eric, looking at his watch again. He replaced it,
arose to his feet, and laid his hand on Terry's shoulder, with that
winning smile of his that made his face so charming.

"Look here, Terry," he said, "I am not such a scoundrel, such a
Lovelace, such a Don Giovanni, as you try to make me out. I'm ready to
go with little Crystal to the St. George's slaughter-house, or the
little church down among the trees yonder, this very morning if I might.
You're a good fellow, and, as I said before, your sentiments do you
honor, and so on. You feel a little sore about this business,
naturally--I would myself, in your place; but all's right and on the
square here. I never was in earnest before--I am now. I'm going up for
my mother--she must come here and receive Crystal as her daughter. And
when the wedding comes off, you shall be the best man, 'an' ye will,'
Terry--that _I_ swear, since swearing seems the order of the day. And
now, dear old man, don't lecture any more; it's too hot--give you my
word it is, and I want to reserve all my strength for the journey.
Here's seltzer and sherry. Compose your feelings with that liquid
refreshment, and dash off your note to the madre while I get into my
outer garments."

There was no resisting Eric in this mood, it was not in human nature.
The charming smile, the charming voice, the affectionate, frankly
cordial manner, would have moved and melted a Medusa.

"No, Crystal was not to blame," Terry thought, with a sigh, glancing
over at their two images in the glass--it was in the nature of things
that women should fall in love at sight with Eric.

He scrawled off the note in a big, slap-dash sort of hand, each long
word filling a whole line; folded, sealed it, and gave it to Eric just
as he sprang up into the trap.

"Bye-bye, old boy," he said, gayly. "When shall I tell the madre to
expect you? Not before Christmas? Oh, nonsense! She couldn't survive
without you half the time. Well, as you won't be here when I return,
adieu and au revoir. Love to everybody."

The groom touched the horses. They sped down the avenue like the wind,
and Terry was alone.

       *       *       *       *       *

"It is very odd we don't hear from Eric--that he doesn't return. I can't
understand it at all. It is three weeks since he left; he was to be back
in one. There's something very singular about it, to say the least."

Thus petulantly Lady Dynely to Miss Forrester. They were together in the
drawing-room--her ladyship reclining upon a sofa, a book in her hand.
Miss Forrester looking charming in palest amber tissue and white roses,
lying back in a vast downy arm-chair before the open window, putting the
finishing touches to a small sketch.

"The house is like a tomb since he and Terry left. It is most
incomprehensible indeed, Eric's staying all this time. If you understand
it, France, and feel satisfied, it is more than I do. My dear child, do
put down that tiresome drawing and listen. Ever since Mr. Locksley's
advent, I believe you have given yourself wholly to art."

The color rose in Miss Forrester's clear, dark face. She looked up from
her drawing at once.

"I beg your pardon, Lady Dynely. What was it you said?"

"About Eric. It's three weeks since he went away--he was to be back in
one. And he never writes to me at least. Perhaps he treats you
better--France, what are you laughing at? Eric has written to you?"

Miss Forrester's musical, merry laugh chimed out.

"Oh, yes, _ma mre_, Eric has written to me."

"And you never told me. What does the wretched boy say?"

"I don't think he is wretched. It was a very pleasant letter. He merely
wrote to give me up."

"France!" in horror.

"Yes, mamma--he came to his senses down in Lincolnshire. Couldn't think
of forcing my inclinations--if the proposed alliance of the noble houses
of Dynely and Forrester were distasteful to me, then, at any cost to
himself and his own lacerated heart, he resigned me. It read like one of
Lord Chesterfield's masterpieces--was a model of polite and chivalric
composition."

"Good Heaven! and you--France, what did you say?"

Again Miss Forrester's laugh rang out.

"I answered in three words, mamma--terse, pithy, and to the point. I
wrote, 'Dear Eric: Who is she?' That epistle he has not done me the
honor of answering. I think I see his face when he read it."

And then France lay back and went off into a prolonged peal of
merriment.

Lady Dynely rose up on her sofa, her delicate cheeks flushing with
vexation.

"You wrote that, France--to Eric?"

"I wrote that, mamma, to Eric. I understand Eric better than you do, and
I'm not the least afraid of Eric, and you are. I could not have written
anything more to the point, if I had tried for a month. He might have
answered, though; I should like to know who my rival is this time."

"France, do you really believe--"

"That Eric has fallen in love in Lincolnshire, for the one-millionth
time? Yes, Lady Dynely, as firmly as that I sit here. Now, who do you
suppose she can be? There are no ladies in Sir Philip's household, and I
don't think he would bestow his heart's best affections upon the cook."

"Miss Forrester, if you consider this a theme for jest--"

"Please don't be dignified, mamma, and please don't call me Miss
Forrester. Don't I say, I don't believe he would. It must be one of
Terry's family--you know what I mean--one of the Council of Nine--one of
the nine Misses Higgins! It would be comical if Terry and he were
brothers-in-law after all, both married on the same day, in the same
church, in the same family, by the same pastor and papa. Quite a
pastoral idyl altogether."

Miss Forrester laughed again. Of late, since the receipt of Lord
Dynely's letter, the whole world had turned rose-color to the heiress of
Caryllynne. The portrait painting business was still going on; but not
even to herself would Miss Forrester admit that that had anything to do
with it.

Tears actually sprang to Lady Dynely's pale blue eyes.

"You are cruel, France; you don't mean to be, perhaps, but you are. I
have set my heart, my whole heart, on seeing you Eric's wife, and you
treat the matter like this. You despise him--you must, since you hold
him and his feelings so lightly and contemptuously."

France laid down her drawing, went over, knelt beside the elder lady,
and gave her a kiss.

"Now, mamma mine, look here," she said, coaxingly, "it's just this. You
love Eric, and love is blind; you don't see him as he is. I'm not in
love with him, and couldn't be if he lived in the same house for the
next hundred and fifty years, and I do see Eric as he is. He's very
handsome, and very brilliant, and very charming, but he is as unstable
as water. He has no back-bone; and if I married him, and he didn't break
my heart the first year, I should henpeck him to death, or--the divorce
court. For the rest, you'll see I'm right. Some new face caught his
fickle fancy down there, and hence that magnanimous letter. I don't
blame him, he was born so, I suppose, and can't help it. Hark!"

She started to her feet and ran to the window. A fly from the railway
was just stopping, and a young gentleman in a light gray suit in the act
of leaping out. Again France laughed.

    "'By the pricking of my thumbs,
    Something wicked this way comes,'

as Hecate says. Speak of the angels and you hear their wings. Here's
Eric now."

Eric it was. He came in as she spoke, and met her laughing, roguish
glance, that seemed to read his inmost thoughts.

"At last! Just as your mother and I were turning our thoughts to crape
and bombazine. We had given you up for lost, Eric, and here you come
upon us like a beautiful dream once more. And now, while you tell her
all the news of your sojourn, I will run away and dress for dinner."

She left the room, almost disconcerting Eric by her last saucy backward
glance. Almost, not wholly--nothing earthly ever entirely put his
lordship out of countenance.

"Really, Eric," his mother began, pettishly, "I don't see how France can
treat your desertion of her so lightly. In my days such conduct would
have been considered unpardonable."

"Ah! but we don't live in the dark ages now," Eric responded, first
ringing the bell, then sinking into France's vacated chair. "And my
desertion of France--please translate that, mother mine; I don't
understand."

"It is easily understood. You asked France to marry you before you left,
did you not?"

"I--I believe so. It is three weeks ago, and a man may naturally be
pardoned if his memory is somewhat hazy at that distance of time."

"You asked her to marry you," pursued his mother, overlooking this
persiflage, "and she told you to come for her answer in a week--did she
not?"

"My dear mother, what an admirable counsel for the prosecution you would
make. Yes, she did. Sherry and seltzer," to the footman who entered.

"And you never came," Lady Dynely said, her eyes flashing angrily.
"Eric, is that the conduct of a gentleman--a lover--a man of honor?"

"It was the conduct of a man of sense.

    "'If she be not fair for me?
    What care I how fair she be?'

It would have been an act most unbecoming a gentleman to force a lady's
inclination. So France gave me to understand; and so, upon sage second
thought, I came to see. I didn't come for the answer; I wrote for it."

"You did?"

"I did," said Eric, filling himself a glass of sherry; "I wrote,
renouncing her unless she came to me of her own free will. It was a
most honorable, manly and high-toned letter, I consider myself."

"And she said?" eagerly.

"She said," said Eric, laughing at the recollection, "'Who is she?' I
believe Miss Forrester must be a sorceress. I haven't taken the trouble
to tell her who she is, but I have taken the trouble to return here
to-day to tell you."

"Eric," his mother cried, starting to her feet, "you mean to tell me--"

"Mamma," Eric said, plaintively, "do sit down. Don't excite yourself.
Good Heaven! where's the use of everybody taking things so seriously in
this way--getting steam up to such a height for nothing? I mean to tell
you that I have met a girl I like a thousand times better than France
Forrester; that I have asked her to marry me; that I have asked her
father for his consent, and that he has given his consent, contingent
upon yours. There is the whole matter for you in a nutshell."

His mother dropped back, stunned.

"In three weeks," she murmured, in a dazed voice, "all this in three
weeks' time."

"We live in a rapid age, mother," responded the young man, coolly. "Time
is precious; why waste it? Strange it may seem, but no less strange than
true. And truth is stranger than fiction. It is an accomplished fact."

"Who is she?" Lady Dynely asked, helplessly.

"France's question over again. She is Miss Higgins."

"Higgins!"

"Yes, poor child. It's not a distinguished appellation, and a rose by
any other name does not smell as sweet. 'Christabel--twenty-first
Viscountess Dynely, _ne_ Higgins,' will not look well in Debrett.
However, there is no rose without its thorn, they tell me. She is the
Vicar of Starling's eighth daughter."

"France said so," murmured her ladyship, still in that helplessly
stunned tone.

"Did she? Then we ought to have France burned as a witch. Terry hasn't
been writing to her, has he?"

"I don't know. This girl is the sister of the girl Terry is going to
marry?"

"No, madame," said her son, coolly, filling another glass of sherry;
"not her sister, but herself."

"What!"

"What an amount of talking these things seem to involve," Eric said,
pathetically, "and how inexcusably void of comprehension people appear
to be. I repeat, my dear Lady Dynely, the young lady I intend to marry
is the young lady Mr. Dennison honored with his preference, and intended
to transform into Mrs. Dennison. Unfortunately for him, 'I came, I saw,
I conquered.' She preferred me to the big dragoon, and I left Terry
exclaiming, like Francis First at Pavia, 'All is lost but honor.'"

He paused. His mother had risen to her feet, every trace of color
leaving her face, her eyes fixed in a sort of horror upon her son.

"Eric," she said, huskily, "you tell me--you mean to tell me that you
have taken from Terry the girl he loved?"

Eric lifted his blonde eyebrows in weary resignation.

"If you put it in that sentimental way--yes, mamma."

She stood and looked at him. She tried to speak--no words came. The
baseness of this, after all Terry had resigned, the noble self-sacrifice
he had shown--was too much. He had given up his birthright to Eric, and
this was Eric's return.

"Mother," Eric cried, rising to his feet, aroused to something like
alarm by the pale horror of her face. "What is the matter now? Why do
you take Terry's affairs so much to heart? Isn't he big enough and old
enough to look after himself? Am I to blame, is she to blame, if she
prefers me to him? I expected to be taken to task on France's account,
but, gad! I certainly didn't expect to on Terry's."

"You don't know--you don't know--" she said in a broken voice.

"No, I don't know," Eric answered, with an impatient frown, "but I
should uncommonly like to. What is Dennison that I should let his
feelings stand in my way? He hadn't spoken, so he has no reason to
complain. Here is a note from him, by the way, to you."

He presented her the letter, and sat watching her while she read it,
lying back among the cushions of his chair. It was short:

     "DEAREST LADY DYNELY:--Eric has told you all by this time. If he
     loves her, and is good to her, I ask no more. If he is not, then,
     as I have told him, he shall answer to me. She loves him with all
     her innocent heart, and she is so dear to me, that I would die to
     save her a moment's pain. Let him look to it, if he tires of her,
     and tries to throw her over. For you, if I have any claim whatever
     upon you, I ask this favor of you in return. Come here, take her to
     your heart as your daughter, and I shall consider myself more than
     repaid. Ever yours,

                                                              "TERRY."

She sank back on her sofa, crushed the letter in her hand, laid her face
against the cushions, and burst into an unrestrained passion of tears.
Eric arose angrily to his feet.

"I don't understand this," he said. "What is Dennison that his interests
should be nearer to you than mine? What has he said in the letter?"

"Nothing that concerns you to see," Lady Dynely said, proudly lifting
her head. "Have you anything more to say, Eric, before I go to dress?"

"This, that it is my wish you accompany me to Lincolnshire to-morrow,
and formally receive Crystal as my betrothed wife."

He stood haughtily erect before her--a young Sultan issuing his
sovereign commands to his womankind.

"I will go," she answered briefly. "Is there anything else?"

"That you will tell France--I don't wish any chaffing on this subject;
it is a weakness of Miss Forrester's to chaff a fellow, and is very bad
form. Tell her at once, and have done with it."

The youthful autocrat must be obeyed. With a weary sigh Lady Dynely
sought out Miss Forrester, and found her quite dressed and looking very
handsome, sitting gazing with dreamy eyes at the sun setting over the
green Devon woods.

"Well, _ma mre_?" she asked.

"It is all as you said, France," my lady answered; "he fell in love in
Lincolnshire."

Miss Forrester laughed, and yet with a touch of feminine pique too.

"I knew it. I felt it in the uttermost depth of my prophetic soul--

    "'Oh, my cousin, shallow-hearted,
    Oh, my Eric, mine no more.'

Who is she? One of the nine Misses Higgins?"

"One of the nine Misses Higgins."

"And Terry and Eric will be brothers-in-law, as I said. What a capital
joke, Lady Dynely."

"No, France--not brothers-in-law. It is--"

But France started impetuously to her feet.

"Lady Dynely don't say it. Don't say it is the particular Miss Higgins
Terry wanted. Don't make me think so badly of Eric as that."

But Lady Dynely sat sorrowful and mute, and France read all the truth in
that sad face.

"It is, then. Oh, this is too bad! too bad!--too bad of her, too bad of
Eric. It reminds one of the Scripture story of the cruel man who took
his neighbor's one ewe lamb. My poor, good Terry!"

She sat down, her eyes flashing through bright tears.

"I knew him weak and fickle," she said; "I never thought him
dishonorable. For her," contemptuously, "she never could have been worth
one thought from Terry Dennison."

"I have had a letter from Terry," Lady Dynely said, sadly. "Poor fellow!
he makes no mention of coming back. He wishes me to accompany Eric to
Lincolnshire and formally countenance the engagement."

"You will go, of course?"

"I can do nothing else. And you, France--you care wholly on Terry's
account, I am sure, not at all on your own."

"Not in the least on my own," France said, holding her handsome head
high, her dark eyes still full of indignant fire. "But Terry loved this
girl, and Terry--I must say it, though I offend you, Lady Dynely--is
worth two hundred Erics. Oh, it is a shame--a shame!"

They met at dinner. Miss Forrester's greeting was of the coldest and
most constrained. Eric was his own natural, languid, charming self, at
his best. His mother's sad, pale face he would not see, France's flushed
cheeks and angry eyes he overlooked.

"It takes two to make a row," Eric thought; "you won't make a row with
me."

Once France spoke of Terry--her bright, angry eyes fixed upon his face,
her own wearing a very resolute look. Where was Terry? How had he left
him? Where was he going? When did he mean to return? Eric bore it
heroically.

    "Io pan,
    Terry! Terry!"

he laughed. "How you ring the changes on that classical name. I don't
know anything of Terry's outgoings and incomings. Am I my brother's
keeper? Your solicitude does Mr. Dennison too much honor."

She turned from him.

"He has no heart," she thought; "no sense of remorse; no feeling for any
human being but himself. I pity Miss Crystal Higgins."

The evening brought Mr. Locksley, the artist.

"So he comes still," Eric thought, watching with sleepy, half-closed
eyes his mother and the artist playing chess, while France sat at the
piano and sang softly. "I wonder--I wonder if this is the secret of your
queenly indifference, Miss Forrester, to me."

Next day Lady Dynely and her son departed. France watched Eric out of
sight with a smile, the fag end of an old ballad on her lips:

    "'Lightly won and lightly lost,
    A fair good-night to thee.'"




CHAPTER XIV.

"ONCE MORE THE GATE BEHIND ME FALLS."


In that pleasant upper room of Dynely Abbey, set apart as Mr. Locksley's
studio, and sacred wholly to that artist and his painting goods and
chattels, Mr. Locksley himself stood on the morning of the day that took
Lady Dynely and her son to Lincolnshire. He stood with folded arms and a
darkly thoughtful look, gazing at his own work. As he stood there, tall,
strong, erect, the soldierly air that told of his past calling was more
manifest than ever.

This portrait was a gem--something more than an ordinary portrait--as a
work of art, worthy of Reynolds or Romney. It had been a labor of love,
heart and soul had been in the work, and the result did what the works
of master hands seldom do, satisfied himself.

From a darkly misty background the face of France Forrester shone
vividly out, startlingly lifelike in coloring and expression. He had
caught her very look, that mischievous sparkle of eye and smile, that
brightly mutinous turn of the graceful head, as she leaned forward from
the canvas. Those darkly laughing eyes looked up at the artist now from
beneath that floating chevelure of rich, waving hair, the perfect lips
smiled upon him saucily, as though they understood his sombre thoughts
and mocked at them.

"As she would, most likely," he thought, "if she knew all. But no--that
is not France Forrester. Proud she is, proud of the name she bears, the
lineage that lies behind her and the place she holds in life, but to
laugh at any mortal pain is not in her. I can see the first flush of
haughty anger and amaze at the nameless painter's presumption--then the
soft womanly compassion for his suffering, that would make gentle and
tender her parting words. And yet I have thought that if she knew all,
the whole truth"--he paused suddenly and turned impatiently away towards
the window. "What a fool I am," he muttered, half-aloud. "She loves that
handsome dandy, of course--he is the sort of gilded fop womankind make
idols of. Could I not see it in her face last night?"

He stood staring out at my lady's carefully kept Italian garden, all
ablaze with gorgeous August flowers. It was a sultry, overcast
day--sunless, windless, gray. Early in the morning the sun had come out
with a dazzling brightness, only to vanish again and leave behind a low,
leaden sky, frowning with drifting cloud.

The great house was very still. My lord and lady had gone; Miss
Forrester's clear voice, and the light, silken rustle of her garments
were nowhere to be heard. She was not to sit to Mr. Locksley any more;
the last sitting had been given a week ago, and though he still came
daily it was but to add the few last finishing touches to his perfected
work. He dined with the two ladies at intervals, and spent occasional
evenings at the Abbey when there were no other visitors. From general
society he shrank; but he never refused my lady's cordial invitations
when she and her ward were alone. It might have been wiser if he had.
They were growing dangerously dear to him, these long tte--tte
evenings with the heiress of Caryllynne; perilously precious, this
standing beside her, turning over her music, listening to the old
ballads she loved to sing, watching the white, flying fingers, the
tender, lovely, spirited face--how dear, how precious, he was finding
out now to his cost.

He turned from the window and began pacing impatiently up and down the
long, lofty room. In spite of the wide open window the atmosphere was
almost painfully oppressive. So sultry, so airless was the leaden day,
that it was only by an effort one could breathe. The physical suffering
blended with the mental. He loosened the strip of black ribbon at his
throat, as though even that suffocated him. He was facing for the first
time the bare truth to-day. He had shut his eyes wilfully to his own
danger; the moth had seen the lighted candle, and intoxicated by its
brilliancy, had still flown headlong in. Was the moth to be pitied,
then, let him singe his wings ever so badly?

"I will go!" he said to himself, abruptly, "I will go to-morrow. Flight
is one's only safeguard in these things. If I stay, if I see any more of
her I will commit the last crowning act of folly, and tell her all. My
work is finished--there is no cause to linger. Yes, I will go--I will
start for Spain to-morrow, and explore it from the Escurial to the
Alhambra, and in painting dark-eyed Morisco maidens and bull-fights I
will forget this summer's fooling."

He looked at his watch--two o'clock. Three was his dinner hour--it would
take him the hour to walk to the village. He made his headquarters at
the "Kiddle-a-wink" in the village of Dynely, and slept in that upper
chamber wherein sixteen years before, one summer night, Alexis Dynely
lay dying.

As he passed out from the house into the sultry afternoon, he glanced up
at the sky. It was growing darker every instant--a faint, damp rain was
beginning to fall. It was doubtful, good walker though he was, if he
would outstrip the storm and reach the inn before the summer rain fell.
He looked around as he walked rapidly away, to catch a glimpse of a
gauzy dress, to hear a girl's sweet voice singing, to see a graceful
head bent over a book or a drawing. Miss Forrester, however, was nowhere
to be seen. It was as well so, perhaps.

"I will call this evening and make my adieux to both ladies," he
thought, and, pulling his hat over his eyes, strode rapidly on his way.

Yes, he would leave England on the morrow--for good and all this time.
Where was the use of coming back, where the sight of the familiar
places, the familiar faces that knew him no more, brought nothing but
pain? He would make Rome his headquarters for life, and give himself up
utterly to his art. A boy's mad folly, a woman's base deceit had wrecked
his life sixteen years ago. He had been thrust out from his mother's
home and heart with scorn and bitter words, his birthright given to a
stranger. It never occurred to him to sue for commutation of that
sentence. With the past he had nothing to do; he had deserved his fate,
he had disgraced his name; his mother had done rightly; in the future
the art he loved was all he had left him. He would start upon his second
exile to-morrow. This time there should be no looking back, this time it
should be life-long. To return to England meant returning to see her the
happy wife of Lord Dynely; to return and sue for his mother's favor,
meant to oust her from her fortune, to rake up all the old dead-and-gone
scandal, to bring the shame from which that mother, the haughtiest woman
in England, had fled sixteen years before, back to her in its first
force. No, there was nothing for him but silence and exile to the end.

"Mr. Locksley?"

The clear sweet voice made him look up from his moody reverie with a
start. And then, like a vision, France Forrester's brightly smiling
face, set in a ravishing bonnet, beamed upon him. Miss Forrester, with a
tiny groom behind her, drove a low, basket phaeton and a pair of
spanking little ponies. She drew up the ponies in dashing style, and
turned to the artist with that bewitching smile of hers.

"Are you going home, Mr. Locksley--I mean to the inn? Pray don't go just
yet. Let me offer you this vacant seat. I have something to say to you."

Was fate pursuing him when he meant to fly from danger? He took the seat
beside her, and Miss Forrester with a touch of her parasol-whip, sent
the little steppers briskly ahead.

"I am alone to-day--do you know it? And as I didn't expect even your
society, Mr. Locksley--I came away. They left by the early train this
morning."

"They--who?"

"Lady Dynely and Eric. Oh, you don't know, then--I thought perhaps she
had told you over your chessmen last evening. Yes, they started for
Lincolnshire this morning--to be gone a week at the least; and I am
queen regent, monarch of all I survey, until their return. The first use
I make of my liberty is to spend a whole long day at dear old
Caryllynne. It is not nearly so ancient nor so stately as the Abbey, but
I love it a hundred times more. Have you ever been there, Mr. Locksley?"

She looked up at him, half wondering at the dark gravity of his face.

"I have been there, Miss Forrester."

"Indeed! Strange that Mrs. Matthews, the housekeeper, told me nothing
about it."

"I have not been in the house."

"Then you have missed an artistic treat. The Caryll picture gallery is
the pride of the neighborhood; there is nothing like it in the whole
country. Mrs. Caryll, as I have told you, is really a devotee of art,
and always was. There are Cuyp's, and Wouverman's, and Sir Joshua's
portrait, and sunsets by Turner, and sunrises by Claude Lorraine, a
gallery of modern and a gallery of Venetian art. Oh, you really must see
it, and at once. I shall drive you over and play cicerone. Nothing I
like so well as showing the dear, romantic old Manor."

"You are most kind, Miss Forrester," he said, with a sort of effort,
"but it is quite impossible. I mean," seeing her look of surprise, "that
as I leave Devonshire to-morrow, I will have no time. Wandering artists
don't keep valets, so I must attend to the packing of my own
portmanteau, and that, with some letters to write, will detain me until
midnight."

He was not looking at her, else he might have seen and possibly
understood the swift, startled pallor that came over her face.

"You are going away?" she said, slowly.

"The portrait is finished, my work here is done. I owe Lady Dynely and
you, Miss Forrester, many thanks for your kind efforts to render my
sojourn agreeable."

"If Lady Dynely were here," Miss Forrester answered, her color
returning, and in her customary gay manner, "she would say the thanks
were due you, for helping to while away two poor women's long, dull
evenings. Isn't it rather a pity to go before she returns? She will
regret it extremely, I know."

"If I had known of this sudden departure, I would have made my adieux to
her ladyship last night. May I further trespass on your great kindness,
Miss Forrester, and charge you with my farewell?"

She bent her head and set her lips a little as she cut the ponies
sharply with her whip. It had come upon her almost like a blow, this
sudden revelation, but her pride and thorough training hid all sign.

"Artists are like gypsies--ever on the wing--that I know of old. And
whither do you go, Mr. Locksley? Back to the green lanes and rural quiet
and the inspiring surroundings of old Brompton."

"Farther still," he said, with a smile; "to Spain. I have roamed almost
over every quarter of the habitable globe in my forty years of life, but
Spain is still a terra incognita. I have had an intense desire ever
since I gave myself up wholly to art to make a walking tour over the
country. One should find a thousand subjects there for brush and
pencil."

"To Spain," she repeated, mechanically; "and then?"

"Well, I can hardly say. I shall devote a year at least to Spain, and
then most probably I shall return to Rome and make it my headquarters
for life."

There was dead silence. The ponies bowled swiftly along; the road that
led to the village had long been passed. Neither noticed it. The
thoughtful gravity had deepened on his face. Her hands grasped the reins
tightly, her lips were set in a certain rigid line. Her voice, when she
spoke again, had lost somewhat of its clear, vibrating ring.

"You picture a very delightful future, Mr. Locksley; I almost envy you.
Oh, no need to look incredulous--the Bohemian life is the freest,
brightest, happiest on earth, but it is not for me. What I waylaid you
for--to return to first principles--is this. I have had a letter from my
dear old guardian, Mrs. Caryll, and she begs me to send her a duplicate
of my portrait. She has one, but that was painted five years ago, and I
have been chanting the praises of your handiwork until she is seized
with a longing for a copy. You flatter me so charmingly on canvas, Mr.
Locksley, that I really should like to gratify her if it were possible
to procure her the copy. But I suppose all that is out of the question
now."

"Mrs. Caryll shall have the copy. I trust she is well. I saw her so
often in Rome," he said, half apologetically, "that I take an interest
in her naturally."

"She is as well as she is ever likely to be," France answered, rather
sadly, "and so lonely without me that I think of throwing over
everything and going back to join her. I should infinitely prefer it,
but she will not hear of it and neither will Lady Dynely. I must remain,
it seems, and run the round of Vanity Fair whether I wish it or not. I
ought not to complain--I _did_ enjoy last season. Come what will," with
a half laugh, "I have been blessed."

"Mrs. Caryll has no intention then of returning to England?"

"She will never return. It is full of bitter associations for her. It
would break her heart to see poor old Caryllynne."

"She still takes her son's wrongdoing so much to heart--she is still so
bitter against him? Pardon me, Miss Forrester, I have heard that story,
of course."

"There is no apology needed. You will wonder, perhaps when I tell you,
you remind us all of him. That is the secret of Lady Dynely's interest
in you from the first."

The clear, penetrating, hazel eyes were fixed full on his face. That
trained face never moved a muscle.

"As to being bitter against him," pursued France, "it is just the
reverse. It is remorse for her own cruelty that drives her nearly to
despair at times. For she was cruel to him, poor fellow, when he came to
her in his great trouble and shame--most cruel, most unmotherly. He came
to her in his sorrow and humiliation, and she drove him from her with
bitter scorn and anger. _That_ is the thought that blights her life,
that has preyed upon her health, that makes the thought of home horrible
to her. She drove him from her into poverty and exile here, and here she
will never return. A thousand times she has said to me, that, to look
upon his face once more, to hold him in her arms, to hear him say he
forgave her, she would give up her very life, give up all things except
her hope of Heaven."

"She has said that?"

She was too wrapped in her subject to heed his husky voice, to mark the
change that had come over his face.

"Again and again. The hope of seeing him once more is the sole hope that
keeps her alive."

"She thinks that _he_ is still living?"

"She thinks it. Every year since that time, with the exception of the
two last, he has sent her some remembrance. A line, a trinket, a flower,
a token of some sort to let her know he still exists. Those tokens have
come to her from every quarter of the globe. India, Africa, America, and
all countries of Europe. There is never an address--merely the post-mark
to denote whence they came, and his name in his own familiar hand. Ah!
if we but knew where to look for him--where to find him, I believe I
would travel the wide earth over, if at the end I could find Gordon
Caryll."

"Miss Forrester! you would do this?"

"A hundred times more than this! He was my hero, Mr. Locksley, as far
back as I can remember. There is no one, in all the world, I long so to
see."

"And yet the day that finds him robs you of a fortune."

She looked up at him indignantly, impetuous tears in her eyes, an
excited flush on either dusk cheek, more beautiful than he had ever seen
her.

"A fortune! Mr. Locksley, do you think no better of me than that? Oh!
what would a million fortunes be to the joy of seeing him once more--of
restoring him to his mother! Caryllynne is not mine--only held in trust.
One day or other, I feel, Gordon Caryll will return, and then 'the king
shall have his own again!'"

What was it she read in the face of the man looking down at her?
Something more than intense admiration surely, though she read that
there plainly enough. It brought her down from her heroics, from
cloudland to earth, from romance to her sober senses. She pulled up the
ponies sharply.

"We must go back," she said, in a constrained tone. "I have passed the
turning to the village. As you insist upon going at once to the inn, I
suppose a 'wilful man must have his way.'"

He touched the reins lightly with his hand, and checked her in the act
of turning.

"Excuse me, Miss Forrester; I have changed my mind. I resist no longer.
Since you are so kind as to be my guide, I will gladly go with you to
Caryllynne and see the picture."

She looked at him again--rather haughtily it seemed.

"You are quite sure it is your wish, Mr. Locksley, and not a matter of
politeness? You are quite sure it will not inconvenience you at all?"

"Quite sure, Miss Forrester. I wish to go."

She turned without a word and drove off. The distance was short. In a
few minutes the great Manor gates were reached, and not an instant too
soon. The summer storm, threatening all day, was upon them at last. As
they passed beneath the lofty arch of masonry, two great drops splashed
upon their faces.

They sped up the avenue, beneath the dark waving trees, at full speed. A
groom came out to take the horses. Two or three old servants, on board
wages, still kept up the place. Not an instant too soon; the rain was
beginning to fall heavily and fast, and a sharp flash of blue lightning
cut the dark air.

"Hurry! hurry!" was Miss Forrester's cry, as, laughing and breathless,
she ran up the steps. "Welcome to Caryllynne, Mr. Locksley!"

He removed his hat with a certain reverence, as though he stood in a
church; emotion on his face she could not read. She led the way into the
vast tiled hall, the black and white marble flooring covered with skins
of wild beasts.

Mrs. Mathews, the housekeeper, came forward to receive her young lady.

"We have come to see the pictures, Mrs. Mathews," Miss Forrester said,
"and, as we appear to be storm-bound for some hours, I think I must ask
you to give us some lunch. This is Mr. Locksley, and as Mr. Locksley has
not dined, pray give us something that will serve as a substitute."

Sixteen years ago Mrs. Mathews had been housekeeper here. She bowed
deferentially, her eyes fixed upon Mr. Locksley with a curiously
intense gaze. As she turned away she met her daughter, also domesticated
here.

"Who is it, mother?" the girl asked. "Who is the gentleman? Lord
Dynely--Mr. Dennison?"

"Neither," her mother answered. "His name is Mr. Locksley; and if ever I
saw one man's eyes in another man's head, he has the eyes of Mr. Gordon
Caryll."




CHAPTER XV.

"STAY."


Miss Forrester ran lightly to one of the upper rooms to remove her
bonnet and lace scarf. It was but a moment's work. Her guest awaited her
below; but she made no haste to rejoin him. She stood by one of the
windows looking down blankly at the rain-beaten garden, and trying to
realize what she had been told. He was going away--going away the first
thing to-morrow--never to return to England more.

She lingered, leaning against the window, while the rain lashed the
clear glass, and beat down the tall ferns and grasses and flowers,
heedless of how the moments passed.

All at once she awoke--as one might from a dream--broad awake. Why was
she lingering? To-morrow was still to-morrow; to-day was here and he
with it. He was her guest, in this house by her invitation; the duty of
hospitality called her to his side. The rle of love-lorn damsel was a
rle entirely out of her part in the drama of life. She would put off
all thought of what to-morrow must bring until to-morrow came.

She found Mr. Locksley loitering through the long drawing-room, looking
at the few pictures it contained, mostly family portraits, examining the
curiously carved ebony chairs and cabinets, the sandalwood caskets, the
great porcelain jars filled with roses and lavender, and touching
tenderly, as though they were sensitive things, the curious, old china,
the quaint, pretty trifles scattered everywhere, just as Mrs. Caryll's
hand had placed them last.

"Isn't it a darling old room," France said. "Everything old-fashioned,
and quaint, and queer, and faded, with no modern newness or splendor
anywhere, and yet twice as beautiful as any of the grand
recently-fitted up rooms of the Abbey. Everything is just as it was left
when she went away--this room and her room. In Gordon's too, poor
fellow, nothing has been changed."

Mr. Locksley looked at her--a curious smile on his face, a curious
expression in his eyes, half cynical, half sad.

"What an interest you seem to take in Gordon Caryll, Miss
Forrester--this black sheep of a spotless flock, this one scapegoat of
an irreproachable family. Was he worthy of it."

"Most worthy of it, I am sure. He was unfortunate, Mr. Locksley; he
ruined himself for a woman's sake. It's not a common act of folly--men
don't do that now-a-days, they're not capable of it. I think I should
like them a little better if they were. There's a sort of heroism, after
all, about a man who deliberately throws up all his prospects in life
for a woman."

"Very doubtful heroism, Miss Forrester, it seems to have been in his
case. He took a leap in the dark, and awoke to find himself in a
quagmire of disgrace, from which all his life long he can never arise.
What a pretty garden."

He joined her at one of the windows and stood looking down. The
Caryllynne gardens covered in all some half-dozen acres, utterly
neglected of late years, and running wild, a very wilderness of
moss-grown paths, tangled roses and honeysuckles, clematis and syringa,
fallen statues, empty marble basins, where fountains once had been. Over
all, to-day, the wildly sweeping rain and vivid play of summer
lightning.

"Ruin and decay everywhere," France said, with a sigh. "It is plain to
be seen no master's eye ever rests here. The gardens of Caryllynne,
years ago, Mr. Locksley, were the glory of the place. This was Mrs.
Caryll's; it has never been kept up since she went away."

"But you, Miss Forrester, I should think that--"

"Nothing shall be changed--nothing altered by me. As Gordon Caryll left,
so he shall find it when he comes back."

"You are so sure he will come back, then."

"As sure as that I stand here. I don't know why, but ever since I have
been old enough to hear about him and think about him I have known that
he will come back."

"And that return will really make you--really make his mother happy?"

"It will be new life to his mother. It will make me happier than
anything," she paused a moment and her color rose--"_almost_ happier
than anything on earth."

"Then in spite of the past Gordon Caryll ought to be a happy man. You
have never seen him--this forgotten exile in whom you take so deep an
interest?"

"I have never seen him, but I have seen his picture and have heard of
him from my earliest childhood, and whenever and wherever we meet I
shall know him."

He gave a quick start, flushed slightly and laughed. She looked up at
him in surprise.

"You will know him--you who have never seen him--you think that, Miss
Forrester?"

"I think that, Mr. Locksley."

"But he will have changed--sixteen years and more is a tolerable time.
No, Miss Forrester, you might meet him face to face, talk to him, clasp
hands, and still be as strangers. Time and trouble change men; sixteen
years knocking around the world, leading the sort of life he has led, a
free companion, a soldier of fortune, will change any man. Miss
Forrester, believe me, when you meet, if ever you do meet, you will not
know Gordon Caryll."

He paused abruptly. The dark, penetrating eyes were watching him with a
suspicious intentness he did not care to meet.

"Mr. Locksley," she said quickly, "_you_ were a soldier of fortune--you
fought in India about the same time, or so Terry Dennison has told me.
Did you ever meet Gordon Caryll?"

His face flushed again, dark red. There was an instant's silence--then
once more he laughed.

"You are a sorceress, Miss Forrester. What have I said to make you think
so?"

"You have said nothing. And yet--Mr. Locksley, if you know anything tell
me. I would give half my life to know."

"Well, then--yes," but the answer was given reluctantly, "I think I once
met Gordon Caryll."

She clasped her hands together, and stood looking at him breathlessly.

"In India?" she asked.

"In India I met a man that I judge may have been the man you mean. He
was not called Caryll--how was it he called himself? And yet I know from
certain things he told me of his history that he was the man."

Her eager eyes were fixed upon him, her eager lips were apart, the
sensitive color coming and going in her face.

"Go on," she breathed.

"I have very little to tell. He told me his story one night as we lay
beside our bivouac fire--the story of his terrible mistake--of his
terrible awakening--of his divorce from the woman who had so utterly
deceived him--of his return to England--of his sentence of outlawry and
exile. I know he had no intention of ever trying to have that sentence
revoked--he felt that he deserved it. It was simple justice; he bowed
his head and accepted his doom. He had dishonored a name never
approached by disgrace until he bore it; he had broken his father's
heart and brought him to the grave; he had driven his mother forever
from the home and the country he had resigned. What return--what earthly
redemption, could there be for him?"

"And yet there is--there is!" she broke forth vehemently. "From first to
last he was more sinned against than sinning. He loved that woman--that
wicked, wretched woman, whose memory I hate--and he would have given up
all things for love of her, had she not been the wretch she was. He came
to his mother in his trouble, and she thrust him forth. She has
repented--oh, how bitterly--and the only happiness life can hold for her
is to make atonement, to receive and forgive him again. Oh, Mr.
Locksley, if you know anything of him now, if you can aid me in finding
him, help me. Bring him back to us, to his mother, to his home, and the
whole gratitude of my life will be yours."

She stretched forth both her hands to him. He took them, very pale, and
held them in his.

"He will rob you of a noble inheritance. Have you any right to throw it
away? What will Lord Dynely say to that?"

"Lord Dynely!" She looked at him in angry surprise. "What has Lord
Dynely to do with this!"

"Much, since he has to do with you. The day that restores Gordon Caryll
to his mother, robs you of half your fortune."

"You spoke of that before, Mr. Locksley. Never speak of it again. What
are a thousand fortunes compared to the right?--to seeing her, my best
and dearest friend, happy, and him restored from wandering and exile to
his own?"

"And as Lady Dynely you can afford to be magnanimous--a fortune more or
less can concern you little."

She looked at him still haughtily, but with a heart beginning to beat
fast. If he cared nothing for her, why this bitter tone, this pale,
stern face?

"As Lady Dynely. There is some mistake here, Mr. Locksley. I don't know
what you mean."

"I beg your pardon, Miss Forrester. It is presumptuous, no doubt, in me
to allude to it, but as your engagement to Lord Dynely is no secret, I
may--"

"My engagement to Lord Dynely! Who says I am engaged to Lord Dynely? I
am nothing of the sort. Lord Dynely is engaged to a clergyman's daughter
in Lincolnshire."

He stood still, looking at her, his head in a whirl, wonder,
incredulity, blank amaze in his face.

"There was some sort of foolish compact between Mrs. Caryll and Lady
Dynely," proceeded Miss Forrester, "to marry us when we grew up--a
compact in which I have had no part--and which we never could ratify.
Eric and I have grown up as brother and sister--more than we are now we
never will or could be to each other. With the ordering of my life or
fortune, _he_, at least, has nothing to do."

There was a moment's pause--a most awkward and uncomfortable pause for
Miss Forrester. Mr. Locksley stood still, so petrified by this sudden
revelation that his very breath seemed taken away.

"I thought--I thought," he said, "you loved him."

She made no answer.

"I thought you loved him," he went on. "I thought you were engaged to
him. And last night, when he returned, I fancied I read new happiness in
your face--that his coming had brought it, and it was more than I could
bear. I had done with loving--or so I thought--done with women forever,
and yet I accepted Lady Dynely's invitation and came down here. And I
thought you were to be his wife, that all your heart was his, and I--"

"Resolved to run away to Spain, and in painting dark-eyed Spanish
donnas, forget France Forrester."

She laughed as she spoke. Her dark face was flushed, but the old, gay,
mischief-loving spirit was back. She could not look at her lover, but
she could laugh at him.

"Yes," he said, moodily, "there are some dangers from which flight is
the only safeguard. You, a wealthy heiress in your first youth--I, a man
of forty, poor, unknown, an artist whose brush brings him the bread he
eats. You cannot realize more fully than I do, how insane my love for
you is."

"Have I said it was insane?"

"France!" he cried.

She did not speak.

"France," he cried again, "can it be possible that you care for me!
Speak my fate in one word--shall it be go, or stay?"

She turned toward him, the dark eyes full of radiant light, and
answered:

"Stay!"




CHAPTER XVI.

"GORDON CARYLL."


Ten minutes have passed. All that it is necessary to say has been said;
the first delirium is over, and reason has resumed her sway.

"But what will Lady Dynely say?" Locksley asks. "How am I to go and tell
her that the impecunious artist whom she brought down here, to paint her
ward's picture, has had the presumption to fall in love with his sitter,
and declare that presumptuous passion? And what will your guardian in
Rome say--Mrs. Caryll?"

"I don't know that it matters very greatly what they say," France
laughs. "Mrs. Caryll I should like to please certainly, but since I am
not to marry Lord Dynely, I do not think her objections will be very
difficult to overcome. For Lady Dynely, I am under her care for the
present, but to control my actions in any way she has no right whatever.
I shall be of age in two years, and then"--she looks up into the eager
face above her, still laughing--"and then, so you are pleased, it won't
matter very greatly what all the world together says."

"That means you will be wife. France--am I to believe it--that one day I
may claim you as my own?"

"If you care to have me. And, meantime, I suppose you will give up your
idea of rushing out of the world, and remain here like a reasonable
mortal, and paint that duplicate picture for dear old grandmamma
Caryll."

"I will do anything you say--I will paint a thousand duplicates--I will
stay here and face an army of guardians if necessary, and be branded as
a fortune-hunter, an adventurer. For a fortune-hunter they will call me,
and believe me to be."

"Not in my presence, at least," France answers; "no one, not those I
hold nearest and dearest, shall speak ill of you and remain my friend.
And speaking of fortune, I hope you have no objection to my restoring to
Gordon Caryll, should he at any time return, all the inheritance his
mother bequeathes me. I hold it in trust; and let him appear to-morrow,
or thirty years from now, I will still return it."

Locksley laughed.

"I object! Not likely! Still--I hope he will not come!"

"Mr. Locksley!"

"I decline to answer to that name any longer to you. I have another,
though the idea does not seem to have occurred to you."

"What is it? I have seen G. Locksley at the bottom of your pictures.
What is it? George? Godfrey? Geoffry? What?"

"None of these--my name is----"

The dark, luminous eyes were lifted to his face.

"Is--well?"

"My name is Gordon."

"Gordon!" a startled expression came over her face for a moment--her
eagerly wistful eyes looked at him. But he met her gaze with his
curiously imperturbable smile.

"It is a favorite cognomen of yours, I know. There are other Gordons in
the world beside Gordon Caryll, who as I said before, I hope will never
return."

"And why?"

"Because I am mortally jealous of him. He has always been your hero, by
your own showing--is so still--and I feel in the depths of my prophetic
soul that he is destined to be my rival. If it were not for that, I
might be tempted to--" a smile and a provoking pause.

"Well, to what?" she cries with that pretty imperiousness of manner that
was one of her chief charms.

"To find him for you. It ought not to be an impossible task. I think I
could accomplish it, if I were quite sure your hero of the past would
not become your idol of the future. To bring him here with a halo of
romance enveloping him would be a dangerous experiment. I had made up
my mind to go and surrender you to Lord Dynely; to surrender you now to
Mr. Gordon Caryll--no, I am only human--I could not do that. Lord Dynely
would be a dangerous rival for any man living, with the youth and the
beauty of a Greek god; but Gordon Caryll must be old and as battered as
myself. To be ousted by him--"

He paused; she had clasped her hands, her lips were apart, her eyes were
dilated.

"Mr. Locksley--"

"Gordon--Gordon--I told you my name."

"Gordon, then--do you think--_do_ you think you can find him?"

"Caryll? Why, yes. I can try at least. I dare say he is as anxious to
return as you are to have him back. Only tell me, France, that when he
is found he will never come between you and me?"

She looks at him, an indignant flash in her eyes--an indignant flush on
her cheeks.

"Neither Gordon Caryll nor any man on earth can do that. I belong to
you. Only I want him back for his own sake, for his mother's, for mine.
He has suffered enough, been in exile long enough, for what at no time
was his fault, but his misfortune. Fetch him back, if you can--it is all
that is needed to complete my perfect happiness now."

The name of her lover does not come fluently from her lips yet.
"Gordon." It is an odd coincidence, she thinks, that he should resemble
the exiled heir of Caryllynne, and bear the same name. Some dim, vague
suspicion is beginning to creep over her, some shadow of suspicion
rather; for, as yet, the truth is too wildly unreal and improbable to be
thought of. He knows more of Gordon Caryll, she thinks, than he will
tell, and the dark eyes look up at him wistfully, searchingly. Something
in Locksley's face makes her think the subject distasteful to him. He
stands there understanding her thoroughly, and with a half-repressed
smile on his lips. They have changed places it would seem; she is no
longer the haughty, high-born heiress--he no longer the obscure,
penniless artist, and soldier of fortune. It is his to rule, hers to
obey.

"What a wretched expression of countenance, Miss Forrester," he said
laughing. "Are you regretting your hasty admission of five minutes ago?
Are you sorry already you bade me stay? If so--"

Her clasped hands tighten on his arm. Sorry she bade him stay! Her
radiant eyes answer that.

"Then it is solely on Gordon Caryll's account. Be at peace, my France,
ask no questions; we will talk of ourselves, not of him. Only be sure of
this--he shall return to his home, to his mother, and to you."

She lays her happy face against his shoulder in eloquent silence. So
they stand--looking out at the leaden summer afternoon, listening to the
soft, dark rush of the summer rain.

"How will we get back to Dynely Abbey if this lasts?" France says at
last.

"It is not going to last," Mr. Locksley answers; "it is lighting already
in the west yonder. In two hours from now, _ma belle_, you will drive me
back to the village through a perfect blaze of sunset glory. Meantime we
have the house to see, luncheon to eat, and, by the same token, I wish
your old lady would hurry. It may seem unromantic, Miss Forrester,
but----"

"You have had no dinner and are famished," laughs France. "Here comes
Mrs. Mathews now, to announce that our banquet is ready."

Mrs. Mathews enters, unutterably respectable to look at, in her stiff,
black silk, and widow's cap. Yes, luncheon is ready, and as Mrs. Mathews
makes the announcement, she gazes with strange intensity into the face
of the tall, bearded stranger. She remembers her young master as though
she had seen him but yesterday, and _how_ like this gentleman is to him
none but Mrs. Mathews can realize. His eyes, his expression, the very
trick of manner with which he shakes back his thick brown hair. Her
master returned! It cannot be, else surely Miss France must know it; and
yet--and yet--the house-keeper's eyes followed him as one fascinated.

She waits upon them. It is a very merry little repast. In spite of
love's delirium they both enjoy the creature comforts provided. Mr.
Locksley is really hungry--does the _grande passion_ ever impair a
healthy man's appetite? It does France good to see him eat. And then,
luncheon over, they saunter away to look at the rooms.

Locksley's prediction concerning the weather is already beginning to be
fulfilled. The afternoon has lighted up once more--the sun, behind its
veil of clouds still, will be out in full splendor presently; the rain
falls, but gently. The swift August storm is spent.

"We shall have a delicious drive home," France says, as they wander
through long suites of rooms, drawing-rooms, library, and
picture-gallery. "What an eventful day this has been. How little I
thought, when I started forth 'fetterless and free' this morning, that I
should wear captive chains before night; I am glad Lady Dynely is
away--she would be certain to read all my wrongdoing in my guilty face
upon my return, and to sit down and tell her in cold blood so soon, I
could not. It would seem a sort of desecration."

"You are sure you will never repent?" Locksley asks, uneasily. "You have
made but a miserable bargain, France. With your youth and beauty, your
birth and fortune, the offers you refused in the season, to end at last
with a free lance, an obscure artist, whose youth is passed, who can
give you nothing but an unknown name, and a heart that you took captive
at sight, in return. My darling, the world will tell you, and tell you
truly, you have made but a sorry bargain."

"The world will never tell it to me twice. Why do we talk of it? I love
you; with you I am happy--without you I am miserable--all is said in
that."

There is silence for a time. They look at the pictured faces of
dead-and-gone Carylls, and do not see them. At last--

"And so you take me blindfolded?" Locksley says. "You ask nothing of the
forty years that lie behind me? You give me yourself, without one
question of what my life has been? How are you to tell I am worthy of
the gift?"

She looks at him and her happy face pales suddenly. All at once there
returns to her the memory of Eric's words, the memory of that hinted at,
hidden away, "obnoxious wife."

"I have a story to tell you," he says in answer to that startled look;
"you shall hear it before we quit this house--you shall know all my life
as I know it myself. How many more rooms have we to see? Whose is this?"

"It is--it was--Gordon Caryll's."

They pause on the threshold. The sun has come from behind the clouds and
fills the room with its slanting, amber glory. The rain has entirely
ceased--a rainbow spans the arch of blue sky they can see from the tall
window.

"Nothing has been altered," France says softly; "everything is as he
left it. Books, pictures, pipes, whips, guns,--all!"

They enter. What a strange expression Locksley's face wears, the girl
thinks, as he looks around. She does not understand, and yet those
vague, shapeless suspicions are floating in her mind. They touch
nothing--they stand together and look, and the yellow sunshine gilds
all. The books in their cases, the handsomely framed proof engravings of
dogs and horses, the pipes of all nations, the sidearms of all
countries--dirks, cimetars, swords, bowie knives, the gaudy robe de
chambre, now faded and dim, thrown over a chair back--all as Gordon
Caryll had left them.

They quit this room presently and enter the next. It was Mrs. Caryll's
sitting-room, in those long gone days, the room in which, as the
twilight of another August day fell, she stood and banished her only son
from her side forever.

The bright yellow sunshine floods all things here too; the chair in
which she used to sit, the work-table and work-box upon it, her piano in
the corner, the velvet draperied oratory beyond; and over the chimney,
one picture with its face turned to the wall. "It is a portrait of
Gordon Caryll," France says, almost in a whisper, for something in her
companion's face startles her strangely; "she placed it so on that last
cruel evening when she drove him from her. So it has hung since."

"Turn it," Locksley commands briefly, and she obeys. She stands upon a
chair and turns the pictured face to the light. It is covered with dust.
Spiders have woven their webs across it. She glances around for a cloth,
finds one, wipes dust and cobwebs together off, and the boyish face of
the last Squire of Caryllynne smiles back upon her in the sunshine.

"Was he not handsome?" she asks, regretfully. "Poor Gordon! brave and
generous and beloved of all--to think he should pay for one mistake by
life-long exile and loneliness."

She looks down at her lover. She pauses suddenly; a wild expression
comes over her face. She springs from her perch and glances from the
pictured face of the boy to the living face of the man gazing gravely
up.

She sees at last--neither years, nor bronze, nor beard can deceive her
longer. She gives a little cry, and stands breathless, her hands
clasped, her color coming and going.

He sees he is known, and turns to her with the very smile the pictured
face wears.

"My France," he says, "you know at last that I am Gordon Caryll."




CHAPTER XVII.

THROUGH THE SUNSET.


So! The truth is out at last--the desire of her life is gained. Gordon
Caryll stands there before her--her lover!

She hardly knows whether she is glad or sorry, she hardly knows even
whether she is surprised. She has turned quite white, and stands looking
at him in a silence she is unable to break.

Gordon Caryll laughs--the most genially amused laugh she has heard yet.

"If I had said, 'I am his Satanic Majesty, horns, hoofs and all,' you
could hardly look more petrified, more wildly incredulous. My dear
child, do come out of that trance of horror and say something."

He takes both her hands, and looks smilingly down into her pale,
startled face.

"Look at me, France--look at that picture. _Don't_ you see the
resemblance? Surely you don't doubt what I have said?"

"Doubt you! Oh, Gordon! _what_ a surprise this is. And yet--I don't
know--I don't really know--'As in a glass, darkly,' I believe I must
have seen it from the first."

"And you are sorry or glad--which? You told me that the desire of your
heart was Gordon Caryll's return. Gordon Caryll stands before you--your
heart's desire is gained, and you look at me with the blankest face I
ever saw you wear. Are you sorry, then, after all?"

"Sorry! Ah, you know better than that. Why," with a laugh, "the romance
of my life was that Gordon Caryll would return, and that I should be the
one to console him for the bitter past--that I should one day be his
wife. And to think--that my dream should come true. Yet still--"

"Well--yet still."

"Yet still--more or less it is a disappointment. I had hoped to be the
good genius of your life in all things--that my fortune would be your
stepping stone to fame. Now I can do nothing; I am not going to marry a
struggling artist and help him win his laurel crown. The heir of
Caryllynne need owe nothing to his wife. My romance of love in a
cottage, while you won a name among the immortals, is at an end."

"Not so. After all it will be due to you the same--I take Caryllynne
from you. And I would never have taken off my mask, and shown myself to
the world as I am, but for you."

"Not even for your mother's sake?"

"Not even for my mother's sake. How, but for you would I ever have known
that my mother desired it, that I was forgiven, that she longed to take
me back? It makes me happier than I can say now that I know it; but of
myself I never would have discovered it. What was done, was done; I
meant to have walked on the way I had chosen to the end. But you
appeared, and lo! all things changed."

"It is like a fairy tale," she said; "I _cannot_ realize it. Oh! what
will Lady Dynely, what will Eric, what will your mother, what will all
the world say?"

"I don't think it will surprise Lady Dynely very greatly," Caryll
answered coolly. "She recognized me the first day--I saw it in her
face--only she took pains to convince herself it was an impossibility. I
had been gone so long it was impossible I could ever come back; that was
how she reasoned. For Eric, well it would be dead against every rule of
his creed to be surprised at anything. He will open those sleepy blue
eyes of his for a second or two, and lift his blonde eyebrows to the
roots of his hair."

"Very likely," says France; "he has not far to lift them."

"I wonder you did not marry him, France. He's a handsome fellow, and a
gallant. As unlike a battered old soldier such as I am as--as the Apollo
is unlike the Farnese Hercules."

"And yet there are many people, of undoubted taste too, who prefer the
Hercules as the true type of manliness to the Apollo. Eric is very
handsome--absurdly handsome for a man; the wife of a demi-god must have
rather a trying time of it. I don't care, besides, to share a heart that
some scores of women, dark and light, have shared before me. 'All or
none,' is the motto of the Forresters. Are you sure, sir, I may claim
all in the present case?"

"All--every infinitesimal atom. I offer you a heart that for the past
seventeen years has had no lodger. Before that," he drew a deep breath
and looked at her. "You know that story."

"Yes, I know it--Lady Dynely told me. She is dead?"

"Would I ever have spoken to you else? Yes, she is dead."

He dropped her hands suddenly and walked over to the window. Beyond the
green hill tops the sun was dropping into the sea--the whole western sky
was aflush. The sparkling drops, glittering like diamonds on roses and
verbenas, were all that remained of the past storm.

She stood where he had left her, looking after him wistfully, with
something that was almost a contraction of the heart.

"Nineteen years have passed," she thought, "since they parted. Does the
very memory of that time still affect him like this?"

She remembered the story Lady Dynely had told her--of how passionately
he had loved that most worthless wife. Could any man love like that
twice in a lifetime. The wine of life had been given to that dead
actress--the lees were left for her.

"France!"

She was by his side in an instant--ashamed of that unworthy spasm of
jealousy of the dead.

"Am I to take this day as emblematic of my life? Have the rain and the
darkness passed forever, and will the end be in brightness such as this?
It has been a hard life sometimes, a bitter life often, a lonely life
always, but the darkest record you know. The story of the woman I
married and who was my ruin."

She glanced up with that new-born shyness of hers into his overcast face
in silence.

"Let me tell you all to-day, and make an end of it," he said. "It is
something I hate to speak of--hate with all my soul to think of. You
know the story--Lady Dynely has told you, you say. You know then how I
was divorced, how our united names rang the changes through England and
Canada; how the name of Caryll, never dishonored before, was dragged
through the mire of a divorce court. You know how I came to England and
saw my mother and Lucia. Saw Lady Dynely, told her all, and bade her
good-by upon that other August night nineteen years ago--the very night
her husband died. All that you know?"

"Yes, I know," she said. "Go on."

"I had left my old regiment and exchanged into one ordered to India, and
in India the next twelve years were spent. It was hot and exciting work
at first; little time to think, little time to regret. The horrible
mutiny, of which you have heard, with whose bloody and sickening details
all England was ringing then, when women and children were butchered in
cold blood, was at its height. Who could stop and think of private woes
when the whole British heart was wrung with agony. It was the best
discipline that could possibly have befallen me--for my life I was
reckless, the sooner a Sepoy bullet ended a dishonored existence the
better. But the flying Sepoy bullet laid low better men and passed me. I
carried a sort of charmed life--I passed through skirmish after
skirmish, hot work too with the fierce black devils, and never received
a scratch. At last our slaughtered countrymen were avenged and the
mutiny was over.

"Of the life that followed in India I have little to say. It was the
usual dull routine of drill and parade; of Calcutta and Bombay--of hill
parties, of up-country excursions, of jackal shooting, and pig sticking.
Of a sudden I grew tired of it all. India became insupportable, a sort
of homesickness took possession of me. I must see England. I must see my
mother once more. I sold out and came home, and came here, and heard
all about my people. My mother had quitted Caryllynne forever, and taken
up her abode at Rome. She had adopted General Forrester's only child as
her daughter and heiress, Miss Forrester being then at a Parisian
convent. Lady Dynely was a widow--she too was abroad--she too had
adopted an orphan lad, who was now with her son and heir at Eton. That
was what I learned from the village gossips, and then once more I left
England.

"This time I went to America. There I remained, rambling aimlessly about
the country, trying to decide what to do with my future life. Suddenly
it occurred to me to ascertain for certain what had become of the woman
who had been my wife. Was she living or dead? I never thought of her at
all when I could avoid it, but that thought had often obtruded. Now was
the time to know for certain.

"I went to Canada--Quebec, to the place where I had seen her last. The
lonely house on the Heights, which she had chosen as her home, stood
silent and gray, desolate and uninhabited. I returned to the town,
hunted up the man who had been its owner thirteen years before, who was
its owner still.

"'Could he tell me anything of the lady--Mrs. Gordon--who had been his
tenant in that past time?' He pushed up his spectacles and looked at me
curiously.

"'Humph!' he said, 'that is a very long time ago. Mrs. Gordon! Do I
remember her? I should think so, indeed--no one who ever saw _that_ face
was likely to forget it in a hurry. Perhaps--would I mind telling
him?--perhaps I was Mr. Gordon--the gentleman whom he had the honor of
speaking to once before?'

"'It can matter nothing to you,' I answered, 'who I am. I am interested
in Mrs. Gordon's ultimate fate. Can you tell me where she is now?'

"He laughed in a grim sort of way.

"'Well, no--seeing there is no telegraphic communication between this
world and the next. Mrs. Gordon is dead.'

"'Dead!' Whether we hate or love, the abrupt announcement of the death
of anyone we have intimately known must ever come upon us with
something of a shock. "'Dead!' then I was free! I drew a long breath--a
breath of great relief. 'Will you tell me how she died?' I asked after a
moment.

"'It was a very shocking thing--oh; a very shocking thing, indeed. She
was killed.'

"'Killed.'

"'I don't wonder you look startled. Yes, poor soul--killed in a railway
accident. Wait a moment--I have the paper somewhere--I generally cut out
such things and keep them.'

"He ransacked in his desk--produced a Montreal paper of four years
before, and pointed out a paragraph. It gave a detailed account of a
very terrible collision on the Grand Trunk Railway, of the loss of life,
the list of the wounded and killed. Among the killed I read the name of
Mrs. Gordon.

"'Is that all your proof?' I said to him. 'That is nothing. Gordon is a
common name.'

"'Ah, but look here.'

"He turned over the paper and pointed to another place. 'The Mrs. Gordon
whose name is recorded in another column as among the number killed, was
a lady with a history of more than ordinary interest. She was of a
beauty most remarkable, by profession an actress of more than ordinary
talent. Her history must still be familiar to our readers, as the
heroine of the celebrated divorce case of nine years ago. A young
English officer of family and wealth, named Gordon Caryll,' etc., etc.
In short, the whole miserable story was given of the actress, her
accomplice, and her dupe. 'Since that time,' the record went on to say,
'she had returned to the stage and was rising rapidly to fame and
fortune when this most melancholy disaster ended her brilliant career.'

"I sat with the paper before me. And this was the end--the end of all
that beauty that, among all the women I had met since or before, I had
never seen equalled. The voice of Mr. Barteaux aroused me.

"'Every year from the time she left, she returned for a flying visit of
a few days, to settle accounts with Joan Kennedy and to see the child. A
fine little girl now, and her mother's living image.'

"I stared at him in blank amaze. 'The child!' I said. 'What child?'

"He pushed up his spectacles once more, and scrutinized me over them.

"'Then you are not Mr. Gordon, after all? Mr. Gordon Caryll, of course;
I mean the gentleman who married her, and who divorced her. I give you
my word, I thought you were.'

"'It can't matter to you who I am, my good fellow. Only I want to know
to what child you allude.'

"'To Mrs. Gordon's child, to be sure. Born in the House that Wouldn't
Let, a few weeks after your last visit here, and left by Mrs. Gordon in
charge of Joan Kennedy, when she went away.'

"A child! I had never known of that--never thought of that. I sat for a
moment quite still trying to realize what I had heard.

"'She named the little one Gordon, after its papa, I suppose. She
couldn't take it with her very well, so she left it with Joan when she
went, and had ever since paid liberally for its support. Once a year,
too, she came to visit it, and it was returning from that ill-starred
visit this year she had met her terrible end.'

"I rose up, startled beyond all telling by this new revelation.

"'Where does this Joan Kennedy live?' I inquired. 'I must see her at
once, if possible.'

"'It is not possible,' returned Mr. Barteaux. 'I know nothing of Joan
Kennedy now. Three years ago she married a man named McGregor, and left
with him for the Western States. She took Mrs. Gordon's child with her.
She could not have been more attached to it had it been her own. Since
then I have seen or heard nothing of her.'

"'Can I not obtain her address?'

"'Not here, sir--no one knows where they went. McGregor had no
particular location in view. You might advertise in New York and
Western papers, and see what will come of it.'

"I followed his advice--I did advertise, again and again, but with no
result. I wanted intensely to find that child. I travelled West, I
inquired everywhere--in vain. Then the civil war broke out, and I joined
the army. Two more years passed, and then in one of the great battles I
received a wound that was so nearly mortal as to incapacitate me from
further fighting. The moment I could quit hospital, I returned to
Europe--went at once to Rome, and took to painting, as the one last
ambition and love of my life. In Rome I saw you, saw my mother many
times, but I held aloof. I only knew I had driven her from England, that
my dishonor clung to her like a garment. I had no thought but if I came
before her I should be spurned once more. That I did not choose to bear.
Then my restless familiar again took possession of me--I came back to
England. I painted that picture, sent it to the Academy, and there, one
sunny May afternoon, met my fate and you."

"And that picture," France said, speaking as he paused and looked fondly
down upon her, "'How the Night Fell,' was your parting with _her_, was
it not?"

"It was."

"Poor soul! Ah, Gordon! she was to be pitied, after all. She loved you
and lost you. I can think of no bitterer fate."

"Don't waste your pity, France. Of love, as you understand it, she knew
nothing. Good heavens! what an utterly vile and cold-blooded plot it
was! and what an easy dupe she and that scoundrelly old major found in
me! Don't let us talk about it. I have told you--so let it end. I never
want to speak of her while I live again. Only--I should have liked to
find that child."

They stand silently, side by side. The sun has set, but the sky is all
rosy, and purple and golden, with the glory it has left. France pulls
out her watch.

"Seven. How the hours have flown. I should have started long ago--it
will be quite dark before I reach the Abbey now. Do order round the
phaeton, Gordon, whilst I run up and put on my hat."

She quits his side and runs lightly up the polished oaken stairs,
singing as she goes for very gladness of heart. She has always loved the
dear old house; she will love it now more than ever, since in it she has
been so supremely happy.

She adjusts the coquettish little bonnet and returns.

The lord of the manor, stately and tall, a very man of men, France
thinks, awaits her and assists her in. He gathers up the reins as one
who has the right, and drives her at a spanking pace away from
Caryllynne. The broad yellow moon is lifting her luminous face over the
pearl and silver sky, the rose and amethyst splendor is fading tenderly
out of the west. She sits beside him in silence, too happy to talk much.
All her life dreams are realized. Her artist lover is hers--and he and
Gordon Caryll are one. She has been wooed and won as romantically as the
most romantic girl could desire. His voice breaks the spell.

"I start for Rome to-morrow."

"To-morrow!" She looks up for an instant. "Gordon! so soon?"

"She has waited sixteen years," he answers. "Can I go too speedily? Yet
if you--"

"Oh, no, no! It is her right, it is your duty. You must go. Only you
will not stay very long?"

The nightingales are singing in the woods of Caryllynne--they alone may
hear his answer.

He drives her to the Abbey gates--he will not enter. He will walk back
to the village, he tells her; he needs a walk and a smoke, to calm his
mind after all this.

"Shall I see you to-morrow before you go?" she asks.

"I think not--no, I will leave by the first train--it would be too
early. Our parting will be to-night. Tell Lady Dynely; and let wonder be
over before I return."

Then under the black shadows of the chestnut trees they clasp hands and
say farewell.




CHAPTER XVIII.

KILLING THE FATTED CALF.


The golden summer days are over. September is at an end--the sharp crack
of the fowling-pieces no longer rings the long days through, as the
doomed partridges wheel in the sun. The ides of October are here--the
steel-gray mornings, the frost-bound nights, the stripped branches of
the tossing trees, the shrill wild winds. It is October, the last week
of the month, the last hour of the day; and the night which the white
chill moon is heralding even now, is to be a grand field night at Dynely
Abbey. For my lady gives a ball, the first for many a year; half the
county are invited, and all invited are coming. Has not the news
spread;--has not Gordon Caryll, the black sheep of the flock, the "hero
of a hundred battles," whose life reads, so far as they know it, like a
chapter from some old romance, returned to claim his own, and are they
not to behold him to-night? It has been something more than the ordinary
nine days' wonder, this story that has been told of him; these good
people in a circuit of twenty miles have talked of nothing it would seem
since it came out first. They can recall him well, scores of them--a
tall, fair-haired, handsome lad, a dashing young trooper before he left
for that transatlantic world, where he met the siren who has been his
doom. It all comes back to them, the first dark whisperings of that
terrible scandal that broke his haughty father's heart, that drove his
mother into exile forever. Then the full details of the story--the
public shame, the divorce, the return, the decree of banishment. They
had all thought him dead, and France Forrester the heiress of
Caryllynne, and lo! he starts up all in a moment, a distinguished and
popular artist, and the accepted lover of his mother's heiress. He has
been in Rome all these weeks, visiting that mother herself; publicly
and joyfully recognized and received by her, and to-night he returns,
and they will see him face to face at Lady Dynely's.

At Lady Dynely's! Why, in the days that are gone, when he was but the
merest lad, there was an old story that he was his cousin's lover. She
has not seen him yet in his new character--it will be curious to watch
them, the friends and neighbors maliciously think. And France Forrester
is to marry him. Is the actress wife dead then, they wonder? They had
thought Miss Forrester and Lord Dynely were engaged, and now it comes
out that Lord Dynely is to marry a clergyman's daughter in
Lincolnshire--a Miss Higgins. Miss Higgins is to be present also
to-night--she and her father and one of her sisters are expected this
evening. Certainly a treat is in store for them--not one who is invited
will miss coming.

As the last light of day fades out and the white starry moonlight floods
earth and sky, Lady Dynely comes out of her dressing-room. In the
clustering wax-lights she looks pale, pale even for her who is always
pale, but fair and youthful and elegant in her trailing violet velvet,
her priceless point lace, and the Dynely diamonds flashing on slender
throat and wrists and hands. The very first of her guests will not
arrive for a full hour yet, but she has dressed early, and stands quite
alone, glad to be alone for a little before it all begins. Up in her
room France is dressing--in theirs Crystal and Crystal's sister are
dressing likewise--Eric is in his--Terry in his. For Terry has broken
through his resolution of not putting in an appearance before Christmas,
and run down for a night. Lady Dynely has ordained it so, and Terry
knows no will of his own where she wills otherwise. The first sharp,
cruel pain of loss is not even yet obliterated--all his life long,
though he lived to be a hundred, no other woman will ever be to him
quite what little Crystal Higgins has been. In no way is she at all
remarkable; pretty, but scores he sees every day are as pretty; not
brilliant, not wise, not clever, and yet--she will stand alone among all
womanhood forever and ever to Terry Dennison. He has not met her yet.
She reached the Abbey early in the afternoon, he not half an hour
since, and he looks forward to the meeting with nervous dread that half
unmans him. She is Eric's now--well, so that Eric is loyal, so that Eric
makes her life happy, he can forgive even him. On New Year's eve she is
to be Eric's wife, and he is bidden to the wedding. He has had an
interview with Lady Dynely--of necessity very brief. All his generosity,
all Eric's disloyalty is in her mind as she comes forward to meet him,
and takes his hand in hers and holds it tight, and looks with pale
imploring eyes up in his face--a face that is just a thought graver and
more worn than she ever saw it before.

"It is all right," he says, simply, knowing by intuition what she would
say. "So that Eric makes her happy, all the rest is nothing. I don't
blame him much--her not at all. Who would look at me twice beside Eric?"

And then he kisses her cheek gently and goes up-stairs to his own old
room, and meets France on the upper landing on her way to dress.

"Dear old Terry," Miss Forrester says, giving him both hands; "it is
like water in the desert to see you again. Go where I will, meet whom I
may, there is but one Terry Dennison."

"And but one Mr. Locksley--no, I beg his pardon, but one Gordon Caryll.
So your hero has come at last, France. All your life you have been
worshipping him from afar off, now your demi-god has plumped from the
clouds at your feet. You have thrown over Eric and are going to marry
Caryll."

"Thrown over Eric!" Miss Forrester retorts, forgetting grammar in
indignation. "I like that way of putting it, when everybody knows he
threw over _me_. A case of love at sight, wasn't it, Terry? and, amazing
to relate, it seems to last. I suppose you know she's here."

"Yes, I know. Do you like her, France? But you do, of course."

"I don't perceive the of course. She is pretty enough--oh, yes, I don't
deny her pretty Grecian features and pink and pearl complexion; but,
like her--that's another thing. Little idiot!"

"And why little idiot, Miss Forrester?"

"She jilted you, Terry, for him--a man for a manikin. She led you on,
and would have married you if he had not come; and, at the first sight
of his ambrosial curls and little amber mustache and girl's complexion,
she goes down at his lordly feet. Bah! I've no patience with her."

"But you'll be good to her, France, all the same. Poor little Crystal!
It looks a very brilliant match, and yet----"

"And yet she would be ten thousand-fold happier as your wife. The woman
who is lifted to the honor and bliss of being my Lord Viscount Dynely's
bride, bids fair, once the honeymoon is ended, to win the martyr's
crown. The handsomest peer in the realm, the most notorious male flirt
in Europe, is hardly likely to be held long by the pretty, innocent,
baby face of Crystal Higgins. It was awfully good of you, Terry, to come
at all."

"Her ladyship wished it," is Terry's quiet answer, as though all was
said in that, and Miss Forrester shrugs her imperial shoulders.

"As the queen wills! you should have been born of the Dynely blood and
race; the motto of the house suits you--'_Loyal au mort._' You would be
faithful to the death, Terry, I think. It certainly does not suit
Eric--it is not in him to be faithful to any human being."

"I wish he heard you, France."

"He has heard it a thousand times. By the bye, Terry, it occurs to me to
ask exactly what relation are you to Eric?"

The clustering wax lights shed their lustre full upon Terry's face, and,
as she asks the heedless, impulsive question, France sees that face turn
dark red from brow to chin. The swift abruptness of the simple demand
strikes him mute. The truth he may not tell--may never tell, and
falsehoods never come trippingly from Terry's tongue. Miss Forrester
lays her slim ringed hand on the young man's arm.

"I beg your pardon," she says, hastily. "I know, of course--Eric's
distant cousin; but, as you stood there, on my word you looked
sufficiently like him to be his brother. I have often noticed a vague
resemblance before, in height and bearing; but never, I think, so
markedly as now."

The dark, painful flush deepens on Dennison's face. He looks at her with
startled eyes. She is wonderfully acute in her surmises. Has some
inkling of the truth come to her? But no--the smiling face that meets
his is supremely unconscious. She pulls out her watch.

"Past seven. I should have been under the hands of Pauline an hour ago.
Ta, ta, Terry; run away, my dear boy, and make yourself beautiful
forever."

She trips past and vanishes in one of the upper rooms; and Terry,
drawing a long breath, goes more slowly to his.

"No," he thinks; "it was but a random shot that struck home. I am Eric's
distant cousin. She suspects nothing."

But Mr. Dennison was mistaken. It had been a random shot; but, as the
red light of guilt flamed out in the dragoon's face, the first suspicion
of the truth that had ever come to her broke upon her then. She had
heard that vague story of distant kinship--she had heard, years ago,
that Lady Dynely had made a pilgrimage to some wild region of western
Ireland and brought Terry back, a little uncouth waif and stray; she
knew how zealously she had cared for him since--she knew of Terry's
boundless love and gratitude, in which to her there was always something
almost pathetic; but she never dreamed there might be more on the cards
than met the eyes. "Sufficiently like Eric to be his brother." She had
heard what manner of man the late Right Honorable Viscount Dynely had
been--Eric's light-headed fickleness was as hereditary as the title. Who
was to say that Eric and Terry were not brothers, after all? Yes, that
was the secret of Lady Dynely's compassionate care--of Terry's humble,
patient devotion.

"Poor fellow!" she thought, "it is hard lines on him. The name, the
rank, the wealth, the love--all to the younger; to the elder brother
nothing. Ah, well! as poor Stephen Blackpool says, 'Life's aw a
muddle.'"

She sits musing for a while under Pauline's practised hands, then her
thoughts shift away from Terry Dennison to Gordon Caryll. He will be
here to-night, and under the silk, and flowers, and laces her heart
gives a glad leap. Since that happy evening under the moonlit limes and
chestnuts they have not met; to-night he will be with her once more.
How strange, how romantically strange it all has been, she thinks. From
earliest childhood she has heard of him, set him up as a hero, and loved
him in her girlish, romantic way, without any hope of ever seeing him.
And now he is back--her own, forever.

"Hurry, Pauline--hurry, my child," she says in French.

It wants but an hour until his arrival, and she must be the first to
meet him. Already wheels are crashing over the gravel, and the guests
are beginning to arrive.

There is a tap at the door.

"Please, Miss Forrester, may I come in?" says a timid little voice.

France breaks away from Pauline's hands, opens the door, and sees
Crystal standing there dressed and ready to go down and trembling with
nervous dread of the ordeal. She has been but little accustomed to
society--until the coming of Lord Dynely and her fairy fortune she has
been looked upon as a baby at home. To-night she must do credit to
Eric's taste--Eric, the most critical and sensitive of mankind--must
face half a county and be criticised, and see Eric's mortification in
his face if her country manners fail. She loves him so wholly, that the
thought of his displeasure is as death.

Two great, imploring, blue eyes look up to Miss Forrester, shy, humble,
deprecating--the gaze of a very child. She is afraid of this stately,
dark-eyed heiress, but not half a quarter as she is of Eric.

"Please, Miss Forrester, may I come in and wait until you are dressed,
and go down with you?" she falters.

France takes her suddenly in her arms, all her prejudices fading away at
sight of that pathetic, baby face, puts back the feathery, flaxen hair,
and kisses her.

"You pretty little baby," she says; "come in and let me look at you. My
dear, I had no idea you were half so lovely."

"Oh, Miss Forrester"--Crystal's pearly face flushes rose-pink with
pleasure--"do you think I am pretty? Do you think I will do? Do you
think Eric will not be ashamed of me?"

"Ashamed of you? Well, Eric is tolerably fastidious, tolerably hard to
please, but I think even he would find it difficult not to be fully
satisfied to-night. No, little vanity, I won't flatter you, I won't tell
you what I think of your looks. Only you are more like the queen of the
fairies, or a 'lily in green covert hiding,' than any ordinary mortal I
ever saw. Pauline, what do you think?"

Thereupon Pauline bursts forth into a vehement French outpouring of
praise and admiration, that brings smiles, and dimples, and blushes to
Crystal's shy face. "Like a lily in green covert hiding?" Yes, the
poetic simile is a true one. With her filmy, gossamer dress of palest
green, her pale pearl ornaments, her paler floating, flaxen hair, her
pure, pale face, her large, shy eyes, she looks like some water spirit,
like Undine herself--a lake lily in its green array.

Ten minutes more complete Miss Forrester's toilet. Dark, and stately,
and tall, entirely self-possessed and at her ease, a greater contrast
than the two could scarcely be found as they descend to the already
filled rooms. A blue, silvery silk sweeps behind her, silver lilies
trail in the rich darkness of her hair, looped with diamond stars, a
cluster of fragrant white blossoms in her hand. So Miss Forrester and
Miss Higgins dawned upon the view of the best county society.

Eric is watching for his lady love--Eric, looking extremely patrician,
and elegant, and his eyes light as they fall upon his betrothed. Truth
to tell, he has been dreading this ordeal almost more than she has; his
vanity is so thin-skinned--so much stronger than any other passion of
his life. What if she does not do him credit to-night? What--good
Heaven!--what if she appears looking rustic, or countryfied, or dressed
in bad taste? He has been turning alternately hot and cold for the last
fifteen minutes as he stands here, when he sees her enter the rooms on
France Forrester's arm. And then doubting and fearing are at an end. His
heart gives an exultant leap, his eyes light, a smile comes over his
lips, he draws a long breath of intense, unutterable relief. Rustic,
countryfied, dressed in bad taste! Why, she is lovelier than he has ever
seen her, and her dress is the very perfection of good taste. Yes, the
country parson's daughter will do credit to Lord Dynely to-night.

He advances and takes possession of her, stooping his fair, tall head to
whisper something that lights up Crystal's soft, sweet face. The worst
is over now, she feels she can face all England, all the United Kingdom,
in a body. Eric, the sovereign lord and ruler of her life, is deigned to
be pleased with his lowly handmaiden.

Miss Forrester is surrounded immediately, she is besieged with petitions
for the next waltz, but she declines. It is her intention not to dance
at all before supper, and she takes Terry Dennison's arm, and clings to
him as her rock of refuge.

"I'm engaged to you for the next waltz, Terry," she says imperiously;
"not to dance it though--you understand?"

"I understand," Terry gravely responds. "We are waiting for the hero of
the piece to come on, and we want to be disengaged to meet him, looking
cool and lovely, and our very best. That is a very delicious thing in
the way of dresses, Miss Forrester--misty, silvery blue, a sort of
moonlight color that is vastly becoming to your dark complexion. Being
in love agrees with you, I think--I never saw you looking so well as
to-night. Give you my word there's nothing half so handsome in the
house."

Miss Forrester bows her acknowledgment.

"Monseigneur, 'you do me proud.' The first compliment I ever received
from Mr. Dennison in my life! But you haven't seen all in the house--you
haven't seen Miss Crystal Higgins. Look yonder."

Terry looks. Sooner or later he knows it must come, and he has schooled
himself to meet her. His sunburnt face pales a little as he sees her
leaning on Eric's arm, lovely as a dream, happy as it is ever given
mortals here below to be. He pulls his tawny whiskers and tries to
laugh.

"Bliss is a wonderful beautifier--knocks all Madame Rachel's cosmetics
into thin air. Handsome couple, aren't they?--look as though they were
made for each other, and all that. Shall we go up and pay our respects?"

"You may--I have none to pay; and Lady Dynely beckons--I think she wants
you, Terry. When you've spoken to Crystal, you had better join her."

So Terry goes up, and Crystal lifts those imploring, innocent eyes of
hers in humble appeal to his face, and the look goes through Terry's
heart of hearts. Ah no; she is not to be blamed. She has done as eleven
girls out of twelve would have done--there are not many like France
Forrester to look upon Eric, with undazzled eyes. He pays his respects
and makes his greetings in frank, brotherly fashion enough, and requests
the honor of a waltz. The turquoise eyes glance timidly up at Eric as if
seeking his permission. For, earlier in the evening, Eric has issued his
princely ukase that his affianced wife shall waltz with no one but
himself.

"I don't choose to see my promised wife gyrating round the room with
every fellow in the county who chooses to ask her. Remember, Crystal,
you dance round dances with me only!"

She is very willing. If he had ordered her to sit in the remotest corner
of the room until morning dawned, she would have obeyed willingly,
gladly, so that his sultanship deigned but once or twice to smile upon
her in her exile. But Terry Dennison, Terry, who is almost like a
brother, will not Eric make an exception in his favor? Eric, who is to
have so much--Terry, who has lost all. But Eric's blonde brows knit
themselves ever so slightly; to Terry he is not disposed to yield an
inch.

"Crystal only waltzes with me, Terry. Scratch your initials down for a
quadrille, old boy, if you do that sort of idiotic performance, and do
it quickly, for our waltz begins."

Terry does that sort of idiotic performance, scratches his initials
accordingly, then seeks out Lady Dynely. Lady Dynely merely wants him to
make himself useful all night, in finding partners for unpartnerable
elderly girls, and lead the forlorn hope himself.

"It is what Eric should do," her ladyship says, "but Eric won't do it.
If he dances at all, it will be with the youngest and prettiest girls
present, so, Terry, I look to you."

"'England expects every man to do his duty,'" laughs France Forrester,
passing him, and giving him a perfumed blow of her fan. "My poor Terry!
Some men are born martyrs. Some have martyrdom thrust upon them; I begin
to think you are one of the latter."

But Mr. Dennison pulls on his kid gloves a little tighter, braces
himself for the battle, and looks about him undismayed. Old or young,
handsome or ugly, it is all the same to Terry. Since Crystal is not for
him, all the rest doesn't much matter. The most venerable virgin
present, the scraggiest matron, are the same to him for this night as
the Venus herself.

"Let's see," he says; "there's Belinda Higgins--I'll lead off with her.
After that I'll take 'em as they come--one down, t'other come on."

Mr. Dennison goes and with polite empressement asks the eldest Miss
Higgins but one for that waltz. Eric and Crystal float past them as
perfect in their waltzing as in their beauty. Eric whispers something in
her pretty pink ear that makes her look at Terry and her bony elderly
sister and laugh. It is the unkindest cut of all, but Terry bears it
manfully. Let them laugh. He is pleasing Lady Dynely, he is making, for
the time, poor old Belinda happy--he asks no more.

Miss Forrester is not dancing. She is growing impatient. Her restless
eyes wander ceaselessly to the door. He should have been here a full
hour ago; the train was due at eight, it is ten now. Can anything have
happened? Can he not be coming, after all? He telegraphed this morning
he would be with them by the eight o'clock train. Why does he not come?

"Will she dance?" Dance! No, she could as soon think of flying. She gets
away from Prince Di Venturini, who is present, and who dances like a
little yellow Italian angel; makes her way from the warm, brilliantly
lit, brilliantly filled saloon, to the cloak room, throws a heavy wrap
over her shining ball-dress, and goes out into the chill October night.

A wild autumnal gale is blowing, the trees rock in the stormy moonlight
that floods earth and sky and distant sea. She goes down the portico
steps and stands alone on the white, cold terrace. The stone urns gleam
like silver; Ajax in marble stands with his face uplifted to the purple
sky, defying the lightning. Above the roaring of the gale she can hear
the deeper, hoarser roar of the far-off sea, above all the sweet ringing
of the German waltz music within. The old stone Abbey is lit to the
roof--countless figures flit past the windows like shapes in a magic
lantern. She stands here alone, wondering why he does not come.
Suddenly, over the soughing of the wind, the tossing of the trees, there
comes a sound that makes her heart spring, her eyes light--the rapid
roll of the wheels up the drive. The carriage was sent two good hours
ago to meet him; all is well, he is here at last.

She leans eagerly forward. Yes! the tall form of her lover leaps out and
approaches. He sees the solitary figure standing on the terrace--the
pale, expectant, eager face upon which the white moon shines. He is by
her side in a moment, and France's perfect hour has come.

"What! waiting for me?" he says; "getting your death out in the cold.
Come into the house immediately. How long have you been here?"

"Not long--ten minutes or more. I must confess to feeling just a trifle
uneasy. You are two hours behind time."

"And you took it for granted that perishing in a ball-dress on the
terrace would fetch me the sooner," growls Mr. Caryll, but he takes her
happy face between both his hands, and his frown changes to a smile.
"Yes, we're two hours behind time; got shunted off--misplaced switch,
something wrong with the road--I was asleep at the time, and knew
nothing about it until we were under way again. High jinks going on
within, aren't there? Awful bore to go and dress and face them all."

"You would rather face a regiment of Sepoys, I dare say; but a brave man
never shows the white feather, be the danger what it may. Will you go to
your room at once?--the dear old _atelier_ where my portrait was
painted--"

"And the unhappy painter hopelessly done for."

"Has been fitted up for your use," goes on Miss Forrester. "So run up at
once, get into regulation costume, and come down to be looked at."

"Is there a _very_ great crush, France?" Caryll asks, in dismay.

"Three hundred, if one; and as Miss Higgins has been stared at until
they can stare no more, you will be the cynosure of all; every eye will
be concentrated upon you."

She laughs at his blank face, slips her hand through his arm, and leads
him into the house.

"How is grandmamma?" she asks; "and what did she say? Tell me
everything."

"Tell you everything! They talk of the labor of Hercules; but to tell
you everything 'grandmamma' has said in the past seven weeks would be a
Herculean task indeed. She says this, for one thing--that you are to
join her in Rome next week, or a week after, at latest."

"What! with you?"

"Forbid it, Mrs. Grundy. Oh, no! we don't outrage the proprieties in
that fashion. With Lady Dynely, of course. She will chaperone you--will
she not?"

"Are you going back, Gordon?"

"Naturally. We part no more. My poor mother! It is something to be loved
as she loves me."

"She knew you at once?"

"At once--the moment we met. She neither fainted nor screamed--it is a
wonderful old lady!--she just came forward and took me in her arms, and
not one word was spoken on either side. Outwardly all those years have
changed her little less than they have done me; she is very feeble. She
would have come with me if she had been able. Not being able, and
longing to see you, she bids me bring you and Lady Dynely when I go
back. Will you come, France?"

"Will I not?" she answers, lifting her happy eyes. "But my stay must be
a short one. Eric's wedding takes place on New Year's Eve, and I am to
be first bridesmaid."

"Bridesmaid for the last time, then," says Gordon Caryll. "Pity we can't
make it a double wedding. I don't see the sense of waiting, myself; and
I promise you this, I don't mean to wait long. When will it be, France?
January?"

"No, sir; not January, not February, not March, nor April; not a day
sooner than May. And then, in the height of the season, with flying
colors, if you insist upon it, we will march to St. George's, and you
shall be made miserable for life. No, it's of no use putting on that
imploring face; when my decree is issued, all the eloquence of men fails
to move me. Go up to your room--you have not a moment to spare, you are
shamefully late as it is."

She releases herself, and hastens back to the ball-room. Near the
entrance she meets Eric on his way for ices and orangeade, and in her
face he reads the truth.

"'Lo! the conquering hero comes!' and Miss Forrester's eyes light up
their lamps, and Miss Forrester's cheeks fling out the flag of welcome.
I had about given up the hero of the night as a laggard in love; but
better late than never."

Half an hour passes, and then into their midst, so quietly that but few
find it out for the first hour, the "hero of the night" enters. He makes
his way to Lady Dynely's side, and she who has met him daily but seven
short weeks before, greets him as though she had never looked upon him
since that August night by the lake.

"It is like a fairy tale," she says; "I cannot realize it. I thought you
dead, in spite of all of France's hopes, in spite of the yearly gifts to
your mother. And to think that we have you with us once more. But you
are greatly, wonderfully changed."

"Well, yes," Caryll answers; "a dozen years' campaigning is apt to
change a man. Still, I think you half-recognized me that day at the
Academy."

"You see, I could not realize it," her ladyship answers, leaning on his
arm, and making her way slowly through the rooms. "The voice was the
same, and the eyes; but I had made up my mind so entirely never to look
upon you more, that I wouldn't admit the likeness. Still, it drew me to
you. It was for the sake of that likeness I wished you so much to
accompany us here."

"I came to my destiny!" he laughed. "But for that journey, France and I
would never have arrived at an understanding, and I should have gone
down to my grave 'Gordon Locksley.'"

"France will make you a charming wife, Gordon. I congratulate you, with
all my heart. After all, you have not done so badly with your life. You
have won a name for yourself, with your sword, and with your brush, and
you have won France Forrester's whole heart--such a great, generous,
loyal heart! I had thought to see her Eric's wife; but you know how that
has ended."

"Happily for me--yes; happily for him, I trust, also. Is that little
green-and-white fairy on his arm, with the apple-blossom face, the bride
elect? What a model for Undine! Present me, Lucia, will you?"

Mr. Caryll is presented and begins the business of the night by dancing
with the bride elect. As France has laughingly predicted, people stare,
in a well-bred way, until even curiosity is satiated. The hero and
heroine of the evening, meandering through the Lancers, are the observed
of all observers. France dances, too, with her lover, with Eric, with
Terry, whom she rescues from an elderly-young lady, with unpleasantly
prominent shoulder blades, and unpleasantly prominent rouged cheeks.
With the Prince Di Venturini last of all before supper. As this dance
ends Mr. Caryll advances to claim his property, and the Neapolitan
prince renews his acquaintance and presents his congratulations.

"Madame Felicia has been deploring her loss in your gain, monsieur," the
prince says; "she fears now she will never receive what you promised
her--the companion picture to 'How the Night Fell.'"

"Did I promise her?" says Caryll, carelessly. "Then let madame be at
rest. If it affords her any pleasure she shall yet have the companion
picture. What shall we call it? 'How the Morning Broke?'"

He looks at France with a smile that says the dawn has come with her.

"A charming title," cries Di Venturini. "May I ask has monsieur ever
seen Madame Felicia?"

"Never," Caryll responds. "She was playing in London last season, I am
aware, and I naturally heard a great deal about her, but I never had
curiosity enough to go and see her. I was very busy, and I had long
lost my relish for theatre-going."

His face clouds a little. Di Venturini looks at him with small, keen,
glittering eyes.

"Pardon, monsieur, but I inferred from what I have heard Madame Felicia
say, that she certainly knew you."

"Impossible, prince. To my knowledge she never met me in her life."

"Ah! my mistake then, of course. She will be charmed to learn that she
is to have the companion picture."

He bows himself off, and France and Caryll go into supper together. That
pleasant banquet is prolonged. When it is over, a little knot of Miss
Forrester's admirers press around and plead with her to sing. She yields
and is led to the piano, still on Gordon Caryll's arm.

"Sing 'Ay Chiquita,'" some one says.

She points to a pile of music, and Mr. Caryll tosses it over to find the
song. He places it upon the piano, and Frances' slim fingers float over
the keys in tender prelude. He is replacing the loose sheets as he found
them, when all at once he stops still--stops with one of the pieces in
his hand and stares at it as though it were a ghost. He is gazing at the
outer page, not at the music, with a face from which every trace of
color slowly fades out. The song begins--Miss Forrester's sweet,
vibrating voice fills the room. He never hears, he never heeds. Every
feeling of sight and sense, and hearing, seems concentrated in that
fixed rapt gaze on what he holds.

It is a waltz. "The Felicia Waltz," composed by Prince Di Venturini, and
dedicated to Madame Felicia. Below the title is a colored vignette of
madame herself, leaning smilingly forward--_en buste_. It is a beautiful
face--even this highly-colored lithograph cannot make it otherwise--and
eyes and lips flash back their brilliant smile on all beholders.

So long he stands there holding it, that the song ends. There is a
murmur of pleasure and thanks from the group about the piano, but the
singer turns from all for a smile of praise from him. His face is
averted, he is bending over a piece of music, and does not speak a word.

"What is it you have there, Gordon?" she asks, gayly, "that holds you so
enchained?"

"Monsieur honors my poor composition with his closest attention," says
the voice of Di Venturini; "or is it madame's fair face that holds him
spellbound?"

Their words arouse him. He lays down the sheet and turns away, but his
face still keeps that startled pallor under its bronze.

"A fair face indeed, prince, and one I have surely seen before, though
the name is new to me. In America, or Canada probably--madame has been
there?"

He listens for the reply with an intensity of eagerness his outer
quietude does not betray. Prince Di Venturini looks at him with quick,
suspicious eyes.

"But no, monsieur--Madame Felicia has never crossed the Atlantic in her
life."

"You are sure, prince?"

"I am very sure, monsieur. I have it from madame's own lips. She detests
everything transatlantic."

"I have been mistaken then," Caryll says, calmly; "I really thought I
had seen that pictured face before. It is merely one of those chance
resemblances we meet sometimes. I once knew a person who looked very
like that."

He offers his arm to France and leads her away. No more is said on the
subject, but through all the hours that follow the pale gravity never
quite leaves his face. And once, when all are dancing and the music-room
is entirely deserted, he goes back, tears off the page that has the
pictured face of Madame Felicia, and conceals it quietly in one of his
pockets for further inspection.

The chill October morning is gray in the east when the last carriage
rolls away from the great gates of Dynely Abbey, and the spent household
betake themselves to their rest. But for full an hour after, Gordon
Caryll sits in his room, that picture spread out before him, gazing
steadfastly down at the gaudily-colored portrait of the French actress
as though it held him by some sorceress' spell.

"Her eyes, her smile, her every feature," he says under his breath. "Can
there be two women on this earth so much alike? Years older, but the
same. Had she a sister, or--has the grave given up its dead? Has she
come back from Hades itself to torment me?"




CHAPTER XIX.

HOW THE OLD YEAR ENDED.


It is the night of the 31st of December, and the vicarage of Starling is
bright with lights, gay with people, merry with music, and festive with
feasting. The eve of the old year is going merrily out in "babble and
revel and wine." And to-morrow is pretty Crystal's wedding-day.

They are all down--Lord Dynely, his mother, France, Terry. They have
been here two days now, and to-night a score of guests, intimate friends
all, crowd the quaint, low-ceilinged, comfortable old vicarage to
repletion, to welcome in right merrily the blithe new year.

Gordon Caryll is not here--he is the only absentee of the family. He is
back with his mother under the genial Roman sky. She is not able to
travel, not able to bear the rigor of an English winter, and she grows
more and more exigeante in her old age, and cannot bear her restored
idol out of her sight. So he is with her greatly to Miss Forrester's
regret.

She and Lady Dynely have but just returned from Italy for this wedding;
they go back for the winter when it is over. The first week in May she
and Gordon are to be married, and, after their bridal tour, settle down
at Caryllynne. Already the workmen are busy there, beautifying and
putting it in order. Eric and his wife will take up their abode at the
Abbey, his mother going to her jointure house, Dynely Hall. That is the
programme.

The vicarage rooms are full--the gayety is at its height. A set of
"Sixteen Lancers" are pounding away over the drawing-room carpet to the
piping of the eldest Miss Higgins, who adorns the piano stool. They will
support nature presently on lemonade and negus. Eric leads off the
revellers; looking happy and handsome, and in the wildest of wild high
spirits. It is a difficult thing to believe, but on this eve of his
wedding he is as deeply in love as he was the day of the memorable
picnic. It may possibly not last--but it is intoxicatingly delicious
while it does last, and little Crystal is ready enough to take the
glitter for purest gold. For Crystal--well, she is at her brightest and
fairest, too, to-night. There are hot red roses in her cheeks, a
streaming light in her blue eyes; her sweet, foolish little laugh rings
out in her joyous excitement. Even now, on the eve of her wedding, she
can hardly realize her own bliss. Surely it is the most wonderful freak
of fortune that gives this darling of the gods to be her very own
to-morrow morning at eleven o'clock. It is eleven at night now--twelve
more hours, and earth and all its powers will never be able to separate
her from him more. She lifts her little peach-bloom face to her partner
and talks and laughs. As a rule, she has but little to say, but she can
always talk to Terry, and never half so gayly as to-night. Terry is her
partner, and, whatever he may feel, no one outwardly is happier there.

Miss Forrester is not dancing. She is flitting restlessly about, here
and there and everywhere. The rooms are garlanded with holly, and ivy,
and mistletoe; glorious fires are burning, and in the dining-room a long
table is set out, to which the gay company will sit down presently to
toast the New Year in. No room is vacant; sentimental couples sit
spooning in spoony little nooks, go where you will. The vicar and Lady
Dynely, a portly dowager and Sir John Shepperton, the nearest magnate,
sit at whist. So the moments fly.

Presently France steals away, and leaving the hot, bright rooms, goes
out into the porch. It is a dazzling winter night; the earth lies all
white, and sparkling and frozen, under the glittering stars; the
leafless trees stand motionless, their black branches sharply traced
against the steel blue sky. Far off the village bells are ringing--bells
that ring out the dying year. One hour more and the new year will have
dawned. It has been a very happy year to the girl who stands there, in
her white dress and perfumy roses, and the new year is destined to be
happier still. Her heart is full of a great unspoken thankfulness, and
ascends to the Giver of all good gifts in eloquent, wordless prayer.

Presently the dancing ends, and, flushed and warm, the dancers disperse
themselves about, eating ices and drinking lemonade. Terry leads Crystal
to a cool nook, and Eric, his fair face flushed, joins them, and flings
himself on a sofa by his bride's side.

"Lend me your fan, Crystal," he says. "Look upon me and behold an
utterly exhausted, an utterly used-up man. Did you see my partner--did
you see that stall-fed young woman who has been victimizing me for the
past half hour? It was the most flagrant case of cruelty to animals to
ask that girl to dance. I saw her eying you, Dennison--there's your
chance, old fellow, to take fortune at its flood. She's two hundred and
fifty avoirdupois, and she has seven thousand a year, so I am told, to
her fortune. Go in and win, Terry; you'll never have such another
chance."

The young lady alluded to had sunk into a capacious arm-chair at the
other end of the room, her face crimson, her fleshy chest heaving, her
fan waving after her late exertions.

"You see her," says Eric, "the sylph in green silk and pink roses,
quivering like a whole cascade of port wine jelly."

"Yes," answers Terry, looking at the shapeless florid mass of adipose
good-nature, with sleepy, half-closed eyes; "only, you see, it requires
courage to marry so much, and I don't set up for a hero. How she does
palpitate--reminds one of the words of the poet: 'A lovely being
scarcely formed or molded--a'--France, what's the rest?"

"'A peony with its reddest leaves yet folded,'" supplements France,
gravely. "Terry, what will you do through life without me by your side
to tell you what you mean? I am sent here to order you gentlemen to take
somebody down to supper. I suppose you're booked, Eric, for the
green-silk young lady?"

"Not if I know it," Eric answers, drawing Crystal's hand within his arm.
"A lifetime of bliss, such as I look forward to, would hardly compensate
for another hour like the last."

"Then you take her, Terry," commands France, and Terry obeys, as usual,
while Sir John offers his arm to Miss Forrester, and Lady Dynely takes
the place of honor by the vicar's side.

It is a very long table, and the party is not so large, even counting
the nine daughters of the house, but that they all find seats. For it is
not a "stand-up feed," as Terry says, where every chicken wing and every
glass of wine is fought for _ outrance_. And then the battle
begins--the fire of knives and forks and plates, the sharp shooting of
champagne corks, the chatter and clatter of laughter and talk, of toasts
and compliments. The boar's head that has grinned as the centrepiece
with a lemon in its jaws, is sliced away, raised pies are lowered,
wonderful pyramids of amber and crimson jellies are slashed into
shapeless masses, and lobster salads vanish into thin air.

The moments fly--the last hour of the old year is fast drawing to its
close.

"Ten minutes to twelve," cries Lord Dynely. "Here's to the jolly New
Year. Let us drink his health in the good old German way, to the one we
love best."

He filled his glass, looked at Crystal, and touched his to hers.

"The happiest of all happy New Years to you," he says, "and I am the
first to wish it."

And then a chorus of voices arises. "Happy New Year!" cry all, and each
turns to somebody else. Lady Dynely stretches forth her hand to her son
with a look of fondest love; Terry Dennison leans over to her with the
old wistful light in his eyes. The vicar and his wife exchange
affectionate glances. France turns to no one; her thoughts are over the
sea, with one absent.

Then they all rise, and as by one accord throng to the windows to see
the New Year dawn. White and clear the stars look down on the snow-white
earth; it is still, calm, beautiful. From the village the joy-bells
clash forth; the old year is dead--the new begun.

"Le roi est mort!--vive le roi!" exclaims Lord Dynely. "May all good
wishes go with him."

The piano stands by his side. He strikes the keys with a bold, skilled
touch, and his rich tenor voice rings spiritedly out:

    "He frothed his bumpers to the brim--
    A jollier year we shall not see;
    And though his eyes are waxing dim,
    And though his foes speak ill of him,
    He was a friend to me!
      Every one for his own.
    The night is starry and cold, my friend;
    And the New Year, blithe and bold, my friend,
      Comes up to take his own."

"My pale, my pensive France," he says, "why that mournful look? The old
year has been a good friend to you also, has he not? As Tennyson says,
'He brought you a friend and a true, true love.'"

"'And the new year will take them away,'" finishes Lady Dynely, with a
smile. "An ominous quotation, Eric. Let us hope for better things. And
now, my little bride elect, as you are to be up betimes to-morrow, I
propose that you go to bed at once, else that pretty peach face of yours
will be yellow as any orange at the altar to-morrow."

So it is over, and the new year is with them. The guests not stopping at
the vicarage say good-night and go, the others disperse to their rooms.
There is a farewell which no one sees between the happy pair, then Eric
saunters out into the white starry night to smoke one last bachelor
cigar, and Crystal is kissed by mamma and Lady Dynely and France, and
takes her candle and goes off to her room singing softly to herself as
she goes:

    "You must wake and call me early, call me early, mother dear,
    For to-morrow will be the happiest day of all the glad New Year."

The morning comes, sparkling and glimmering with frosty sunlight, and
the vicarage is all bustle and gay confusion, a very Babel of tongues.
Nine; coffee--ten--dressing; eleven--carriages at the door, everybody
down stairs, and _the_ supreme hour has come.

Up in her "maiden bower," the bride stands robed for the altar. The hot
red roses of last night have died out, she is paler than the white silk
she wears. The chilly nuptial flowers are on her head, the filmy veil
shrouds her like a mist. Silent, lovely, she stands in the midst of her
maids, not crying, not speaking, with a great awe of the new life that
is beginning overlying all else.

She is led down, she enters the carriage, and is whirled away through
the jubilant New Year's morning to the church. There the bridegroom
awaits her. The church is full; villagers, friends, guests, charity
children, all assembled to see the vicar's prettiest daughter married.
There is a mighty rustling of silks and moires as the ladies of the
family flock in, a flutter of pink and snowy gauze as the six
bride-maids take their places. France is at their head, and divides the
admiration of the hour with the bride herself. As usual the bridegroom
dwindles into insignificance--the one epoch in the life of man when he
sinks his lordly supremacy and is, comparatively speaking, of no
account. Terry Dennison is there, looking pale, and cold, and miserable,
but who thinks of noticing _him_? Only France's compassionate eyes look
at him once as he stands, silent and unlike himself, with an infinite
pity in their dark depths.

It begins--dead silence falls. The low murmured responses sound
strangely audible in that hush. It is over--all draw one long breath of
relief, and a flutter and a murmur go through the silent congregation.
They enter the vestry--the register is signed--they are back in the
carriages, whirling away to the wedding breakfast, and bridegroom and
bride are together, and the Right Honorable Lord Viscount Dynely is
"Benedick, the Married Man."

After that the hours fly like minutes. They are back at the vicarage.
They are seated at breakfast, champagne corks fly, toasts are drunk,
speeches made and responded to. The bridegroom's handsome face is
flushed, his blue eyes glitter, all his feigned languor and affected
boredom, for the time being, utterly at an end. By his side his bride
sits, smiling, blushing, dimpling, most divinely fair. Opposite, is
Terry Dennison, trying heroically at light talk and laughter, that he
may not be the one death's head at the feast, but his face keeping all
the time its mute, cold misery.

The breakfast is over. The newly-made Viscountess hurries away to change
her dress. They will travel by the afternoon express to London--thence
to Folkestone. The honeymoon will be spent in Brittany--the first week
of February will find them in Paris, there to remain until the London
season is fairly at its height.

White satin splendor, nuptial blossoms, virginal veil, are changed for a
travelling suit of pearl gray, that fits the trim little figure to a
charm. From beneath the coquettish round hat and gossamer veil, the
sweet childish face looks sweeter and more childlike than ever. In the
hall below the impatient bridegroom stands--at the door the carriage
waits. She is trembling with nervous excitement from head to foot; she
is but a frail, sensitive little creature at best. Her mother is weeping
audibly--her father coughs, takes off his glasses and wipes them
incessantly. France Forrester stands with dark, tender eyes, and in her
heart a vague feeling of pity, which she cannot define, for this fragile
looking child-wife.

"Oh, Eric!" she says, laying her hand on his shoulder and looking up at
him with those dim, dusk eyes, "be good to her! take care of her, love
her always. You hold that child's very life in your hands; if you ever
neglect her, if you ever grow cold to her, as surely as we both stand
here, she will break her heart."

He laughs--nothing irritates him this thrice happy day, and _this_ is
really a most stupendous joke.

"_I_ neglect her! I cold to her! When I am either, I pray Heaven I may
die!"

She shrank back, something in his words, something in his look,
frightened her.

"He will neglect her, he will turn cold," some inward, prophetic voice
whispered; "and the doom he has invoked may fall."

One other heard those impassioned words--Dennison. He paused a moment,
caught Eric's hand, and wrung it hard.

"Look to yourself, Dynely," he said, in a hoarse, hurried voice, "if you
ever forget that vow!"

Then he ran rapidly up the stairs and disappeared.

Lord Dynely looked after him, shrugged his shoulders slightly, and
laughed again.

"Poor old Terry!" he said, "'the ruling passion strong in death.' As
much in love with Lady Dynely as he ever was with Crystal Higgins. Ah,
well! time blunts these things. Let us hope he will have lived down his
ill-starred madness before we meet again."

The bride's door opens--a flock of pink and white, and sky blue nymphs
flutter out. The bride for an instant remains alone. Indifferent to what
may be thought, may be said, Dennison enters, goes up to the new-made
peeress, takes both her hands in his, with a clasp whose cruelty is
unconscious, and looks down with gloomy eyes into the startled,
milk-white loveliness of her face.

"Crystal," he says, his voice hoarse and hurried still, "I must say one
word to you before we part. If, in the time that is coming, you are ever
in trouble, if you are ever in need of a friend, will you send for me?
All our lives we have been as brother and sister--by the memory of that
bond between us let me be the one to come to you if you ever need a
friend."

She looked up at him. To the day of his death that look haunted him--so
radiantly, so unutterably happy.

"_I_ in trouble! _I_ in need of a friend!" she repeated in a slow,
rapturous sort of whisper. "_I_, Eric's wife! Ah, Terry! dear old
fellow, dear old brother, that can never be. I am the happiest, happiest
creature on all God's earth!"

"Yet, promise," he reiterates, in the same gloomy tone. "Who can foresee
the future? _If_ trouble ever comes--mind, I don't say that it ever
will--I pray it never may--but if it comes and you need help, you will
send for me? Promise me this."

"It is treason to Eric to admit any such supposition," she laughs; "I
_don't_ admit it, but if it will please you, Terry," the radiant
brilliance of her eyes softens to pity as she looks at him, "I promise.
It is a promise you will never be called upon to redeem--remember that.
No trouble can ever touch me. Eric loves me and has made me his wife.
Let go, Terry--he is calling."

He releases her hands, she holds out one again, with that tender,
compassionate glance.

"Good-by, Terry," she says, softly. "If I have ever given you pain I am
sorry. Forgive me before I go."

"There is nothing to forgive," he answers, huskily. "No man on earth
could help loving you, and all women seem to love _him_. Good-by, little
Crystal, and God in heaven bless you!"

It is their parting. She flies down the stairs to where her impatient
possessor stands.

"I--I was saying good-by to Terry," she falters, trembling already, even
at that shadow of a frown on his god-like brow. But at sight of her the
shadow changes to brightest sunshine.

"Good-by! good-by! good-by!" echoes and echoes on every hand.

The bride is kissed, and passed round to be kissed again, and there is
crying and confusion generally, and in the midst of it Miss Forrester's
wicked black eyes are laughing at Eric, who stands inwardly fuming at
all this "confounded scene," mortally jealous, and longing to tear his
bride from them all and make an end of the howling.

It does end at last; he hands her into the carriage, springs after,
slams the door, the driver cracks his whip, and they whirl off from the
door. A shower of slippers are hurled after them--then the carriage
turns an angle and disappears, and all is over.

       *       *       *       *       *

The guests begin to disperse, some at once, some not until next day. A
gloomy silence falls over the lately noisy, merry house--it is almost as
though there had been a death. Reaction after so much excitement sets
in, everybody, more or less, looks miserable. Terry Dennison is the
first to go--he rejoins his regiment. Lady Dynely, dowager, and Miss
Forrester are the next, they return for the winter to Rome; and Miss
Forrester makes no secret of her eagerness to be off.

The next day dawns, sleety, rainy, chill, a very winter day. The last
guest has left the vicarage by the noon train, and the depression and
dismalness is more dismal than ever. The eight remaining Misses Higgins
wander, cheerless and miserable of aspect, through the lately-filled
rooms, setting to rights and taking up the dull thread of their dull
gray lives once more.

When night falls, shrouded in sleety rain, the dark old vicarage stands
sombre and forlorn, despite the presence of those eight bright
creatures, under the inky, dripping, Lincolnshire sky.




PART THIRD.




CHAPTER I.

HOW THE NEW YEAR BEGAN.


A raw and rainy February evening--the first week of the month. Over
London a murky, smoke-colored sky hung, dripping wet, miserable tears
over the muddy, smoke-colored city. The famous "pea-soup atmosphere" was
at its very pea-soupiest--figures flitted to and fro through the murk,
like damp spectres, shrouded in great-coats and umbrellas. The street
lamps, that had been lit all day, winked and flickered, yellow and
dismal specks in the fog.

The streets of the city were filled with noisy, jostling life--the
streets of the West End were silent and deserted. The deadest of all
dead seasons had come; the great black houses were hermetically sealed;
the denizens of Belgravia and Mayfair had flitted far away; even the
brilliant, gaslit emporiums of Regent Street were empty and deserted
this foggy February evening.

At the bay-window of one of the great club houses of St. James Street, a
man stood smoking a cigar and staring moodily out at the dark and dismal
twilight. The wet flag-stones glimmered in the pallid flicker of the
street lamps, few and far between; drenched and draggled pedestrians
went by. Now and then a hansom tore past, waking the gruesome echoes.
These things were all the man at the bay-window had to stare at; but for
the last hour he had stood there motionless, his moody eyes fixed upon
the rain-beaten glass. The solitary watcher, stranded upon Western
London at this most inhospitable season, was Terry Dennison. Terry
Dennison who yesterday had obtained a fortnight's leave, and who, this
dreary February evening, found himself in the old familiar quarters--why
or wherefore, he hardly knew. There were numbers of country
houses--bright, hospitable houses, to which he held standing
welcome--houses where a "southerly wind and a cloudy sky proclaimed it a
hunting morning," but he had thrown over all, and was here as utterly
alone, it seemed to him, as though he had been wrecked on a deserted
island.

The five weeks that had passed since Christabel Higgins' wedding day had
made but slight outward alteration in Terry. He was looking haggard, and
jaded,--the honest blue eyes kept the old kindly, genial glance for all
things, but they look out with wistful weariness to-night. Where are
they this wretched, February evening, he wonders--where is _she_, what
is she doing?

Are she and Eric doing the honeymoon still in the leafless groves of
Brittany, or have they gone to Rome to join the Gordon Caryll party,
where Lady Dynely and Miss Forrester also are? An unutterable longing to
see Crystal once more fills him--it is folly, he knows, something worse
than folly, perhaps, but before these two weeks of freedom expire he
must stand face to face with Viscount Dynely's bride.

The last gleam of the dark daylight is fading entirely out as a hansom
whirls up to the door and deposits its one passenger. The glare of the
lamp falls full upon him, and Dennison recognizes an old acquaintance.
As the man enters he turns and holds out his hand.

"What! _you_, Dennison? My dear fellow, happy to meet you. I saw a face
at the window and thought it was Macaulay's New Zealander come before
his time, to philosophize over the desolation of London. Beastly
weather, as usual. How three millions of people, more or less, can drag
out existence through it--"

The speaker flings himself into a chair and gives up the problem in
weary disgust.

"I thought you were in Greece, Burrard," says Terry, throwing away his
cigar, and depositing himself in a second easy-chair.

"Was, all January. Gave it up and came to Paris, to have what our
transatlantic neighbors call 'a good time;' and just as I was having it
(Felicia's there, you know), came a telegram from Somersetshire,
summoning me home. Governor--gout in the stomach--thinks he's going to
die, and wishes to have all his offspring around him. It's the fifth
time I have been summoned in the same way," says Mr. Burrard, in a
disgusted tone, "and nothing ever comes of it. It's all hypo on the
governor's part, and the family know it; but as he'll cut us off with a
shilling if we disobey, there's nothing for it. It was beastly crossing
the Channel, and I'm always seasick. It's an awful nuisance, Terry--give
you my word," Mr. Burrard gloomily concludes.

"Hard lines, old fellow," laughs Terry. "Let us hope this time that your
journey will not be in vain. So Paris is looking lively, is it? No
February fog there, I suppose? I shouldn't mind running over myself for
a few days. Many people one knows?"

"Lots," Mr. Burrard sententiously replies; "and, as I said before, la
belle Felicia at the Varietes, younger, and lovelier, and more fatal
than ever. Gad! Terry, the divine art of _petits soupers_ will never die
out while that woman exists. She's a sorceress and enchantress, a witch.
She must be five-and-thirty at the very least: and last night, as I sat
beside her, I could have taken my oath she wasn't a day more than
seventeen."

"Hard hit as ever, dear boy," Terry says, lighting another regalia. "I
thought that was an old story--over and done with ages ago--that you
were clothed and in your right mind once more, and about to take unto
yourself a wife of the daughters of the land. Have one?"

He presents his cigar case and box of Vesuvians, and Burrard gloomily
selects and lights up.

"You know Felicia, Terry?" he asks, after a smoky pause.

Terry nods.

"_You_ never were one of her victims though, were you," the other
pursues.

"Not I, old fellow," Terry laughs good-humoredly. "The rle of quarry to
any woman's hawk is not in the least my line. And I never could see, for
the life of me, what there was in belle Felicia, that men should go down
before her, like corn before the reaper. She's a monstrous fine woman
for those who admire the swarthy sort, which I don't, and knows how to
use those two black eyes of hers; but that dancer has never danced--were
it the daughter of Herodias herself--who could quicken my pulses by one
beat."

"You're a cold-blooded animal, Dennison, I'm afraid," responds Mr.
Burrard. "Your insensibility to all womankind has passed into a proverb.
You always had the entre, too, when Felicia was in London."

"I had the good fortune to be of some slight service to her on one
occasion, and, like all women, she magnified a mole-hill into a
mountain. So she is still as fatal as ever--who is the last unhappy
devil who has fallen into her clutches?"

"Their name is legion. There are two American millionaires over there,
ready to blow each other's brains out about her. There is an Austrian
archduke, with five-and-twenty quarterings, an empty purse, and the
bluest of sang azure, ready, they say, at a moment's notice, to make her
his wife. There is Prince Di Venturini, who has come to his own again,
since the young Italy party took the reins--that affair is old and
settled; it's an understood thing if she behaves herself she is to be
Madame la princess. And last, but by no means least in the fair
Felicia's eyes--since the bracelets, and rings, and rubbish of that sort
he gives her, they say would fill a Rue de la Paix jeweller's window--is
young Lord Dynely."

Terry has been lying back in his chair, dreamily watching the clouds of
smoke curl upward, and taking but a languid interest in the
conversation. At this name he sits suddenly upright, staring with round,
startled blue eyes.

"Who?" he asks, sharply and suddenly.

"Dynely--know him, don't you? Oh, by the bye, yes--you and he are
connections, aren't you? Married at Christmas--country parson's
daughter, didn't he, all on the quiet? Well, my word, he's going the
pace now, I can tell you."

"Burrard, do you mean to say Dynely is in Paris?"

"Been there the past three weeks. Went to Brittany or Normandy, or
somewhere for the honeymoon--so I was told; found love among the roses,
a week after matrimony, awfully slow work; most men do in like case,
poor devils; set the proprieties at defiance--couldn't serve out his
sentence; came to Paris, and fell, like the greenest of all green
goslings, straightway into the talons of that bird of paradise, Felicia.
By the bye, birds of paradise haven't talons, I daresay, but you know
what I mean."

The color has faded out of Terry's face, leaving him very pale. Mr.
Burrard, with whom the handsome dancer is evidently a sore subject, and
who is also suffering evidently from an attack of the green-eyed
monster, goes aggrievedly on:

"Never saw a fellow so far gone in so short a time--give you my honor,
Dennison! He's mad, stark mad, running after that piratical little
demon. It's early days to leave the pretty wife alone in their big
hotel. All Paris is talking about it, _sotto voce_, of course. Did you
know her, Terry?"

Burrard's sleepy, half-closed eyes, look across at him, and note for the
first time the sudden, startled pallor of his face.

"Yes--I know her," he answers slowly. "How is she looking, Burrard?"

"Never met her but once, and that was before the Felicia had gobbled her
husband up body and bones. I met them driving in the Bois, and I
remember everybody was turning to stare at the little blonde beauty. She
appeared also one night at an embassy ball, and was the talk of the
clubs for the next three days. It was her first and last appearance.
She's there still, but invisible to the naked eye. While he follows
Felicia like her poodle or her shadow, the little one mopes at home. I
wouldn't say all this, Dennison, you understand," says Mr. Burrard,
fearing he has gone too far, "but it is public talk in Paris. Dynely's
infatuation is patent to all the world."

The face of Terry has settled into an expression Horace Burrard has
never seen on that careless, good-humored face before. It is set and
stern, the genial blue eyes gleam like steel. But he speaks very
quietly.

"And the Prince Di Venturini allows her to carry on like this? Wide
latitude for a future princess, you must own. Accommodating sort of
Neapolitan, the prince."

"Understand me, Terry," says Burrard, answering this last sneer rather
earnestly. "I don't mean to say Felicia goes much further than some of
our own frisky matrons do. A flirt she is _ outrance_--she would flirt
with her own chasseur if no better game offered. Beyond that, scandal
goeth not. Di Venturini is most assuredly a man who can take care of his
own, a dead shot, and a noted duelist. Madame is also most assuredly his
_fiance_. She has an _me damne_, who goes about with her
everywhere--the widow of an English curate, and propriety itself in
crape and bombazine. But she takes men's presents, fools them to the top
of their bent, cleans them out, and throws them over, with as little
remorse as I throw away this smoked-out cigar. 'One down, t'other come
on,' that's the fair danseuse's motto."

There was some bitterness in Burrard's tone. Evidently he was one of the
"cleaned out and thrown over." He arose as he spoke and looked at his
watch.

"Have you dined, Dennison? Because I have ordered--"

"Thanks--I dined two hours ago. Don't let me detain you, Burrard, and
good-night."

He went slowly up to his room, his face keeping that set, stern look.

"She has no father, no brother to take her part; I may be that to her,
if I may be no more. If Burrard's story be true, then it is high time
some one went to the rescue."

His own words came back to him. Had the time come already for him to
defend her against the husband she loved, and for whom she had jilted
him? He knew Eric well--knew how recklessly, insanely, he tore every
passion to tatters--knew how little hold principle or fidelity had upon
him, knew him weaker, more unstable than water, selfish to the core,
regardless of all consequences where his own fancies were concerned.
And into the keeping of such a man as this, little Crystal's whole heart
and life had been given.

"If he is false to her," Terry ground out between his set teeth, "I'll
kill him with my own hand. Only one short month his wife, and neglected,
forsaken already. Oh, my little Crystal! My little, pretty, innocent
Crystal!"

He remembered his words to her on her wedding-day: "If you are ever in
trouble--if you ever need a friend, promise to send for me." She had not
sent, poor child! but she had not forgotten those words, he knew. He
would go to her--go at once. While Eric was kind she had not needed
him--Eric had tired of her, was on with another love before the
honeymoon had waned--she needed him now. Yes, he would go at
once--to-morrow--by fair means or foul, Eric must be made to quit Paris;
and that painted sorceress, who wrought men's ruin, must be forced to
give back his allegiance to his wife. He should not neglect her and
break her heart with impunity.

That night Terry Dennison spent tossing feverishly on his bed, listening
to the lashing rain, and chilly, whistling, February wind. Before the
dark, murky day had fairly broken he was at the London Bridge
station--at nightfall he was in Paris.

       *       *       *       *       *

The February weather, so bleakly raw in London, is brilliant with
sunshine, sparkling with crisp, clear frost here in Paris. The great
avenues of the Bois and Champs Elyses may be leafless, but the hoar
frost sparkles in the early sunshine like silver, the icicles glitter
like pendant jewels, and the bright, glad life, that never under the
Parisian sky grows dull, is at its brightest.

On this night that brings Dennison to Paris, gaslight has taken the
place of sunlight, and seems to his eyes, accustomed to London fog and
dreariness, no whit less dazzling. The bright streets are thronged--the
huge front of the Hotel Du Louvre is all a glitter of gaslights as his
fiacre whirls up, and deposits him and his portmanteau at the entrance.

"Can he have a room?" he asks the gentlemanly clerk.

And "_Mais oui monsieur_," is the answer; "there is one room at
monsieur's service, but it is _au cinquime numro quatre-vingts
douze_."

Monsieur does not care; he prepares to mount, turns back and asks:

"Lord and Lady Dynely are here?"

"Certainly, monsieur. Their apartments are _au premier_, lately vacated
by his Serene Highness M. le Duc----."

Terry ascends to his cockloft, with a gravely meditative face. Are they
at home he wonders? is she? and how will Eric receive him? If what
Burrard says be true, it does not much matter--his and Eric's day of
reckoning will have come.

At that very hour, in one of her gorgeous suite of rooms, Lady Dynely
sits, quite alone. Alone! ah, poor Crystal! when is she not alone now?
She sits, or rather crouches, on the wide velvet-cushioned window sill,
overlooking the brilliant, busy quadrangle below, where flowers bloom in
great tubs, and tall palms stand dark under the glass roof, heedless of
how she crushes her pretty dinner dress of blue silk, the hue of her
eyes. The soft blonde hair falls loose and half curled over her
shoulders. What does it matter? Eric is not here to see--Eric is never
here now it seems to her. What she wears, how she looks, have ceased to
interest Eric. He cares for her no more--after the deluge.

Her very attitude as she sits, huddled up here, is full of hopeless,
pathetic pain. The street lamps flare full upon the pretty, youthful
face--youthful still, childish no longer. She has eaten of the tree of
knowledge, and its fruit has been bitterer than death. All the sweet,
childlike, surprised innocence of the soft fair face, that made half its
charm, is gone--its peach-like, dimpled outline has grown sharp, the
pearly fairness has turned to fixed pallor--its delicate wild rose bloom
has entirely faded--the tender, turquoise eyes have taken a look of
patient despair, very sad to see. Not six weeks a bride, and the wife's
despair shining from the sad, sweet eyes already.

Her cheek is pressed against the cool glass; her hands--from one of
which her wedding-ring slips, so wasted it has grown--are loosely
clasped in her lap; her tired eyes watch listlessly the crowds that
pass, the many vehicles that flash up to the great doorway, and flash
away again. Her mind is as listless as her looks. She has been alone for
two hours--two weeks it seems to her. She does not care to read, she
cannot go out, she cannot call in her maid and talk to her, and there is
no one else she knows. For Eric--well, the largest of the small hours
will bring Eric home--perhaps.

Suddenly she starts. From a fiacre that has just drawn up a man leaps
out. The lamp light falls upon him for a second, and Crystal's heart
gives a leap. Big, broad-shouldered, ruddy, bearded, in the familiar
round hat and suit of tweed--how much it looked like Terry. Oh! to see
Terry once more--dear old, ever kind Terry! oh, to see any of them from
home--even sharp Elizabeth Jane or snappish old Belinda. What a long,
long time it seems since her wedding day!

Her wedding day! It is only six weeks--six little weeks, and how happy
she had been! That day, with all its details, returns to her with a pang
of remembrance that pierces her heart. She recalls Terry's parting words
with strange vividness now--in all these weeks she has never thought of
them before.

"If in the time that is coming, you are ever in trouble, if you ever
need a friend, will you send for me? All our lives we have been as
brother and sister--by the memory of the past, let me be the one to help
you if you ever stand in need."

She had laughed in her happy incredulity then--ah, how true his words
had come. But she could never send for him, or for any one on earth; her
trouble was a trouble she could only take to the good God. He alone
could befriend her here. How had the change come about?--was she to
blame? She could not tell. Her mind went over, in a dazed, helpless sort
of way, all her brief married life, and the fault had not been
hers--that she knew. They had been so happy in Brittany, so intensely
happy--with a happiness that, as a quaint English writer says, "Spread
out thin, might have covered comfortably their whole lives." They had
been happy--intensely--for one week; happy in a more moderate degree, on
Eric's part, the second. The third set in with steady drizzling rain,
and wild wintry winds, and before its close the bridegroom was yawning
in the face of the bride. He was as fond of Crystal as ever, no doubt,
but four days of incessant rain in a dull Breton town are apt to be
trying to the frivolous masculine mind.

"Oh, I say, Chris," Eric said, with a prolonged yawn, "this is awfully
slow, you know. I can't stand much more of St. Malo and this infernal
weather--upon my word I can't. It's a beastly dull hole at any time; a
fortnight's as long as any rational being could survive it. I say, let's
go to Paris."

If Eric had said, "Let us go, like Hans Pfaal, up to the moon in a
balloon, and live there," Crystal would have looked up in her lord's
handsome, bored face, with blue eyes of adoring delight, put on her
things, and gone. Paris, or St. Malo, or the moon, were all alike to
this worshipping, little three weeks' wife. Next day they came to Paris,
and Crystal's troubles began. The first four days all was well. He drove
with her in the Bois, his vanity tickled by the profound admiration her
delicate blonde loveliness everywhere excited. He took her to the
Louvre, to the Tuileries, to a ball at the English Embassy, to a dinner
at the Earl of Albemarle's.

The fourth evening was windy and wet; she had a slight headache, and
could not go out. Eric was to dine at the Jockey Club, of which he was a
member. After dinner, with a couple of friends, he went to the Varieties
to see Felicia in her new piece, "The Golden Witch." He went, and
Crystal's doom was sealed.

"It's rather odd," Eric said, as he and his friends took their places in
the stalls, "that I've never seen this celebrated Felicia. She had
finished her engagement and left London before I came. Is she really the
great irresistible she's called?"

"Ah! wait until you see," one of his companions answered. "If you are
made of anything like the inflammable materials I wot of of old, one
flash from her black eyes will finish you."

Eric laughed.

"We have changed all that, _mon ami_. I have outlived my taste for black
beauties, and can defy all the sorceresses that ever bounded before the
footlights."

There was a glow at his heart as he said it. A vision rose up before
him, of the pure, sweet face, crowned with its halo of pale gold hair,
that he had left at home. Ah yes! these dark daughters of the earth had
had their day--he was his little white wife's forever now. Then the
curtain rose, and the "La Sorcire d'Or," in a triumphant burst of
music, bounded before them. The lights flashed up, a thunder of welcome
shook the house, their favorite was smiling and kissing hands to her
friends. Eric Dynely looked with critical eyes. Her scant drapery was as
if woven of cloth of gold--she seemed robed in a sunburst. Her
magnificent black hair fell in a rippling shower to her slim waist,
clasped back with brilliants. The great, dark Southern eyes seemed to
outflash the diamonds. Whatever her age, under the gaslights she did not
look a day over eighteen.

"By Jove!" Eric said, his breath fairly taken away; "she's handsome,
Argyll!"

Argyll smiled.

"Look out for your counter-charm, old fellow. The fair Felicia slays,
and spares not. She is handsome--yes as a tigress or panther is
handsome--and as merciless."

She danced--it was the very poetry of grace and motion. She sang--and
her magnificent contralto filled the building. It was the merest trifle
of a play, but she threw herself with wonderful _abandon_ and passion
into her part, carrying her audience with her. At the close, when the
"Golden Witch" is tried, condemned, and found guilty of witchcraft, when
she is sentenced to be bound to the stake, when the sacrificial fire is
kindled about her, when, with wild agony and despair in the beautiful,
ghastly face, she chants her own weird death song, a silence that is
painful and oppressive fills the house. The mimic flames mount high--the
death song dies out in an unearthly wail of anguish as the curtain
falls. The "Golden Witch" has been burned alive.

"Best thing they could do with her," growls Argyll; "it's a thousand
pities they don't try it in reality. There are a good many _belle dames
sans merci_ in this one city, but I'll take my oath she's the wickedest
woman in Paris. Wake up, Dynely. On my word, the fellow's in a trance!"

The theatre shook with its thunders of applause. "Felicia! Felicia!" a
hundred voices called. She came, gliding out before them, smiling and
bowing once more, with a serpentine smoothness of motion, a supple
grace, that _was_ very pantheresque. A shower of bouquets were flung
upon the stage--then with a last brilliant smile she vanished, and
everybody arose to go.

"Will you come behind and be presented, Dynely?" his friend said; "you
rather look as if you'd like it. I have the _entre_. There's to be a
supper, and Felicia's little suppers are things to dream of. She and I
are old acquaintances," he laughs as he lights his cigar; "any friend of
mine is sure of a welcome."

To turn from the voice of the tempter was an act of self-sacrifice Eric
had never striven to do in his life. He did not strive now. Certainly he
would go and be presented to the adorable Felicia.

"By Jove! Argyll, old fellow, she _is_ a stunner and no mistake," he
said.

So they went, and the lovely Felicia, all smiles and darkling, sparkling
glances, proffers her hospitality to Mr. Argyll's friend. Eric accepts.
For one instant the pale slumbering face of his wife rises before him
reproachfully, but he puts the thought impatiently away. She is asleep
long ago--what odds will an hour or two make to her to-morrow. It is, as
Argyll says, a _chef d'oeuvre_ of a supper--the cuisine,
perfection--the guests the wittiest, cleverest men, the most beautiful
and successful actresses in Paris. And in a state of wild intoxication,
that comes more from Felicia's smiles and looks than her sparkling
wines, Eric reaches his rooms as the new day grows gray in the east.
Next morning--is it by chance?--they meet in the Bois--Lord Dynely on
horseback, Felicia in a fairy chariot, drawn by two coal-black Arabs,
handling the lines like "Four-in-hand Fossbrooke" himself. The brilliant
smiles and glances are showered on Lord Dynely once more in dazzling
profusion--he becomes her attendant cavalier, and they take the Bois in
dashing style, the observed of all observers. In a delicious bonnet--a
work of art in itself--behind a flimsy dotted veil, madame still looks
eighteen--no more. Her violet velvets, her rich sables, set off her dusk
beauty well; all eyes follow her, very audible French exclamations of
admiration reach her gratified ears. Hats fly off at her
approach--gentlemen innumerable salaam before her, and the graceful head
bends like a queen's to it all. Ladies look on the other side, it is
true--but what will you! She is a dancer, and men adore her--two
unforgivable sins in their eyes; a coquette of the first water--farther
than that slander itself will not go. The sheep dog--the demure-faced
curate's widow--occupies the other side, as they fly along, down the
great wooded drive of the Bois de Boulogne.

And little Crystal's doom was sealed! Neglect, coldness,
impatience--there was nothing left for her but these. Evening after
evening, upon one pretext or another, he was absent; evening after
evening she sat while the long, dragging, miserable hours wore by, and
waited, waited, waited, for one who did not come. Many madnesses of this
sort had held him before, but none so utterly, recklessly mad as this.
What did it mean? What had she done? She could not understand the change
in him. Was Eric growing tired of her already? The childish blue eyes
would lift to his face in bewildered, pathetic questioning, the childish
lips would quiver. He could not meet those glances. He avoided her more
and more--her meek, uncomplaining patience was the keenest reproach she
could make. Then the bewildered questioning died out of the eyes, and a
dark despair took its place. Even to her, secluded as a nun, vague
rumors of the truth came. Eric had tired of her--another woman had
caught his eye and fancy. All was over for her. "Milor's" infatuation
for the actress was the gossip of the very servants, the magnificent
presents he gave her, his constant attendance upon her; and in some way
it all floated to Crystal's ears. Her own maid looked upon her with
pitying eyes--all Paris knew that she was a bride forsaken before the
honeymoon had waned. She uttered no word of complaint--no reproach, only
the color died out of her face, the light from her eyes--to her it was
death--her life had come to an end--just that.

She sits alone this evening as usual--she is always alone now. She
accepts no invitations--she receives no visitors. But there is a visitor
for her to-night, however, a tall gentleman, at whom Marie, the maid,
casts glances of admiration as she announces him. Crystal rises,
bewildered, from the window--she has not caught the name. Under the
light of the chandelier her visitor stands, and a great cry of amaze and
delight fills the room.

"Terry!" she cries; "oh, Terry!"

She rushes forward, and fairly flings her arms around his neck. She is
so utterly lonely, so homesick and desolate, poor child, and Terry is
the big brother who has always been so good to her--nothing else.

His face flushes under the swift caress. Then she recollects herself,
and lets him go, and puts back her loose, falling hair in blushing
confusion.

"I----it was so sudden, and I--I _am_ so glad to see a face from home.
Sit down, Terry. When did you come, and how are they all?"

Her fingers lace and unlace nervously. Her lips tremble like the lips of
a child about to cry. She has grown nervous and hysterical of late from
being so much alone with her misery, and the sight of Terry has unnerved
her.

"All well," he answers cheerily; "at least I've not been down at the
Vicarage, but I had a letter from Linda a week ago. I told them I was
going to cross over and look you up, and they sent no end of love and
all that."

Then there is a pause--a painful one. The color has faded out of her
face, and it looks bluish white against the crimson velvet back of her
chair. Good heavens! Terry thinks, with a thrill of pain and anger, how
changed she is, how thin, how worn, how pallid. But he makes no mention
of her looks, he only asks in a constrained sort of voice:

"Eric is well, I hope?"

"Oh, yes, thank you!"

Her voice falters as she repeats the old formula. Again there is
silence. Terry is not a good one for making conversation, and silence is
little Crystal's forte.

"Is Eric not at home?" he ventures after that uneasy pause.

"No," she answers, her eyes fixed on the rings she is unconsciously
twisting round and round; "he is dining out. It--it is a bachelor party.
He could not take me."

"And what business has he at bachelor parties _now_?" rises to Terry's
lips, but he represses it. She is going to say something, he sees--the
sensitive color is coming and going in her face--something that she
finds hard to say. It comes out at last hurriedly.

"Terry! I wish you would take me to the theatre to-night."

"Crystal!"

"To the Varietes. I--I want to go. I must go!" She lifts her eyes to
his, and they flash for a moment. "I have wanted to go all this week.
Will you take me to-night?"

He sets his lips. She has heard then. He asks no questions--he makes no
reply.

"Don't refuse me, Terry," she pleads, and the sweet lips tremble. "You
never did refuse me anything--don't begin now. I want to go--oh, so
much! I want to see--that woman."

The wifely hatred and jealousy she feels for "that woman" are in the
bitterness with which she pronounces the two words. It is hard to refuse
her--but Terry sits silent and troubled still.

"I would do anything for you, Crystal," he says at length; "but this--is
this best?"

"I want to go--I _will_ go," she says, passionately, turning away. "I
did not think you would refuse, Terry Dennison."

"I have not refused, Crystal," he answers gently. "Of course I will
take you, with pleasure, since you wish it. There is plenty time, too.
While you put on your mantle and gloves, I will go and secure a box--if
one is to be had."

She gives him a grateful glance.

"You were always good to me, Terry," she repeats softly.

He sighs to himself as he leaves her. So changed! so changed! and she is
as dear to him as ever. The hottest anger he has ever felt against any
living man, he feels to-night against Lady Dynely's son.

She dresses without the aid of her maid--dresses hurriedly, and stands
all ready as Dennison reappears.

"It is all right, Lady Dynely," he says in his cheery voice; "by great
good luck there was one unoccupied box, and I got it. Our fiacre is at
the door."

She slips her gloved hand within his arm and goes down; she is trembling
with nervous excitement, he can feel. She has never seen this beautiful,
wicked actress, who has charmed her darling from her--she has never
dared speak of her to Eric, and he has never offered to take her
anywhere. He may be angry when he hears of this--she has no intention of
concealing it from him--but she must see her, she must. She must look
upon the face fair enough to take the bridegroom from his bride before
the honeymoon is at an end.

The house is full when they reach it--a glittering horse-shoe of faces,
and toilettes, and gaslight, and perfume and fluttering fans. She sinks
into her seat and draws back behind the curtain. The play has begun, and
"_La Sorcire d'Or_," in her dark, insolent, triumphant beauty, and
dazzling raiment, is on the stage, electrifying the audience by her
passionate power.

Crystal looks at her and turns sick, sick at heart, sick with despair.
Yes, she is beautiful--terribly, brilliantly beautiful--insolently,
demoniacally beautiful, it seems to her. Her voice is like silver, her
eyes like dusk stars; and Eric worships beauty in all things, and this
woman--this, is her rival. She turns away in sick, mute despair as the
curtain falls. What power has she to hold him against a glittering
enchantress like this. At that moment a party of gentlemen enter the
box opposite; she gives a quick gasping cry--one of them is her husband.

He has been dining and wining evidently. His fair, girl's complexion is
flushed--his blue eyes glitter with passionate excitement. He leans back
and sweeps the house with his glass--she shrinks tremblingly farther
from sight. Terry, too, draws back--Terry, whose face wears a look
Crystal has never seen it wear before.

The curtain rises on the second act. Lord Dynely's double-barrels turn
from the people to the players. _She_ is on the stage once more--his
opera glass devours her. He lies back and stares immovably all through
the act. When at its close loud plaudits ring through the house, his
primrose-kidded hands applaud to the echo. She comes--floral showers, as
usual, rain upon her. Crystal does not look at her now--her fascinated
eyes are riveted upon her husband. She sees him lean forward, a smile on
his handsome face--sees him take a little bouquet of fairy roses and
geranium leaves from his button-hole and fling it to the actress.
Crystal gives a little gasping cry of sheer physical pain. _She_ formed
that little bouquet--_she_ pinned it into his button-hole as she kissed
him good-by four hours ago. And now the actress lifts it--lifts it from
amid hosts of others, presses it to her lips--flashes one lightning
glance at the fair-haired Englishman in the box above, and disappears.

"You stand well with the Felicia, Dynely," one of the party, a
compatriot of Eric's, says, with a loud laugh. "She selects your bouquet
from all that pyramid. Lucky beggar! We poor devils stand no chance
against such a curled darling of the gods."

The third act finishes--the golden witch dies at the stake, singing her
wondrous funeral song. The play is over.

"And I'd like to be the one to fire the fagots, by ----," Terry grinds
out between his set teeth. Then he leans over and speaks to his
companion. "Are you tired, Crystal? You look pale," he says--so gently
he says it.

She is more than pale; her very lips are colorless; but she lifts her
grateful, hopeless eyes, and repeats the old foolish formula:

"Oh, no, thank you."

"The 'Golden Witch' is finished. There is a grand new ballet--do you
care to wait to see it?" he asks again.

"I will wait, Terry, if you please."

She does not care for the ballet; she will not see it at all, very
likely; but Eric is yonder--her Eric--her husband--and while she can sit
and watch him, this place is better than any other in Paris.

But presently Eric gets up, leaves his box, and goes away. There is
rather a long interval before the ballet. People chat, flirt, laugh,
discuss the play and Felicia, and presently there is a stir, and a
bustle and a sensation amid them all.

Every glass in the house turns to one box as the curtain rises and the
new ballet begins. Terry and Crystal look, too.

In that stage-box the star of the night sits. Madame Felicia, in elegant
full dress, ablaze with diamonds, lies back in her chair, wielding a fan
with the grace of a Castilian donna, and listening, with a smile on her
perfect lips, to the whispered words of the man who bends over her. He
stoops so low that his blonde hair mingles with her jetty tresses. The
little knot of fairy roses nestle in these ebon locks; and the tall
cavalier who bends so closely, so devotedly, is Eric, Lord Dynely.

Crystal can bear no more. With a great sob, she turns to Dennison, and
holds out her hands.

"Oh, Terry," the poor child says, "take me home!"

He does not speak a word. He rises, wraps her cloak around her, draws
her hand within his arm, and leads her out of the theatre. In the fiacre
she falls back in a corner and hides her face from the pitiless glare of
the streets. No word is spoken all the way--what is to be said? Both
know the worst.

He conducts her to her own door, still dead silent. There he pauses,
takes both her hands and holds them in his strong, friendly clasp, while
he looks down in the drooping, heart-broken face.

"Keep up heart, little Crystal," he says; "I'll fetch Eric home in an
hour."

She lays her cold cheek down for a second on the warm, true hands.

"Dear old Terry!" she says, softly. Then he lets her go, and the
velvet-hung door closes behind her.




CHAPTER II.

"LA BELLE DAME SANS MERCI."


And this is how it has ended. Only five weeks married--and he has
wearied of her already--a newer, more brilliant beauty has won him from
her. Terry has known it would come--known it from the first, but not so
soon--good Heaven! not so soon. He takes his way into the street, the
hottest, fiercest wrath he has ever felt against any human being,
burning in his heart against Eric Dynely. How she has changed--what a
pale shadow of the lovely, happy face she took to the altar last New
Year's day. What a pitiful, crushed, heart-broken look the sweet,
childish eyes wear. If she could have loved him--if he could have won
her--if Eric had never come between them, how happy he could have made
her! He would have made her life so blessed, she would have been all his
own in time, beyond the power of any man to come between them. With a
sort of groan he breaks off. His she is not, his she can never be. Eric
must return to her or she will die--the whole story is told in that.

"He shall return to her," Terry says inwardly, setting his teeth, "or I
will know the reason why."

He does not pause a moment--he hurries at once to the theatre. The
ballet is but just ended--the people are pouring forth, but nowhere
among them does he see Eric. At length in the crowd he espies a man he
knows, one of the four who first entered with him he is seeking, and he
makes his way to him and taps him familiarly on the shoulder.

"Boville, old boy," he says with the Briton's customary curt greeting,
"how are you?"

Mr. Boville looks over his shoulder and opens two small, sleepy-looking
eyes.

"What, Dennison! what, Terry! you here! thought you were at Aldershot.
Awfully glad to see you all the same."

"I'm looking for Eric," Terry responds, plunging at once into his
subject. "He came in with you. Where is he now?"

"Yes, he came in with me," Boville says, with a faint, weary little
laugh. "Where is he now? In much pleasanter company, dear boy--driving
home with Madame Felicia. Intoxicating creature that--eh, Terry? And
weally, on my word, you know," lisps Mr. Boville, raising his white
eyebrows, "Dynely is altogether the spooniest fellow!"

"Where does Madame Felicia live?" Terry growls, with a flash of his eye,
cutting Mr. Boville's drawl suddenly short.

The slow, sleepy eyes open again. Mr. Boville looks at Mr. Dennison with
a curious little half smile. But he gives Madame Felicia's address
readily enough, and watches the big dragoon out of sight with a shrug.

"Is Eric to be brought to his senses, and is Terry deputed to do it, I
wonder?" he thinks. "If so, then Terry has quite the most difficult task
before him that heavy dragoon was ever called upon to do."

Yes, Terry was going to bring him to his senses--going to bring him to
his wife; and without a moment's hesitation, he hails a fiacre, gives
the address, and is whirled away through the noonday gaslit brilliance
of the boulevards.

"There's to be a supper, no doubt," he thinks. "Is not Felicia famous
wherever she goes for her after-theatre suppers? Well, fortune stands my
friend this time--I hold the open sesame to _her_ doors, and though I
have never availed myself of it before, by Jove! I will to-night."

His mind goes back to a certain day two years before, when he had in all
probability saved Madame Felicia's life, or at least what was of equal
account to her, her beauty. It was the old story of runaway horses--the
lady rescued in the nick of time. Madame's passion for spirited ponies
had, on more occasions than one, placed her pretty neck and graceful
limbs in jeopardy--on this occasion the runaways had become altogether
unmanageable, the reins had been jerked from her hands, and with heads
up and eyes flashing, they had rushed madly along. The gates of a great
park ended the road--if those gates were open madame still stood one
chance, if they were closed--she shuddered, intrepid little Amazon as
she was, and sat still as death, and white as marble, straining her eyes
through the whirlwind of dust as they flew along. The park came in
sight--the gates were _closed_! It was just at that moment Terry
Dennison, on horseback, came in view. He took in the situation in an
instant. To attempt to check the horses in their mad career would have
been useless now; they would wrench his arms from the sockets before
they could be stopped. He galloped up, hurled himself off his horse, and
with the agility of a circus rider and the strength of a latter-day
Samson, lifted the lady sheer out of the carriage. The horses went
headlong at the closed gates, shivering the frail phaeton to atoms, and
Madame Felicia fainted quietly away in Lieutenant Dennison's arms.

That was the story. Terry never made capital of it, but the actress did.
She was profoundly and greatly grateful, and to show that gratitude,
made every possible effort to captivate her preserver and break his
heart. For once she failed. Mr. Dennison was invulnerable. All her
cajoleries, all her fascinations, all her beauty and _chic_, fell
powerless on this big dragoon's dull sensibilities. He saw through her
and laughed at her quietly in his sleeve. What the deuce did the little,
gushing dancer mean making eyes at him? Terry wondered. He wasn't an
elder son; he didn't keep an open account at Hunt & Roskell's; he had
never given any one a diamond bracelet in his life. She knew it
too--then what did she mean? It was madame's way of showing her deep
gratitude to the preserver of her life--simply that. But for Terry she
would have been smashed to atoms with the phaeton, her beauty ruined,
her symmetrical limbs broken, her occupation gone. She shuddered when
she thought of it; death would have been preferable to that. She _was_
grateful, deeply and truly grateful, and gave Mr. Dennison carte blanche
to come and go as he pleased from henceforth forever. It was a
privilege for which royalty itself was sighing just then, but with the
dull insensibility that had always characterized him in these things,
Dennison treated it and her with the calmest, utterest indifference. He
liked her as a dancer, but as a woman, and in private life, not any,
thanks. Terry did not go in for dancers. In short Mr. Dennison would
_not_ be numbered among her victims, would not lose his head for her;
and madame saw and laughed good-naturedly, and gave it up and respected
him accordingly. It would be a refreshing novelty to have a masculine
friend, a friend pure and simple, who would never be a lover, and so she
liked Dennison as honestly, as a more honest woman might, and still kept
her doors open to him. He came at times to those pleasant, post-opera
suppers, where the cleverest painters, the most distinguished novelists,
the handsomest actresses in London were to be met, and was ever warmly
welcomed.

He had known she was in Paris--he had not met her for seven months, but
he had not had the faintest intention of calling upon her here. And now
he was whirling along rapidly to her rooms. Of his welcome from her, at
all times and in all places, he was sure; his welcome from Eric was much
more to the point just at present; and of that he was not at all sure.

"Hang her!" Terry thought, with an inward growl; "hang all such
confounded little pirates, cruising in honest waters, and raising the
devil wherever they go. Still if one goes there at all, one must be
civil, I suppose."

Civil accordingly, Mr. Dennison was when ushered into the gem-like
drawing-room of Madame Felicia.

A chandelier, blazing like a mimic sun in the frescoed ceiling, made the
room one sheet of golden light. The walls were lined with mirrors, the
windows hung with satin and lace, the air heavy with pastilles.
Half-a-dozen elegantly dressed and exceptionally handsome women reclined
in every species of easy-chair, with attendant cavaliers. On a low
fauteuil reclined the great Felicia herself, robed in a billowy cloud of
translucent white. As a rule she affected costly moires, stiff brocades,
heavy velvets; to-night, crisp, white gossamer floated about the
perfect form, richest lace draped the arms and shoulders, diamonds and
opals glittered about her, and pale, perfumy, yellow roses nestled in
the dead-blue blackness of her hair. By her side, Lord Dynely sat,
gazing at the dusky, languid, slightly-bored, warmly-lovely face, as if
he could never gaze enough. All started and stared as the new-comer was
announced. Unknown to all but two--most unlooked for by them--Terry yet
advanced with that ease that the utter absence of all vanity, of all
self-consciousness, gives.

"I only reached Paris to-night," he said, "and unorthodox as is the
hour, I could _not_ resist the temptation to call. It is seven months
since we met, madame, and you will recollect that in your goodness I
hold permission to visit you in season and out of season."

Quite a lengthy and diplomatic speech for the speaker, but he had
prepared it in the fiacre. When one deals with serpents one must be
subtle. The yellow-black eyes turned upon him, a light of real pleasure
in them; she half arose and held out her hand. She was cordially pleased
to see Terry.

"Mr. Dennison knows he is always more than welcome--one does not easily
forget such service as he rendered. How very nice of you to call. Let me
introduce you to Lord Dynely; but you know him, perhaps?"

She looked doubtfully at his lordship. Know him? Surely! for on Lord
Dynely's face an unmistakable scowl has arisen.

"What the devil brings you to Paris, Dennison?" he bluntly demands;
"when did you come?"

"To-night, _mon cher_--have you not heard me say so? Delighted to see me
does he not look?" Terry says gayly, turning to madame.

"Where are you stopping?" Eric asks, still with a scowl.

"I honor the Louvre with my patronage on this occasion, my lord."

Then there is a pause. The two men look at each other--one straight,
level, searching glance--angry and suspicious on Eric's part--stern and
resolved on Terry's. Eric is the first to turn away, with a shrug, and a
slight contemptuous laugh.

"John Bull is ubiquitous! Go where you will he crops up when you least
expect him. It is one of the great draw-backs of our civilization."

"Was monsieur at the Varietes to-night?" madame asks, coquettishly. She
is not French, but she affects the French language as she affects French
cookery, French toilettes, and French morals.

"I have had that pleasure," Terry responds. "Madame is irresistible in
all things, but she out-does herself in '_La Sorcire d'Or_.' Shall we
see you in it at the Bijou next London season?"

Felicia laughs softly, and glances up from under her black lashes at
Lord Dynely's gloomy face.

"Ah--who knows? Next London season--it begins in a month or two, does it
not? but who knows what may happen in a month or two? One may be a
thousand miles away from your bleak fogs, and easterly winds, and dull
phlegmatic stalls by that time. _Mon ami_, how sulky you look," striking
Dynely a blow with her perfumed fan. "As you say in your country--a
penny for your thoughts."

"They are worth much more--I was thinking of _you_," he answers rather
bitterly.

"Lord Dynely does me too much honor. Judging by his tone they must be
pleasant. May I ask what?"

"I was wondering if there will be _any_ Madame Felicia to enchant the
sleepy British stalls of the Bijou next season. I was wondering if by
that time it will not be Her Excellency, Madame La Princesse Di
Venturini."

She laughs a second time. His angry, jealous tone, which he cannot
conceal if he would, amuses her vastly.

"Who knows?" is her airy answer, "such droll things happen! I am not
sure, though, that it would be half so pleasant. They are announcing
supper. Mr. Dennison, will you give me your arm? Lord Dynely, the most
delightful of men, the most gallant of gentlemen on ordinary occasions,
yet falls a prey at times to what I once heard a countryman of his call
_the doldrums_. And I cannot endure people who have the doldrums!"

She laughs once more, softly and musically, and shows dazzlingly white
teeth. She is a trifle vulgar, this peerless Felicia--her most ardent
admirers admit that. She smokes, she drinks a great deal of her own
champagne--she has even been known to swear at times. But she laughs
well--it is one of her most telling points--languidly, sweetly and very
often. What her nationality is no one seems exactly to know. English she
is not--French, Italian, Spanish, German, she is not. There are people
who hint at Yankee extraction; but this madame herself denies, furiously
and angrily denies. She has never crossed the Atlantic in her life, and
never, _never_ will. She hates America. The lazy, topaz eyes flash as
she says it. She will never play in America in her life.

The ruby velvet portires were drawn aside, and they filed in by twos
into the adjoining dining-room. Here too the light was vivid as noonday,
and beneath the mimic sun of gas a table glittered that was a vision.
Tall epergnes of frosted silver, filled with rarest hot-house flowers,
slender glasses of waxy camellias from the greenery of a duke, rarest,
costliest grapes, peaches and pears.

There was a brief pause in the gay hum of conversation as they sat down.
Felicia's cook was a _chef_ of the first water--his works of art were
best appreciated by silence. For her wines--was not every famous cellar
in Paris laid under contribution?--nothing finer were to be met at the
table of imperial royalty itself. Presently, however, the first lull
passed, gay conversation, subdued laughter, witty sallies, brilliant
repartees flashed to and fro. Perhaps of all the clever company
assembled, the hostess herself was least clever. As a dancer she was not
to be surpassed--as a beauty she was without peer--as a brilliant, a
witty conversationalist, she was nowhere. She ate her delicate _salmis_,
drank her famous clarets and sparkling Sillery, laughed softly at the
gay sallies going on around her, and watched Lord Dynely, her
_vis--vis_, with a mocking smile in the languid depths of her topaz
eyes. He sat, like herself, almost entirely silent through all the
bright badinage going on around him, his brows bent moodily, drinking
much more than he ate--a sort of "marble guest" amid the lights, the
laughter, the feasting and the flowers.

Terry's sudden coming had completely upset him. Something in Terry's
eyes roused him angrily and aggressively. What business had the fellow
here? What business in Paris at all? Through the unholy glitter, his
wife's face rose before him as he had left her hours ago, pale, patient,
pathetic. The tiny knot of roses she had given him gleamed still amid
the blackness of Felicia's hair--Felicia, who, lying back, eating an
apricot, seemed wholly engrossed by her conversation with Dennison. The
broad band of gold and diamonds on her perfect arm blazed in the light.
Only yesterday he had given it to her, and now she had neither eyes nor
ears for anyone but this overgrown, malapropos dragoon.

"_Mon ami_," Felicia said to him, with a malicious laugh, as they arose
to return to the drawing-room, "you remind one of the _tte de mort_ of
the Egyptians--wasn't it the Egyptians who always had a death's head at
their feasts as a sort of _memento mori_?--and the rle of death's-head
does not become blonde men. For a gentleman whose honeymoon has not well
ended, that face speaks but illy of post-nuptial joys."

"Ah, let him alone, madame!" cried Cecil Rossart, a tall, pretty,
English singer, with a rippling laugh. "You know what the poet
says--what Byron says:

    "'For thinking of an absent wife
    Will blanch a faithful cheek.'"

His lordship is thinking of the lecture her ladyship will read him when
he returns home."

"If late hours involve curtain lectures," cried Adele Desbarats,
shrilly, "then, _ma foi_! milor should be well used to them by this. To
my certain knowledge, he has not been home before three in the morning
for the last two weeks."

"Let us hope my lady amuses herself well in his absence!" exclaimed
Miss Rossart, flinging herself into a Louis Quatorze fauteuil, and
rolling up a cigarette with white, slim fingers--"no difficult thing in
our beloved Paris."

Eric glanced from one to the other at each ill-timed jest, his blue eyes
literally lurid with rage. Dennison's face darkened, too, so suddenly
and ominously, that Felicia, not without tact, saw it, and changed the
subject at once.

"Sing for us, Adele," she cried imperiously, lying luxuriously back in
her favorite dormeuse. "Mr. Dennison has not heard you yet. Have you
heard Mademoiselle Desbarats, _mon ami_?"

"I have not had that pleasure, madame."

The vivacious little brunette went over at once to the open piano, and
began to sing. The others dispersed themselves to smoke and play
bezique. Madame's rooms were Liberty Hall itself. Lord Dynely leaned
moodily across the piano, a deep, angry flush, partly of wine, partly of
jealousy, partly of rage at Dennison, partly of a vague, remorseful
anger at himself, filled him. For Terry, madame cleared away her billowy
tulle and laces, and made room for him beside her, with her own
enchanting smile.

Immediately above the piano--immediately opposite where they sat, a
picture hung, the broad yellow glare of light falling full upon it. It
was the picture that had created the furore last May in the Academy.
"How the Night Fell."

"I have always had a fancy, madame," Terry said, doubling his hand and
looking through it at the painting, "that the woman in that picture is
excessively like you. I never saw you with such an expression as that--I
trust I never may; still the likeness is there--and a very strong one
too. Do you not see it yourself?"

"Yes. I see it," madame answered, with a slow, sleepy smile.

"It's odd too, for Locksley--Caryll I mean--never saw you. I asked him
myself. He had a dislike to theatre-going it seemed, and never went near
the Bijou."

The slow, sleepy smile deepened in madame's black eyes, as they fixed
themselves dreamily on the picture.

"He never went to the Bijou--never saw me there? You are sure of that?"

"Quite sure. Told me so himself."

"Ah! well, his dislike for theatres and actresses is natural enough, I
suppose, considering his past unlucky experience. Quite a romance that
story of his; is it not? Is she alive still?"

"No," Terry answered gravely, "dead for many years. Killed in a railway
accident in Canada, ages ago."

The sleepy smile has spread to madame's lips. She flutters her fan of
pearl and marabout with slim jewelled fingers.

"Mr. Locksley--I mean Caryll--promised me a companion picture to this. I
suppose I may give up all hope of that now. I really should like to make
his acquaintance; I have a weakness for clever people--painters, poets,
authors--not being in the least clever myself, you understand. No, I
don't want a compliment--there is no particular genius in being a good
dancer. For the rest," with a faint laugh, "my face is my fortune. Where
is Gordon Caryll now?"

She speaks the name as though it were very familiar to her--with an
undertone--Terry hears but does not comprehend.

"In Rome, with his mother."

"Does he ever come to Paris?"

"He is expected here almost immediately, I believe."

"Ah!" she laughs. "Well, when he comes, Monsieur Dennison, fetch him
some night to see me. Will you?"

"If he will come. And when he hears you have wished it, I am quite sure
he will," says Terry.

There is a pause. Madame's eyes are fixed, as if fascinated, on the
picture beyond.

"I presume, after Mr. Caryll's first unlucky matrimonial venture, he
will hardly thrust his head into the lion's jaw again. I have heard a
rumor--but I can hardly credit it--that he is to be married again next
May."

"It is quite true."

"To a great heiress--to that extremely handsome Miss Forrester I saw so
often with you last season in the park?"

Terry bows. He does not relish France's name on Madame Felicia's lips.

"It is a love-match, I suppose?"

"A love-match, madame."

She tears to pieces a rose she holds, watching the scented leaves as
they flutter and fall.

"But there is a great disparity of years. She nineteen, he almost forty.
I wonder"--she says this suddenly, flashing the light of the
yellow-black eyes electrically upon him--"if the first unlucky Mrs.
Caryll were _not_ dead, only divorced--if Miss Forrester would still
marry him?"

"I am quite sure she would not," Dennison responds; "but there is no use
speaking of that. The woman is dead--dead as Queen Anne--was killed in a
railway accident, as I say, and a very lucky thing too for all
concerned."

There is a flash, swift and furious, from the black eyes, but Terry does
not see it. The ringed hands close over the pretty fan she holds with so
savage a clasp that the delicate sticks snap.

"See what I have done!" she laughs, holding it up; "and Lord Dynely was
good enough to give it to me only yesterday. Well--it has had its
day--he must be content." She flings the broken toy ruthlessly away, and
looks up at her companion once more. "Does Miss Forrester accompany Mr.
Caryll to Paris in this expected visit?"

"They all come together--his mother, Lady Dynely (the dowager Lady
Dynely I mean), Miss Forrester and Mr. Caryll," Terry answers, uneasily,
longing to change the subject but hardly knowing how.

She smiles a satisfied kind of smile and is silent. Her eyes rest on
Lord Dynely's moody, sullen face, as he stands by the piano, heedless of
the song and the singer, and she laughs.

"Your coming seems to have had a depressing effect upon your kinsman. By
the bye, he _is_ your kinsman, is he not? He was in the wildest of wild
high spirits before you entered. Is this romantic Mr. Caryll not a
relative also?"

"A second cousin. You do Gordon Caryll the honor of being interested in
him, madame," Terry says brusquely.

Madame laughs again and shrugs her smooth shoulders.

"And you are sick of the subject! Yes, he interests me--one so seldom
meets a man with a story now-a-days--men who have ever, at any period of
their existence, done the 'all for love, and the world-well-lost'
business. Shall we not call over poor Lord Dynely and comfort him a
little? He looks as though he needed it. _Trs cher_," she looks towards
him and raises her voice, "we will make room for you here if you like to
come."

"I shall make my adieux," Lord Dynely answers shortly. "You are being so
well entertained, that it would be a thousand pities to interrupt. It is
one o'clock, and quite time to be going. Good-night."

He turns abruptly away and leaves them. Again madame laughs, and shrugs
her graceful shoulders at this evidence of her power.

"What bears you Britons _can_ be!" she says; "how sulkily jealous, and
how little pains you take to hide it. Why did not your Shakespeare make
Othello an Englishman? What, _mon ami_!--you going too?"

"For an uninvited guest have I not lingered sufficiently long?" Terry
answers carelessly, and then he hurriedly makes his farewells, and
follows Eric out.

He finds him still standing in the vestibule, and lighting a cigar. The
night has clouded over, a fine drizzling rain is beginning to fall, but
Eric evidently means to walk. The distance to the Hotel du Louvre is not
great.

"Our way lies together, old boy," Terry says, linking his arm familiarly
through Eric's, "so I cut it short and came away."

"What an awful cut, for Felicia," Eric retorts, with an angry sneer.
"Let me congratulate you, Terry, on your evident success; I never knew
before that you went in for that sort of thing."

"If by going in for that sort of thing, you mean flirtation with
danseuses, I don't go in for it," is Terry's reply. "If I did I should
certainly choose some one not _quite_ old enough to be my mother."

"What do you mean?" Dynely asks, savagely.

"I mean Felicia, of course--thirty-five if she's a day. Oh, yes, she
is--I've heard all about her. She wears well, but she's every hour of
it. And the most dangerous woman the sun shines on."

"I wonder, then, you fling yourself into the jaws of the lioness," Eric
retorts, with another bitter sneer. "You make a martyr of yourself with
the best grace possible--make love _con amore_ as though you enjoyed it,
in fact."

"I didn't come to see Felicia," Terry says, quietly. "I came to see
_you_."

Eric's eyes flash fire. He turns to speak, but Dennison stops him.

"Wait one moment," he says, in the same quiet, resolute tone. "You are
angry, and excited, and jealous. Jealous! faugh! of such a woman as
that! Do you know that your infatuation for her--your neglect of your
wife--is the talk of Paris--the talk of London?--for in London it
reached me."

A furious oath is Eric's answer as he wrenches his arm free.

"And you came after me as my keeper, as a d---- spy!" he cries, hoarse
with passion.

"I came after you as your friend, as _hers_," Terry answers, his own
eyes kindling. "It is early days, Dynely, to neglect your bride--to
leave her there, utterly forsaken and alone, to break her heart in
solitude, while you fling gifts in the lap, and sit at the feet of a
Jezebel like that. I do not set up as your keeper--as any man's--but I
will not stand by and see _her_ heart-broken, her life blighted, while I
can raise my voice to prevent. Eric! if you had seen her as I did, three
hours ago, pale, crushed, heart-broken--"

"'Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife!' My wise Terry, my virtuous
Terry, my pink and pattern of all morality, did you ever hear _that_?
You're as much in love with Lady Dynely as you ever were with Crystal
Higgins. I only wonder you took the trouble to come. Would it not have
been pleasanter to have stayed behind and soothed her sorrows with your
pathetic and pious conversation?"

Terry looks at him--at the flushed, furious face--at the blue eyes lurid
with rage, in wonder--almost in horror.

"Good Heaven!" he says, "is _this_ Eric? If any other living man had
said as much, or half as much, I would have knocked him down. But I see
how it is; that devilish sorceress has turned your brain. Well--she has
turned stronger brains, but she shall not make an absolute fool of you.
Eric! dear old man, I'm not going to quarrel with you, if I can help it.
You don't know what you are saying. I promised little Crystal to fetch
you home in an hour. It's awfully lonely in that big hotel for her, poor
child, and she was never used to being alone, you know."

His voice softened. "Ah, poor little Crystal!" he thinks, with a great
heart-pang, "if your married life begins like this, how in Heaven's name
will it end!"

"So!" Eric says between his set teeth, "_she_ sent you after me, did
she?--a naughty little boy to be brought home and whipped! Perhaps she
also told you where to find me?"

"She told me nothing--nothing, Eric, and you know it," Terry answers,
sternly. "Is it likely she would discuss her husband with anyone? It
wasn't difficult to find you. The very street gamins could have told me,
I fancy, so well is your new infatuation known. Eric, old fellow, we
have been like brothers in the past, don't let us quarrel now. Keep
clear of that woman--she's dangerous--awfully dangerous, I tell you. She
has ruined the lives of a score of men--don't let her ruin yours. Don't
let her break Crystal's heart--Crystal, whose whole life is bound up in
yours. Pity _her_, Eric--poor little soul--if you have none for
yourself."

Again Eric laughs harshly and long.

"Hear him, ye gods! Terry Dennison in the rle of parson! Is your sermon
quite finished, old boy?--because here we are. Or is this but a prelude
to a few more to come? How well the patronizing elder-brother tone comes
from you--you, of all men--the dependant of my mother's bounty. _She_
comes to Paris next week--what fine stories you will have to tell
her--what eloquent lectures you can prepare together. Let me tell you
this, once and for all, Dennison," he says, white with anger, his blue
eyes aflame--" I'll have no sneaking or spying on my actions--I'll be
taken to task by no man alive, least of all by _you_! Let there be an
end of this at once and forever, or by--you'll repent it!"

Then he turns, dashes up the wide stairway, and Terry is alone.




CHAPTER III.

IN THE STREETS.


Terry stands for a while irresolute. One by one the clocks of the great
city chime out the hour after midnight; a few belated pedestrians, a few
fiacres fly past. Even Paris is settling itself for its night's sleep,
but Dennison has no thought of sleeping. It is of no use mounting to his
cockloft under the eaves in his present disturbed state of mind--sleep
and he will be strangers for hours to come. Eric has robbed him of more
than one night's rest since last September--since that eventful day of
the Lincolnshire picnic, when all that was brightest and sweetest in his
life went out of it forever. Well, so that he had been true, so that he
made her happy, Terry could have borne his pain with patient heroism to
the end; but to-night, the old, half-healed pang comes back sharp and
bitter as ever. Only six weeks a bride--six weeks, and neglected,
outraged already--his brief, hot fancy dust and ashes--Felicia, the
actress, preferred before Crystal, the wife.

"He's a villain," Terry thought, savagely; "he's worse than a
villain--he's a fool! Yes, by Jove! as they say over here, a fool of the
fourth story."

He glanced up at the window where four hours ago Crystal had wistfully
sat. Lights still burned there. Was Eric taking her to task for what
_he_ had done--little Crystal, to whom no one ever spoke a harsh word!
He could not stand there with the thought in his mind--he turned, and
without knowing or caring whither, made his way through the now almost
silent city streets.

The drizzling rain that had begun to fall at midnight was falling still,
not heavily, but with a small, soaking persistence, that showed it
meant to keep it up until morning. Smoking as he went, his hands thrust
deep into the pockets of his overcoat, Dennison strolled on and on,
quite heedless where he went, or how far. His thoughts were still with
Crystal--what should he do for her? how help her? It was useless, worse
than useless to remonstrate with Eric--no one knew better than Terry how
hopelessly and utterly obstinate opposition made him. If he could only
induce him to quit Paris. His mother was coming; but Terry knew how
little influence his mother had over him where the gratification of his
own fancy was concerned. For Eric himself it did not so much matter--he
could afford to spend a few thousands in bracelets and bouquets for the
dark-eyed dancer, until his feverish fancy burned itself out as so many
scores of other feverish fancies had done; it was Crystal who was to be
considered--Crystal, who lived but in his love, who drooped already like
a broken lily--whose heart he was breaking as thoughtlessly and as
surely as ever careless child broke the toy of which it had wearied.

"I'll speak to Felicia herself," Terry thought, with a last desperate
impulse; "she can't be _all_ bad--no one is, they say, and I have heard
stories of her lavish generosity to the poor, and all that. Even so
insatiable a coquette as she is may spare one victim. I'll go to her
to-morrow and tell her how it is, tell her of the poor little girl-wife
he neglects for her, and ask her to shut the door in his face. She told
me once, I remember, after that runaway scrape, to ask any favor I
chose, 'though it were half her kingdom,' and I should have it. I never
wanted anything of her before--let's see if she will keep her promise
to-morrow."

The idea was a relief. His train of thought broke--much thinking was not
in Terry's line--he paused suddenly and looked about him. For the first
time he became aware that he had lost his way, that the night was
advancing, that it was black, chill and rainy, and that the sooner he
retraced his steps the better. As he turned, a cry, faint and far off,
reached his ear--a cry of pain or fear--then another, then another. It
was a woman's voice, a woman in trouble. Instantly Terry plunged in the
direction, running full speed. The cry was repeated, nearer this
time--a shrill, sharp cry of affright. He made for the sound, turned a
corner, and found himself in a narrow, dark street, high houses frowning
on either hand, and a woman, flying, panting, and crying out, with two
men in hot pursuit.

"Hallo!" Dennison cried, sending his strong, hearty, English voice
through the empty, silent street, "what the deuce is to pay here?"

With a shrill scream of delight the flying figure made for him and
clutched his arm, panting for breath.

"Oh, sir, you are English," she gasped, in that language; "save me from
those horrid men!"

Terry passed his right arm around her. One of the men, a beetle-browed,
black-bearded Frenchman, came insolently up, and without further parley
Mr. Dennison shot out his left in the most scientific manner, and laid
him on the pavement. His companion paused a second to see his fellow's
fate, and then precipitately fled.

"And unless we want the gendarmes to come up and march us to the
station, we had better follow his example, I think," said Mr. Dennison
to his fair friend.

He looked down as he spoke with some curiosity. An Englishwoman alone
and belated at this hour, in the streets of Paris, was a curiosity. The
light of a street lamp fell full upon her. A woman! why, she was a
child, or little better, a small, dark, elfish-looking object, with two
wild black eyes set in a minute white face, and a dishevelled cloud of
black hair, falling all wet and disordered over her shoulders.

"Who are you?" was Dennison's first astounded question.

The wild black eyes lifted themselves to his face--two small hands
clutched his arm tightly. Where had he seen eyes like those before?

"Oh, sir! don't leave me, please! I am so afraid! it is so late."

"Late! Egad, I should think so. Rather late for a little girl to be
wandering the streets of any city, French or English. You _are_ a little
girl, aren't you?" doubtfully.

"I am sixteen years and six months--and I didn't want to wander the
streets. I lost my way," was the answer, somewhat angrily given.

"Who are you?"

"I am Gordon Kennedy."

"And how do you come to have lost your way, if I may ask, Miss Gordon
Kennedy?"

The big black eyes lifted themselves again to his face in solemn,
searching scrutiny. Evidently the gaze was reassuring; she drew a long
breath of relief and clung confidently to his arm. But again Terry was
nonplussed--_where_ had he seen some one like this before?

"I came from Scotland--from Glasgow," the girl answered, with a certain
old-womanish precision. "I came in search of a person residing in Paris.
I reached here in the train to-night. I have very little money, hardly
any, and I was foolish enough to try and find the person I wanted on
foot, instead of in a cab. I lost my way naturally; and I know so little
French, and speak it so badly that I could not make myself understood. I
did not know what to do; I wandered on and on; it grew dreadfully late;
I thought I would stay in a church porch until morning out of the rain.
While I was looking about for one, those two dreadful men followed and
spoke to me. I ran away and they pursued. I screamed for help and you
came. And I am very, very much obliged to you, sir," concluded Miss
Gordon Kennedy, with another solemn, upward, grateful glance of the
lustrous eyes.

"And how do you know whether I am any better than the two men you fled
from?" Terry asked, with a half-laugh.

"Ah, sir, you are English, and you have a good face. I am not afraid of
_you_," the girl answered, with a second profound sigh of relief.

"Thank you," Terry said, still laughing; "it is the highest compliment
ever paid me in my life. Well, Miss Kennedy, it is getting on for two
o'clock, and is raining, as you see. Shall I look you up a convenient
church porch, or what shall I do with you? Even a church porch in Paris
on a wet night is not altogether a desirable lodging for a young lady of
sixteen. Where shall I take you?"

"I don't know," the girl answered, with an air of anxious distress. "If
it were not so late, so dreadfully late, I might try to find _her_. Tell
me, sir, are all the theatres closed yet?"

"Closed two hours ago. You don't think of exchanging the church porch
for a theatre, do you, mam'selle?"

"Don't laugh at me," she returned, with a sudden flash of the black
eyes; "there's nothing to laugh at. I want to find a person who belongs
to a theatre--a lady, an actress. She plays at the Varieties."

"At the Varieties?" Terry repeated, a little startled. The flashing
black eyes had once more discomfited him by their resemblance to other
eyes he had somewhere seen. "I know some of the ladies who play at the
Varieties. May I ask what is her name?"

"It is Madame Felicia."

They were walking swiftly along through the rain. At these words
Dennison suddenly stood still. The girl looked up at him in surprise.
Again, by the glare of the street lamps, that strange, striking
resemblance flashed upon him. Madame Felicia! Why, this child was
sufficiently like Madame Felicia to be her own daughter. Well--Terry
suppressed a whistle, and still stared blankly down at his little
companion.

"Well," she cried, impatiently, "what is it?--Why do you look at me so?
Have I said anything strange? Do you know," with a sudden glow of hope,
"Madame Felicia?"

"Come on," was Terry's answer; "you'll get your death standing here in
the rain. Do I know Madame Felicia? Well--a little. Do you know her?"

"No."

"You don't! Then, why--if I may ask--"

The dark eyes look up at him again with another petulant flash.

"No, you may not ask! I can't tell you. I want to find Madame
Felicia--the actress who plays at the Varieties. That is all I intend to
tell you. I have come all the way from Glasgow alone to find her. I
_must_ find her--to-night, if possible. She is the only friend I have in
the world. Oh, sir, you have been very good to me. You have done me a
great service--I know you have a kind heart; take pity on me and, if you
know her, take me to her."

"Does she expect you?" Terry asked, staggered.

"No, sir, she does not; but all the same she will take care of me."

"You are quite sure of that?"

"Quite sure, sir."

"Have you ever met Madame Felicia?"

"Never to remember her, but I know what she is like. It is a great many
years since she came to see me. We lived in Canada then."

"We--whom?"

"Joan and me. Joan is my foster-mother, and she is dead. But I have no
right to tell you this. I _won't_ tell you!" with a child's impatient
petulance again.

"You speak of Madame Felicia visiting you in Canada," Terry went on,
taking no notice of the brief outbreak of anger; "you must make a
mistake, mademoiselle. The Madame Felicia I know was never in Canada in
her life."

"Look here!" cried the girl, excitedly. She disengaged her arm, and
produced a photograph from the pocket of her dress. "Look at this! Is
your Madame Felicia anything like this?"

They pause again--again beneath a street lamp--and he looks at the
picture. Madame Felicia, sure enough--to the life--a softly tinted,
perfect likeness.

"Well?" the girl impatiently demands. He hands it back and looks at her
with strongest curiosity.

"That is my Madame Felicia. There is but one such face as that on earth.
And, I repeat again, she never was in Canada."

"And I repeat she _was_!" she flashed out angrily. "Why do you
contradict me? I know better! It is very impolite! She _was_ in Canada!
she was! she was! She lived there--I was born there--"

She paused. In her excited vehemence she had betrayed herself. She
clasped her hands and looked up at him wildly. "I--I--didn't mean that!"
she gasped. "I--I--didn't mean anything!"

"No, of course not," Dennison responded, unable to repress a smile. What
a child she evidently was, what a passionate, excitable, wilful child!

"Oh, take me to her!" she cried, with a sort of sob. "It is so late, so
cold, so wet! I never was out at this time of night with a strange man
before. What would Joan say? Ah, poor Joan!"

She sighed bitterly and clung to him, looking about at the unfamiliar
scene, her eyes dusk with bewilderment and terror.

"Joan was your mother?" Terry insinuated; "no, by the bye, your
foster-mother?"

"It does not matter to you what she was!" retorts Miss Kennedy, with a
sudden return to sharpness. "Will you take me to Madame Felicia, or will
you not?--there!"

"My dear child, Madame Felicia will be in bed."

"She will get up when she hears who I am. Oh! please take me to her
house--only to her house. She will let me in. She will take care of me
when she hears who I am."

"When she hears who you are," Terry thought, looking at the dark,
passionate, pleading, upturned face--at the large, dilated black eyes.
"_She_ was in Canada, and you were born there! There is a story in the
past, then, that madame keeps as a sealed book. I always thought so--I
always thought there was more in her hatred of America than met the
eye."

"Will you take me to her--say?" cried the girl, giving his arm an angry,
impatient shake, "or are you a wicked man after all, like the Frenchman
you knocked down?"

"A wicked man?" Terry repeated, laughing, and with a sort of pity in his
face for this unsophisticated child. "My dear little girl, no. I am the
incarnation of every domestic and Christian virtue, and I will take you
to Madame Felicia instanter. We are near her house now--I only hope she
will take you in. If she will not, some one else shall. Gracious
powers!" he thought, "if this outspoken child had fallen into other
hands."

The girl drew a long breath, and gave the arm she had so lately shaken a
little, grateful squeeze.

"You _are_ good. I am sorry I was so cross with you, but I hate to be
contradicted. She will take care of me; don't you be afraid, and she
will thank you too. What is your name?"

"Terry, mademoiselle."

"Terry what?"

"Terry Dennison; and yours you say is Gordon Kennedy? An odd name for a
young lady."

"Yes, isn't it? But the Gordon was after my father, and the Kennedy was
after Joan. Joan always called me Donny, for short."

"The Kennedy was after Joan, was it? That's odd too. Had your father no
other name than Gordon? Was that his family name?"

"I wish you wouldn't ask so many questions!" was Miss Kennedy's answer,
with still another return to sharpness. "It is awfully impolite to ask
questions. My name is Gordon Kennedy, and I want to go to Madame
Felicia--that's enough for you to know."

"I beg your pardon, mademoiselle," Terry said, laughing; "I stand
rebuked. I won't offend again. Here we are at Felicia's, and lights are
burning yet. Stand here; I will inquire at the _loge_ if madame is to be
seen."

He left her and hastened to make inquiries. The household of madame had
not yet retired--madame's chasseur, in gorgeous livery, was produced,
who in voluble French declared it to be utterly impossible to disarrange
madame at that hour.

"Call madame's maid," Dennison said, authoritatively; "it's a matter of
the utmost importance to madame herself. I will explain to her."

The maid was reluctantly summoned. Dennison hastened back to his waiting
protge.

"Have you any thing--a note, a token to send to madame that will prove
your identity? She will not see you else," he explained.

The girl produced from her pocket a small sealed packet, and put it
confidently in his hand.

"Joan gave me that before she died," she said. "She told me to give it
to Madame Felicia when I met her. You send it to her, and all will be
right."

The femme de chambre appeared, sleepy and sulky. Madame could see no one
at such an hour. Madame had already retired--she could not dream of
disturbing madame. Monsieur's business must wait until to-morrow.
Monsieur cut short the flow of French eloquence by slipping a glittering
Napoleon in one hand and the packet in the other.

"Give madame that, with Mr. Dennison's compliments. Tell her that the
young lady--Gordon Kennedy--is here, just arrived from Scotland, and
waiting to see her."

The Frenchwoman vanished. In silence, Dennison and the young girl stood
and waited. How would it end?

Would madame receive her? Or would she treat her as an impostor, and
send her away? His own pulses quickened a little with the suspense.
Five, ten, fifteen minutes, and the maid did not appear.

"Are you cold?" Terry asked very gently, as the girl gave an
irrepressible shiver from head to foot.

She looked at him, with those sombre, spectral dark eyes, so like, yet
so unlike Felicia's own.

"I am _afraid_," she answered, her teeth chattering. "I don't know! what
if she will not receive me after all? She is a great lady--I am so poor,
so wretched. She may not want me. Oh, if she does not, what will become
of me?"

"I will care for you," he answered kindly. "My dear child, don't tremble
so. Ah! here comes the woman now."

The maid returned, curiosity painted on every feature of her face.

"Madame would see mademoiselle. Mademoiselle was to come to madame at
once."

With a little cry of joy the girl sprang forward.

"I knew she would! I knew she would!" she said, with a sob. Then she
reached out both hands to Dennison. "You were so good! I will never
forget you--never! I thank you with all my heart!"

He pressed the little cold hands kindly, and watched her out of sight.
Then he started at a rapid pace for his hotel.

"So!" he thought; "an odd adventure, surely! I seem destined to be mixed
up in Madame Felicia's affairs. Will she be grateful, or the reverse,
for this night's work, I wonder? That girl's maternity is written in her
face--although, of course, she might be Felicia's sister. I wish I could
get a hold upon her of any sort, yes, of any sort, that would make her
hear to reason about Dynely. Come what may, I don't care how, _he_ must
be freed from her thrall."

He had reached his hotel. It was past two now. But few lights
burned--Eric's rooms were in darkness.

Rather fagged, Terry made his way to his own sky-parlor, and soon forgot
his first eventful Paris evening in sound, fatigued sleep.




CHAPTER IV.

DONNY.


The departure of Lord Dynely and Dennison was the signal for the
departure of the rest of madame's guests. Half an hour later and the
lights were fled, the garlands dead, and Felicia was alone in her own
pretty, rose-hung, gaslit drawing-room. She lay back in the soft depths
of her fauteuil, a half-smile on her lips, too luxuriously indolent as
yet even to make the exertion of retiring. The picture "How the Night
Fell" was the object upon which her long, lazy eyes rested, while that
well-satisfied smile curled her thin red lips.

"So he is coming," she was thinking; "and he is to be married. To be
married to France Forrester, one of the very proudest girls in England,
as I have heard. She knows all about my story, no doubt. And she thinks,
and he thinks, and they all think, I was killed in that railway accident
so many years ago. Her mother was a French Canadian; and she is of her
mother's religion, so they tell me; and even if her pride would permit,
her religion would forbid her to marry a man who is the husband of one
living divorced wife. And this, then, is the form my vengeance is to
take after all. I have wondered so often, so often--it seemed so
impossible my ever being able to reach him, my ever being able to make
him suffer one tithe of what he has made me. But, 'I have him on the
hip' now. Through his love for this girl I will stab him to the heart. I
will part them and stand between them--ay, even if I have to make my
history patent to the world. If I have to confess to Di Venturini, to
whom I have lied so long. I will prevent _his_ marriage if I have to do
it by the forfeit of my own."

She paused a moment to roll up and light a rose-scented cigarette, her
face clouding a little at her own thoughts.

"It will be a sacrifice too, if I _should_ have to make things public,
to confess to the prince. He knows nothing of my past life, except the
pretty little romance I invented for his benefit. At my worst he
believes me to be an outrageous coquette with more head than heart, not
in the least likely to be led astray by the tender passion, and with no
false pride to stand in the way of my accepting costly presents. Indeed,
in the very fishy state of the prince's own exchequer since I have known
him, the diamond bracelets, etcetera, were not at all obnoxious in his
sight." She lifted her dusk, lovely arm, and looked with glittering eyes
at the broad band of yellow gold, ablaze with brilliants. "What a fool
that boy lordling is!" she thought, contemptuously; "so great a fool
that there is really no credit in twisting him round one's finger. And
he has a bride of six weeks' standing, they tell me--neglected and alone
for _me_--at the Louvre. Ah! these brides!" with a soft laugh. "She is
not the first whose bridegroom has left her to spend the honeymoon at my
feet. He is a relative of Caryll's, too. Will his neglect of her, and
besotted admiration of me, be another dagger to help stab him? If there
were no bracelets in question I think that motive would be strong enough
to make me hold fast."

She flung away her cigarette and began abruptly drawing off the many
rich rings with which her fingers were loaded. On the third finger of
the left hand, one--a plain band of gold, worn thin by time--alone
remained--the only one she did not remove. She lifted her pretty,
dimpled brown hand, and gazed at it darkly.

"I wonder why I have worn you all this time?" she mused. "My wedding
ring! that for sixteen years has meant nothing--less than nothing. And
yet by day and by night, I have worn you in memory of that dead time--of
that brief five months, when I was so happy, as I have never, in the
hours of my greatest triumph, been happy since. Di Venturini says it is
not in me to love. He is in love, poor little old idiot! If he could
have seen me then!"

Her hands fell heavily in her lap, she sighed drearily.

"How happy I was! how I did love that man! what a good woman I might
have been if he would have but forgiven and trusted me. But he spurned
me, he drove me to desperation, to death nearly. What did he care? I
vowed my turn would come--for sixteen years I have waited, and it has
not. But the longest lane has its turning, and my hour is now."

She arose and walked up and down, her floating muslin and laces sweeping
behind her. Once she paused before the picture, leaning over the back of
a chair, and looking up at it with a curious smile.

"What an agonized face he has painted," she said softly; "what anguish
and despair in those wild eyes. Did I really look like that, I wonder?
and what was there in him that I should wear that tortured face for his
loss. Good Heaven! if it comes to that, what is there in any man that
women should go mad for their loss or gain--selfish, reckless fools, one
and all! Even he is ready to paint his own folly and madness of the
past, to make money of it in the present."

She turned away with an impatient, scornful last glance and slowly left
the room. Up in her own chamber, she rang for her maid, and with a yawn
resigned herself into her hands for the night.

"If I can only make it all right with the prince," she mused, as the
Frenchwoman brushed out her thick, black hair. "I don't want to lose
him, particularly now, as he has come to his own again. Madame la
Princesse Di Venturini! My faith! a rise in life for the little beggarly
singer of the New York concert hall, for poor old Major Lovell's
accomplice, for Gordon Caryll's cast-off wife. No, I must not lose the
prize if I can, and he is most horribly jealous. Let the truth reach
him--that I have had a husband, that I have a daughter, and much as he
is infatuated, I really and truly believe he will throw me over."

Her thoughts wandered off into another channel, suggested by the
incidental remembrance of her daughter.

"What shall I do with the girl?" she thought, "now that Joan is dead,
and Joan's boor of a husband does not want her. He will be sending her
to me one of these days if I do not take care. I must answer his
insolent letter to-morrow, and tell him at all risks to keep her from
coming here. From what Joan has written of her, I believe her to be
quite capable of it."

Madame's _toilette de nuit_ was by this time complete. The maid had
departed, and madame was in the very act of depositing her loveliness
between the lace and linen of the rose-curtained bed, when the woman
suddenly and excitedly reappeared, the packet in her hand. In a dozen
voluble sentences she related the cause of the disturbance.

"A tall, blond English monsieur--Deens-yong--it was impossible to
pronounce the name, but one of the English gentlemen who had been
present this evening, and a young lady with him, who insisted upon
seeing madame, and Monsieur Deens-yong, with his compliments, had sent
madame this."

"Mr. Dennison," madame repeated, aghast, "and a young lady." She looked
at the superscription and turned white. "Mon Dieu!" she thought, in
horror, "Joan's writing! Can it be possible _she_ is here?"

It was quite possible--the contents of the little packet left no doubt.
It was a rare thing for madame to turn pale, but the dusk complexion
faded to a sickly white by the time she had finished the letter.

"I will see this young person, Pauline, mon enfant," she said
carelessly, feeling the needle-like eyes of the waiting woman on her.
"Show her up here at once, and wait until I ring; I may need you."

The woman departed, marvelling much. And Felicia, throwing a
dressing-gown over her night robe, and thrusting her feet into slippers,
sat down to await the advent of her daughter.

It was two o'clock--what an hour to come, and with Terry Dennison, of
all men. What did it mean? How did the girl come to be in Paris at all,
and what should she do with her, now that she was here? She had not seen
her for ten years. Although Joan and her husband had removed to
Scotland--she had never felt any desire to see her. From what Joan wrote
of her, she was a wilful, headstrong, passionate creature, whom love
alone could rule, upon whom discipline of any kind was lost, reckless
enough if thwarted for any desperate deed. And now she was here. What
_should_ she do with her? If the truth reached the ears of Di Venturini!
No, it must not--at any hazard it must not. She must win the girl over
by kindness, by pretence of affection, and, when opportunity offered,
get rid of her quietly and forever.

And then the door opened, and Pauline ushered her in. For an instant
there was silence while mother and daughter looked at each other full. A
very striking contrast they made--the mother in her mature and
well-preserved beauty, her loose robe of violet silk, her feet in violet
velvet slippers, elevated on a hassock, lying indolently back in her
chair, the lamplight streaming across her rich dark beauty. The daughter
draggled and wet, her black hair disordered, her pale, pinched face
bluish white, her great dusk eyes half shy, half defiant.

"Come here, child," said the soft silky tones of Felicia.

The girl advanced, still with that half-shy, half-defiant air and
attitude, ready to be humble or fierce at a moment's notice. Madame
stretched forth her hand, drew her to her, and kissed her cold, thin
cheek.

"You are Gordon Kennedy?"

"And _you_ are my mother!"

She made the answer with a certain defiance still--prepared to fight for
her rights to the death.

"Hush-h-h!" madame said, with a smile; "_that_ is your secret and mine.
No one knows it here--no one must know it as yet. My marriage was a
secret in the past, is forgotten in the present. I was divorced long
ago. But you know all that."

"Of course I know; Joan told me everything. Look here."

She pushed up her sleeve, and showed on the upper part of her arm the
initials "G. C." in India ink.

"_You_ did that, Joan said," went on the girl still defiantly. "She told
me to show it to you, and remind you of the day you sent her away and
did it yourself."

"I remember very well," Felicia said, still smiling, still holding the
girl's cold hand. "My child, how chill you are, how wet. Here, sit down
on this hassock and tell me how in the world you come to be in Paris at
this unearthly hour, and in charge of Mr. Dennison."

Gordon Kennedy obeyed. The defiance was gradually melting out of her
face, but there was a visible constraint there still. With
straightforward precision she narrated her adventure of the night.

"I ran away from Glasgow," she said, boldly. "Joan died, and I hated
_him_. He was a brute, and he tried to beat me. I threw a plate at his
head and cut one cheek open. It was a horrid gash," said this young
virago, with a shudder; "but I didn't care; he _was_ a brute; I had to
run then, and I came here. I had some money; Joan gave it to me; I have
some yet, and might have taken a cab when I got to Paris as well as not,
and gone to your theatre, but the streets were so bright and dazzling,
the shops so splendid, I thought I would walk. I was a fool for my
pains. I don't know what would have happened, only Mr. Dennison came.
Ah, I like _him_--he was awfully good."

"But surely, surely, child, you did not tell him who you were?" madame
cried in horror, as she listened to this outspoken confession.

"I told him nothing," Gordon answered, proudly, "only my name, and where
I came from, and how I got lost, and that I wanted to find you. He said
he knew you, and would take me to you, and here I am."

"It is the most extraordinary thing I ever heard of," madame said,
bewildered; "and you are the most extraordinary child. Surely there is a
Providence that watches over children and fools."

"I am no child, and I am no fool. I'll thank you not to call me either,"
cried little spitfire, blazing up.

"No, no, certainly not. Why, child, will you be angry with me, your own
mother?" madame said, in her sugarest tone.

"You don't look very glad to see me, if you are my mother," retorts Miss
Kennedy, sulkily.

"You have surprised me so much, don't you see, and I don't want it
known that you _are_ my daughter. It would be a very bad thing for me,
and create no end of talk."

"You are ashamed of me, I suppose?" the young girl cried. "I knew you
would be. You are a fine lady, and I am--yes, look at me. I am a
miserable, draggle-tailed object, am I not?"

"What a temper you have," madame said, still smiling, still holding her
hands. "Don't speak so loudly. I am not in the least ashamed of you.
Properly dressed you will be quite like me."

The black eyes lit.

"Do you think so," eagerly; "Joan always said I was like you, but you
are so beautiful, and I am so thin, and black, and pale. You will let me
stay with you, then, will you?"

"Certainly--that is for the present. I think I shall send you to school.
You would like to go to school, would you not, Gordon. By the bye, I
would rather not call you that."

"Joan called me Donny."

"Donny be it, then. I will dress you properly and send you to school,
and you are not to say a word--no, not a whisper--about our
relationship. You can keep a secret, I think, by your face."

"Try me," the girl said, proudly. "I'd die before I'd tell, if I
promised not."

"And you _do_ promise. It would never do for me, Donny, at least not
just yet, to acknowledge you. People here do not know I ever was
married."

"If you wish it--yes, I promise," the girl said, a wistful light in the
great eyes.

"Then for the present you shall remain here--for a few days, that is.
You shall sleep in my dressing-room, and I will tell my maid and the
rest that you are my cousin--yes, a cousin from Scotland. And now, as it
is late, and have been travelling and are tired, I will see you safely
in bed myself."

"And may I see _him_ again--the gentleman who was so kind to me?" the
girl asked, only half satisfied after all.

"Mr. Dennison? Oh, well--yes--I suppose so. Tell him you are a cousin,
and I will indorse your story."

"I hate telling lies," Donny muttered, rather sullenly; but madame
prudently took no notice. In her own mind she had resolved that long
before Prince Di Venturini's return to Paris, this obnoxious daughter
should be safely out of sight for good and all.

With her own hand she led her to the dressing-room, helped her to
arrange the little lace-draped bed there, and saw her safely in it
before retiring to her own room.

It had been a very unexpected and rather disagreeable ending to a
pleasant evening. Contretemps will occur, and must be made the best of.
Madame had reached that age when we learn the folly of disturbing
ourselves for trifles. A composing draught of wine and spices stood on
the table. She rang for her maid, and dismissed her, drank her sleeping
potion, and went calmly to bed.




CHAPTER V.

WHAT LOVE'S YOUNG DREAM SOMETIMES COMES TO.


It is twelve o'clock, more or less, by all the clocks and watches of
Paris--high noon by the broad brightness which is pouring a flood of
golden light through the blue silk curtains, over the glass, and silver,
and china of a dainty breakfast-table set for two, over two blonde
English heads--Lord and Lady Dynely.

They are breakfasting _tte--tte_, and in profound silence. His
lordship hides a very sulky, dissatisfied and conscious face, behind
that day's _Moniteur_. Her ladyship, on the other side of the big
shining urn, droops over her teacup, pale as the dainty cashmere robe
she wears, with blue eyes that look jaded and dull from want of sleep.
She has not slept all night, and it tells upon her not used to "tears o'
night instead of slumber." In the garish morning sunshine, the pretty
little face looks woefully wan and piteous, poor child, and he sees it;
how can he fail to see it, and is in a fine rage with her and with
himself in consequence. No words have passed between them concerning
last night--no words as yet. That pleasant conjugal debate is still to
come. He had found her feigning sleep, the tears undried upon her
cheeks, so peachily plump only five weeks ago--then like the heart of a
blush rose--now paler than the palest lily. This morning only
monosyllables have been exchanged, but the tug of war is to come, and
although he dreads it horribly--as he dreads and hates an things
unpleasant to his own super-fastidious selfishness--his lordship throws
down the paper at last and begins.

"I suppose," he says, in a voice he tries not to render harsh, but which
_is_. "I suppose you know Dennison came last night? Confounded meddling
prig! I suppose you know, or will know, he followed me, and tried to
play parson for my benefit. I wonder now I did not knock him down for
his impertinence--I will, by Jove, if he tries it again. I hope,
Crystal, you did not send him?"

She shrinks and shivers away at his tone--at his words. He sees it, and
the sting of remorse that follows and tells him he is a brute, hardly
tends to add to his good-humor.

"_Did_ you send him?" he angrily repeats.

She lifts her eyes for an instant to his irritated face, then drops
them, shrinking into herself more and more.

"I sent no one," she answers, in a voice so low as to be hardly audible.

"Oh," Eric says, in a grumbling tone. "You saw him though. He was here?"

"He was here--yes."

"How did he know so well where to find me then? I told you I was going
to dine with some fellows at the Caf de Paris."

"Yes, you told me," she repeats, in the same faint voice. Then she looks
suddenly up at him and her blue eyes flash. "We went to the theatre,
Eric," she says, boldly.

"To the--," so astounded is Lord Dynely that the last word fails on his
lips.

"To the theatre--yes," Crystal goes on quickly and gaspingly. "I wanted
to go--it wasn't his fault, poor fellow--I asked him to take me--I made
him take me."

"And may I ask," says his lordship, with labored politeness, and turning
quite white with anger, "which theatre you honored with your preference?
_Les Italiens_, no doubt?"

"We went to the Varieties. We saw that woman. We saw _you_," she answers
in the same gasping tone.

His lips set themselves with slow, intense anger--his blue eyes gleam
with a dangerous light.

"You saw _that_ woman! Be more explicit, if you please, Lady Dynely. You
saw what woman?"

"That actress. That wicked, painted, dancing woman. And we saw you. You
threw her the flowers I gave you. She wore them in her hair. And then
you were in the box with her--as if--as if--"

But Crystal can say no more. At the recollection of his looks as he bent
over that woman, she breaks utterly down, covers her face and bursts
into passionate weeping.

He is white to the lips now--white with an anger that has something
quite deadly in it. She is his bride but six weeks, and she sits yonder
sobbing her heart out, but he never softens or relents. Who is to gauge
for us of the capabilities of evil that are within us? All his life Lord
Dynely had been taken by superficial observers for a kind-hearted
gentleman, free of hand and large of heart, who would not willingly
injure a worm--all his life he had taken himself to be a good-natured
fellow--tender-hearted, indeed, to a fault; and now he sits watching his
wife with a glance that is absolutely murderous. With it all he is so
astounded that it is a moment before he can speak.

"You did this?" he says at last, in a slow, cruel, suppressed sort of
voice. "You played the spy upon me--_you_! You gave your old lover the
cue, did you--you dragged him after me to the theatre to spy upon me.
You're a fool, Crystal; and, by Heaven, you'll live to repent it!"

She gave a gasping cry. He arose from his seat, flung down his paper,
and stood before her, white with rage.

"It is a thousand pities," he says with a sneer, that for the moment
blots out all the fair Greek beauty of his face, "that I did not let you
marry Dennison. He's in love with you yet--no doubt your old penchant
too is as strong as ever. _It was not his fault, poor fellow._ May I ask
where you and Mr. Dennison are going together to-night?"

She looks up at him--her eyes all wide and wild, with a bewildered sort
of horror. Eric has insulted her--_insulted_ her. She tries to speak,
but only a gasping sound comes. Something in her eyes--in her face
frightens even him, in his blind fury, into remorse and relenting.

"Don't look like that," he says with a strident sort of laugh. "I didn't
quite mean what I said; but when a man finds his wife running about to
theatres in his absence, with her old lover--Well, sir! what do you
want?"

For a servant has entered with a card upon a salver, and presents it
with a bow. Lord Dynely takes it up and utters an exclamation.

"Miss France Forrester!" he exclaims. "The plot thickens. _They're_
here, too, are they? Where is the lady?" he demands of the man.

"In the salon, my lord."

"Very well, tell her we will be there in a moment." The man salaams and
departs. "Go to your room, Crystal," he says, less harshly; "and, for
Heaven's sake try and get rid of that face. You look like a galvanized
corpse. You will have them thinking here I adopt the good old British
custom of beating my wife. Put on rouge--anything--get your maid to do
it, only don't fetch that woe-begone countenance to France Forrester's
sharp eyes."

With this pleasant and bridegroom like adjuration he leaves her and goes
to the salon to receive their guest. He is humming a popular Parisian
street song as he goes, a half smile on his lips, all his old sunny
debonnaire self once more:

    "Ma mre est  Paris.
    Mon pre est  Versailles,
    Et moi je suis ici,
    Pour chanter sur la paille--"

he sings as he enters. France sits in a great ruby velvet chair,
charmingly dressed, looking fresher, fairer, more brightly, saucily
handsome, Eric thinks, than he has ever seen her. "How blessings
brighten as they take their flight." _What_ did he see in his faded,
_passe_, pallid little wife, to prefer her to this brilliant, dark
beauty? For my lord's taste has changed, and "black beauties" are
decidedly in the ascendant again.

"My dear France," he says, holding both her hands, "this is an
astounder. We knew you were coming, but not so soon. When did you
arrive, and where are you located?"

"We arrived late last night, and have apartments in the Faubourg St.
Honore, near the British Embassy. And with my usual impetuosity, and my
usual disregard of _les convenances_, I ran the risk of finding you
still asleep, and rushed away immediately after breakfast. You _are_
up, I see, for which, oh, be thankful. And now where is Crystal?"

"Crystal will be here in a moment. How well you are looking, France,"
he says, half-regretfully; "being in love must be a great
beautifier--better than all Madame Rachel's cosmetics."

"Must be!" she laughs; "you don't know from experience then? I can
return the compliment--you are looking as if life went well with you--"

    "His 'and was free, his means was easy,
      A finer, nobler gent than he,
    Ne'er rode along the shons Eleesy,
      Or paced the Roo de Rivolee!"

quotes France, after her old fashion; "but then, of course, we are in
the height of our honeymoon, and see all things through spectacles
_couleur de rose_."

Eric laughs, but rather grimly. He is thinking of the honeymoon-like
_tte--tte_ her coming ended.

"And how are they all?" he inquires--"the Madre and Mrs. Caryll? Mrs.
Caryll is here, I suppose?"

"Grandmamma is here--yes. And better than you ever saw her. And your
mother is well and dying to see you, and how matrimony agrees with you.
Do you know, Eric," laughing, "I can't fancy you in the _rle_ of
Benedick the married man."

He laughs too, but it is not a very mirthful laugh.

"Caryll is with you?" he says, keeping wide of his own conjugal bliss;
"Of course he is, though--lucky fellow! I needn't ask if _he_ is well?"

"You need not, indeed," France says, and into her face a lovely rose
light comes; "but you will soon see for yourself--they will all call
later. What does keep Crystal--I hope she is not so silly as to stay and
make an elaborate toilet for me?"

"No, no--she will be down in a moment. She has a headache--is rather
seedy this morning--late hours and dissipation will tell on rustic
beauty, you know. By the bye, apropos of nothing, do you know Terry
Dennison is here--at this hotel? We are quite a family party, you see,"
he laughs again rather grimly.

"Terry here! dear old Terry! how glad I shall be to see him. When did he
get over?"

"Last night also. It appears to have been a night of arrivals. Ah, here
is Crystal now."

He looks rather anxiously as he says it. He knows of old how keen Miss
Forrester's hazel eyes are--he feels that she has already perceived
something to be wrong. That she has heard nothing he is quite sure. Her
manner would certainly not be so frankly natural and cordial if one
whisper of the truth had reached her.

Crystal has done her best. She has exchanged her white wrapper for a
pink one that lends a faint, fictitious glow to her face. The suggestion
about rouge she has not adopted--rouge, Crystal looks upon as a device
of the evil one. Something almost akin to gladness lights her sad eyes
as she comes forward and into France's wide, open arms.

"My dear Lady Dynely! My dear little Crystal!" and then France stops and
sends her quick glance from her face to Eric's, and reads trouble
without a second look. She is honestly shocked, and takes no pains to
hide it.

Eric winces. _Has_ Crystal so greatly changed then for the worse? All
his selfish, unreasoning anger stirs again within him.

"You have been ill?" she says, blankly. "You--you look wretchedly."

"I told you she had a headache," Eric interrupts, irritably. "I told you
late hours and Paris dissipation will tell upon rustic beauty. There is
nothing the matter. Open your lips, oh, silent Crystal! and reassure
Miss Forrester."

"I am quite well, thank you," Crystal says, but no effort can make the
words other than faint and mournful. Then she sits down with her face
from the light, and leans back in her great carved and gilded chair,
looking so small, and fragile, and childish, and colorless that a great
compassion for her, and a great, vague wrath against him, fills France's
heart. She does not know what he has done, but she knows he has done
something, and is wroth accordingly. Why, the child has gone to a
shadow--looks utterly crushed and heart-broken. Is he tired of her
already?--is he--but no, _that_ is too bad to think even of fickle
Eric--he cannot be neglecting her for a rival.

Her cordial manner changes at once--a constraint has fallen upon them.
All Eric's attempts at badinage, at society small talk, fall flat. He
rises at last, looks at his watch, pleads an engagement, and prepares to
go.

"I know you and Crystal are dying to compare notes," he says, gayly,
"and that I am in the way. Only Crystal's notes will be brief, I warn
you, France; she has not your gift of tongue. Lady Dynely is the living
exemplification of the adage that speech is silver, and silence is
gold."

"Shall you be in when your mother and Gordon call, Eric?" France asks,
rather coldly. "If not, I am commissioned to tender an impromptu
invitation to dine with Mrs. Caryll."

"Awfully sorry," Eric answers, "but we stand pledged to dine at the
Embassy. _I_ must put in an appearance, whether or no, and Crystal will
also--headache permitting. Crystal rather shrinks from heavy dinner
parties and goes nowhere."

"I thought late hours and Paris dissipation were telling on her,"
retorts France, still coldly. And Eric laughs and goes, with a last
severe, warning glance at his wife--a glance which says in its quick
blue flash:

"Tell if you dare!"

It is a needless warning--Crystal has no thought of telling--of
complaining of him to any one on earth. She lies back in her big chair,
her little hands folded, silent and pale, while the sounds of ringing
life reach them from the bright, gay boulevard below, and the jubilant
sunlight fills the room.

"How thin you have grown, Crystal," France says at last, very gently.
"Paris does not agree with you I think. We must make Eric take you home
to Dynely."

Her eyes light eagerly--something like color comes into the colorless
face. She catches her breath hard.

"Oh!" she says, "if he only would!"

France is watching her intently.

"You don't like Paris, then?"

"Like it!" the gentle eyes for an instant flash. "I hate it."

There is a pause. France's heart is hot within her. Fickle, unstable,
she had always known Eric to be; selfish to the core and cruel in his
selfishness; but an absolute brute, never before.

"Do you go out much?" she asks.

"No--yes." Crystal falters. She hardly knows which answer to make in her
fear of committing Eric. "I don't care to go out--dinner parties _are_ a
bore--I never was used to much society, you know, at home."

"I am afraid you must be very lonely."

"Oh, no! that is--not very. I read and play--a little--and then, Eric--"

But her voice breaks, it is not trained to the telling of falsehoods,
and the truth she cannot tell.

"Yes," France says quietly, "Eric is out a great deal naturally--he is
not a domestic man; but once you return to Dynely all that will be
changed. We must try and prevail upon him to take you home at once."

The sad blue eyes give her a grateful glance. Then a troubled,
frightened look comes into them.

"Perhaps--perhaps you had better not," she says; "he will think you are
dictating to him, and he cannot bear to be dictated to. He likes
Paris--I am sure he will be angry if he is urged to go."

"We can survive that calamity," Miss Forrester answers, cynically; "and
your health--and, yes, I will say it--happiness, are the things to be
considered first."

"But I am happy," cries Crystal, in still increasing alarm, "indeed I
am. How could I be otherwise so soon?"

Her traitor voice breaks again. France looks at her in unutterable
compassion.

"Ah, how indeed!" she answers, "you poor little pale child! Well, I must
go--they really don't know where I am, and we are all to go sight-seeing
to the Luxembourg. Do come with us, Crystal; you look as though you
needed it."

But Lady Dynely shakes her small, fair head.

"I cannot," she says. "Eric may return, and be vexed to find me out."

"Eric! Eric!" thinks France, intolerantly; "I should like to box Eric's
ears!"

"Besides, sight-seeing tires me," Crystal goes on, with a wan little
smile, "and I don't think I care for pictures. We visited the
Luxembourg, and the Louvre, and the Tuileries, and all the rest of the
show places, when we first came, and I remember I was ill all day with
headache after them. I like best to stay at home and read--indeed I do."

France sighs.

"My little Crystal! But you will be lonely."

"Oh, no. Eric _may_ come to luncheon--he often does--and Terry will drop
in, I dare say, by and by. You know Terry is here?" interrogatively.

"Yes; Eric told me. I wish I could take you with me all the same, little
one. I hate to leave you here in this hotel alone. It is a shame!--a
shame!" says France, in her hot indignation.

But Crystal lifts a pained, piteous face.

"Please don't speak like that, France. It is all right," she says, with
a little gasp; "I--I prefer it."

"Do come!" France persists, unheedingly. "We will leave you at home with
grandmamma Caryll, while we do the sight-seeing. You will love her,
Crystal--she is the dearest, best old lady in Europe. Then we will dine
comfortably together, _en famille_, and go to the Varieties in the
evening, to see this popular actress Paris raves about--Madame Felicia."

But, to France's surprise, Crystal suddenly withdraws her hands and
looks up at her with eyes that absolutely flash.

"I will never go to the Varieties!" she cries; "I will _never_ go to see
Madame Felicia! She is a wicked, wicked woman, and I hate her!"

She is trembling from head to foot with nervous passion as she says it.
France stands petrified. Then all in an instant Crystal recollects
herself, and piteously clasps her hands.

"I did not mean to say that!" she cries; "it is very wrong of me. Please
don't think anything of my angry words--I did not mean anything by
them--indeed I did not."

France stoops and kisses her as a sister might, holding her close for a
moment; and a little sob she cannot wholly repress breaks from the poor,
jealous child, as she lays her head on France's breast.

"My darling," France whispers, in that warm kiss, "keep up heart. Eric
shall take you out of this wicked, tiresome' Paris before the week ends,
or I will know the reason why."

Then, with profoundest pity for this poor little girl bride, she goes,
her own day's pleasuring totally spoiled.

"This is what Eric's love-match comes to," she think sadly. "Ah, poor
little Crystal!"

    "'I have lived and loved--but that was to-day;
    Go bring me my grave-clothes to-morrow.'"




CHAPTER VI.

AT THE VARIETIES.


It is close upon luncheon hour when Miss Forrester returns to the
Faubourg St. Honor. As she enters the drawing-room, still in her street
dress, she sees her lover sitting in an arm chair by the open window,
smoking a cigar, and immersed in the art criticisms of the _Revue des
Deux Mondes_. He throws down the paper and looks at her with lazily
loving eyes. Happiness and prosperity certainly agree with _him_--as
Gordon Caryll, the accepted suitor of Miss Forrester, he looks ten years
younger than did Mr. Locksley, the impecunious portrait painter.
Handsomer, nobler, France thinks, than Mr. Locksley, it is impossible
for mortal man to grow.

"Well," he says, "you have returned. My thoughts were just turning
seriously to the idea of having out the detective police, and offering a
reward for your recovery. Is it admissible to ask, my child, where you
have been?"

She comes behind him, lays her little gloved hands on his shoulders, and
looks down into the gravely smiling face resting against the chair back.
They are not demonstrative lovers those two, but now, rather to Mr.
Caryll's surprise, Miss Forrester impulsively stoops and leaves a kiss
on his forehead.

"And to think," she says, drawing a tense sort of breath, "that I
_might_ have married him!"

Mr. Caryll opens his handsome gray eyes. Both the kiss and the
irrelevant exclamation take him rather aback.

"You might have married him! You might have married whom? You have not
been proposing to any one this morning, have you? What are you talking
about France?"

"About Eric," she answers, absently.

"And with the most woe-begone of faces. Melancholy has evidently marked
you for her own this morning. You are regretting you threw Eric over for
me--is that it, my dear?"

"Nonsense!" is France's energetic answer. "I hate to have you say such
things, even in jest, Gordon. Thank Heaven, no! I liked Eric,
certainly--one could hardly fail to do that; but, I always had a most
thorough-paced contempt for him all the same. And if I had married
him--but no, I never would, I never could, if there had been no Crystal
Higgins, no Mr. Locksley, in the scheme of the universe. Gordon, I have
been to see them this morning."

"So I inferred, my dear, from your very energetic language. And you
found them well, I hope?"

"Eric is well," France says, resentfully; "he will be, to the end of the
chapter. But, Crystal--"

"Yes?" Mr. Caryll says, interrogatively. "Crystal is well also, no
doubt?"

"Well!" France cries, and then stops. "Ah! you should see her--wait
until you do. I never saw any one so changed in my life."

"For the better?"

"For the worse. She is the shadow of herself--poor little soul! Her sad,
heart-broken face and voice haunt me like a ghost. Eric is a brute!"

"Indeed! Husbands invariably are, are they not? What has Eric done?"

"I don't know what he has done," Miss Forrester answers, indignantly. "I
only know he is breaking his wife's heart. Why don't you say 'husbands
invariably do'? I daresay it is true enough."

Mr. Caryll takes one of the gloved hands and gives it an affectionate
little squeeze.

"My dear child, don't excite yourself. I intend to prove an exception.
Seriously, though, I am very sorry for little Lady Dynely. I am afraid
the rumors I have been hearing must be true."

"Rumors? What rumors? I never heard you allude to them."

"No; one does not care to talk about that sort of thing, and I knew it
would annoy you, and make his mother unhappy. But as you seem to be
finding out for yourself, well they _do_ say he neglects the little one,
and runs about with--"

"With Felicia, the actress! Gordon, I am sure of it! With Felicia, the
dancer!"

"With Felicia, the dancer. But take it calmly, my love. How do you know
it?"

"I know it from Crystal herself. That is what she meant when I asked her
to come with us to the Varieties to see Felicia."

"Ah, what did she mean?"

"She said she hated the Varieties, she hated Madame Felicia; that she
was a wicked, painted woman. And you should have seen those dove-eyes of
hers flash. My poor, dear little Crystal!" The dark, impetuous eyes fill
with tears and fire with indignation. "Only six weeks married!" she says
passionately. "Gordon, I hate Eric."

"Now, France," he says gravely, "don't make yourself unhappy about this.
Lady Dynely must have known she ran no ordinary risk in marrying
Dynely--the most notorious male flirt in Europe. If she had had one
grain of sense in that pretty flaxen head of hers she must have known
that matrimony would work no miracles. A flirt he is by nature--there is
not a grain of constancy in his whole composition; and as she has taken
him, so she must abide by her bargain."

"He is a brute!"

"So you said before," answers Mr. Caryll, a half-smile breaking up the
gravity of his face. "Still, allowance must be made for him. He has been
spoiled all his life--he has never been thwarted--to wish has been to
have, and ladies have petted and made much of him for his azure eyes,
and golden curls, and his Greek profile, all his life long. Time _may_
cure him. Meanwhile, neither you nor I, Miss Forrester, can help
Crystal. And they say this Felicia plays the deuce with her victims."

"Have you ever seen her, Gordon?"

"Never. I was too busy last year when she was at the Bijou, and besides,
I had an aversion to theatres and theatre-going. I shall see her
to-night, however."

"She bought your picture, 'How the Night Fell,' didn't she?"

"Yes. Di Venturini purchased it for her. By the bye, I promised at the
time a companion picture. They say she's to marry Di Venturini
immediately upon his return from Italy."

"Marry him! _That_ woman!"

"My dear France," Caryll says, laughing, "with what stinging scorn you
bring out _that_ woman! There is nothing said against 'that woman'
except that she is a most outrageous coquette."

"But she is a dancer, and he is a prince."

"That goes for nothing. The best blood of the realm takes its wife from
the stage in these days. I shouldn't fancy it myself, but you know the
adage, 'A burnt child dreads the fire.'"

"Poor little Crystal!" sighs France.

"Poor little Crystal, indeed. Rumor says he is altogether infatuated.
Let us hope rumor, for once, is wrong. Are they coming to dinner?"

"No. Eric pleads a prior engagement, and she does not seem to have heart
enough left to go anywhere. Here is Lady Dynely. By the bye, I forgot to
tell you Terry is in Paris."

"Terry? Terry Dennison?" cries Lady Dynely, eagerly; "is he, really.
Where, France?"

"At the Hotel du Louvre. I stole a march upon you this morning, and made
an early call upon the happy pair."

Her ladyship's eyes light eagerly.

"And you saw them? You saw Eric?"

"I saw Eric, mamma."

"How is he looking? Will they dine with us?"

"Eric is looking well--never better. And they dine at the Embassy this
evening. No doubt, though, Eric will call."

"Here he is now," Caryll interrupts, looking from the window, and France
disappears like a flash. She feels in no mood at present to meet and
exchange pleasant commonplaces with the Right Honorable the Lord
Viscount Dynely.

She goes to her room, throws off her bonnet and seal jacket, and pays a
visit to grandmamma Caryll, in her own apartments. Paralysis has
deprived her of the use of her limbs. She sits in her great invalid
chair the long days through. But in her handsome old face a look of
great, serene content reigns.

The restless, longing, impatient light that for years looked out of her
eyes has gone--she has found what she waited and watched for. Her son is
with her--France is to be his wife--she asks no more of earth.

The luncheon-bell rings. Mrs. Caryll's is brought in, and France
descends. To her great relief, Eric has gone, and Terry is in his place.
Terry, who is changed too, and who looks grave and preoccupied.

"You were at the Louvre this morning, France," he says to her as they
sit side by side. "You saw _her_?"

"Yes, Terry," and France's compassionate eyes look at him very gently.
"I saw her."

"And you have heard----"

"Everything--poor little Crystal. Terry, Eric must take her to England,
and at once."

"Ah, if he only would," Terry says with a sort of groan, "but he will
not. That is past hoping for. He is killing her--as surely as ever man
killed woman. And when he does," Terry sets his teeth like a bulldog,
"_my_ time of reckoning will come."

"You must accompany us this afternoon, Terry," Lady Dynely says, after
the old imperious fashion. "France is quite as much as Gordon is capable
of taking care of. _I_ want you."

Terry falls into the old groove at once. In his secret heart he is
longing to be at the hotel with Crystal, to cheer her in her loneliness;
but that may not be, may never be again. So he sighs and goes. They
spend the long, sunny, spring-like afternoon amid the lions of Paris,
and return to dine, and dress for the theatre.

"The whole duty of family escort will fall upon your victimized
shoulders, Dennison," says Mr. Caryll, looking up from a letter that the
post has brought him. "This is a note from General McLaren--I served
under him at the beginning of the American civil war. He is at the Hotel
Mirabeau; and as he leaves Paris to-morrow, begs me to call upon him
to-night. You won't mind, I suppose; and I will look in upon you about
the second act."

"I always told Terry he was born to be a social martyr," France says.
"The fetch-and-carry, go-and-come, do this and that _rle_, has been
yours from your birth, my poor, boy."

So it chances that when the curtain goes up, and the "Golden Witch"
begins, Gordon Caryll does not make one of the party of three who look
down from the front of their box, amid all the glittering "horse-shoe"
of gaslight and human faces. The pretty, bright theatre is very full;
there is an odor of pastilles, a flutter of fans, a sparkle of jewelry.
Felicia is in great form to-night--she has heard from Lord Dynely
himself of the family party coming to view her with coldly-critical,
British eyes. They have laughed together over it in her little
dusk-shaded, perfumed, luxurious drawing-room, where his lordship has
made a much longer morning call than he made immediately before in the
Faubourg St. Honore.

She glances up now, swiftly and eagerly, as she comes forward to the
footlights, a golden goblet in her hand, her long hair floating loosely
over her shoulders, singing some wild bacchanalian, Theresa-like ditty.
She is gloriously beautiful in her scant drapery, and her rich voice
fills the theatre superbly. But as she tosses off her goblet, at the end
of her drinking song, she sees that the man she looks for is not in the
box.

Will he know her? He has never seen her since that long, far-off night
when they parted in the darkening day by the shore of the lonely
Canadian river. He thinks her dead. Will he know her? A wild, fierce
delight fills her soul, flames up in her eyes, and burns in her cheeks.
Will he know her? She will sing to-night (if he comes) the song she ever
sang for him, that first evening in the cottage of Major Lovell. It
will run very well with this play--that is much more song and dance than
drama. If he doubts her identity, surely, surely, he will remember
_that_.

She is wild with excitement, she surpasses herself. The audience applaud
to the echo--she flings herself into her part with a reckless abandon
that sweeps her listeners along with her. And still she watches that
box, and still he does not come. Will he not come at all? Amid a storm
of excited applause, amid a shower of bouquets, the curtain falls upon
the first act.

"How well she plays." "How magnificently she is looking." "Never saw her
dance half a quarter so well in my life before." "By Jove! you know,
_what_ a voice Felicia has." These and a hundred such exclamations run
the round of the theatre.

"She is beautiful!" France exclaims, "with a _beaut du diable_ I never
saw equalled. And she dances and sings like a very Bacchante."

"Wish to Heaven they would burn her as a witch," growls Terry, under his
ruddy beard. "Such a woman should no more be let run loose than a
leopardess."

"She sings very well," Lady Dynely says, languidly; "but there is
something fierce and _outre_ about her, is there not? I don't like this
sort of exhibition. A ballet is bad enough--this kind of thing is
positively indelicate. What is she looking at our box for? I caught her
more than once."

"She is looking for what she does not see. There is Eric yonder in the
stalls," says Miss Forrester, in a tone of stony resentment.

"Is he, really?" Eric's mother puts up her glass and leans forward. "So
he is, and quite alone. Where is Crystal, I wonder?"

"Crystal is at home, and _quite alone_ also, you may be very sure,"
answers France, still in that tone of strong, suppressed indignation.

"I wonder if he sees us? Oh, yes, he does. There he is rising. No doubt
he will call upon us directly. France, why don't you look? He is bowing
to _you_."

But France's bright, angry eyes are fixed steadfastly upon the rising
curtain--she will _not_ see Lord Dynely. And Lord Dynely looks away from
her, feeling he has been snubbed, and knowing very well the reason why.

He has come to the theatre to-night, partly because he cannot stay away,
partly out of sheer bravado.

What! shall he stay away because he is afraid of Terry Dennison, and
France Forrester? Is he still a child in leading-strings, to be dictated
to? Not if he knows it. So he leaves early the ambassador's saloon, and
goes to the Varieties, and sits out all the second act, directly under
the lorgnettes of the Gordon Caryll party.

Again madame surpasses herself--again the whole house rings with
applause--again bouquets are showered upon her. Lord Dynely adds his
mite to the rest, a bouquet of scarlet and white camellias. Again and
again, the black, fierce, restless eyes, flash their feverish light to
that one box. And still the man for whom she looks does not come.

He comes as the curtain falls for the second time, and France's eyes and
smile welcome him.

"Am I _very_ late?" he asks. "McLaren and I had a thousand things to
say, and time flew. I say, France, how do you like it?"

"Not at all! She fascinates one, but it is a horrid and unhealthy sort
of fascination. Her mad singing and dancing throw me into a fever."

"Is there much more of it?" he says, standing behind her chair. "Is it
all over?"

"There is one more act. She is to be burned alive, Terry tells me, and I
want to wait and see her. I shall try to fancy the burning real, and
enjoy it accordingly."

"By Jove!" he says, and laughs, "what a blood-thirsty spirit we are
developing! Ah! Dynely, _you_ here?"

For the door opens, and Eric, languid and handsome, saunters in.

"How do, Caryll? Late, aren't you? Well, France--well, _ma mre_, how do
you like it? Superb actress, isn't she?"

He looks at France. With a certain defiance, she sees and accepts.

"If dancing mad jigs, singing drinking songs, and capering about like a
bedlamite, go to constitute a fine actress, then yes. A little of Madame
Felicia goes a long way."

His eyes flash, but he laughs.

"There is no accounting for tastes. She seems to please her audience, at
least."

"Where is Crystal?" France abruptly asks. "I thought you were to dine at
the Embassy."

"Crystal is at home. And you thought quite right; we _were_ to dine at
the Embassy." The defiant ring is more marked than ever. "I have dined
there, and on my way home dropped in here, knowing I would have the
pleasure of being in the bosom of my family."

He looks at her steadfastly, and France turns her white shoulder
deliberately upon him. Her lover is leaning over the back of her
chair--ah! how she loves him, how she trusts him--how different he is
from this shallow-brained young dandy, with his Greek beauty, and
callous heart! How differently her life will be ordered from Crystal's,
when she is his wife.

As she thinks it, the curtain goes up for the third time, and the
"Golden Witch" bounds on the stage.

She is singing as she springs to the footlights, a gleeful hunting
chorus this time. A troop of followers in green and gold come after, and
join in the chorus. Her costume is of green and gold also; a green
hunting cap, with a long white plume, is set jauntily on her raven
tresses. She is dazzling in the dress, she is radiant as she sings.
Again her sweet, high voice, rings to the domed roof. And it is the very
song Rosamond Lovell sang for Gordon Caryll, seventeen years ago, in the
Toronto cottage.

She flashes one fierce electric look up at their box.

Yes, he is there at last--at last. Thank Heaven for that! if she can
thank Heaven for anything.

He hears her, he sees her; recognizes the song. He knows her.

Her hour of triumph is complete. Her excitement reaches its climax. As
she never played before, she plays to-night. She holds the multitude
breathless, spellbound. She sings her own death-song, wild, wailing,
weird, unearthly, so ghastly in its tortured agony, that France
shudders and turns pale. The mimic flames arise--surround her, her
uplifted face is seen above them, as the curtain falls down, her ghastly
death-song dies wailing away.

For a moment, so rapt and petrified are the audience, that they cannot
applaud. _Then_--such a storm of clapping, of calling, shakes the walls
of the theatre, as never shook it before. "Felicia! Felicia!" they
shout, as with one voice.

She comes out smiling and kissing hands. Another tempest of applause and
delight breaks forth. Then flashing up one last look, straight into
Gordon Caryll's face, she disappears.

There is a stir and commotion, an uprising and shawling of ladies.

"Ugh!" France says, with a shudder; "it is diabolical! it is like the
nightmare. I shall never come to see this _outre_ spectacle again. Do
_you_ like it, Gordon?"

She leans back, and looks up at him. He does not seem to hear her, he
does not seem to see her--he is staring at the stage like a man
stupefied.

"Gordon!" she cries.

His eyes turn slowly from the blank, green curtain to her, but his face
still keeps that dazed, stunned look. His bronzed skin, too, has turned
of a dead ashen gray.

"Gordon," France says once more, this time in terror, "what is it?"

Her question seems to break the spell. He makes an effort--a mighty
effort, she can see, and answers her.

"Nothing. Will you come?"

His very voice is changed--it is hoarse and low. He offers her his arm
mechanically, and watches her arranging her opera-wrap, without trying
to help her. She takes it and goes with him out, and all the while he
keeps the dazed look of a man who is walking in his sleep.

"Oh, Gordon!" she cries out, "_what_ is it? Do you know that woman?"

He wakes then--wakes to the whole horrid truth.

"For Heaven's sake, don't ask me," he says, "to-night. Wait--wait until
to-morrow."

Her eyes dilate. They are out under the frosty, February stars. He puts
them into the carriage--Lady Dynely and France--but he makes no effort
to follow them. Eric and Terry make their adieux and turn away.

"Are you not coming, Gordon?" Lady Dynely asks in surprise.

"No," he answers, still in that low, hoarse tone. "Home," he says to the
coachman. And as they whirl away, France leans yearningly forward, and
sees him standing under the street lamps, quite alone.




CHAPTER VII.

"AFTER MANY DAYS."


He knows her! From the first moment in which his eyes rested on her,
from the first instant he has heard her ringing voice, he knows it is
his wife. The song she sang for him in Major Lovell's dim drawing-room
so many years ago, she is singing again for him to-night, for him--he
knows that, too. His divorced wife stands yonder before him--this
half-nude actress--his divorced wife whom for the past ten years he has
thought dead. He knows it in that first moment of recognition as surely
as he ever knew it in the after days.

She has hardly changed at all--in the strong, white lime light, she does
not seem to have aged one day in seventeen years. The dusk, sensuous
beauty is riper and more of the "earth, earthy;" the delicate outlines
of first youth have passed, except that she is even more beautiful in
her insolent, voluptuous womanhood than in her slim, first girlhood. He
thinks this in a dazed, stupefied sort of way as he stands and looks at
her. And this is Rosamond Lovell--the woman who was once his wife.

His wife! his wife! The two words echo like a knell through his brain,
set themselves to the wild, sweet music that is ringing about him, fit
themselves in time to her flying feet. His wife! Yonder creature,
singing, dancing in that dress, that _undress_ rather--gaped at by all
these people. His wife!

The lights, the faces, the stage, seem to swim before him in a hot, red
mist. He grasps the back of the chair he holds, and sets his teeth.
Great Heaven! is the Nemesis of his mad, boyish folly to pursue him to
the end?

And then France's cool, sweet voice falls on his ear. "Do you like it,
Gordon!" she is asking, with a smile. The fair pure face, the loving,
upturned eyes, the trustful smile, meet him and stab him with a pang
that is like death. He has forgotten her--in the first shock of
recognition and dreadful surprise, he has forgotten her. Now he looks
down upon her, and _feels_ without thinking at all, that in finding his
divorced wife he has lost his bride.

He cannot answer her--his head is reeling. He feels her wondering,
startled eyes, but he is beyond caring. He tries to answer, and his
voice sounds far off and unreal even to his own ears.

It ends. The curtain is down, the blinding stage-light is out, she is
gone. He can breathe once more now that fatal face is away. The whole
theatre has uprisen. Lady Dynely is moving out on the arm of her
son--France is clasping his and gazing up at him with eyes of wistful
wonder.

They are out under the cool, white stars--he has placed them in their
carriage, seen them roll away, and is alone.

Alone, though scores pass and repass, although dozens of gay voices and
happy laughs reach him; although all the bright city is still broad
awake and in the streets. He takes off his hat and lets the cold wind
lift his hair. What shall he do, he thinks, vaguely; what ought he do
first?

Rosamond, his divorced wife, is living--he has seen her to-night. And
France Forrester will marry no man who is the husband of a wife. They
have spoken once on the subject--gravely and incisively--he recalls the
conversation now, word for word, as he stands here.

"If she had not died, France," he had asked her, "if nothing but the
divorce freed me--how then? Would you still have loved me and been my
wife?"

And she had looked at him with those clear, truthful, brave eyes of
hers, and answered at once:

"If she had not died--if nothing but your divorce freed you, there could
have been no '_how then_.' Loved you I might--it seems to me I must; but
marry you--no. No more than I would if there had never been a divorce. A
man can have but one wife, and death alone can sever the bond. I believe
in no latter-day doctrine of divorce."

They had spoken of it no more, he had thought of it no more. It all
comes back to him as he stands here, and he knows he has lost forever
France Forrester.

And then, in his utter despair, a wild idea flashes across his brain,
and he catches at it as the drowning catch at straws. It is _not_ his
wife--he will not believe it. It is an accidental resemblance--it may be
a relative--a sister; she may have had sisters, for what he ever knew.
It is not Rosamond Lovell--the dead do not arise, and she was killed ten
years ago. Some one must know this Madame Felicia's antecedents; it is
only one of these accidental resemblances that startle the world
sometimes. He will find out. Who is it knows Madame Felicia?

He puts his hand to his head as this delirious idea flashes through it,
and tries to think. Terry Dennison--yes, he is sure Terry Dennison knows
her, and knows her well. He will be able to tell him; he will follow at
once.

A moment later and he is striding with a speed of which he is
unconscious in the direction of the Hotel du Louvre. He finds his man
readily enough. Terry is standing in the brilliantly-lit vestibule,
smoking a cigar. Eric is _bon garon_, and has run up at once to his
wife. A heavy hand is laid on Terry's shoulder, a breathless voice
speaks:

"Dennison!"

Terry turns round, takes out his cigar, and opens his eyes.

"What! Caryll! And at this time of night! What's the matter? My dear
fellow, anything wrong? You look--"

"There's nothing wrong," still huskily. "I want to ask you a question,
Dennison. Come out of this."

He links his arm through Terry's, and draws him out of the hotel
entrance into the street. Terry still holds his cigar between his finger
and thumb, and still stares blankly.

"There must be something wrong," he reiterates; "on my word, my dear
fellow, you look awfully."

"Never mind my looks," Caryll impatiently cries. "Dennison, you know
Madame Felicia?"

At this unexpected question, Dennison, if possible, stands more agape
than ever. Then he laughs.

"What! You, too, Caryll! Oh, this is too much--"

"Don't laugh," Caryll says, harshly. "Answer me. You know this woman?"

"Well, yes."

"Intimately?"

"Well, yes, again. I suppose I may say tolerably intimately."

"What is her history?"

"What?"

"Who is she? Where does she come from? What is her real name?" Caryll
asks, still in that same hoarse, breathless haste.

Mr. Dennison's eyes dilate to twice their usual size. He altogether
forgets to resume his newly-lit cigar.

"My dear fellow----"

"The devil!" Gordon Caryll grinds out between his set teeth. "Answer me,
cannot you?"

No jesting matter this, evidently, and Terry, slow naturally, takes that
fact in.

"Who is she? Where does she come from? What was the rest?" he demands
helplessly. "Good Lord! Caryll, how should I know? I'm not Felicia's
father confessor."

"You told me you knew her intimately."

"I know her as well as most people know most people, and that goes for
nothing. What do we, any of us, know of any one else? Don't grow
impatient, old fellow; all I know I'm willing to tell, but it's precious
little. Now begin at the beginning and cross-examine. You shall have the
truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Only don't keep the
steam up to its present height, or you'll go off with a bang!"

There is a second pause. Terry resumes his cigar, thrusts his hands in
his coat pockets and waits. Gordon Caryll comes to his senses
sufficiently to make a great effort and calm down.

"I beg your pardon, Terry," he says, more coherently than he has yet
spoken; "but this is a matter of no ordinary importance to me--a matter
almost of life and death."

Again Terry's eyes dilate, but this time he says nothing.

"I never saw Madame Felicia before to-night," goes on Caryll; "and she
bears the most astonishing, the most astounding resemblance to another
woman, a woman I have thought dead for the past ten years. I want to
know her history, and I have come to you."

"Go on," says Terry, calmly.

"Was Madame Felicia ever in America?--ever in"--a pause--"in Canada?"

"She _says_ not," is Terry's answer.

"Says not? Then you think--"

"I think she was. She has always been so vehement in denying it that I
have suspected from the first she lied. And since last night I felt sure
of it."

"Since last night--"

"I don't know that it's quite fair to tell," says Terry; "but I don't
see that I'm bound to keep Felicia's secrets--I owe her no good turn,
and if it's of any use to you, Caryll--"

"Anything--everything connected with that woman is of use to me," Caryll
answers, feverishly.

Without more ado, Terry relates the episode of last night--the rescuing
the girl in the street, her inadvertent words, and the bringing her to
Felicia.

"She asseverated again and again that Felicia had been in Canada. She
said she herself had been born there, in such a way, by Jove! that you
could only infer Felicia to be her mother. And she looked like Felicia.
And she had Felicia's picture. And Felicia received her at once. And I
believe, upon my soul, that she is Felicia's daughter."

Gordon Caryll listened dumbly. Felicia's child and--his. He knew there
had been a child--a daughter--had not Mr. Barteaux told him? And she too
was here.

"She called herself--?" he began.

"She called herself Gordon Kennedy. _Gordon_! By Jove!" For the first
time a sudden thought strikes Terry--a thought _so_ sudden, and _so_
striking that it almost knocks him over. "By Jove!" he repeats again,
and stares blankly at his companion.

There is no need of further questioning. Assurance is made doubly
sure--Felicia and Rosamond Lovell are one, and this girl picked up
adrift in the Paris streets is his daughter. No need of further
questions, indeed. He withdraws his arm abruptly and on the spot.

"That will do," he says. "Thanks, very much. And good-night."

Then he is gone, and Terry is left standing, mouth and eyes open--a
petrified pedestrian. It all comes upon him--the story of Gordon
Caryll's Canadian wife--the actress--the picture--the puzzling
resemblance to Felicia--her eager questions about him the evening
before. Terry is dumbfounded.

"By Jove!" he says again aloud, and at the sound of that dear and
familiar expletive his senses return. "By Jove, you know!" he repeats,
and puts his cigar once more between his lips, and in a dazed state
prepares to go home.

Gordon Caryll goes home too. He sees France's face at the drawing-room
window as he passes, looking wistful and weary, and at the sight he sets
his teeth hard. He cannot meet her. He goes up to his room, locks the
door, and flings himself into a chair to think it all out.

He has lost her--forever lost her. To-morrow at the latest she must know
all, and then--he knows as surely as that he is sitting here--she will
never so much as see him again.

It is no fault of his--she will not blame him--she will love and pity
him, and suffer as acutely as he will suffer himself. All the same,
though, she will never see him more. And at the thought he starts from
his chair, goaded to a sort of madness, and walks up and down the room.

The hours pass. He thinks and thinks, but all to no purpose--not all the
thinking he can do in a lifetime can alter facts. This woman is his
divorced wife--and France Forrester will marry no divorced man. The law
can free him from his wife, but it cannot give him France. The penalty
of his first folly has not been paid--and it is to be paid, it seems, to
the uttermost farthing. His exile and misery are to begin all over
again.

He suffers to-night, it seems to him, as he has never suffered in the
past. And as the fair February morning dawns, it finds him with his
face bowed in his hands, sitting stone-still in absolute despair.

The first sharp spear of sunshine comes jubilantly through the glass. He
lifts his head. Haggard and pallid beyond all telling, with eyes dry and
burning, and white despair on every line of his face. His resolve is
taken. All shall be told, but first that there may not be even a shadow
of mistake, he will see this woman who calls herself Madame
Felicia--will see her and from her own lips know the truth.

Early as it is he rings for his man, and has a cold bath. It stands him
in the stead of sleep. He makes a careful toilet, has a cup of coffee
and a roll, and goes out of the house before any of his womankind are
stirring.

The bright sunshine and bustle of the streets help him. He smokes, and
that soothes him. As eleven chimes from all the city clocks, he is
altogether himself again, the excitement and agitation of last night
over and done with. He is very pale--beyond that there is no change in
him.

He feels no anger against the woman he is going to see--he is just
enough for that. The fault has been all his--all his also must be the
atonement. But he will see her, and then--.

He cannot quite think--steady as he has forced himself to be--of what
will come after. It is very early yet to make a call, but he cannot
wait. It is not difficult to discover the address of the most popular
actress in Paris; he does discover it, walks steadfastly there, and
encounters madame's tall chasseur in his gorgeous uniform of carmine and
gold.

Madame sees no one at this hour, monsieur is politely told; it is
doubtful if madame has arisen.

But madame will see _him_, monsieur is quite certain. Will this Parisian
"Jeames De La Pluche" be good enough to forward monsieur's card to
madame.

The chasseur looks doubtful, but something in the English monsieur's
face causes him to comply. The card is passed onward, and inward, until
it reaches the hand of madame's maid, and by madame's maid is presented
to madame.

Madame has arisen--early as is the hour, has even breakfasted. She lies
back in her dusk-shaded drawing-room, looking rather fagged after last
night's unusual excitement, with deep bistre circles surrounding her
eyes. Her lady companion sits near reading aloud. She lies back with
closed eyes, not listening, but thinking of Gordon Caryll's face as she
saw it last night looking down upon her.

"A visitor for madame--a gentleman," Pauline announces.

"I can see no one, it is too early," madame says crossly; "is it M. Di
Venturini?"

"No, madame. An English gentleman, tall and fair--who has never been
here before."

Madame sits suddenly up, and seizes the card. Her pale face flushes dark
red as she reads the name. She does not quite know what she has
expected--certainly not this. For a moment her heart beats fast.

"I will see the gentleman, Pauline," she says. "Mrs. Hannery, you must
be tired of that stupid book. The morning is fine--suppose you take
Pandore [the poodle] and go for a walk. It will do you both good, and I
shall not need you."

Thus dismissed, the lady companion rises and goes; madame turns to her
maid:

"Where is my new protge?" she asks. "Miss Donny."

"In her room, madame, reading."

"See that she does not leave it then, see that she does not enter here.
Now show the gentleman up."

The maid departs. Madame springs up, darkens the room yet a little more,
looks at herself in one of the full-length mirrors, and is back in her
seat with drooping, languid eyes before the door re-opens. But her heart
is beating fast, and her topaz eyes are gleaming savagely under their
white-veiled lids.

The door opens, and he comes in. And so again, after many years, this
man and woman, once husband and wife--are face to face.

The first thing he sees in that twilight of the room is his own picture.
It hangs directly opposite the door, and the sunshine, as it opens,
falls for a moment upon it. Like that they parted, like this they meet
again! He stands for a second motionless, looking at it, and she is the
first to speak.

"A very good picture, and very well painted; but I don't think, I can't
think, I ever wore _such_ a face of despair as that. You ought to know,
though, better than I."

The slow, sweet voice was as smooth and even as though the heart beneath
were not throbbing at fever heat. A cruel, lingering smile was on her
face, and the yellow, stealthy eyes were watching him greedily. He
turned as she spoke and looked at her.

"Rosamond!"

She started at the name, at the low, even gentle tone, in which it was
spoken. The blood rose again over her face, and for a second she found
no voice to answer. Then she laughed.

"Ma foi!" she said, "how droll it sounds to hear that! I had almost
forgotten that once _was_ my name, so long is it since I have heard it?
Ah, _Dieu_! how old it makes one feel."

A real pang went through her heart. Growing old! Yes, surely, and to
grow old was the haunting terror of this woman's life.

"You have changed," she said, looking at him full, "changed more than I
have. You do not resemble very greatly the slender, fair-haired
stripling I knew so long ago in Toronto. And yet I should have known you
anywhere. _Mon ami_, will you not sit down?"

"Thanks," he answered in the same low, level voice, "I will not detain
you but a moment. Last night, for the first time since we parted at
Quebec, I saw you--"

"And the sight was a shock, was it not, monsieur?" she gayly
interrupted.

"It was," he replied gravely, "since I thought you dead. Since I was
sure of it."

"Ah, yes! that railway accident. Well, it was touch and go--I never
expect to be so near death, and escape again. But I did escape,
and--here I am!"

She looked at him with her insolent smile, her eyes gleaming with evil
fire.

"Here I am," she repeated with slow, lingering enjoyment; "and it spoils
your life for you--does it not? As you spoiled mine for me _that_
night."

She pointed to the picture--the vengeful delight she felt shining in her
great eyes.

"You were merciless that night, Gordon Caryll, and I vowed revenge, did
I not? Well the years have come and the years have gone; we both lived,
and revenge was out of my reach. I never forgave you and I never will;
but what could I do? Now we meet, and I need do nothing. The very fact
that I am alive is vengeance enough. It parts you from her--does it not?
Ah, you feel that! Monseigneur, I wonder why you have come here this
morning? It is certainly an honor I did not expect."

"I came to make assurance certainty," he answered. "I _had_ no doubt,
and still--"

"And still you would stand face to face with me once more. Well--there
is no doubt, is there? I am Rosamond Lovell--Rosamond Caryll--the girl
you married, and whose heart you so nearly broke, seventeen years ago.
Oh, don't look so scornful! I mean it! Even I had a heart, and I loved
you. Loved you so well that if I had been able I would have gone down to
the river and drowned myself after you left me that night. Fortunately I
was not able. I could laugh now when I look back and think of my
besotted folly. We outlive all that at five-and-thirty."

"You were not able," he repeated; "that means--"

"That my child was born twelve hours after we parted," she interrupted
once more. "Did they tell you in Quebec that?"

"Yes, they told me. And the child is with you now."

"Who told you so?" she demanded, sharply.

"I know it--that is enough. You ask me why I came here to-day--one
reason was to see her."

She laughed contemptuously.

"And do you fancy I will let you? Why, I meant that child from her birth
to avenge her mother's wrongs. And she shall--I swear it."

"You refuse to let me see her?"

"Most emphatically--yes. When the time comes you shall see her to your
cost--not before."

He turned to go. She rose up and stood before him.

"What! so soon," she said, with a laugh, "and after so many years'
separation? Well, then, go--actions, not words, are best between us. But
I think, Gordon Caryll, _my_ day has come. Miss France Forrester is a
very proud and spotless young lady--so they tell me. Have you told her
yet who Felicia the actress is?"

He made no reply. Without speaking to her, without looking at her, he
passed out of the greenish dusk of the perfumed drawing-room into the
sparkling sunshine, and fresh, cool wind of the fair spring day.




CHAPTER VIII.

A MORNING CALL.


It is just one hour later, and France Forrester stands with hands
clasped loosely before her at the window of Mrs. Caryll's invalid room,
gazing with weary wistfulness at the bright avenue below, a strained,
waiting, listening expression on her face. For since they parted last
night so strangely at the entrance of the theatre she has not seen her
lover, and when has _that_ chanced between them before? Something has
happened! Something wrong and unpleasant--she feels that vaguely,
although she cannot define her own feeling. How oddly he looked last
night, how strangely he spoke, how singularly he acted. Did he too know
Madame Felicia? Then she smiled to herself. Of course not--had he not
said so a dozen times. Madame Felicia might have power over the weak and
unstable, such as Eric Dynely; over men of the stuff Gorden Caryll was
made, no more than the ugliest hag that prowled Paris.

But why did he not come?

Last night, long after the rest had retired, she had waited up in the
salon wistfully anxious for the good-night she so rarely missed. And he
had entered very late, and had passed on at once to his room, although
he _must_ have known she would wait. Had he not been belated times
before, and had she ever failed to wait--had he ever failed to seek her
out? She had gone to bed vexed and disappointed. But she was not one
easily to take offence, and it would be all right to-morrow. He _might_
have looked into the salon, but he did not--and--there was an end to it.
To-morrow at breakfast he would tell her, whatever it might be. So she
rose happy and light-hearted, the fag-end of a tune between her lips,
with no presentiment of all that was so near shadowing her happy girl's
heart.

Breakfast hour. She ran down eagerly. Gordon was never late. He was
always to be found in dressing-gown and slippers reading Galignani at
this hour. But his favorite arm-chair this morning was vacant, and only
Lady Dynely met her across the crystal and the silver.

"Has Gordon turned lazy, I wonder?" the elder lady said, carelessly; "it
is something new to miss his face at the end of the table. Eric and his
wife are coming to-day. France and I had counted on Gordon for you. We
are going to Saint Cloud, and if Gordon does not return--"

"In any case I do not think I shall go," France answered, rather
wearily. "One grows so bored of perpetual sight-seeing. I shall stay at
home with grandmamma Caryll."

She had no appetite for breakfast, and when it was over she ran up to
say good-morning to "grandmamma." No, Gordon had not been there
either--his mother's first question was for him.

"It is the very first day he has failed to pay me a before breakfast
call," Mrs. Caryll said, with a half-laugh, and yet dissatisfied. "Can
he have gone out, or where is he?"

"I do not know," France answered, vaguely uneasy; "he was not down to
breakfast."

"Not down to breakfast?"

"He was absent rather late last night," Miss Forrester said, speaking
lightly; "no doubt he has turned sluggard, and overslept himself.
Susan," she said to Mrs. Caryll's nurse and maid, who entered at that
moment, "do you know if Mr. Caryll is still in his room?"

"Mr. Caryll went out three hours ago, Miss France," the Woman answered.
"So I heard his man Norton say."

There was a pause.

"How _very_ strange," France was thinking, more and more uneasily; "how
very unlike Gordon. What can it mean?"

But there was no solution of the enigma. The morning wore on, bringing
Eric and Crystal--Eric handsome and debonnaire as ever, Crystal clinging
to his arm, silent, shadowy. And Lady Dynely alone was their companion
in the day's pleasuring at Saint Cloud.

"I wish you were coming, France," Crystal said, in a wistful whisper.
Somehow, in France's strength and sunny brightness, even this little
wilted lily seemed to revive.

"Not to-day, darling," France answered, kissing her. "It will not do to
leave grandmamma quite alone. Besides, Saint Cloud is an old story to me
and rather a tiresome one. We will all meet at dinner and go to the
Opera aux Italiens together."

"Has Crystal's eloquence prevailed, France?" Eric says in his languid
way, sauntering up. "No? Then," with a slight, half-contemptuous laugh,
"the case is hopeless indeed. When a woman won't, she won't. I suppose
we must be resigned, although your absence spoils our excursion. Come,
madre, come, _sposo mio_. By-by, France--'we meet again at Philippi.'"

And then they are gone, and France draws a long breath of relief. Gordon
will be here presently, and they will have a long, delicious day all to
themselves, and everything will be explained.

She goes up to Mrs. Caryll's room, takes a favorite book, seats herself
by a window, whence no one can enter unperceived, and tries to read. But
so many people come in and go out, so many carriages and fiacres whirl
up and down, that her attention is perpetually distracted. How long the
hours are--how the morning drags--will he _never_ come? Eleven, twelve,
one! Will he return to luncheon at two? He hardly ever eats luncheon,
but surely he will come. How dazzlingly bright the sunshine is--her eyes
ache. She rises with an impatient sigh and closes the curtains. A brass
band somewhere near is thundering forth its music. They are playing one
of Felicia's popular airs. She wishes they would stop; the noise makes
her head ache. Mrs. Caryll is dozing in her chair. The brazen braying of
the band is beginning to make France sleepy too. Just as her tired eyes
close, and her head droops against the back of her chair, Susan taps
softly and enters the room.

"Miss France." She has to repeat the name before the girl looks up.
"Miss France, there is a lady in the salon to see you."

"A lady." For a moment her heart had bounded. But, only a lady!

"Susan," she impatiently exclaims, "_hasn't_ Mr. Gordon come yet? Surely
he must be in his room or--"

"No, Miss France, he hasn't come yet. And the lady is waiting in the
salon--"

"Who is she? Where is her card? I am not dressed. I don't wish to see
any one."

"She would not give her name; she sent up no card. She said she wished
to see Miss Forrester at once on very important business."

"Very important business!" Miss Forrester rises, opening her hazel eyes.
"Important business!" Again her heart leaps--is it anything about
Gordon? "In the salon, you say, Susan? I'll go down at once."

She goes. In the long, cool salon, the jalousies are half-closed, and in
the dim, greenish light a lady sits. A lady very elegantly
dressed--_over_-dressed, it seems to France, her face hidden by a close,
black lace veil.

"You wished to see me, madame?" Miss Forrester says gently, and
marvelling who her veiled visitor can be.

The lady turns, rises. "Miss Forrester?" she says, interrogatively, and
Miss Forrester, still standing, bows.

"You wished to see me on important business--"

France does not finish the sentence, for the lady quietly removes her
veil, and they stand face to face. A very beautiful and striking face
France sees, and oddly familiar, though for the moment she cannot place
it. Only for a moment, then she recoils a step.

"Madame Felicia!" she exclaims.

"Madame Felicia!" the actress repeats, with a graceful stage bow and a
coolly insolent smile. "Now you know why I did not send up my name. You
would not have seen me."

Miss Forrester has recovered herself. Surprised excessively she is
still; intensely curious she is also, but outwardly she is only calmly,
quietly courteous.

"You mistake," she says, in the same coldly gentle tone; "I would have
seen you. May I ask to what I owe this unexpected visit?"

She seats herself at a distance, near one of the windows, and glances at
her watch as a hint to be brief. Madame Felicia takes the hint. The
coolly insolent smile yet lingers round the full, red lips, the
yellowish black eyes (like a cat's eyes, France thinks) have an
exultant, triumphant light.

"I will not detain you long," she says; "and I think what I have to say
will not bore you. May I ask--although I _know_ you have not--have you
seen Mr. Gordon Caryll this morning?"

France's heart gives one leap. It _is_ something about Gordon after all.
Her dark face pales slightly; and she has to pause a second before she
can quite steady her voice.

"And may _I_ ask," she says, haughtily, "in what way that concerns you?"

"It concerns me much more nearly than you think," the actress answers.
"You shall hear presently. I know you have not seen him this morning,
else you would not be sitting here with me now. I thought I would be
beforehand with him, and I am. I thought he would hardly have the
courage to come straight from me to you."

The blood rushes in a torrent to France's face, to her temples.

"From me to you!" There is a great green tub of jessamines in full bloom
standing behind her. Is it the sweet, sickly odor of the flowers that
turns her so deathly faint now? "From you to me," she repeats; "I don't
know what you mean."

"I am quite sure you don't. Mr. Caryll has not been visible here this
morning because he has been with me. He left me just one hour and a half
ago, and I dressed at once and came to see you. You should hear the
story from me as well as from him. I was resolved I should have no more
of your blame than was my due. I saw you in the box last night at the
Varieties. I saw you often last spring in London. You looked good, and
brave, and noble, and although I care little for the opinion of the
world, of its women particularly," with a reckless laugh, "it is my
whim to stand as well as possible with you. I felt sure I would be
before him. Men do not hasten to tell such a story as he has to tell
you."

Oh, the deathly faintness of these jessamine flowers. Oh, the horrible
clashing, crashing of the band, whose braying seems to pierce her head.
For a moment France turns so giddy and sick that she cannot speak. The
actress half rises in alarm.

"Miss Forrester! you are going to faint--"

But France lifts her hand and motions her to be still.

"Wait," she says, almost in a whisper. "You have frightened me. I am all
right again. Now go on."

She sits upright with an effort, clenches her hands together in her lap,
and sets her teeth.

"Go on!" she says almost fiercely, and looks Madame Felicia full in the
face.

The insolent smile, the exultant light, have died out of the dark face
of the dancer. In its stead a touch of pity has come. After all, this
girl is to suffer as she suffered once--and she remembers well what
_that_ means.

"Miss Forrester," she says, gravely, "did you notice nothing unusual in
Mr. Caryll's looks or manner last night at the Varieties--last night,
when he saw me?"

Did she? Did she not? The ashen pallor of his face, the husky tone of
his voice, and his abrupt departure!

"Go on," she says, under her breath again.

"Let me ask you one other question," says Madame Felicia. "You are to
marry Gordon Caryll?"

"I am."

She seems to answer by no volition of her own. Even at this moment it
strikes her--what an odd thing that she, France Forrester, should be
sitting here answering whatever questions this dancing-woman chooses to
ask.

"You know his story, of course--that he had a wife, that he was
divorced. You think, you all think, he is a widower."

"Yes," France says in the same mechanical way--slowly and dully, "he is
a widower."

"He is _not_ a widower," Madame Felicia cries, with one flash of her
black eyes--"no more than I am a widow. _He_ thought me dead, thought me
killed in a railway accident. I was not. For seventeen years we have not
met. Last night we did. Miss Forrester, I am Gordon Caryll's wife!"

"His wife!" France has known it before it is said. "His wife! his wife!"
How oddly it sounds. She is conscious of no acute pain--her principal
wish, as she listens almost dreamily, is that that horrible band would
cease and that she could get away from the smell of these jessamines.

"You do not seem to understand, Miss Forrester," Felicia cries sharply.
"I repeat, I am Gordon Caryll's divorced wife."

"I understand," France says, dreamily. "Go on."

"Does it not matter to you, then?" madame cries still more sharply.
"Would you marry a divorced man?"

"No. Go on."

There is a moment's silence. It is evident her quietude puzzles madame.
It cannot puzzle her any more than it does France herself. By and by,
she feels dimly, she will suffer horribly. Just at present she feels in
the hazy trance of the lotus eater, listening to the music of the band,
looking at the sunshine lying in broad, golden bands on the carpet,
inhaling the scent of the jessamine. To the day of her death those will
turn her sick and faint.

"Go on," she says quite gently, unable to get beyond these two words,
and madame incisively _goes_ on.

"He recognized me last night," she says, her voice hardening as she sees
how quietly the other takes it. "I had recognized him long before, since
I saw his picture at the Academy, 'How the Night Fell.' Well--last night
he saw me, and, naturally, knew me at once. I have not changed much--so
they tell me."

There is a pause--madame watching her, half irritated by her profound
calm. Miss Forrester watching the flickering bars of light on the
carpet.

"Is it her training, or is it want of feeling?" the actress wonders.
"No, I think not that. They are all alike--these aristocrats--ready to
stand like a red Indian and die game." "I fancy his slumbers were
rather disturbed last night," she goes on, with a hard laugh; "he looked
like it this morning when he came to me."

Miss Forrester lifts her eyes from the carpet, and looks at Felicia.
"Why did he go to you?" she asks.

"Chiefly, I think, because he wanted to make certainty more than
certain, partly because he knew his child--_our_ child--was with me, and
he wanted to see her."

A pang that is like a red-hot knife-thrust goes through France
Forrester's heart. _Our_ child! Yes, this woman has been his wife, is
the mother of his child. She gives a little gasp.

"You--you let him see her?"

"I did _not_ let him see her--I am not quite a fool. As I told him he
shall see her one day to his cost. She is mine, and I mean to keep her.
His name he took from me--his child he cannot."

There is silence again. The pity has died out of Felicia's face; it is
hard, and bitter, and relentless as she speaks again.

"All the evil he could work me he did. I loved him and he left me--he
cast me off with scorn and hatred. I swore revenge; but what can a
woman--even a bad woman--do? Look, here, Miss Forrester!" Her voice rose
rapidly and her eyes flashed. "In marrying me he fell a victim to a
plot, an unscrupulous plot, I don't deny. I was not Major Lovell's
daughter; I was no fit wife for such as he--I was taken from the lowest
concert-room of New York city. When I was a baby I was thrown upon the
streets; I had to make my own living, and earn the crusts I lived on. I
knew no mother, no father, no God. To make money--to wear fine clothes
anyhow--that was my religion. Lovell came and took me, and Gordon Caryll
saw and fell in love with me. He asked no questions--he married me. And
I loved him with a love that would have been my earthly salvation, if he
had let it. I was true to him, in thought, and word, and action; I would
have given my life for him. Then Lovell died, and dying told his story.
I fled, and hid myself from his first fury; I knew he would take my life
if we met. And then, months after, he found me out, and spurned me as
he would a dog, and showed me the decree of divorce, and left me
forever. Miss Forrester, I was a fool, I know, but I fell down there on
the sands where he quitted me like a dead woman. It would have been
better for him and for you to-day," with another reckless laugh, "if I
had died. But--here I am."

She broke off abruptly. In the dark eyes looking at her she read nothing
but a great and infinite pity.

"Poor soul!" France said, softly, "you loved him, and were his wife. It
was hard on you."

Madame shrugged her shoulders.

"I have survived it, you see. Men die and worms eat them, but not for
love! That night my baby was born. There is the story. You have heard it
often before, no doubt. He is divorced--I cannot stop your marriage. Do
as you will--only I had to come and tell you this."

She arose as she spoke. France stood up, too, and drew a step nearer.

"Madame," she softly said, wistful wonder in her eyes, "do you--do you
love him yet?"

Once more madame laughed.

"Love! Ma foi! it is years since I knew what the word meant. Only fools
ever love. Not I, Miss Forrester! I hate _him_ as I do--well, not the
devil--for I have no reason to hate him. No, no! it would be strange,
indeed, if I did; I finished with all that forever the evening we parted
by the Quebec shore. I am to marry the Prince Di Venturini in a month;
but marrying and loving--well, they are different things."

"Does _he_ know of this?" France asked, hardly knowing why she did ask.

"M. Di Venturini? Not yet--not at all if I can help it. And I don't
think he ever will. Mr. Caryll will not tell, and I am quite sure I
shall not."

She moved to the door; on the threshold she paused.

"Are you angry with me for coming?" she demanded, abruptly.

"Angry?" France echoed, wearily. "Oh, no, why should I be?"

Angry! No, she was angry with no one. She felt tired and sick, and worn
out--she would like to be alone, to darken her room and lie down, and
get away from the distracting music of that ceaseless band, from the
dazzling glare of the sunshine, from the heavy odor of the flowers. But,
angry--no. A touch of pity crossed again madame's hard, insolent beauty.

"I am sorry for you," she said. "You look good and gentle--you deserve
to be happy. Yes, I _am_ sorry for you."

And then she had left the room, and her silks were rustling down the
wide stairway, and France was alone.

Alone! She leaned her folded arms on the table, and laid her face down
upon them and drew a long, tired sigh. It was all over; and the woman
was gone, and out of France's life all the happiness was forever gone,
too.

Gordon's wife! How strangely it sounded. _She_ was to have been
that--she never could be now. If he were dead and in his coffin, she
could not be one whit more widowed than she was. There was a dull sort
of aching at her heart--but no acute pain. She wondered at her own
torpor.

The band was striking up another tune. She could _not_ endure that. She
arose and toiled slowly and wearily up the stairs to her own room. The
great hotel was very still. She reached her chamber, lowered the blinds,
threw herself face downward on the bed.

"Gordon's wife! Gordon's wife!" Over and over, like some refrain, the
words rang in her ears. Then they grew fainter and fainter--died out
altogether; and in the midst of her great trouble France fell fast
asleep.




CHAPTER IX.

"THE PARTING THAT THEY HAD."


The last amber glitter of the sunset was gleaming through the closed
jalousies, and lying in broad yellow bars on the carpet, when France
awoke. Awoke with a great start, suddenly, and broad awake, her horrible
trouble flashing upon her with the vividness and swiftness of lightning.
Gordon's wife was alive; _she_ could never be that; she must give him up
at once and forever. Then a passionate sense of desperation and misery
seized her.

"I cannot! I cannot!" she cried out, clenching her hands and flinging
herself face downward among the pillows. "Oh, I _cannot_ give him up!"

The yellow light flickered, faded, grew gray. One by one the golden bars
aslant the carpet slid out of sight. Ten minutes more and the closed
room was almost dark. And slowly the wild tempest of hysterical sobs was
subsiding, too violent to be long-lived, but France Forrester did not
move. Presently it died away altogether, and kneeling by the bedside,
her face bowed in her hands, she was seeking for strength to bear her
bitter sorrow where strength alone can be found.

"Thou whose life was all trouble," France's soul cried, "help me to bear
this!"

No thought had ever come to her that he was free--that legally she might
become his wife to-morrow in all honor before the world. Her French
mother had reared her in a faith which teaches that divorce is
impossible--a faith which holds marriage a sacrament, too holy to be
broken by law of man, in which, "until death doth ye part," is meant in
the fullest and most awful sense of the words. His wife lived--his
wife, although she were Princess Di Venturini within the hour--and she
and Gordon, even as friends, must meet no more. Friends! Ah, no, they
could never meet as that; and so they must meet just once, and say
good-by forever.

She got up at last, utterly exhausted in body and mind. How still the
vast hotel was. How dark the room had grown. She drew up the blinds in a
sort of panic and let in the gray light of evening. It was almost night.
Perhaps Gordon had come and was waiting for her. She must go to him at
once, at once.

"Oh, my poor dear," she thought, "you have borne so much--could you not
have been spared this last, bitterest blow?"

She went down stairs without pause. If he had returned at all, he would
be in the salon; he would not tell his mother until he had told
her--that she felt. She never stopped to think of her white cheeks and
swollen eyes; he was alone and in trouble, and she must go to him.

Yes, he had come. As she softly pushed the door open she saw him. He was
sitting where she had sat three hours ago. Three hours! was it only
that? Three years seemed to have passed since this morning. He sat, his
folded arms on the table, his head lying on them--his whole attitude
despairing and broken down.

He did not hear her as she entered and crossed the room, neither heard
nor saw, until she laid one hand lightly on his shoulder and spoke.

"Gordon!"

Then he looked up. To her dying day that look would haunt her, so full
of utter, infinite despair. Those haggard, hopeless eyes might almost
have told her the story, had Madame Felicia never come. Haggard and
hopeless as they were, they were quick even in this supreme hour to see
the change in her.

"You have been crying?" he said.

In all the months they had been together he had never seen the trace of
tears on France's happy face before. The sight of those swollen eyelids
and tear-blotted cheeks struck him now as with a sense of actual
physical pain.

"What is it?" he asked. "'Ill news travels apace,' but I hardly think,"
with a harsh sort of laugh, "mine can have reached you already. France,
my own love, what is it?"

But she shrank away, drawing her hand from his grasp, and covering her
eyes with the other.

"Oh, Gordon, hush!" she cried out; "I cannot bear it. I----," with a
great gasp, "I know all."

"All!" His face turned of a dull, grayish pallor, his eyes never left
her. "France, do you know what you are saying? What do you mean by all?"

"That--that----" No, her dry lips would not speak the words. "Madame
Felicia has been here," she said, with a quick desperate gesture, and
walked away to the window.

The bright street below was dazzling with gaslights--golden stars
studded the violet February sky. Carriages filled with brilliant ladies
flew ceaselessly by--the brilliant life of the most brilliant capital of
the world was at its height. And France leaned her forehead against the
cool glass and wondered, with a dull sickness of heart, if only this
time yesterday she had indeed been happier than the happiest of them
all.

Gordon Caryll had risen from his chair and stood looking at her,
actually dumbfounded by her last words. In whatever way she might have
heard the loathsome truth, he had never thought of this--that _she_
would have the untold audacity to force an entrance here.

"France!" he exclaimed, a dark flush of intense anger crimsoning his
face; "do you mean what you say?--that woman has dared come here?"

"Yes," she said, wearily. "Ah, don't be angry, Gordon. What does it
matter, since I must know it?--what difference who tells the tale? She
is not to blame, poor soul, for being alive."

"Poor soul!" he repeats, in a strange, tense tone. "Do you mean
Felicia--that utterly vile and abandoned creature? Is it possible you
pity _her_?"

"With all my heart, Gordon--more, almost, than I pity myself, and I do
pity myself," France said, with a wistful sort of pathos in her voice.
"I was so happy--so happy!"

He stood for a moment silent--struggling, it seemed, with his own
rebellious heart. The angry glow faded from his face. In its place an
infinite sadness came.

"When did she come? Will you tell me what she said?" he asked.

"She came this afternoon--about three. It seems like a whole lifetime
ago, somehow," France answered, in the same weary way, passing her hand
across her eyes; "and she told me she was your--your wife."

And then suddenly her strength breaks down, her voice falters and fails,
and she clenches her hands together, and is silent.

"She is no wife of mine!" he says, fiercely. "Years ago the law freed me
from the maddest marriage ever madman made. France, why should we
sacrifice the happiness of our whole lives to her? Let us set her at
defiance. She is no more to me--and you know it--than any of the painted
women who danced with her last night. She shall _not_ part us. She shall
not blight your life as she has mine. France, I cannot give you
up--don't look at me like that--I tell you I will not give you up. You
shall be my wife."

She made no struggle as he held her hands. She stood and looked at him,
in grave calm.

"Let me go, Gordon!" is all she says, and with a sort of groan, he
obeys. "I can never be your wife now, and you know it. I am sorry for
you, sorry for myself, sorrier than I can say; only if we are to part
friends, never speak to me again like that."

He turned from her, his brows knit, his lips set.

"Forgive me," he said, bitterly; "I will not offend again. It is easy
for you, no doubt, to give me up; I was but a doubtful prize from first
to last--no one knows it better than I; but you see it is not quite so
easy for me. I have grown to love you, in the mad and idiotic way in
which I have done most things all my life; and that woman (whom you
honor with your pity, by the way,) has made such an utter failure of the
best part of it, that now, when hope and happiness were mine once more,
it seems rather hard she should crop up to make an end of it all. I
have earned my retribution richly, I am aware--all the same, it is
bitter to bear."

She looked down at him with eyes of sorrowful wonder and reproach. Was
this Gordon--her hero, her "man of men?"

"Easy for me!" she repeated, her lips quivering. "You were but a
'doubtful prize' from the first! Ah, I have not deserved that. I don't
know whether hearts break--I suppose not, but I feel as if mine were
breaking to-night. See, Gordon! I love you so dearly--so greatly, that
there is nothing on earth I would not do for you, suffer for you,
only--commit a crime. And to marry a man whose divorced wife lives, is
to my mind one of the blackest, most heinous crimes any woman can
commit. All my life I will love you--I could not help that if I
would--all my life I will be true to you, all my life I will pray for
you. Only don't say bitter and cynical things any more--it is hard
enough to bear without that."

Her words, her tone, touch him strangely and tenderly. The anger, the
fierce temptation--each dies out, never to return. There is even the
shadow of a smile on his lips as he looks up.

    "'I could not love thee, dear, so much,
    Loved I not honor more!'"

he murmurs. "Forgive me, France; you are right, as you always are--you
are all that is brave, and noble, and womanly. Only--that does not make
the losing you any the easier."

And then there is silence, and both look out at the gaslit panorama
below, while the heavy minutes pass. So long the silence lasts, that
France grows frightened, and breaks it with an effort.

"You knew her last night?" she asks.

"At once," he answers, in a dull, slow way; "the very moment she
appeared. France, do you recollect the night of Lady Dynely's ball last
autumn? I saw her portrait that night--the vignette, you remember, on Di
Venturini's waltzes; and I recognized the face. But I would _not_
believe it--it seemed too horrible to be true. It was some one who
resembled her, I said to myself--a relation, perhaps; but she was
dead--dead beyond doubt. It is easy to believe what we wish to believe.
I never thought of her again until she stood before me on the stage."

"I knew by your face something had happened," France says, softly, "but
I never dreamed of that."

"How could you? Oh, my poor child, it is not alone that she spoils my
life, but to think she should have power to spoil yours! To think that
you should suffer for my sins at this late day."

"We all suffer for the sins of others," France says, and somehow says it
bravely. "We might all safely take the battle-cry of the strong old
Crusaders for our staff of strength, '_God Wills It_.' It is
inevitable--don't let us talk of it--since it is no longer a question of
talking, but endurance. You saw her this morning?"

"I did. I wished to make assurance doubly sure, as they say, before I
came to you. For I knew what you would say--that the decree of divorce,
which freed me seventeen years ago, would be no freedom in your eyes.
And, my darling, the thought of losing you was, and is, more bitter than
the bitterness of death."

"Don't!" she says, with a gasp, "don't! don't!"

"I saw her," he went on, "and I knew all hope was at an end. The girl I
had married seventeen years ago in Canada was before me--Madame Felicia.
I lingered but a few moments--it was her hour of vengeance, and I think
even she was satisfied. And the child is with her--did she tell you
that?"

"Yes--she told me. Oh, Gordon! if she would but give her up."

"She _shall_ give her up," Gordon Caryll said, his mouth setting hard
and tense beneath his beard; "if not by fair means, then by foul. She is
no fit guardian for any young girl. Terry Dennison will help me here;
and, one way or other, my daughter shall come into my keeping."

"Terry?" Miss Forrester said, in surprise.

As briefly as possible Caryll narrated the odd manner in which Terry
had been instrumental in bringing the girl to her mother.

"Dennison can keep a secret--I know no man I would trust as I do him.
You will not mind my telling him all, France? All?"

"No," she answered; "you may tell Terry, but--not Eric."

"Eric!" Caryll repeated contemptuously; "Eric is a fool! And my mother
must know."

"Your mother, of course. Ah, poor grandmamma! it will be a blow to her."

He caught at her words.

"Must I really go, France--really and truly--and leave you and my mother
alone?"

"Gordon, you know you must."

"I don't know it," he said, recklessly; "if you cannot be my wife, at
least we can be friends, and together--"

"We can never be together. You can do as you please," her head drooping,
her voice faltering; "it is your place to stay with your mother, of
course. I will ask Lady Dynely to take me back to England at once."

"Stay, France!" he said, rising hastily. "Forgive me once more. No, I
will go--it will be best so; and immediately--to-morrow."

Then again silence fell, and both stood apart, neither able to speak the
words that must come next. In five minutes they must say good-by and
forever.

A carriage whirled up before the hotel. The door opened, and Eric,
looking unutterably bored by his day's "on duty," got out and assisted
his wife and mother to alight.

"Here they are," Caryll exclaimed, starting back. "I cannot meet then,
any of them. Make my adieux to Lucia to-morrow; tell her, if you like, I
shall not see her again. France--"

And then he was clasping both her hands hard, and looking in her face
with that straining gaze we look on the face we love best the instant
before the coffin-lid is shut down.

"Oh, Gordon!" she cried out, "where will you go?"

"I don't know, I don't care--what does it matter?"

"You will write to--to your mother?"

"Yes, I will write. I will see her now and say good-by. I will see
Dennison, too, before I leave Paris. Oh, my France! my France! how can I
give you up!"

There were footsteps and voices in the hall--on the stairs. One moment
and the Dynelys would be upon them.

"Good-by, France! good-by! good-by!"

And then he was gone. And France, breathless, and white, had fallen upon
the sofa, feeling as though the whole world had come to an end.




CHAPTER X.

"IF ANY CALM, A CALM DESPAIR."


If they would not come in, if she could be alone--that seemed the only
thought of which France was conscious, as she lay there, utterly unable
for the time being to speak or move, knowing, in a dazed sort of way,
what a ghastly face the wax-lights would show them. Oh, to be alone--to
be alone!

She had her wish. A swish of silk, a flutter of perfume, the saloon door
flung wide, and Lady Dynely's voice saying, impatiently:

"All darkness, and coldness, and solitude. Where can they be? where is
France?"

"With Mrs. Caryll, mamma," Crystal's soft voice suggests. "It looks
dreary--that great, gilded saloon; let us go up to your boudoir."

So they go, and France feels as though she had escaped some great
danger. She rises, feeling stiff and strange, and gropes her way out
through the darkness, and up to her own room. She has to pass Mrs.
Caryll's door; she pauses a moment, while a passionate longing to enter
there, at all risks, to look on his face once more, even to bid him
stay, seizes her. Her wedding day is so near--oh, so near--and they have
been so infinitely happy together. What right has that wicked, dancing,
painted woman to come and tear them apart? For a moment she listens to
the tempter, then she clasps her hands over her eyes, and rushes up to
her room. Lights are burning here; she locks the door, and throws
herself on the bed, there to lie motionless, sleepless, all the long
night through.

The Dynelys dine alone. No one can tell, it seems, what has become of
the Carylls and Miss Forrester. Mrs. Caryll's room is forbidden--her
mistress is ill to-night, the maid gravely tells Lady Dynely. Even she
cannot be admitted. Miss Forrester's door is locked, and Miss Forrester
may be deaf or dead for all the attention she pays to knocks or calls.
It is really very odd, and Lady Dynely wonders about it, all through the
rather dull family dinner, to her son and daughter.

Rather dull! It is horribly dull to Eric. He forfeits a banquet at
Francetti's this evening, with half a dozen congenial spirits, for this
"bosom-of-his-family" sort of thing, and worse still, forfeits his stall
at the _Varietes_, to do escort duty for his harem, to the Opera aux
Italiens. But since he is in for it, he does it with tolerably good
grace, and Crystal's wan, moonlight little face lights, and smiles come
to the pale lips. She says little, but she is happy. Eric has been her
very own all day--will be her very own until noon to-morrow. Beyond that
she does not look--"unto the day, the day."

Dinner ends, and they go to the opera. Patti sings, and the grand opera
house is brilliant with ladies in marvellous toilettes. If France were
only here, Eric thinks, as he struggles manfully with his tenth yawn, it
would not be so bad, but a man cast over wholly to the tender mercies of
his mother and his wife, is an object of compassion to gods and men.

About the time the Dynely party take their places in their private box
on the grand tier, Gordon Caryll opens the door of his mother's room,
and passes out.

He goes up to his room, where his valet awaits him, and gives his few
orders. A portmanteau is to be packed at once--he (the valet) is to
follow with the rest to Liverpool, before the end of the week. That is
all--and the man listens with an immovable, wooden face, outwardly, in
direst, blankest wonder within.

"Blessed," he says, as his master departs, "if this here ain't a rum go!
I thought we was going to be married, at the British Hembassy; and now
we're up and hoff 'ot foot, with all our luggage, hover to Liverpool. I
wonder where we go hafter that?"

"We" were going to America once again--to
California--Nevada--Oregon--all the wild, new lands, whither "we" had
never set foot yet. Not to forget--that could never be! But life, it
seemed, amid perpetual hardship and adventure, amid wild regions and
wilder men, would be more easily dragged out without hope than
elsewhere.

He had told his mother; and she had listened in such wonder, such pain,
such pity, as words cannot tell. She had set her heart on this match,
and it was never to be. Her whole happiness in life was wrapped up in
her son, and he was to be taken from her. He must go--since this woman
stood between him and France forever, better, far better, they should
part.

"I would rather go," he had said; "not to forget, not to suffer less--I
do not hope that, I do not even wish it; but I cannot stay and face the
wonder, the scandal, that will ensue. I am a coward, if you like, but I
underwent the ordeal once, and--" he set his teeth hard and stopped.

"Yet, I will stay if you wish," he said, after a moment's pause. "I will
stay with you, and," another pause, "_she_ can return to England with
Lucia Dynely."

But the mother, whose life was bound up in him, clasped her arms about
his neck, and answered:

"You must go, Gordon. France is right--she can never be your wife, while
that woman lives, and so parting is best for you both. You must go, and
may Heaven's blessing be with you."

And then there had been a parting, so sad, so solemn, last words so
sweet, so motherly, a parting prayer so earnest, so holy, that the
fierce wrath and hot rebellion had died out, and somehow calm had come.
He had left the hotel, very pale, very grave, a great sadness on his
face, but otherwise unchanged.

He must see Dennison before he left. He went to the Louvre and found
him, providentially, lounging aimlessly about, and looking bored.

"De do, Caryll," Terry began, abbreviating the formula, and swallowing a
gape. "Awfully slow work this. Haven't seen a face I know since noon.
Was at your place, and found the family invisible--dead or sleeping.
Eric is doing the _rle_ of Master Tommy Goodchildd--trotting out the
madre and Crystal, and making a martyr of himself, I know. But I say,
old boy, anything wrong, you know? On my life, now I look again, you
seem awfully seedy."

"We can talk in the street, I suppose?" Caryll answers, abruptly, and
taking his arm. "I have something of importance to say to you. Come this
way. Dennison, I'm off to-morrow!"

"Off?" Terry repeats the word and stares.

"Off for good and all--to return no more--to the other end of the world.
It's all up between me and--Terry, can't you guess? I thought you did
last night. Madame Felicia is my divorced wife."

There is a pause, a speechless, breathless pause. Mr. Dennison looks at
the moon, the stars, the sky, the streets, the gaslights, the people,
and all spin round. At last, "By Jove!" he breathes, and is still.

Caryll does not speak--his mouth is set rigid and hard behind his beard.
They walk on, and the silence grows uncomfortable. Terry in desperation
breaks it first.

"I thought she was dead," is what he says.

"So did I," Caryll answers; "so did they in Canada, so the papers said.
She is not, however. Madame Felicia seventeen years ago was my wife; the
girl you rescued on the streets two nights ago my daughter."

"Little Black Eyes! By Jove!" Terry aspirates again.

"I fancied you must have suspected something of this since last
night. I recognized her at the theatre. I visited her this morning.
There is not a shadow of doubt. The dancer, Felicia, is my divorced
wife."

"By Jove!" once again is all Terry can say, in his blank amaze. "And
France?" he asks, after a pause.

"All is at an end there. In France's creed there is no such thing as
divorce. I am as much the husband of Felicia as though that divorce had
never been."

There is another uncomfortable silence. What is Terry to say? Fluency
and tact are at no time his. But silence is better than speech just
now.

"So I am going away," Caryll resumes, steadily; "and I leave my mother
and France in your charge, Dennison. I go to-morrow. When does your
leave expire?"

"In a fortnight."

"There will be ample time, then. My mother proposes returning to
Caryllynne; you will escort her thither. For the rest, Lady Dynely will
be told the truth, but no one else--least of all, Eric. There will be no
end of conjecture, and gossip, and mystification, no doubt, but since
none of us will be here to hear it, it won't greatly matter."

"But," Terry hazards, "will _she_ keep the secret? They say women never
can, you know?"

A cold smile lights Gordon Caryll's lips.

"Trust them when it is to their own interest. Felicia has fooled M. Di
Venturini into offering to make her his wife. The wedding, I am told, is
to take place soon. _He_ has no idea that she has ever been married--she
has lied to him from first to last. It is her interest to hold her
tongue, and now that her revenge is satisfied she will."

"It's a deuced bad business, Caryll, old fellow," Terry says, gloomily.
"I'm awfully sorry. Confound the woman! she seems born to work mischief
and deviltry to every man she meets."

"Another thing, Dennison," Caryll pursues, taking no heed; "what I
principally wished to speak to you about, is my daughter. By fair means
or foul, she must be taken from her mother and given to me. And, Terry,
for this I look to you."

"To me?" Terry repeats, blankly; "but how? I can't go to Felicia and
demand her, I can't watch my chance and steal her away. Hang it, no!
She's a female fiend, and I owe her no good turn, but still she is the
girl's mother, and as such has a right to her. I suppose she is fond of
her?"

"She is not. Felicia never was fond of any human being but herself. She
would send the girl adrift to-morrow, only it adds to her revenge to
retain her. She will not treat her kindly, of that I am sure; and before
the week ends the poor child will need but the offer to fly. My mother
will gladly receive and care for her. Terry, you must see her for me.
Let her know the truth. You have been of service to her and she will
trust you. Explain everything; tell her a better home and kinder
relatives than she has ever known await her. She will go with you of her
own free will--take my word for that."

"Well, I'll try. I'll do my best," Terry said. "Hang it, Caryll! there's
nothing I _wouldn't_ do for you and France. I suppose they--your mother
and Miss Forrester--are awfully cut up."

"Naturally. Don't speak of it, Terry. I know I can trust you; and if
anything could help me now, it would be that knowledge. There is no more
to be said, I believe. Look after the mother and France--get the child
away from Felicia--make Eric leave Paris for his wife and mother's sake
if you can. A multiplicity of tasks, dear boy, and the last the hardest
by far; but I know it will be no fault of yours if you fail. I will bid
you good-by and good speed here."

They clasped hands hard in silence, then, without one word more, parted,
and each went his own way. Terry lit a cigar, and with his hands deep in
his pockets made his way gloomily back to the Hotel du Louvre.

"And if ever the fiend incarnate came on earth to work mischief in human
shape," Mr. Dennison inwardly growls, "he has come in the form of
Felicia the dancer. Devil take her! is there no end to the trouble she
is destined to make?"

Next morning, Lady Dynely, to her surprise and annoyance, finds herself
breakfasting alone. Neither Gordon Caryll nor France Forrester is to be
seen when she enters. She waits half an hour--still they fail to put in
an appearance. Lady Dynely hates solitary breakfasts, and rather
pettishly rings the bell.

"It's _very_ odd," she thinks annoyedly; "all day yesterday, and now
again this morning, neither Gordon nor France is to be seen. And both
are such preposterously early risers."

Her own maid answers the summons, and her ladyship impatiently sends her
in quest of the truants. Ten minutes, and Simpson returns.

"Miss Forrester has not yet left her room. She is suffering from
headache, and begs my lady to excuse her until luncheon. For Mr.
Caryll--Mr. Caryll, my lady, has gone.'

"Gone!" my lady repeats with a blank stare.

"Yes, my lady. Norton, his man, received his orders last night to pack
up and follow him at once to England. Mr. Caryll left the hotel himself
late last evening, and has not since returned."

Lady Dynely listens to this in dazed incredulity. France ill!--Gordon
gone! Now what does this mean? Her first impulse is to go to Mrs. Caryll
and inquire, her second to eat her breakfast and wait quietly, until she
is told. She acted on the second, ordered in breakfast, and sipped her
chocolate as best she might for the devouring curiosity that possessed
her.

An hour later, and Miss Forrester came down. The dainty morning toilet
was as fresh and unexceptionable as ever, the pretty rich brown hair as
perfectly _coiffed_. But out of the dark bright face all the color was
stricken, out of the clear brown eyes all the youthful gladness, all the
loving, happy light. She went to Mrs. Caryll's room. The elder lady sat
in her easy-chair, dressed for the day, waiting in an anguish of
suspense. As France came in she opened her arms, and without a word the
girl went in to them, and laid her pale face on the motherly bosom with
a great, tearless sob.

"My child! my child!"

She held her to her, and there was silence. The eyes of Gordon Caryll's
mother were full of pitying tears, but the eyes of France were dry and
burning.

"I sent him away--from you who love him so dearly. Oh, mother, forgive
me. I did it for the best."

She says it in a choked whisper, lifting her face for a moment. Then
again it falls on the other's shoulder.

"It was like death, it was worse than death, but I told him to go," she
says, again, in that husky undertone.

"My dearest," Mrs. Caryll answers, "you did right. Dearly as I love him,
precious as your happiness is to me, I would rather part with him
forever, rather see you as I see you now, than let you be his wife
while that woman lives. I believe as you believe. No law of man can
alter the law of God. If she was his wife seventeen years ago--my child,
how you shiver! are you cold?--she is his wife still. It is right and
just that he should have put her away--that I believe; knowing her to be
alive now, it is right and just also that you should have sent him from
you. But, oh, my dear, my dear, it is hard on you--it is very hard on
him."

"Don't," France says. "Oh, mother, not yet! I _can't_ bear it. This day
fortnight was to have been our wedding-day, and now--"

She breaks down all in a moment, and the tears come--a passionate rain
of tears. The mother holds her almost in silence, and so on her bosom
lets her weep her anguish out.

She is crying herself, but quietly. Great self-control has always been
hers--is hers still. To part with her lately-found son has been like the
rending of soul and body--more bitter than the bitterness of death; but
she has learned, in weary years of penitence and waiting, the great
lesson of life--endurance. So she comforts France now, in a tender,
motherly fashion, and France listens, as she could listen to no one on
earth, this morning, but Gordon's mother.

"It is not for myself," she says at last, after her old, impetuous
fashion, "it is for him. He has suffered so much, atoned so bitterly in
exile, and loneliness, and poverty, all the best years of his life for
that mad marriage of his youth, and now, when I would have made him so
happy, when he _was_ happy, in one instant everything is swept from
him--home, mother, wife--and he must go out into exile once more. Oh,
mother! help me to bear it! It breaks my heart!"

The wild sobs break forth again. The mother's heart echoes every word.
It is retribution, perhaps justice--none the less it is very bitter.
They both think of him, leaving all things, and going back to outlawry
and wretchedness; they think of her in her insolent, glowing beauty and
prosperity, the world going so well with her, glorying in her vengeance,
and it requires all the Christianity within them to refrain from hating
her.

But presently the storm of grief ends, and sitting on a low hassock, her
head bowed on Mrs. Caryll's knee, France listens to her sad plans for
the future--so different, oh, so different from all the girl's bright
hopes of but a day before.

"We will return to England, France," Mrs. Caryll says, gravely; "to
Caryllynne. It has been deserted long enough. There we will live quietly
together, and hope, and pray, and wait--"

"Wait," France repeats with mournful bitterness. "What is there to wait
for now?"

What, indeed! Both are silent. Unless this fatal woman dies--and in her
rich and perfect health she is likely to outlive them all--what can her
son ever have to hope for in this lower world? For France--well, as the
years go on, the elder woman thinks happiness _may_ return to her. She
is so young, there may be hope for her--for him, none.

"Would you rather we went to Rome?" she asks, after a pause.

"No," France says. "Let us return to Caryllynne. It was _his_ home; I
shall be less wretched there than anywhere else on earth."

So it is agreed.

"Terry will take us," Mrs. Caryll says. "Terry knows all. And Lucia must
be told, my dear--it is impossible to keep the truth from her."

"Yes, tell her," Miss Forrester assents, wearily; "the sooner the
better. And ask her to spare me--to say nothing of altered looks, or
of--him. I will return to my room, and you had best send for her at
once. She was speaking of taking Crystal to Versailles--let her know
all, and make an end of it before she goes."

Then France toils spiritlessly, cold and white, and wretched looking,
back to her room, and Lady Dynely is sent for, and the miserable sequel
to Gordon Caryll's early marriage is told her, as she sits surprised and
compassionate, beside Gordon Caryll's most unhappy mother.

       *       *       *       *       *

"Where is he now?" is France's thought, as she sits wearily down, and
lays her head on the table, as though she never cared to lift it again.
He is whirling along in a French express train--Calais-ward. To-night he
will cross the channel; by the first Cunarder that quits Liverpool he
will sail for New York, and so begins the second exile to which his
fatal wife has driven him.




CHAPTER XI.

M. LE PRINCE.


A quiet street near the Rue de la Paix. The hour, ten in the evening.
Almost absolute solitude reigning--only at long intervals the footsteps
of some passer-by awakening the echoes. Dim and afar off as it seems,
the turmoil of the great city coming mellowed and subdued.

One house, large, unlighted, gloomy, standing in a paved quadrangle, has
had a constant stream of visitors for the past two hours. They are all
men--men who have a stealthy and furtive look, who pass on rapidly, who
give a counter-sign to a waiting servant at the gate, who do not spend
more than fifteen minutes within those gloomy precincts, who flit away
and disappear, only to have others take their places. So it has been for
the past two hours, so it is likely to be until perhaps midnight.

This house is the property of his Excellency Prince Di Venturini; and M.
Di Venturini is the leader and moving spirit of a secret political
society. For upward of two months he has been absent on a mission of
grave import; this is the evening of his return, and the members of the
society--Italians all--have been summoned to their headquarters to
report progress to their leader.

Outside the gloomy and secluded mansion is wrapped in profound darkness;
inside, halls and passages are dimly lit--one room only, that in which
M. Di Venturini sits, being brightly illuminated.

He sits at a table strewn with papers, letters, pamphlets--small, spare,
yellow, with black, glancing eyes, sharp as stilettos, and thin,
compressed lips. One by one, his followers come and go; one by one,
their reports are noted down and docketed.

With sharp, quick precision he conducts each interview, with imperious
command he gives his orders, with scant ceremony he dismisses each man
of them all. Business of a still more private and delicate nature awaits
his attention--business purely personal to M. le Prince--and he rather
cuts short the latest comers, and hurries the levee to a close.

A clock over his head chimes eleven. With an impatient gesture he
dismisses his last client, flings himself back in his chair, pushes his
scant black hair, thickly streaked with gray, off his forehead with a
weary air, and then sits for some minutes lost in deep and anxious
thought. His thick brows knit, his lips set themselves in a tight, tense
line, then, with a second impatient motion, he seizes a silver hand-bell
and rings a sharp peal.

"I shall speedily learn whether it is truth or slander," he mutters.
"Paujol and Pauline watch her well, and they belong to me soul and body.
I may trust their tale, and if she has played me false, why, then--let
her look to herself!"

The bell is answered almost immediately by the servant who has stood on
guard.

He bows and awaits.

"Have they all gone?"

"All, M. le Prince."

"Has Paujol come?"

"Paujol has been awaiting your excellency's commands, for the last
hour."

"Let him enter."

The man bows again and disappears.

M. le Prince lies back in his chair and plays a devil's tattoo of
ill-repressed impatience on its arm. Then M. Paujol enters--a very tall
man, in a gorgeous uniform, no other, in fact, than Madame Felicia's
huge chasseur in his robes of state.

"Ah! Paujol. You have been here for some time, Antoine tells me. Have
you obtained leave of absence, then, from madame?"

"Madame is not aware of my absence, M. le Prince. Madame departed one
hour ago to the bal d'opera at the Gymnase--the instant she left the
Varieties, in fact."

"Ah-h!" the interjection cut the air sharply as a knife; "to the bal
d'opera at the Gymnase. With whom?"

"With the young milor Anglais--M. le Vicomte Dynely."

A moment's silence. An ominous flash, swift, dangerous, has leaped from
the eyes of the Neapolitan--his cruelly thin lips set themselves a
little tighter.

"It is true, then! all I have heard. He is the latest pigeon madame has
seen fit to pluck, this green young British lordling! He is with her at
all times, at all places. Paris rings with his infatuation--eh, Paujol?
is it so?"

"It is the talk of Paris, monseigneur, of the clubs and the salons, of
the streets and the theatre. Does your excellency wish me to tell you
_what_ they say?"

"All, Paujol. Word for word."

"They say, then, M. le Prince, that but the English noble has a wife
already, madame would throw over your excellency and marry milor Dynely.
They say that madame has fallen in love with his handsome face, and that
while your highness will be the husband and dupe, _he_ will still remain
the favored lover."

The hand--thin, sinewy, strong--that clasps the arm of the chair,
clutches it until the muscles stand out like cords. A fierce Neapolitan
oath hisses from his lips--otherwise he sits and listens unmoved.

"Go on, Paujol," he reiterates. "Your report is most amusing, my friend.
He is at madame's constantly, is he not?--he is her _cavalier servante_
to all places?--his gifts are princely in their profusion and
splendor?--again, is it not so?"

"It is so, Illustrissima--Pauline tells me the jewels he has given her
are superb. He is her nightly attendant home from the theatre, he is at
all her receptions, each day they ride in the Bois or the Champs
Elyses, he spends hours in madame's salon each morning. To none of the
many gentlemen whom madame has honored with her regard has she shown
such favor as to M. le Vicomte Dynely. Madame Dynely, it is said, is
dying of jealousy. All Paris laughs, monseigneur, and when your
excellency returns, wonders how the drama will end."

"Paris will soon learn," monseigneur answers grimly.
An ominous calm has settled upon him, the devil's tattoo has quite
ceased now, his black eyes glitter diabolically. "Thou hast watched
well, Paujol, my friend; thou shalt be well rewarded. Madame dreams not
then of my return?"

"She does not, your excellency. I heard her tell M. Dynely only to-day
that your highness would not return to Paris for another week."

A smile curled the thin lips.

"It is well. And so safe in my absence, not dreaming that her chasseur
and femme de chambre are my paid and devoted spies, she takes as her
lover this pretty-faced English boy, and all Paris laughs at _me_! It is
well, I say. But I am not the husband yet, and the English say those
laugh best who laugh last. And so they assist at the bal d'opera
to-night? Ah, what hour does madame propose returning, Paujol?"

"An hour after midnight, M. le Prince. She quits early that she and M.
Dynely may start early for Asnires, where they spend to-morrow."

Again that threatening flash leaps from the eyes of the prince.

"What does madame wear?" he demands.

"A domino _noir_, with a knot of yellow ribbon on the left shoulder."

"And Monsieur?"

"Monsieur goes in full evening dress, with a yellow rose in his
button-hole, and lemon gloves."

Di Venturini takes out his watch.

"Half-past eleven--ample time. A million thanks, friend Paujol! As I
say, your fidelity shall be well rewarded. Is your report made? If so,
you may depart."

"One moment, monseigneur. My report is not finished--the most important
part is yet to come. Is your excellency aware that madame has a
daughter?"

"What!"

"That madame has a daughter--a tall English mam'selle of sixteen years,
at present stopping with madame?"

The yellow complexion of the Neapolitan fades to a greenish white. He
sits and stares.

"Paujol! A daughter! What is it you say?"

"The truth, M. le Prince. A daughter and a husband. The daughter is with
her now, as I tell you; the husband divorced her many years ago. The
daughter was brought to the house late one night by an English
gentleman, a friend of M. Dynely, Monsieur Dennison,"--Paujol pronounces
the English names with perfect correctness--"and has remained ever
since. Before you return, however, madame proposes sending her away. The
husband came once, and once only. The interview was brief. Here is his
card."

He draws it out and places it before him. "Gordon Caryll," Di Venturini
reads. For a moment he is at a loss, for a moment his memory refuses to
place him. Then it all comes upon him like lightning. The picture "How
the Night Fell," the mysterious resemblance of the woman's face to
Felicia, her determination to have it at any price, and the name of the
artist--Gordon Locksley, then--Gordon Caryll afterwards. In common with
the rest of the world he has heard Gordon Caryll's story--the mad
marriage of his youth, the scandal, the divorce, the prolonged exile
from home and country, and now--and now Paujol stands before him with
an immovable face, and tells him gravely that Felicia, the woman he has
honored with the offer of his hand, is that fatal divorced wife.

He sits for a moment, petrified, and in that moment he believes. Paujol
never makes mistakes, never hazards rumors without proof. She had lied
to him then from the beginning, duped him from first to last, and Prince
Di Venturini could better endure anything than the thought that he has
been fooled and laughed at by the woman he has loved.

"So!" he says between his teeth, "this must be seen to! Proceed,
Paujol--you are indeed a treasure beyond price."

Thus encouraged, M. Paujol, still with a gravely immovable face,
proceeds. In detail he narrates how Dennison brought to madame at
midnight this waif of the streets, how madame at once received her, how
Pauline faithfully did her part, overheard every word of the
conversation that passed between mother and daughter, and faithfully
repeated that conversation to him. He had taken it down in writing from
her lips on the spot, and would read it aloud to monseigneur now.

He unfolded the document as he spoke, and slowly read it over, that
momentous conversation, in which "Donny" had claimed Felicia as her
mother, and Felicia had acknowledged her as her child--the pledge of
secrecy between them, and the compact by which madame was to pass her
off as a distant relative. In his cold, steady, monotonous voice, Paujol
read it, then folded, and handed it respectfully to his superior officer
and master. Di Venturini, his yellow face still sickly, greenish white,
waited for more.

"The girl--she is still there?" he asked.

"She is still there, M. le Prince. She is to be sent away in two days.
She and madame have had a quarrel."

"Ah! a quarrel! What about?"

"About M'sieu Dennison. M. Dennison came yesterday, came the day before,
and both times asked to see the young lady he had picked up on the
streets. Madame put him off with a falsehood. Mam'selle was ailing and
had declined to see him. This Pauline repeated to mam'selle, who, it
would appear, is most anxious to meet again with the gentleman who
rescued her. Mam'selle flew into a violent passion, sought out madame
and taxed her with duplicity. Madame is not accustomed to being
arraigned for her actions, and possesses, as monseigneur doubtless is
aware, a fine, high temper of her own. Before five minutes madame was
boxing mam'selle's ears. Mam'selle became perfectly beside herself with
fury, and tried to rush out of the house, but was captured and brought
back by Pauline, who was, as usual, on the watch. Madame then informed
Pauline that mam'selle was mad, quite mad, that her madness consisted in
fancying her her mother, that she had run away from her friends under
that delusion, and that now she was under the necessity of locking her
up, for a day or two, until she could send her safely back to those
friends. The passion of mam'selle was frightful to behold, so Pauline
says, but she was brought back and safely locked up, and so continues
locked up at this present moment. She refuses to speak or eat, and lies
like a stone. Madame has made arrangements to have her removed the day
after to-morrow--where, Pauline has not as yet discovered."

Paujol pauses. Di Venturini, his face still green, his lips still set,
his eyes still gleaming, looks up.

"And the conversation between madame and M. Gordon Caryll--did Pauline
also overhear that?"

"Pauline overheard every word, monseigneur, and, as before, repeated it
to me. As before, I took it down in writing upon the spot, and have it
here. Shall I read it aloud, M. le Prince?"

By a gesture Di Venturini gives assent. Immovably Paujol stands and
reads this second report; immovably his master sits and listens. It
leaves no room for doubt--Felicia has deceived him, as thoroughly and
utterly as ever woman deceived man. A husband--a daughter--a lover! and
_he_ the laughingstock of Paris! His face for an instant is distorted
with passionate fury, as Paujol places this second paper before him.

"This is all?" he hoarsely asks.

"This is all, M. le Prince."

"The girl is still locked up, you say, in madame's rooms, and madame
will not return from the opera ball until one o'clock? Wait, Paujol,
wait!"

He leans his forehead on his hand and thinks for an instant intently.
Then he looks up.

"I will go with you, Paujol, first to see this girl, then to the
Gymnase. I have no words with which to commend the admirable manner you
and Pauline have done your duty. Go and call a fiacre at once."

Paujol bows low and obeys. Di Venturini sits alone. He does not for one
second doubt the truth of all this he has heard. His two emissaries are
fidelity itself--their loyalty has been long ago proven. He has long
doubted the woman he has asked to marry him. To-night has but made
conviction doubly sure; and Csare Di Venturini is not a man to let man
or woman, friend or foe, betray him with impunity. His face looks leaden
in the lamplight, his black eyes gleam with a fury that is simply
murderous.

"A husband who divorced her--a child whom she has hidden--a lover for
whom I am betrayed!" he repeats through his set teeth, "and all Paris
laughing at me. To-night at the bal d'opera, to-morrow at Asnires, and
M. le Prince safely absent for another week. Diavolo! it is like the
plot of her own plays."

He laughs, a laugh not pleasant to hear, rises and makes ready for his
drive. The fiacre is already at the door, he enters and is rapidly
driven away to the lodgings of madame.




CHAPTER XII.

AT THE BAL D'OPERA.


"I hate her! I wish she were dead! Oh, why, why, why did I ever leave
Scotland and come to this horrible place--to her? I will starve myself
and die if I cannot get my freedom in any other way! Oh, I wish I had
died before I ever came here!"

It was the burden of the moan "Mademoiselle Donny" had been making to
herself for the last two days. To Pauline, who brought her her meals,
she scorned to speak at all. She lay like a stone, asking no questions,
answering none, scarcely touching the food. Then again at times the
fierce passions inherited honestly enough from those who had given her
life would assert themselves, and her piercing cries would ring through
the rooms. She would beat on the locked door and barred window until her
hands bled and she sank exhausted and breathless upon the floor. It was
known to all madame's household that the poor child, raving so madly in
that bolted and barred upper room, was hopelessly insane, and in another
day or two would be safely shut up in a _maison de sant_.

She lies now prostrate on the floor, her head resting against the side
of the bed. All day long at intervals, her wild cries have rung out, the
little dark childish hands have beaten against the unyielding door.
Madame's nerves have not been disturbed thereby. Madame has spent the
long sunny day amid the wooded slopes and sunlit glades of St. Cloud
with her _cavalier servante_, Lord Viscount Dynely, and the pallid
curate's widow. Now it is past eleven at night, and she grovels prone
here, spent, white, exhausted, her dusk eyes gleaming weirdly in her
pallid child's face, her elfish black hair all tossed and dishevelled
over her shoulders.

"If _he_ were here," she thinks with a great sobbing sigh, "he would
save me. Oh, if I had only stayed with him that night, and never come
here! He was good, he was kind; I would have been happy with him."

The face of Terry Dennison rises before her--the honest eyes, the frank
smile, the man's strength and woman's gentleness, and her heart cries
out for him now in her trouble, as though he had been the friend of her
whole life.

"He asked for me," she thinks, with another long shuddering sob. "Twice
he asked for me, and each time she told him a lie--told him I was sick
and did not want to see him. And she struck me in the face. Oh, I hate
her! I hate her!"

Her folded arms rest on the bed--her face drops on them, and so poor
ill-used, ill-tempered, passionate Donny lies still. She falls into a
sort of lethargy that is not sleep, but the natural result of so much
fierce excitement, and in that half-doze dreams--dreams Terry Dennison
is coming to her rescue once more, the kindly smile she remembers so
well, and trusts so entirely, on his face--that his foot is ascending
the stairs, that he is turning the key in the door, that he is in the
room. Then a light flashes through the darkness, and she looks up with
dazed dreaming eyes to see a man in the room, shading a light and
looking at her--a man who is _not_ Terry Dennison.

"Hush-h-h!" this man says, putting his finger on his lip, and
noiselessly closing the door. "Not a word, not a sound, mademoiselle! I
am a friend. I have come to save you. But all depends on your being
perfectly still."

She does not rise. She lies and looks at him, her wide-open, black eyes
full of silent wonder and suspicion.

"Who are you?" she asks.

He is a little yellow man, in a richly-furred coat, and with an air of
distinction, but Mam'selle Donny does not like his look.

"I am a friend, as I told you. I have been sent to save you. I have
been sent by him--the gentleman who brought you here--Monsieur
Dennison."

She springs to her feet now, the sound of that name electrifying her.

"Take me to him," she cries, breathlessly. "Oh, sir! take me to him. He
is strong, and brave, and kind. Oh, take me from this dreadful house,
from that dreadful woman to him!"

"Hush-h!" he says again; "softly, mademoiselle--some one may hear. I
have come to take you to him presently, but first--madame is your
mother, is she not?"

"Why do you ask that?" she impatiently demands; "what has that to do
with it? Oh! let me go away at once."

"It has everything to do with it, mam'selle. Monsieur Dennison told me
to ascertain. He would have come himself, but you know madame distrusts
him and will not let him see you, lest you should tell him the truth."

"I know! I know!" she impatiently interrupts. "She lied to him! She told
him I was ill, when he asked for me, and I was dying to see him. She
slapped my face, and locked me up here, and I hate her!" Her eyes
flashed fire, her hands clenched. "What is it you want to know?" she
cried excitedly. "I'll tell you anything--everything so that you take me
from here, to him."

"Tell me your story--who you are. She is your mother, is she not? I see
the likeness in your face. Who is your father, and where is he?"

"I don't know; I wish I did. I would make Mr. Dennison take me to him.
She is my mother--oh, yes! and I was born in Quebec, more than sixteen
years ago. My father would not live with her, I don't know why, and
there was a divorce. So Joan told me. Joan was there when I was born,
and my mother left me with her and went away. Joan brought me up; now
she is dead, and so I came here. I wish I never had--oh! I wish I never
had. Her name is not Madame Felicia--her name is Rosamond. She called
herself Mrs. Gordon when I was born, and my father's name was Gordon
Caryll. I don't know whether he is living or dead. Joan did not know.
That is all. And now I have told you, I want you to take me away."

But her visitor arose and put her gently back. One look into her face
had settled the question of her maternity.

"Not to-night, petite. It is late for you to be abroad. But you shall be
taken away, and that speedily--you may trust my word when I say so."

Then, before the bewildered child can quite realize it, the little man
with the yellow face and furred coat is gone, the key turned in the
lock, and she is alone in her prison once more.

       *       *       *       *       *

The bal d'opera was at its height. The vast building was one sheet of
white gaslight; perfumes, pastilles, and the rich odor of flowers made
the atmosphere almost overpowering. The orchestra, playing the sweet
Strauss waltzes, filled the air with quivering melody. And above the
rich strains of the music arose the shrill laughter, the shrill clatter
of ceaseless gay voices, as dominoes, white and black, flower-girls,
_debardurs_, gypsies, _paysannes_, _coryphes_, _princes au thtre_,
and men in plain evening dress, with masks off or on, as the whim took
them, flashed and flitted ceaselessly and noisily to and fro. A gorgeous
picture of one phase of Paris gaslit life--a glimpse of the Arabian
Nights--brilliant, intoxicating, wicked.

Among the maskers there came, quite alone and moving slowly, a short,
slight man, in a furred and frogged great-coat, which, despite the
warmth, he still retained, his mask concealing all but the glitter of
two restless black eyes. He made his way to the centre of the
assemblage, and leaning negligently against a statue of the Apollo,
watched the brilliant phantasmagoria as it flitted before him. Suddenly
he started slightly and drew in his breath with a sharp, sibilant sound.
What he looked for he saw.

There flew swiftly past him, in the dizzy whirl of the half-mad
waltzers, a black domino, with a knot of yellow ribbon on her left
shoulder. The tall partner who clasped her so closely, was a gentleman
in plain evening dress, a yellow rose in his button-hole, primrose kids
on his hands. The wild laughter of the lady reached him as she whirled
by like a bacchante, laughter he knew well, and had heard often. The
hawk had sprung upon its quarry--from that moment he lost sight of them
no more.

The waltz ended. The domino _noir_ moved away on her companion's arm to
a distant corner, where the glare of gaslight was less blinding, where
tall tropic plants cast shade, where but few people were, and where
seats for the weary were placed. Quietly, stealthily, the gentleman in
the mask and furred-coat followed, unobserved. The lady threw herself
into one of the seats, and fluttered open her fan.

"Mon Dieu! but it is hot! Eric, mon enfant, have the common humanity to
go and fetch me a water ice. That last waltz was charming, and how well
you have my step. We must dance the Krolsbalklange valse together, and
then--home. Eric, go for the ice if you would not see me expire."

She removed her mask and showed the flushed, laughing, lovely face of
Felicia. Her companion rose to obey, whispering something that caused
madame's shrill laughter once more to peal out as she struck him with
her fan. "_Fi donc_, Eric, I know what your tender speeches are worth.
It is too warm, and I am too fatigued for love-making. Go for my ice."

He departed. Five minutes after, as he was slowly making his way through
the revolving throng with madame's water-ice in his hand, a man in a
furred overcoat ran rudely against him, knocking it out of his hand and
over his immaculate evening suit.

"Mille pardons, monsieur," this personage cried, with a low bow, but a
mocking laugh. "But if monsieur _will_ be clumsy! I regret exceedingly
having spoiled monsieur's best coat; but--"

A chorus of laughter from the bystanders, who were in the mood to laugh
at any mishap to their neighbors, however slight, cut him short. The
next instant the little man was flat on his back, sent thither by a
well-directed blow straight from the shoulder. As if by enchantment a
crowd gathered. There is magic in a "row" that speaks to the heart of
men of all nations. The insolent gentleman in the frogged coat leaped to
his feet with a shrill cry of fury, but before he fairly reached them
he was sprawling on his back once more.

"Come on," Lord Dynely said, with perfect coolness; "as my best coat
_is_ spoiled, I don't mind spoiling it a little more. Get up and I'll
show you how to walk through a ball-room without running against your
neighbors."

"Mon Dieu, Eric!" cried the voice of Felicia, who had replaced her mask,
and now rushed to the scene; "what is the matter? Who is this?"

"I have not the honor of monsieur's acquaintance at present; but all the
same it affords me pleasure to teach him--"

He paused, for madame had clutched his arm with a cry of terror and
recognition. With eyes literally flashing flame, Di Venturini had sprung
to his feet like a tiger, torn off his mask, and confronted them.

"Yes, madame--it is I. You recognize me, I see. Tell your lover who I
am. You know me, if he does not. We shall be better acquainted before
long. I have the honor, have I not, of speaking to Lord Dynely?"

He hissed out his words in English that the crowd might not understand.
Eric, confounded himself by this sudden rencontre, bowed also.

"A friend of mine shall wait upon you, my lord, to-morrow morning," Di
Venturini said in a rapid whisper. "You have heard of me--I am the
Prince Di Venturini. For you, madame," with a low bow, "I shall see you
later."

Before either could speak he turned, made his way through the throng,
and quitted the bal masque. For this purpose he had come--his end was
accomplished.

The crowd dispersed, rather disappointed at having, after all, been
cheated out of a free fight. Felicia and Lord Dynely looked at each
other blankly for a moment. Then madame broke into one of her shrill
laughs.

"_Ma foi!_ Eric, my friend, but this is droll! It is like one of our
vaudevilles at the Varieties, where madame amuses herself in monsieur's
absence, and monsieur, furious and jealous, unexpectedly appears. What a
scene that will be to-morrow!--he is all that there is of the most
jealous--that poor little M. Di Venturini, and I _did_ promise him,
before he left, never to coquet more. There is one waltz, mon
cher--shall we dance it, or--"

"We will dance it, of course," Lord Dynely answers, "a waltz with you is
too rare a treat to be lightly given up."

The soft, sweet strains of the Krolsbalklange float out, and they whirl
away with it, in perfect time. Felicia is a perfect dancer, her feet do
not seem to touch the floor. Dynely means what he says when he avers
that a waltz with her is a rare treat. Then it ends, and he wraps her in
her opera cloak, and leads her to her carriage. She leans forward, her
witching face in the full glow of the gaslight, a smile on the red lips,
in the lustrous, topaz eyes.

"And Asnires, _mon enfant_," she says, "do we go to-morrow down the
Seine as agreed, or do we--"

"We go!" he answered, his blue eyes flashing; "not for all the jealous
Italians in Christendom would I throw over to-morrow's excursion."

He stoops and kisses the jewelled, ungloved hand she extends. Once again
she laughs, that sweet, derisive laugh he knows so well. Then the
carriage rolls away. Circe has gone, and her victim stands alone in the
cool February night.




CHAPTER XIII.

AFTER THE BALL.


He stands alone under the cold, white stars, and as the chill wind
sweeps about him, as the chill dawn breaks, his senses slowly return.
One way or other this intoxicating flirtation of his has ended at least.
To-morrow's excursion down the Seine to Asnires is probably its closing
act. For M. le Prince Di Venturini, the affianced of Felicia, has been
insulted, and M. le Prince is a man to wipe out such insults thoroughly
and well. He is a noted duelist--three times has he killed his man;
lighting his cigar coolly and walking away while his adversary lay dying
hard among the sweet summer grasses. He is a skilled swordsman, a dead
shot. More than once, since the beginning of his flirtation with the
fair Felicia, has Lord Dynely been told that. And he--of fencing he
knows next to nothing--a pistol he has not fired three times in his
life. And "a friend will wait upon him to-morrow," and the morning
after, at the farthest, he will meet Di Venturini somewhere amid the
wooded slopes of Versailles.

Physically, Lord Dynely was the farthest possible remove from a coward.
Life may be tolerably pleasant, and still a man may face the possibility
of leaving it with good grace, if his conscience lie dormant. To fear
death, one must fear what comes after death. Of that, like most men of
his stamp, wholly given up to the pursuit of pleasure, Lord Dynely never
thought. After all, taken with all its dissipations, even at its best
and brightest, here in Paris, life was a good deal of a bore--not so
desirable a thing to keep, by any manner of means, that one should make
much of a howling at resigning it. And that the day after to-morrow,
when he stood face to face with Di Venturini, under the leafless trees
of Versailles, or the Bois de Vincennes, he must resign it, he was as
certain as that he lit his cigar now, and strolled slowly homeward under
the white, shining stars. Yes, life was a bore; a man tired of all
things. A pretty face with two blue eyes bewitches him, he marries it,
and is wearied to death or satiety in a fortnight. One grew tired of
women, of wine, of horses, the rattle of the dice, the croak of the
croupier, the shuffle of the cards, the whirl of the ball-room, the
glare of the gaslight, of all things in this wearisome, lower world.
Even swarth-skinned, topaz-eyed actresses pall after a few weeks, after
a few thousand pounds spent upon them in presents, for which "becks and
nods, and wreathd smiles" are but a flat return. _Vanitas Vanitatem!_
The song Solomon sung so many thousand years ago is wearily echoed by
his sons--the _jeunesse dore_ of to-day. And one other day must end it
all. There would be the trip down the Seine to-morrow, sunshine above
them, music around them, a golden blue river below them, and two yellow,
black, lustrous eyes smiling languidly upon him. The morning after, in
the gray, cold dawn, there would be that silent woodland meeting, the
sharp report of two pistol shots, a yellow, Neapolitan prince flying in
haste out of the imperial dominions of Napoleon the Third, and a man
lying stark on the blood-stained grass, his dead face upturned to the
sky. As in a vivid picture before him he saw it all. And then there
would be a wedding in Italy a few weeks later, and the topaz eyes would
smile for life on the Neapolitan prince. For the dead man--well,
for him, in the creed of the man himself, the best of all
things--annihilation!

He walked home very slowly, smoking and half dreamily, thinking all
this. He must keep the matter from his womankind, and he must find a
friend. There was Boville--yes, Boville would do--he would see him the
first thing to-morrow, and refer Di Venturini's second to him. Under
ordinary circumstances, Terry Dennison would have been his man, but
under present circumstances Dennison was not to be thought of. For a
second quarrel had taken place between the two men--a quarrel bitter and
deep; and for the same cause--Dynely's neglect of his wife. It had
occurred three days after the sudden and somewhat surprising departure
of Gordon Caryll. Eric still held fast, body and soul, by Felicia,
Crystal still drooping with that pathetic, heart-broken face. By command
of Lady Dynely, _mre_, Terry had taken Crystal for a drive in the Bois,
and there, face to face, in the yellow afternoon sunshine, they had come
upon the glittering little equipage of Felicia the dancer. Lying back in
her silks and sables and seal skins, her "flower face" smiling behind a
little lace veil, her English cavalier, Lord Dynely, beside her, so Lord
Dynely's wife had come upon them full. For a second, four pairs of eyes
met--then the bright carriage of the danseuse flashed past, and
Felicia's derisive laugh came back to them on the breeze.

"Mon Dieu! Eric, a pleasant rencontre for you?" she cried, unaffectedly
amused by the situation. "What is the matter with Mr. Dennison? He gave
me a look absolutely murderous as we passed."

Crystal had fallen back with a gasping cry as though a brutal hand had
struck her.

"Oh, Terry! take me home," she had sobbed, as once before, and Terry, in
silence, with flashing eyes and lowering brows and compressed lips, had
obeyed.

Four hours later and there was a "scene" in the salon of the Dynelys.
Crystal, sick heart and soul, was alone in her room; Eric, waiting for
dinner, was reading the evening paper, when Dennison strode in and
confronted him.

"Dynely!" he passionately demanded, "how is this to end?"

Lord Dynely looked up, the conscious blood reddening his transparent,
girl-like face.

"How is what to end? May I request you to take a somewhat less
aggressive tone in addressing me, Mr. Dennison?"

"Your neglect--your shameful neglect of your wife. It is brutal, it is
murderous--you are killing her by inches, before our eyes!"

The flush faded from the blonde face of Viscount Dynely. The livid
whiteness of deadly anger took its place. He laid down his paper and
spoke with ominous calm.

"May I inquire if my wife has sent you here to tell me this?"

"Your wife knows nothing of my coming--that you know as well as I. But I
swear, Eric, this must end! You are breaking, brutally breaking your
wife's heart. All Paris is talking, is laughing over your besotted
infatuation for that old woman--Felicia the dancer! You spend your time,
you lavish your gifts on that painted Jezebel, while Crystal dies day by
day before your eyes. And only seven weeks since you married her!"

Eric rose to his feet--the light of deadly rage filling his eyes, but
before he could speak Dennison interposed:

"Stay!" he cried, lifting his hand, "hear me out! I pledged myself once
never to quarrel with you, do what you might, say what you would. That
promise I mean to keep. It is the farthest possible from my wish--the
thought of quarrelling with you. But, Eric, I say again this must end."

"Indeed! You speak of my very pleasant platonic friendship with the most
charming woman in Paris, I presume. May I ask _how_ you propose to end
it?"

"For Heaven's sake, Eric, don't sneer! I speak to you as a friend, as a
brother. You cannot be quite heartless--you cannot have quite outlived
your love for Crystal. Don't you see you are killing her--poor, little
soul, don't you see she worships the ground you walk on, the least thing
your hand has touched. She would die for you, Eric; and you--you neglect
her more shamefully than ever bride was neglected before; you insult her
by your devotion to this worthless woman. If you had seen her after you
had passed to-day----" he stops suddenly and walks away to a window.
"Don't let us row, Eric," he says hoarsely; "I have no wish to interfere
with or dictate to you, but in some way I stand pledged to Crystal since
her happiness is at stake. Our friendship of the past has given me the
right to be her protector at least."

"The right of a jilted lover!" Eric returns, that bitter sneer still on
lips and eyes. "Let us understand each other, Dennison. This is the
second time you have interfered in this matter. I warn you now, let it
be the last. I have listened to your insolence, because I wish to drag
my wife's name into no public scandal, or quarrel with you. It is the
last time I will be so forbearing. Be kind enough to quit these rooms at
once, and enter them no more! Be kind enough, also, to discontinue your
acquaintance with Lady Dynely. If I were inclined to take umbrage
easily, I might with reason object to you, her jilted lover, as I said
before, playing the rle of attendant cavalier, but I let that
pass--this once. I shall order my wife to receive your visits no longer,
and I think she will hardly venture to disobey. After to-day, Mr.
Dennison, you will understand our acquaintance is at an end."

And then, before Terry could speak, his lordship had quitted the salon,
and nothing was left but to obey. And the only result of his
interference was frigid coldness on the part of Lord Dynely to his wife,
and increased devotion, if that were possible, to Felicia. They had met
more than once since, and Dynely had cut him dead. So matters between
those two, who had grown up as brothers, stood to-night. Verily, a woman
is at the bottom of all the ruptured masculine friendships of this lower
world!

The early dawn was breaking before Lord Dynely reached his hotel.
Crystal, pale as a shadow, wasted and wan, lay asleep. A pang of
something like actual remorse shot through him as he looked at her, so
changed in those few brief weeks.

"Poor little soul!" he thought, "if--if the worst does happen to-morrow,
it will be hard lines on her."

Of no use going to bed, he thought; he could not sleep. He threw himself
on a sofa in the dressing-room adjoining, still in his evening suit, and
in ten minutes was fast as a church.

The breakfast hour was past when he awoke, and Crystal was seated beside
him, watching him with eyes of unutterable pathetic yearning. She
started up confusedly, as he opened his eyes, coloring, as though caught
in some guilty act.

"Waiting for me, Crystal?" he said, rising on his elbow, with a yawn.
"You were asleep when I came home, and I would not disturb you. What is
the hour? Ten, by Jove! Is breakfast ready? I have an engagement this
morning, and must get off at once."

Breakfast dispatched hurriedly, his dress changed, a note sent in hot
haste to Boville, Lord Dynely was waited upon by a tall,
fiercely-mustached, soldierly Frenchman. The interview was brief, and
strictly private. Boville sauntering lazily in, encountered monsieur
swaggering out.

"Who's your military friend, Dynely?" he inquired, "and what the deuce
do you want of a man in such a hurry as this?"

"My military friend is Monsieur Raoul De Concressault, Captain of
Zouaves; his business here, to bring me a challenge from Prince Di
Venturini; and I have sent for you in such a hurry to be my second in
the affair. Take a seat, Boville, and a cigar."

"By Jove!" cried Boville, taking the seat, but not the cigar. "I thought
it would come to this. Of course Felicia is at the bottom of it?"

"Of course--is not her charming sex at the bottom of all the mischief
and murder on earth? Also, of course everything is strictly _sub
rosa_--it won't do to let it get wind."

"Certainly not," Boville answered gravely. "Tell us about it, Dynely. I
thought M. le Prince was safely away for another week."

"So did I--so did Felicia," Dynely said, with a slight laugh. "He turned
up in most dramatic fashion at the _bal masque_ at the Gymnase last
night, however."

And thereupon his lordship briefly, and not without humor, sketched the
rencontre at the _bal d'opera_.

"And the result is to be a duel?" said Boville, still very gravely.
"Dynely, are you aware Di Venturini is the best swordsman, the deadest
shot, in Europe?"

"To be sure, _mon ami_. All that is a matter of history. Light up, old
fellow; I can recommend these Manillas."

"And you?" Boville inquired, obeying.

"I? Oh! well, I know next to nothing of fencing, and never fired a
pistol half a dozen times in my life."

"But--good Heaven! Dynely, you have no chance at all then, if the prince
means mischief! And he mostly _does_, I can tell you, when he fights.
Don't you know he has killed three men already?"

Lord Dynely shrugged his shoulders.

"I can't show the white feather on that account. I've got into this
scrape, and I must take the consequences. I've referred De Concressault
to you. You'll act for me, old fellow, I know?"

"I shall be helping to murder you," Boville answered, with a groan. "Is
there no way, Dynely, by which----"

"There is no way by which this matter can be settled, except by a
meeting," Dynely answered, impatiently. Di Venturini came to the ball
for no other purpose than to insult me. He did it, and I knocked him
down twice. You must perceive there can be but one ending to such a
thing as that."

"Devil take Felicia!" growled his friend. "I wish you had never seen the
sorceress. She is fatal to all men. She reminds one of those fabled
What's-their-names, mermaids--sirens--Lurline--who lure poor devils with
their smiles and songs, and then eat them up, and crunch their bones.
It's a deuce of an affair, and I never served a friend so unwillingly
before in my life. By the way, was the prince masked? How did you know
him?"

"He tore off his mask in a fine frenzy after the second knock down. _I_
never saw him before in my life. And now I come to think of it, he
didn't see _me_ at all. I kept my mask on through the whole
fracas--never thought of it once. By Jove!" Eric cried, laughing, "the
idea of going out with a man he never saw!"

"It's no laughing matter, let me tell you," Boville growled again; "it's
an infernal business, and I wish you had chosen anyone else to act for
you in the matter. However, if you insist that it is inevitable----"

"It is most decidedly and emphatically inevitable; so be off and arrange
for to-morrow morning, there's a good fellow. I've an engagement that I
would not be late for for worlds."

"And pistols or swords----"

"Are equal to me. Of the two I prefer pistols, as quickest and most
decisive. You understand. I have no doubt the result would be the same
with either weapon, for I think his excellency means mischief, as you
say, only pistols conclude things with dispatch."

The two men shook hands and separated. Boville, reluctantly, to settle
preliminaries with De Concressault, and Lord Dynely to keep his last
appointment with Madame Felicia down the Seine, to Asnires.




CHAPTER XIV.

CHEZ MADAME.


Half an hour later Madame Felicia and Lord Dynely had fairly started
upon their excursion--their last, they both knew, and the knowledge gave
the forbidden fruit fresh zest, even to their jaded palates. You _must_
feel an interest in a handsome and devoted young cavalier, lying in the
sunshine at your feet, who, this time to-morrow, for your sake, may be
lying with a bullet through his heart. As well as Lord Dynely himself,
Felicia knew what would inevitably take place in the light of
to-morrow's dawn, and, though his youthful and impassioned lordship was
beginning seriously to bore her, she had never before been one-half so
sweet, so witching, as to-day.

Half an hour after their departure, there rattled up to madame's door a
fiacre, from which alighted M. le Prince. That she would be awaiting his
coming, with more or less of impatience and anxiety, he did not doubt.
He absolutely stood dumb, when the tall chasseur, indorsed by Mam'selle
Pauline, announced madame's departure, and with whom.

"Gone for the day to Asnires, and with Lord Dynely!" he repeated,
staring at them blankly. The extent of the defiant audacity absolutely
took his breath away.

"But, yes, M. le Prince," Pauline answered, with a shrug, "not to return
until barely time to dress for the theatre."

"And she left no note, no message of any kind for me?"

"None, M. le Prince."

"How did they seem, Pauline? in good spirits, or----"

"In the very highest spirits, M. le Prince. She dressed with much more
than usual care, and so, evidently, had milor. I heard her tell him, as
they went away, laughing together, that he was looking handsome as an
archangel and elegant as a secretary of legation, and that she looked
forward to the pleasantest day of her life."

He set his teeth with a snap, his eyes aflame.

"And he--what said monsieur?"

"That all days must be the pleasantest of _his_ life spent in her
company. Then they drove off side by side."

The yellow complexion of the prince had turned dirty white, with jealous
rage. If one chance of life had remained to his rival, he lost it in
that moment; if one chance of setting herself right had remained to the
woman who slighted him, she lost it in that hour.

"And, mademoiselle?" he asked, "the little captive--what of her?"

"Is still captive, monseigneur. She is to be removed to-night, after
midnight, safely out of Paris, for the present. Madame holds a little
reception after the play to-night. When it is over, Paujol and Mam'selle
Donny quietly leave Paris?"

"Ah! Madame holds a reception, does she?" the Prince said, grimly. "Very
well, Pauline, I will trouble you no further. I will do myself the honor
of being present at madame's little reception after the play. Who knows
when she may hold another?"

He laughed inwardly--a laugh that might have warned madame had she heard
it. But, drifting down the sunny Seine to the music of the band of the
National Guard, madame heard nothing except the full-blown flatteries of
her English knight.

It was a charming day--all that there was of the most delightful. With
the abandon of a child, madame threw herself into the pleasure of the
moment, and lived, while she lived, each hour to the utmost. "Eat,
drink, and be merry, for to-morrow you die," was the key-note of her
life. There was nothing new, and nothing true, but the sun shone with
summer warmth, and the band played sweetest music, the champagne and
truffles were of the best, and her companion was the handsomest man in
Paris. To-morrow the Prince Di Venturini would shoot him or run him
through--it was well; there were other adorers left; but the knowledge
added spice to the wine of life to-day.

"Thou art absent, Eric, mon ami!" she murmured, tenderly. "Of what art
thou thinking, then? Tired already of our _fte_ day--which I am
enjoying like a child, since I am with thee?"

He awoke with a start.

In very truth, as they wandered here arm in arm, his thoughts,
marvellous to relate, had strayed backward to--his wife! How madame
would have laughed had she known it. Poor little soul--poor little
Crystal! When the end came to-morrow, would not the shot that finished
him kill her also? One creature at least of all the women who had smiled
upon him for his azure eyes, and golden hair, and Greek face, had loved
him. Well, in this world, where there is so much of empty glitter, so
little real gold, even that was something.

The brief, bright February day wore on, grew gray and overcast. Madame
shivered in her wraps, and turned fretful and cold. They hurried back to
the steamer and re-embarked for Paris.

"We will have a storm to-morrow--dost thou not think so, Eric?" madame
asked, wrapping her rose-lined seal-skins closer about her, and looking
up at the gray, fast-drifting sky.

He followed her glance, dreamily. To-morrow! Where, this time to-morrow,
would he be? In this world or the next?--if there be a next--he thought.

"Still dreaming, mon cher?" Felicia said, with an impatient shrug. "I
begin to think you have not enjoyed our excursion after all."

He answered her, as he knew she expected to be answered, in words of
empty compliment, but still with that absent, dreaming face. His wife
haunted him like a ghost, to-day. Poor little Crystal!

Yes, Dennison was right--he had been a brute to her. Only seven weeks a
bride, and to-morrow a widow! Ah, yes; it was hard on her!

"Shall we see you at my rooms to-night?" Felicia asked again.

"Yes--that is, no, I think not. I have an engagement for to-night that
will prevent my having that pleasure."

She shrugged her shoulders. They stood together in the chilly twilight
at madame's door.

"Then this is really good-night?"

"This is really good-night."

She gave him her hand, in its perfectly fitting gray glove, and looked
at him in silence for a moment. There was a half smile on her lips--so,
without a word, black eyes and blue met, in one long, farewell glance.

"_Ma foi!_ It is a thousand pities to kill anything half so handsome!"
madame was thinking. "Well--he has helped to amuse me for four weeks.
What more can one ask?"

"Does she know?" Eric was musing, "but of course she does. Also, of
course," rather bitterly this, "she does not care. It is only one more
lover, growing wearisome, and safely out of the way."

"Good-night, then, mon ami," madame said, softly, "and au revoir!"

"Good-night, Felicia," he answered, "until we meet again!"

And then he was gone, a smile on his blonde face, and those two had
looked at each other for the last time on earth.

Four hours later, and the glittering rooms of Madame Felicia were filled
with a very brilliant throng. The best men in Paris, the handsomest and
wittiest women met there. And there, when the reception was at its
highest, the conversation at its gayest, the music and laughter at their
liveliest, came M. le Prince Di Venturini.

Not unexpected. "Who has been here, Pauline?" madame had demanded, when
under the hands of her maid, at the dressing-room of the Varieties; and
the answer had been prompt, "M. le Prince, madame."

"Ah! and you told him--"

"That you had gone to Asnires for the day, with milor, madame."

Madame laughed.

"How truthful you grow, petite. And M. le Prince--what said he?"

"Nothing, madame; but that he would see you later at the reception."

So madame knew he was coming, and was prepared for all chances. War or
peace--she was equal to either fate, only a trifle curious. Others were
curious, too; that little contretemps at the bal d'opera, quiet as it
had been kept, was known, and people shrewdly suspected that Di
Venturini, noted duelist and fire-eater, would not let the matter drop
there. How would he meet madame?

He made his way slowly through the rooms, and met her with suave and
polished courtesy, told her of his journey, of his health, hoped she had
amused herself well in his absence, lingered half an hour among the
guests, and then, with an elaborate apology for his early departure,
went away.

By one o'clock the rooms were empty, the lights out. Madame valued her
good looks and lustrous eyes too highly to keep very late hours. Paujol
had quitted his post, Pauline had disrobed her mistress of silks and
laces, and substituted a dressing-gown. In her room Felicia sat, smoking
two or three nerve-soothing cigarettes before going to bed. In the
boudoir without Pauline sat, waiting, half-asleep, with her mistress'
night draught of spiced wine and eggs on the table before her. Madame
often sat dozing and dreaming over her cigarettes for an hour at a time,
while the girl waited. So to-night she lay luxuriously back in her
chair, her eyes closed, the rose-scented smoke curling upward, when a
man made his way noiselessly into the boudoir from the street. He
glanced at the sleeping Pauline, at the waiting night draught, and
passed on into the dressing-room, into the bed-room, and so came, still
noiselessly, upon madame.

He stood for a moment looking down upon her. She had not heard him, but
some baleful, mesmeric influence warned her he was there. She sat up
suddenly, opened her eyes, and looked full into the yellow face of
Prince Di Venturini.

For a second there was silence. She was a plucky little woman, without a
nerve about her, and uttered no word or sound. She looked at him
straight, silent, then: "Monsieur the prince."

"At your service, madame. I trust I have not too greatly disturbed you?"

A mocking smile was on his lips. She looked at him disdainfully.

"You have not disturbed me at all. For a moment, I confess, I took you
for a burglar, but my nerves are good. What was Paujol about that you
entered unannounced?"

"Paujol was asleep in his loge."

"And, Pauline?"

"Pauline is asleep also in your boudoir. It is past two, madame."

"And a very late hour for M. Di Venturini's visit. Could it not have
been deferred until to-morrow, I wonder?"

"It could not, madame. By to-morrow I shall be across the frontier, and
very far from Paris."

"Ah, I understand!" she looked at him unflinchingly. "You mean to kill
Lord Dynely?"

"I mean to kill Lord Dynely. Such an insult as he offered me can only be
wiped out in blood. I regret that madame must lose her lover, but--"

"Pray, no apologies, M. le Prince!" madame answered, with perfect
sang-froid; "he was beginning to bore me. Grand passions are always in
bad form, and poor boy, he was ludicrously in earnest. Well, monsieur,
as you depart to-morrow, I suppose I must give you an audience, even at
this improper hour, and in this apartment, or--shall we adjourn to the
boudoir?"

He laughed derisively.

"It shocks madame's delicacy then, that I have intruded here. A thousand
pardons, _ma belle_. Where, may I ask, when he paid his last visit, did
you receive the painter, M. Gordon Caryll?"

She never flinched. He knew that then.

"He was your husband, was he not? And one does not stand on ceremony
with one's husband. You see, madame, I know all!"

She smiled--a smile that fanned his jealous anger into fury.

"And madame's daughter, that she keeps caged up like a wild
animal--what of her? You see I know that also. And all the lies madame
has been telling me from the first--what of them?"

"Nothing of them. And lies is an ugly word to use to a lady."

"Diable! do you sit there and mock at me! Do you sit there and deny
this?"

"I deny nothing, monsieur. I affirm nothing. M. le Prince will believe
precisely what he pleases."

"And do you think--do you for a moment think, I will marry you after all
this? You, the cast-off wife of this man Caryll. You, the mother of this
girl--"

"Stay! M. le Prince," Felicia said, with one flash of her yellow black
eyes. "You have said quite enough! No, I do not think you will marry me.
I would not marry you, with your diabolical temper and jealousy, if you
were king of Italy, much less owner of a beggarly principality. I don't
really think I ever meant to marry you at all--you are much too old,
and, if you will pardon me, too ugly. I adore handsome men--Gordon
Caryll and Lord Dynely are that, at least. And De Vocqsal--you remember
the Austrian marquis, I think, prince? Yes--well, De Vocqsal is coming
to Paris next week, and is more urgent than ever that I shall become
Madame la Marquise. He is young, he is handsome, he has fourteen
quarterings, and a rent-roll that is fabulous. He never calls me ugly
names, and is much too gallant a gentleman to intrude into a lady's
chamber at two in the morning on purpose to insult her. Here is your
ring, prince; it never fitted from the first, and I am glad to be rid of
it. It is the only present you ever gave me, so I have, happily, nothing
to return. Now let me say good-night and _bon voyage_, for I am really
very sleepy."

She yawned aloud, as she removed the heavy diamond from her finger and
held it out to him.

"Good-night, prince; and a pleasant trip to you both--he, _pauvre
enfant_, to the next world, and you--to Italy, is it? Take your ring,
monsieur, and go."

He took it, and stood looking at her, his face cadaverous, his eyes
like coals. "You tell me this? You mean to marry De Vocqsal?"

"I am growing tired of the stage. Even _that_ palls. Yes; I shall marry
De Vocqsal, prince, and become a fine lady."

"This is the end, then?"

"Oh, mon Dieu! yes, if you ever mean to go. How can there be an end
while you loiter here? Go! go! I insist."

He laughed.

"I go, madame; pray do not say it again. Thanks for your good wishes.
Accept my congratulations beforehand. It is a brilliant destiny to be
Madame la Marquise de Vocqsal. Good-night, and adieu."

He bowed low, and was gone--through the dressing-room, and into the
sitting-room beyond. Here, Pauline, still guarding the wine, and fast
asleep now, sat in the dim light. He went to the table, something
between his fingers, a shining globule, and dropped it into the glass.
The bell rang sharply at the moment. Pauline started up, with a cry, and
Di Venturini vanished through the outer door.

"Madame never misses her night draught, so Pauline tells me," he said to
himself, with a sardonic smile, as he leaped into his waiting cab; "she
will not miss it to-night; and once drank, there is a longer journey
before her than a bridal trip to the imperial court of Francis Joseph.
So good-night to _you_, madame, and bon voyage!"




CHAPTER XV.

"HOW THE NIGHT FELL."


From the window of her room, Crystal, Lady Dynely, watched the twilight
of that overcast February day close down. She lay on a broad, low sofa,
half buried in cushions, her small face gleaming out like marble against
their rose tints, the large blue eyes, so brilliant with happy
love-light a few brief weeks ago, dim with watching and much weeping
now.

Outside the wind was rising. The trees rocked in the gale, the darkness
deepened, the first heavy rain-drops began pattering against the glass.
Inside the gloom deepened also, until the little, pale face was barely
visible. All day long she had been alone, sick in body, sick in soul,
crushed of heart. Now she was straining her ears, for the first sound of
that familiar step on the stairs, for the first note of that gay
whistle, with which he was wont to herald his coming. To her this
twilight hour was _the_ hour of the twenty-four, for it almost
invariably brought Eric, to dress or dine.

Her maid entered to light the lamps, but the soft little voice sent her
away. "Not yet," she said, gently. "I like the dusk. Has--has my lord
come home?"

"No, my lord has not come home," the Frenchwoman answered, with a
compassionate glance at the drooping figure. Alas! was not my lord's
defection as well known in the servants' hall as in salon or chamber?

Where was he to-day?--the child wondered. Where was he now? Was he with
_her_?--that wicked, beautiful, brown woman? Oh! to be able to win him
back, her very own, her husband, and hold him from them all! Was God
punishing her for loving too greatly, for worshipping the creature
instead of the Creator? She did not know--it might be wicked--this
unreasoning worship of hers; but wicked or worthy, it would last until
her life's end. She could see her face now as she lay--the room was
lined with mirrors. What a pitiful, pale face it was! And he liked rosy
bloom, peachy, plentiful flesh and blood. The dancing woman had
these--_she_ had nothing left but the moonlight shadow of her pearl
face, and her true and tender heart. Good and pleasant things, but not
likely long to hold a sensuous, changeful, beauty-worshipping,
thoroughly selfish man. Dimly she knew this, and with a half sob, buried
that poor, wasted face in her hands. He had fancied her from the first,
only for her pretty, flower-like looks; let her lose these charms, as
she was losing fast, and her last hold on her husband's heart was gone.

She lay thinking this--thinking so intently, that she did not hear the
door pushed gently open, and a tall figure come in. It came softly over,
and knelt on one knee beside her, and so, in the dusk of the room,
looked down upon the colorless, wasted face, the locked hands, from
which the wedding ring hung loose. Suddenly her eyes opened.

"It is I, Crissy," he said.

The bewildered look changed to one of electric surprise and joy. She
flung her arms around his neck, and held him as though she would never
let him go.

"Poor little soul!" he said, more moved than he cared to show. "You have
been alone all day, and have got the horrors. Were there none of them
here--my mother--France--all day?"

"Yes, both. Your mother stayed an hour, and then went to make some calls
with Terry. France stayed and read to me all the morning. She is so
good--my own dear France. They are all good, but--but," the clinging
arms close together, he can feel her passionate heart beat: "Oh, my
love! I only want you.

"Poor little Chris!"

It is all he can say. He lays his face beside hers for a moment, and is
still. He is thinking of this time to-morrow--he knows as surely as that
he rests here, that the bullet that kills him will end her life. And it
is for that dark daughter of Herodias, he has forsaken her. All at once
a loathing of Felicia, of himself, comes upon him. What a black and
brutal wretch he is! how utterly unworthy of this spotless wife, whose
heart he is breaking. If the past could but come over again! if what is
done could be undone, how differently he would act, how happy he would
make her. But it is too late for all that--the end has come.

"Crystal," he says gently, "I've not been a very good sort of husband,
I'm afraid--I never was a very good sort of fellow at any time. I've
done enough to forfeit all right to your love, but--you care for me
still?"

"Care for you!" she whispered. And then the clinging grasp tightens, and
she can say no more.

"Yes, I know you do," he says, with a stifled sigh; "it's awfully good
of you, Chris, for I _have_ been a brute, that's the truth. And look
here, I don't mean this really, you know, but if anything happened;
if"--with a slight laugh--"I chanced to die, for instance--"

But she interrupts him with a shrill cry, like a child that has been
struck.

"Eric!"

"Foolish child! Do I look like dying? It is only a suppositious
case--let me put it. If I chanced to die, say to-morrow, you would
forgive me all my wrongdoing, my neglect? You would not have one hard
thought of me, would you?"

She half raises herself, and tries to look at him. But, still laughing,
he holds her so that she cannot see his face. "Answer, sweetheart--would
you?"

"I never had one hard thought of you in all my life, Eric, never, so I
could have nothing to forgive. If you died"--she catches her breath with
a sort of gasp as she says it--"do you think I could live? Oh, love,
that is all past. I can never have any life now apart from you!"

"You think so," he says, uneasily; "but you are young, and--you only
think so."

"I know so," she answers, under her breath; and instinctively he knows
it too.

"Well," he says, at length, after a long pause, "regrets are useless,
but I wish with all my soul the past three weeks could come over again.
I ought to have made you happy, little wife, and I have not. If--if the
time is given me, I swear I will. Now, let me go; I have letters to
write, and much to do this evening."

"You"--she pauses, and looks at him with oh, such wistful, longing
eyes--"you are going out, as usual, Eric?"

"No," he says, smiling down upon her. "I am going to remain in, as
_un_-usual, Crystal. Lie here until dinner is announced; I will write my
letters in your boudoir. You know I must always be alone when my
epistolatory attacks come on."

He unlooses the clasping arms and goes. And Crystal nestles down among
her pillows, and shuts her eyes to keep back the joyful tears that come
to women alike in bliss and in pain. Just now her bliss is so great,
that it is almost pain; she cannot, cannot realize it.

He passes through the dressing-room, into the pretty, mirror-lined,
satin-hung nest beyond, that is Crystal's sitting-room, leaving both
doors ajar. He lights the lamps himself, draws pens, ink, and paper
before him, and sits down to write. He must leave a few parting lines
with Boville for his mother and Crystal in case of the worst. He wishes
he had made a will to-day instead of going to Asnires, but it is too
late for that. The title and estate go to a distant cousin of his
father's, unless--yes, there is one unless. It is something Crystal has
never spoken of--he thinks himself it is unlikely.

"By Jove!" he says, under his breath. "I hope so, for her sake, poor
little soul. It will console her; and dead or alive, a fellow likes to
perpetuate the title."

He begins his mother's letter first. It will be the easier. He writes,
"Hotel du Louvre, February 26, 18--. My dear mother," and there he
stops, and gnaws the gold handle of his pen, and pulls his amber
mustache, and stares at the blank sheet with troubled blue eyes. What
_shall_ he say? It will almost go as hard with her as with Crystal.
Absolutely these preliminaries are worse than the thing itself.

The minutes tick off--still he sits and stares at the white paper. What
shall he say--how shall he word it? Some fellows have a knack of writing
things--he has none--never had. Beauty and brains don't, as a rule,
travel in company. Eric, Lord Dynely, never felt the want of the
latter--that refuge of the destitute, before. By Jove! What shall he say
to her? Then, as he plunges the pen in desperation down in the ink,
determined to say _something_ or perish, the door is burst suddenly
open, and Terry Dennison comes impetuously in. Terry Dennison, flushed
of face, excited of eye, and strides up to him at once.

"Eric, what is this? Is it true?"

Eric lays down his pen, and flushes also with haughty amaze and anger.

"Dennison! again! and after what passed between us the other day."

"Do you think I would let that stop me now?" Dennison bursts forth,
excitedly. "Do you think I would heed anything you may have said at such
a time as this? Is it true?"

"Is what true?" still in haughty anger.

"Your duel with Di Venturini. I met De Concressault out yonder, and he
dropped a hint, but would not speak plainly. I know that Di Venturini is
back, I heard of your rencontre at the bal masque, and I feared
something of this. But I did not think you would be so mad--yes, so mad,
Dynely, as to accept his challenge. Tell me, is it true?"

"It is quite true. May I inquire in what way it concerns Mr. Dennison?"

"In what way! Great Heaven! he can talk to me like this. In what
way--his murder--for it is nothing less. Eric, I say, this must not go
on."

"Indeed!"--with a sneer. "How do you propose to prevent it?"

"I will give information to the police. I will--I swear! If I can stop
it in no other way, the gens-d'armes shall be on the ground before you.
Eric, you shall not fight Di Venturini!"

Eric arose to his feet, that lurid light of anger the other knew so
well, in his eyes.

"You dare to stand there and tell me this! Meddler! Fool! If you are a
coward yourself, do you think to make me one? Begone! and interfere,
tell the police, at your peril. By George, if you do, when the prince
and I have met elsewhere, whichever of us survives shall shoot _you_!"

There was a moment's silence--Eric livid with passion, Terry's eyes
aflame, his breath coming quick and hard--then:

"You mean to tell me, Dynely, that if I prevent your meeting
to-morrow you will meet Di Venturini elsewhere?"

"So surely as we both live I shall meet Di Venturini when and where he
pleases."

"But, Heavens and earth, Eric, don't you know he means to kill you?
Don't you know he is a dead shot, and that you don't stand a chance. No,
by Jove! not the shadow of a chance. A duel! why this will not be a
duel, it will be a cold-blooded murder."

"Call it by what name you please, only be kind enough to go."

"Eric, you shall not--you _shall_ not meet the prince. He means to take
your life; you haven't a shadow of a chance, I repeat. Oh! dear old
fellow, stop and think. I don't mind what you say to me--I don't mean to
be meddlesome--I don't mean to quarrel with you. Dear old boy, stop and
think. It is not you alone Di Venturini will kill--it is your mother--it
is your wife."

"This is all nonsense!" Eric cried, angrily and impatiently "a waste of
time. I have letters to write, and I want to get to bed early to-night.
If you talked until the crack of doom you couldn't alter things one
iota. Let it kill whom it may, I can't and won't show the white feather.
Di Venturini has challenged me, and I am to meet him at day-dawn
to-morrow--that is as fixed as fate. He means to shoot me, I haven't the
slightest doubt; but that has nothing to do with it. The Dynelys have
never been noted for rigid virtue of any sort, or an overstock of
brains; but at least none that I ever heard of were cowards. I won't be
the first to disgrace the name. Have we palavered enough over this, or
has more to be said? I warn you, I won't listen. If you will not leave
me, then I shall leave you."

He gathered up his papers angrily to go. Dennison advanced and laid his
hand on his shoulder.

"Eric! if you have no mercy on yourself, have mercy on your wife and
mother. It will kill them--that you know as well as I. Let me meet this
Italian cutthroat in your place. I'm a better shot than you, and he'll
never know the--"

"You're a fool, Terry!" Eric cried, throwing off the hand. "You talk
like a puling baby. Let _you_ meet Di Venturini in my place, and I sneak
at home like a whipped school-boy, behind the petticoats of my wife and
mother! For Heaven's sake get out, and stop talking such infernal rot!"

Terry drew back, and folded his arms.

"It is inevitable then, Dynely? You mean to meet the prince?"

"It is inevitable, Dennison. If your head had not been made of wood, you
might have known that from the first. I shall meet Di Venturini as
surely as the sun will shine in the sky to-morrow."

A sort of smile crossed Dennison's face at the simile. The rain was
pelting against the windows hard.

"The sun will _not_ shine in the sky to-morrow," he said, under his
breath. Then aloud: "And you are quite sure, old boy, that you know the
prince means to kill you?"

"I am quite sure he means to try," Eric answered, coolly; "I am not at
all so sure that he will succeed. Now, then, Terry, I'll forgive you
everything--everything on my word, if you'll only take yourself off at
once, and stop being a confounded bore! When a man expects to be shot at
break of day, he naturally has no end to do the night be----"

He never finished the sentence. With a face of white horror, Dennison
was pointing to the door of the dressing-room. Eric whirled round, and a
cry broke from his lips. There, in her wrapper, her face like snow, her
eyes all wild and wide, her lips apart, his wife stood. She had heard
every word.

"Great Heaven! Crystal!" Eric cried.

He sprang toward her. She was swaying like a reed in the wind, but at
the sound of his voice the blind, bewildered eyes turn toward him, the
arms instinctively outstretched. It was the doing of a second--before
he could reach her, she had fallen heavily forward on her face, a stream
of bright red blood flowing from her lips.

The two men stood petrified, horror-stricken. It was all so sudden that
for an instant it stunned them. Then Eric awoke. With a horrible oath he
sprang forward, seized Dennison by the throat, and struck him with all
his might across the face.

"It is all your doing, you fool! You meddlesome, thick-witted fool! If
you have killed her, by ---- I'll have your life!"

He flung him from him like a madman. By laying hold of the wall Dennison
alone saved himself from falling. The onslaught had been so swift, so
unexpected, that he had had no chance to defend himself at all.

Now he was forced to stand for an instant to regain his breath. The
flush had faded from his face, leaving it ghastly, only where the red,
cruel mark of the brutal blow lay. Then he plunged blindly after his
assailant, but in that instant Eric had stooped, raised his wife in his
arms, and passed with her into the inner room.

Dennison drew back, laid his arm against the wall, and his face upon it.
So he stood for a moment--a moment that was an age of agony. Then he
turned, and silently and swiftly went out into the melancholy,
rain-beaten night.




CHAPTER XVI.

"LOYAL AU MORT."


Straight to the Faubourg St. Honore, straight to the rooms of Lady
Dynely, Terry went. Crystal might be dying--was, no doubt, and he would
be before any of Eric's messengers to break the news to Eric's mother.
His teeth were set, his fists unconsciously clenched, his blue eyes
aflame. The blow, that for a moment had blinded him, burned on his face
still, like a brand of fire--the savage that is latent in all men, in
far better and deeper-cultured men than this big dragoon, was uppermost
now. Eric had struck him, basely and dastardly struck him. If by lifting
his finger, he could have saved Eric's life, in this first blind fury he
would not have lifted it.

He strode into her private sitting-room, and inquired for Lady Dynely.
Yes, my lady was at home, had but just come, was on the verge of again
going out, but was at home. She would be with Mr. Dennison directly.

She was with him as the servant said it. She came rustling in, her pale,
flowing silks sweeping behind her, a cloak of velvet and fur falling off
her shoulders. Her dainty Parisian bonnet was on her head, a flurried,
wild look on her ever pale face, an excited sparkle in her light blue
eyes. As she entered, Dennison thought, with a thrill of recollection,
of the very first time he had seen her as she entered the Irish cabin in
the wet twilight, to change all his life for evermore. Had she changed
it for the better? If she had left him to grow up ignorant, and poor,
and unlettered, among his mother's people, there in the wild Claddagh of
Galway, might he not have been a happier man to-night?

"Terry," she cried, coming excitedly forward, both hands outstretched,
"what is this I hear? I was just starting for the Louvre as you were
announced. Half an hour ago I was at Lady Clarendon's reception, and
there the rumor reached me of this horrible affair. Oh, Terry! speak and
tell me, it is _only_ a rumor, that he will not be so mad, so wicked, so
utterly reckless, as to risk his life."

So! that was told! He drew in his breath hard. All must come out now.

"Of what do you speak, Lady Dynely?"

"Do you not know? Oh, then it must be false. If it were true you would
be the very first Eric would tell. Wretched boy! he is always worrying
me to death of late--yes, ever since his return last August. And now his
neglect of his wife, poor little creature, and his running after this
horrible dancer. Oh! what a trouble sons are to mothers. Terry, I heard a
shocking story whispered about at Lady Clarendon's. Captain de
Concressault dropped in there for ten minutes, and it seems he set the
ball going. But, it cannot be true."

"Captain de Concressault is a good one to keep a secret," thought Terry,
grimly.

"What was it De Concressault said?" inquired he, aloud.

"Oh! a most scandalous thing. It would break my heart if I thought
it true. That Eric went to a masked ball, at one of those places
here, with that woman, Felicia; that there he met Prince Di
Venturini, who had followed to watch them, that a dreadful quarrel
ensued, and that Eric knocked the prince down again and again.
Everyone was horrified--naturally. And I left immediately and came
here, to change my dress and go direct to the Louvre. Terry, you are
silent; you look--oh! good Heaven! Terry, don't tell me it is true!"

But Dennison stood silent, his head bent down, his eyes averted, his
hat, which he had not yet removed, shading his bruised and discolored
face.

"Terry, I command you! Speak and tell me--is this story true?"

"Lady Dynely--I am afraid it is."

She laid her hand over her heart, turning ghastly pale.

"And Eric went there with that woman, his wife ailing at home--went to
that wicked dancing-place, and insulted Prince Di Venturini?"

"My lady--yes."

He spoke reluctantly, each admission dragged from him. Falsehoods came
never readily to Dennison, and then, of what use were falsehoods here?
She _must_ know.

"He insulted Di Venturini, a man who fights duels upon the smallest
provocation--who will take no insults from any one. Terry, tell me--tell
me the truth, I command! Has Di Venturini challenged Eric?"

"Lady Dynely, I am sorry, sorry to have to say once more--yes."

Her blue eyes dilated, the last trace of color faded from her face.

"And Eric?" she said, in a sort of whisper. "Eric has----"

"Accepted. There was no alternative. I am very sorry," Dennison said
again.

She sat down suddenly on a sofa near, so ghastly that he drew close in
alarm.

"Lady Dynely, good Heaven! you are going to faint. Shall I----"

She motioned him to be still, the sick, giddy faintness that was like
death, holding her speechless.

"Wait," she said, with a gasp. "I--I won't faint. Oh, Terry! What is
this? Oh, my Eric! my son, my son."

She buried her face in her hands and was still, whether crying or
praying Terry could not tell. He stood uneasily looking at her, feeling
horribly uncomfortable, not knowing in the least what to do or say.

She looked up after a moment. Her eyes were red and inflamed, but she
was not crying.

"When do they meet? The truth, I insist."

"To-morrow morning at daybreak," he answered, almost under his breath.

"And they fight with pistols?" she shuddered, convulsively, from head to
foot, as she said it.

"With pistols."

"And Di Venturini will kill him!" she cried out, rising up. "Oh, I see
it all! I see it all! They will meet there in some lonely place at
day-dawn, and my boy, my darling, my Eric, will be foully murdered. Oh,
Heaven, have mercy on me and on him!"

She flung herself once more upon the sofa, her whole body convulsively
quivering.

"He will kill him! he will kill him. This time to-morrow my darling will
be dead! Oh, I cannot bear it! I _will_ not bear it!" She started up
madly. "This is murder!" she cried shrilly; "foul, cold-blooded murder.
It must be stopped."

He stood silent, thrilled to the soul by her agony. But again--what
could he say, what could he do?

"Terry!" she cried, seizing him by the arm and shaking him in her
passion, "why don't you say something? Why don't you do something? Why
don't you tell me what to do? Oh, you don't care! No one cares. You
stand there like a stone and tell me that to-morrow at daybreak my boy
is to be murdered. I asked you to take care of him, to keep him from
danger, and you promised, and this is how you keep your word. You stand
here safe and well, and to-morrow--oh, my heart! to-morrow Eric is to be
shot! Go!" She flung him from her with passionate strength. "You are a
coward and a traitor! You swore to me, and you have broken your oath.
You might have prevented this, and you have not. Terry Dennison, I hate
you!"

He put out his hand blindly, as though to ward off a blow.

"For God's sake, mother!" he said, hoarsely.

"Don't call me mother!" she cried, in her insane frenzy. "I wish I had
never seen you. I wish I had left you there, in Galway, to live and die.
Oh! you might have saved him--you might--you might--and you would not.
You come here and tell me that to-morrow you will stand by and see him
shot. But you shall not!" she shrieked. "I will go myself--now--this
instant, to Eric, to Di Venturini, and on my knees I will beg for my
darling's life. I know the prince--he will listen to me--to me, a most
wretched mother." Her horror, her fear, had driven her for the moment
absolutely distraught. She would have rushed from the room but that
Dennison caught her.

"Lady Dynely, you must not go. For pity's sake stay a moment longer.
Eric will never forgive you if you do this."

"He will not be alive to-morrow morning if I do not do it! Let me go,
Terry Dennison! You will not lift a finger to save him--your own
brother--so I must. Let me go."

But he held her fast.

"Wait a moment," he said; and something in his tone, in his face, even
through all her madness, made her stop.

She looked at him with eyes all wild and wide with terror, and for the
first time saw the bruised and swollen disfiguration of his face. She
snatched off his hat and looked at him full.

"Terry!" she exclaimed, "what is this?"

He turned crimson--a burning, shameful crimson, from brow to chin. In
those supreme moments of life, the perceptive faculties are
preternaturally sharpened--like a flash the truth burst upon her.

"Terry!" she cried out in new horror, "Eric has done this!"

He did not speak--he could not. Like inspiration, something of the real
truth came to her.

"You and he have quarrelled, and he has struck you! Terry I--you--you
have not struck him back?"

"No," he said, hoarsely and breathlessly, "I did not strike him back.
Mother, be silent! the devil has been in me strongly enough once
to-night. Let me forget this blow if I can."

She flung her arms around his neck, and kissed the brutal mark of her
darling's handiwork.

"Forgive him, Terry!" she said. "He is your brother--your only brother,
and he does not know what he does. Forgive him, have pity on me. In some
way you can, you must, prevent this duel. He is all I have. I have loved
him so fondly--oh! with more than mother's love--I have been so proud of
him, of his beauty, of his grace, of his talents. Everywhere he has gone
people have loved and admired him. He is all I have--all I ever had. My
heart is wrapped up in him. He worries me--he troubles me, but I could
not live if I lost him. Terry! Terry! pity me--pity him. He is so
young--life is so bright for him. Pity his wife, whom you love--and in
some way--- oh, in _any_ way! save his life."

Her arms held him close--her pale passionate face, over which the tears
poured, was upheld to his. So in the supreme selfishness of mother love,
she pleaded. In some way she instinctively felt that her only earthly
hope was in Terry Dennison.

He stood still--a horrible struggle going on within him. He had gone
to Eric in all good faith and fellowship, ready to take his place
to-morrow before Di Venturini's pistol. And Eric's answer had been a
blow. No man had ever struck him before--no man ever was likely to
again. It burned like a brand at this moment. And he was called upon
to forgive this--this and the hundred other insults Eric Dynely had
offered him, and at all risks save his life.

"Terry," Lady Dynely said, still holding him close, "do you remember
that afternoon last August? We were alone together at Dynely, and I told
you your story. I need never have told you--who was there to make me?
You knelt at my feet, and I put my arms around you, and kissed you for
the first time. I loved you then--I have loved you since, but not--oh,
no! not as I loved _him_. Do you remember what I said to you that day?
Do you remember what you promised me?"

He does not answer. She does not know what she is asking him to do. She
does not know of the struggle that is going on in the heart, beating in
such hard throbs against her own.

"I recall it all, as though it were this moment," she softly went on. "I
said to you, 'Be a friend, a brother to my boy. He is not like you--he
is reckless and extravagant, easily led, self-willed, and wild. He will
go wrong, and you must be his protector. Let nothing he ever says,
nothing he ever does, tempt you to anger, tempt you to desert him.
Promise me that.'"

Still silent--still with that strange, rigid look on his face, that half
frightens her in the midst of her supremely selfish pleadings, and which
she does not understand.

"You knelt down," she went on, "you kissed my hand; and kneeling there,
alone with God and me, _this_ is what you said:

"'Nothing Eric can ever say, can ever do, will tempt me to anger--that I
swear. For his sake and for yours, I will do all mortal man can do. You
have been the good angel of my life--I would be less than man if I ever
forgot it.' You promised that, Terry--the time has come now for you to
keep your word."

Still silence. Oh! if he would but speak, if that dark, strange, rigid
look would but leave his face.

"My Terry! my Terry!" she whispered, "you have been brave and noble in
the past. For sake of him and me, you gave up name, fortune, love--for
sake of him and me, I call upon you now in _some way_ to save his life."

He drew a long, hard breath, and looked down upon her. Did she know
what she asked? No, he saw she did not. All the same though, so that
he saved Eric, it didn't much matter.

"Terry, speak to me," she pleaded, "don't stand and look at me like
this. Oh! if you ever loved me, if you ever loved Crystal, save him who
is the life of our lives. Terry, I call upon you--save Eric!"

He stooped and kissed her.

"Say no more, mother. If mortal man can do it, I will save Eric."

She gave a great sob of unutterable joy and relief, laid her face on his
shoulder and was still.

"You need have no fear," he went on; "Eric shall not fight Di Venturini.
And now, too much time has been spent here already. You must go to the
Hotel du Louvre at once. Crystal is ill."

"Ill?"

Rapidly and concisely he narrated his visit to Eric, only suppressing
Eric's own insulting language--how Crystal had overheard, and the
result. At any other time Lady Dynely would have been unspeakably
horrified--now the greater horror had swallowed up all lesser.

"Yes, yes, I will go to her at once. Oh, poor child! Terry, will you
tell me--_how_ do you mean to save Eric?"

He smiled.

"You will learn later. At present do not in any way let Eric suspect
that you know anything. And--that my plan to save him may succeed--you
must give him an opiate to-night."

"An opiate?"

"He must be made to sleep beyond the hour of meeting, else, not even
Crystal's death could keep him away. To steady his nerves for to-morrow
some sleep will be necessary--he will, therefore, probably retire early.
In fact, you must see that he does, and induce him to take a glass of
wine, or beer, and administer an opiate in the drink that will hold him
for eight hours at least. All depends upon that."

"Oh, I can do that. I have done it often before."

"Very well; that is all you are to do. Now go quickly to the Louvre, and
perform your part. In about two hours I will call to see how Crystal is.
I have other business of importance meantime. For the present good-by."

       *       *       *       *       *

The last act of "La Sorcire d'Or" is over, the ballet has begun, and a
group of gentlemen are loitering about the vestibule of the theatre, not
quite sure whether they will return to their stalls for the great
display of legs and lime-light, or go virtuously home to bed. Mr.
Boville is among them, and Mr. Boville is debating within himself the
advisability of a little game of lansquenet, as a soothing preparation
for slumber, when a man strides hurriedly up and lays his hand heavily
on his shoulder.

"Boville! I thought I would find you here. Will you leave the theatre
and come with me?"

Boville swings round and faces his interrogator.

"You, Dennison! Certainly, my dear fellow. But what the deuce is the
matter? On my word you look like your own ghost."

"Come with me," Dennison replies, hurriedly, and Boville links his arm
through the dragoon's and goes.

Without a word, Terry leads him away from the glare and gaslight glitter
of the thronged boulevards to some distant, dimly-lighted, deserted
street.

Without a word Boville follows. This is something serious, he feels. Has
the duel got wind? Dennison and Dynely are relatives, Boville hazily
recollects--relatives of some sort; he is not quite clear about it. No
doubt Dennison has come to speak of the duel; but why with _that_ face?

"Boville," Terry abruptly begins, "Lord Dynely and Prince Di Venturini
fight to-morrow, do they not, and you are Dynely's second?"

"Weluctantly--yes. It's a bad business, old boy. Dynely hasn't a ghost
of a chance, and so I've told him. But a wilful man--you know the
proverb. Besides, weally, you know," Mr. Boville has a rooted objection
to the letter R, "I don't see how he is going to get out of it. The
Prince--confound him! would bwand him as a coward far and wide, and
Eric's not that. My dear Terry," they are passing under a street lamp at
the moment, and the light falls full upon his companion's face, "what
_have_ you been doing to yourself? There is a bwuised swelling the size
of an egg between your eyes."

Dennison's face turns crimson, a deep, burning, tingling crimson once
more. He pulls his hat far over his eyes, and tries to laugh.

"An accident, Boville. Never mind my face--I've no beauty to spoil. I've
come to talk to you about this duel. At what hour do they meet?"

"At first peep of day, between half-past six and seven. It won't do to
be later. But who told you? De Concressault or Dynely himself?"

"Both. Boville, this meeting must never take place!"

"Delighted, I'm shaw, to hear it," drawled Mr. Boville, opening two very
small, very sleepy blue eyes to their widest; "never was accessory to a
murder in my life--don't want to begin now. But, at the same time, how
do you pwopwose to pwevent it?"

"You can refuse to act for Eric."

Boville shrugged his shoulders and inserted his glass in his eye.

"And have my bwains blown out for my pains. Haven't got many bwains,
thank Heaven--never was in our family--still, the few I've got I pwopose
to keep. That dodge won't work, Terry, twy something else."

"It will be downright slaughter, Boville--nothing less."

"Know it, dear boy--told Dynely so; but what's the use of telling? He's
got into this infernal little scwape, and must take the consequences.
He's had his three weeks' flirtation with Felicia--now he's got to pay
the penalty. _Apropos des bottes_, she was in capital fawm to-night--at
her loveliest. If it were she that was to be shot to-morrow, I'd assist
at the cewemonial with the gweatest pleasure."

There is a moment's silence, and the two men walk on in the rain. Then
Dennison speaks in an altered voice.

"There is one way, Boville--only one."

"Vewy pleased to hear it, dear boy. Give it a name."

"I must go out in Dynely's place."

It is the proud boast of Herbert Boville's life that since he was in
pinafores he has never felt surprise or any other earthly emotion. But
now--he actually stops in the rain, and stares at his companion, aghast.

"Go out in--my dear Dennison, I _don't_ think I can have heard you
awight. Will you kindly wepeat your last wemark?"

"Oh nonsense, Boville--your hearing's all right. I must go out in
Dynely's place; such has been my intention from the first, and I call
upon you to aid and second me."

Boville fixed his glass in his eye, and tried in the darkness to see his
friend.

"I always thought," he said in a helpless tone, "that I had less bwains
myself than any other fellow of my acquaintance. Now I know I was
mistaken. Pway, Terry, _when_ did you take leave of your senses?"

Terry muttered something forcible and strong.

"Look here, Boville," he cried impatiently; "don't let us waste time
chaffing. As surely as we both stand here, I mean this. Dynely hasn't a
ghost of a chance, as we both know; for him to meet Di Venturini would
be sheer murder. Now with me it is different. I may not be the same dead
shot the prince is, and I haven't had his experience with living
targets, but my pistol hand is tolerably sure for all that. And I mean
to meet Di Venturini to-morrow."

He said it with a dogged determination that convinced Boville at last.

"By Jove!" he said, "this is a rum go! Do you mean to tell me, Terry,
that Eric will stand by and allow this?"

Eric knows nothing about it--will not until all is over. He is the last
man on earth who _would_ allow it. The devil himself is not more
obstinate or more plucky than Dynely."

"You must be awfully fond of him, Terry, old boy! Gad! I never heard of
such a thing in all my life. Knocks Damon and the other fellow into a
cocked-hat. By Jove! it does. At the same time you stand no more chance
before the prince than Dynely."

"I don't think so," Dennison responded, coolly; "as I tell you, I'm a
very fair shot and can hold my own with most men."

"With most men, perhaps--not with the prince. And, then, it's
impossible--oh, utterly impossible! You don't suppose, now, Dennison,
you _don't_ suppose Di Venturini will fight you instead of Dynely?"

"I don't suppose he would, if he knew. It is not my intention to let him
know."

"Ah, how will you help it?"

"Simply enough. Di Venturini never saw Eric in his life."

"But he _has_ seen you, dear boy, and De Concressault knows Eric like a
book. How do you propose to baffle two pair of eyes?"

"Boville," said Terry, earnestly, "this thing has to be done, that is
the whole amount of it. Even if I were sure--which I am not at all--that
Di Venturini would shoot me, I would still meet him. It will be the
early dawn of a dark and rainy morning. I shall wear this slouch hat,
which, to a great degree, will hide my face. And in figure and general
air Dynely and I are alike--have often been accosted for each other.
They will never suspect--how should they? They will take it for granted
that I am Lord Dynely, and the duel will be fought, and there will be an
end of the matter."

"An end of the matter! Ah! very likely. And where, all this time, will
be Dynely?"

Terry reddened.

"Dynely will be asleep--drugged. I have taken care of that."

Again Boville paused--in genuine, unfeigned amazement.

"Dennison! drugged! By Jove! And who will drug him?"

"His mother. At my request."

"By Jove!" exclaimed Boville again, and laughed softly, "if this isn't
the wummest go. By Jove, Terry, _how_ fond you must be of Eric!"

Once more Terry reddened violently in the dark.

"Look here, Boville," he said again, "it isn't that. It isn't altogether
for Eric's sake. I--I don't mind telling you, it's for the sake of his
mother and wife. Their very lives are bound up in him--if he is killed
it will kill them. And I owe his mother everything--everything, I give
you my word, Boville. I stand pledged to her, solemnly pledged to save
her son. And I mean to keep that pledge. There, you have it."

"And you expect me to aid and abet you in this Quixotic--yes,
Dennison--Quixotic scheme? By Jove! I'll see you shot first!"

"You will probably see me shot _at_, at least," Terry answered with a
slight laugh. "Come now, Boville, I rely upon you in this. It's for the
best all round. Di Venturini will shoot Eric as dead as Queen Anne--now
I don't mean to let him shoot me. I flatter myself my chances are as
good as his. I will not break my word to Lady Dynely. If you refuse to
aid me, I will go to Argyll--_he_ will not, I know."

"Has Lady Dynely asked you to meet the prince in her son's place?"

"Of course not--she would be the last to permit such a thing. All the
same; I have promised to save him, and there is no other way. As I tell
you, she has been my benefactress all my life. If Dynely were killed,
his mother and wife would break their hearts. And," Terry drew his
breath in hard, "there is no one to care for me."

Boville looked at him suddenly. In the dim light the tall figure was
curiously like Eric's--he noticed it for the first time. Was his
relationship to handsome Eric nearer than the world knew?

They had come close upon the Hotel Louvre--the brilliant boulevards
almost deserted this wet night. Dennison stopped, and grasped his
companion's hand.

"You will do this for me, Boville? I can depend upon you?"

"Not with my will, I swear, Dennison! But if you insist--?"

"I do insist. What is the hour?"

"Before seven. But your scheme won't wash. I warn you, Di Venturini and
De Concressault will know."

"They will _not_ know. Until six to-morrow, then, Boville, old fellow,
good-night, and sound sleep."

       *       *       *       *       *

In Crystal's room the light burned dim. Pale, motionless, she lay, Lady
Dynely watching by her side. It was close upon midnight, when a servant
came in and softly announced Mr. Dennison.

"Terry!" She started up and went to meet him in the outer room.
"_Well?_" she whispered, breathlessly.

"It is all right," he answered, in the same tone; "and Crystal?"

"Crystal is asleep and--safe. It was but a small artery ruptured, and
she will be about in a few weeks, so the doctors say."

"Thank Heaven!" she heard him murmur. Then "where is Eric?"

"Eric is asleep, too. I have done as you bade, Terry. He has had the
glass of port, and the opiate in it. He took it as quietly as a child."

Her lip quivered. He took her in his arms for a moment, and kissed her.

"Keep up heart, mother. I will keep my word. All will be well with Eric.
And now," with strange shyness, "before I go--may I go in for a moment
and look at Crystal?"

She motioned him to enter, remaining outside herself. He went softly in,
and knelt reverently down by the little white bed. Like a lily she lay,
so cold, so white, so pure.

"My little Crystal," he said, under his breath, "my little love, if by
the sacrifice of my own life I can bring happiness to you, then I resign
it willingly. My own little one! good-by, and God bless and keep you
always."

Lady Dynely had quitted the dressing room for a moment to glance at her
slumbering son. He lay deeply asleep, his head pillowed on his arm, his
fair Greek profile turned to the faint light. Then she hurried back to
say one last word to Terry, but Terry was gone.




CHAPTER XVII.

HOW THE MORNING BROKE.


The rain fell softly and ceaselessly all night--it was falling softly
and ceaselessly still when morning dawned. The gray, ragged light was
struggling wanly through the leaden sky when a fiacre drove rapidly
toward the Bois de Boulogne, and three men got out. They were Dennison,
Boville, and an English surgeon, resident of Paris.

"You will wait here," Boville said to the cabman; and the three men
hurried rapidly along to a secluded and distant spot, where, under the
waving trees, scores of "meetings of honor" had taken place before.

They were a very silent party. Boville looked perplexed and gloomy, and
gnawed his mustache uneasily.

"I feel as though I were helping to slaughter you, Dennison," he had
groaned as they first started. The band of comradeship between him and
Terry was one of many years' standing, and the settled conviction was
upon him this dreary morning that Terry was going to his death. The
miserable weather, perhaps, had something to do with his forebodings,
also the unearthly hour at which he had been obliged to get up, but most
of all Di Venturini's reputation as a dead shot.

"Wish to Heaven I had never got mixed up in the infewnal business," he
growled, inwardly. "Eric was bad enough, but this is worse. Nevew heard
of such an awangement before--nevew. If Dennison's shot, as he's sure to
be, I shall feel like a murdewer all my life."

They strode silently on together now, beneath the dripping trees.

"We're wather ahead of time, I think," Boville remarked drearily, once,
as they passed swiftly over the short, wet grass.

"It's always well to err on the right side," Dennison answered
cheerfully. "Di Venturini isn't the sort to keep anyone waiting when
this kind of thing is on hand."

He was looking pale and rather jaded. He had slept little or none all
night. He had written a brief note to Lady Dynely and another to Eric,
and intrusted them to Boville, to be delivered in case of the worst. And
the worst would happen, that he felt as surely as Boville himself. The
quarrel between Di Venturini and Dynely was of that deadly sort that
admitted of no half measures. As surely as he walked here he knew that
the prince meant to kill him--if he could.

He had altered himself greatly during the preceding night.
All his profuse, flame-colored beard had been shaven off, his great,
ruddy, trooper mustache trimmed down, and waxed at the points, to
resemble Eric's dandy, golden, facial adornment. It deepened the faint
likeness between them incredibly--even Boville was genuinely surprised.
That impurpled swelling between the eyes had been reduced by judicious
applications; the slouched, felt hat, pulled far down, hid it
altogether. His coat-collar was turned up, naturally, to exclude the
rain, and with the vague, general air of resemblance in their figure and
walk, it would really have required a suspicion of the truth to make
either Di Venturini or his second suspect the exchange.

They reached the spot chosen. It was deserted. Boville looked at his
watch.

"A quarter of seven. They ought to be here. It won't do to loiter about
after--"

"Hark!" Dennison interrupted, lifting his finger. Foot-steps and voices
were approaching rapidly. "I thought his excellency would not keep us
waiting long. Here they are."

They came in view at the moment. Terry pulled his hat a little farther
over his brow, and busied himself in lighting a cigar. Di Venturini
bowed to him profoundly, with all the debonnaire grace for which his
highness was justly famed. Dennison, like a true-born Briton, returned
it stiffly and distantly. De Concressault approached Boville with
profuse gesture and apologies for the brief delay.

"A million pardons. He was disgusted at having necessitated their
waiting in the rain. It was all the fault of their most infamous pig of
a driver. Would they proceed to business at once? There was no time to
lose."

Terry was turned, his face averted, still absorbed by his cigar and
refractory Vesuvians, which, dampened by the mist, refused to light. Di
Venturini, buttoned up to the throat in a tight black coat, no speck of
white anywhere visible, stood leaning against a tree some forty rods
distant, a half-smile of devilish malignity and triumph on his face.

The preliminaries of the duel were soon arranged; great practice had
rendered M. de Concressault an adept in these nice matters of honor. The
combatants were to fire simultaneously, at fourteen paces, at the
dropping of a handkerchief and the old "_une_, _deux_, _trois_."

"Stand here, M. le Prince, if you please," Boville said, marking the
spot; and the prince, with that smile of demoniacal malice and triumph
still in his yellow face, bowed and obeyed.

"You'll take your place here, Dennison," Boville continued, in an
undertone; "and for Heaven's sake fire the very instant I say three."

Dennison nodded, threw away his cigar, received his pistol, and took his
place. His heart beat fast, with absolute terror, lest he should be
recognized. But the shaven beard, the hat pulled down, the coat collar
turned up, concealed him effectually. A shapely nose and a ruddy
mustache were alone visible; for the rest, the general figure and
bearing were sufficiently like Eric's to pass muster in that dull light.

There was a moment's pause--Boville held out a white handkerchief.

"Ready, messieurs?" Then a pause, "One--two." Another pause, a quick,
warning glance at Dennison. "_Three!_"

The white handkerchief fell, and simultaneously two shots rang sharply
out on the still morning air.

Again there was a pause, brief, terrible. The smoke cleared away--both
men stood as they had been placed. The prince's left wrist hung broken.
Boville's eyes were fixed on Terry. Was he untouched? _No._ As he looked
he saw him sway blindly forward, wheel half-round, and fall like a log
on his face.

Boville and the surgeon rushed forward, the latter first, and turned him
over and raised his head. The face was ghastly, the eyes closed, and
from the breast in the region of the heart a small stream of blood was
making its way through his clothes.

"Is he dead?" Boville asked, himself almost as white as the fallen man.

"No--fainted, but--"

He tore open coat and shirt and examined the wound. A small, livid hole
beneath the heart was there on the broad, marble-like bosom, from which
that slender red stream yet trickled.

"It doesn't look very bad, it doesn't seem to bleed much," Boville
cried, in an agony of impatience. "For Heaven's sake, Jackson, speak
out! what do you think?"

The doctor looked grimly up from his manipulation.

"I think there is internal bleeding, Mr. Boville. This young man won't
live two hours."

Boville rose suddenly, and turned away.

"His highness, the prince, does his work well. It's a pity, too--it's
the finest physique I ever saw in the whole course of my life. The torso
of a Hercules, by George. In the ordinary course of things this poor
fellow would have lived to be ninety."

"Can he be moved?" Hubert Boville asked, in a stifled voice.

"Oh, yes! he must, I suppose. It may hasten the end, but won't alter it.
Where are you going to take him?"

"To the Hotel du Louvre. His friends are there."

"Poor lad! By Jupiter, _what_ a bust!" the doctor cried, lost in
professional admiration.

At this moment the prince and the captain of Zouaves sauntered up.

"See if he's dead, De Concressault," they heard Di Venturini say
nonchalantly; "my right hand must be losing its cunning if he is not. I
certainly meant to kill him."

"Oh! _il est mort_," De Concressault responded, with equal carelessness;
"he's shot through the heart, and the sooner you are over the frontier
the better, M. le Prince. Messieurs, _bonjour_!" He lifted his hat,
bowed profoundly, and without another look at their victim, both hastily
quitted the ground.

       *       *       *       *       *

Seven! by the great booming bell of Notre Dame. Seven, by all the
steeples of Paris. Seven, by the little Swiss clock in the chamber where
Crystal lay, feverishly asleep, and Lady Dynely, senior, sat pale and
worn, watching. In the adjoining dressing-room, on the broad, soft sofa,
Eric lay still, in deepest, dreamless sleep. Safe! and the fatal hour
past.

Where was Terry? What was he doing? In what way had he stopped the duel?
Lady Dynely's heart was beating anxiously and fast--some dim, prophetic
prescience of the truth was trying to force its way upon her, but she
would not listen. No, no! Terry would never be so insane as that. He was
not reckless and foolish like Eric--he would never think of keeping his
word in _that_ way. Only--as she had never longed for anyone's coming in
her life, she longed for Terry's now.

Half-past seven. She arose from her place by Crystal's bed and went into
Eric's room. Still asleep--soundly, sweetly--like a little child, his
blonde, handsome head still pillowed on his arm, a placid expression of
profound rest on his face. She stooped low and kissed him--a prayer for
him in her heart. He was the idol of her life--he always had been. And
but for Terry he might be lying dead out there in the rain somewhere,
even now--yes, even now. How good he was, how generous, poor Terry!--few
would have resigned life's best gifts as he had to his younger brother,
for her sake. She would show him in the future how grateful she was, how
noble she thought him.

Eric stirred in his sleep--he murmured a word. She bent low to catch
it--was it hers, was it his wife's name? He turned and spoke again, more
loudly.

"Felicia," he said, "Felicia, _ma belle_, I will meet you to-morrow."

She recoiled with a sudden revulsion of feeling. Even in his sleep it
was of that wicked sorceress his thoughts were--that fatal woman, who
had so nearly compassed his death. She turned without another look, and
hurried from the room.

Eight o'clock. Still Terry did not come. Oh, what detained him? Surely
he must know how anxious she was.

A quarter past. She arose impatiently to quit the room, and on the
landing, ascending the stairs, she came face to face with Hubert
Boville.

At the first glance, before he opened his lips, before a word had
passed, she knew something had happened. His clothes were wet with rain,
his high boots splashed with mud, his face pale, his eyes excited. He
took off his hat as he saw her, and she instinctively recoiled.

"Mr. Boville!" she gasped. "Oh, what is it?"

"I was coming in search of you, Lady Dynely," he said. There was an
instinctive coldness in his courteous tone--had not _she_ in some way
sent Dennison to his doom? "I am the bearer of very sad and shocking
news. Poor Terry Dennison--"

He stopped. With a cry he never forgot--a cry whose exceeding bitterness
made him pity her even in that hour--she staggered back against the
wall, and put out her hand to ward off the blow that must come.

"I see you suspect the truth," he said, more gently. "I am very
sorry--sorrier than I can ever say--that I, in any way, have had a hand
in this. But the duel has been fought; he met him in Lord Dynely's
place; and--we have brought him here. He is below in the cab. Will you
have a room prepared at once, Lady Dynely--there is no time to lose."

She stood literally gasping for breath. Her hand over her heart. Oh!
what was this?--what was this?

"There is no time to lose," Boville repeated again. He had little
sympathy for the hysterics of the woman who, to shield her own son,
had, he knew, urged Dennison to save him at any cost. "I must beg of
you, Lady Dynely--"

She came a step forward, and grasped his arm.

"Is he dead?" she asked, in a voice no one would have recognized as her
own.

"No, my lady; not yet."

The answer seemed to inspire her with galvanic life. "While there is
life there is hope." He was not dead. Oh! Heaven be praised!--he might
not die after all.

"Bring him up," she cried, starting forward, "at once--at once, to this
room."

She pointed to it, and hastened forward to prepare it with her own
hands. Boville departed. She summoned her maid, and together, with
feverish haste, they made ready the bed.

They carried him up between them--a stark, rigid form--and laid him on
the bed.

As she looked upon the bloodless, awfully corpse-like face, the closed
eyes, the blue rigid lips, a sudden stillness came over her. Was that
Terry--Terry Dennison?--whom only eight hours ago she had seen in all
the strength and vigor of youth and powerful manhood? That
Terry?--Terry, who never, in all the twenty years she had known him, had
had one sick day? That Terry, lying there cold and motionless--so
awfully white, so awfully still?

"My dear Lady Dynely," said Boville, with real compassion, touched by
the ghastly horror of her face, "come away."

She turned to him.

"You told me," she whispered. "You told me he was not dead."

"Neither he is--only insensible. Come with me--you _must_ come for the
present. The doctor is going to try to find the ball. The moment the
operation is over you shall return."

He led her from the room, her face still fixed in that look of white
horror.

"Where is Lord Dynely?" he asked.

"Asleep," she whispered; "_he_ told me, and I--for my son's sake, I
made Terry do this--for my son's sake I sent him to his death. It is
I--I--who have killed him. Oh, Heaven! this is how he meant to keep his
word."

She fell down upon a fauteuil, her face hidden in her hands. He could
say nothing--do nothing--she only spoke the truth. He had a man's
natural dislike to scenes, and so left her.

He returned to the chamber he had quitted. The surgeon rose at his
entrance from his work.

"Well?" Boville asked.

"I cannot extract the bullet, and he is dying. You may as well tell them
so. He will be a dead man in an hour."

"Poor fellow!" Hubert Boville stood with folded arms, an expression of
bitter regret on his face, looking down upon his friend and comrade.
"Yes, death is imprinted here. And when the last great muster roll is
called," he said, with unconscious pathos, "no truer friend, no braver
soldier, will ever answer than Terry Dennison."




CHAPTER XVIII.

"WHILE IT WAS YET DAY."


Half an hour had passed. Lady Dynely knew that Terry Dennison was about
to die.

The truth was broken to her by France Forrester. Miss Forrester, coming
early and hastily to relieve her ladyship's watch by the sick bed of
Eric's wife, had heard the first version of the truth from the
whispering servants of the hotel. Pale with wonder and terror she had
asked for Mr. Boville, and Mr. Boville had come forward and told the
whole truth. So! he had crowned all the sacrifices of the past for Lady
Dynely and her son by yielding up his life. Surely he had paid his debt.

"Is he conscious?" she asked, with strange, mournful calm. Her own great
sorrow had left its traces on her worn, pale face, but still more in the
unnatural quiet and gravity of her manner.

"Yes, he has been conscious for the last five minutes."

"May I go in?" she pleaded. "I will not disturb him. I will be very
quiet."

"Certainly," Boville said, "and Lady Dynely must be told, too. I--I wish
_you_ would tell her, Miss Forrester. I hate breaking things to people."

"I will tell her. How long will he live?"

"Half an hour perhaps. Certainly not more."

"Have you sent for a clergyman? No. Then do so at once."

She passed into the room. The blinds were up, the full light of the
gray, rainy morning streamed in. She bent over the bed. The face was
still and colorless as marble, the eyes closed. Her own filled.

"Does he suffer?" she whispered to the doctor across the bed.

"Very little, if any. The hemorrhage is internal. There is faintness,
but no pain."

The low whisper reached him. He opened his eyes, and a smile of
recognition came over his face.

"France!" he said, faintly.

"Yes, Terry." Then all at once a great choking seized her and she could
say no more.

"Don't cry," he said, still faintly, smiling, "it will--be--all right."

"Yes, dear old fellow, I think it will." She stooped down with infinite
pity and tenderness and kissed him. "You--you are going, Terry--do you
know it?"

"Yes. It's all right, France. Don't cry so. It's awfully good of you to
come."

His strength seemed to rally for a moment. He looked anxiously around.

"Where am I? This isn't my room."

"Don't make him talk too much," the doctor said. "Here, sir, drink
this."

He swallowed the spoonful of liquid and still watched France with
anxious eyes.

"You are in one of Eric's rooms."

"Eric," his eyes lighted, "where is Eric?"

"Asleep. Would you like to see him?"

The light faded from his face. All at once he recalled the livid bruise
between his eyes, and averted it even in that hour.

"He--might not--care to come," he said with difficulty. "How
is--Crystal?"

"Crystal is recovering. Oh! don't think of her, of him, of anyone, dear
old Terry, but yourself. We have sent for a clergyman. He will be here
in a moment. You will see him?"

He nodded assent.

"Where is the madre?" he asked.

"In the next room--broken-hearted. Shall I go for her?"

"Poor mother! Yes."

She turned at once to go. As she did so the door opened and the
clergyman came hastily in.

"I will leave you with him for ten minutes," France whispered, "then we
will all return."

She hurried from the room and into the presence of Lady Dynely. As she
had fallen down half an hour ago, Lady Dynely still lay in a sort of
stupor of dull, infinite misery. France lifted her head.

"Rouse yourself, Lady Dynely," she said: "he has asked for you, poor
boy. You must go to him."

To her dying day France never forgot the utter wretchedness of the face
uplifted at her command.

"He is dying, France, and I--I have killed him. I made him swear to save
Eric, no matter how, no matter how, and he has given his life for my
son. And, last night, Eric struck him, struck him full in the face. No,
I cannot go to him--I can never look upon him again."

"This is folly, Lady Dynely!" exclaimed the girl, her eyes kindling.
"Are you altogether heartless? He has asked for you--your absence will
embitter his last hour. You _must_ go to him, Eric must go. Oh!" France
cried, "have you not made him suffer enough, you and Eric, that you are
so ready to make him suffer still at the last?"

Lady Dynely arose wildly to her feet.

"I will go to him! I will do anything! I will go to him at once."

"Not quite at once. A clergyman is with him. Leave them alone for a
little. But rouse up Eric; fetch him with you; tell him all."

"Tell him all!" Lady Dynely repeated. She stood, a strange, excited
expression crossing her face. "Yes," she said, under her breath, "I will
tell him all--ALL. It is time."

She ran from the room, and into Eric's. He was moving and muttering
restlessly now, the opiate beginning to lose its effect. She seized him
by the arm and shook him roughly.

"Awake, Eric!" she cried; "awake at once."

He opened his eyes immediately and stared up at her in a dazed way.

"What's the matter, mother? Have you gone mad? Crystal--"

He half rose on his elbow with a look of alarm.

"Never mind Crystal--wake up!"

"I _have_ woke up. What's the matter with you? What's the hour?" Then,
like lightning, memory rushed upon him; his face flushed, turned pale.
He pulled out his watch and looked at the time. A quarter of nine.
"Great Heaven!" he exclaimed, and fell back among the pillows.

"Ay!" his mother cried, bitterly, "look at the hour. The time for the
duel is past, is it not? And the duel has been fought, and your honor
saved. Oh, my heart! such honor. You are safe here, and he lies dying
there--for you. Your own brother, Eric--your elder brother!"

He sat and stared at her, thinking she had gone mad, quite speechless.

"No," she said, "I have not lost my senses, though you look as if you
thought it. The duel has been fought; Terry took your place, and he lies
dying in yonder room now, for you, and for me, and for Crystal--the
friend whom you struck last night--the brother whose birthright you have
usurped all your life!"

Still he sat speechless--still he was staring at her, not comprehending
a word.

"Oh, you don't understand--you won't understand, and time is flying and
every moment is precious. I must go to him. Eric, rouse yourself! try to
comprehend what I am saying. Terry met Prince Di Venturini this morning,
and fought your duel for _you_. I made him! I nearly went mad when he
came to me last night and told me of Crystal's accident first, and of
your challenge. I don't know what I said, I don't know what I did, only
I made him promise to save you, and he has, he has!"

He was beginning to understand now. His face turned white, his lips set
themselves.

"Go on," he said, speaking for the first time.

"I gave you an opiate and you slept while he went out and met the
prince in your place. He is dying in that room, and he has asked for you
and for me; and he is your brother, Eric, your own brother."

"My brother! Mother, are you mad? I have no brother."

But he grew whiter still as he said it. The resemblance between
them--the vague, unsatisfactory story of his relationship to them--all
flashed upon him; and then he knew what manner of man his father had
been.

"He is your brother--your very own; your father's son. Oh, not as you
think," seeing the expression of his face; "his mother was Lord Dynely's
wife. I have all the proofs, and he was three years old when you were
born."

He rose up.

"His mother was Lord Dynely's wife--his _wife_! And Terry is three years
older than I am. Mother, what is this?"

"The truth! And Terry Dennison is your father's elder son and heir! I
knew it since the night of your father's death; he confessed all, dying,
whilst I knelt by his bedside. You never for one moment have had a right
to the title you bear. Terry Dennison is Lord Viscount Dynely!"

He fell heavily back on the seat he had quitted.

"And you concealed this?" he said, in a hoarse whisper.

"No--I told him. I told him last August. When he wanted to go down to
Lincolnshire and ask Crystal Higgins to be his wife, I detained him. I
could not let him go in ignorance. I kept him and told him all--all,
Eric! I thought he would have ousted you and claimed his own. That was
why I wanted you so much to marry France Forrester and her fortune. But
he gave up all, Eric--name, title, wealth--for the love of you and me."

He buried his face in his hands and turned from her--stunned.

"He might have won Crystal--she was his before you came--she was all he
had, and you took her from him. He might have taken from _you_ title and
fortune, and he did not. Last night he came to you in all good faith and
brotherly love, and--and," a great gasp, "you struck him, Eric! I
kissed the brutal mark on his poor face last night. This morning he went
out in your place and met the prince, and was shot down as _you_ would
have been. And he lies dying there; he will be dead before the hour
ends."

He put out his hand with a fierce gesture to stop her.

"Cease!" he said, hoarsely. "Oh, God! I _cannot_ bear it!"

She obeyed--a rain of tears pouring over her face. He lay
mute--quivering through all his strong young frame.

"Leave me," he said, in the same hoarse voice, "I want to be alone."

She turned to go, but on the threshold she stopped.

"You will come, Eric," she said, "when we send?"

"Yes. Go!"

She went. France stood waiting for her at the door.

"He has asked for you again. He is sinking fast. Come."

She led her into that other room. The clergyman's last offices were
over. On the face, lying among the pillows, the cold dews of death
already stood. She fell down on her knees by the bed and took the dying
head in her arms. He opened his heavy eyes and smiled--a smile of great
content. "_Mother_," he said, and lay still.

"Oh, my Terry! my Terry!" she cried out, "forgive me before you go."

"There is--nothing--to forgive," he spoke, slowly and faintly, but
clearly. "You were always good to me. I loved you all my life, mother.
Don't cry--it's better so. Eric," his eyes looked wistfully toward the
door, he sighed wearily, "Eric won't come?"

"Eric will come." She bent down and kissed him, and in that kiss
whispered: "I have told him all."

"All!" He looked up at her quickly, almost in reproof. "That was wrong."

"It was right. I should have told him long ago. Oh, my boy! my own
Terry! how good you are."

He smiled--Terry's own amused smile. Then he closed his eyes wearily,
and lay still again.

Obeying a motion of her hand, France had gone to fetch Eric.

He came in--white as death itself, an agony of remorse, of sorrow, upon
his face, changing it beyond all telling. He knelt down on the opposite
side of the bed, and laid his face on one of Terry's hands, without a
word.

"Eric! dear old boy!" The old, glad, loving light lit the dying eyes.
"I'm glad you've come. You don't mind what I did this morning? Di
Venturini will never know. It's all right, isn't it?"

He was watching him wistfully.

Was Eric angry? But Eric only lifted his face for a minute, and laid it
down again.

"All right! Oh, Terry! you break my heart."

What was it fell on Terry's hand? Tears, and from the eyes of Eric
Dynely! For a moment Terry himself could not speak.

"It is all right, then," he said, under his breath. "Dear old boy, I'm
glad of that."

Then there was stillness. He lay in Lady Dynely's arms, his face
pillowed on her breast, his eyes closed, his breathing coming quick and
hard. On the other side knelt Eric, never moving or looking up. The
dull, melancholy light stole in and fell upon him, stricken down there,
in the glory and strength of his manhood. France Forrester watched him
mournfully, from her post at the foot of the bed.

"And his sun went down, while it was yet day," she thought. "My own dear
Terry! as clean of heart, as brave of soul, as loyal a knight as any
Arthur or Galahad of them all."

Suddenly his eyes opened, and he looked up in Lady Dynely's face.

"I--have--kept my promise," he said, slowly. "I never quarrelled--with
Eric."

"Oh, my boy! my Terry!" she could only answer through her tears.

He moved a little.

"Eric," he whispered, and Eric lifted his pale face and red, tear wet
eyes. "Good-by--_brother_," he said, so low that Eric had to lay his
ear to his lips to catch the words; "be good--to--Crystal."

He closed them once more, exhausted, and lay still. There was a sudden,
short convulsion of the limbs--it passed, and he was quiet. So he had
lain for fully five minutes, his head resting a dull weight in Lady
Dynely's arms. A sharp terror seized her--she looked helplessly around.

"Is he asleep?" she piteously asked.

Hubert Boville came forward and bent over him. He laid his hand on his
heart for a moment, and listened for his breathing. Then he stood up.

"Not asleep," he said, very gently; "dead."




CHAPTER XIX.

"POST TENEBR, LUX."


In _Galignani's Messenger_ of next day there appeared this paragraph:

     "FEARFUL DUEL.--Yesterday morning, at seven o'clock, a meeting
     took place in the Bois de Boulogne between a certain princely
     personage, well known in the Italian political world, and an
     English lieutenant of dragoon guards. His excellency the prince
     was attended by Captain De C---- cr---- lt, of the --th Zouaves,
     and the other combatant by the Hon. H. B--ville, attache of the
     British Embassy. As usual there was a lady in the case. The duel
     was fought with pistols, at fourteen paces. The first fire proved
     fatal--the Englishman being shot through the heart. The police
     are on the track of the noble fugitive, but up to the present
     without success."

In the same column another paragraph appeared which created a far wider
and deeper sensation.

     "SUDDEN AND MYSTERIOUS DEATH.--It is with deepest regret we
     announce to our readers the awfully sudden and most mysterious
     death of the charming actress whose beauty and versatility have
     crowded the Varieties for the past four months--Madame Felicia.
     Last night she gave one of the delightful receptions for which
     she has ever been justly famed, and appeared in her usual
     excellent health and spirits. She retired about midnight, still
     seemingly perfectly well. In the morning her maid found her dead
     in her bed. Suspicion of foul play is at work, and a post-mortem
     will probably discover the cause of this death, which all
     theatre-going Parisians will deeply regret."

       *       *       *       *       *

It is the close of an exquisite June day. The old, long-deserted
gardens of Caryllynne glow in the warm rose light. Down one of the paths
an elderly lady, with snow-white hair, is being wheeled in an invalid
chair by a dark damsel, with black sombre eyes and a look of prophetic
melancholy on her face. The elderly lady glances over her shoulder with
tender, kindly eyes.

"Are you not tired, Donny?" she asks, gently. "You must be. You have
been wheeling me for fully an hour. Do call Esther, my child."

The black, melancholy eyes light.

"Oh! no, grandmamma--I never grow tired when with you."

"My dear, how mournful you look, though. Do we not make you happy,
little one? Tell grandmamma what it is."

"Happy!" she clasps her hands almost with passion. "Oh, so happy!--so
happy that I grow afraid. It is like Heaven to be with you, and papa,
and mamma France. No one was ever good to me before since Joan
died--except that night--_him_."

"Poor Terry!" Mrs. Caryll sighs; "he was good to all things. And so it
is excess of happiness that makes you sad? A paradox, surely, but I am
glad it is no worse."

She takes her in her arms and kisses her fondly.

"I want you to be happy, my child--I want to make you happy, to atone in
some way for all the unhappiness I have given your father. Love him,
Donny, for his past life--oh, my own dear Gordon has been dreary and
loveless enough."

"I _do_ love him," the girl answers, her great eyes shining. "Who could
help it? So noble, so handsome, so good he is. And he is happy now--who
would _not_ be happy with Mamma France? And to think that to-morrow is
their wedding day, and that I am to be one of the bride-maids! How
strange it seems."

"It is a happiness he has waited for long--poor Gordon," his mother
answers.

"And I have been thinking, too, grandmamma, of--of _her_," she drops her
voice, and the great eyes dilate; "it was all so sudden, and so
dreadful. Oh! I wonder what it was!--what made her die like that? Did
they ever find out?"

"Not for certain, Donny, dear. Ah! don't let us talk about it
to-night--on this happy bridal eve. Poor soul! it was a terrible fate."
She shudders as she says it. She will not tell the daughter she was
poisoned. Poisoned--whether by herself, maid, or whom, has never been
discovered. There are those who have strong suspicions of the truth,
but--in Naples, Prince Di Venturini reigns in the halls of his
forefathers, and in this world at least justice does not seem likely to
reach him.

On the terrace above, Gordon Caryll walks, France by his side, and both
pace to and fro in the roselight of the summer sunset, with hearts too
full of bliss for many words. France looks down at the pair below, the
pink flush of the sky kindling into brightness Donny's dusk face.

"She will be very handsome," Miss Forrester says; "and--very like her
mother."

His face clouds for a second.

"Poor child!--yes. Let us trust the likeness will end there. How fond my
mother seems of her. They are never happy apart. France!" he looks at
her suddenly, and a smile that is more radiant than the sunset lights
his grave face, "this time to-morrow you will be suffering agonies of
sea-sickness crossing the channel. You always _are_ sea-sick, you know."

"Yes, I know." She smiles back for a moment, then grows grave. "Don't
let us visit Paris, Gordon, I never want to see Paris more. I can
never--no, never--suffer again in this life as I have suffered there."

"We will go wherever you please, my own France."

There is silence again. The rose light is fading from the sky--its
last rays fall on one of the many painted windows of the old manor,
the motto of the house, cut in the panes, shines out:

"_Post tenebr, lux_," she reads. "Oh, Gordon! the past has been very
dark for you--if my love can lighten the future there will never be
another dark hour."

       *       *       *       *       *

In her dower house Lady Dynely, the elder, dwells alone. She has never
quite recovered from the shock of that death bed in Paris--she never
will.

"From first to last my own selfish love for my son spoiled his life,"
she ever says; "_he_ did not know what selfishness meant. I and mine
blighted his existence--brought him to his death. _He_ forgave
me--Heaven may--I never will forgive myself."

So she lives on, quietly doing good to all. No one can accuse her of
selfishness now. Her son is a better son than he ever was before, but
she knows that he, who died that rainy February morning, loved and
honored her, as no human being ever did before, ever will again. They
brought him home, and the great vault of the Dynelys was opened, and he
was laid to sleep with them. People wondered at it a good deal--but then
Lady Dynely had always been a little eccentric since her husband's
death. They wonder still more as they read the inscription above him. It
is a slab of plain gray granite, with gold lettering, and it says this:

                            SACRED TO THE MEMORY
                                      OF
                              TERENCE DENNISON,

                    Who Gave His Life To Save Another's,
                             FEBRUARY 29TH, 18--.
                                TAT 25 YEARS.

"_Greater love than this no man hath:--That he lay down his life for his
                                    friend._"

       *       *       *       *       *

In this same rosy sunset, Crystal, Viscountess Dynely, sits alone, fair
and sweet, and youthful, as this time last year when she walked about
the Lincolnshire lanes and waited for Terry Dennison to come and ask her
to be his wife. She is alone, dressed for dinner in the crisp white
muslin and blue ribbons that become her childish fairness best, and
which her husband best likes to see her wear. And if that husband
fancied hodden-gray or sackcloth and ashes, be very sure this
exceptional wife would never have donned other array. She is waiting for
him now to come to dinner, listening with love's impatience for the
first sound of the footstep, the first note of the gay whistle she
knows so well. For she is happy once more, poor Crystal, and Eric is all
her own again.

She knows the whole story. Weeks after, when strength had come back to
the weak frame, and light to the dim blue eyes, sitting side by side,
his arm around her, Eric had told all--all. Nothing had been hidden, and
she learned at last how noble was the heart she had refused, the heart
stilled forever. The blue eyes dilated, the lips parted and quivered,
the tender face grew very pale, and she flung her arms about her husband
wildly, and strained him to her.

"Oh, Eric!" she cried out; "to think it might have been you!"

Oh, selfish human heart! To the depths of her soul she wondered at the
brave generosity of him who was gone; to her inmost heart she bowed down
in reverence. She wept for his loss, real and passionate tears--dear,
brave, noble Terry! her playmate and friend,--but her first thought was
for her own idol, her first impulse one of unutterable gladness that it
had not been he. She caught her breath, with the horror of it, and while
her tears fell for Terry, she held the man for whom Terry had died,
close to her impassioned little heart, and cried, again and again:

"Oh, my darling! my darling! to think it might have been _you_!"

As Eric never had, never would, she knew Terry had loved her. She was
grateful to him; she strewed his coffin with flowers; she wept her
pretty eyes red, again and again, over his grave; but she loved Eric,
and she never thought of that dreadful morning under the dripping trees
of the Bois de Boulogne without a prayer of trembling thankfulness that
it was _he_ who was taken, and not her beloved.

And Eric is very good to her, very gentle and tender with her, very
affectionate, after the manner of men and husbands. And she does not ask
much; she gives so greatly that a small return suffices. That small
return, let me say, the Right Honorable Lord Viscount Dynely gives
willingly and from his heart; and Crystal is happy--and the curtain
falls to universal felicity? Well, as the leopard cannot change his
spots, nor the Ethiop his skin, so men of Lord Dynely's stamp do not
change their nature. Kind he will be to her always--Terry Dennison's
dead face would rise from the grave to haunt him if he were
not--affectionate, too, after his light, for in a sultan-like, off-hand
way, lordly Eric is fond of his little wife; faithful, also, with a
fidelity that will include more or less admiration and attention for
every pretty woman he meets; but for Crystal, or France, or one of us
all, to be perfectly happy, is not given to anyone born of woman.
_This_, Crystal knows--that all the happiness that is hers, all that
ever will be hers, has come to her across Terry Dennison's grave.


                                THE END.




  +--------------------------------------------------------------+
  | Transcriber's Note:                                          |
  |                                                              |
  | Printer's punctuation errors were corrected.                 |
  |                                                              |
  | The following suspected spelling errors were addressed.      |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 36 'Waters' to 'Watters'                                |
  | 'with Mrs Watters if you will'                               |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 56 'sideling' to 'sidelong'                             |
  | 'and with a sidelong glance'                                 |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 62 'ail' to 'all'                                       |
  | 'keep me from seeing him at all'                             |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 73 'no was' to 'was no'                                 |
  | 'there was no denying that'                                  |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 118 'anounced' to 'announced'                           |
  | 'publicly announced to all'                                  |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 136 'think I' to 'I think'                              |
  | 'I think he will recall me'                                  |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 164 'hvve' to 'have'                                    |
  | 'until you have heard all'                                   |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 318 'etcetra' to 'etcetera'                             |
  | 'the diamond bracelets, etcetera were not'                   |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 325 'wofully' to 'woefully'                             |
  | 'face looks woefully wan'                                    |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 333 'Luxemboug' to 'Luxembourg'                         |
  | 'we visited the Luxembourg'                                  |
  |                                                              |
  | Page 360 'insolently' to 'insolent'                          |
  | 'a coolly insolent smile'                                    |
  |                                                              |
  +--------------------------------------------------------------+




  1876.

  G. W. CARLETON & CO.

  NEW BOOKS

  AND NEW EDITIONS,

  RECENTLY ISSUED BY

  G. W. CARLETON & CO., Publishers,

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  Love (L'amour).--
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      Author of "New Gospel of Peace."                        50
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                            CHARLES DICKENS' WORKS.

                                 A New Edition.


  Among the many editions of the works of this greatest of English
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  distinctive objection,--either the form and dimensions of the volumes
  are unhandy--or, the type is small and indistinct--or, the illustrations
  are unsatisfactory--or, the binding is poor--or, the price is too high.

  An entirely new edition is _now_, however, published by G. W. Carleton &
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  completely satisfy the popular demand.--It is known as

                    "Carleton's New Illustrated Edition."

                          COMPLETE IN 15 VOLUMES.

  The size and form is most convenient for holding,--the type is entirely
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  The illustrations are by the original artists chosen by Charles Dickens
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  This beautiful new edition is complete in 15 volumes--at the extremely
  reasonable price of $1.50 per volume, as follows:--

  1.--PICKWICK PAPERS AND CATALOGUE.
  2.--OLIVER TWIST.--UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER.
  3.--DAVID COPPERFIELD.
  4.--GREAT EXPECTATIONS.--ITALY AND AMERICA.
  5.--DOMBEY AND SON.
  6.--BARNABY RUDGE AND EDWIN DROOD.
  7.--NICHOLAS NICKLEBY.
  8.--CURIOSITY SHOP AND MISCELLANEOUS.
  9.--BLEAK HOUSE.
  10.--LITTLE DORRIT.
  11.--MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT.
  12.--OUR MUTUAL FRIEND.
  13.--CHRISTMAS BOOKS.--TALE OF TWO CITIES.
  14.--SKETCHES BY BOZ AND HARD TIMES.
  15.--CHILD'S ENGLAND AND MISCELLANEOUS.

  The first volume--Pickwick Papers--contains an alphabetical catalogue of
  all of Charles Dickens' writings, with their positions in the volumes.

  This edition is sold by Booksellers, everywhere--and single specimen
  copies will be forwarded by mail, _postage free_, on receipt of price,
  $1.50, by

  G. W. CARLETON & CO., Publishers,
  Madison Square, New York.



[End of _A Mad Marriage_ by May Agnes Fleming]
