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<div><span class='sc'>Vol. XI., No. 10.</span> <span class='sc'>November 18, 1893.</span> Subscription Price, $1.50</div>
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<div>
<h1 class='c002'><span class='c003'>THE ADVENTURES OF<br/>AN UGLY GIRL</span></h1></div>
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<div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
<div><span class='xlarge'>MRS. GEORGE CORBETT</span></div>
<div class='c000'><span class='small'><i>Author of “When the Sea gives up its Dead,” “Adventures</i></span></div>
<div><span class='small'><i>of a Stowaway,” “A Sailor’s Life,” “The Child</i></span></div>
<div><span class='small'><i>of the Wreck,” “The Mystery of Fellsmere,” “Tom</i></span></div>
<div><span class='small'><i>Penn’s Derelict,” “Adventures of an Amateur Detective,”</i></span></div>
<div><span class='small'><i>“Secrets of a Private Enquiry Office,”</i></span></div>
<div><span class='small'><i>“The Missing Note,” “New Amazonia,” “Adventures</i></span></div>
<div><span class='small'><i>of a Lady Detective,” etc., etc.</i></span></div>
<div class='c004'><span class='xsmall'>Issued Semi-Monthly.</span></div>
<div><span class='xsmall'>Entered at the Post-Office at New York as second-class matter.</span></div>
<div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>PETER FENELON COLLIER, Publisher, 523 W. 13th St., N.Y.</span> </span></div>
</div></div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c004' /></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div>“WORTH A GUINEA A BOX”</div>
</div></div>
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<div class='nf-center'>
<div><span class='xxlarge'>BEECHAM’S</span></div>
<div><span class='xxlarge'>PILLS</span></div>
<div class='c000'>CURE</div>
<div><span class='xlarge'>SICK HEADACHE,</span></div>
<div><span class='large'>DISORDERED LIVER, ETC.</span></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c006'>They Act Like Magic on the Vital Organs,
Regulating the Secretions, restoring long lost
Complexion, bringing back the Keen Edge of
Appetite, and arousing with the ROSEBUD OF
HEALTH the whole physical energy of the
human frame. These Facts are admitted by
thousands, in all classes of Society. Largest
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<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><b>Covered with a Tasteless & Soluble Coating.</b></div>
<div class='c000'>Of all druggists. Price <b>25</b> cents a box.</div>
<div>New York Depot, 365 Canal St.</div>
</div></div>
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<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div><span class='xxlarge'>THE ADVENTURES</span></div>
<div><span class='small'>OF</span></div>
<div><span class='xxlarge'>AN UGLY GIRL</span></div>
<div class='c000'><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
<div><span class='large'>MRS. GEORGE CORBETT</span></div>
<div class='c000'><i>Author of “When the Sea gives up its Dead,” “Adventures of a</i></div>
<div><i>Stowaway” “A Sailor’s Life,” “The Child of the Wreck,” “The</i></div>
<div><i>Mystery of Fellsmere,” “Tom Penn’s Derelict,” “Adventures</i></div>
<div><i>of an Amateur Detective,” “Secrets of a Private Enquiry</i></div>
<div><i>Office,” “The Missing Note,” “New Amazonia,” “Adventures</i></div>
<div><i>of a Lady Detective,” etc., etc.</i></div>
</div></div>
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<div><i>Specially written for “Once a Week Library”</i></div>
</div></div>
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<div><span class='small'>Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1898 by</span></div>
<div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>Peter Fenelon Collier</span>,</span></div>
<div><span class='small'>In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington.</span></div>
</div></div>
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<div><span class='xxlarge'>All’s Well</span></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c006'>that ends well; all who have Coughs,
Colds and Throat Troubles are <i>made</i>
well by</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><span class='c008'>Scott’s</span></div>
<div><span class='c008'>Emulsion</span></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c006'>of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites
of lime and Soda. When lungs are
affected Scott’s Emulsion, if taken in
time, prevents consumption. <i>Physicians</i>,
the world over, endorse it.</p>
<hr class='c009' />
<p class='c006'>The consumption germ takes root and
grows when the body is weak and
emaciated. The germ passes off when
the body is strong.</p>
<hr class='c007' />
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
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<div>Prepared by SCOTT & BOWNE, N. Y. Druggists sell it.</div>
</div></div>
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<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div><span class='xlarge'>THE ADVENTURES OF</span></div>
<div><span class='xlarge'>AN UGLY GIRL.</span></div>
</div></div>
<hr class='c009' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER I.<br/><span class='small'>“As ithers see us.”—<span class='sc'>Burns.</span></span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>“<span class='sc'>Come</span>, Dora! I shall never be ready, if you
don’t make haste. They will be here in ten
minutes, and my hair is not half so nice as it
ought to be, thanks to your carelessness.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You are very good to ignore my own claims
to attention so utterly. I have been helping you
this half-hour and have barely time enough left
to change my frock. To make my own hair
presentable is impossible now.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, what does it matter how your hair
is dressed, or what sort of a gown you put on?
You may just as well spare your pains, for
unfortunately nothing that you can do seems to
mitigate your ugliness. I’m sure I cannot think
where you get it. You are—”</p>
<p class='c012'>But, somehow, I did not feel inclined to wait
for the end of Belle’s encouraging lecture. Perhaps
it was because I was so often treated to
my beautiful elder sister’s homilies that they had
lost the spark of novelty and had acquired a
chestnuty flavor. Perhaps I failed to recognize
any generosity in her persistent efforts to nip
such latent buds of vanity as from time to time
tried to thrust their poor little heads above the
chill crust of ridicule and contumely. Perhaps
I was really as bad-tempered as I was said to
be. Anyhow, my behavior could not claim
to be either quiet or elegant as I stormily
quitted Belle’s room, slamming the door behind
me with such violence as to elicit from my more
well-bred sister a little shriek of affected dismay.
So far from feeling sorry that I had given Belle’s
nerves a shock, I wished viciously that her fingers
had been jammed in the doorway, or that
something equally disastrous had occurred to
take off the edge of her conceit and self-satisfaction.
In the corridor I met my brother
Jerry, of whom I was devotedly fond. But,
although he had evidently some interesting remark
to make, I did not stop to speak to him,
but hurried noisily to my own room, where I
locked myself in, and threw myself on the bed,
to give way to a storm of sobs and tears.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And all for what?” it may be asked.
“Surely a spiteful remark from one sister to
another is hardly worth all this display of feeling.”
Ah, well, perhaps <i>one</i> such remark now
and then might be treated with the cool contempt
which spiteful utterances deserve. But
does the reader know what it is to be perpetually
and persistently snubbed from one year’s
end to the other? Does he realize how hard it
must be for a sensitive and love-craving girl to
be reminded that she is ugly and unattractive?
Not reminded once in a way either, but pretty
nearly every day of her life. Or does any one
doubt how the heart must needs ache to see all
the love and flattery of friends and relations alike
showered upon a being whom you know to be
empty-headed and frivolous, while everybody
seems to regard your plain exterior as sufficient
reason why you should be snubbed and
neglected?</p>
<p class='c012'>If the reader has ever had any of these experiences,
he will the more readily understand my
inability to restrain my tears on the especial
occasion just mentioned. For it really was a
very especial occasion, and I had been more
anxious to look well at this particular moment
than I ever remembered to have been in my life.
I had hoped that Belle, just for once in a way,
would take a little interest in my personal appearance,
and that she would help me to create
as good an impression as possible upon the newcomer
whose advent I had both dreaded and
longed for.</p>
<p class='c012'>But Belle was too self-engrossed, and too
firmly convinced of my hopeless unpresentability,
to give the slightest thought either to me
or to my feelings. Nay, she had even claimed
so much of my time in the task of enhancing
her own beauty, that, as we have seen, I had
only a few minutes left for myself, and even
this morsel of time was not utilized by me, as
things turned out.</p>
<p class='c012'>The fact is, I was anxious and overwrought,
and Belle’s unkind speeches had multiplied all
day until they had utterly broken my composure.
“Can it really be true,” I wondered in
abject misery, “that nothing I can either do
or wear will help to mitigate the first feeling
of repulsion which my new mother must necessarily
experience at the sight of my ugliness?”</p>
<p class='c012'>The question was of very vital import to me,
for I longed for the advent of at least one sympathetic
woman in the house; and when I heard
that my father, now three years a widower, was
about to marry again, I hoped, with a fervor
that was nearly akin to agony, that his second
wife would be the friend I so sorely needed.
True, she would be my stepmother, and she
would naturally assume the direction of the
household affairs, at once placing the daughters
of the house in a subordinate position.
This being the case, I believe it would have
been more orthodox to have railed against the
new invasion, and to have followed the prevailing
social custom of resolving to make life miserable
for the woman who had presumed to step
into my mother’s place. But I always was terribly
unorthodox in many things, and, considerably
to my father’s surprise, I expressed my
enthusiastic delight at the prospect of having
a stepmother to reign over me.</p>
<p class='c012'>He need not have been surprised, if he had
ever taken the trouble to understand me. But
he was wrapped up in Belle’s charms, and never
looked at me without regretting either my ugliness
or my temper, which all in the house, except
dear little Jerry, pronounced unbearable.
And yet I can truthfully say, that if I had experienced
anything approaching to just treatment,
I should have been infinitely sweeter-tempered
than my much-bepraised sister, than
whom none could have been more unfeeling to
the motherless girl whose heart ached for a little
love. I generally did Belle’s bidding, for she
always contrived to make things unpleasant for
me if I rebelled against her authority. But to
Lady Elizabeth Courtney I felt ready to yield
the most devoted service and obedience, if only
she would love me just a little in return; and I
had anxiously revolved every means of creating
a favorable impression upon her. I meant to
have taken considerable pains with my toilet,
and to have welcomed the home-coming bride
with radiant smiles.</p>
<p class='c012'>And this was how my good resolves had
ended. Just when—after working hard all day
to see that everything was conducive to a warm
and comfortable home-coming—I had begun to
hurry through my toilet, I was summoned to
Belle’s aid, with the result that instead of giving
my stepmother a smiling welcome I was up
in my own room, with a face red and swollen
with weeping, and a heart full of angry feeling,
when she arrived. Presently I heard a carriage
approaching, and at the same instant Jerry
knocked vigorously at my bedroom door.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Be quick and come down, Dorrie,” he cried,
in an eager, excited voice. “Papa and Lady
Elizabeth are nearly here, and I want you to
run down the avenue with me to meet them.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m not coming,” I answered, with a sob
that was audible to Jerry and provoked him to
quick wrath.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I knew she would!” he exclaimed. “That
horrid Belle’s been at her tricks again and said
something nasty. But don’t let her have the
best of you like that. Don’t you know that you
promised to go with me to meet them, and if
you don’t come they won’t believe you are glad
about it.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I can’t help it, Jerry,” was my mournful
reply. “I look so hideous just now that I could
not possibly face a stranger. Run off quickly
yourself. Say that I have a headache or something
of the sort, and that I shall try to sleep it
off. Run now, there’s a dear boy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>And forthwith Jerry, whose real name, by-the-by,
is Gerald Mortimer Courtney, ran along
the corridor, down the wide, shallow stairs,
across the tiled hall, and into the open air, just
as the carriage containing the newly married
pair drove into the large graveled space in which
the chestnut avenue terminated. In spite of my
discomfiture and unpresentable appearance, I
possessed my due share of curiosity, and hastily
jumped to my feet, crossed the room, and looked
through the window at the prancing horses and
elegant equipage which bore the newcomers.
As soon as the carriage stopped, a liveried footman
descended and opened the door with a flourish.
By the time he had let the steps down,
Belle and Jerry were at the carriage door, and
I saw Mr. and Lady Elizabeth Courtney get out
and exchange smiles and kisses with my sister
and brother, while I, poor pariah, looked on
with hungry eyes and an aching heart, and bewailed
my luck in seeming ill-natured and inhospitable,
after all my efforts to prove the
contrary.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth, I must explain, had had some
love passages with my father a long time ago.
But their youthful desires had been taught to
bow to the demands of fortune and position.
Lady Elizabeth was the daughter of an earl,
and could aspire to more material comforts than
could have been provided for her by the penniless
younger son of a country squire. True, the
earl had no money, and what little land was still
left him was mortgaged up to the hilt. But he
had many friends who possessed sufficient influence
to pitchfork his four sons into government
sinecures. He had a cousin also, the Duchess
of Lyndene, who chaperoned his handsome,
clever daughter through two whole seasons, and
eventually resigned her charge into the care of
Samuel Chisholm, Esquire, once upon a time a
shoeblack, now the proud possessor of twenty
thousand a year, all made by the judicious advertisement
of his prize patent blacking.</p>
<p class='c012'>Upon the whole, the earl’s daughter was supposed
to have done tolerably well for herself,
and as her husband’s fortune steadily increased
there was every reason for her to feel satisfied.
Even the incumbrance which she had been compelled
to take with the fortune was not especially
disagreeable to her, for Mr. Chisholm was a
very clever man, whose mental and social equipments
kept pace with his fortunes, and, in spite
of his low origin and antecedents, he was as
courtly and well-bred as Lady Elizabeth’s nobly-born
brothers. The pair therefore lived harmoniously
enough together, at least to outward seeming,
for many years. Then Mr. Chisholm died
somewhat suddenly, and his will was read in
due course.</p>
<p class='c012'>It was during that important ceremony that
the unexpectedly bereaved widow first felt real
resentment against her late husband. For
though he had died a millionaire, he had only
willed his wife a life interest of five thousand a
year, which was quite a paltry income compared
with the princely revenue she had expected to
be hers. To her father a like fortune was bequeathed,
in addition to a sum of thirty thousand
pounds wherewith to redeem his impoverished
estate. The widow’s brothers each received
a gift of five thousand pounds, and to the widow
herself was willed all the personal property of
the deceased.</p>
<p class='c012'>All the rest of his vast fortune was divided
among a swarm of poor relations, whose existence
Lady Elizabeth had never acknowledged,
but who no doubt showered blessings on the
memory of the dead man who had thus befriended
his own flesh and blood. The Earl of Greatlands,
too, declared himself delighted with his
son-in-law’s generosity. But his daughter did
not hesitate to say that she had been treated
shamefully, and at once proclaimed her intention
of resigning the tenancy of the costly London
establishment, which it would be a farce to
attempt to keep up on five thousand a year. She
retired to a pretty place in the country, declining
to reside with her father, who, elated by his
unwonted prosperity, was actually talking of
taking a young wife to comfort his old age.</p>
<p class='c012'>My father had, meanwhile, married my
mother, whose memory I adore, for she loved
me passionately, and while she lived I was
never humiliated, as was perpetually the case
after her death, which occurred some three years
before my story opens. I do not remember hearing
how my father came across Lady Elizabeth
again, but I believe that their early attachment
soon reasserted itself, and though he was much
the poorer of the two, and encumbered with three
children, the match was soon arranged.</p>
<p class='c012'>Although Lady Elizabeth had been dissatisfied
with her widow’s portion she was very much
richer than we were, and her coming to Courtney
Grange was likely to be a very important
event to the previous humble inhabitants thereof.
In addition to the Grange, which had been my
maternal grandfather’s property, my father had
just six hundred a year, derived partly from
what his father had left him, partly from my
mother’s small fortune. Our establishment
consisted of two servants, in addition to the
family. Their names were John and Martha
Page. They had never seen any other service
but that of my father and grandfather, and had
lived seventeen years under the same roof before
it entered their heads to amalgamate their interests
by marrying. They were quite used to the
constant scraping and economizing which we
were compelled to practice, and did not look
upon the arrival of a new mistress as an unmixed
blessing, even though she was bringing a
good income with her.</p>
<p class='c012'>As for Belle, she was quite wild with delight
at the gorgeous prospect which opened itself
before her mental vision. London seasons, presentations
at court, halcyon days of brilliant
pleasure, and a swarm of dukes and earls sighing
for the honor of her hand. These were some
of the glowing visions in which she indulged.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And I mean to get into Lady Elizabeth’s
good graces, whether I like her or not,” she informed
me. “She can do so much for me if <i>she</i>
likes, and I can be amiability itself when <i>I</i> like.
Besides, my looks will win her over at once.
She will soon see what credit I can do to pretty
gowns. As for you, you’ll be lucky if she tolerates
you at all. I’m sure it’s a shame that our
family’s reputation for beauty should suffer as
it does through you.” And so on, <i>ad libitum</i>.</p>
<p class='c012'>Of course, I was not surprised to see her
warm, gushing welcome of my father and his
wife, nor to note the glance of surprised admiration
which the latter cast upon Belle and Gerald,
for they were really both very beautiful, and
both tall and well-grown, with lovely golden
hair, rich deep blue eyes, and an exquisite complexion,
united to perfect features.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth, too, I was sorry to see, was
a tall, handsome woman, who by no means
looked her forty years. When I say that I was
sorry to observe this, it must not be imagined
that I grudged her her good looks. But I had
had a vague notion that if she were comparatively
plain she would the more easily sympathize
with my troubles, into which no one in the
house except Jerry seemed able to enter. Now
my hopes in that direction were upset, and I
already knew instinctively that my own absence
was being commented upon. I saw my father,
the very picture of masculine comeliness, glance
up at my window with an angry frown, and I
knew almost as well as if I had been present
what Belle and Jerry were saying about me.</p>
<p class='c012'>After all, I thought, I had been very foolish to
let Belle’s ill-nature and my own ill-temper spoil
my resolve to make Lady Elizabeth’s home-coming
as pleasant as possible. Apart from looks,
my remaining upstairs would have already
made me lose ground with my stepmother.
Was it too late, I wondered, to rectify my
error, and make my appearance before dinner
was served? Answering the question in the
negative, I resolved to complete my toilet as
quickly as possible, and get over the ordeal of
the first meeting without further loss of time.</p>
<p class='c012'>So I began operations at once, wondering,
while I brushed my hair, how it was that I
was so different to Jerry and Belle. I pulled
faces at my own ugly reflection in the glass,
but as that only seemed to make matters worse,
I desisted. But I could not banish the discontent
which enhanced my ugliness, and made it
almost perfect in its own way. Why was I so
short and dumpy? I asked myself vainly. And
why was my hair so black, and lank, and scanty?
And how was it that my complexion was more
like Thames mud than anything else? And
why was my face covered with freckles? These
freckles I always felt to be an especial aggravation
of nature; for whoever heard of freckles on
a dark, sallow skin? And then, how did it
happen that my eyes were of a pale watery-brown
hue, while I had hardly got either eyelashes
or eyebrows that were visible? And
why, oh, why! had my nose got that exasperating
habit of looking skyward?</p>
<p class='c012'>Even as I asked these questions of myself, I
felt how hopeless it was to attempt to answer
them. So I abandoned them and tried to console
myself with the reflection that my mouth
was well-shaped and that I had splendid teeth.
But then my great red hands obtruded themselves
upon my notice, and blotted out all consciousness
of my redeeming features. I took
considerable pains with my hair, and put on
my best dress. Alas! the latter was of a curious
brown shade which somehow only seemed
to enhance my ugliness. Belle was dressed in
a dainty pink cambric; but I was never allowed
such a luxury, as it was considered that I was
too untidy, and too plain, and altogether too
unsuitable to indulge in pretty things. Besides,
we had to be economical, and as I could never
hope to captivate a lover, no matter how I was
dressed, it would have been a shame to waste
money upon my futile adornment. So Belle
argued, and I had hitherto had no choice but
to bow to her arguments.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was at last ready to go downstairs, when
once more Jerry came to look me up.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, you’re donned up, are you?” he remarked.
“And, upon my word, you’re looking
quite spry.”</p>
<p class='c012'>But I was not to be soothed by such negative
flattery as this, and sternly asked Jerry what he
meant by “looking quite spry.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, spry, you know, spry means—at least,
I mean—that you look as if you were going to
a prayer meeting; that is, you look so prim, and
tidy, and straight. But, Dorrie, dear, I like
you far better as you were this morning, and as
you generally are. You look real jolly then.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Saying this, Jerry kissed me warmly, and I
forthwith resigned myself to the hopelessness
of attempting to improve my appearance. This
morning I had worn an old lilac print that had
originally been made for Belle. It was faded
with much washing, and possessed sundry little
adornments in the way of frayed edges and
sleeves out at elbows. Truly, Belle had been
right, after all, and it was sheer folly on my
part to rebel against fate, since neither coaxing
nor rebelling seemed to propitiate her. Seeing,
therefore, how stern and uncompromising she
was with me, I resolved to take less notice of
her in future, and had no sooner made the resolve
than I began to feel peaceful and self-possessed.
What if the gift of beauty was
denied me, had I not many other blessings to be
thankful for? In all my seventeen years of life
I had never had anything but the most robust
health, and if my school record was anything to
go by, I possessed a much more valuable property
in the way of brains than Belle did. These
should outweigh my physical defects, and prove
my passport to the world’s good graces.</p>
<p class='c012'>I dare say Jerry was rather surprised to see
me suddenly straighten myself up, and assume
a much more cheerful expression.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What is Lady Elizabeth like?” I asked.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Looks?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, ways.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I take her to be rather a brick, do you
know. She was as pleasant and as much at
home with Belle and me as if she had lived here
all her life and had just been off for a holiday.
She thinks we are just like pa, and that is high
praise, I should fancy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Very high praise, Jerry. I wonder what
she’ll say about me. But it doesn’t matter. Is
dinner nearly served?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes; but John was grumbling because you
hadn’t helped to see that the table was all right,
as you had promised to do.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh! Poor John. It was a shame of me to
forget all about him. I’ll hurry down now and
see what I can do. Come on, Jerry.”</p>
<p class='c012'>A minute later we were both skipping nimbly
downstairs, and while Jerry, at my earnest
request, ran round to the stable to see how my
bull-terrier, Bobby, was progressing, I ran into
the kitchen to make my peace with John and
Martha. As Martha was somewhat sulky, and
protested that they had managed very well without
me, I made my way to the dining-room, and
began swiftly to re-arrange the flowers which
I had culled for the table earlier in the day.
John looked rather scandalized, and remarked
that he thought he knew how to arrange a table
as well as most folks. But I did not heed John’s
grumbling much, for it was his chronic condition,
and I had just completed my little task to
my own satisfaction when John rang the second
dinner-bell, the first not having been noticed by
me.</p>
<p class='c012'>Just then Jerry came back.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Bobby will be all right in a day,” he said,
whereat I expressed my satisfaction, for I had
been greatly troubled when poor Bobby had
come limping home with every sign of war
about him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And, oh!” I said, with sudden remembrance,
“what has been done with the wonderful
carriage and pair, and those gorgeous servants?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“They went straight home. They belong to
the earl. He sent them to meet Lady Elizabeth
at the station. Her own carriages are coming
after she has seen what arrangements it will be
best to make here. I fancy she doesn’t like the
place very much.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not like the Grange?” I exclaimed indignantly.
“Why, she must be a veritable
heathen—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dora, I regret that you should think fit to
behave so badly, but must demand a little of
your attention, while I introduce you to the
notice of Lady Elizabeth Courtney.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Was ever luck like mine? Here had I quite
lost sight of the fact that my father and his
wife might enter the room at any time, and they
had actually overheard me speak in tones of
contempt of the one woman on earth whom I
wished to propitiate! I turned hurriedly round,
and saw my father, looking very irate, Lady
Elizabeth, looking coldly critical, and Belle,
looking ill-naturedly triumphant.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I beg your pardon, papa. I did not mean
it,” I stammered.</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, I do not suppose you did mean us to
overhear you,” he replied sternly. “But I have
no doubt that you had resolved to be intensely
disagreeable, and I tell you plainly that I will
not have it. You see, my love,” he said, turning
to his wife, “you will have a little temper
and self-will to deal with, but I am sure you
will know how to compel it to keep within due
bounds.”</p>
<p class='c012'>What could I do or say after that? Nothing,
of course, and I sat miserably through the whole
meal, while all but Jerry laughed and talked as
if quite unconscious of my presence. I would
fain have escaped to my own room when the
dinner was over. But my father had taken it
into his head that I merely wanted to be obstinate
and disagreeable, and suggested that I
should spend an hour in the drawing-room. I
accordingly took refuge at the piano. But my
music was so melancholy that I am not surprised
that I was asked to desist, for, when you
come to think of it, “Killigrew’s Lament,” and
“The Dead March in Saul,” haven’t a very
bridal sound about them.</p>
<p class='c012'>So far Lady Elizabeth had not spoken directly
to me, and whenever my eyes wandered in her
direction, I could see that her glance was very
critical, but I could not be sure that it was quite
so disapproving as I had expected. Yet, although
I neither spoke, nor was spoken to, there
was no constraint between the others, for my
father and Lady Courtney were both good conversationalists,
and Belle could chatter by the
hour, provided the talk was kept at a suitably
frivolous level. Jerry, after being petted and
praised a little, had been sent to bed primed with
a quartet of kisses, and jubilant in the possession
of a bright sovereign which papa had given
to him in honor of the advent of a new mistress
at Courtney Grange.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Belle, dear, suppose you play us one of your
pretty pieces,” said my father. Whereupon I
vacated the music-stool, and took refuge near
the big oriel window which overlooked the
orchard, and which was my especial delight.
For it was like a small room in itself, and I did
not feel quite so lost among its cozy, faded
draperies as I did in any other part of our
drawing-room, which always seemed to me to
be much too large for the furniture that was in
it. Belle, after a great deal of fidgeting and
looking round at herself, to make sure that her
dress was falling in graceful folds, struck a few
chords on what had been a very fine piano in its
day, but which even I, who was partial to all
that had belonged to my mother, was compelled
to admit was getting out of date.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I really don’t like to let you hear me for the
first time on an old instrument like this, Lady
Elizabeth,” said Belle. “If my music strikes
you disagreeably, pray make all due allowance
for the difficulties under which I labor.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Pray don’t apologize, my dear,” answered
Lady Elizabeth. “I know how to separate the
faults of the instrument from those of the player,
and the quality of the piano need not trouble
you long, as in all probability a grand of my
own will be here in a day or two.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How delightful!” exclaimed Belle, and then
she proceeded to give us a specimen of the skill
which, times without number, I had been advised
to emulate. She played “The Rippling
Cascade” in a style that was faultless as regards
time and precision, following it up with “The
Musical Box.” But her playing was utterly devoid
of expression. Pathos, tenderness, power,
fire, were all unknown musical quantities to her,
as they are, alas! to numbers of other conventional
players; and whether it was “Home, Sweet
Home,” or “The Soldier’s Chorus,” each and
everything was played with the same clock-work
insensibility to all the laws of expression. I
watched Lady Elizabeth narrowly, as she listened
to Belle’s efforts in the musical line, and
(shall I own it?) I was maliciously glad to notice
a distinctly bored expression steal across her
features. There was one thing in which I could
excel my usually all-conquering sister, of which
the lady whom we both desired to please was
evidently a judge, and I could not help rejoicing
in the fact that I was not quite weaponless in
the fight for favor, though I had certainly done
anything but shine so far.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What do you think of Belle’s performance?”
asked my father, either forgetful of my presence,
or not caring whether I overheard the conversation
or not. Lady Elizabeth’s reply,
though given in a low tone, and under cover
of the music, reached my ears quite distinctly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“She is just a trifle disappointing there, Gerald.
I should imagine your younger daughter,
Dora, to be much the better artist of the two.
She seems to be a trifle wild and ungovernable,
but would, I think, be amenable to reason, with
judicious handling.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear Elizabeth, you don’t know her yet.
Wait until you have seen more of her, and then
you will agree with me that she is more than
trying. Indeed, she is positively exasperating
at times. Belle always has some complaint to
make of her, and I am not surprised that this
should be so, for it is a matter of impossibility
to make her either look or act like a lady. No
one would dream that she was a Courtney.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Often and often I had felt my heart ache at
the neglect and carelessness with which my
father had always treated me, and I had grieved
bitterly at the lack of outward comeliness which
seemed to be the passport to his affection. But
that he was actually so devoid of parental feeling
as to show himself positively antipathetic to
me had never occurred to me. Now, as I heard
him saying things which must make me almost
hateful in Lady Elizabeth’s eyes, I felt myself
harden toward him, and the love which I had
hitherto cherished for him fell from me like a
worn-out mantle. What! oh, what had I ever
done that he should do that which presumably
only my bitterest enemy would do to me? Why
should he try to prejudice me in the eyes of his
wife? Had he no remembrance of the mother
who loved me with a love equal to that which
she bore for himself and his happier children?
Was he quite forgetful of all the little efforts I
had always made to increase his comfort? Did
he really regard me as quite removed from the
sphere of a lady, because I had worked hard,
and made my hands red and unsightly, ever
since I had realized how difficult it was for
Martha and John to manage our big house efficiently
without assistance? I, in my blindness,
had hoped that he would commend me for my
industrious habits, and it was a bitter awakening
to discover that he only rated me on a par
with, perhaps, a scullery maid.</p>
<p class='c012'>I could feel my eyes begin to gain the fire they
usually lacked, and the hot blood suffused my
cheeks as I sat trembling with anger, and fighting
madly to prevent myself from uttering the
reproaches that forced themselves to my lips. It
would be well, I thought, to keep quiet until the
end of the play, and hear the verdict which
Lady Elizabeth would pronounce upon me. I
therefore listened for her answer with tightly
clasped hands and motionless form, but with my
attention strained to the utmost, Belle having
meanwhile reached the most flourishy part of
“Household Harmonies.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Do you think it quite fair to the child,”
said my stepmother, “to give implicit credence
to what one sister says to the detriment of the
other, without giving the latter a chance to defend
herself? Do not imagine for a moment I
have a thought of reproaching you. But I cannot
help contrasting the love and admiration
you so openly display for Belle with the coldness
and actual displeasure with which you look
at Dora. May not this have much to do with
the girl’s presumably bad temper and <i>gauché</i>
manners? You see, I want to make the best of
all belonging to you, Gerald, and I am inclined
to think that there is more in your younger
daughter than you have given her credit for.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I should be only too glad to discover a single
good quality in Dora,” replied my affectionate
father. “But I repeat that she is really hopeless,
and assure you, for your own future guidance,
that her disposition is on a par with her
looks, than which nothing could very well be
more disappointing, considering the fact that
she is the offspring of a house which for generations
has been famous for its beauty.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But a beautiful body does not invariably
hold a beautiful mind, and of course the obverse
rule holds good. The fact is, I am not
sure that I have not taken a fancy to Dora. I
have an idea that she is a girl of great possibilities,
under judicious management. Certainly,
appearances are against her at present, but appearances
are but very circumstantial evidence
at best.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And how do you get over her rudeness to
you on your arrival?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You mean her failure to meet me at the
door?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I rather fancy that if I had been in
her place I should have done the same. It is bad
enough to be such a contrast in looks to her
handsome sister, without having her plainness
accentuated and aggravated by the most unbecoming
attire that could possibly have been procured
for her. Belle is beautifully dressed, and
Dora’s frock is simply hideous. Her hair, too,
is plastered down in as ugly a fashion as possible.
I mean to alter all that, and the result
will astonish you, I am sure.”</p>
<p class='c012'>By this time Belle had noticed that she had
an unappreciative audience, and was closing the
piano, contriving to display, as she did so, a
certain amount of well-bred annoyance, as I
knew instinctively without looking at her, so
well was I used to her little ways. Lady Elizabeth
smiled pleasantly and said, “Thank you,
my dear.” My father, considerably to Belle’s
own wonderment, appeared quite oblivious of
her beautiful presence, a thing she had never
had to complain of before. He looked like a
man suddenly confronted with a new and mysterious
riddle, and as if he were not sure whether
he ought not to doubt the sanity of any one who
could deliberately say anything in favor of me.
True, old Martha and her husband were sometimes
quite ungrudging of their commendation,
after I had been specially useful to them. But
they were only servants, and it was perhaps
natural that they should judge things in a
different way to more educated people.</p>
<p class='c012'>As for me, I sat like one in ecstasy, for I had
at last found some one who was not only willing,
but actually determined to see that I was treated
in a manner equal to the other daughter of the
house, and not relegated to the position of a
menial. My father had evidently forgotten that
I was in the room. Lady Elizabeth thought I
had left it, as was evidenced by her parting
words to Belle, as the latter was going up to
her own bedroom.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Good-night, Belle,” she said. “To-morrow
we will have a talk about what we will do together
in future, eh? And tell your sister that
I hope she will be well enough to go on an exploring
expedition with me. I’m sure she has
a pretty garden and other interesting things of
her own to show me. She looks like a real
lover of nature.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Had my heart not been so full of conflicting
emotion I could have laughed at Belle’s stare
of surprise. But laughter would have been horrible
to me just then, and would have seemed a
desecration of the purer sounds that rose to my
lips.</p>
<p class='c012'>Does the reader know how it feels to be in a
state of joy so exquisite that it is difficult to
restrain the voice from shrieking aloud and
the limbs from dancing in wild abandonment?
Even so did I feel when I rose from my chair
as Belle left the room. But my excitement ran
into the channels of gratitude and love, and I
soon found myself kneeling at Lady Elizabeth’s
feet, sobs shaking my frame, tears streaming
down my cheeks, and broken words of feeling
issuing from my lips.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dear, dear lady!” I cried. “Oh, how I bless
you for your kind words! You don’t know how
I have hungered for love! You don’t know
what a grief it was to me to seem rude to you.
You don’t know how grateful I can be. I will
do anything for you. I will work my fingers
to the bone, if you wish it. I will lay my life
down for you, if you will only give me just a
little corner of your heart, just a little of the
sympathy for which my heart has been aching.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear child,” said my stepmother, as she
clasped me warmly to her breast, while genuine
tears of sympathy actually rolled down
her cheeks. “My poor Dora! of course I mean
to love you. And I want you to remember that
I am your mother, to whom you must come in
all your troubles.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Then, with an affectionate kiss, she released
me, and I fled to my bedroom, sobbing still with
excitement, but proud, happy and exultant, as
I had never been in my life.</p>
<p class='c012'>“She is an angel!” I thought, rapturously.
“Oh! how happy we shall be now!”</p>
<p class='c012'>Alas, poor mortal! it is well for thee that the
portals of the future are impervious to thy gaze,
and that it is forbidden thee to know how small
is perhaps thy destined share of happiness, the
true elixir of life.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER II.<br/><span class='small'>“In the world there is no duty more important than that of being charming.”—<span class='sc'>Victor Hugo.</span></span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>On rising next morning my first thought was
that I must dress myself with more care than
was usually the case with me before breakfast.
Not that I was not always neat and tidy, as far
as my personal toilet went. But the old dresses
which had hitherto been deemed good enough
for me to wear in the mornings would have to
be discarded henceforth, and I felt quite proud
of the suddenly accentuated importance of my
personal appearance, as I rummaged my wardrobe
in search of something that would be fit to
wear in the presence of Lady Elizabeth Courtney.</p>
<p class='c012'>But I was not very successful in my search,
and was obliged to content myself with a somewhat
shabby green striped stuff, that had been
bought for Belle, but was made up for me, because
she took a dislike to it on seeing it at
home. I remembered the remark Lady Elizabeth
had made about my hair, and tried, with
very indifferent success, to remove the objectionable
sleekiness which was its distinguishing
feature.</p>
<p class='c012'>When quite ready to go downstairs I surveyed
myself in the glass, but cannot say that I was
delighted with the reflection which confronted
me for a moment. It was only seven o’clock,
and I went to the stable ere going elsewhere, to
see after the wants of Bobby and of my dear
old Teddy. Teddy was a shaggy pony, whose
looks were anything but handsome, but in whose
society I had hitherto spent my happiest hours.
That I should be the proud possessor of a pony
often struck me with surprise; but it was an established
fact, nevertheless. My uncle Graham,
protesting that no one would buy such an ugly
animal, had given him to me, and as Belle would
not have been seen on the back of such an inelegant
steed, there was no attempt to subvert him
to other uses than the donor intended.</p>
<p class='c012'>Sometimes Jerry and I wandered for miles
with him, taking turns at having a ride on his
broad back over the wide expanse of moorland
in which our county rejoices. Bobby, too, always
went with us, and, next to Teddy, perhaps,
was the dearest animal alive. I had bought
him, for sixpence, from some boys who had been
paid a shilling to drown him because he had the
mange. He wasn’t handsome then, but he improved
in looks when he recovered from his illness,
and he was so loving, so merry, so clever,
and such a jolly companion altogether, that it
would have been a terrible grief to me to part
with him. Then both Bobby and Teddy were
such splendid confidants. To them I poured out
all my sorrows, and I always felt better after
we had talked things over. They would both
look at me so earnestly and lovingly with their
beautiful eyes, while I told them whatever I
had to tell. And then, to prove that they understood
me, Teddy would rub me with his head,
and Bobby would first lick my fingers, and then
give a short, sharp bark, and look defiantly
round him, as if to challenge my enemies.</p>
<p class='c012'>Both animals were nearly as fond of Jerry as
they were of me. But he was only nine years
old, and did not understand them quite as well
as I did. Whenever we were bent upon a long
excursion on the moors we would take a basket
of provisions with us. Then, when we got to a
suitable spot, we would prepare to enjoy our
picnic. Teddy and Bobby would lie down for
awhile, or would amuse themselves in their own
way, the one by nibbling at such eatables as he
might find, and the other by excursionizing in
search of rats. But they knew what a certain
whistle meant, and returned promptly to our
side as soon as they heard it. Then, having
unpacked our basket, we would distribute the
luncheon. There was always a goodly bone for
Bobby, and some apples and a few carrots for
Teddy; and though we were no doubt a curious
quartet, we were a very happy one, for I had
no regrets when in the unrestrained company of
my three chums. After lunch, we sometimes
had a game at hide and seek among the stones
and hillocks, Teddy in particular being very
difficult to deceive. It was such fun to see his
dear old nose come poking round a corner, and
to witness him neigh and prance in his joy at
having unearthed us, while Bobby complimented
him on his skill by barking his admiration.</p>
<p class='c012'>It seemed a pity that such beautiful days
should have an end, and we were all sorry when
it was time to go home again. As for me, I
used to feel my spirits leave me as we neared
home, for I was always sure to be in some scrape
or other on my return. It was very easy for me
to get into trouble at any time, but the head and
front of my offending in connection with our
picnics was my inability to distinguish between
scraps and bones to which Bobby was welcome,
since no one else could eat them, and the remains
of a joint which Martha had intended to
convert into <i>rissoles</i>. Teddy’s apples, too, had
a knack of being of the choicest flavor, whereas
the green windstrewn ones were supposed to be
good enough for a pony.</p>
<p class='c012'>As I now went to the stable, I could not help
wondering how Lady Elizabeth would regard
my pets. But I felt more assured about the
matter than I would have done if I had thought
about it yesterday. For if my stepmother could
actually take a fancy to <i>me</i>, she was not likely
to take exception to the ugliness of Teddy and
Bobby.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hallo, Dorrie!” I suddenly heard a voice exclaim,
and looking toward the kitchen-garden,
whence the sound proceeded, I saw Jerry, hand-in-hand
with Lady Elizabeth, to whom he was
doing the honors of the place thus early.</p>
<p class='c012'>“We’ve been getting some strawberries for
breakfast,” smilingly said my stepmother, “or,
rather, we were going to get some, but either
Gerald or I ate all we gathered.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, it wasn’t me,” said Jerry. “I gathered
them, and you ate them. But I can soon
pull some more, after you have looked at my
white rats and my rabbits.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And my pony,” I put in; adding, with no
shade of reserve or shyness about me, “Do you
always get up so early, Lady Elizabeth?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not always, especially if I am in town. But
I am fond of rising early in the country. Besides,
I wanted to explore the Grange thoroughly
to-day. I have been here before, but it is so
long since that I have quite forgotten what it
is like.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Do you know,” put in Jerry, “that I fancied
yesterday you did not like the place?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And Dora thought I must be a heathen not
to do so.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, I beg your pardon,” I exclaimed hurriedly.
“It was very presumptuous of me. But
I have lived here all my life, and to me no place
can be nicer than Courtney Grange.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That remains to be proved,” said my stepmother,
with a smile. “I have an idea that the
sanitary arrangements of this place are bad.
Should this really prove the case, we shall vacate
the Grange in favor of a pretty place of my
own.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Leave the Grange!” I cried aghast. “Why,
that would be awful! I should look uglier than
ever anywhere else.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“On the contrary, it is just possible, Dora,
that this place is to blame for your unsatisfactory
complexion. Perhaps your bedroom is
a specially unhealthy one. Your father has
promised to employ some sanitary engineers at
once, to examine the place. Meanwhile I have
left my maid at Sunny Knowe, and we are all
going next week to pay a visit to that place.
Your father is quite willing that you should all
three accompany us, and I am sure you will
enjoy your visit.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But I have no pretty clothes to be seen elsewhere
in.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“We will soon alter that. I am very glad
that Ernestine did not come with me. I can
manage very well for a week without her, and
it is just as well that neither she nor any other
servant of mine should criticise you at present.
You will show to much better advantage in new
clothes, and may as well create as good an impression
as possible, even upon the servants, who
can be very neglectful of people who do not
strike them as important. I intend you to be
considered as important as your sister, who is
very lovely, but who must not monopolize all
the attention due to you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed, I do not want attention or assistance.
I am quite used to looking after both myself and
others, and cannot expect the same politeness as
Belle. See, these are my pets, and I love them
dearly, for they both love me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Bobby always slept with Teddy, and it was
no unusual thing to see the two friends come to
meet me, as they did on this particular morning,
Teddy brushing my arm by way of salute and
uttering a delighted neigh, while Bobby barked
his “good-morning” quite plainly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“They have brought you to see some lovely
animals,” said a voice at this juncture. It was
my father, who had joined us, preparatory to
going in to breakfast, and who gazed at me with
manifest displeasure.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m afraid, my dear,” he continued, “that
you will be somewhat disgusted at being taken
the round of stableyards and back premises.
But I should have warned you as to what you
might expect from Dora. Her tastes are inveterately
low.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then I am afraid I am low, too,” laughed
Lady Elizabeth, “for I have actually been enjoying
myself. I was always sorry that I had
no children of my own, and a few fresh young
spirits about me will complete my happiness
in marrying you. Come along, children. We
mustn’t keep your father waiting for his breakfast.”</p>
<p class='c012'>My father was not severe or ill-natured, except
when irritated by the sight of the child who was
a veritable eyesore to him, and he would have
had to be a churl indeed to resist his wife’s
sunny ways. He was smiling pleasantly at her,
and had turned to walk toward the house, having
offered her his arm, when I hastily whispered
to her: “Pray excuse Jerry and me for
a moment, while we gather those strawberries.”
And then I ran off, followed by Jerry, and
knowing full well that my desire to procure
Lady Elizabeth a plentiful supply of the fruit
of which she seemed fond would provoke my
father’s displeasure again, simply because it
would strike him as another undesirable exhibition
of my notoriously independent manners.</p>
<p class='c012'>But I no longer felt any particular desire to
please him, and only cared to be of service to
the dear lady who would permit no prejudices
to influence her treatment of me. As far as she
was concerned, I meant to follow Victor Hugo’s
advice, and be as charming and helpful as I
could. If I could not make my appearance
charming, I would charm her by a solicitous
and persistent attention to her pleasures and
comforts.</p>
<p class='c012'>It did not take the two of us long to gather a
good supply of “Queens” and “Presidents,” and
we reached the morning-room before the others
had sat down to breakfast. Belle was there, attired
in a pretty pale blue print, and was admirably
foiled by my altogether unprepossessing
appearance. As I saw Lady Elizabeth’s glance
wander from Belle to myself, I knew that she
was wondering what I could possibly wear to
make me look pretty; and though I could never
really hope to embody such a pleasant adjective
as “pretty,” I was happy in the knowledge that
Belle’s unpleasant theories were upset, and that
I might possibly show a marked improvement in
my appearance ere long.</p>
<p class='c012'>The rest of the day was chiefly taken up
with explorations and consultations, and a
good many new arrangements were made.
Jerry, I was sorry to hear, was to be sent off
to a French boarding school at the beginning of
the next term. But when I heard that he was
to spend all his holidays at home, just as if he
were in an English school, I felt reconciled to
the temporary absences of the bright, clever
child who liked his ugly sister best. Jerry
himself was quite overjoyed at the programme
cut out for him, and promised to write us each
and all a French letter from the first week of
his residence in France.</p>
<p class='c012'>Belle, who was now twenty, was enraptured
by the promise of next season in town, while
I was so delighted to hear that I was to have
efficient instruction on my favorite instrument,
the violin, that I burst into tears, and ran
hastily up to my own room, where I might
vent my emotion unrestrainedly. You see,
my tastes had met with so little sympathy heretofore
that I required some time to get used to
unwonted indulgences. I was not sure that my
happiness would not yet take unto itself wings
and fly away, or that I was not dreaming; for
I had never heard of the arrival of a stepmother
being so conducive to the welfare of the junior
branches of the family as promised to be the case
with us.</p>
<p class='c012'>My father, I noticed during the next few
days, was so supremely contented and so happy
in the society of his wife, that I contrasted the
coldly conventional manner in which he had
always comported himself in my poor mother’s
presence, and was able to see that the feeling
he had borne for her was but poor stuff compared
to the love he felt for Lady Elizabeth. I
remember also having heard that these two were
lovers in their youth, and it amazed me to think
that they could have deliberately thrown aside
the heart’s most sacred feelings in order to
make a worldly marriage.</p>
<p class='c012'>I have since then become thoroughly conversant
with the fact that Mammon is infinitely the
more powerful god of the two, when it comes to
a tussle with Cupid, and that even very estimable
people lose their judgment when called
upon to choose between them. And yet, how
can they honestly utter their marriage vows,
when the heart is given away from the one
they are marrying? Truly, life has many
mysteries, which it were unprofitable work to
attempt to solve!</p>
<p class='c012'>In a day or two quite an assortment of new
clothes came for me, and it was astonishing to
see how different I looked in the reds and yellows
which I now wore. I was still the ugly
girl of the family, but it was quite possible for
strangers to overlook the unpleasant fact for a
while, and I even caught myself hoping that I
looked rather nice than otherwise, especially
when callers began to pay their respects to the
newly-married couple.</p>
<p class='c012'>Both Belle and I were introduced to nearly all
our visitors, among the first of them being the
Earl of Greatlands. I was rather disposed to
like him, until he put his eyeglass up, quizzed
me attentively, and remarked: “You are unfortunately
very like your mother, Miss Dora,
though I believe she had much finer hair and
eyes than you have. But everybody improves
in the hands of my daughter, and I have no
doubt you will be as handsome as your sister
by the time you are her age.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am only just twenty,” said Belle stiffly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“So I suppose, my dear,” rejoined the earl.
“But you will find in a year or two that even
the slight margin of age there is between the
two of you will land you considerably on the
weather-side, in other people’s opinion.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Belle flashed an angry glance from her beautiful
eyes, being careful, however, not to let the
earl see it, for did she not desire an invitation to
Greatlands Castle? As for me, I felt nothing
less than enraged, although I could not quite
decide whether the old gentleman was deliberately
rude, or only gifted with an unfortunate
knack of making <i>mal-à-propos</i> speeches. But
he did not notice that he had hurt the feelings
of either of us, having turned his attention to
Jerry, who, faultlessly dressed in a new black
velvet suit, was being introduced to his stepmother’s
father.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ah! a very pretty boy,” he said. “But a
perfect imp of mischief, I know. Boys who
look like him always are. How many times
have you gone out ratting?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not so often as I would like, sir. Dorrie
can’t always get away.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And does Dorrie go rat-hunting?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course she does. She has a splendid dog.
Teddy is hers, too, and he’s just a brick.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Teddy’s a brick? But of what use is a brick
on hunting expeditions?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, you know what I mean. Teddy is the
jolliest little pony in the world.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You seem fond of Teddy?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Rather.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And of Bobby?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I wonder who wouldn’t be!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And of Dorrie?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, of course!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And of Belle?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Belle? Well, yes, I dare say I am, when she
doesn’t sneak on Dorrie.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Gerald, I think you are forgetting yourself,”
interrupted my father angrily. “That girl has
made you worse than herself. It is just as well
that you are going to be parted. For the present,
you have been long enough in the drawing-room.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Very well, sir,” said Jerry, and turned to
leave the room at once. Lady Elizabeth, I could
see, was more amused than vexed; Belle looked
at both Jerry and me with angry disdain, and
the earl just laughed as if Jerry had uttered a
very good joke.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Wait a bit, Jerry,” he said. “If the others
will excuse me for a few minutes, I would like
you to show me this wonderful dog and pony.
And as they are Dorrie’s property she will perhaps
be good enough to come with us.”</p>
<p class='c012'>As nobody entered any objection to the earl’s
proposals, I accompanied him from the room,
and five minutes later he and Jerry and I were
interviewing Teddy and Bobby, who had been
having a gambol at the foot of the orchard.
The orchard was not a place they were supposed
to frisk about in. But somebody had carelessly
left the wicket open, and it was not their fault,
poor things, that a choice young “ribstone pippin”
had been snapped in two during their
frolics.</p>
<p class='c012'>The earl was certainly a funny man. He was
as different from what I had always supposed
an earl to be as was possible. In fact, he was
more like a jolly old farmer than anything else.
But what a gossip he seemed to be! And how
inquisitive he was! He laughed immoderately
at sight of my pets, but immediately soothed
my wounded feelings by stroking and patting
them, and I could see that they both took a
fancy to him at once. It wasn’t everybody that
Teddy would sidle up to in the dear, winning
way he had, or to whom Bobby would wag his
approval. But perhaps they were both in a better
humor than usual; for Bobby had uncovered
one of the mushroom beds, and had helped himself
to a few of the fungi, of which he was inordinately
fond, while naughty Teddy, as several
broken branches testified, had been feasting on
unripe “Dutch mignonnes” and “Duke of
Oldenburghs.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Nice animals,” said the earl. “Just the sort
I would have expected your property to be, eh,
Dorrie?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My name is Dora.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But Jerry calls you Dorrie.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“He is privileged. He likes me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And how do you know that I don’t like you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You? I don’t see how you can. Very few
people do.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Perhaps I am one of the few. At any rate,
I mean to call you Dorrie. It sounds nicer between
friends than ‘Miss Dora,’ doesn’t it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now you are making fun of me. And you
would make even more fun of me, if I were to
believe that the Earl of Greatlands wanted to be
friendly with an ugly, uninteresting girl like
me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Isn’t Lady Elizabeth friendly with you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, she is an angel!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, please to remember that I am that
angel’s father, and of the same species. Don’t
you see my wings?”</p>
<p class='c012'>At this we all three laughed, and we enjoyed
each other’s society very well for about half an
hour, during which time we had shown our visitor
all sorts of things that I had never dreamed
would interest an earl.</p>
<p class='c012'>Suddenly he exclaimed: “And now I must go
back to the house, or I shall be getting into hot
water with the old people, eh? But look here,
Jerry, what has Belle got to sneak about?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now, Jerry, don’t <i>you</i> turn sneak,” I
warned.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You don’t need to be afraid. But Belle is
horrid, after that. She’s always saying that
Dorrie’s ugly. And I’m sure she isn’t really
ugly, is she?”</p>
<p class='c012'>The latter question was addressed to the earl.
But I did not wait to hear his answer, for I was
thoroughly angry with Jerry, for once, and returned
to the house unceremoniously, leaving
them to go back when they liked. Of course I
was not behaving politely. But I am afraid
that very polished manners were really a little
out of my line at that time, and, after all, it was
too bad of Jerry to turn the conversation on to
my unfortunate ugliness, just when we were
having such a nice time of it. Instead of going
back to the drawing-room, I went straight to
the kitchen, where I was busily occupied for the
next two hours in helping Martha to shell “marrowfats,”
to prepare salad, to make a pudding
and some cheesecakes, and in other ways to do
my best toward making dinner a success. Belle
never condescended to enter the kitchen at any
time, nor would my father have liked her to risk
spoiling the perfect loveliness of her hands. But
Martha and John had never suffered from lack
of work, and some help was absolutely needed
by them. True, a strong girl from the village
of Moorbye had been engaged now to do the
rougher part of the housework, but even then
there was plenty of room for my assistance.</p>
<p class='c012'>That evening the Earl of Greatlands dined
with us, as did also Lord Egreville, his son, who
had ridden over to pay his respects to his sister
and her husband. He was a widower, and resided
with his father at Greatlands Castle, his
two sons being at Oxford. I did not like him
at all, and he took no pains to conceal the fact
that he considered me to be very small fry indeed.
But he was quite fascinated by Belle’s
beauty, and flirted desperately with her. She
seemed perfectly willing to receive his attentions,
and certain amused glances which I saw
exchanged between Lady Elizabeth, the earl,
and my father, set my thoughts working in an
odd direction.</p>
<p class='c012'>What a queer thing it would be, I mused, if
this Lord Egreville and Belle were to fall in
love with each other, and make a match of it!
How it would complicate relationships. Why,
let me see, Belle would become her father’s
sister-in-law, and would be a sort of aunt to
Jerry and myself, while the old earl could call
himself either her father-in-law, or her grand-father-in-law,
if he liked. The situation presented
so many funny aspects, that I felt it
necessary to relinquish my dessert-spoon while
I abandoned myself to a fit of laughter that obstinately
refused to be repressed.</p>
<p class='c012'>As there was apparently nothing to laugh at,
my manners were again called into question,
chiefly by the innocent and unconscious cause
of my amusement.</p>
<p class='c012'>A few days after this, the sanitary engineers
were at work on Courtney Grange, and we were
all domiciled <i>pro tem</i> at Sunny Knowe, a lovely
place in its way, but not nearly equal to what
Courtney Grange would be when thoroughly
restored. Oddly enough, a distant relation,
from whom my father had never expected anything,
died at this juncture, and bequeathed
him several thousand pounds. His income had
never been large enough to keep the place up as
it ought to have been kept, and the Grange had
therefore fallen considerably out of repair. Now
that he was married to a lady with an ample income
he could spare his newly acquired fortune
for repairing purposes, and resolved to spend
nearly the whole of it on that object.</p>
<p class='c012'>Under the circumstances, we were not likely
to return to the Grange much before Christmas.
But we did not trouble about that, as the Knowe
was a very pleasant place to live at. I had,
very much to my sorrow, left Teddy under John
Page’s care, for Lady Elizabeth desired me to
ride a more presentable steed while at the Knowe.
I was provided with a well-made habit, and had
the use of a handsome horse. But the decorous
rides I now took, in company with Belle, and
with a groom following closely, were not to be
compared with the delightful excursions Teddy
and I had had together, though Belle enjoyed
them, and the altered state of things was evidently
regarded by her as a great improvement.</p>
<p class='c012'>As it had been necessary to leave Teddy behind,
I could not be cruel enough to bring Bobby
away and leave him without a friend to talk to.
John had promised to look well after them both,
but I knew that they would miss me sadly, and
longed for the time when I could comfort them
again with my presence. Lady Elizabeth was
very good to me, but at times I was not sure
that I did not regret the old spells of unconventional
freedom.</p>
<p class='c012'>So true is it that we are prone to lose sight of
the privileges and blessings of the present in
the vain longing after a vanished past, in which
we could find little to be joyful at, when it was
with us. In my case, I was ready to let the
memory of our halcyon days on the moors outweigh
that of all the days of neglect and misery
during which I had craved for the mother’s love
which had once blessed me.</p>
<p class='c012'>The Earl of Greatlands and his son spent a
good deal of time at the Knowe, and we, in our
turn, saw much of the castle, which had been
thoroughly rehabilitated since Lady Elizabeth’s
first husband had been good enough to furnish
the money wherewith to do it. It was a fine
old place, and it was pleasant to see what pride
its owner took in all connected with it. Lord
Egreville was very attentive to Belle, but it was
difficult to decide how far the element of seriousness
entered into the behavior of either of them.
There was a prudent reticence on the part of
Lord Egreville at times that annoyed Belle very
much, because it argued that he was not quite
so infatuated with her as she would have liked
him to be.</p>
<p class='c012'>And yet, I do not believe she cared for him
one atom, although she gave him more than
sufficient encouragement to proceed with his
attentions—up to a certain point. Once, when
in a very gracious mood, she became quite confidential
with me.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It would be a very good match, even for me,
who have always meant to do well for myself,”
she said. “The estate is quite unencumbered,
and in first-class order. Lord Egreville is not
very good-looking. But I would tolerate his
looks if I cannot do better for myself. Though
certainly it would be a great thing to become
an English countess.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But Lord Egreville will not be an earl until
his father dies.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“His father, as you seem to forget, is close
upon seventy, and cannot live forever.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How horrid it seems to count upon dead
men’s shoes like that!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t excite yourself, my dear. If Lord
Egreville were to propose to me to-morrow, I
would not give him a decided answer. I must
see what my coming season in town brings
forth. I might captivate a much richer nobleman,
or even a millionaire pill or soap manufacturer.
At any rate, I am not going to throw
myself away in too great a hurry.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘A bird in the hand—’ You know the rest.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, I know the rest. But my motto is:
‘Look before you leap.’”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I hope you won’t leap into a big bog-hole,
that’s all.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, no. I will leave that suicidal performance
for those who can never hope to leap any
higher. How do you like this brooch? Lord
Egreville sent it this morning.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If I were you, I would tell him to keep his
dead wife’s jewelry a little longer. He might
require it for some one else, if you pick up a
duke or a millionaire.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Having had my parting shot, I judged it wise
to leave Belle to her own devices, and went off
to my little room, where I practiced industriously
on my fiddle for an hour and a half. There
were plenty of servants here, and I had no excuse
for offering to help with the cooking,
though I would have liked nothing better. Indeed,
I had often thought that if I had not belonged
to a family in which it was necessary to
keep up appearances, I would have become a
professional cook. But I had still a little congenial
employment to turn to. Jerry was going
off to school this week, and I had undertaken
to mark all his things myself, besides making
him sundry little knick-knacks that would prove
useful to him.</p>
<p class='c012'>I found it very hard to part with Jerry, when
the time came for him to go, and was rather
hurt to find that he cared less about leaving us
behind, than he did about the delights of travel
and school-life to which he was looking forward.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I did think you would be sorry to leave me,”
I murmured, reproachfully, just as he was being
resigned to the charge of the tutor who was going
to accompany him to the school, and afterward
take part in teaching the boys.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, what’s a fellow to do?” Jerry rejoined.
“You wouldn’t have me to cry and
look like a muff, would you? It isn’t the same
as if I was a girl. It wouldn’t matter then if I
cried my eyes red.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No more it would, Jerry. Good-by, dear.
And you’ll be sure to write often to me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Quite sure. Good-by, Dorrie. Good-by,
pa. And, oh! Dorrie, I’ve forgotten my bag of
marbles, and my new top. Will you send them
to me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>There was barely time to answer in the affirmative,
and then the child was off. Then my
father, having seen me comfortably seated in
the waggonette in which we had driven to the
station, flicked his whip, and off we started on
our return drive, little dreaming of the terrible
events which were to come to pass ere the dear
boy from whom we had just parted came back
to the home he left so blithely.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER III.<br/><span class='small'>“Tis the unlikely that always happens.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>My life seemed strangely quiet without Jerry
for the next few days, and I longed all the more
to console myself with Bobby and Teddy. But
one gets used to the absence of anybody in time,
and Lady Elizabeth’s arrangements were so
promotive of the comfort and pleasure of all
with whom she lived that it would have seemed
ungrateful of me to suggest that I should be
glad when the time came to go back to the
Grange. Still, it was true that, apart from the
loss of Jerry’s companionship, I had conceived
a desire to leave Sunny Knowe. The Earl of
Greatlands had become unpleasantly effusive to
me. He was constantly paying me compliments,
which were all the more galling as they
were made with a perfectly grave mien. Had
Belle been the recipient, there would have been
nothing objectionable about them, as she could
have received them in the full conviction that
they were honestly meant. But for me, whose
ugliness was proverbial, to be addressed as
“pretty dear” and “dainty dove,” was very bitter
indeed; for it was bad enough to be fully conscious
of a total absence of all that was dainty
and pretty, without being publicly satirized,
and held up to the unfeeling laughter of Belle
and her admirer, Lord Egreville.</p>
<p class='c012'>One afternoon my temper, which of late had
lain in abeyance, reasserted itself in a startling
manner. We were all in the drawing-room,
with several of the neighboring gentry, who had
come over to confabulate about some <i>tableaux
vivants</i> that there had been some talk of getting
up. Several satisfactory groups had been
decided upon; but, apparently by common consent,
nobody had suggested that I should take
a part in the performances, until the earl remarked:
“Look here, there seems to be a strange
want of judgment among you. You have left
the flower of the flock out of your calculations,
and I propose that she and I represent ‘Beauty
and the Beast.’ I can soon dress up as the
‘Beast,’ and she can fill her part satisfactorily.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And pray who is the ‘flower of the flock’?”
said Belle, who was to represent “Guinevere.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Who else, but winsome Dora?” retorted the
earl, whereat there was an undisguised laugh on
the part of Belle and a few more of her caliber,
while the rest smiled in good-natured toleration
of so palpable an absurdity. Just for one instant
I turned sick with humiliation. Then I
walked up to the earl, and, with my eyes flashing
angrily, hissed rather than said: ‘You are
an old man, my lord. I am but a young girl.
You think that you may hold me up to ridicule
and laughter with impunity. But I vow you
shall do so no longer. Shall I tell you what I
will do if you dare to insult me in that manner
again?’</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dora, how dare you!” exclaimed my father
angrily. “If you have forgotten how to behave
yourself, I must request you to go to your own
room at once.—I told you how it would be,” he
remarked to Lady Elizabeth.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Tut, tut!” put in the earl. “Let the girl
alone, Courtney. This little bit of an outburst
is my especial prerogative, and I would like to
hear the whole of it. What will you do if I
repeat the kind of conversation which seems to
rouse your ire? Why shouldn’t I call you a
beauty?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Because I have a right to demand that you
should cease to satirize my unfortunate appearance,
and because I will no longer submit quietly
to listen to compliments which become insults
when applied to me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But you have not yet told me how you will
prevent me from saying just what I please.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If you are so little of a gentleman as to repeat
your conduct, I will—I will slap your face!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“This is too disgraceful!” interposed my
father again. “Once more, Dora—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have to beg you once more to permit me to
finish this little affair in my own way,” said
the earl, who was actually laughing, so utterly
insignificant and childish did he deem my anger.
“So you would slap my face, eh? Well, there’s
nothing would please me better. I like a girl
with some go in her. And you know you really
are the nicest, bonniest—”</p>
<p class='c012'>Five minutes later I was in my own room,
feeling thoroughly ashamed of myself. I had
not permitted the Earl of Greatlands to finish
his preposterous compliment. But I certainly
had disgraced myself in the eyes of my father,
of Lady Elizabeth, and of sundry other people
who witnessed my exit from the drawing-room
and its predisposing cause. For I had really
slapped the old earl’s face, even as I had threatened
to do. He would probably not annoy me
in the same way again. Indeed, it was problematical
if he would ever speak to me again; for,
after all, my conduct must seem inexcusable in
the opinion of all but myself. For how could I
expect any one else to understand how bitter it
was to me to have my lack of comeliness held
up to the laughter and contumely of more
favored mortals.</p>
<p class='c012'>Next morning, when I came down to breakfast,
I found my father awaiting my advent in
the morning room, and braced myself for the
reprimand which I knew to be inevitable. Said
reprimand was even more severe than I had anticipated,
but my affectionate parent displayed
such a total lack of the consideration which I
felt was the due of my own wounded feelings,
that, somehow, I no longer felt sorry for what
I had done, but maliciously resolved to adopt
equally drastic measures if ever I should be insulted
in like manner again.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I was never so ashamed in my life,” supplemented
Belle, who had come in while my father
was talking, and had listened with a smile to
his lecture.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am glad to hear you say so,” said the
voice of Lady Elizabeth. “It really was a
shame to laugh when you saw how Dorrie was
being tormented.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed, it is Dora I was ashamed of, not
myself. It is not likely that I shall ever disgrace
myself in like manner.” So said Belle,
and then the very absurdity of the suggestion
that she would ever be tormented for the same
reason that I had been provoked the girl to irresistible
laughter, and served to prove how
utterly heartless she could really be where my
feelings were concerned.</p>
<p class='c012'>That afternoon the earl rode over to Sunny
Knowe and surprised me by greeting me even
more cordially than ever. Evidently he thought
me too insignificant and childish to be offended
with, while I considered that the best thing I
could do would be to make no further allusion to
yesterday’s <i>contretemps</i>. He did not seem inclined
to tease me any more, and the remainder
of that day passed pleasantly, as did many more
ere we returned to the Grange.</p>
<p class='c012'>When at last we were installed in our old
home again, we were astonished at the wonderful
improvements that money and taste had been
able to effect in and around it. It was now a
grand old place, worthy of the imposing view
it commanded and the fine trees by which its
grounds were dotted. My father both looked
and felt like a rich landed proprietor, as he surveyed
the realm which, thanks to Lady Elizabeth’s
income, he would be able to support in a
style becoming the dignity of the Courtneys,
who had once owned all the land for miles
around. A new wing had been added, for the
comfort of Lady Elizabeth, whose rooms were
situated here, and who had brought such a
quantity of beautiful new furniture with her
that the Grange was a veritable palace of delight
to Belle and myself, who had never known
anything but shabby surroundings. My bedroom
was now of my own choosing, and had
been furnished exactly like Belle’s.</p>
<p class='c012'>I wrote glowing accounts to Jerry of all that
was being done, and was especially careful to
give him full details concerning Bobby and
Teddy, and the rats and rabbits. Poor Jerry!
he was to have come home for the Christmas
holidays, and they were close at hand when a
serious accident befell him. He had been too
venturesome in some of the school sports, with
the result that he had a severe fall and fractured
his right leg. His father was telegraphed for at
once and lost no time in reaching him. Meanwhile,
the boy had been treated by a skillful surgeon,
and there was every prospect of his progressing
satisfactorily toward recovery. But it
was deemed inadvisable to move him at present,
so poor Jerry had to forego his anticipated holiday
at home.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I felt awfully sorry for Kendall,” he wrote
in his weekly letter home, “because his father
and mother were dead, and he would have to
spend his holidays at school. Now I am jolly
well glad, for he will be company for me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>It must not be imagined that Jerry was particularly
selfish in expressing himself thus. It
was only his youthful vagueness that was at
fault. The writing, under the circumstances,
was hardly legible. But I thought it very brave
of the child to write at all.</p>
<p class='c012'>Meanwhile, Christmas approached and passed
with comparative uneventfulness. True, Lord
Egreville had proposed to Belle. But she had
declined to give him a definite answer, on the
plea that she was too young to be engaged just
now; the truth being that she was determined
not to labor under the disadvantage of being
already out of the running when she went to
London for the season.</p>
<p class='c012'>A house in town had been rented for us, and
in due course we all migrated thither. I had
hardly expected to be introduced to London
society yet, and Belle openly grumbled at the
idea. But Lady Elizabeth generally got her
own way in everything, and when she intimated
that there was no reason why I should
not enjoy myself like the rest there was no
opposition from my father. Arrived in London,
however, I found that people were by no means
inclined to make a fuss over me, while the
“beautiful” Miss Courtney was fêted and courted
to her heart’s content.</p>
<p class='c012'>Still, the proposals she had confidently expected
were somewhat chary in realizing themselves,
and when they did come they were not
as superlatively tempting as they might have
been. The fact was, it was pretty generally
known that Belle would have no dowry to speak
of, and though plenty of young aristocrats admired
her immensely, they deemed it advisable
to offer their affections and society at the shrine
of Mammon. There were a couple of millionaires
in the market. But, incredible as it seemed
to Belle, there were other girls in London whose
physical charms equaled her own, and to these
other girls the millionaires succumbed.</p>
<p class='c012'>Belle fumed. Belle raged. Belle almost anathematized.
Belle hated her victorious rivals.
But Belle was wily, and presented an unruffled
front in the presence of Lady Elizabeth and her
relatives. She made the most of the proposals
she did get, but professed her inability to love
the proposers. Love, indeed! Could such a
beautiful sentiment find an entrance into her
cold breast? Impossible! What she coveted
was wealth and station, and when, toward the
end of the season, Lord Egreville’s proved to be
the most eligible offer, she accepted him, and
had the felicity of seeing her engagement recorded
in all the society papers.</p>
<p class='c012'>I had an idea that the Earl of Greatlands did
not care much for Belle, but had never presumed
to give utterance to my suspicion. Lady Elizabeth,
however, was not quite so reticent.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I wish you every happiness, dear,” she said
to Belle, kissing her warmly, “and I think that
you and Cyril will prove very congenial companions;
but I am not sure that my father will
like to see any mistress at the castle, other than
his own wife, so long as he lives.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But your father has not got a wife!” exclaimed
Belle, with rising resentment at what
she considered Lady Elizabeth’s presumption;
for, by her engagement to her brother, she was
prospectively lifted to the same plane of relationship,
and but for the favors which her stepmother
could bestow upon her, she would at
once have merged the respect due to a mother
in the aggressive equality which she deemed a
sister-in-law’s meed.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth’s reply startled us all.</p>
<p class='c012'>“He has no wife at present,” she said, “but I
have good reason for asserting that he contemplates
marriage at an early date, provided the
lady of his choice condescends to accept
him.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Condescends to accept him!” I knew very
well what was the gist of Belle’s thoughts, as
she sat with a sullen and dismayed face, without
making even a pretense of eating the dainty
fare which lay on her breakfast plate.</p>
<p class='c012'>Who wouldn’t condescend to accept him?
Wasn’t he nearly seventy years old? And
wasn’t he likely to die ere many years were
over, leaving his widow in the untrammeled
possession of a title that would give her the
<i>entrée</i> to any society? He was sure, too, to
scrape and save all he could to provide for his
widow after his death, and that would mean a
considerable curtailment of the allowance which
Lord Egreville looked for on his marriage. Besides,
if the earl brought a countess to the castle,
and Lord Egreville was asked to retire to the
dower-house with his bride, her position would
be by no means so imposing as she had expected
it to be. Residence at the castle, as its nominal
mistress, had been one of Lord Egreville’s
special pleas when urging his suit, and, next to
the acquisition of the secondary title, with the
prospect of a succession to the primary one, had
been one of her chief reasons for considering
him much more of an eligible <i>parti</i> than her
other suitors.</p>
<p class='c012'>And then, oh, horror! suppose the earl’s new
wife should be young! Suppose there should
actually be a child born! Why Cyril would be
still further despoiled to provide for the bringing
up of the little brat. True, he could not be
robbed of his prospective right to the earldom,
as he was the eldest son. But an active fancy
could easily picture no end of humiliations for
him and his wife, if the foolish old earl were
permitted to bring his infatuation for some
pretty face into fruition.</p>
<p class='c012'>That these thoughts flew through Belle’s brain
in the sequence in which I have recorded them
is more than I am able to vouch for. But I
knew her temperament and disposition so well
that I had no hesitation in guessing the direction
of her reflections.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I believe you are just saying all this to try
me,” she said at last, looking up at Lady Elizabeth
with a face from which she was trying to
banish some of the shadows. “Now I come to
think of it, he spends the greater part of his
time with us, and if he were attracted by anybody
in London, he would be more likely to
seek her society than ours.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth smiled very mysteriously, but
did not vouchsafe a more explicit reply.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Papa,” said Belle, impatiently, “suppose
you look up from that stupid paper and take
a little intelligent interest in what is going on
around you. It’s perfectly exasperating to see
you absorbed in an account of a shooting or fishing
expedition, when the future of your eldest
daughter is being discussed.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My eldest daughter, eh? To be sure, I have
two daughters, but the future of one of them is
considerably in embryo yet, I should imagine.
And what do you wish me particularly to say?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Have you known anything of the earl’s intention
to get married?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, really, now you mention it, I did hear
some time ago that he was on the lookout for a
suitable spouse, but I fancy the old party hasn’t
turned up yet.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Just what I think. Lady Elizabeth has
simply been teasing me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, my dear, do you happen to know anything
definite about the matter?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Appealed to thus directly, Lady Elizabeth replied
guardedly, “I have really been given to
understand that my father would like to get
married. But I am not at liberty to disclose
the name of the lady whom he would like to
marry.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“At least tell me whether she is old or
young,” appealed Belle, anxiously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, she is several years younger than my
father, I believe.”</p>
<p class='c012'>With this answer Belle was forced to be satisfied,
and shortly afterward we all left the
breakfast-room.</p>
<p class='c012'>As for me, I had listened to the foregoing
conversation with considerable interest, but not
with the absorbed attention which might perhaps
have been aroused in me, if I had had the
least idea that the doings of the Earl of Greatlands
could possibly affect myself. After all,
I was really sorry for Belle. But perhaps the
earl’s marriage might not affect her so adversely
as she feared.</p>
<p class='c012'>At eleven o’clock Lord Egreville came to see
Belle. I do not know the exact purport of their
conversation with each other, but I do know
that when Belle’s <i>fiancé</i> left the drawing-room
he looked much less pleasant than when he entered
it, and hardly seemed to have time to
speak to the earl, who was announced at this
juncture. Thinking I would have an hour’s
uninterrupted practice on my violin, I went up
to my own room, but was summoned thence
by-and-by.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Please, Miss Dora,” said Lady Elizabeth’s
maid, “you are wanted in the library.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“<i>I</i> am wanted in the library!” I echoed, in
surprise. “Why, who can possibly want me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I do not know. It was milady who sent me
to ask you to go down to the library.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is Lady Elizabeth there?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, she is in her boudoir. Mr. Courtney is
with her.”</p>
<p class='c012'>At first it struck me as very singular that
there should be a caller who wished to see me
alone, and then I reflected that my music-master
had perhaps found it inconvenient to give me
my music lesson at the usual hour, and had
come to ask me to change the time. Full of
this thought, I hurried downstairs, but was
very much surprised to be confronted, not by
Signor Tringini, but by the Earl of Greatlands.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear child, how astonished you look,” he
said, as, coming forward and taking my hand,
he conducted me courteously to a seat.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well,” I replied, “I cannot conceive what
can be your object in desiring an interview with
me. But perhaps there has been a mistake, and
it is Belle you want.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed, it is not Belle I want, but your very
own self.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I hope I have not been doing anything to
call forth your particular displeasure. I have
really tried to be on my best behavior with
everybody since I came to London.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You have not displeased me yet. But you
will displease me very much, if you refuse to
grant the request I have come to make of you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then I will do the best I can to avert your
threatened displeasure by promising to grant
your request beforehand.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ah, my dear, if I were inclined to take an
unfair advantage, I would rejoice exceedingly
over that promise. As it is, I am terribly afraid
that you may retract it. Do you happen to have
heard of my intention to get married, if I can
persuade a certain lady to accept me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, Lady Elizabeth spoke of it this morning.
But she would not give us any clew to the
lady’s identity, and I, at least, am very curious
about her. I hope she is a nice old lady, and
that she will like me. You see, she will be a
sort of grandmother-in-law to me—with your
permission.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Grandmother fiddlesticks! She isn’t old
enough to be anybody’s grandmother. Can’t
you guess who it is?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, no. How should I? I do not know
so very many of your friends, and I really do
not know anybody that would seem to be a suitable
Countess of Greatlands.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, it seems to me that for all-round obtuseness
you beat everything! Do you think it
likely that I would seek a private interview with
you, in order to tell you of my intention to ask
some one else to marry me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then why have you come to see me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why? Only to ask you to take pity on a
lonely old man, and marry him. Look here,
child, don’t jump up and look angry, for I really
mean it. You are the only woman I would
care to marry, and if you refuse to marry me
I will have nobody else.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Good gracious! how can a girl marry her
grandfather? Do you forget that you are my
stepmother’s father?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And what of that? We are not really related.
Now don’t be hasty, my dear. Think of
all I can do for you, and of all you can do for
me. You shall have anything and everything
you want, and be presented at Court. As the
Countess of Greatlands you will be courted and
sought after. But you can do much more for
me than that. You can make the short span of
life which yet remains to me perfectly happy.
Say yes, my dear, and my love and gratitude
will know no bounds.”</p>
<p class='c012'>But I could not say yes for a while. Yet
neither could I say no. My astonishment was
almost too great for words. Still, I was not
displeased at the dazzling prospect held out to
me. Reflect, dear reader, before you blame,
that I had always been told that I need never
hope to win the affection of any man, and that,
while those around me basked in the sunshine
of family joys, the man did not exist who would
care to cast in his lot with mine. True, this
man was old, and he was almost decrepit. But
he had singled me out from the many others who
would gladly have become Countess of Greatlands.
In doing so, he had done me an honor
of which I was fully sensible, and it was such
a joy to me to have become the best beloved of
even an old man that my heart prompted me to
say “yes,” as he desired.</p>
<p class='c012'>Still, certain scruples would obtrude themselves
upon my notice, and counseled a little
hesitation.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Belle?” I faltered at last. “I cannot! It
would make such a difference to Belle.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“It will not make the slightest difference to
Belle, I assure you, Dorrie. She is too vain
and frivolous for me to care about living in the
same house with her. Whether I marry or not,
Cyril and she will have to content themselves
with the dower-house during my lifetime. It is
the same with the title. They cannot have it
until I am gone, and your present possession of
it will not keep them out of it one day after it
accrues to them. Come, my dear, end my suspense,
and keep the promise you made me a
while ago.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My father? And Lady Elizabeth?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Have no solid objections to offer.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Neither had I after that. But, somehow, the
enraptured kiss with which my old lover sealed
our engagement was not the sort of thing I had
pictured in my day-dreams, and I involuntarily
shivered under his caresses.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What is it, my little pet, are you cold?” he
asked solicitously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Just a little,” was my evasive answer.
“This room always seems chilly. But that does
not matter. Tell me, for it seems so strange,
how it is that you actually want to marry <i>me</i>,
of all people in the world. Look how ugly I
am!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You are not ugly to me, my dear. Besides,
I am past thinking outward appearance the sole
recommendation and guarantee of a happy life.
I need more than mere outward beauty.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And you think you have found it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am sure I have found it! And now, my
love, with your permission, I will remain here
until your father comes. I shall see you again
later in the day.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Having thus virtually received my dismissal,
I sped up to my own room, but not before my
ardent lover had claimed another kiss as his due.</p>
<p class='c012'>Did I feel glad?</p>
<p class='c012'>Or did I feel dismayed?</p>
<p class='c012'>I was really unable to tell myself which sensation
predominated. I met Belle on the landing,
and was conscious of a strange feeling of
trepidation, which made me slink into my own
room like some one guilty of a mean action.</p>
<p class='c012'>Oh, dear! how could I ever face them all? I
thought. How could I ever have the presumption
to pose as the superior in rank and family
prestige to my beloved stepmother? Why, if I
married her father, I should be <i>her</i> stepmother.
And my sister’s mother-in-law! And my father’s
mother-in-law, too! And—could it be possible?—my
own step-grandmother! There were no
end of complications involved in the new arrangement;
and, as I pondered over them, I
became more and more doubtful as to the propriety
of accepting the grand future held out to
me. And yet, if I could do so without repugnance
on my part, and with an honest determination
to prove that the earl had acted wisely in
selecting me as the wife of his old age, why
should I not become a great lady? Why—</p>
<p class='c012'>But my conjectures were interrupted at this
juncture by a very unusual event. Belle had
actually come to visit me in my own room! I
knew instinctively, however, that her visit
boded me no good, and when I looked up into
her face, I saw that she was in a demoniacal
temper.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is it true?” she cried, as she flung herself
on a chair just in front of me. “Is it true that
you have actually deluded that old imbecile into
offering marriage to you? My father has just
told me that you are to become the Countess of
Greatlands at a very early date. But the news
is too monstrous for belief! A hideous little
reptile like you to lord it over me! A shrimp of
a girl, whose <i>gauchérie</i> and ill-manners are proverbial,
to dare to assume airs of superiority
over me! I tell you it shall not be. I will not
have it. Sooner than endure such a humiliation
I would—I would—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And pray what would you do?” I asked,
not with the compunction I had felt a while ago
at the idea of relegating my beautiful sister to
a secondary position. Nor yet with the anger
which had blazed up in me on hearing the commencement
of her virago-like harangue. But
with the cool contempt of one who feels that her
position is impregnable, and that her assailant
is beneath consideration. “And how will you
prevent an arrangement with which you are not
of sufficient importance to be permitted to interfere?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Perhaps it was astonishment at the unwonted
courage with which I met her assault. Perhaps
it was a sudden access of prudence. But whatever
the cause, the effect was the same. Belle
declined to tell me how she would prevent my
marriage with the earl. But she continued to
revile me for some minutes as treacherous, deceitful
and scheming, and wound up by saying
that I need not congratulate myself upon my
seeming triumph, as Lord Egreville would certainly
not permit his father to perpetrate the
folly he contemplated, even if he had to swear
that he was no longer responsible for his actions.</p>
<p class='c012'>To all this I steadfastly refused any further
reply, and, becoming tired of leveling abuse
which seemed to make no impression, Belle left
the room as suddenly as she had entered it.
Once alone, I found that my own feelings with
regard to the coming event had undergone a
complete revolution. I no longer entertained
the slightest doubt as to the propriety of having
consented to accept the earl. On the contrary,
I was strongly determined to fulfill my promise,
and to remove myself forever from the tyranny
of Belle’s reproaches and airs of superiority.
Very much to my own surprise, too, I felt very
indignant at the slights cast upon the earl, and
found my heart warm considerably toward him.
For, when I came to think of it, he had always
treated me kindly, and even when I thought he
was deliberately insulting me, he must really
have meant what he said. That his taste was
peculiar, to say the least, was patent even to
myself, but that was all the more reason for
gratitude and love on my part.</p>
<p class='c012'>Gratitude? Yes, that was undoubted. Love?
Why not? Surely it is not so very hard for the
one to engender the other.</p>
<p class='c012'>Presently Lady Elizabeth came to my door
and asked my permission to enter. This was
readily given, though I already felt very much
overwrought, and dreaded the coming interview.
But I need not have been uneasy about
that; for, as usual, my good stepmother had only
my welfare at heart.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am afraid Belle has been giving you an
uncomfortable time of it,” she said, drawing a
chair toward me and kissing me affectionately.
“She is fuming in the drawing-room, and has
sent for Cyril to consult with him as to what
is best to be done in this remarkable crisis.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And you?” I asked beseechingly. “Do you
think I have been a scheming, wicked girl,
and that I have done wrong in accepting the
earl?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Certainly not, my child. I have known for
some time that my father wished to make you
his wife. Indeed, he consulted me as to the
wisdom of doing so, and I gave my unqualified
approval to his project. Seeing that he had set his
heart on having a young wife, I preferred to see
you in that capacity rather than any one else.
But I hope that you are fully alive to the duties
that will be expected of you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed yes,” I answered soberly. “I mean
to do all in my power to make the earl happy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That is right. If you think only of promoting
his happiness, your own will come, as a
matter of course. But tell me, have you any
idea that the ceremony is expected to take place
almost immediately?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh no! how can it? I am too young yet to
marry.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear, in a case like this the bride’s youth
counts for nothing, and the bridegroom’s age
carries all other considerations before it. Your
father also agrees that it is best to make immediate
arrangements, and there is really no reason
why you should not be married next week.”</p>
<p class='c012'>And somehow it was all decided, almost without
referring again to me, that on the following
Wednesday I should be transformed into the
Countess of Greatlands. I have no doubt that
society partially echoed Belle’s sneers and voted
the earl half crazy. But if it did, its criticisms
did not trouble me, and I was supremely happy
as I reveled in the lavish preparations that were
being made for the great event. Belle’s wedding
was indefinitely postponed, although it had
at first been spoken of as an almost immediate
event.</p>
<p class='c012'>So far as I could judge, Lord Egreville was
as bitterly opposed to the earl’s wedding as Belle
was. He was just distantly civil to me, and I
took no trouble to ingratiate myself with him.
Sometimes, when the couple sat whispering in a
corner, I surprised an occasional glance that was
positively malignant in its intensity of hatred.
Once or twice I remembered my sister’s assertion
that she would prevent my marriage, and
wondered vaguely if she were really hatching
some plot against me. Then a certainty that it
was out of her power to harm me consoled me
once more, and I pursued the happy tenor of my
way, all my time occupied either by the earl’s
visits or by my initiation into further gayeties
of attire.</p>
<p class='c012'>The wedding itself was to be a very quiet
affair, and as soon as it was over my husband
was going to take me into Derbyshire for a
week. Then we were to go to the castle, which
was being rapidly prepared for my reception.</p>
<p class='c012'>And so the time flew on, until Tuesday came
round once more. To-morrow was to be my
wedding day.</p>
<p class='c012'>To-morrow! Oh, that dreadful to-morrow!
Shall I ever forget it as long as I live?</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER IV.<br/><span class='small'>“There will be no wedding to-day.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>That night I went to bed hoping to the last
that Belle would relent and say a kindly word
to me. For after all, she was the only sister I
had, and I would have been thankful to have
been reconciled with her. But she was as implacable
as ever, and never uttered one kindly
word to me amid all the congratulations of
others; although Lady Elizabeth had, I know,
remonstrated with her on her unsisterly behavior.
My father did not care to interfere in
the matter, especially as his sympathies were
all in favor of his eldest daughter.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was up betimes, for we were to be at the
church at ten o’clock. I had been sorely exercised
about the choice of a wedding dress, as I
feared that white would make me look more
hideous than usual. But Lady Elizabeth had
persuaded me to have a creamy satin, and,
somehow, as I surveyed myself in the glass, I
was not quite so dissatisfied with the result as
I had expected to be. The freckles had found
the London atmosphere uncongenial, and had
departed, I fervently hoped forever. My complexion
too had changed from a muddy hue to
a clear dark olive which, though far from being
satisfactory, was a considerable improvement
on its former condition. My hair, thanks to the
skillful treatment of Lady Elizabeth’s maid,
had grown much thicker, and looked rather
nice than otherwise.</p>
<p class='c012'>But, in spite of these improvements, I was
still an ugly, insignificant-looking slip of a girl,
and I lost myself in wonderment at the thought
of such great good fortune coming to me. There
were to be no bridemaids, only a few personal
friends having been invited to church, though
there was to be a reception at the house afterward.
Belle had at first declared her intention
of refusing to accompany us to church. But
perhaps the thought that she would, by holding
herself aloof, betray to the world at large how
deeply chagrined she was, induced her to alter
her mind.</p>
<p class='c012'>Still, when I saw her in the hall, just before
we started, I could not account for her unusual
appearance. She was positively livid, and shook
every now and then in the strangest manner.
Both my father and Lady Elizabeth conceived
the idea that she must be ill, but she assured
them that there was nothing the matter with her.</p>
<p class='c012'>“But of course one feels a little excited at seeing
one’s sister so suddenly raised to splendor,”
she said, with a side glance at me which displayed
so curious a mixture of fear and hatred
that I lost all my good spirits, and was driven
to church in an unaccountable state of nervousness
and trepidation, which was increased when
I saw that the bridegroom and Lord Egreville,
who was to officiate as best man, were not here
first, according to arrangement.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am surprised they are not here yet,” whispered
Lady Elizabeth. “Never mind, dear, they
are sure to come soon.”</p>
<p class='c012'>So I thought, too. But for the life of me I
could not hinder the tears which came to ease
my head and my heart, both of which were in a
state of painful tension. By-and-by, I looked
up to see Belle’s eyes fixed upon me once more.
But what had wrought a change in her again?
Her expression was no longer one of fear, but of
victory. The hatred was there yet, and that
did not surprise me. But how to account for the
unmistakable triumph which I had seen manifest
itself on her face for a moment?</p>
<p class='c012'>Like a flash her words recurred to me: “I
tell you, it shall not be! I will not have it!
Sooner than endure such a humiliation I
would—”</p>
<p class='c012'>Ah! what would she do? What <i>had</i> she
done? I asked myself anxiously. Something
decisive. Something disastrous to me, I knew,
or her face would not have worn that momentary
impress of a purpose accomplished. Somehow,
through all the weary waiting that followed,
my powers of observation and deduction
seemed strung to their highest pitch. I noticed
that as the moments dragged on without bringing
the two gentlemen, Lady Elizabeth and my
father grew momentarily more anxious. And I
also noticed that Belle no longer looked expectantly
toward the door, as every one else kept
doing, but that she bore all the appearance of
one whose desires were accomplished.</p>
<p class='c012'>At last, unable to bear the suspense any
longer, my father rose from his seat, and, whispering
to Lady Elizabeth that he was going to
the earl’s temporary town residence, to ascertain
the cause of the strange delay, he left the church
without further preamble, my acutely attuned
ears shortly afterward hearing the rattling of
his cab-wheels down the street.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth, who sat next to me, put a
caressing hand upon my own, and whispered:
“Do not look so frightened, child. I do not
suppose they will be long in coming now.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“They will never come!” was my reply, intended
only for my comforter’s ears. “They
will never come! Something dreadful has happened,
and Belle knows it. See how calm and
self-satisfied she is now. Remember the state
she was in before she came. She vowed that
my marriage should not take place. She has
made her vow come true!”</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth cast a startled glance at Belle,
but had no time to comment upon my words,
for at this moment we heard an excited hubbub
near the door, and Marvel, the earl’s valet, came
down the aisle with a face which advertised bad
news.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Will your ladyship please leave the church
as quickly as you can?” he said to my stepmother.
“And take the bride with you. <i>There
will be no wedding to-day.</i>”</p>
<p class='c012'>“For God’s sake, tell me what is the matter!”
she exclaimed. “Something dreadful has happened
to my father!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“An accident has occurred to him,” said
Marvel, with an attempt to speak as if it were
nothing serious. But his voice broke in the
endeavor, and he sobbed forth: “Oh, my poor
master! it is too dreadful!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What is the matter with him?” cried Lady
Elizabeth, fairly shaking the man in the intensity
of her excitement and dread. “Tell me at
once.”</p>
<p class='c012'>When I heard Marvel’s reply, I neither
shrieked nor fainted. For I had felt sure that
he would say what he did.</p>
<p class='c012'>“He is dead!” he said, and my eyes, flaming
and accusing now, at once sought Belle’s, flashing
my conviction of her guilt in her face.
Under that glance she reeled as if from a blow.</p>
<p class='c012'>I hardly know what else happened that morning.
I went home as in a dream, feeling somehow
more sorry for Lady Elizabeth than for
myself, and wondering if they would hang Belle
when it was discovered that she had murdered
the earl; for my mind refused to disabuse itself
of a conviction of her guilt, although reason
pointed to the conclusion that it was impossible
for her to have injured the earl, seeing that she
had not seen him, or spoken to him, for twenty
hours.</p>
<p class='c012'>The wedding guests returned to their own
homes, there to discuss the sensational interruption
to what some of them had voted the most
sensational wedding of the season. My father
reached home soon after we did, and confirmed
Marvel’s story in every detail. The Earl of
Greatlands had been found by Marvel, who had
grown alarmed when he did not rise at eight
o’clock, lying in ghastly rigidity in the bed
which he had sought some hours earlier in apparently
unusually buoyant health and spirits.
A glance convinced Marvel that life was quite
extinct, and a moment later he was rousing the
household with shouts and cries. Of course
everybody came rushing up to the earl’s room.
And of course several doctors were summoned
at once. But it was only too patent from the
very first that there was no hope, and though
there was much loud lamentation on the part of
the servants, and quite a touching display of
sorrow on the part of Lord Egreville, or, rather,
the new Earl of Greatlands, it was not of the
slightest avail, and the fiat speedily went forth
to the world that Lionel, ninth Earl of Greatlands,
being in an unusually excited state, owing
to his prospective marriage, had succumbed to
unsuspected heart disease.</p>
<p class='c012'>Nearly all the world accepted this explanation
of the tragic event which had, at one blow,
deprived me of husband, wealth, title, position
and influence, and had converted Lord Egreville
into the peer he longed to be.</p>
<p class='c012'>But not for one moment did I believe that the
doctors had given anything like a true diagnosis
of the cause of the late earl’s death. There is a
fashion in everything, even in matters of life
and death, and nowadays it seems to be an epidemical
fashion with medical men to ascribe
every sudden death of which they do not understand
the cause to unsuspected heart disease.
The explanation is plausible, and, in all likelihood,
more often than not correct, although
there is a strong element of guess-work about it.
Post mortem examinations are horrible and unpleasant
contingencies to contemplate, and the
feelings of relatives and friends are apt to be
cruelly wounded by the bare mention of such a
<i>dernier resort</i>.</p>
<p class='c012'>Of course it would have been extremely painful
for all parties concerned if an inquest over
the remains of the Earl of Greatlands had been
suggested; but I never doubted for one instant
that such a course would have resulted in the
discovery of foul play, such as only I—and one
other, as subsequent events proved—suspected.</p>
<p class='c012'>Suspected! do I say? It was no mere suspicion
with me. It was a firm and rooted conviction,
that nothing but absolute proof to the
contrary could ever dispel. And that proof,
since no one broached the advisability of an
inquest, was not likely to be afforded me. No
doubt there was considerable marvel in some
people’s minds concerning my manner of bearing
the sudden reverse of fortune which had befallen
me, but their opinion troubled me little,
and it was not likely that I would occupy the
minds of sensation-mongers long after I had
been relegated to my former status of insignificant
obscurity. Tears did not often come to
relieve the aching weight which oppressed me,
as I pondered in what perhaps struck those who
were unable to gauge my real feelings as a hard
and defiant mood.</p>
<p class='c012'>How could they tell, however, that the grief I
felt for the loss of the man who had loved me
outweighed my regret for my lost glories, since
I let very few words of sorrow escape me? Indeed,
I dared not indulge in comments with any
one, for I feared lest the horror and loathing
which I now felt for my sister and her <i>fiancé</i>
should break the bounds in which I had resolved
for the time being to entrammel them, and overflow
in a torrent of bitter denunciation and invective.
I should imagine that there are few girls
of stronger passions for love or for hatred than
myself, and I sometimes caught myself wondering
how I managed to refrain from publicly denouncing
those whom I firmly believed to be the deliberate
murderers of my dear old earl; for I hated
them with a hatred that was consuming in its
wild intensity. Yes, my hatred was of fearful
force. But I was swayed by an even stronger
passion, which held it at bay.</p>
<p class='c012'>This was my love for Lady Elizabeth, the
first being who, since my mother died, had
opened her heart to me, and who was now prostrated
by a nervous attack, due to grief at the
loss of her father, between whom and herself
the strongest sympathy had always existed. She
had of late admitted me largely into her confidence,
and I had gained so much knowledge of
her nature that I knew what a bitter blow such
family disgrace would be to her as would overtake
us all were my convictions shared by others.
For my father’s sake I would not have repressed
my wild longing for vengeance. For Lady
Elizabeth’s sake I could have submitted to make
an even greater sacrifice.</p>
<p class='c012'>But even my great love for her could not induce
me to hold friendly intercourse with Belle,
or to withhold the fierce glances of accusation
under which the new Earl of Greatlands writhed
in impotent rage. He saw that I suspected evil-doing
of some sort on his part, and he resented
my glances at first by frowns of defiance. But
somehow, when I continued to maintain steadfastly
the antagonistic attitude I had assumed,
he grew manifestly uneasy, and even went so
far as to presume to address words of sympathy
to me, which implied that he imagined me to
cherish animosity against him merely because
he was occupying the place of the man who was
to have been my husband, and suggested that
he hoped I would no longer hold aloof from him
and Belle as if I thought they had done me an
injury.</p>
<p class='c012'>To this misjudged attempt to induce me to
bury the hatchet I vouchsafed no response but
a cold stare of contempt and a curl of the lip
which spoke volumes. Indeed, so potent was
this mute answer of mine that the earl almost
ceased to visit our house, and my father was informed
by Belle that my violence and ill manners
had succeeded in depriving her to a great
extent of her lover’s society.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dora,” said my affectionate parent to me one
morning after breakfast, “I am sorry to observe
that you have lapsed into your former ill-conditioned
state of selfish ill-breeding. I have made
all due allowance for the disappointment you
must have felt at being prevented from becoming
the great lady you expected to be. But I
have noticed with growing displeasure that you
are venting your spleen in an unjustifiable manner
upon Belle. Certainly, she is going to occupy
the position you thought would be yours, but
she is doing you no personal injury thereby, for
your chances are irrevocably gone, and she was
engaged to the present Earl of Greatlands before
the marriage between yourself and his father
was arranged. It is therefore abominable that
you should try to make her life miserable by
driving her lover from the house, and doing
your best to produce an estrangement between
them; and if you continue your present behavior,
I shall insist upon your going to live at
the Grange until we are ready to leave London.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth was too ill to come downstairs,
and was, therefore, not present during
this harangue. Otherwise it would probably
not have been made; for, even in things that
wholly and solely concerned me, my father was
wont to show that consideration for his wife,
who loved me, that he would never have displayed
toward me for my own sake, and he
treated me with tolerable politeness when in her
presence. But when she was not there, he
showed the same unbounded partiality for Belle
and the same lack of sympathy for me which
had always distinguished our intercourse in the
past; and it is not surprising that my lately acquired
self-reliance prompted me to retort that
I was best aware of the motives of my conduct,
and that Belle was not likely to lose her lover
through me, since their destiny would henceforth
be ruled by the promptings of an evil
conscience.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You miserable little wretch!” exclaimed my
father. “How dare you speak to me in that
tone? And how dare you cast innuendoes
against Belle and Cyril which virtually amount
to an accusation?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“An accusation of what, sir?” I asked, with
a calm deliberateness which surprised even myself,
and caused my father to stagger as if he
had received a blow. And, indeed, he had received
such a blow as is to be hoped falls to the
lot of few fathers. For my looks and manner,
more than my words, had struck him with the
sudden conviction that his favorite child was suspected
of having at least been accessory to a mortal
crime. That the suspicion emanated from the
brain of another of his children mattered little
to him, for he already disliked me too intensely
to feel any heart-pangs on my account. It was
quite sufficient, however, to cause him to cast
aside the last shred of conventionality as regarded
his treatment of myself.</p>
<p class='c012'>What transpired during the next five minutes
I prefer not to relate. There are events in the
lifetime of most people which possess either too
sacred or too painful an interest for discussion
with others. The memory of my last interview
with my father awakes in me no emotion but
that of resentment at the constant injustice with
which he had always treated me, and which culminated
on this occasion in my expulsion from
his house.</p>
<p class='c012'>Perhaps he thought that I would not take him
at his word, and that at the end of the hour
which he had named as the limit of time he
would allow me in which to pack up my belongings
and rid my family of my presence, I
would weepingly sue for mercy and promise to
be polite and conciliatory to Belle and the Earl
of Greatlands. The mere supposition that I,
whose passions were of the strongest, could thus
do violence to my feelings, and acknowledge the
superiority of two people whom I hated and despised
with all my heart, for the sake of retaining
a home in which I could never hope to be
happy again, still serves to excite my indignation
and to provoke me to a feeling of resentment
which I would fain repudiate in my
calmer moments.</p>
<p class='c012'>For, after all, my father, poor man, was
blinded by his partiality for Belle; and although
he fully grasped the deadly import of my unspoken
suspicions, he never for a moment
doubted his beautiful darling’s goodness, but
accepted my attitude merely as a convincing
proof of the monstrosity of nature of one to
whom had been denied that outward fairness
which in his eyes was equal to the strongest
proof of inward purity. Thus I sometimes
reason, in attempted palliation of his harshness
to me. But, somehow, my reasoning has
an awkward knack of doubling upon itself and
transforming my would-be kindlier leanings into
the old imbittered resentment.</p>
<p class='c012'>My preparations for departure were soon
made, although as yet my brain was in too
great a turmoil to permit me to make a definite
plan for my future guidance. I must remove
myself and my belongings quickly. And I
must take my leave of Lady Elizabeth without
permitting her to be pained by a knowledge
of the permanent nature of the estrangement
between myself and my family. The
latter was a difficult feat for me to perform.
But I succeeded in going through the interview
in a manner which it pleased me to recall
during my subsequent sufferings; for my dear
stepmother was spared the pain which would
have been hers, if she had realized the anguish
of mind which my love for her caused me to
hide.</p>
<p class='c012'>I found her in her dressing-room, reclining
on a couch which was drawn up to the fire,
the day being somewhat chilly for the time of
year. I noted with a sudden foreboding dread
the change which the last few weeks had
wrought in Lady Elizabeth’s appearance. She
was paler, thinner, and altogether much more
fragile-looking than when, so short a time ago,
she had assisted me to select the trousseau for
my own marriage with her father. There was,
however, a light in her eyes which had, until
lately, been a stranger to them, and which had
caused me considerable uneasiness. For it gave
me the impression that it had its origin in a feeling
deeper even than the grief which an affectionate
daughter would naturally feel at the loss
of a beloved parent.</p>
<p class='c012'>Could it be that—oh, no! perish the thought!
Why should she be tortured by such suspicions
as had fixed their scorpion-fangs in my brain?
She could scarcely be so fully convinced of
Belle’s capacity for evil as I was, since she
had never known her until the glamour of her
artfulness and beauty was such as to cause nearly
every one who knew her to take a fancy to
her. Nor had she such deep reason to distrust
one of her own mother’s children as was the
case with me. Some hidden sorrow was sapping
her life’s strength. But I fervently and
sincerely prayed that it might not be the hideous
phantom of suspicion which was bidding
fair to wreck my own life.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have come to say good-by for a time,” I
said, speaking with wonderful quietness for one
whose brain was in a whirl of stormy emotion.
“As you know, things are not as pleasant as
they might be between Belle and myself, and
father and I have agreed that it will be best for
me to return to the Grange for a while. The
change will do me good, but I shall be grieved
to part from you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But, my dear, we are all going to the Grange
shortly,” said Lady Elizabeth, casting upon me
a look of anxious scrutiny. “Come here. Kneel
beside me, and tell me all about this sudden
arrangement. Have Belle and you been quarreling?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Belle and I have not been quarreling,” I
answered, as I dropped on my knees beside the
only woman in the world who loved me, and
stroked her white hand between my much less
shapely ones. “But you may have noticed that,
whether rightly or wrongly, I cannot feel happy
in her presence. The earl, your brother, too,
seems to be kept away from the house through
the antagonism which he and I feel for each
other. I feel as if it were wicked to dislike any
one nearly related to you. But, indeed, I cannot
help it. So you must forgive me, and let me go
from you now with nothing but the kindest and
most loving words from you; for, believe me, I
am more sorely in need of your sympathy than
ever I was, and could not bear to think of an
estrangement between you and me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dorrie, I have learned to love you, and I
know that you are not likely to form violent
antipathies without a cause. I also feel convinced
that your treatment of—of—my brother
is dictated by the strongest feeling on your part.
The nature of that feeling must remain unknown
to me, for I dread confirmation of certain
thoughts which fill my days and nights with
terror. Even should you prove to be actually
unjust to my brother, it will make no difference
between us. But, if you are really leaving town
before the rest of us do, you must promise me
one thing.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I will promise anything to you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I know your willingness to serve me, and I
think I can gauge your love for me, but I am
about to exact a great proof of both. Listen.
All my life I have yielded to the dictates of
family pride. I have been proud of my ancient
lineage and unsullied family escutcheon; so
proud, indeed, that I did not hesitate to ally
myself with one who had once been one of the
humblest sons of the people. I never dreamed
of the possibility of my being lowered to his
family level by marrying him, but was sure that
the prestige of my own connections would over-shadow
the possible vulgarity of his antecedents.
In marrying a wealthy commoner, of whose personal
worthiness I felt thoroughly convinced, I
hoped to be able to assist my family to a financial
position more commensurate with their social
status than the aristocratic impecuniosity which
had been our lot for many years, owing to the
extravagance of my grandfather, who had mortgaged
the greater part of the estate. My expectations
were fully justified. My husband was
kind and generous, and whatever my original
feelings toward him may have been, I can truthfully
say that his upright nature won my complete
loyalty and respect. I was certainly disappointed
to find myself comparatively poor
after his death. But I have had time to think
the matter over since then, and believe that the
people to whom he left the bulk of his money
must have needed it more than I did. I see
that you wonder why I am telling you all this.
I assure you I have a strong enough motive,
for I want you to realize that I would sacrifice
everything to the honor of my family—love,
happiness, even life itself. This being the case,
can you picture how terrible it would be to me
to see even the shadow of public disgrace fall
upon our name? That you have ample provocation
for a certain course of conduct which would
materially affect the interests of my brother,
and of your sister, I know. I also know that
you return the love I bear you. Let that love
outweigh the resentment you feel at the conduct
of others. If you are not inclined to spare <i>them</i>,
for God’s sake spare <i>me</i> the anguish which a
disclosure of your—of your suspicions would
cause me! You are leaving us for a time. I
implore you to have mercy upon an ancient
name.”</p>
<p class='c012'>By the time Lady Elizabeth had got thus far,
she was sobbing in uncontrollable excitement,
and clung to me with convulsive apprehension.
As for me, I was filled with grief at this disclosure
of the suffering which my dear one was
undergoing. I could no longer doubt that she
shared all my own painful suspicions, and that
to her distressed state of mind her recent physical
prostration was attributable. And I was
stabbed by the remorseful thought that I had
been the one to originate the dread suspicions
which were doing so much mischief. Was it
too late to undo the mischief? Could I hope to
remove the terrible burden of dread which oppressed
Lady Elizabeth? It was doubtful. But
there was too much at stake to warrant hesitation
on my part, and my course of conduct was
instantaneously mapped out.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mother,” I said, as quietly as my emotion
would permit, “I cannot pretend not to understand
the meaning of what you have just said.
But, oh! my dear, how could you think I meant
all that I implied to you on that terrible morning,
when I was beside myself with anxiety and
grief? Put away such thoughts from your
mind. It is the misfortune, not the fault, of
Cyril and Belle, that all the circumstances attending
recent events have seemed as if specially
guided for their interests. But if even I, who
am so great a loser by their advancement, can
say that my first suspicions were unjustifiable
and wicked, surely you can no longer think them
capable of a crime too atrocious for even ready-dyed
criminals to think of.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth suddenly raised her head and
literally gasped with mingled relief and amazement.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is it possible,” she cried, “that I have been
tormenting myself needlessly? That I have
foully wronged Cyril and Belle? That I have
mistaken your dislike to them for a stronger
sentiment—that of a thirst for justifiable revenge
for a deadly injury?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Quite possible. Think. Our dear old earl
could not have been expected to live very much
longer. He was happy. So happy, that he
was naturally excited. Excitement is not good
for weakly old people, and the skillful doctors
who were summoned were sure to be able to
judge of the real cause of death. You cannot
tell how much I regret having given audible expression
to a cruel suspicion. But you can do
as I have done—and repudiate it.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Do you repudiate it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Most certainly I do.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Thank God for that! You have lifted a
nightmare from my mind. Do you know that
the promise I wished to exact from you was that
you would at least spare me the suffering which
a denunciation of my brother Cyril would cause
me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“A denunciation! Ah, well—I don’t like
him. I never shall like him. But as there is
nothing to denounce, I can safely promise you,
nay, swear to you, that never, so long as you
live, will I, by word or deed, do aught that can
injure any member of your family or in any
way jeopardize its good name.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You swear this?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I swear it!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You have given me a new lease of life, my
darling, and by the time we join you at the
Grange you will see me almost as vigorous as
ever.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I hope so. But I must be off now, or I shall
not be ready when the cab comes round for me.
Good-by.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Good-by, my dear. I hope the change will do
you good. You too have been drooping lately.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I suppose I have. But country air will work
wonders, eh?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Another minute, and I had hurried out of
Lady Elizabeth’s room, with breaking heart and
whirling brain. Should I ever see her again?
To what had I pledged myself? I had, for her
sake, forsworn all my dreams of punishing those
whom I firmly believed to be the murderers of
the Earl of Greatlands. Certainly, I had never
intended to invoke the vengeance of the law
upon them, for I also had some regard to the
maintenance of the esteem in which the two
families were held by the world at large. But I
had meant to elucidate, by some means, the extent
of their culpability, and to show them up to
their relatives in all their hideous criminality,
leaving them to continue their career stripped
of the misplaced love and confidence that had
hitherto been so charily bestowed upon me.</p>
<p class='c012'>Surely this was but a feeble ideal of the punishment
due to a great crime which had deprived
me of everything that made my life worth living.
But I was now bereft of even this small
satisfaction, for I had, for the sake of Lady
Elizabeth, pledged myself to do nothing that
would reflect discredit upon her family. I had
even gone so far as to repudiate all my suspicions,
and so long as she lived I must do
nothing to re-awaken the terrors which had
been tormenting her of late.</p>
<p class='c012'>Does any one doubt that I found this sacrifice
of my personal inclinations very hard to bear?
or that it was not a real sacrifice to leave my
enemies to gloat unrestrainedly at the success
of their evil plotting? Or do they imagine that
the feelings I harbored were unjustifiable? If
so, let them imagine themselves in my position.
Let them picture all that I had lost and suffered,
and contrast my lot with what would have been
my condition had the earl’s life not terminated
when it did. True, I had as yet not the slightest
practical evidence to support my opinion of
the culpability of the new earl and his <i>fiancée</i>;
but as my personal conviction never admitted
the slightest doubt on that score, I found its
virtual abandonment all the harder to bear,
though nothing would now make me disregard
Lady Elizabeth’s wishes. And this I mention,
not for the sake of demonstrating my powers of
self-sacrifice, but to show how gratefully I reciprocated
the kindness of my stepmother, and
to show how my heart hungered for love, since
the lavishment of a little of it upon me had
power to arouse in me a feeling so passionate
as to be almost akin to worship.</p>
<p class='c012'>And now I was about to leave, probably forever,
the one being who cared for me. Small
wonder that the hard feelings which had hitherto
enabled me to keep my composure should
break down, and that the quick tears of utter
lonesomeness should chase each other down my
pale cheeks as I hurriedly gathered my belongings
together, and began to pack them in the
substantial trunks which had been provided by
Lady Elizabeth to hold the trousseau with which
her loving liberality had provided me.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Excuse me, Miss Dora, but my lady has
sent me to see if I can be of any use to you.
You are packing everything up? Then pray let
me do it for you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>I looked up through my tears, and saw Agnes,
my stepmother’s maid, standing ready to relieve
me of my task. She was in such evident sympathy
with me that at sight of her kindly face
my last shred of composure left me, and I wept
in such an abandonment of grief as only a feeling
of utter desolation can produce. Agnes was
frightened at the violence of my emotion and
did her best to console me. But I presently became
calmer, and thanking her for the trouble
she was taking, gladly availed myself of her
help in packing my boxes. I felt no hesitation
in taking everything that belonged to me, for
all I had worth having was due to the generosity
of Lady Elizabeth or of her father. To my
own father I owed nothing of which I was now
possessed, the last item of the unbecoming garments
which he had so grudgingly bestowed
upon me having disappeared long ago.</p>
<p class='c012'>In another half an hour I was ready to go,
and a few moments later the cab for which I
had sent was at the door. As I stepped into it
I glanced at the upper windows of the house
which was no longer a home for me. I saw
Lady Elizabeth, who had come to her window
to wave me a smiling good-by. Evidently no
one had yet told her that I was permanently
banished from my father’s house. I smiled and
kissed my hand to her, resolved that her last
glimpse of me should be as pleasant as possible.
Then my eyes sought the level of the drawing-room
windows, to see—what? My sister standing
there by the side of the Earl of Greatlands,
both of them displaying the greatest delight at
my departure, and both of them casting contemptuous
glances of triumph on a poor, homeless
girl whose presence near them was a continual
reproach.</p>
<p class='c012'>But their malevolence did not get all the satisfaction
it sought, for my glance wandered swiftly
upward again, and rested on my stepmother’s
smiling face, until I was driven out of sight altogether,
with such apparent unconsciousness of
their presence that they could not know I had
seen them. And thus I entered upon the battle
of life on my own account.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER V.<br/><span class='small'>“A maiden’s fancies.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>In spite of the turmoil of mind under which I
had labored since my interview with my father,
I had already formed somewhat definite plans
for my future.</p>
<p class='c012'>I had made all my arrangements as if I were
really going to the Grange, and had had my
boxes labeled accordingly. Thus Lady Elizabeth
had not alarmed herself about me, knowing
that my comfort would be looked after at the
Grange. My father, if he had taken the trouble
to make any inquiries about me, would also
think he knew whither I was bound; and, even
if visited by a faint feeling of compunction on
my behalf, would consider that I was as well off
in one place as in another.</p>
<p class='c012'>But since he had ordered me from his house,
I meant to take him literally at his word, and
had resolved never to cast my shadow within
any threshold of his again. I was but ill equipped
for earning my livelihood, but I had a certain
determination of purpose at whose bidding
I was prepared to cast aside all false pride, such
as might possibly throw obstacles in the way of
my progress. Thus I realized that it might
become necessary for me to adopt a means of
living perfectly honest and honorable in itself,
but which had hitherto never entered into the
calculations of a Courtney.</p>
<p class='c012'>Circumstances had precluded my having many
friends to whom I could turn in my present
need. But I felt that I could rely upon the vicar
of Moorbye and his kindly wife. Both the Rev.
Horace Garth and Mrs. Garth had always shown
some interest in me and in my doings, and they
were among the few people who seemed to be
uninfluenced by the physical disadvantages
which were such a sore source of trouble to me.
It was to the Moorbye vicarage, therefore, that
I resorted for aid and counsel in this my great
extremity. I felt some trepidation as I was
swiftly whirled along in the second-class compartment,
for which a sense of the necessity of
economizing the money I had at my disposal had
induced me to take a ticket. As to what kind
of traveling companions I had, it is impossible
for me to say, for I was too much engrossed with
my troubles to take notice of my surroundings.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Will the Garths welcome me, and do their
best for me; or will, they consider me to blame,
and wash their hands of me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>This was the question that was uppermost in
my mind, and I could scarcely refrain from putting
it into so many words, when, on alighting
at Moorbye Station, whom should I see but the
vicar himself welcoming two ladies who had
evidently traveled from town by the same train
which had conveyed myself.</p>
<p class='c012'>Leaving the porter, who gave me a respectful
recognition, to see after my luggage for the present,
I hurried up to the vicar and accosted him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mr. Garth, can you give me a moment’s private
conversation? If these ladies will kindly
excuse you, I will not keep you long.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, Dorrie! What brings you here just
now?” Mr. Garth exclaimed, as he, fortified by
the permission of his friends, walked along the
platform with me. “And how do you happen
to be traveling alone?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My father has turned me out of his house.
Until I can find some means of earning my living,
I have no one to whom I can go for counsel
but yourself. I hoped to have been able to stay
with you to-night, but I see you already have
visitors.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Tut, tut, child! As if that mattered. You
would always be welcome. Now, not a word
of all this until we can talk the matter over later
on. Meanwhile, come and be introduced to my
friends.—Oh, I say, Thompson, see that Miss
Courtney’s luggage is sent up to the vicarage
with the rest.—Ah, here we are! Mrs. Marshall,
I am glad to introduce to your notice Miss
Dora Courtney, who has kindly come to cheer
her old friends up a bit. Miss May, you will be
pleased to have a clever companion of your own
age while you are down here. Dorrie, these are
old friends and near relatives of ours, Mrs.
Frank Marshall and Miss May Morris.”</p>
<p class='c012'>What wonderful power there is in generous
good nature combined with tact! Five minutes
before I reached Moorbye Station I was among
the most miserable upon earth, wondering
whether even a civil welcome awaited me. Five
minutes after my arrival I was being bowled
toward the vicarage in Mrs. Garth’s funny little
governess car, and was laughing merrily with
the others at the small space at our individual
disposal.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear, I have an unexpected pleasure in
store for you. Here are our cousins, and here
is Dora Courtney, also come to favor us with a
visit.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Thus said the vicar, on our arrival at his
home. There was a warm welcome from Mrs.
Garth, supplemented by a somewhat boisterous
one from Master Vincent Garth, who betrayed
great curiosity concerning my outward appearance.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Do come right into the middle of the hall,
just for one minute,” he demanded, “while we
have a real good look at you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Quite unconscious of the purport of his impetuosity,
I laughingly obeyed him, the rest meanwhile
standing by in indulgent amusement.
For some seconds the child looked at me gravely.
Then his face became quickly clouded with disappointment,
and, considerably to the surprise
of us all, he burst into loud lamentations, of
which it was some time before we could gather
the meaning.</p>
<p class='c012'>“We don’t like her any better,” he sobbed.
“Susie said Miss Dora was to be a grand countess,
and we’ve looked at her, and she isn’t
turned grand. She’s just ugly.”</p>
<p class='c012'>I believe Mrs. Garth hoped and fancied that I
had not been able to understand Vinnie’s comments.
But I had not found it very difficult to
do so, and felt quite as much hurt as if this little
stab to my vanity had proceeded from a responsible
individual, instead of from an impulsive
child, though I strove to hide my humiliated
feelings as much as possible.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What a horrid child,” whispered Miss Morris,
as we passed up the fine old staircase, in the
wake of our hostess, on the way to the rooms
allotted to us. “He ought to be whipped for
insulting any one like that.”</p>
<p class='c012'>For a moment I was tempted to second her
remark. Then my better nature prevailed, as
I remembered how frank and generous Vinnie
really was.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I do not blame him,” I answered, somewhat
soberly, it must be confessed. “Vinnie was
only giving way to a natural disappointment,
and did not dream of hurting my feelings, I am
sure.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now look at the accommodation I have for
you, and tell me if you think it will do,” called
out Mrs. Garth’s rich voice from a room which
she and Mrs. Marshall had just entered. “I
have only two spare bedrooms, which open
out of this dressing-room,” she continued. “I
had intended the large room for Madge, and
the small one for May, but I am afraid I
must ask two of you to use one bedroom
jointly.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, how delightful!” exclaimed May, who
was evidently a very impulsive young lady.
“Madge can have the small room, and Dora and
I will sleep in the other. I may call you Dora,
mayn’t I? I hate ceremony, and, do you know,
I have taken quite a fancy to you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Of course all Miss May’s propositions were
cheerfully acquiesced in, and we were all three
soon occupied in unpacking our dinner-gowns.
In the dressing-room a cozy little fire shed its
comforting rays upon the pretty furniture and
draperies, and gave an aspect of cheerfulness to
the place which was by no means reflected in my
own heart, though I strove to banish all outward
semblance of dejection.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Fancy a fire in June!” laughed May, as she
insisted I should at once call her. “It strikes a
Londoner as rather odd; but, do you know, I’m
not at all sure that it isn’t quite cool down here.
I gather that you are a native of these parts,
Dora. Is it a usual thing to need fires in
summer?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“At the Grange,” I replied, as I fastened the
dinner-dress which I would rather have been excused
from wearing this evening, as I was both
tired and overwrought, and would gladly have
gone to bed, “at the Grange we seem to need
fires all the year round in some of the rooms.
Some parts of the neighborhood are inclined to
be rather marshy and damp, and as coals are
cheap about here, nearly everybody keeps the
chills off in the only possible way.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Good gracious! I hope it isn’t a fever-and-ague
sort of a neighborhood! What shall we
do if it is? We are invited down here for a
month, but if there is any danger in that direction,
I shall betake myself off again. Fancy
jerking your limbs first in one direction and
then in another, and pulling grimaces at people
just at the very moment when you want to be
most polite! It’s too awful to think about, and
I dare not risk it.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, you goose,” exclaimed Mrs. Marshall,
“you are mixing up fever-and-ague with an entirely
different complaint, called St. Vitus’s
Dance. It is a nervous affection, not likely to
be brought on by a chill.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And,” I added, “I don’t think you need
alarm yourself about fever-and-ague, either.
None of the Garth household have ever been
troubled with it, and we have always enjoyed
the same immunity at the Grange.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“The Grange. That’s where you live, isn’t
it?” inquired May. “It sounds quite old-worldish
and jolly. I can fancy all sorts of spirits
and hobgoblins disporting in its interminable
corridors and secret chambers. What is the
ghost like? Is it a woman dressed in gray silk,
and with a heartbroken look on a beautiful face?
And does she wring her hands, and cry, ‘Woe
is me!’ Or is it a man, looking fierce and
vengeful, and dragging clanking chains after
him? They are mostly either one or the other,
and oh! I forgot, the woman turns into a cat
sometimes, and stands mewing over a place
where there is a buried treasure. Isn’t it delightful
to think of? Dora, you must take me
to the Grange, and let me sleep with you one
night. Then we’ll watch for the ghost, and
perhaps we may solve the mystery of the treasure
and become rich beyond the wildest dreams
of avarice. And then I’ll write the ghost’s history.
Mr. Stoach is great on ghosts lately, but
our ghost tale will be much better and much
more thrilling than any he has got hold of. I
wonder if there are heaps of rubies and pearls
and diamonds and sapphires among the treasure.
It always is the case. Oh, won’t they be gorgeous!
Dora, we must go not later than to-morrow
night! I really cannot bear the suspense
any longer. What do you say?”</p>
<p class='c012'>But for a little while I was beyond saying
anything, for every time I tried to speak a fit
of laughter prevented the utterance of a single
intelligible word. Mrs. Marshall, too, though
she laughed like one who was more familiar
with Miss May’s flights of fancy and vagaries
than I was, enjoyed the situation thoroughly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s the way with May,” she smiled.
“You will get used to her by-and-by, no doubt.
She pictures the wildest things, and accepts the
freaks of her own imagination as gospel truth.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But,” interrupted May, whose face looked
comically anxious. “There is a ghost, isn’t
there? And there is a treasure, isn’t there?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m afraid that the Grange possesses neither
of those hall-marks of antiquity,” I responded,
as gravely as I could. “At least, I have never
heard of them.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s just it!” cried May, renewed hope
sparkling in her eyes. “Perhaps you are rather
nervous, and they didn’t like to tell you about
the ghost. But it’s there, all the same. Have
you never heard it pattering along the deserted
corridors, or tapping gently against the window
panes, to attract your attention, or sighing
mournfully through the keyhole, or—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“May, do be less absurd,” pleaded Mrs. Marshall.
“You will not be ready to go down with
us to dinner if you do not hurry up, instead of
standing chattering about rubbish.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Rubbish, indeed! Ghosts are not rubbish.
Treasure is not rubbish. I wish I had some of
the latter now, so that I could have a maid to
dress me. Dora, you must, you really must, let
us make a start at solving the mystery to-morrow.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But there is no mystery.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That remains to be seen. At any rate, you
will take me to the Grange to-morrow, will you
not?”</p>
<p class='c012'>I was glad that just at this moment we were
summoned to dinner, as May’s persistence about
visiting the Grange worried me a little, and I
did not want to commit myself in any way until
I had had the private talk with Mr. Garth that
had been agreed upon. So “We will see about
it” was all the reply on the subject which May
received just then. But it satisfied her for the
time being, for she immediately went off into
ecstasies of thanks and speculation, which bubbled
over even after we had sat down to dinner.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What do you think?” she exclaimed to Mr.
and Mrs. Garth. “I’m in for no end of adventure.
Dora has promised to take me to the
Grange, to exorcise the ghost and recover the
buried treasure. And we’re going to spend our
wealth abroad. We shall wear our diamonds at
the foreign courts, and I intend to marry nothing
under a duke. And my children will be
princes, and perhaps—Good gracious! who’s
the next heir to the throne of Germany?”</p>
<p class='c012'>By this time the whole company was convulsed
with laughter, which Miss May did not seem to
appreciate; for she froze up immediately, cast a
withering look of scorn at the callously inappreciative
company, and spoke not another word for
at least two minutes, at the end of which time
her tongue was languishing for exercise.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And how did you leave Lady Elizabeth?”
inquired Mrs. Garth, during this momentary
break in the conversation.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I do not like her present condition at all,”
was my reply. “She has fretted a good deal
ever—ever since the earl died.”</p>
<p class='c012'>It cost me much to utter these words quietly,
for the mere thought of my poor old lover’s
mysterious death always moved me to sudden
anger.</p>
<p class='c012'>“But surely she is not fretting herself ill?”
said Mr. Garth, in some surprise. “We know
that she was much attached to her father; but,
after all, he was really old, and she has many
compensating blessings, if I am not mistaken.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You are not mistaken,” was my answer.
“But Lady Elizabeth’s grief is not selfish or unreasonable,
though it may be incomprehensible
to all but herself and me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then you think you understand fully why
she is allowing it to prey on her health?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“God help me, yes!” I cried passionately.
“Why do you torture me like this? Cannot you
understand that the whole subject is too bitter
for me to talk of more than can be helped?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Poor child!” exclaimed Mrs. Garth penitently.
“Of course it is. I ought to have
known.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, no, I am the one to blame. How can
you possibly know all that occupies my mind?
Forgive my hasty words, they were foolish and
unwarrantable.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mrs. Garth protested against this last assertion
of mine, but I need hardly remark that our
party was not quite so cheerful as it had been,
and that we were all somewhat relieved when it
was time to adjourn to the drawing-room.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dorrie,” said Mr. Garth, “can you spare
me a few moments before we join the others?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Certainly.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then we will have a chat in my study.”</p>
<p class='c012'>And to Mr. Garth’s study we went. Here,
so far as it was advisable for me to do, I confided
the details of my history and perplexities
to my host, who listened with the greatest attention
to all I had to tell him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Do you think I am much to blame?” I asked
at last.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I cannot think that you have much to reproach
yourself with, as, though somewhat impulsive
at times, I believe you to be very fair
and just. But, to be candid, I do not quite
realize the necessity for all this extreme feeling.
That, I suppose, is because I do not know all
the workings of the case. Is that so?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You are quite right. But I cannot be more
explicit than I have been. I have no right to
press the subject further on any one’s notice.
But I can assure you honestly that I have done
nothing of which I need be ashamed, and that it
would be utterly impossible for me to live in the
same house with my sister again. Not that she
need be blamed much, either. But we seem to
be naturally antagonistic to each other and are
best apart.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But what will you do with yourself, child?
That you should earn your own living has never
been contemplated for you, and you are consequently
handicapped at every point.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am not afraid of work. Teaching is not
much in my line. I believe I can play the fiddle
sufficiently well to perform at an occasional concert,
but that would not do much toward keeping
me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You might teach the violin—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, dear no. I am afraid I should find myself
rapping the knuckles of my pupils if they
should turn out extra stupid. That wouldn’t do
at all. I could go out as amanuensis, or companion,
or something of that sort; for I write
a neat hand, have more than a smattering of
French and German, and am A1 at making
Everton taffy and pickled cabbage.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Two very indispensable acquisitions for an
amanuensis! Still, your other qualifications
might fetch somebody. What do you say if we
advertise? Would you mind going abroad?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Just what I would be best pleased to do at
present.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now about Mrs. Marshall and Miss Morris.
It will be necessary to tell them something—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“We will just tell them that I have had a deal
of trouble, that I wish to turn my back on the
scenes of my trouble for a time, and that while
away from home I have a fancy for earning my
own living. Such part of my troubles as are
already public property you may of course confide
to them.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then things are settled so far. I will see
about the advertisement being sent off for you,
and you must understand that we are by no
means in a hurry to get rid of you. You will
be more than welcome to stay here until you find
something to your liking to do.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Somehow all this kindness robbed me of the
composure which a strict business-like attitude
on Mr. Garth’s part might have helped me to
preserve. I could only thank him brokenly, and
beg him to excuse my appearance in the drawing-room,
as I felt fit for nothing but solitude and
bed. He readily promised to do what I wished,
and at length I felt at liberty to retire for the
night. But by this time I had a distracting
headache, and though I bathed my forehead
with eau-de-cologne, and tried various other infallible
specifics, I found it impossible to go to
sleep, or even to subdue the pain which tormented
me. From below I could occasionally
hear the sound of singing, though I was unable
to judge whether the vocalist was the elder or
the younger of the two visitors.</p>
<p class='c012'>About twelve o’clock, as judged from the
periodical chiming of the little clock in the
dressing-room, it became evident that the other
visitors were coming up to bed, and I forthwith
feigned the sleep which refused to come at my
bidding, lest voluble Miss May might expect me
to talk with her. The two ladies made as little
noise as possible in the dressing-room for a while,
and I was just thinking that my bedfellow
would soon join me, when I heard the most
blood-curdling shriek imaginable, and a white
figure fairly flew into the bedroom, jumped into
the bed, drew the clothes frantically over her
head and ears, and moaned in a state of shuddering
terror. My own natural alarm was
speedily quenched by the appearance of Mrs.
Marshall, bearing every evidence of extreme
anger.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I do believe you are losing your senses
altogether!” she exclaimed, giving her sister’s
shoulder a vigorous shake, which, so far from
pacifying the young lady, only sent her into a
fresh paroxysm of terror, and caused her to give
a louder shriek than the first. By this time
Mrs. Garth had run into the room, to see what
was the matter, while at the door could be heard
the voices of a startled group of people, composed
of the vicar, the cook and the housemaid, all of
them wondering what on earth the commotion
was about. Inside the bedroom, the tableau
was not without interest. Mrs. Garth stood
with a lighted candle raised above her head, looking
almost as frightened as May seemed to be.
Mrs. Marshall was trying to convince her sister
that there was nothing to be afraid of. May
was steadily trying to bury herself under the
bedclothes, and I was sitting up in bed, vainly
struggling to wrest my legitimate share of sheets
and blankets from the frantic clasp of their unceremonious
appropriator.</p>
<p class='c012'>After a while May grew calmer and popped
her head from under the clothes with a sudden
jerk, which caused it to come into contact with
the chin of her sister, who was bending over her,
in an attempt to pacify her. The result was
somewhat painful for Mrs. Marshall, and caused
May to scream out again in terror.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Keep it off! Keep it off!” she cried wildly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Keep what off? What on earth do you
mean?” I shouted, feeling utterly unnerved and
vexed at the same time.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, the ghost! the ghost! Keep it off!”
was the shuddering response.</p>
<p class='c012'>“How can you be so silly,” I said, out of all
patience. “What do you mean by a ghost?”</p>
<p class='c012'>By this time, May began to seem more
rational, and cautiously sat up, surveying the
room with a scared look. “I heard it,” she
said, solemnly. “And I felt it touch my
shoulders.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“It was no ghost other than myself who
touched your shoulders,” spoke up Mrs. Marshall,
still hugging her jaw in an attitude of
pain. “I wish I could shake some sense into
you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh! it was you, was it?” quoth May. “But
it wasn’t you who gave three unearthly taps at
the window. I heard them quite distinctly, and
I’m sure it was all done by a ghost.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“It was done by the Virginia Creeper which
climbs all over this side of the house,” said Mrs.
Garth. “You will very likely hear it again,
but may go to sleep comfortably.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And let other people go to sleep,” added Mrs.
Marshall, as she went back to her own room.</p>
<p class='c012'>Mrs. Garth, after bidding us both good-night,
also retired, and May subsided angrily into a
recumbent position. “Just like Madge, to try
and make me look ridiculous,” she grumbled.
“All the same, it was a ghost, and I won’t stay
here after to-morrow.”</p>
<p class='c012'>And this was the girl who, only a few hours
before, had talked of laying a ghost and unearthing
the ghostly buried treasure with which
her prolific imagination haunted the home of
my childhood!</p>
<p class='c012'>Certainly her escapade had had one good
effect. It had banished my headache, and I
did not suffer any more from insomnia that
night.</p>
<p class='c012'>When I awoke the next morning, May Morris
was looking at me with a comical expression of
disgust on her pretty face.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Do you know,” she said solemnly, “I believe
I made a perfect idiot of myself last night. I
can’t think what it was that so unnerved me.
The fact is, it was the unexpectedness of the
whole thing. Now, if I had known beforehand
that the house was haunted, I shouldn’t have
been frightened a bit. You wait and see what
a bold front I shall put on when we see the
Grange ghost.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear,” I said, with a smile born of a
conscious superiority in matters nervous, “there
are two reasons why I cannot show the Grange
ghost.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And what are they?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am not likely to visit the interior of the
Grange, and, if I did visit it, I could not show
any one its ghost, because it hasn’t got one.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hasn’t it, really?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No—really.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What a pity! And just when I thought I
was going to have a share of the treasure!
Never mind, I shall find another some day.
Oh, by-the-by, Mr. Garth told me a funny
thing last night. He said that you, a rich
young lady, belonging to a county family,
and, as one might almost say, the widow of
an earl, wanted to take a situation and earn
your own living!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“He is quite right in what he has stated.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then I believe I know just the sort of thing
that would suit you, that is, if you would care
to go to Russia.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why not?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, you see, it is such a queer place. It
swarms all over with nihilists, and anarchists,
and spies, and caviare, and bomb-shells, and
there are prisons at every street corner, into
which they clap you without so much as a
minute’s notice, if you don’t happen to salaam
humbly every time a government official goes
by in his amber gown and scarlet turban. In
fact, it’s just a horrid place, where they can’t
speak English, and where they murder everybody
who can’t pronounce the word ‘Peccavi.’”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Upon my word, May, you’ll be the death of
me yet! You seem to get awfully mixed up in
your information. Somebody must have been
slandering Russia to you a little. Of course, it
could never be half so nice as England at its
best; but even the Evil One, you know, isn’t half
so black as he’s painted, and we’ll give Russia
the benefit of doubt. Anyhow, your description
hasn’t frightened me, and, if you don’t mind,
you shall give me the particulars of the situation
you were speaking of, while I complete
my toilet.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“All right, I’ll tell you about it. But if you
are put in prison and tickled to death, don’t say
I didn’t warn you. I dare say you have heard
that when Madge and I are at home we live at
South Kensington. Now next door to us there
lives a Russian lady with her little daughter
and a whole swarm of servants. We met Madame
Kominski at Lady Tranmere’s At Home
last week, and heard that she was looking out
for a useful companion to take back to Russia
with her. She wanted somebody who was a
real lady, who could be treated on a family footing,
and who could speak French or German.
She had had several applicants for the post, but
none of them suited.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I wonder why?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, between you and me and the post, I
think I know. They were all too good-looking.
Madame is both young and beautiful, and does
not want a companion who will eclipse her.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then I suppose I shall stand a chance of
securing the coveted post, since I am almost
ugly enough to serve as a foil even to a plain
woman.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now that is nasty of you, for I don’t call
you a bit ugly. Only just unbeautiful enough
to prevent madame from being jealous.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Very well. I will go back to London to-morrow
and interview Madame Kominski, if
you will furnish me with her address.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But why not write?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“A letter would not describe my appearance
accurately enough. If madam desires some one
who is unbeautiful, as you put it, a sight of me
will go far to convince her that she has found
the treasure she is in search of.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t quite understand you, but of course I
will write the address down for you, and if you
really get the appointment, you must write me
regular accounts of your adventures. Then I’ll
have them printed in a book, and if I can’t find
a buried treasure, I shall perhaps be famous as
an authoress.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“A valuable wrinkle, my dear. I must be
careful not to write anything that isn’t intended
to become public property.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, but you are sure to be in such a perpetual
state of excitement that you will not be able
to weigh all your words when you are writing.
There is one difficulty. Suppose they put you
in prison, how will you manage to send your
letters off?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You must trust me for that. I am sure to
find some way of dispatching all the letters I
am likely to write to you while in prison. On
your side, you must never mention anything
about Russia or the Russians in any letter you
may dispatch to the czar’s country. Then we
shall be all right.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Very well, then that is all arranged. But
before you go downstairs I am going to show
you the loveliest, most ravishing, most delightful
thing you ever saw in your life. Look here!”</p>
<p class='c012'>As May spoke, she jumped up and dived into
one of her boxes, whence she fished out a whole
handful of photographs. I naturally expected
to behold the presentment of a superlatively
beautiful member of my own sex, and was not
a little astounded to see a dozen portraits of a
popular but by no means wonderfully handsome
actor.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Isn’t he bewitching?” May rhapsodized.
“Did you ever see any one in your life half so
handsome? Oh, he’s simply adorable!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And did he give you all those photographs?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, dear no! I bought them all with my
own pocket-money. I love him so dearly that I
dream of him almost night and day, and I buy
a copy of every fresh portrait of him that is
issued. Oh, if you could only imagine how I
love him!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And does he return your love?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Unfortunately for me, he does not know me.
He has never even seen me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then I suppose you fell in love with him on
the stage.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, he is nearly always on tour, and I have
never seen him act. Indeed, I have never seen
him at all. I just saw a photograph of him in
a shop-window, and straightway fell in love
with it. You may think it only a passing
fancy. But I feel that if I could only look upon
his face, my greatest dreams of earthly bliss
would be realized, and I would be content to
die.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mere romance, my dear girl. You will come
across some one in the flesh who will prove much
more charming than the counterfeit presentments
of your adorable actor, who, by-the-by,
becomes engaged to a fresh young lady about
every six months.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I can’t help it. He is just all in all to me,
and I shall never marry so long as he remains
single. If, after all my devotion, my hero marries
another woman, then I may think of accepting
a gentleman who proposes to me every three
months. Meanwhile, I have a little consolation.
I often take a look at his house at Kensington,
in the hope of catching a glimpse of him through
one of the windows.”</p>
<p class='c012'>And in this style May meandered on, the
while I wondered whether she were really sane
or not. She was evidently badly smitten, and
by mere portraits, which must have revealed to
her many beauties of expression which were hidden
to me, for I could only look upon them as
the faithful presentments of a man whom I had
heard spoken of as selfish, conceited and unscrupulous
in his dealings with women.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I suppose you are quite disburdened of all
the particulars of your wonderful romance by
this time,” was Mrs. Marshall’s cheery greeting.
“I knew it was no use interrupting you
before you had confided the whole story to Miss
Courtney. And what do you think of it, Miss
Dora, now that you have heard it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>This last question was addressed to me with
such a humorous twinkle in Mrs. Marshall’s
merry dark eyes, that, for the life of me, I could
not help responding to it, and my comments
were expressed in a burst of hearty laughter,
which not all my latent worries could rob of its
spontaneity. I was not sure that May might
not resent our irreverence, but she took it very
good-humoredly, and five minutes later we were
all greeting our host and hostess at the breakfast-table.</p>
<p class='c012'>As both the sisters were in quite a merry
mood, they cheered the rest of us up wonderfully,
and no one, to look at us, would imagine
that we had ever become acquainted with care.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VI.<br/><span class='small'>“When venom’d gossip shows her poison-fangs, the watchword is, ‘Beware!’”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>But as soon as breakfast was over, I had a
private confabulation with Mr. Garth, in which
he fully approved of my intention of going to
see Madame Kominski at once.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Let me see,” he said by-and-by. “There is
a train from Moorbye at 12:52. This would
enable you to reach Kensington by 4:30, a
good time, I should imagine, for catching the
lady at home. If you fail to see her this evening,
you can either return here, or put up at a
hotel which I can recommend for the night. If
you do not come to an arrangement, you will
return and stay here, of course, until something
else turns up. Should you, on the other hand,
find the appointment one that you can accept,
your future proceedings will be arranged between
Madame Kominski and yourself.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“The 12:50 train will suit me admirably,” I
said. “I shall have time to pay a visit to Bobby
and Teddy. They, at least, will remember me
with affection.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then suppose you get ready at once, Dorrie.
I will go with you, as I want to see John Page.
He has had frequent touches of rheumatism
lately, and I promised to take him some liniment.
I can talk to him while you interview
your pets.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Miss Morris is anxious to go to the Grange.
But I would much rather go without her this
morning.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My wife will amuse her. I can take her,
together with her sister, to have a look at Courtney
Grange to-morrow.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Half an hour later the vicar and I were walking
briskly toward my old home, and I was feeling
happy at the mere sight of the waving corn-fields
and smiling hedge-rows which stretched
on our right hand, in vivid contrast to the semi-barrenness
and sober but quaint coloring of the
moorland on our left. I found it impossible to
pass all the floral treasures which greeted me by
the way, and my heart presently grew heavy at
the thought that it might possibly be years before
I was able to gather another bunch of wild
flowers on my native heath. When the chimneys
of the Grange came in sight, I had a fierce
battle to fight with my avowed determination
not to enter its doors again, and I found that
sentiment was, after all, a much stronger passion
in me than wounded pride.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, I must run in and see Martha,” I exclaimed,
when at last we emerged from the long
avenue. “Do wait a minute here, while I run
round to the back and give her a surprise.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Suiting the action to the word, I left the good-natured
vicar to his own devices, while I hurried
round to the kitchen entrance, anxious to
see Martha at her usual avocations, in order that
I might fancy this hurried visit to my home
more homelike. Somewhat to my disappointment,
Martha was not half so surprised as I had
fancied she would be.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Eh! is that you, Miss Dora?” she exclaimed,
dropping the potato she was peeling, as I impetuously
sprang into the kitchen and gave her a
warm greeting. “I thought maybe you would
come to-day; and you’ll find your room quite
ready for you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But how could you know I was coming?” I
inquired blankly. “I never sent you word that
you might expect me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, but Mr. Courtney did. We got a letter
from him this morning. Here it is.”</p>
<p class='c012'>I took the letter, which she pulled out of her
pocket for me, and read it, feeling as if all the
romance were knocked out of me again.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Prepare Miss Dora’s room. If she is not
already at the Grange, you may expect her
soon.”</p>
<p class='c012'>That was all, and I could not help a slight
feeling of vexation at its tenor. True, it implied
that my father had not really intended to
banish me altogether. But it also evinced such
a determination to ignore any mental distress in
which I might be submerged that it convinced
me more than ever of the hopelessness of ever
expecting my father to show the least spark of
true affection for me.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And how is John?” I asked soberly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“John! Why, John’s pretty much as usual,
I think,” said Martha, with a sharp touch of
asperity in her voice. “But somehow he seems
to be everlastingly complaining of late, and it’s
‘Oh, my leg! Oh, my back!’ nearly all day
long.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then he must be really ill.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not he. He’s just taken a lazy fit, and
wants pampering, that’s all.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Which he isn’t likely to get from the wife
o’ his buzzim,” broke in John’s voice at this
juncture.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, John, I quite forgot!” I exclaimed
penitently. “The vicar is waiting for you on
the steps. He has got some liniment for you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>John hobbled off at once, calling out, as he
did so: “There’s a letter waiting for you upstairs,
Miss Dora.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Aroused to sudden curiosity, I at once ran up
to my old room, and almost cried with joy to
see Lady Elizabeth’s beloved handwriting. If
my father’s missive lacked sympathy, his wife’s
made ample amends for it, for it breathed of
nothing but love and anxious care for my well-being.
It had been taken for granted by my
stepmother that I would come straight to the
Grange and wait quietly there for the return of
the rest of the family. I resolved to perpetuate
her comforting delusion as long as I could, and
forthwith wrote her a letter, in which I thanked
her warmly for all the nice messages she sent
me, and assured her that she need have no uneasiness
about me, as I should make myself
quite comfortable while at Moorbye.</p>
<p class='c012'>Then I sallied out to the stables, having wondered
already how it was that I had seen nothing
either of Bobby or of Teddy. Even as I got
quite up to the stable door they were both still
invisible, and a vague feeling of impending
calamity seized me, as the old familiar whistle,
to which my erstwhile playmates had been wont
to respond so joyously, failed to evoke the usual
boisterous signs of recognition from either of
them. I certainly did hear a feeble whine, but
could hardly credit it to be Bobby’s usually
clamorous voice.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, my God!” I thought dumbly, “is a new
trouble about to befall me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Then I walked slowly forward, feeling a leaden
weight on limbs and brain alike. With quaking
heart and anxious eyes I peered in the direction
of Teddy’s old stall, and when I failed to
see the dear little ugly companion of my happiest
frolics, I only felt the mist which covered
my eyes to be the outcome of a dreary conviction
which had been stealing over me ever since
I emerged from the house. For a moment a
deadly faintness almost overpowered me, so that
I had to seize the nearest available support, in
order to prevent myself from falling. While I
still stood, feeling half dazed with a newly
added sense of misery, I once more heard the
feeble imitation of a whine which had already
attracted my attention. Then, looking down, I
saw, painfully rolling toward me, a little round
body that must be, could be, nothing but my
darling Bobby. Hastily stepping forward, I
stooped and lifted the object, and oh! how can
I ever describe what I felt when, taking it to
the light, I discovered it to be none other than
my beloved pet! Poor fellow! he had recognized
me, and, though almost at death’s door, had
made a desperate effort to meet me once more.</p>
<p class='c012'>I sat down with him on my lap and bent over
him in an agony of grief. He, in his turn,
fondly licked my fingers and looked at me with
a piteous, all-adoring love shining out of the
beautiful eyes which were already fast glazing
over with the last dread film.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, my darling!” I moaned, as I kissed his
dear little head over and over again. “What
have I done that I should lose everything I love?
I would give ten years of my life to see you
frisk about me in the old happy way. Can’t
you really get better, now that I have come?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Did the poor thing understand me, or was he
only making a supreme effort to make me comprehend
how glad he was to see me? Perhaps
it was both, for he always was more intelligent
than some human beings I have encountered.
Be this as it may, he suddenly rose to his feet,
and stood looking in my face for a moment almost
the picture of his old excitable self, with
sparkling eyes and quivering body. Then he
gave a sharp, glad bark, and dropped, lifeless,
on the lap of one of the most desolate human
beings on earth.</p>
<p class='c012'>How long I sat there in my misery I do not
know, but was at last interrupted by the voice
of the vicar, who, perceiving what had happened,
asked me no questions, but, gently lifting
poor Bobby’s body into a basket which stood
close by, suggested that we should bury him
ourselves before we returned to the vicarage.
As one in a dream, I let him lead me whither he
would, and together we went down to the old
orchard, where, presently, my kindly friend took
upon himself the office of grave-digger. Concerning
Teddy, I asked no more questions just
now, for I no longer believed him to be alive.</p>
<p class='c012'>When I had marked Bobby’s resting-place, I
turned to John Page, whom, for the first time,
I noticed to be standing near me. “And now,”
I said, my voice still shaken with sobs, “tell me
how it is that you never sent us word that my
pets were ill.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed, miss, I did,” answered John, with
a sympathetic look at my grief-stricken face.
“I sent the master word about everything.
You had only been gone a day or two when
Teddy began to fret and go off his feed. He
would seek you in the yard, and in the orchard,
and in all sorts of likely and unlikely places,
and when he couldn’t see anything of you, he
would whinny that pitifully that neither Martha
nor me liked to hear him. We used to try to
pet him up a bit. But it was no go, and we
could see that if he went on fretting like that
things would soon go wrong with him. Bobby,
too, hung his head, and walked about looking
the picture of misery. When you were away at
my lady’s place, before, they both took on considerable.
But you were not quite so long
away, and it hadn’t such an effect on them as
it’s had this time. It was only last week that
Teddy died, and Bobby has never been out of
the stable since. I have done what I could for
him, but anybody could see that he wouldn’t be
here long. The master knew Teddy was dead,
and I’m sure I thought you knew all about it.
I buried him just at the foot of the paddock,
feeling that that was where you would have
liked to put him, if you had been at home.”</p>
<p class='c012'>I couldn’t speak. But I gave John a look
which would show him that I exonerated him
from blame and that I was grateful to him for
what he had tried to do for me. Then I walked
down to the paddock, to take one last look at
poor old Teddy’s resting-place. And here a
fresh idea seized me. My two pets had been
such inseparable friends during life that I felt
it cruel to part them in death, and returned to
John, to ask him to bring Bobby’s body to be
finally interred beside that of his friend and
companion. My wish was soon accomplished,
and then, without looking back at the old home
even once more, I walked away toward the
vicarage, followed by the vicar, and hardly
knowing whether grief at my loss, or resentment
at the callousness which had prevented my father
from telling me the true state of the case, was
predominant.</p>
<p class='c012'>I had not walked far before I was overtaken
by Mr. Garth, but there was very little said between
us until we were nearly at the vicarage.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Did you know that my pony was dead?” I
asked him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Certainly not,” he replied. “I saw John
last week, and he never mentioned either of
your pets, though I do not doubt that he has
taken good care of them. Very likely your
father did not wish you to be told much about
them, lest the news should unsettle you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, of course. That is the true explanation
of the case. My father was actuated by tender
regard for my feelings, and I ought to feel proportionately
grateful. But, somehow, I don’t
feel particularly moved in the direction of gratitude,
and the sooner I am away from the neighborhood
of Courtney Grange the better. I shall
not regret my absence from it now, since my
presence near it could only foster painful memories.
The past is dead, and I must let my dead
past bury its dead.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You have youth and energy on your side,
my dear. I predict that in six months you will
yearn for your old home again and be as happy
as ever here.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Never! You do not know me, Mr. Garth.
My experiences since I went to London have
been such as to develop and increase the latent
passions of my childhood, besides endowing me
with others toward which I never suspected myself
to have a leaning. Among the latter are
self-reliance, independence, and firmness of purpose.
They alone will forbid my early return
to the Grange.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I will not argue the point with you,
child, as of course you know more about the
matter than I do. But has it struck you that
while we have been lingering at the Grange,
time has been flying, and that you have missed
the 12:50 train for London? You will have to
put off your journey until morning, as the next
train from here arrives in London too late to
enable you to call at Madame Kominski’s house
this evening.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then what shall I do? How soon can I get
there in the morning?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If you do not mind rising early, you can
leave by the 6:30 <span class='fss'>A.M.</span> train. That will land
you in Kensington in good time.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If you and Mrs. Garth—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Pray don’t mention it, child. We are only
too happy to do what we can for you. Oh, there
they all are!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“They” of whom he spoke were Mrs. Garth,
Mrs. Marshall and Miss Morris, who were walking
leisurely toward us, their hands full of wild
roses and honeysuckle, which they had been
pulling in the hedgerows. Master Vinnie was
skipping alone in front, and having an occasional
race with Leo, a splendid St. Bernard,
who looked as wise as any of us.</p>
<p class='c012'>The whole party looked so handsome, so
happy, and so thoroughly satisfied with their lot
in life, that my own isolation and loneliness
struck me more forcibly than ever. I am not
sure that I was not going to give way to another
outburst of grief, when I chanced to look up
into Mr. Garth’s face, and saw that the erstwhile
sad and sympathetic expression of his
countenance had vanished as magically as do
morning mists before the power of the rising
sun. He was smiling at the pleasant sight
which greeted his gaze, and in an instant I was
confounded by a sense of the selfishness of my
own conduct. What right had I to obtrude my
private griefs upon my friends? True, they
were kind and sympathizing, but that did not
deprive them of their due claim to consideration,
and life does not hold so much happiness for any
that one can afford to exchange the flowers of
joy for the withered leaves of sorrow, even
though the sorrow may more closely appertain
to another.</p>
<p class='c012'>I believe that great changes of character may
be brought about in susceptible and highly-strung
natures by trifling incidents, and a suddenly
conceived resolve of my own was no particularly
noticeable departure from a somewhat
general rule. “If I cannot be happy myself,”
I reflected, “I can at least conduce to the happiness
of others by presenting a bright and cheerful
front to the world. And this I will try to
do in future, God helping me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>It was in conformity with this resolution that
I walked smilingly up to Mrs. Garth and her
guests, and apologized for having kept the vicar
so long away from them. Then I challenged
Vinnie and Leo to a race, and, before Mr. Garth
had time to conjecture the cause of the abrupt
change in my demeanor, I was scampering down
the lane with the delighted boy, and the no less
delighted dog, who instantly entered into the
spirit of the diversion suggested, as did also
May Morris, who laughingly exclaimed that she
saw no reason why she should not join in the
fun, and promptly followed in our wake. We
had half an hour of scampering and laughter,
and returned to the vicarage breathless, rosy,
and hungry. Perhaps Leo could hardly be accused
of being either breathless or rosy, but he
was certainly as ready for his midday meal as
any of us. As for myself, I noted with surprise
that my effort to appear cheerful and happy had
recoiled upon myself, and that I no longer felt
so miserable as I had done earlier in the day.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You’re just a dear, jolly girl,” said May to
me, as we were rehabilitating our toilet, previous
to going down to lunch. “I’m awfully
sorry you are going away so soon, and I’m
awfully afraid lest those horrid Russians should
lock you up in one of their dungeons. Just
fancy how awfully horrid it would be if they
were to hang you up by the thumbs, and flog
you with a bundle of knouts!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear girl,” I said, unable to refrain from
laughter at May’s limited and slangy vocabulary,
as well as at her hazy and mixed-up notions
of things Russian. “It is not by any means
sure that I am going to Russia, and even if I do
go, it is of no use anticipating unlikely contingencies.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Perhaps not,” retorted May sapiently. “But
one may as well be prepared for possibilities,
and then they don’t overtake one as a surprise.
And, after all, there are perhaps worse things
than the knout.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hardly,” I rejoined. “The knout so generally
proves an instrument of death that it must
be regarded as the extreme punishment.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But suppose they banish you to Siberia?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t see any probability of such a disaster,
as, if I am lucky enough to secure the appointment
I am seeking, I shall be very careful about
what I say and do. And now—suppose we go
downstairs?”</p>
<p class='c012'>After luncheon the vicar announced his intention
of paying some visits which he owed to a
few of the poorer of his parishioners. “I do not
care to inflict myself upon them in the forenoon,”
he added. “They are generally busy,
either cleaning or cooking, and do not care to be
bothered by callers before they have had time to
don themselves up a little.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But why should you trouble yourself to visit
them at all, when you have a curate who could
look after your poorer parishioners?” asked
Mrs. Marshall. “The vicar of St. Dungaree’s
Church only associates with, or speaks personally
to, the well-to-do people of his parish. He
never goes to any house of which the rent is less
than seventy pounds per annum.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then I suppose he does not think people with
small incomes possess souls?” I ejaculated.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, dear, yes! of course they have souls.
But you can’t attach as much importance to
their conversion as if they were in a position to
be of service to the church, as rich people can
be, and a curate’s attentions are as much as they
can expect.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then we may conclude that the objects of a
curate and of a vicar are entirely dissimilar.
The curate wishes to save souls. The vicar is
anxious to wheedle money out of his parishioners.
Fie, Mrs. Marshall, how can you so depreciate
Mr. Garth’s calling?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Good gracious! Miss Courtney. It’s you
who are doing it, not me. I never thought of
the matter in the light you are throwing upon it.
And I am sure Mr. Garth understands my meaning
very well.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“To be sure I do,” responded the vicar, good-humoredly.
“No doubt the vicar of St. Dungaree’s
is swayed by motives which outsiders do
not understand. For my own part, I am quite
convinced of my own unfitness for a city living,
as I have what some would consider inveterately
democratic notions. For instance, I am far happier
when chatting with old Mrs. Murfree, who
has been bedridden for six years, and who nevertheless
earns a precarious livelihood by knitting
and coarse needlework, than when conversing
with Lady Smythe, who imagines herself to be
the greatest lady in the county. And I would
much rather have a talk and a smoke with old
Grey, our cobbler-poet, than be invited out to
dine with the lord of the manor.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And that reminds me,” put in Mrs. Garth,
“that Lady Smythe and her daughters are coming
this afternoon for a game of tennis. The
Worthingtons will probably be here, too, so I
hope you will try to get back before they leave.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The vicar, having promised to use his best
endeavors in that direction, now hurried off. I
would rather have been excused from meeting
the coming guests, if I had consulted only my
own inclination; and it required a little mental
struggle on my part to induce me to persevere
just then in my lately-formed resolve to be as
cheerful as possible at all times. May Morris,
superficial and shallow as she seemed, was a
bright, merry girl, who did nothing to foster
either lugubriousness or reserve, and with whom
it would have been difficult for me to maintain
a silent mood for any length of time. Vinnie,
too, seemed to have taken immensely to me since
the morning and eagerly importuned us for another
romp. Thus it happened that when the
Smythe family drove up to the door they were
rather scandalized by seeing two young women,
who were evidently utterly regardless of appearances,
scampering along a sidewalk, laughing
and panting, followed by a fleet-footed child, who
was pelting them with daisies which had a few
hours before bespangled the tennis lawn, and by
an excited St. Bernard, whose occasional tugs
had utterly ruined the fresh appearance of their
gowns.</p>
<p class='c012'>“There now,” I said at last. “I really must
sit down a bit. Vinnie, hadn’t you better run
in and ask nurse to sponge your hands and face,
before any visitors see you? I think I must go
in also and straighten my hair.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s just how I feel,” said May, so we all
adjourned, in order to present a better appearance
by-and-by.</p>
<p class='c012'>An hour later both courts on the vicarage
tennis lawn were occupied with players, most of
whom wielded their racquets in such a way as to
indicate considerable practice in the health-giving
pastime upon which they were now engaged.
The two brothers Worthington, sons of a local
landed proprietor, were worthy partners of the
Misses Smythe, and Mr. Graham, the doctor’s
assistant—whose aider and abettor in all social
functions at which they could both be present
was Mr. Wix, our curate—was so evidently
smitten by May’s charms that I caught myself
wondering whether he would be able to supplant
the fascinating actor. Mrs. Marshall had offered
to let me play in her stead, but a reaction from
my previous excitement had set in, and I craved
quiet and repose. Leaving her, therefore, to a
game which I knew she would enjoy, I strolled
further away from the house, and presently sat
down on the forked arm of an apple-tree which
grew just behind the hut that had been erected
for the accommodation of those who preferred to
watch the game rather than take an active part
in it. The branch of the tree hung so low that
I had no difficulty in fixing myself comfortably
upon it, and I soon found the repose of my situation
so conducive to drowsiness that I think I
must have gone to sleep for a little while.</p>
<p class='c012'>At any rate I was roused by the sound of
voices which I could not localize for a few moments,
as I had not noticed the approach of the
speakers, who were evidently now sitting in the
hut close to me. My own name fell on my ears
with somewhat startling distinctness.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Miss Dora Courtney,” said a voice which I
recognized as that of Lady Smythe, the wife of
an ex-wine merchant who had chanced to be the
mayor of a neighboring town on the occasion
of the Queen’s Jubilee, and had consequently
dropped into a knighthood. “Miss Dora Courtney
surprises me by her behavior.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“In what way, Lady Smythe? And who is
the young lady, that she should evoke interest
in <i>you</i>?” asked another voice, which was
strange to me, but which had such a liberal allowance
of flattering unction in it, and which
laid such emphasis on the second person singular
that I set its owner down for a toady of the
first water at once.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear Miss Grindle,” was the reply, “I
am certainly exclusive. But I am able to take
interest in many people whose position in society
scarcely warrants notice from me. Otherwise
you would hardly find me mixing indiscriminately
with people at parties like this. It
pleases commoners to be noticed by persons of
title, and I pride myself upon being looked upon
as more condescending than the rest of the
nobility hereabouts.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, you’re just an angel! If only the
Mountmerlyns were like you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ah, yes! poor things! I feel sorry for them.
What’s the use of their asthmatic old earldom,
without money to keep it up? Such a struggle
as they must have! And, between you and me,
they’re dying to know Sir Robert and myself,
but are overawed by a sense of the great difference
in our position.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You mean—Lady Smythe?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“We are so rich, and they are so poor. No
wonder they are afraid of intruding upon
us.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And this Miss Courtney?—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“To be sure, we were talking of Miss Courtney.
Well, she was brought up at Courtney
Grange, and has a sister and brother who are
perfectly lovely, strange as it may seem when
you look at her plain face. I believe they pride
themselves upon being a county family, but they
were a very poverty-stricken lot until the father
secured for his second wife a rich widow, the
daughter of the Earl of Greatlands. Then one
startling announcement followed another. Lady
Elizabeth’s brother, the heir to the earldom,
became engaged to the beautiful Miss Courtney.
Then the wedding was put off because the old
earl was to be married to the ugly Miss Courtney,
the one who is here now. While all society
was opening its eyes in amazement at this freak
of the old earl, it was startled by the news of his
death on his wedding-morning.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How shocking! And had the marriage
taken place?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How could it? This girl would then have
been the Countess of Greatlands.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Poor thing! What a dreadful disappointment
for her.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, you may well say so. And that is
what surprises me so about her. She seems to
be quite happy and merry. Look how she was
running about the garden when we came—a
perfect tomboy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“So she was. It’s really very indecent of
her, when one comes to think of it. She ought
to keep herself as quiet as if she were really a
widow.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“H’m! widows! I don’t think much of them.
They are a flighty lot. But what do you think
people are saying about the ‘Greatlands Romance,’
as it is called?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m sure I don’t know. You see, I have
been abroad, and—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And you can’t afford to buy the newspapers.
Yes, I know all about that. Well, they say that
the earl’s son—that is, the present earl, and his
intended bride, Miss Belle Courtney, were furious
when they heard of the old gentleman’s infatuation,
and that they swore the marriage
should never take place. One of the servants
overheard a desperate quarrel between the two
sisters, in which the elder vowed all sorts of
horrible things. After that it was queer, to say
the least, that the poor old man, who had gone
to bed the night before quite healthy and happy,
should be found to be dead when his valet went
to rouse him on his marriage morning.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Good heavens! why, they must have murdered
him!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, it certainly looks like it. They vowed
he shouldn’t get married, and he didn’t live to
get married. Of course, the other couple, now
that all obstacles have been swept out of their
path, will get married soon and share the wealth
and title. But I wouldn’t like to stand in their
shoes.—Oh, here is Mrs. Garth! Mrs. Garth,
we have just been saying what a good thing it
is for poor Miss Dora Courtney that she can be
so cheerful after all her troubles.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, she bears up wonderfully, poor child.
But I have not seen her for some time. I
thought she was perhaps in here with you.
Where will you have your tea? Here, or in
the drawing-room?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I think I would rather go indoors for a while.
I want to look at some new prints Mr. Garth
was telling me about.”</p>
<p class='c012'>A few minutes later the hut had changed
occupants, and May Morris, hot and excited
after a victorious game, was pouring tea for
the tennis players out of an urn which a servant
had placed on the table, while the young men
were handing the bread and butter plates round,
amid a chorus of laughter and merry rapartee.
I alone sat unobserved, lonely, and now once more
thoroughly miserable, heedless of aught else
save my own bitter reflections, and feeling as
incapable of moving as I had done during the
conversation between Lady Smythe and Miss
Grindle.</p>
<p class='c012'>That the tragedy of my life should be talked
about did not surprise me. But that my own
dreadful suspicions should have found an echo
in the breasts of others was to me a most horrible
revelation, which created in me so great
a revulsion of feeling as to paralyze my energies
<i>pro tem</i>. I could do nothing for a while but
sit and wonder vaguely what would be the
end of it all. Would the conviction of my sister’s
guilt spread from one to another until the
authorities felt bound to interfere, with the object
of arriving at a complete solution of the
mystery? Should I have to give evidence?
And would Lady Elizabeth be called upon to
witness against her brother and her stepdaughter?
Would the name of both families be
dragged through the mire of the criminal
courts, and be gloated over by pothouse politicians
in polemical discussions <i>in re</i> the immorality
of the aristocracy? And, horror of
horrors! suppose things were to come to the
worst, was it possible that my beautiful sister,
the pride of her father’s heart, and one of my
darling mother’s children, could be sentenced to
a shameful death! A murderer’s death is not
more shameful than his crime, we know; but,
alas! how many hearts bear witness to the agony
inflicted on friends and relatives by the mandates
of justice. It would kill Lady Elizabeth if the
case were brought to trial, and this reflection
was itself enough to strengthen my determination
to avoid publicity henceforth. My very
presence, it seemed, was sufficient to set the
tongues of conjecture and suspicion wagging.
My temporary absence might perhaps help people
to forget the existence of myself and my
history.</p>
<p class='c012'>For the future, if I would avoid a crisis, I
had better be seen and heard as little as possible;
and this reflection made me so feverishly anxious
to quit the country that I sprang from my
seat in excitement and hurried toward the house
as if thereby I could hasten the interview between
Madame Kominski and myself. As I
might have expected, I was intercepted on my
way and besieged by inquiries as to where I
had been hiding myself. My pale face and
heavy eyes indorsed my plea of the desire of
seclusion on the score of a violent headache, and
I was allowed to go to my room, where Mrs.
Garth soon followed me with a cup of tea and
words of sympathy. Left alone once more, I
meditated earnestly as to my future proceedings,
finally coming to the conclusion that for the sake
of Jerry and Lady Elizabeth, if not for the sake
of my father and Belle, I must never divulge
aught that could harm Belle, but must do all in
my power to prevent the suspicions of others
from being fostered.</p>
<p class='c012'>In spite of my desire to appear as cheerful as
possible, I felt myself unequal to the task of
going downstairs again that afternoon. Evening
found me able to appear more sociable, and
the next morning saw me, primed with good
wishes and affectionate “good-bys” from my
dear good friends, Mr. and Mrs. Garth, both
of whom had got up to escort me to the station,
en route for Kensington, where I arrived in due
course.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VII.<br/><span class='small'>“From prying eyes and fingers defend us, good Lord!”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>“Is Madame Kominski visible?” I inquired
of the smart servant-maid who answered my
ring at the bell of the house to which I had been
directed to go.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is it an appointment, madam?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, but I have reason to think that Madame
Kominski will see me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If you will step inside, I will ask her. What
name shall I give?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Miss Dora Saxon.”</p>
<p class='c012'>This change of name was the result of my deliberations
while on my way here. It struck me
as desirable, in Belle’s interests. In Belle’s!
How strange it seemed that I should have to
resort to trickery and subterfuge for the sake of
one who, though so nearly related to me, was
yet my mortal enemy! Yet so it was, for was
not the happiness of those whom I loved best on
earth involved in her immunity from punishment,
if she were guilty; and in her protection
from false accusation, if she were innocent?
Ah! would to God I could have thought the
latter! My course of conduct would then have
been much easier for me.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You wish to see me?” was the question addressed
to me after a while, in such a musical
voice that I glanced at the owner of it in pleased
surprise, as I answered somewhat eagerly:
“Yes, Madame Kominski. I have been told
that you are seeking a companion, and would
like to secure the post. I can give you good
credentials.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And references to former employers?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have never lived away from home before.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And why, may I ask, do you wish to come
to me now?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My home associations have become painful.
I was to have been married a month ago, but—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“The old story. Your lover forsook you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, my lover died.”</p>
<p class='c012'>There was a quick glance of sympathy, and a
few moments’ pause. Then Madame Kominski
resumed: “Your story is very sad. But I am
afraid that for that very reason I cannot entertain
the idea of making you my companion. I
want some one who will be cheerful and bright,
not a woman whose bearing will wear the impress
of a tragic past. Pray do not think me
unfeeling, but I often have to leave my little
daughter for days together, and would not like
her to be made melancholy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You would find me as cheerful as you could
desire. I intend to cast my past from my mind
as much as possible.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If I could think that—”</p>
<p class='c012'>But there is no need to give the whole conversation
in detail. Suffice it to say that I prevailed
upon Madame Kominski to write to Mr.
Garth for further particulars of me, and that I
obtained her promise to engage me, should his
reply prove satisfactory. Feeling quite sure
that this would be the case, and that Madame
Kominski was a woman who could be trusted, I
told her that my real name was Courtney, but
that I preferred to be called Miss Saxon for the
future, as I did not wish it to be known that I
had left home to go to service. As it happened,
it was well that I took my prospective employer
into my confidence. She had heard something
about my history from the newspapers, and my
candor seemed to win both her sympathy and
her good-will.</p>
<p class='c012'>She insisted upon my having lunch with her,
and introduced me to her daughter Feodorowna,
a girl of ten, who could not boast of a much
more attractive appearance than myself. But
by-and-by, as she grew to womanhood, her
looks might improve, and she might possibly
become more like her mother, who certainly was
a very beautiful woman, being tall, stately, and
inclined to embonpoint, though as yet being only
sufficiently stout to make her voluptuously perfect.
Her fine dark eyes, Grecian features, clear
skin and purple-black hair, which waved and
curled about her brows in charming disorder,
would seem to disclaim a Mongolian origin altogether,
and were all in harmony with her musical
voice and graceful gait.</p>
<p class='c012'>Two days later, a very satisfactory reply to
madame’s letter having come from Mr. Garth,
all arrangements were completed. My luggage
had been sent for, and I was formally installed
as companion-governess in the household of
Madame Kominski, who readily agreed to my
wish that my true appellative should be discarded
for the present, and that I should be introduced
and known to others only as Miss
Saxon. I had not forgotten May Morris’s idea
that absence of good looks was the best recommendation
to madame’s favor. But I did not
let the notion worry me. I was by this time
convinced that nature, when denying me beauty,
had given me some compensating qualifications,
and Madame Kominski was so kind and friendly
with me that I found no difficulty in being comparatively
happy and wholly cheerful.</p>
<p class='c012'>Feodorowna, or Feo, as she was called by her
mother, seemed to have taken quite a fancy to
me, and I won her heart altogether when I proposed
teaching her to play the violin. I found
her to be an apt and docile pupil, but as masters
came to the house to teach her many of the
branches of her education, such portion of it as
fell on my shoulders did not prove onerous.</p>
<p class='c012'>“We start for St. Petersburg on Monday,”
said Madame Kominski, the Friday after I had
become a member of her household, looking up
from a letter which she was reading. “I suppose
you have no objection to go there, Miss Saxon?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“None whatever, madame. I shall like it
very much, I am sure.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have no doubt you will, for you will have
every possible comfort and will mingle in the
best society St. Petersburg affords. And you,
Feo, now that you are going to see your cousins
again, must not neglect your English. I shall
depend upon Miss Saxon to insist upon constant
practice in that and in French.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You may depend upon me, and upon Feo,
too. We have already made a compact to speak
nothing but English together one week, and
nothing but French the next.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And, mother, what is the use of saying Miss
Saxon every time? Why don’t you call her
Dora, like I do? She will really seem like one
of the family then.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, Dora be it, with all my heart, child.
Ah! what’s this? Dora, I find that I have to
go out of town to-day. I may be back to-morrow,
but cannot be sure. You will see that the
servants push on with the packing.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Certainly. I will do my best to make up for
your absence.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Madame Kominski had evidently read something
in the last letter she had opened which
had caused her to form the sudden resolution of
leaving home that day. She hastily gathered
the papers which had come by that morning’s
post together, and was leaving the breakfast
room with them, when Feo exclaimed: “Oh,
mother, it is too bad! You promised to take us
to the theater this evening.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear child, I cannot help that. This
journey cannot be postponed. You shall go to
the Grand Theater soon after we arrive in St.
Petersburg. You know that I never willingly
disappoint you or break a promise to you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Forgive me, dear mother. I won’t complain
again.”</p>
<p class='c012'>From this it may be gathered that Feo was
a docile, affectionate child, and such I always
found her. I could not help hazarding a faint
conjecture as to the nature of the business which
took madame from home at a time when one
would suppose her presence to be more than usually
necessary in it. But it was no business
of mine, and I found sufficient to do to occupy
all my thoughts and time for the next few
days. It was Monday at noon before the mistress
of the household returned to it. She
seemed tired and somewhat dispirited, but insisted
upon starting for St. Petersburg that
night, as had already been arranged.</p>
<p class='c012'>A week later we were all comfortably installed
in a splendid house, on the Nevski Prospekt,
and my eyes were fairly dazzled by the magnificence
of some of the houses to which I was introduced.
I was very glad that my wardrobe
was so liberally furnished, and that I was at
least possessed of the means of mitigating my
plainness as far as was possible. I was also
spared some of the humiliation which had been
so often meted out to me in England. Whether
it was that I was surrounded by more people,
whose chief characteristic was lack of physical
beauty, or whether it was that less importance
was attached to the possession of mere outward
charms, I cannot say. But it is certain that my
personal deficiencies were less often brought
home to me here, and, greatly to my surprise, I
seemed to promptly win the favor of several
cultured aristocrats, who apparently never
dreamed of discounting my few mental attractions
because I was only a hired companion.</p>
<p class='c012'>Many of them spoke English, and showed
great interest in our social laws and customs, so
different to those prevailing among themselves.
To the best of my ability, I answered all the
questions put to me, sometimes; I fear, forgetting
that to extol English institutions was to
decry the systems of the land in which I had
temporarily found a home. One evening madame,
always good to me, had taken me with
her to the house of a certain Prince and Princess
Michaelow, both of whom welcomed her with
great warmth and affection. The princess, who
proved to be English, and only a few years older
than myself, was a girl of strikingly imposing
figure and lovely appearance. Her rich, glittering
auburn hair framed a face of the purest
oval. Her arch, piquant features were set off
by a complexion of exquisite fairness and purity,
the cheeks reminding me of nothing so much as
of the dainty pink dog-roses I had so often delighted
to gather at home. Her teeth were
white and even, and were given plenty of opportunity
for display by their smiling owner. But
her eyes struck me as her chief charm. They
were large and limpid, fringed by dark lashes,
and were of the deepest azure, with a bright-rayed
amber iris that gave them an almost uncanny
beauty. She was dressed in a gown of
soft pale blue surah, and her only jewels were
pearls. But such pearls! And such a mass of
them, in ropes, strings, sprays and festoons,
which helped to put the finishing touch to as
fair a vision of human beauty as I had ever
beheld.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was half inclined to stand in awe of her at
first, and to shrink into a pained comparison of
her appearance and mine. But her frank, cheery
smile and demonstrative welcome at once put
that nonsense out of my head, and I was henceforth
content to worship her as the embodiment
of all that was good and beautiful. My admiration
must have shone in my eyes, for the prince
bent down to me, and said smilingly, in rather
broken English: “I perceive that Miss Saxon’s
tastes are similar to my own. I hope she will
often favor us with a visit. My wife has been
looking forward to meeting Madame Kominski’s
new friend.”</p>
<p class='c012'>New friend! Was that Prince Michaelow’s
delicate way of putting the case, or did he really
not know that I was madame’s paid companion?
I caught myself revolving this conjecture even
while conversing brightly and with outward
ease. But it was not destined to trouble me
long. Later on in the evening, Madame Kominski,
who was a brilliant conversationalist, and
an evident favorite wherever she went, being
surrounded by a group of admiring friends, I
found myself somewhat isolated and thrown
upon my own resources. Yet I was by no
means tired or dull, for I watched the ever-varying
panorama in the brilliant salon in which I
found myself with considerable interest.</p>
<p class='c012'>One man in particular attracted my notice by
his somewhat sinister aspect and gloomy bearing.
He stood, half concealed by the draperies
of a large portière, with erect figure and folded
arms, looking at Madame Kominski with an expression
in his eyes which I found it difficult to
fathom, but which gave me an uneasy conviction
that it boded her no good. He was tall, of
fine build and bearing, and would, I think, by
most people be considered handsome. But there
was a depression of the eyes and upper part of
the nose which I did not like, and which seemed
to me to argue the possession of a cunning and
perhaps malignant nature.</p>
<p class='c012'>My inability to fathom the meaning of his
frequent glances in Madame Kominski’s direction
began to irritate me. Was it love that he
felt for her? Or was it hate? If the latter, why
did such a look of desire shine from his eyes
when they rested on her sparkling beauty? If
the former, why did he frown and clinch his
hands at the sound of her merry laugh?</p>
<p class='c012'>“You seem engrossed in contemplation of
Count Karenieff,” said a voice at my elbow.
“Does his appearance charm you so much?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“By no means,” I replied quickly, turning to
the Princess Michaeloff, who seated herself by
my side. “On the contrary, he strikes me as
rather repellant than otherwise. I have been
wondering if he hates Madame Kominski.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Certainly not. He is madly in love with
her. Unfortunately for him, our friend’s tastes
lean in another direction and she has been compelled
to reject his suit.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then he does hate her, and his glances mean
revenge.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I hope not. He is a dangerous enemy. There
are several people now doing penance in the fortress
of St. Peter and Paul who have been doomed
to their awful fate through his denunciations.
Only last week the son of one of these, a mere
child of fifteen, was banished to Siberia, and
there is little doubt that Count Karenieff has a
hand in this business also.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But what could he, a boy of fifteen, have
done to deserve so horrible a fate?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“He has done nothing to deserve it. No one
pretends to say that he has. But he is a bright
and intelligent lad, who might some day be
seized by a desire to avenge the wrongs of his
parents, and he is the heir to a vast property
which is now confiscated by the State. Of
course the man who has given the State an excuse
for increasing its revenue has also come in
for a share of the spoil.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What a monstrous system! What a monstrous—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“For God’s sake, be quiet! If you are overheard
talking like that, we are lost! How could
I have been indiscreet enough to dwell on tabooed
subjects like that? I think it must be
through meeting with some one who is as unsophisticated
as I was myself when I first came
here, only twelve months ago.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“So short a time as that?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, so short a time as that. I came out
here as Madame Kominski’s companion.
Thanks to her goodness, I had as many social
advantages given me as if I had been a sprig of
nobility, instead of being merely the daughter of
a poor country curate, who had found it necessary
to leave home to earn a livelihood. How
kind fate has been to me! I was scarcely here
before I won the love of the man who is now my
husband. I have surely all that woman can
desire. I love and am beloved, and I revel in
unlimited wealth and comfort. Better still, I
am able to free my parents from the harassing
anxieties against which they have hitherto had
to contend. Still—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You must be perfectly happy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have only one wish ungratified. I would
dearly like to live in England, and to escape the
constant espionage to which we are all subject.
But this cannot be, so I spend as much time in
the company of English people as I can. Do
you know, Madame Kominski brought an English
companion out here three years ago. She
was very fond of her, and was somewhat cut up
when Miss Vernon, a very handsome woman,
by-the-by, left her to get married. When I
left her, she said that she would have no more
companions, as she grew fond of them only to
lose them. I am very glad that she has altered
her mind.”</p>
<p class='c012'>So then, madame had been actuated by no
petty feeling of jealousy when she declined to
engage a pretty girl as her companion. She had
few relatives, felt somewhat lonely in the house,
and desired to secure a companion who would be
likely to remain a member of her household for
some time. Struck with this conviction, I felt
more assured than ever of the real kindness of
madame’s nature, and actually felt glad for the
moment that there was no likelihood of her
being disappointed in me as she had been disappointed
in her other companions. Little did
I dream how soon she would stand in dire need
of loving friendship, she, to whom the world
seemed to wear so smiling and benignant a front!</p>
<p class='c012'>While we had been talking, there had been a
slight movement of dispersal, and some of the
guests now claimed the attention of the princess,
who had certainly given me a disproportionate
share of her attention. Soon afterward, we also
took our leave, and both madame and myself
seemed to have plenty of food for pleasant
thought during the short drive home.</p>
<p class='c012'>The next morning it was found a difficult matter
to rouse Feo at the usual time, and her maid
expressed the opinion that the child must be ill.
I went to see her, and found her pale, sick and
languid, possessed of a violent headache and
consuming thirst. Somewhat alarmed, I announced
my intention of summoning a doctor at
once. But to this plan Feo entered very strenuous
objections.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed, Miss Dora, I am not really ill,” she
protested. “I shall soon be all right again, and
I’ll never, never do it again as long as I live.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Do what, child?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, that would be telling, and I promised
Olaf that I wouldn’t tell.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That mischievous little cousin of yours!
You have been up to some naughtiness together.
Tell me, have you been out and caught a fever,
or something of that sort?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, dear no, Dora. At least, we caught
something, but it isn’t a fever, and we didn’t
have to go out for it. Oh, dear, my head!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I must just go and see if madame
knows what will cure you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, Dora, dear! pray don’t! She would be
so vexed. Look here. I’ll tell you all about it,
if you’ll promise not to let mother know what is
the matter with me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But suppose you should get worse. Madame
would blame me then, and serious mischief might
result from delay. I really think we must call
a doctor in.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, Dora, you are so silly! Why can’t you
understand? I see I shall have to tell you everything.
But do give me a drink of lemonade
first. I shan’t get worse, that is certain. They
never do; Olaf says so.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Let Trischl fetch you a cup of coffee.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Bah! Do you want to make me sick? I
want lemonade, and you might—yes, I wish you
would get me some vodki to put in it.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Vodki! Is the child crazy?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, I’m not crazy. But I think you must
be, or else you would understand that it’s just
the Katzenjammer that’s the matter with me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Katzenjammer! What a queer complaint.
I hope it isn’t catching.”</p>
<p class='c012'>But at this point Feo suddenly became convulsed
with laughter, provoked thereto, I think,
by the comical aspect of Trischl, who had all
this time remained in the room, and who had
thrown her hands up in horror at the name of
the mysterious disease. The sight of Feo’s
mirth began to make me feel angry, for it struck
me that she had been hoaxing me a little. But
all at once the laughter ceased, and was replaced
by sobs, amid which I heard an occasional
protest to the effect that she would “never do it
again—no, never!”</p>
<p class='c012'>I now deemed it wisest to keep silent for
a while, and presently Feo raised a repentant
and shamefaced countenance to mine.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll tell you all about it,” she said. “But
you must promise not to tell mother.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If it is nothing very bad.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course it isn’t.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Very well, then, I promise.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I knew you wouldn’t be nasty with me.
And now I’ll explain what the Katzenjammer
is. You get it after you have been tipsy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Feo!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“It’s quite true. You see, last night, after
mother and you had gone out, Uncle Feodor and
Aunt Anna called with Olaf to take me to the
theater, as they had promised to do. But Olaf
didn’t want to go to the theater, and asked me
to stay at home and play with him. He knew
of such a splendid new game, he said. So we
got permission to stay here, for I thought Olaf’s
new game was something wonderful, he made
such a fuss about it when he ran to my room to
persuade me to agree to his plan. Then, when
we were alone, he said: ‘I have a short story to
tell you first. Our old isvostchik, who has been
with us so many years, has got dismissed to-day
for getting drunk. He has often been drunk,
and he was told that if he did it once more he
would lose his place. Old Hans, who is a German,
knew the penalty of offending again, and
he was always troubled with what he called the
Katzenjammer after he had been tipsy. But
this seemed to make no difference. He got tipsy
yesterday, and couldn’t drive the carriage when
mother wanted to go out in the afternoon. So
he was packed off about his business, in disgrace.
Now don’t you think, Feo, that it must
be delightful to get drunk? If it were not, do
you think a poor man would risk so much for the
sake of drinking vodki? I’m sure he wouldn’t,
so I’m determined to try what it feels like to be
tipsy, and I want you to share the fun. We’ll
pretend to be two friends, who haven’t seen each
other for a long time, and we’ll keep inviting
each other to have a drink with us.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘But suppose it makes us have the Katzenjammer
after it?’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘Oh, then we have only to take a little
drop more vodki, and then we shall be better
again.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“So at last I agreed and Olaf reached a decanter
and some glasses out of a sideboard, and we
made ourselves tipsy. It was great fun, too, for
we grew quite jolly, and we danced, and we
sang for ever so long. Then Olaf fell asleep on
the floor, and I came to bed. I don’t know
whether Olaf wakened up or not when they came
to fetch him. And it isn’t half so jolly as I
thought it would be. My head aches awfully,
and I’m never going to get drunk again.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Now was it very wrong of me to be so stricken
with laughter that I found it necessary to turn
away to hide my emotion? I’m afraid a strict
moralist would hardly approve of my behavior,
and I must have felt some twinges of conscience,
or I would not have tried so hard to recover a
stern demeanor. Finally, I succeeded, and drew
such a picture of future horrors, that would certainly
be the consequence of indulgence in a taste
for strong drink, that Feo was almost frightened
out of her wits and was not likely to transgress
again in a hurry. Of course I tabooed the idea
of giving her any more of the pernicious stuff
which had made her ill. As Trischl appeared
to know all about the matter, I purchased her
silence by the gift of a silver rouble, which she
received with many manifestations of satisfaction.
Then I ordered some hot extract of beef
to be brought for Feo, advised her to lie still for
an hour or two, and went to the morning-room
in search of madame.</p>
<p class='c012'>I found her looking somewhat disturbed. She
always had a surprising amount of letters, seeing
that she was a private individual. I had
once or twice offered to take some of the fatigue
of correspondence off her hands. But to this
she would never consent. Indeed, I never even
saw the addresses of the letters she sent away,
as might have been the case had she cared to
trust me with the duty of writing them down to
her dictation. There was much that was mysterious
in her way of receiving and dispatching
her postal communications, and she was so good-natured
with me on every other point that I
knew she must have a good and sufficient reason
for keeping me aloof in this respect. On this
particular morning one of her letters had brought
her tidings which necessitated a sudden change
of plans on her part. As had been the case
when in London, she left home for a few days,
scarcely allowing herself time to have a small
portmanteau packed, and giving us not the
slightest idea of where she was going or how
long she would be away. I was told that she
depended upon me to take her place in the household
as far as possible, but specific directions she
had not time to give me.</p>
<p class='c012'>That afternoon, I was writing a letter to Mrs.
Garth, when Feo came into my room.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I wish you would take me for a drive, Dora,”
she said. “My headache has nearly gone, and
I believe fresh air would cure it altogether.”</p>
<p class='c012'>So I put my half-finished letter on one side,
ordered the carriage, and prepared myself to go
out with Feo. We both enjoyed the drive, and
as I was still fresh to many of the sights of St.
Petersburg, there was plenty of subject matter
for conversation.</p>
<p class='c012'>On arriving home again, I repaired at once to
my own room, as I was anxious to finish the letter
which I had begun to write to Mrs. Garth.
I took the key of my room door out of my pocket.
As I did not want the prying eyes of any of the
servants to glance over my correspondence, I had
taken the precaution of locking my door instead
of putting my papers into my desk again.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was somewhat surprised to find that the door
was not locked, after all, and thought for a moment
that I might have been mistaken as to
having turned the key. But no. Reflection
convinced me that there had been no mistake.
I distinctly remembered that, after taking the
key out of the lock, I had tried the door-handle.
It would not yield to my touch. Therefore, the
door had been locked. It was not locked when
I returned. It was evident, then, that it had
been tampered with during my absence. But
who could have taken such an unwarrantable
liberty? The question puzzled me, until I recalled
to mind a figure I had seen on the stairs
as I came up. It was the figure of a man whom
I had not seen before, but who was walking
leisurely downstairs, as if he felt assured of a
safe and familiar footing in the house.</p>
<p class='c012'>Who, or what could he be?</p>
<p class='c012'>A servant in the house?</p>
<p class='c012'>I thought not.</p>
<p class='c012'>What then, a spy?</p>
<p class='c012'>At the mere thought of being subject to the
government espionage of which I had heard so
much my limbs trembled under me and I fairly
gasped for breath. I thought of May Morris
and her gruesome predictions, and the wildest
consternation seized me as I wondered if I had
written anything that could compromise me.
Had my letter to Mrs. Garth been overhauled?
I must ascertain, if possible. I examined my
blotting case and papers. They did not look as
if they had been disturbed. I was putting them
down again, half-reassured, when I perceived the
faint impress of what must have been a dirty
thumb on the edge of the sheet of note-paper on
which I had been writing. I disclaimed the
idea of having soiled the paper myself; but resolved
to apply a test, in order to be quite sure.</p>
<p class='c012'>Taking another sheet of paper, and wetting
my right thumb with ink, I lightly grasped the
paper between my thumb and forefinger, leaving
upon it a slight mark. Then, taking a magnifying-glass
from the table, I observed the two
marks with its aid. The veinings on them were
totally different. I had not soiled the half-written
letter. A spy had been in my room. Could
it be that trouble was in store for me, and that I
had already fallen under the ban of suspicion?</p>
<p class='c012'>Madame was away a week. When she returned,
I was struck by the anxious expression
of her face and still more by the evident effort
with which she strove to be her old bright self.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Are you not well?” I asked her, feeling
considerable solicitude on her behalf.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Quite well, Dora. Only a little tired after
traveling. Tell me, has anything notable occurred
during my absence?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“There have been several callers.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Were the Prince and Princess Michaelow
here?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes. They came on Thursday, and took
Feo and myself for a drive. We spent a very
pleasant afternoon. Feo is spending the day
with them again.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And Count Karenieff. Has he been here?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ah! I thought so! I must be on my guard
against him. Is that all you have to tell me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“There is something else. But I am not sure
that it is worth mentioning, or that the circumstances
warrant the uneasiness they have caused
me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“For Heaven’s sake! tell me all there is to tell.
You little dream all there may be at stake.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am convinced that there is a spy in the
house. Hush—what was that?”</p>
<p class='c012'>As I uttered the last words, I sprang to my
feet, and ran toward a large portière, which
seemed to me to have moved while I was speaking.
The door behind the portière was open,
and I was just in time to see the figure of a man
disappear round an angle of the great corridor
into which all the rooms on this floor opened.
When I turned and faced madame again, after
carefully shutting the door, I saw that she was
deadly pale, and that she was literally shaking
with nervous apprehension. I hastily gave her
a glass of wine, which she just as hastily drank,
and then sat looking at me with a mute question
in her startled eyes.</p>
<p class='c012'>“A man has just run away from this door.
He has been listening,” I whispered, feeling as
if the raising of my voice might bring ruin on
the unnerved woman of whom I had already
grown fond. Then I rapidly related how I had
been driven to the conclusion that the house was
under espionage.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Was there anything in the letter that could
be construed as matter of a mischievous tendency?”
madame asked anxiously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Nothing whatever,” was my confident reply.
“I had merely said that my life in St. Petersburg
was being made very pleasant, and that I
had met a great number of very nice people.
After I discovered that my correspondence had
been overlooked, I destroyed the letter and resolved
not to dispatch another in its place until
I had consulted you. On Thursday I wrote
out a page from Milton’s ‘Paradise Lost,’ and
left it, together with my blotting-book and writing
materials, on the escritoire in this room.
When I examined the things on my return, I
found that the page of poetry and the top layer
of blotting-paper out of my blotter had disappeared.
Ah—that door is opening!”</p>
<p class='c012'>The door, which slid on noiseless hinges, was
quite concealed by the portière, but a very slight
motion imparted to the latter by the incoming
draught had not escaped my watchful attention,
and the spy, whoever he was, was baffled again
for a time, for madame sprang up, and drew the
large curtains to one side, so that it was impossible
for the door to be moved again without our
being aware of it. To make assurance doubly
sure, we slid the bolts that were on the inside.
Then we explored the room which opened out of
the large morning-room in which we had been
sitting. We soon satisfied ourselves that nobody
was there, and then, after locking the doors
of that room also, to prevent unwarranted intrusion,
we sat down to discuss the matter more
fully.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dora,” said madame, “just reach me my
desk, will you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Willingly I obeyed, and then the desk was
carefully overhauled by its owner, who became
still more agitated when she failed to discover
certain papers of which she was in search.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am lost!” she said despairingly. “I have
been mad to keep those letters. And yet, how
could I destroy them, when they were as life itself
to me! My God! have I been too late, after
all? Is he already in the hands of those cursed,
bloodthirsty devils? Holy Mother of God! save
me from going mad!”</p>
<p class='c012'>My own bewilderment and alarm were momentarily
increasing, but I used my best endeavors
to soothe the distracted woman at my
side.</p>
<p class='c012'>“For pity’s sake!” I implored, “be calm. To
lose your self-control may help to bring about
the very disaster you fear. And think of Feo.
She will still claim your attention, whatever
may be the demands upon your fortitude.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My darling Feo! God help her, if anything
befalls me, for those ravening wolves, my
enemies, will have scant mercy upon the child of
a suspect. Dora, can I trust you? Dare I put
my secrets in your keeping?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“God helping me, I will do all I can for you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I believe you. Now listen.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Madame Kominski spoke in a low voice, but
with a painful concentration of purpose and a
nervous clasping and unclasping of her hands
which could only be the result of extreme agitation
and dread.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Listen,” she said once more. “I belong to
a family which has given many martyrs to the
cause of freedom, and from my earliest youth I
was taught to hate that merciless Juggernaut, the
Russian autocracy, with all its vile ramifications
of pillage and murder. Pah! Curse it!
What does government do for us? It revels in
luxury and splendors drained from the life-blood
of millions of groaning victims. It grinds the
people into nothingness as remorselessly as the
millstones crush the wheat with which they are
fed. But the day will come when even that
mighty thing of evil will be numbered among
the curses of the past, and when wealth and
happiness are no longer all absorbed by the thin
crust of society, while all beneath it is one mass
of rotten, seething corruption and misery. They
talk of hell! What hell could display sufferings
equal to those which have been endured by my
people? What hell could be big enough to hold
all the accursed wretches who have for ages
helped to trample out the lives and souls of a
vast nation?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Madame! madame!” I whispered, in renewed
alarm. “Think how dreadful it will be
if you are overheard!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, yes,” she said, sinking her voice
again. “I believe I must be mad! And is it
not enough to drive one mad, to see the downfall
of all one’s hopes; the failure of all one’s
plans; the utter hopelessness of trying to rescue
even one unit among all these millions from the
remorseless fate which an iron autocracy metes
out for it? Where are now all my struggles?
Lost! Wasted! Gone! Crashed by the foul
harpies who bloat themselves on the miseries
of others!</p>
<p class='c012'>“But I forget that you do not yet know my
history. Listen. I will tell it to you.”</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VIII.<br/><span class='small'>“Brave hearts and willing hands may foil even Satan himself.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>“I had,” continued madame, “father, mother,
sister, and two brothers, all of whom were sacrificed
to the Moloch of oppression: My father’s
estates were confiscated, and his castle was
handed into the possession of his betrayer, to
whom was also given a title, and who was henceforth
known as Count Karenieff. I, a babe in
arms, was surely spared in fiendish irony of purpose,
and was consigned to the care of a childless
couple in St. Petersburg, who had strict injunctions
to bring me up as their own offspring,
and who, in consideration of the small income
they received with me, kept the secret of my
birth until I was nineteen. Then Paul Galtioff
died, and his wife Marie, having confidence in
my discretion, and a premonition that her own
end was not far off, showed me my true vocation.
She told me of all that my relatives had
suffered, and how my mother had been subjected
to imprisonment, torture, the lash and personal
degradation because she would say nothing that
would incriminate my father. I have often
since heard of the horrors of St. Peter and Paul.
In your country they speak with bated breath of
banishment to Siberia as the extreme compass of
human suffering. <i>We</i> know that it is the one
ray of hope which gleams before the eyes of those
who are denounced. Complete freedom will never
be theirs again, but there are gradations in even
the lowest ruts of misery, and I would pray for
the devil himself to be saved from the anguish
endured by those condemned to the fortress.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What wonder that, thinking of all these
things, I should pant for vengeance, and that I
should devote all my future energies to foiling
some of the plots against my compatriots! But
Marie Galtioff infused in me some of her own
caution and cunning. Both she and her husband
had belonged to revolutionary societies for years
without once exciting suspicion of their loyalty.
Henceforth I derived my chief satisfaction in
hoodwinking our oppressors. I habitually met
kindred spirits, among them being Feodor Kominski,
who afterward became my husband.
Perhaps it was well for him that death claimed
him soon after Feo was born. His spirit was too
ardent to have worked in the dark much longer.</p>
<p class='c012'>“For some years after I became a widow I
supported myself in various ways. Then my
opportunity came from a quarter least expected.
A member of our society, who possessed great
influence at court, where he was supposed to be
one of the most loyal supporters of the throne,
was asked to recommend some lady who would
make an efficient government spy. He nominated
me for the office. The pay was on a
princely scale. The social advantages attending
the post were great. There was no circle deemed
too high for my entry into it on apparent terms
of equality with the most exclusive. My credentials
were indisputable, and my own conversational
ability did the rest. I became a general
favorite in society, and might have been happy,
could I but have faithfully performed the day’s
duty for which I was paid. My employers gave
me every opportunity of spying and denouncing
suspected persons. I denounced a good many
when I saw that their discovery by others was
inevitable. But I always contrived to let them
have sufficient warning to escape before the bolt
fell. I was doing good work for my people,
under the mask of an alien to patriotism. Above
all, I was occupying a place which will soon, I
fear, be occupied by a substitute whose aims and
aspirations will not be as mine have been.</p>
<p class='c012'>“When I was in St. Petersburg in the early
spring, Count Karenieff, the son of my father’s
old enemy, was introduced to me, and I found it
a terribly difficult matter to be civil to him. It
was, however, necessary that I should curb the
anger which his very name aroused in me. But
when the caitiff’s whelp actually dared to propose
marriage to me, my scorn and hatred over-stepped
the bounds of prudence, and my rejection
was so fierce as to astonish him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘I see, madame,’ he said, his face glittering
with the evil with which his heart is full to
bursting. ‘I understand you better than you
understand yourself. You see in me a man of
strong feeling, and you think it necessary to use
strong words with me, in order to drive me from
my purpose. But I tell you that your beauty
has aroused my passions, and I will gratify
them even though you raised ten thousand objections.
You are so unnecessarily vehement
that I conclude you have a more favored lover.
One, moreover, who resembles me not at all.
And you think to marry him? I swear you
shall marry none but me! Nay, if you do not
beware, I will bring that about which shall make
you turn to me for help, which shall make you
only too happy to throw yourself into my arms
and yield yourself to my embraces. As for your
lover, I shall find him, and I shall silence him,
never fear. His golden hair shall turn gray
with horror, and his blue eyes shall become dim
with anguish.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘He has neither golden hair nor blue eyes,’ I
cried, trembling with the awe the man’s fierce
words evoked.</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘Thank you,’ was his reply. ‘I thought
that, as you seemed so disgusted with my proposal,
your inamorato must be my antithesis.
Now I am sure of it. If it had not been so, you
would have been glad to permit me to retain an
erroneous opinion. Good-day, madame. Perhaps,
when next we meet, you will have become
wiser.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“With this the viper left me, and I sat bereft
of all my usual fortitude. For I knew him to
be capable of as much villainy as his father
before him, and I had practically betrayed
Victor Karniak to him; for his instinct had led
him to form a correct idea of the appearance of
my intended husband. That he would hound
him down, I had no doubt. But I was not so
paralyzed by Karenieff’s threats as to hesitate
long about what I must do.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That night I attended a meeting which was
held by Nihilists not far from here. I had difficulty
in reaching the place unobserved, and,
carefully disguised, I saw Karenieff and two of
his myrmidons watching my house. I explained
the impossibility of my further attendance at the
meetings for some time, as my presence might
lead to the discovery and betrayal of my associates.
There were those among them who swore
that, if there must be a victim, it should be
Karenieff himself. I would have rejoiced any
time since then to have heard of the removal of
the pestiferous carrion; but he bears a charmed
life, or, rather, he is too well aware of his danger
to go anywhere unguarded, for he has denounced
too many people not to fear vengeance from
some quarter.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Victor Karniak was persuaded to leave St.
Petersburg for a time, and it was considered
wisest for us not to meet again until we could
do so with more safety.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I was sent to England, on what was deemed
important business, soon after this, and hoped
that Karenieff’s mischievous intentions were
rendered impossible of achievement. Meanwhile
Victor, having been imprudently active in
Odessa, narrowly escaped capture by shipping
as a common seaman on board a steamer, in
place of a drunken sailor who had fallen overboard.
In due time he reached London. We
found means of meeting, and have been married
in an English registry office.</p>
<p class='c012'>“But we dared not return together, and I
dared not delay my own return, as I had much
information to give concerning many Russians
who have escaped to England, some of them
with Victor’s help and mine. They are safe
where they are, and will assuredly never return
to Russia, having been warned of what they
might expect; so I feel no twinges of conscience
because I have convinced the government beyond
doubt that they are out of Russian territory
and beyond Russian jurisdiction.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My husband, anxious to be near me sometimes,
and having considerable property which
he wishes to realize, if possible, followed me
here. He was at the Princess Michaelow’s reception,
and though we were studiedly cool to
each other, I once saw Karenieff looking at us
with such an appearance of malicious conviction
on his face that I felt sure he suspected our
secret. Victor, who had been called by an alias
in Odessa, believed himself to be recognized, and
would have tried to leave the country again, but
was taken ill and has been unable to quit his bed
for more than a week. I have been with him
the greater part of the time, and he is only since
yesterday strong enough to rise and dress himself.
This morning I saw him, disguised as an
old peddler, and armed with a license and pass
which a friend had procured for him, start on a
journey, every inch of which is fraught with
danger of detection and death. God grant that,
shaken as he is with his recent illness, he may
find himself once more in your land of freedom
ere long.</p>
<p class='c012'>“But I fear, I fear! For my enemy has been
active. He has been missing from his usual
haunts, and has been trying to discover my husband’s
whereabouts. This I have been told by
the people who, on my behalf, have been watching
Karenieff. He did not come here to seek me,
because he knew I was not here. That he has
not known exactly where I was, I can but hope,
for the sake of Victor and the friends who have
helped us. But that he has already denounced
me as a traitor and Nihilist I was told to-day on
my way here. I would not have entered the
house again, but would have tried to escape,
had I had means of travel with me. Besides, I
could not, in any case, have left Feo. Had I
done so, my child would surely have fallen under
the vengeance of those who have gloatingly
crushed out the lives of other innocent children.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I had hoped to get away under cover of
night, but alas! what you have told me since I
came home has served to convince me that I am
already too closely watched to be permitted to
escape. Dora, my friend, help me, for the love
of God! for I already feel, in anticipation, all
the horrors of the fortress, and I can no longer
plan clearly.”</p>
<p class='c012'>All this had been spoken in a voice too low to
penetrate as far as the door, but clear enough
for me, whose head was bent close to madame’s,
to distinguish every word of it. For a few moments
I could only continue to gaze at my friend
in blank dismay. Then, as certain possibilities
presented themselves before my mental vision,
I clasped my hands angrily, and exclaimed:
“Great Heaven! why am I not tall and beautiful,
when so much size and beauty is wasted on
people who do not know how to use it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Recalling that time, I am not surprised at the
change my apparently irrelevant lament wrought
in Madame Kominski’s demeanor. She sprang
to her feet, and fairly hissed at me in her wrath:
“Fool! fool that I have been, to imagine my
troubles could really interest a comparative
stranger! I betray all my secrets to you, and
implore your aid, and only succeed in evoking
from you a lamentation concerning your own
lack of beauty. God! what small minds there
are in this world!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Madame,” I cried, springing to my feet in
my turn, “you mistake me. I am devoted to
you, and will do anything to help you. I expressed
myself clumsily, but I meant to say that
if I were more like you I would change places
with you. As it is, the plan is hopeless. But
we will think of something else. God is not always
on the side of the mighty.”</p>
<p class='c012'>As I spoke, I put my arms round madame
and kissed her affectionately. The revulsion of
feeling produced in her mind by my words and
actions broke the intense strain under which she
had labored, and she embraced me convulsively,
a perfect storm of sobs shaking her frame. I
strove as best I could with my own emotion and
let madame cry on. I knew it would do her
good. Presently she grew calmer, and after
a while her sobs ceased altogether.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am better now,” she said. “I feel as if a
great cloud were rolled from my brain. I can
think and plan once more. My mother, they
say, had the courage of a martyr. If I fall,
my enemies shall not gloat over my cowardice.
Suppose we open the doors again. It is not wise
to show a spy that we fear him.”</p>
<p class='c012'>I had just opened the door, and put the portière
into its usual position, when Trischl, the
German nurse, came to see her mistress. She
walked into the room without invitation, but
preserved nevertheless her usual respectful demeanor.
“I believe madame needs friends,”
she said in a low, cautious voice. “I have seen
that which makes me think so. Madame has
been good to me. If she will not be angry at
my presumption, I will be her faithful helper.”</p>
<p class='c012'>As Trischl ceased speaking, she looked at her
mistress anxiously, as if half afraid of reproof.
But of that she met none, and the friendly clasp
of the hand with which madame tried to show
her appreciation of the risk the faithful creature
was running in offering to help a suspect was to
her a seal of allegiance. For a little while we
deliberated together, forming and rejecting one
plan after another. Presently an unusually vigorous
peal at the visitor’s bell made itself heard
even here, where the sonorous reverberations
seldom penetrated. We all turned pale and the
same unspoken question was in all our eyes: “Is
the enemy already upon us? Is it too late to
escape?” Even evils are welcomed at times,
when they come in the place of a still more
dreaded one, and we were all positively relieved
when a footman presently came to ask madame
if she would see Count Karenieff in the
salon.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Tell him I will see him immediately,” said
madame. Instinctively both Trischl and I knew
what should be done, and we hastened to bathe
madame’s face with eau-de-cologne, to brush her
hair, to alter her toilet a little, and to give to her
face the appearance of quiet composure by means
of a little powder and rouge. The results were
arrived at quickly. The effect was good, and
madame’s bearing and appearance, as she went
down to interview her mortal enemy, were the
reverse of those of a betrayed and despairing
woman, who anticipated a horrible fate in the
near future.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Temporize with him,” I had counseled while
hurriedly assisting with her toilet. “Feign
ignorance of his cruel intentions. If he asks
you again to marry him, do not insult him, but
seem as if you had altered your opinion of him.
Ask him to give you a day to deliberate. It
would be so much time gained for us.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The nod of comprehension with which she
left us showed that she considered my advice
to be good, and I felt more hopeful of the result
of the interview between the courageous woman
and the dastardly man than I could have believed
possible half an hour before.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And now,” said Trischl, “there is no time to
be lost. There are spies in the house. But we
can be as clever as spies, if we like, and we must
prepare things for madame’s departure as soon
as possible. All her jewelry must be hidden
somehow, so that she can easily carry it away.”</p>
<p class='c012'>I felt that Trischl was right, and that a desperate
emergency like this was not the time to
stand on ceremony. Fifteen minutes later a
strange face peeped in at the open door for a
moment. We were both diligently employed.
To all appearances we were both innocently
employed. Trischl was quilting some silk, of
which she purposed making a kind of cuff, to
be tied above the elbows. I was indulging in
the prosaic occupation of mending a pair of
corsets. Could the fellow who had glanced at
us have seen that a pile of jewelry lay underneath
the aprons Trischl and I had donned, he
would perhaps have been slightly surprised.
Had he had a suspicion that I had just stitched
a parure of diamonds into the corset, and that
Trischl was quilting the silk over a beautiful
pearl necklace, he might perhaps have thought
it advisable to report the occurrence to his
superiors. As it was, he passed on, in blissful
ignorance of our real occupation, and it was
certainly not our business to enlighten him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Here is madame,” said Trischl presently;
and I looked anxiously at Madame Kominski, to
see if I could tell the result of the interview
from her bearing. Trischl rose hastily to her
feet, seemingly overwhelmed with confusion at
having been caught occupying her mistress’s
seat. She had forgotten that her quilting task
was not finished, and some valuable rings rolled
across the floor, the incident evoking a little
surprise in the mind of their owner. But while
Trischl hurriedly tried to recover the runaways,
I explained what we had been doing.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What a clever idea!” said madame. “I
should never have thought of such capital hiding-places
myself. If I manage to quit Russia,
I shall probably be in great need of money, and
will be glad to realize the value of the jewelry.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I hope things are not so desperate as we
have feared,” I hazarded.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You shall judge,” was the reply. “Karenieff
was evidently prepared to find me more antagonistic
to him than I showed myself, and I think
my bearing convinced him that my suspicions
concerning him were not aroused.</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘I am sorry to have kept you waiting,’ I
said, ‘but the truth is, I was busy with my toilet
and could not come before.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“He cast upon me a swift look of surprise,
and then, apparently much gratified by the civility
of my reception of him, dosed me with a
few compliments, adding that he hoped I had
forgotten the wild, foolish words he had uttered
to me months ago. I actually found it possible
to laugh, as I remarked in my turn: ‘Ah, yes!
We all alter our opinions of things as time goes
on. I have learned to esteem where I once despised;
and you—you, no doubt, take things
more coolly than you did.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘My love for you has not grown cooler,’ he
exclaimed. ‘Consent to marry me, and I will
secure you immunity from trouble in the future.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘Marry you! Is it possible you still wish me
to become your wife?’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘It is not merely my wish. It is the one
passion of my life! Say you will be mine, and
remove my suspense.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘I do not know,’ I said, pretending to hesitate.
‘You see, I hardly thought you would
favor me again with a proposal, after my former
rudeness to you.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘The woman who hesitates is lost! Have I
really supplanted my fair-haired rival?’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘Bah! Fair men are so insipid.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“So they are. But you will not find me insipid,
my beauty. I hate, or I love, to madness,
and either passion finds in me an ardent votary.
It is well you have chosen me for your lover
rather than for your enemy, since I have more
power than you dream of.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘Indeed! I did not know that you had any
special vocation. You said just now that marriage
with you would bring me immunity from
trouble. I do not see how that can be, since we
all have our troubles; but I wish it were true.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘It shall be true. Listen. You are in the
pay of the government. The private fortune
you are supposed to have is non-existent. I
know exactly what is paid you, since my position
in the secret service is so high as to be one
upon which devolves the regulation of these little
things. With one stroke of my pen I can make
or mar many a life that fancies itself secure
at this moment. Now, information has been
brought to me that you, so far from being a
faithful servant of the Crown, are in league
with those vagabond Nihilists. As my wife,
you shall be proved innocent. As my enemy,
you would be crushed. Which is it to be?’</p>
<p class='c012'>“I believe I acted my part very well. I was
overcome by sudden terror. I clung to the man.
I wept and implored him to save me. I promised
to marry him as soon as he liked. I suffered
him to embrace me. His kisses, hot, passionate
and scathing, have been showered on my
face and lips. I have listened to burning words
which have made me ashamed of my womanhood.
Had I alone been concerned, I would
have died rather than have undergone the humiliation
of the last half hour. But there is
Feo and Victor. For their sakes I must escape
from this accursed country.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And you shall escape,” said Trischl, with
decision. “I think I know how it can be managed.”
In another moment she had left us,
hurrying away as if struck by a fresh idea,
while madame and I eyed each other anxiously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Has he gone?” I asked.</p>
<p class='c012'>“For a time. I believe he has gone to stop
extreme proceedings against me. But the relief
will be only momentary. I should go mad if I
had to endure his caresses often, and he may at
any moment discover that I am already married.
His vengeance would then be more terrible than
ever.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“It is not to be thought of. We must act at
once.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Here is Ivan Dromireff, madame,” said
Trischl’s voice. “I met him on the staircase.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Both madame and I looked at the new arrival
with surprise. He turned out to be none other
than her coachman, and he stood bowing awkwardly,
the while holding out a note between
fingers that were much less clumsy than his
vocation would have led one to imagine them
to be.</p>
<p class='c012'>“A letter from Prince Michaelow,” he said
quietly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“How is it that it has not been sent up in the
usual way?” inquired madame sharply, receiving
for answer a word of which I could not catch
the meaning, but which wrought a great change
in madame’s behavior.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sit down,” she said eagerly, “while I read
the note. And you, Trischl, secure the door
against intruders, and wait here until we decide
what is best to be done.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Trischl, having obeyed her mistress’s order,
came and stood beside Ivan. It struck me that
the footing upon which they stood was a very
familiar one, for they smiled at each other in
quite an affectionate manner. Meanwhile, madame’s
proceedings were somewhat curious.
She opened the note, upon which were merely
written a few lines to the effect that Feo was
enjoying herself and would remain for the night
where she was. Then she took from her pocket
a bunch of keys and unlocked a small medicine
chest. From this she took two phials, each containing
a colorless fluid. Her next proceeding
was to fetch a small china tray from a side-table.
Into this she emptied the two phials.
When the liquids were thoroughly mixed, she
immersed the note in them and let it remain a
few seconds. When she lifted it out of the tray
again, it was seen to be closely covered with
writing, some kind of sympathetic ink having
been used which had required acids to develop
it. This is what was written on the note:</p>
<p class='c014'>“<span class='sc'>My Friend</span>—Our cause is lost. We are betrayed.
Nothing but prompt flight can save us.
Count Karenieff has much in his power. If you
can dupe him for a while it will be well. Victor
will elude his enemies, I think. I have long
feared this day, and have been prepared for it.
Ivan will give you a pass that will be of good
service to you. But it must be used to-night.
To-morrow every departure from the city will be
closely watched. By the time you get this we
shall be well on our way. Feo will go with us,
and I trust we shall all arrive in England safely.
You know the rendezvous. It will be better for
you to be unencumbered by the child. I would
advise your companion to get away, too, if she
has helped you in any way. Ivan has already
made his preparations.</p>
<div class='c015'>M.”</div>
<p class='c016'>After passing the note on to me to read it,
madame asked Ivan if he were aware of its
contents.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I know how we are all circumstanced,” he
said promptly, “and what the prince told me
will be something similar to what he has
written.”</p>
<p class='c012'>In a low, rapid voice madame read the letter
over for the benefit of Trischl and Ivan, who
were now too much implicated to be excluded
from confidence. Then she struck a match and
burned the note and its envelope until they were
entirely consumed. Meanwhile, I returned the
acids to their receptacles, wiped the tray, and
removed every trace of the chemical operation,
giving madame the key of the medicine chest
when I had done.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And now,” said Ivan, “for action.” A minute
later he had divested himself of his overcoat,
and had made himself much less stout by the removal
of some clothes which he had had packed
round his body. Then he coolly took off his big,
bushy beard and mustache, and his tously black
wig. Such a transformation as all this wrought
in him! He had seemed a rough specimen of
humanity, not far removed from serfdom. He
stood before us slim, erect, fair and smooth-faced,
but bearing the witnesses of an indomitable
spirit in his determined mouth, no longer
hidden by the disfiguring hair, in his fearless
glance, and in his square jaw.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now you know me; but no names, please,”
he said warningly, as madame seemed about to
exclaim aloud at sight of him. “The prince,
having induced you to accept a certain position,
has always been convinced of its danger, and
has always been prepared with plans to rescue
you. For this purpose, he recommended me to
your notice as coachman, in order that no symptoms
of menace might escape your friends. I
have seen that you have no more time to lose.
Here is our passport. It is made out for August
Krämer, a German mercantile agent; Anna
Krämer, his wife; Wilhelm Schwartz, commission
agent, and Karl Schwartz, son of the
latter.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But that will not do for us. We are three
women, not three men,” said madame.</p>
<p class='c012'>“If circumstances do not fit us, we must fit
ourselves to circumstances, and I think we can
manage it,” said Ivan. “Trischl is my foster-sister,
and will go with us, I know. She is
big enough and strong enough to personate
Schwartz, senior. You, madame, will have to
figure as Herr August Krämer, while I will do
my best to make you a suitable spouse. The
young English lady will make a very nice boy.
Here are some of the things you will require.
Put on as many as will be hidden by outer clothing.
Take the rest with you. In fifteen minutes
follow me. I will have the carriage waiting
at the door. It shall contain a few necessary
articles which will have to be put on in the
carriage. You must give me your order to
drive to one of the theaters. But be very careful.
Some one is sure to be on the watch. We
will drive away openly. As soon as we have
driven off, draw the curtains and complete your
disguise the best way you can. After a while I
will stop the carriage. You must then get out,
leaving nothing in the vehicle, and keeping
your mantles well wrapped round you. Walk
on a few yards until I join you. The horses will
stand for some time, and I have a man ready to
take them to a place agreed upon. It will not
do for them to return home too soon, and it is
just possible that we may need them. Now I
must be off.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Another minute, and he had replaced his beard
and top-coat. Still a minute more, and we three
women were trying to induct ourselves into garments
such as we had never been used to. In
ten minutes we had stuffed our pockets full of
wigs, beards, jewelry, papers, money and other
etceteras. I had had time to run to my room
and secure my own money and jewelry, as well
as a large cloak and a hat. Everything else I
must perforce leave behind. Trischl fetched her
big cloak and bonnet, and went down to the carriage
a yard or two in front of us. Punctual to
time, we stepped inside. Madame told Ivan to
drive to the Alexander Theater. Ivan touched
his hat obsequiously, mounted his box, cracked his
whip, and we were started on our perilous journey.</p>
<p class='c012'>There was no loss of time among us, after we
drove off, for we knew that promptitude on our
part was a matter of life and death. It was a
somewhat cramped place in which to transform
our appearance, but we had to make the best of
the situation. With hurrying, trembling fingers
we wrought at our disguise. Madame donned
a tow-colored curly wig, beard, mustache and
eyebrows, and exchanged her mantle and bonnet
for a top-coat and slouch hat. Trischl adorned
herself with a black beard something like Ivan
wore, and likewise donned a rough overcoat,
which she surmounted by a felt hat. I was not
proud of my hair, anyway, so, seeing what
trouble the others had in disposing of theirs
under their wigs, I ruthlessly cut mine off with
a pair of scissors I had brought with me for
emergencies. It was surprising how small
and slight a boy I seemed. It would be easy to
pass me off as a fifteen-year-older.</p>
<p class='c012'>When we had done our best to transform ourselves
into as presentable representatives of
Messrs Krämer and Schwartz as was possible
with our resources, we commenced strapping up
the cloaks and hats, the latter being mercilessly
crushed during the operation. We had barely
completed our preparations when the carriage
stopped and Ivan opened the door. “Now is
our time,” he said hurriedly. “We shall barely
catch the Cronstadt boat. Go toward the boat-landing.
I will follow you in a minute.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Without another word we obeyed Ivan’s directions.
We had almost reached the landing,
when a fair-faced, rather good-looking woman
grasped madame somewhat unceremoniously by
the arm, and addressed her in the whining, ill-used
tone which is the special prerogative of
certain carping, dissatisfied wives.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m sure, August,” she said. “It’s easy to
be seen that we’ve been married this six years
and more. I have seen the time when you
wouldn’t stalk on half a mile in front, leaving
me to follow as best I could. But times are
different now, and a man isn’t above making
his wife carry his top-coat in these days. But I
won’t stand it any longer. You may carry it
yourself.”</p>
<p class='c012'>So great was the transformation that for an
instant we did not see that it was Ivan who was
personating the ill-used wife. As soon as she
did become fully alive to this fact, madame took
the top-coat on her arm, instinctively apologizing
for her apparent rudeness.</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, no, that will never do,” muttered Ivan.
“You are far too polite. Keep up your rôle of
a careless husband and growl harder at me than
I growl at you—if you can. There must be no
appearance of haste or anxiety to escape notice.
Boldness is our best weapon.—Herr Schwartz,
that son of yours looks too much like a girl—too
quiet and shy.—Here, Karl, my boy, have a
cigarette, and walk with a little more swagger—as
if the place belonged to you. Take a peep
at the pretty girls you pass, and be politely
courteous, if any old ladies seem to need your
services.—Herr Krämer, you are as fidgety
about that hair of yours as if you were a
woman. It is dangerous to appear too solicitous
about your personal appearance. Now, all three,
please. Follow whatever cue I may think it
desirable to give you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Thus grumbling, admonishing and advising,
the pseudo Madame Krämer talked until we were
close to the ticket-office, near which a goodly
number of people were waiting to pay their
fares, have their passports viséd, and receive
their tickets to go on board the river steamer
which lay waiting for its living cargo.</p>
<p class='c012'>I am afraid that I must confess myself not
nearly so brave as I had imagined I was, for,
now that the crucial moment had come, I trembled
in every limb; whereas the others, either
more habituated to the exercise of courage, or
more alive to the irretrievably fatal consequences
of a false move on their part, walked up to the
barrier as nonchalantly as if traveling by this
route were a matter of daily occurrence with
them. Fortunately for us, there was an unusually
large number of passengers, many of them
being of the Jewish persuasion. Upon these
the rancor of the officials seemed to concentrate
itself, and while apparently well-to-do people
were merely treated unceremoniously, the followers
of Israel were harassed and insulted beyond
patient endurance. Many of them had
been prosperous, but had been hounded from
their homes and driven to beggary by a cruel
and rapacious tyranny that found ready helpers
in its horde of greedy, money-grabbing, red-taped
myrmidons.</p>
<p class='c012'>My heart ached for the sorrows of one miserable
couple, who were accompanied by six children,
and who seemed to be bewildered by the
insults which arrogance in office heaped upon
them. But I also felt especially grateful to
them. For the officials had no time to spare to
examine our passports with anything like care
when there were so many downtrodden Jews
upon whom to exercise their spleen. Thus it
happened that without much fuss or questioning
we soon found ourselves seated in the deck
saloon, en route for Cronstadt, the second-class
passengers being huddled forward, where they
were not likely to be spoiled by the luxury of too
much comfort or accommodation.</p>
<p class='c012'>I saw madame scan the other occupants of the
saloon very searchingly. Perhaps she thought
that her daughter was among them, and it was
difficult to augur well or ill from the fact that
she was not there. I wonder if ever any one
watched the endless twistings and turnings of
the Neva with more impatience than we did, or
if any one ever longed more devotedly to get beyond
the oft-recurring view of St. Isaac’s golden
dome. But even as times of joy have their ending,
even so is the period of suspense and danger
never interminable, and we at last found ourselves
close to Cronstadt.</p>
<p class='c012'>We had not considered it safe to talk about
our position while sitting in the saloon or pacing
the deck, lest we should be overheard and betrayed.
But we all felt breathless anxiety as we
filed off the boat on to the landing-stage, holding
our tickets in readiness for the collector.</p>
<p class='c012'>Suppose we had been missed at St. Petersburg!
Suppose Karenieff, baffled and enraged,
were already on our track! Suppose a wire had
been sent here, conveying orders to detain and
arrest us!</p>
<p class='c012'>Anticipation presented numberless possibilities,
all of which, as we walked ashore without
hindrance, seemed as if they were to be happily
negatived by the reality.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER IX.<br/><span class='small'>“How fain are we to turn our backs on that which likes us not.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>It struck me at the time as a remarkable coincidence
that after walking about fifty yards we
should come across a droschki, into which we
all stepped, being driven away without a word
of explanation to the driver, unless a peculiar,
thrice-repeated nod by Ivan be considered sufficient
explanation.</p>
<p class='c012'>It would be useless to pretend that our drive
was in every respect a comfortable one. The
droschki was, in the first place, so small that we
had to sit on each other’s knees. And it was so
shaky that we had to hold on to each other to
avoid turning a somersault on to the roadway.
But that was not the fault of the droschki. The
ill-used vehicle was compelled to do duty as a
sledge in winter. In summer the runners were
unshiped and laid to rest for a few months,
while the clumsy wheels were hauled out of their
hiding-place and tied to the body of the droschki
with ropes. When you take a carriage of this
description, and drive it helter-skelter through
streets paved with rough round cobble-stones,
the result cannot be expected to be conducive
to comfort.</p>
<p class='c012'>In my case, the miseries of that drive were
intensified, as I was already feeling very sick, in
consequence of having been rash enough to cap
my first cigarette with a second one. But it was all
in the interests of patriotism and freedom, and
the memory of the sufferings of that day and
night has been wiped out by the recollection of
their satisfactory ending.</p>
<p class='c012'>We had been driving, as nearly as I can remember,
about half an hour, having branched
off from the streets into the public park known
as Peter the Great’s Gardens, when our driver
drew his horse up close to the edge of some dark,
stagnant water. We were beside the new Mole.
The last remnant of daylight was now gone, so
far as it does go altogether in these latitudes in
summer. But we were quite able to see that in
the huge basin before us lay hundreds of steamers
of various nationalities, in one of which at
least we hoped to find a haven of refuge.</p>
<p class='c012'>Seeing us get out of the droschki, several uncouth-looking
boatmen, dressed in bright-colored
print shirts, immediately importuned us to employ
them. After a little preliminary bargaining
between them and the droschki-driver, the
two least villainous-looking boatmen were employed
to row our party to an English steamer
named the <i>Beacon</i>.</p>
<p class='c012'>A liberal <i>douceur</i> was given to the driver by
Ivan. We stepped into the gaudily-painted
boat, carrying our scanty store of luggage with
us; the men bent to their oars, and we were soon
skimming the surface of the Mole, while the
sounds of the droschki’s wheels died away in the
distance.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Keep a sharp lookout,” muttered Ivan in
English. “These fiendish boatmen would brain
us all, and pitch us into the water, if they
thought that, by catching us unawares, they
could land a few roubles and a watch or two.
That sort of thing often happens, but none of
the villains are ever brought to book. They bolt
off to their winter quarters as soon as they have
done a stroke of that sort of business, and when
they come back in the next boating season the
whole affair has been forgotten by the officials.”</p>
<p class='c012'>After this, I sat with my eyes glued on the
boatmen, anxiously noting what a number of
ships we had to pass before we reached the one
we wanted, and wildly longing for the time
when I could bid an eternal farewell to misery-haunted
Russia. I supposed, the <i>Beacon</i> being
in the inner Mole, the men would be rowing half
an hour before they reached it. To me the time
seemed an age ere we pulled up beside a black-looking
steamer, and one of the men shouted
“Ahoy!” to the watchman on deck. There was
a speedy reply to the summons, three or four
dark heads popping themselves over the side to
have a look at us. There were no questions
asked, and it almost seemed to me as if we had
been expected, though one could not complain
of the preparations for our reception being too
elaborate. A rope-ladder hung from the ship’s
side, and for a moment my heart sank within
me, when I was told that this was the only
means of boarding our ark of safety.</p>
<p class='c012'>Trischl confessed to me afterward that she almost
fainted at what seemed to her to be courting
certain death. But we were both possessed
by an even greater dread than that of falling
back into the water, and nerved ourselves to appear
as “manly” and unconcerned as possible,
lest our terror should betray how totally unused
to our present surroundings we were. As for
madame, she seemed to be endowed with super-human
courage and calmness.</p>
<p class='c012'>In due course this fresh ordeal was over. The
boatmen grasped the end of the ladder, which
had wooden rungs, in order to steady it, and one
by one we sampled its precarious footing, swaying
from side to side with the motion of the
boat, and sometimes being turned almost with
our backs to the steamer before we reached the
rail at the top. Here many hands were ready
to seize ours, and to help us to descend the short
ladder which led from the rail to the deck. It is
contrary to all custom for a woman to be left to
the last to come on board in this fashion, and
Ivan, in spite of his assumed transposition into
a member of the weaker sex, would fain have
seen the supposed German merchant board the
ship before him. This, however, would of a certainty
have roused the suspicions of the boatmen.</p>
<p class='c012'>So madame was left to give the boatmen their
stipulated pay and to come on board unaided.
The boatmen, knowing with what facility seafarers
usually mount these hanging ladders,
pushed their boat off without further delay, and
paid no more attention to the individual whom
they left dangling in mid-air. Being thus unceremoniously
thrown upon her own resources,
madame exerted herself to secure a more stable
footing, and when at last she stood upon the
deck, shaking with sudden nervousness, I firmly
believed that nothing short of a miracle had
saved her from falling into the water.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Pray come down below at once,” said the
voice of a man who had taken an active part in
our reception, and who proved to be the captain.
“I began to be afraid that you would not save
the tide. It will be high water in an hour, and
there is nothing to hinder us from weighing
and starting at once. We must pass out when
the gates open. You will have to excuse the
quarters to which I am compelled to consign you
until we are out of Russian jurisdiction. We
may possibly be boarded again by government
officials before we are clear of the docks, and you
must all be alike invisible and inaudible. So be
perfectly still until I come down to you again.
You will find some other refugees in the ship.
They will help to make you comfortable. Take
care!”</p>
<p class='c012'>While the captain was talking, he had been
leading us through the ship’s saloon; thence
through the steward’s pantry to what he called
the lazarette, whence we emerged, through a cunningly
concealed sliding door, into an apartment
that was so narrow that two stout people could
barely have passed each other in it, and so dark
that the reader may reasonably excuse the momentary
panic which overcame me, when, before
we had quite comprehended that we were at last
at the end of our journey, we were pushed
further into the passage-like space. Then the
captain hurriedly left us to our own devices, and
the door closed with a peculiar click which advertised
some patent spring action.</p>
<p class='c012'>We were doubtful what step to take next, and
were so imbued with a sense of the deadly danger
that would attend any noise on our part, that
for a few moments we dared neither move nor
speak. It was a great relief when, in a few
minutes, the captain returned with a scrap of
candle—warranted to go out in five minutes.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Daren’t allow more. Might be seen,” he
whispered, and then clicked the door after him.</p>
<p class='c012'>We eagerly availed ourselves of the dim light
which had been put into Trischl’s hand to glance
around our temporary prison, which eventually
proved to have been contrived by means of
double bulkheads, which traversed the ship from
side to side, but were only two feet apart from
each other. The reason for this economy of
space will be obvious when it is remembered
that the object of the shipbuilders had been the
provision of a secret chamber of which the existence
was not to be even suspected by those not
in the secret.</p>
<p class='c012'>The long, narrow passage thus obtained was
furnished with rugs and cushions, and such
other means of comfort as the exigencies of space
and practicability allowed.</p>
<p class='c012'>But we did not dwell long upon the view of
our place of refuge, for we speedily caught sight
of that which filled us with the liveliest joy.</p>
<p class='c012'>We had been enjoined to keep silent. Surely
it would have been a superhuman task to refrain
from a few exclamations of thankfulness at the
surprise in store for us. For here were the
Prince and Princess Michaelow, madame’s
daughter Feo, and a fourth person whom we
soon knew to be none other than Victor Karniak,
my mistress’s newly-wedded husband.</p>
<p class='c012'>Surely tears, and sobs, and smiles, and ejaculations
of gratitude were never more rapturously
blended than in the small, stuffy hole in which
we were all reunited! But prudence soon reasserted
itself, and ten minutes later a Russian
spy might have listened at the door without
hearing a sound from within. Yet a little while
longer and we could hear the vibration of the
screw. We had entered upon another phase of
our adventurous journey.</p>
<p class='c012'>Excitement and danger are prone to make one
forget or ignore bodily claims which weigh very
seriously with us at other times. But when
these unwonted stimulants are withdrawn, nature
is apt to take a little revenge for the temporary
slight put upon her. Thus it is not surprising
that, the happy reunion of friends and
relatives being accomplished, the quartet of
newest arrivals should become conscious of extreme
fatigue and of the need of some kind of
refreshment.</p>
<p class='c012'>The latter was soon forthcoming. A larder
at one end of the room we were in was stocked
with a liberal supply of eatables and drinkables,
and there were plenty of willing hands to serve
us with a meal to which some at least of us did
full justice.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And now, Miss Dora,” said Trischl, “the
best thing we can do is to lie down and sleep for
a while. Everybody else has much to talk over
with friends, and we shall not be missed.”</p>
<p class='c012'>It was quite true. We could, for a time, at
least, be easily, perhaps gladly, spared. While
traveling, and sharing mutual dangers, we had
all seemed tolerably equal in our claims upon
each other. The situation was altered now.
Trischl was kindly and warmly welcomed. But
her welcome was the one which generous employers
would naturally extend to a faithful servant.
I was treated in every respect as an
equal, but was still conscious of the fact that I
was not actually one of the family, as seemed to
be the case with Ivan. That madame should
appear all in all to her husband and child was
natural. But that Ivan, whom I had admired
while I thought him madame’s very humble assistant,
should turn out to be none other than
Count Sergius Volkhoffsky, the cousin and
bosom friend of Prince Michaelow, was a great
surprise to me. They all had much to talk
about, or rather, to whisper about, for great caution
was necessary, and I felt no compunction in
following Trischl’s advice.</p>
<p class='c012'>But it was long before I could sleep; for the
motion of the vessel, combined with the unpleasant
vibration of the screw, which seemed to be
almost under me, soon made me feel sick again,
and I underwent a period of intense but silent
misery, too ill to lift my head, but not too ill to
feel a fresh accession of terror every time the
motion of the ship ceased.</p>
<p class='c012'>I did not know then that the coming out of
dock of a merchant steamer is a tedious business
which involves many fresh starts and stoppages,
if collisions with quay walls or ships are to be
avoided. Had I been aware of this fact, I
should not have kept fancying that the <i>Beacon</i>
had been detained by Russian government officials,
and that pursuers were about to discover
our hiding-place.</p>
<p class='c012'>When at last sleep did visit me, it performed
its work so effectually that on awaking I had no
trace of fatigue or illness left. My cushions
were at one end of our curious room, which was
no wider than an ordinary bunk, and would
hardly have permitted any one to pass me without
disturbing me. As it was, I had slept uninterruptedly
for hours, and was quite refreshed
when I opened my eyes and saw that a lamp
was casting its brightening rays around me.
Trischl stood by my bedside, if such I can call
it, smiling with joy, and holding in her hand a
cup of fragrant coffee.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have brought you some coffee and a ham
sandwich,” she said. “You may get up as soon
as you like now, and come on deck when you
have had some breakfast. We have left Russia
behind us and have got rid of the Russian pilot.
The captain says there is no more fear of pursuit.”</p>
<p class='c012'>This was joyful news indeed, and I lost no
time in preparing myself to go on deck.</p>
<p class='c012'>“If you will follow me, miss,” said Trischl,
“I will show you the berth that is to be yours
till the end of the voyage. You will be able to
wash and dress comfortably in it.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Even the little den to which I promptly betook
myself was of somewhat circumscribed area, but
it was as a very paradise to me, by reason of the
delightful feeling of security which I felt as soon
as I stepped into it. I soon discarded the raiment
which had served me so well, and at once
lost myself in the delight of making myself more
suitably presentable. Every necessity seemed
to have been foreseen and provided against, and
I found an ample stock of clothing placed at my
disposal.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was very glad that I no longer needed to
masquerade in boy’s attire, and took especial
delight in robing myself in a pretty pink morning
gown Trischl brought in for me. My hair
afforded me some trouble, though. If I had
been an ugly girl before, what must I be now?
I thought. My little berth was lighted by a
swing lamp, fixed to a bracket in the bulkhead.
There was also a mirror hanging near the bunk.
But I could not judge very well of my appearance,
and it was with a sense of regret at the
thought that my cropped hair negatived the advantages
of my pretty dress that I eventually
followed Trischl into more airy and lightsome
regions.</p>
<p class='c012'>I found the ship’s cabin well occupied. Madame
and her husband, together with the Prince
and Princess Michaelow, being deep in consultation
concerning future arrangements. So I did
not encroach long upon their time, but, after exchanging
pleasant greetings with them all, went
on deck. Here Feo was having a merry time
with Count Sergius Volkhoffsky. I am not sure
that I wasn’t sorry to find that the latter was a
grand sort of an individual, after all. I would
much rather have been able to call him Ivan,
especially as he looked so very handsome, now
that he was dressed in a manner befitting his
station, while I felt painfully conscious that I
must be looking a bigger fright than ever.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, Dora, I am glad you have come up at
last,” exclaimed Feo, bounding affectionately
toward me. “They would not let me wake you
when the captain first came to tell us that it was
safe enough for us now. Isn’t the sea pretty?
And isn’t this a jolly ship? And isn’t everybody
in it jolly? And, ho; isn’t Sergius jollier
than anything?”</p>
<p class='c012'>I have been told since that if my lips did not
indorse the latter sentiment, my eyes did. But
I must warn the reader that the individual who
made the statement is not to be trusted with regard
to anything he may say about me. For he
is unduly prejudiced in my favor. The latter
fact, when it was first brought home to me,
came upon me as a huge surprise. I still feel
surprise, when I think of it, but am better accustomed
to it by this time.</p>
<p class='c012'>There was much to explain and to talk over
concerning our recent flight, and, while Feo
rambled hither and thither, in thorough enjoyment
of the situation, I listened to the explanation
of much that had seemed inexplicable to me.
The whole party with which I had become so
closely associated was of Nihilistic proclivities,
and had been spending much energy and a great
deal of money in facilitating the escape from
Russia of such members of their fraternity as
from time to time fell under the ban of suspicion.
It had, however, of late, struck them
that the limit of their own safety had been
spanned, and their flight had not been nearly so
hasty and unpremeditated as it had seemed to
me, though Mme. Karniak, as I must now call
my employer, had been reluctant to recognize
her own extreme peril. There was some special
mission to perform, for which a considerable
sum of money was still needed. Madame could
only contribute her quota after handing in her
report and receiving the check with which government
rewarded her imaginary services once a
month. She resolved that once more, and only
once more, she would run the risk of a return to
St. Petersburg.</p>
<p class='c012'>She achieved her purpose, but narrowly escaped
falling a victim to her patriotic zeal.
Prince Michaelow, less sanguine than she, had
foreseen her danger, and provided for her escape,
his cousin having considered it by no means
derogatory to his dignity to assume the rôle
of a coachman for the nonce. The Princess
Michaelow, or Nina, as she has since asked me
to call her, had taken no active part in Nihilistic
plans and consultations, and had been as genuinely
surprised at the sudden necessity for the
flight to England as I had been, but was by no
means downhearted at the prospect of having to
spend the rest of her life in her own country.
As for Mr. Victor Karniak, he had deemed it
wisest to avoid the river steamer, and had not
reached the <i>Beacon</i> much sooner than we had
done ourselves.</p>
<p class='c012'>Needless to say, the visit of the <i>Beacon</i> to
Cronstadt was not the result of merely mercantile
speculation, but of a thoroughly systematized
plan of campaign, by which refugees in the
secret had their escape from Russia facilitated.
The vessel usually made four trips between England
and Cronstadt in the season, taking coals
out from the Tyne, and returning with a mixed
cargo of wheat, timber, and refugees, London
being the discharging port. The after hold was
docked of two feet of its legitimate length, this
space being utilized for the hiding-place in which
we had spent our first night on board.</p>
<p class='c012'>I used to imagine myself an ardent lover of
nature. During this voyage I sometimes wondered
if I had turned Goth or Vandal. For I
no longer took the all-absorbing delight in my
surroundings that had hitherto accompanied me
when among fresh and unconventional scenery.
The ever-changing panorama of views of first
one country and then another, alternated by the
numerous islands which are dotted about the
Baltic, would have aroused my enthusiasm at
any other time. That they did not do so on this
occasion must be laid to Count Sergius Volkhoffsky’s
charge. He was so clever and so brilliant
that when talking to him I naturally overlooked
the unobtrusive claims of scenery. I
might possibly see a great deal more of the world
in time to come, I thought, but I should never
have such a wonderful traveling companion
again. Therefore it would have been foolish to
refuse the opportunities which were mine of enjoying
his society. Certainly these opportunities
seemed to last almost all day, for, strangely
enough, Count Volkhoffsky never seemed to tire
of my company. I knew that things would be
very different, when we reached London, and
he was introduced to cleverer and better-looking
girls. Meanwhile, I felt happy in the present,
and tried to banish the oft-recurring vision of
my own probable future of lonely lovelessness.</p>
<p class='c012'>Alas! the time sped all too quickly for me,
though by every one else on board our arrival in
London was hailed with unmixed relief. The
Prince and Princess Michaelow went to the
Hôtel Metropole until they could complete their
arrangements for residing in a home of their own
furnishing. Their cousin, Sergius, went with
them for a time.</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. and Mrs. Karniak, Feo, myself and
Trischl were soon located in Kensington again,
being fortunate in securing a very nicely furnished
house pro tem. I was not sure that
madame’s financial position was such now as
warranted my remaining with her, but I hardly
knew how to introduce the question of my departure.
It relieved my embarrassment considerably
when madame, having probably partially
gauged my feelings, spoke to me one morning
about Feo’s future.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I find,” she said, “that Feo shows considerable
facility for learning languages. She is so
young yet that she may safely postpone a good
many of the ordinary branches of her education,
and she is getting on so well with her French
and German that I hope you will not leave us
for some time. To lose you would be a serious
break in my child’s education, and I hope you
know how anxious I am to retain your companionship,
especially as Victor has much traveling
to do before his financial affairs are all satisfactorily
arranged.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Surely he is not going to Russia again?” I
exclaimed.</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, not to Russia, but to South America.
He has money invested in shares there, and is
also concerned in some California speculations.
For some time he has foreseen that it would be
as well to invest his capital out of Russia. But
his agents have been rather lax, and he is going
to inspect both nitrate beds and gold mines, in
order that he may realize his legitimate profit on
them. This will take him many months, and
we want you to promise that you will stay with
me at least until he comes back. Both Feo and
I need you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Stay with them! As if it were a favor on my
part, too! Put in that way, the request certainly
surprised me.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Stay with you!” I said gratefully. “I shall
only be too happy to do so. Where else have I
to go to, since my own father declines to welcome
me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Madame had a knack of being tantalizingly
mysterious at times, and I puzzled my head for
some time to unravel the meaning of the curious
smile with which she greeted my last question.
But my immediate future was now arranged for,
at all events, and the least I could do in return
for madame’s kindness was to set about my
duties, light as they were, with all my heart and
all my soul.</p>
<p class='c012'>Meanwhile, I felt anxious to learn how things
fared with Lady Elizabeth. At times, when I
remembered the mysterious nature of the illness
from which she was suffering when I last saw
her, I almost feared the worst. Then my naturally
hopeful temper reasserted itself, and I reflected
that she would now in all probability be
quickly recovering her normal strength in the
bracing air of Moorbye, whither my family
would be sure to have returned ere this.</p>
<p class='c012'>And Jerry! Dear little Jerry! How ardently
I longed to see him. He would be spending his
holidays at home now, and I wondered if he had
made such progress with his French as he seemed
to anticipate before he left us. What a long
time it seemed since father and I, both with
such light hearts, had seen him leave our little
station in the care of the tutor. And what a
round of events had taken place since then. I
had suffered much, and felt years older, although
the last few weeks seemed to have softened my
regrets for the past in a wonderful degree.</p>
<p class='c012'>Belle, too. Somehow, I was now able to
think of her without feeling such anger as had
formerly haunted me, though I can never pretend
to a return of loving, sisterly interest in
her. That was dead forever, but so also was
my former determination to make her suffer as
keenly as I had been made to suffer. Such
a determination I looked upon now as unchristian
and unnatural, since the object of my vengeance
was my own mother’s daughter.</p>
<p class='c012'>Better let sleeping dogs lie, I thought, since
any revelations concerning the death of the late
Earl of Greatlands, if they tended to substantiate
my idea of willful culpability on the part of
Belle and her fiancé, would be productive of
great grief to many others.</p>
<p class='c012'>Feeling anxious and unsettled, and being
doubtful of the wisdom of writing home to ask
for news of my people, lest my father should
compel me to give up my present life of honorable
independence and freedom from petty insults,
I took advantage of a spare hour or two
shortly after my return to London, and went to
the house my father had rented in town. It was
tenantless. I had not intended really going in,
but I believe I should not have been able to resist
trying to see Lady Elizabeth, if she had still
been living here, and I felt more disappointed
than I could have believed possible, since I had
not really expected to see her. To go to Moorbye
was out of the question just now, I thought,
as I did not wish to trespass upon madame’s
good nature yet awhile to the extent of neglecting
my duties for a couple of days.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was walking through the park, on my way
home again, revolving the propriety of writing
to ask Mrs. Garth to let me have all the news
about my people, when I accidentally jostled
against some one else who was evidently as preoccupied
as I was. Hastily looking up, with an
ejaculation of apology, I saw, looking at me
with a face upon which was pictured the greatest
surprise, an elderly man, in whom I recognized
none other than Dennis Marvel, the former
valet of my dear old earl.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, miss!” he said eagerly. “I am glad to
see you. For I have that on my mind which
will drive me mad, if I keep it to myself, but
which I dare tell to nobody but you. I am fairly
pulled to pieces with the misery of the thing.
One minute something in me says, ‘Tell all you
know, and let justice be done. Let not the
guilty flourish while the innocent are cast aside.’
The next minute it seems as if the wickedest thing
I could do was to make more trouble for them
that has had enough already. Oh! miss, you
will be able to help me to decide what should be
done. Though you had such bitter enemies, you
won’t let hatred of them lead you to be cruel to
their belongings, and oh! how it will ease my
mind to tell you everything. I have been to the
house to inquire for you, but the servants could
not tell me anything about you, except that they
thought there had been a quarrel, and that Mr.
Courtney had turned you out—you, who had
been robbed of wealth and title! It made my
blood boil to hear it; but of course I could not
say what I thought, and I never hoped to come
across your ladyship that was to have been like
this—so lucky, after all.”</p>
<p class='c012'>I had let the old man talk on so long without
interruption, for my inward dismay had literally
bereft me of the power of speech for a time.
I did not even try to pretend to myself that I
misunderstood Marvel’s meaning, or that I did
not know exactly to what event he was alluding.
At last the mystery of the earl’s death was
going to be cleared up for me. My suspicions
were to become proved facts, and upon my
shoulders was to fall the onus of judging and
sentencing the guilty. It is small wonder that
I felt the blood leave my face; that my limbs
trembled under me, and that I was glad to avail
myself of the support of the seat near which I
had come into collision with Marvel. I motioned
to him to sit down also, hastily looking
round, lest possible prying ears should be at
hand to surprise and proclaim to the world the
secret of which my companion was about to disburden
himself.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I see that you fully understand my meaning,”
he said, “and I don’t need to beat about
the bush much, for I always thought that you
suspected foul play, by the way you looked at
your sister and the young earl. Well, miss, it’s
quite true. They made away with my poor old
master, for they had sworn that you shouldn’t
get married to him and lord it over them at the
castle. Besides, they pretended to think the earl
must be in his dotage, and no longer fit to be
the head of the family, when he could seriously
think of choosing—well, miss, not to offend you,
I hope—but they said he had picked the ugliest
girl he could find, and that there was no telling
what crazy thing he would do next—try to cut
off the entail, or something of the sort. So they
laid their plans to stop the wedding, and, I
swear it is true, they murdered my poor old
master.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Stop, Marvel,” I said now, having at last
recovered the power of speech. “The accusations
you make are too terrible to be believed
lightly. It is easy to say what your suspicions
dictate. But you have no proofs of what you
say, and I will not hear anything more. I loved
the old earl for his goodness to me, a neglected,
unattractive girl, whom very few people cared
for. The present earl is his son and the brother
of my dear stepmother. His fiancée is my sister,
and thus both, though actually my enemies,
have claims upon my forbearance. Marvel, I
dare not believe them guilty. I will not believe
them guilty! You shall tell me no more.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You must hear all I have got to say now,
Miss Dora,” returned Marvel firmly. “I tell
you, I must open my mind to somebody, and
I reckon you are the safest. Another thing, I
have to be back soon, so would like to get on
with my story.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Are you still with the present earl?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, that’s how I know so much about his
black secret. And my knowing the secret is
the reason why I stop on with him, for he is not
very easy to put up with nowadays. But, you
see, I have lived all my life in the family, and
so did my father and mother before me. So I
feel as if the family’s trouble and disgrace were
mine, too, and I would rather keep on as I am
than let another man step into my shoes. For
he would soon be at the bottom of the family
mystery, and then what would become of us
all?”</p>
<p class='c012'>What, indeed? The result was too dreadful
to contemplate, and I no longer questioned either
Marvel’s veracity, or the purity of his motives.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The present earl,” he went on, “was always
inclined to drink a bit. But since his father’s
death he has really gone on awful. Every week
it has got worse, and I have had to put him to
bed drunk every night for this last month. This
couldn’t help having a serious effect on him, and
last week he had a very bad attack of delirium
tremens, in which his own ravings showed the
whole business up as plain as daylight. I was
glad he was pretty quiet when the doctor was
there, as he would have been one too many in
the secret. The papers said that he was laid up
with an attack of pleurisy. But I knew better,
and it does not pay a fashionable doctor to split
about his patients. Toward the end of the week
the earl got over his attack of the blues and then
I had a serious talk with him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘My lord,’ said I, ‘you must drink no more.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘And why not?’ he asked, looking at me as
if he thought I had left my senses somewhere
else.</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘Because,’ I said, looking him straight in the
face, ‘dead men tell no tales, but drink makes
people tell things that it’s safer nobody else
should know. I’ll tell you what the drink has
made you do and say, and then you can judge
whether it’s safe for you to drink any more or
not.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then I described how he had gone on when
unconscious of what he was doing. He had
fancied every now and then that his father’s
ghost was standing before him with outstretched
finger and threatening visage. ‘For God’s
sake!’ he would scream, ‘take it away! It is
drawing me down to hell! Let me go—take
her! She prompted me to it! It was her crime.
I would not have thought of it, but for her. I
gave him the poison, but it was Belle who
bought it. She swore that she would use it on
her sister, if I failed with the poor old man, who
deserved nothing but good at my hands. Why
didn’t I let her poison the girl? I shouldn’t
have had this to face then. Begone!’</p>
<p class='c012'>“At this he jumped out of bed as if he meant
to attack somebody. But he just fell all of a
heap on the floor, and was pretty easily managed
till the next paroxysm came on, which was in
another hour or two.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now you can guess what sort of an effect my
talk had upon my master. He went almost beside
himself with terror, and was for offering
me no end of things to bribe me to keep his
secret. But I am not one of those human vultures
who grow fat on the crimes and miseries
of others, and I wouldn’t touch a farthing from
the earl except in the way of my earnings, as
usual. It would burn my fingers, if I did.
‘No,’ I said, ‘Dennis Marvel knows his duty to
the family too well to betray it. Your lordship
has the matter in your own hands. Keep off
the drink. Keep your mouth shut, and all’s
safe.’</p>
<p class='c012'>“Since then he hasn’t tasted a drop of anything
that could make him drunk. But he has
awful nights, all the same. He wasn’t really
meant for a villain, and, saving your presence,
Miss Dora, if that she-devil, your sister, hadn’t
got hold of him, things would have been all
right, and we should all have been as happy as
we used to be before we knew her. And now,
Miss Dora, what would you advise me to do?
Do you blame me for what I have done? It
would kill Lady Elizabeth, and disgrace the
family forever, if we didn’t keep the secret. So
it cannot be wicked to shield the guilty.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Thus appealed to by Marvel, I replied firmly:</p>
<p class='c012'>“We <i>must</i> shield the guilty, Marvel, in order
to protect the innocent. You wouldn’t like to
have Lady Elizabeth’s death on your conscience,
would you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“God forbid!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then you and I, faithful friend, must breathe
a word of this business to no one. And we
must do all we can to prevent others from learning
the terrible secret. It is a heavy burden you
have put upon my shoulders, Marvel. I can
only hope your burden has been eased a little in
the telling, and that you will not think it necessary
to share it with any one else.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I give you my Bible oath, Miss Dora, that
not a living soul shall hear me speak of this
thing but you. The weight of the secret was
choking me, but, as you say, a burden shared by
somebody else of like mind is half rolled away.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And yet you have something else to tell me.
What do you mean by saying that the earl has
bad nights? Is he still likely to betray himself?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I think not; for, when awake, he knows quite
well what he is saying. But his conscience is
tormenting him to his doom. He cannot live
long and suffer as he is doing. Sleep refuses
to visit him, except when he takes an opiate,
and every night the dose has to be made bigger,
or it has no effect. A fine state of mind for a
man to be in who is going to be married next
month.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Next month?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, on the fifteenth.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“In London?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No. Lady Elizabeth is too ill to stand much
fuss and excitement. So the wedding is to be
as quiet as possible, and is to take place at Moorbye
Church, the Rev. Mr. Garth officiating. It
is just as well for everybody.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, it is just as well. And now, do you
know, Marvel, I feel ill with the shock of all
you have told me, and—”</p>
<p class='c012'>Marvel at once jumped up and offered to fetch
a cab for me. I gladly accepted his offer, and
reached home half an hour later, while Marvel
returned to his master’s town house, to fulfill
those duties which his long attachment to the
Greatlands family, and his identification of his
own honor with that of his employers, alone
made it possible for him to continue.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER X.<br/><span class='small'>“’Tis better to be born lucky than rich.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>“You have been gone a long time, my dear,”
said madame. “I had begun to be quite anxious
about you, and some one has been waiting for
you who is becoming, oh! so impatient.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Impatient to see me? Why, I shall believe
myself to be quite an important individual
soon,” I returned, with an attempt at a smile,
that was so lamentable a failure that madame’s
attention was aroused at once.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What is it, my child?” she asked solicitously.
“I thought, when you came in, that
you were looking extra well. You had such
rosy cheeks. Now I see that you are flushed
with excitement. How is it? Have you had
an adventure? You are trembling all over.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, I have had an adventure,” I said, my
pent-up emotions finding vent in tears, which
soon relieved me a little, and were not checked
by madame, who fully understood the value of
this outlet for nature’s wellsprings of feeling. She
was at first somewhat alarmed as to the nature
of my adventure. But I speedily reassured her
on that score, telling her that I had met an old
family servant, who had been giving me some
news that had upset me for a time.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is it very bad news?” she asked.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My stepmother is ill, and my sister is going
to be married.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But your stepmother has been ill some time,
and your sister was engaged to be married before
you left home.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, but both illness and engagement have
made progress, and I feel very anxious now
about Lady Elizabeth.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You must go and see her soon. That will
put your mind at rest. And the dear little
brother of whom you are so fond. How is he?”</p>
<p class='c012'>How was he, indeed! Why, I had forgotten
to make a single inquiry about him. Truly,
my perturbation of mind must have been great
to make me forget Jerry. My horror had effaced
the memory of my love for the time, and I explained
to my mistress that so much that was
sensational had been told me that there had
been no inclination to bring Jerry into the conversation.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I shall learn all about him to-morrow,” I
concluded. “As you know, I have written to
Mrs. Garth to send me all the news she has, and
I should have her reply soon. I will also write
to Lady Elizabeth at once, explaining that I am
still safe and well. It is just possible that she
has been anxious about me, although I wrote
her a reassuring letter from the Grange before
I came to you. I also gave Mrs. Garth permission
to inform her that I had gone to St. Petersburg,
in safe companionship.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not so safe as you thought, eh? But that
is all over now, Heaven be thanked. And the
chances are then that your stepmother and your
father know already where you are, if you have
imposed no special restrictions upon Mrs.
Garth?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, very likely they know already.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I hope they will not insist upon your leaving
us.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I will not leave you. But I must see Lady
Elizabeth, as she is so ill. Perhaps a visit from
me might help to tranquilize her mind a little.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dear me! And there is some one else whose
mind will want tranquilizing by this time.
Sergius is waiting in the drawing-room for you
all this while.”</p>
<p class='c012'>I would fain have been excused from meeting
“Sergius” just then, for I knew I must be even
more unpresentable than usual. But madame
was inexorable, and a minute later I was <i>tête-à-tête</i>
with a man in whose company I had begun
of late to feel remarkably uncomfortable. It
was strange that I should begin to avoid the
presence of the only individual of the opposite
sex whose lengthened absence was distasteful to
me, and that I should become <i>gauché</i> and dull
in the society of the one being whose conversation
afforded me most happiness. And yet,
when I come to think of it, there was nothing
strange about it, after all, though I did not
understand myself at the time.</p>
<p class='c012'>I know now that I loved Sergius Volkhoffsky
with a passion so great that I dreaded a betrayal
of my feelings to others, with the consequent
humiliation that I thought would be inevitable.
He was handsome; I was ugly. He seemed to
me to be one of the cleverest men under the sun,
while I felt the acquirements of which I had
formerly been so proud to be little more than a
rudimentary education. Thanks to his prudent
foresight, he had lost but a small proportion of
the wealth which he had inherited from his
father. And I was a penniless girl, whom disagreement
with her family had compelled to go
forth to earn her own livelihood.</p>
<p class='c012'>No wonder I felt miserable when I pictured
the different fate that might have been mine,
had I but possessed a fair share of nature’s
bounties, and no wonder that I shrank, in anticipation,
from the joyless existence foreshadowed
in an unloved future.</p>
<p class='c012'>I had truly loved my old earl. But my love
was based entirely on gratitude and esteem.
Such love is honest, honorable and pleasant to
behold. It is also lasting and durable, if permitted
to flow on in a gentle, uninterrupted current.
But if its possessor be of an ardent nature
it is as easily dispelled by a sudden passion as is
froth on the surface of the breakers, and I know
now how feeble is the love born of gratitude
compared to the love one feels for one’s ideal.
There are some women so constituted that passion
is powerless to assail them, and upon the
whole, it is well for them that it should be so,
for their lives run on in quiet, contented grooves
that afford them every satisfaction.</p>
<p class='c012'>But ask the woman of a more ardent nature
if she would barter her hopes and dreams and
possible disappointments for the humdrum existence
associated in her mind with quiet affection,
and she will answer emphatically in the negative.
It was so with me now. Having once
seen and known Sergius Volkhoffsky, I could
but marvel how I could ever have contemplated
marrying a man old enough to be my grandfather.
Having arrived at this state of mind,
my recollections of my past disappointments lost
all their bitterness, and I could but feel thankful
that my passion for Sergius, vain as it seemed,
was not of an unlawful nature, since I had as
yet made vows of allegiance to no other man.</p>
<p class='c012'>But I was not thinking of all this in detail
when I entered the room in which Sergius had
been waiting so long for me.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am sorry,” I said, “that I was not here to
receive you when you asked for me. I am also
very curious to know the nature of the business
which could actually make you wait half an
hour and more to see me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He sprang up to greet me, his pleasant smile
and warm hand-clasp being enough to dispel the
most obstinate spirits. His glance, too, was so
ardent that I felt the color rush to my cheeks,
and instinctively lowered my eyelids, that he
might not see what power he had over my
feelings.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have not been dull while you were out.
My friends have taken care of that. But I have
that to say to you which made me very impatient
for your arrival. Now that you are here, I am
not in such a hurry to disburden myself, lest I
be sent away in disgrace. But, first, tell me
what I have been doing to offend you lately.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Offend me! How could you offend me?” I
asked, with such genuine surprise on my face
that he could but see I was in earnest.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then why,” he continued, this time taking
my hands in his, as if to command my attention
more effectually; “why have you been so stiff
and distant with me? How do you account for
that?”</p>
<p class='c012'>How did I account for it? To this day I am
unable to tell. I only know that, amazing as it
may seem, Sergius loved me, and desired nothing
so much as to spend the rest of his life with
me. Of course I urged my own unfitness for the
honor of becoming his wife. But my feeble remonstrances
were so vigorously combated that
at last I was able to believe myself to be as truly
beloved as the most beautiful and perfect woman
could wish.</p>
<p class='c012'>There was now only one possible hindrance to
my perfect happiness. Belle’s secret must not
be divulged in its entirety. But I could not accept
an honorable man without warning him
that possible disgrace—deserved disgrace—threatened
my family. Disgrace, moreover, of
so deadly a nature that a nation would recoil in
horror from the contemplation of it.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have heard all your history from Madame
Karniak, and can thus form some faint idea of
the nature of the disgrace you hint at. It has
some connection with the sudden death of the
late Earl of Greatlands. You see, I know all
about him, and I am not at all jealous of the
affection you felt for the poor old man. But
you have suffered enough in connection with
that business, and anything that your sister may
have been accessory to must be expiated by herself,
not by you, nor by me, whose happiness
depends on becoming your husband.”</p>
<p class='c012'>So said Sergius. I know of nobody so young
who is half so wise and clever as Sergius. So
why should I stand in the light of our mutual
happiness? Truly, it would have been sheer
folly. Therefore, when I went to bed that night
it was as the promised bride of a man any woman
would have been proud to win.</p>
<p class='c012'>There had been much congratulation on the
part of the Karniaks, who smilingly asserted
that they had seen all the time “which way the
wind was blowing.” During the evening, we
had a call from the Prince and Princess Michaelow,
who warmly welcomed me as one who
was speedily to become a relative.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not for a long time,” I said, feeling just a
little embarrassed because I could not prevent
my face from looking ridiculously happy. “I
am going to remain with madame until all the
South American and Australian business is
settled.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But suppose madame no longer wants you?”
observed Sergius mischievously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“But you see she does want me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That remains to be proved. I believe a little
bird has already whispered something to me
about alteration of plans since you came in this
afternoon.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“It is quite true,” supplemented madame.
“What I said this afternoon to you about not
leaving us was sincerely meant. But while you
and Sergius were making your future arrangements,
Victor and I decided that life would not
be worth living so long apart. So Feo and I
are going to South America with him, and may
probably stay there much longer than Victor
would care to stay without us.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Meanwhile,” said Nina, “you are to stay
with us as our guest, until Sergius gets a house
nicely furnished for you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And your visit is to be a very short one. A
fortnight at the most. I shall make upholsterers
and decorators fly around, so that when we return
from our wedding-trip you will find everything
to your liking.”</p>
<p class='c012'>So said Sergius, and since everybody seemed
inclined to dispose of me so unceremoniously, I
could but utter very feeble protests, and virtually
surrender myself to their management. I only
made one stipulation. My marriage must be as
private as possible. My happiness seemed too
great to be true, and I had a vague feeling that,
if fate should dash the cup from me, I could best
bear it with few onlookers. The feeling may
have been morbid. But my past experience
must plead my excuse.</p>
<p class='c012'>The next morning lessons for Feo were out of
the question. We elders had so much to talk
about, and so many plans to discuss, that madame
told Trischl to take the child for a walk,
while we completed our arrangements. Trischl
had been offered the option of joining her own
people, who were now in Germany, but had preferred
to travel with madame in the capacity of
maid. So her immediate future was disposed
of also. The Karniaks would have liked to stay
to the wedding, but considered it advisable to
secure a passage in a quick boat that was sailing
in four days. There was thus little time for
preparation. But I rendered all the help I could,
and be sure that my dear friends and I parted
from each other with tears of regret, though we
expected to have the happiness of seeing each
other again some day.</p>
<p class='c012'>I had had two letters from Mrs. Garth, in which
she informed me that Lady Elizabeth was very
much better; that Belle was more beautiful than
ever, and apparently very much delighted at the
approaching consummation of her ambitious
projects. Jerry was at home, and was a jolly
little fellow, but said that the Grange wasn’t
like home without Dorrie. My father, too, I
was told, had fretted somewhat about me, having
evidently come to the conclusion that his
treatment of me had not been the exclusive outcome
of wisdom. “I am sure,” continued Mrs.
Garth, “that if you were to return home now,
your father would welcome you as gladly as
would Jerry and Lady Elizabeth. Of your sister’s
sentiments I know nothing, as she holds
herself very much aloof from me. I have an
idea that she dislikes me. By-the-by, you remember
May Morris? She is going to marry
Mr. Graham, the young doctor. He has bought
a practice at Brightburn, and will take his bride
thither next week.”</p>
<p class='c012'>I was very much amused when I remembered
May’s rhapsodies about the actor, but had no
doubt that a healthy affection for a good man
who loved her would oust all the rubbishy romance
with which she had formerly been filled.
It was good news to hear that my stepmother’s
health had improved so much. I could but hope
that the improvement might continue, and that
she might be spared all knowledge relating to
the particulars of her father’s death. I resolved
that when I saw her again, I would, indirectly,
try to set her mind at rest on the subject by explaining
the irrational and unfounded nature of
the suspicions I had, in my bitter sorrow, shared
with her. Her illness had always struck me as
having a mental origin, and I concluded, since
she was improving, that she was already inclined
to think the best of her brother and
Belle.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was just revolving all this in my mind, and
thinking how glad I would be to go to the
Grange again, when a servant announced a visitor
for me, and my father came quickly into the
room in which I sat. I was not wholly surprised
by his visit, for both Sergius and I had written
to him, giving him the particulars of our engagement,
and asking his consent to our immediate
marriage. But if I expected anything like
a demonstrative greeting from him, I was disappointed,
for he merely touched my hand, as
though I had been a comparative stranger, and
then plunged straight into the business which
had brought him hither.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have, after an unwarrantable silence on
your part,” he said, “received a letter of so extraordinary
a tenor that I have decided to answer
it in person. You say you have promised
to marry an individual who calls himself Count
Volkhoffsky. What proof have you that he is a
genuine count?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I can refer you to his cousin, Prince Alexander
Michaelow, from whose house we are to
be married. There are plenty of people in
London who will give you proofs of the genuineness
of both titles.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“A prince! You seem to have the knack of
ingratiating yourself with the aristocracy. You
are not quite so ugly as you were. Your hair,
curled in that fashion, looks rather pretty than
otherwise. Still, I can’t see what even an old
and decrepit nobleman can see in you. He
might get a <i>professional</i> nurse at much less
expense.”</p>
<p class='c012'>My father had always trampled on my feelings
without the slightest compunction, and his sneers
had left many a bitter wound behind. But these
were all healed now, and he had lost the power
to hurt me. For the first time in my life his
depreciation of me evoked nothing but a feeling
of triumph. I simply rose and rang the bell,
and, on its being answered, asked the servant if
Count Volkhoffsky had arrived yet. On being
answered in the affirmative, I sent to see if he
would favor us with his company for a moment.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And tell Mr. and Madame Karniak that I
would be glad if they would permit me to introduce
my father to their notice,” I said, as the
servant was leaving the room.</p>
<p class='c012'>I shall never forget my father’s look of indignant
surprise, when I spoke of introducing <i>him</i>,
to the <i>notice</i> of <i>my</i> friends. I was amply
avenged for many a cut I had received, and was
also convinced that, in future, he would treat
me with a little more consideration. But he
evidently regarded me principally as Belle’s
rival, and even when he, later in the day, set off
to return to Courtney Grange, he was, I am
sure, feeling both perplexed and sore at the idea
of the apparent facility I possessed for at least
equaling, if not surpassing, his beautiful darling’s
opportunities of happiness.</p>
<p class='c012'>He had also taken it for granted that my
fiancé was some undesirable individual, whose
motive in marrying me was self-interest of some
sort, and I smile yet when I remember how astonished
he was when Sergius confronted him,
and asked him in so courtly a fashion for his
consent to his marriage with his youngest
daughter. Of course that consent was given,
and very glad I was, too. Although I was not
anxious to see Belle again, I was thankful to be
reconciled, with my family, as Jerry and Lady
Elizabeth were too dear to me to be given up
entirely.</p>
<p class='c012'>The day after my father’s visit to me witnessed
the departure of the Karniaks to Chili
and my temporary installation in the house of
Prince Michaelow.</p>
<p class='c012'>My second trousseau was already in active
preparation. Madame Karniak and Princess
Nina had insisted on making me handsome presents,
to compensate me for the wardrobe I had
lost, they said. Lady Elizabeth also sent me
the most affectionate letter imaginable. So far
from resenting the fact that I was about to
marry a man whom I regarded with much
warmer feelings than the mild affection which
I had entertained for the poor old earl, she rejoiced
with me at my good fortune in having
won the love of such a man as Sergius. She was
also good enough to say that I fully deserved
my happiness, and as an indorsement of her approval
of the whole arrangement she inclosed a
check for one hundred pounds as her wedding
present.</p>
<p class='c012'>Thus armed with the approbation of my
friends, and all the necessary sinews of war, I
entered the whirl of preparation with the lightest
of hearts and the brightest of prospects.
Sometimes my busy fingers would stay their
work, and a cloud of dread and apprehension
would settle on my brain.</p>
<p class='c012'>Was it possible that I, utterly lacking outward
beauty, and until lately the most unloved
of beings, was really and truly the one and only
woman with whom Sergius could be happy?
Had he never loved another woman? And if he
had, was she not sure to have been beautiful?</p>
<p class='c012'>When I remembered how truly artistic was
my lover’s temperament, it seemed incredible to
me that he could be perfectly contented with a
wife whose chief function in society seemed to
be to act as a foil to those women whom nature
had endowed more liberally with outward
charms. And if the time were to come when
it would become incumbent upon me to recognize
the conviction that Sergius had mistaken
his sentiments for me, and that he regretted his
precipitancy, how would I be able to bear my
life?</p>
<p class='c012'>Suppose, after the irrevocable knot was tied,
my husband were to wake up some day to the
knowledge that he loved another woman? Suppose—but
by the time I had thus foolishly and
fruitlessly tormented myself, it was beyond my
power to endure even the thought of another
self-stabbing supposition, and a reaction invariably
set in. Surely Sergius, who was chivalry,
gentleness and bravery personified, and who was
esteemed by all his friends for his powers of observation
and his clear, cool insight into human
nature, would not belie his character just where
I was concerned! To believe it was to doubt all
his good qualities, and I rated myself an ingrate
for entertaining such heretical sentiments for
one moment.</p>
<p class='c012'>If the reader is inclined to subscribe to this
last opinion, perhaps he or she will kindly credit
fate with at least a portion of the mental perversity
which at times tormented me almost beyond
endurance. It had been so often impressed upon
me all my life long that I could never hope to
win the true and lasting regard of any man, that
it was surely natural for me to doubt the endurance
of the happiness which seemed to be within
my grasp.</p>
<p class='c012'>But these freaks of fancy could not withstand
the sunny presence of my worshiped Sergius
himself, who was apt to flatter me almost as
much as the Earl of Greatlands had done, and
who seemed never tired of praising the now luxuriant
silken rings of my hair, my long-lashed,
expressive eyes, and my graceful figure, not to
speak of my rich olive complexion. On most of
these counts I let him talk without protest on
my part. Although I knew that his opinion of
me was ridiculously disproportionate to my deserts,
my anxiously observant eyes could not
blind themselves to the fact that my outward
presentment was a vast improvement upon its
old self.</p>
<p class='c012'>But when Sergius actually ventured to praise
my face, and above all, my inveterately snubby
nose, I put down his flatteries with a firm hand.
It was in vain for him to quote Tennyson, and
speak of my unfortunate organ as “tiptilted.”
There are degrees and proportions of tiptiltedness,
and I had measured the depths of unhappiness
too often through “that hideous nose” to
allow my vanity to persuade me into believing
its disabilities removed.</p>
<p class='c012'>Still, I was no longer miserable about it; indeed,
I grew rather proud of it than otherwise.
For if that nose had not had the power to repel
Sergius, it was henceforth to be regarded as the
most prominent existing proof of the genuineness
of his affection.</p>
<p class='c012'>And, after all, what mattered it, since, when
the glamour of self-torment was off me, I knew
myself to be my lover’s idol and the hope of his
existence, miraculous though such a state of
things seemed?</p>
<p class='c012'>My friends, too, were of the kindest and most
considerate ones of the earth. Thus there seemed
nothing to hinder me from being perfectly
happy, and as my wedding-day approached
nearer and nearer I grew more and more confident
of the future, for neither envy nor hatred
conspired to wreck my prospects, as had been the
case before the dawning of that other wedding-day.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was writing to Lady Elizabeth, to express
my regret at her inability to come to the wedding,
and to thank her for her generosity and
good wishes, when Sergius was announced, and
I hastily finished and sealed my missive. For
was not this the last day of my spinsterhood?
And did I not owe my beloved every moment I
could spare?</p>
<p class='c012'>“I hope you have finished all your preparations,
sweetheart, and that no one else expects
any attention from you to-day,” said Sergius.
“For I mean to monopolize you altogether.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed you won’t, for Nina won’t see me for
some time after to-morrow, and has exacted a
promise from me that I would go with her to
choose her very latest wedding-present to me.
So you will have to spare me for an hour or
two.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And indeed I won’t! Just picture your
being selfish enough to want to go off without
me! You shall do your shopping. But you
must do it in my company, for, oddly enough, I
also have a fancy that you should choose your
most prized wedding-present from me yourself,
and we can make one expedition of it. Oh,
here is our gracious princess herself! She will
agree to all I propose, I know.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I must first know what it is that you propose,”
smiled the Princess Nina, who had just
entered the room, Prince Michaelow following
closely in her wake. “I don’t like to make
promises in the dark.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sergius wants to go shopping with us,” I
explained.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, as for that, I mean to go, too,” said the
prince. “If Sergius will look just a shade less
bridegroomy he may also make one of the
party.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The prince’s sally at Sergius’s ecstatically
happy look was received with a laugh by us all,
and half an hour later we were all four being
driven toward Piccadilly behind a pair of splendid
bays. Then ensued a series of excursions
into various West End establishments that was
even more odd than it was delightful, which is
saying much. For it was strange to me to feel
myself the courted and petted object of attention
on the part of three such splendid specimens of
humanity as my betrothed and the Prince and
Princess Michaelow. Probably others also noted
the disparity in our appearance and commented
on it after their own fashion.</p>
<p class='c012'>But my companions were too agreeably employed
to pay attention to much beyond the business
at hand, and so many presents were lavished
upon me that I found it necessary to enter
a protest. We were all just leaving a Regent
Street jeweler’s shop, preparatory to re-entering
the carriage for our homeward drive, when
Princess Nina suddenly said to me in a low
voice: “What a beautiful woman! And she
seems to know you. Who is she?”</p>
<p class='c012'>I looked up hastily, and was confronted by my
sister and her intended husband. For an instant
I hesitated whether to return Belle’s stare
of haughty recognition by a conciliatory movement
or not. My hesitation proved my salvation
from what would have been an intolerable
humiliation. The Earl of Greatlands and Miss
Courtney passed on without vouchsafing me
anything but the disapproving look due to an
obnoxious stranger rather than to a sister, and
we had entered our carriage before I had had
time to answer Nina’s question.</p>
<p class='c012'>I felt the blood leave my face at thus meeting
my mother’s child as a stranger, and Nina was
quick to see that I was strangely moved by the
encounter. She looked the question she did not
care to trouble me by repeating, and I tried to
answer her in as unmoved a voice as possible.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That was my sister who passed us. And
the gentleman who is with her is the Earl of
Greatlands.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“H’m! I thought as much,” put in Sergius.
“I was just thinking that the woman approaching
us would have been quite handsome, if her
face had been less soulless, when I saw her flash
such a malignant look at my Dora as is never
seen on the face of the good, and which a
stranger certainly could not evoke. I don’t
envy my Lord Greatlands.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And I would not like to be in Miss Courtney’s
shoes,” said Nina. “For her affianced
looks just like one of my father’s parishioners
used to look. He had been both wicked and dissipated,
and finished his career in a madhouse.
We will, however, hope that your sister, when
married, will find her husband more desirable
than he looks.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Alas! I knew too well how little happiness
the future could really have in store for my misguided
sister and the unhappy man who had
succumbed to her evil influence. The latter
looked even more ill than I had expected to see
him, and I doubted whether the haunting remorse
from which he suffered would not soon
drive his reason from its throne.</p>
<p class='c012'>And Belle! How could she comport herself
with such queenly pride, and with such an air
of self-satisfaction as she was wearing just now?
It was inexplicable to me. But though the
puzzle was beyond my comprehension, it had the
power to damp my joy for the rest of the day.</p>
<p class='c012'>I would much rather have been spared the
sight of my enemy on my wedding-eve, and, for
the life of me, I could not help wondering
whether her presence in London would not prove
an ill omen for me. Of course the fancy was
silly. But there it was, and I could not banish
it. Still, though I was less happy than before,
I did not wish to spoil the pleasure of my companions,
and, for their sakes, I feigned a gayety
I no longer felt.</p>
<p class='c012'>As we were being driven slowly past Hyde
Park Corner, on our way back to Kensington,
something else occurred to cause me an accession
of surprise not unmixed with dread. A
woman was waiting to cross the road as soon as
it should be safe to do so.</p>
<p class='c012'>She was carelessly glancing at the occupants
of the carriages which passed her, and I was
just thinking how handsome she was, and with
what perfect taste she was dressed, when I felt
a convulsive pressure of the hand which was
clasping mine. I looked up, to see that Sergius
had turned deadly pale, and that he hastily
leaned back and turned his head away from the
stranger.</p>
<p class='c012'>But he was too late. She had seen him.
Moreover, he was no stranger to her, as I could
tell by the swift recognition which flashed across
her features, and by a hasty forward movement
that she made, as if to intercept our progress.
The princess was not noticing the by-play. But
that Prince Michaelow had seen and recognized
the stranger I knew by the glances of dismayed
intelligence which he exchanged with my fiancé.</p>
<p class='c012'>Soon after this we were back at the house of
my generous friends, and three of us at least
were less light-hearted than when we set out
early in the afternoon.</p>
<p class='c012'>That evening I could not dismiss the stranger
from my mind. Who was she? And what acquaintance
could she have with Count Volkhoffsky,
who had been in London so short a time?
But the prince knew her too, and both men had
been distinctly dismayed when they saw her.
Sergius had been so little away from me since
we came to London that he could not have made
many acquaintances of whom I did not know.</p>
<p class='c012'>Was it possible that he had known her in
Russia? Nay, was it possible that this was the
unknown rival in my lover’s affections which
my jealous fancy had painted? And if so, how
could he have transferred his regard from so
handsome a woman to my insignificant self?
And in this question I found consolation and
hope for my own future. For Sergius must love
me, or he would not have been anxious to marry
one so utterly devoid of physical and pecuniary
attractions as I was. Not that I ever dreamed
that he could be mercenary. But I had of late
taken positive pleasure in the reflection that I
owed my happiness to no external advantage
which time or ill fortune could destroy.</p>
<p class='c012'>And yet, how could I marry the man I loved,
if thereby I condemned another woman, who
perhaps loved him equally well, to the misery of
desertion? I could not reconcile it to my conscience
to do this cruel thing. So I took an opportunity
of satisfying myself on that point before
Sergius went back to his hotel for the
night.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Do you know,” I said to him, “I do not
want you to think me intrusive. But I saw the
young lady at Hyde Park Corner who seems to
be an old friend of yours, and whom you seemed
to wish to avoid. Tell me, for God’s sake, what
is she to you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You saw her?” he said, looking more
startled than I liked to see.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes. What is she to you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I think, for the sake of your own peace of
mind, that you had better not ask me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But I must know! Have you ever been her
lover? If so, I must give you up to her, for I
cannot purchase my paradise at the expense of
another woman’s salvation.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My darling! There spoke the noble woman
whom I love, and whom, God helping me, I
mean to cherish through life. Thank Heaven!
my past holds no dark secrets of that sort. It
has been turbulent and full of danger, but, I
swear before God, my love was given to no woman
until I met you. Now, are you satisfied?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, I am satisfied,” I said, and I sank into
his arms with a sob of relief which showed how
terrible a phase of dread I had just passed
through.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You naughty child,” said Sergius fondly.
“How could you speak deliberately of giving me
up to another woman? I am not like you. I
would fight for my rights to the last breath.
You have promised to marry me, and I will give
you up to no one living. You are mine, mine
alone!”</p>
<p class='c012'>After this, my doubts being all dispelled, I
was happy once more, and bade Sergius goodnight
with the exulting conviction that henceforth
the whole of my life would be spent in his
beloved society.</p>
<p class='c012'>My wedding-morn dawned bright and cloudless,
and nothing intervened to prevent my marriage
this time. My father came as the sole
representative of my family, and explained that
Lady Elizabeth had a severe cold which detained
her at home. Otherwise she would have
come up to town for the wedding. Belle was in
London, he said, in answer to my inquiry, doing
some shopping, but there was no reference made
by either of us as to her absence on the occasion
of her sister’s marriage. Jerry had sent me a
letter, full of regrets at his own enforced absence,
all couched in his own boyish style, and
he supplemented these regrets by the promise of
a long visit to me at Christmas.</p>
<p class='c012'>Dear boy! it did me good to read his affectionate
chatter.</p>
<p class='c012'>My father made himself uncommonly agreeable
to my friends, and I think that he must
have begun to doubt the correctness of his own
opinions concerning me, when he saw the esteem
in which others held his hitherto despised daughter.
He pressed Sergius and myself so cordially
to come on a visit to the Grange that I thought
it would perhaps be better to bury the hatchet,
even though I was inwardly convinced that if
my friends had been of low rank, and that if we
had been a struggling clerk and his wife, instead
of the Count and Countess Volkhoffsky, he
would still have preferred our absence to our
company.</p>
<p class='c012'>We were going to Torquay for a short honeymoon,
after which we were to settle down in the
luxurious home already prepared for our reception.
As I changed my bridal gown for the
dress in which I was to travel, I contrasted my
present bliss with the unhappy time which already
seemed to belong to the limbo of a better-to-be-forgotten
past, and thanked God that I
had won the love of so good and true a man as
Sergius.</p>
<p class='c012'>Sergius had laughingly bidden me to make
haste with my toilet, as he was in a fever of impatience
to have me to himself, and to feel that
he really had secured the object he loved.</p>
<p class='c012'>I had just as laughingly responded, little
thinking of the awful blow that was even then
hovering over my head. On going to the drawing-room
again I expected to encounter only
Sergius and the Prince and Princess Michaelow,
for my father had already taken his leave.</p>
<p class='c012'>But how shall I describe the sudden shock I
experienced when I saw that Sergius was absent,
and that both my friends wore such a look of
commiseration and distress as convinced me that
something terrible had again happened to me.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Where is Sergius? What has happened?”
I exclaimed, in sudden panic.</p>
<p class='c012'>For a moment neither of those whom I questioned
spoke. Then the prince came forward,
and, clasping both my hands in his, said gently:</p>
<p class='c012'>“You must take heart, my child. Nothing
dreadful has happened to your husband.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then why is he not here? And why do your
looks belie your words?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sergius has had an unexpected summons.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Away from me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, he has been compelled to go to Russia.”</p>
<p class='c012'>To Russia! To Russia, whither he had only
just escaped, of all places! And without a word
of farewell to me, his bride of an hour!</p>
<p class='c012'>Surely Fate was sporting with me, when, for
the second time, she robbed me of a husband on
my bridal day!</p>
<p class='c012'>But this stroke was harder than the other.
The poor old earl had been claimed by Death.
Sergius had left me, apparently of his own free
will, and in the fullness of health and strength.</p>
<p class='c012'>Who or what was it that had a stronger claim
upon him than I had?</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XI.<br/><span class='small'>“The grip of death.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>I verily believe that for the space of half an
hour I was beside myself. But so far from being
violent under my emotions, I was stunned by
them, and rendered temporarily incapable of
connected thought. Prince Michaelow was, I
think, unable to endure the look of anguish
which my face must have borne; for, after whispering
a few words to his wife, he quitted the
room, wearing an expression which even my
dulled senses were able to construe into a conviction
of the hopelessness of expecting to see
Sergius again.</p>
<p class='c012'>The Princess Nina sat down beside me, clasped
my hands in hers, and comforted me more by
her sympathetic attitude than words could have
done. Presently my thoughts were able to collect
themselves again, and I began to question
Nina eagerly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“How long has Sergius known that he would
have to go back to Russia?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Only a few minutes before he left.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why did he not bid me good-by first?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“He had not time. The summons was urgent.
Besides, he loves you so dearly that he could
not have borne to witness your distress at his
departure.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If he loved me half so dearly as you say, he
would not have forsaken me at anybody’s call.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But he was compelled to go! It was his
sacred duty to do so.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then he ought to have taken me with him.
If he is in danger, who so fit to bear him company
as his wife? And to whom can he owe a
more sacred duty than to me? Have I not been
told more than once that all his near relatives
are dead? Then who is there left to call him
from me? Ah! now I have it! It is the woman
whom I saw recognize him at Hyde Park
Corner, and whom he tried to avoid! Who is
she?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear child, now you ask of me more than
I know. But you may rest assured upon this
point. If any woman exerts influence over him,
and has used that influence to bring about your
husband’s return to Russia, her motive and
power are purely political. You know that
Sergius has been very much involved with secret
societies, and your knowledge of his character
ought to assure you that nothing but the most
irresistible claims upon him could have induced
him to leave you at this juncture, to return to
a country of which every inch is fraught with
danger to him.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then I ought to be with him! Is it right
that I should remain in a land of peace and
safety, while he rushes into the jaws of death?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear child, his chances of security are
much better while he is alone. If you were
with him, he would perhaps have to neglect the
duty to which he is called, in order to watch
over your safety.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And suppose he did?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then he would meet certain and speedy death
which you would no doubt share.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t understand you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Perhaps not. I had better be more explicit.
Years ago, your husband joined a society which
had for its object the removal of the Emperor
Alexander. It is one of the rules of this society
that its members shall unhesitatingly perform
any duty which the Executive Council may deem
necessary for the welfare of the country. A
ballot decides which of the members shall undertake
any given task. Sergius has hitherto escaped
the ballot. But, even as he almost ran
from the house, he said that his turn had come;
that he could not bid you farewell himself, and
that if we never saw him again, we would know
that he had done his duty. You think me cruel
to tell you all this, dear; but I know your strong
sense of what is right, and am sure that you
would rather think of Sergius as dead than as
one who could betray either his country or his
wife.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Think of him as dead!</p>
<p class='c012'>Sometimes, when I remember that scene, I
wonder how it is that I did not go mad. Or
that the phantom mockery of joy which had
again eluded me did not leave brain and heart
alike seared with hatred of all mankind.</p>
<p class='c012'>But, after all, both hearts and brains can bear
an enormous strain ere they fail their owners,
and mine proved themselves to be at least of
average strength. They both survived this new
ordeal, and soon after this I was back in my
dressing-room, anxiously trying to reduce into
less chaotic sequence the thoughts which chased
each other through my mind.</p>
<p class='c012'>Was Sergius really lost to me forever? And
was the errand he was bent upon as terrible as
Nina’s words suggested?</p>
<p class='c012'>Alas! what room for doubt was left me? He
belonged to a secret society, which had for its
object the <i>removal</i> of the Emperor Alexander.
There was only one way in which an obscure
society could compass that removal.</p>
<p class='c012'>Its members would no doubt term it justice.
The world would call it assassination. But to
me the contemplated deed had only one name by
which it could be fitly designated—murder!
That was what was meant. And look where I
would, that self-same word stared me in the face
with demoniac persistence.</p>
<p class='c012'>Murder! Good Heaven! was my whole life
to be darkened by its foul environment? Did
not my poor old earl become its victim? And
was not my own sister an object of secret horror
to me because I knew her to have worshiped at
its shrine?</p>
<p class='c012'>And now my newly-wedded husband, who
was dearer to me than aught else on the face of
the earth, was being drawn into its fearsome
toils! What was it to me that he believed the
czar to be a tyrant and oppressor, and that he
was but doing the bidding of his superiors in
office? Whatever the motive, or whatever the
provocation, the deed would be the same. I
have, I think, a strong sense of the duty owing
to one’s country. But, if a Charlotte Corday
had been my ancestress, I should have made a
very degenerate descendant; for I prefer moral
suasion to physical force, and the assassination
of the most objectionable tyrant would weigh on
my conscience like lead.</p>
<p class='c012'>And, since Sergius was now part and parcel
of my being, everything that touched him
touched me. Could I bear the thought that the
guilt of murder lay on his conscience—on <i>our</i>
conscience? I knew that I could not, and I
prayed God to forbid that this evil thing should
come to pass. Prayer alone would not avail me,
I knew, since God helps those who help themselves.
I must act, if I would compass my
desire.</p>
<p class='c012'>Yet what, after all, could I do? After an
hour’s almost maddened thought I succeeded in
forming something like a definite plan of action.
I would follow Sergius as quickly as a fast
through service could take me. As to whither
I was to follow him must be speedily discovered,
else I might arrive on the spot too late to
effect my purpose.</p>
<p class='c012'>Said purpose was to frustrate the errand upon
which my husband had been summoned. If I
succeeded in doing so, what would be the consequences
to him? Would the secret society to
which he belonged, on finding its mandates outraged,
avenge itself upon him? And would the
salvation of his soul from bloodguiltiness prove
his own death knell?</p>
<p class='c012'>Truly, it was hard for me to know my own
duty. But in one respect I did not hesitate. I
was determined to follow my husband to Russia
as soon as possible, in order that, if an opportunity
offered, I might at least be on the spot to
do what seemed right.</p>
<p class='c012'>But, first, I must discover exactly where Sergius
had gone to. And I must so comport myself
as to hide my real intentions from Prince
Michaelow and his wife. Otherwise they might
decline to give me the information I sought,
since I could not expect them to enter into all
my thoughts and feelings respecting my husband’s
expedition.</p>
<p class='c012'>Thus it happened that my outward bearing
was that of one who is already resigned to her
fate, when I begged them to give me some information
that would enable me to picture the
whereabout of my husband until he returned to
me. I knew that my friends had very faint
hopes that he would ever return. But they were
also acting a part. They wished to blind me
concerning the real gravity of the situation, in
order to preserve me from the shock of sudden
and hopeless bereavement. The interview was,
in fact, a little comedy which had for its <i>motif</i>
the enshroudment of a terrible tragedy.</p>
<p class='c012'>But it sufficed my purpose. I learned all that
my friends could tell me, and when I begged to
be excused from dining with my hosts, on the
plea of being too ill and sick at heart for any
society but my own, I was not wasting my time
in self-indulgent grief, as was imagined, but
was hastily gathering together everything that
I could conveniently take which would be necessary
for a long journey.</p>
<p class='c012'>I had even room to feel thankful that I had
received so many valuable presents of jewelry,
which might, on occasion, be turned into cash,
and that the generosity of my friends had prevented
me from spending much of the money
which Lady Elizabeth had sent to me. Neither
money nor jewelry took up much room, and it
was an object with me to be as unencumbered as
possible. I already knew something of the exigencies
of sudden departures, and had no mind
to take anything that would hinder my progress.</p>
<p class='c012'>Luckily for my present purpose, Sergius and
I, in view of a possible Continental trip, had
studied Bradshaw to some purpose lately, and I
now had little difficulty in extracting some information
that would guide me to Moscow,
whither I was told that Sergius had gone.</p>
<p class='c012'>My newly-engaged maid was not a little bewildered
by the turn of events. But she proved
amenable to reason and did as she was bid without
questioning. I told her to fetch me a hansom,
and to tell the driver to stop at the tradesmen’s
entrance, where my portmanteau was put
into the vehicle. Then, accompanied by my
maid, I also went out by the tradesmen’s entrance,
my object in doing so being to escape
the observation of the Prince and Princess Michaelow,
who might have noticed my departure
from the front door, and who would then assuredly
have tried to dissuade me from following
Sergius.</p>
<p class='c012'>On arriving at Victoria Station I found that
I had thirty-five minutes to spare. This I occupied
in visiting a hairdresser’s shop in the
vicinity. Here I was enabled to purchase a gray
wig and sundry etceteras which would effectually
transform my outward semblance into that
of a staid, elderly lady who would not be thought
unfit to travel unescorted. I had already purchased
a quiet black bonnet and a long black
cloak from my maid, and felt sure that my ultimate
transformation would be complete enough
to deceive even Sergius, if he saw me.</p>
<p class='c012'>At half-past eight I left Victoria, after giving
the maid some messages for the Michaelows.
She was to tell them that I thanked them for all
their kindness to me, and that I felt it to be my
duty to join my husband at once, without risking
the delay which even my best wishers might
possibly consider advisable.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was not without hope that I might see Sergius
even before I left the boat, or, at all events,
before I had been long <i>en route</i>. But he had
probably not taken the same direction that I was
taking, and I felt bitterly disappointed when I
failed to overtake him. I was at Brussels by
five o’clock in the morning, and twelve hours
later was in Cologne. The next morning saw
me on the way to Berlin, and I pushed on thence
to Alexandrovo with as little delay as possible.</p>
<p class='c012'>I represented myself as an English lady on her
way to Moscow to visit her sister’s family, and
had not much difficulty in obtaining a passport.
In two hours from leaving Alexandrovo I was
in Warsaw. Now that I had crossed the frontier
I was in momentary dread of betraying myself
by overanxiety, and did my best to appear
as careless and joy-expecting as if I verily expected
nothing more exciting than a reunion
with my sister.</p>
<p class='c012'>But in Warsaw I felt so ill with suspense, disappointment,
and travel-fatigue, that I was
compelled to rest at a hotel for a day, in order
to recruit my strength sufficiently to complete
my long journey without a breakdown. Two
days later I reached Moscow, via Smolensk, and
then the fever of unrest and anxiety allowed me
no ease for a time.</p>
<p class='c012'>Suppose Sergius were not here, after all! Suppose
some accident had befallen him, and I had
actually passed him on the way! In fact, no
end of suppositions suggested themselves to me,
as I drove to a hotel in which Sergius had, I
knew, found a safe resting-place on more than
one occasion.</p>
<p class='c012'>Now I did not expect to encounter my husband
at the public <i>table-d’hote</i>, nor, indeed, in
any of the public rooms. He had come upon a
secret errand, and he was not likely to ruin his
chances of executing that errand by leading too
open a life. I felt the burning blush of double-distilled
shame on my cheeks even as I thought
this. Shame at the idea of any one whom I
loved lending himself to crime even at his country’s
bidding, and shame that I, so much the
inferior of Count Sergius Volkhoffsky, should
dare to judge him by my own inexperienced
standard of right and morality.</p>
<p class='c012'>Perhaps, when I knew all his reasons for coming
hither, I might even sanction the fulfillment
of his task. Perhaps—but here I suddenly
pulled myself up in horror, for was I not approaching
perilously near to a line of argument
which might ruin my peace of mind forever?
Sanction murder? How could I for one single
moment imagine myself capable of such an
iniquity!</p>
<p class='c012'>Rest and comfortable refreshment did wonders
for me, and, on the day after my arrival in Moscow,
I sat in the salon, eagerly scanning a German
paper which the hotel management had
provided for the use of visitors. From it I gathered
that the czar was expected in Moscow, but
that some rearrangement of plans at St. Petersburg
had caused a postponement of the Imperial
visit.</p>
<p class='c012'>How utterly unlikely it would have seemed to
those around me that the emperor’s visit to
Moscow could possibly concern me! And yet
what a pæan of thankfulness rose from my heart
as I realized that this postponement of which I
had just read meant the deferring of what might
prove the greatest tragedy of my life. I knew
that Sergius could not hope to enter St. Petersburg
without detection, and that it was hardly
likely that those who at the present time had
the power to direct his movements would order
him thither, since he was so well known there,
and had already been denounced to the government.
This delay gave me a chance of meeting
him soon, and of at least trying to weigh my influence
against that of the terrible secret society
of which he was a member.</p>
<p class='c012'>On the second day of my stay in Moscow my
wish was gratified. I saw my beloved in the
flesh, safe and well, and yet, incredible as it
seems to me now, I gave no outward sign of the
rapture which filled my breast. He was very
well disguised, but my love was so keen that it
could have penetrated even more elaborate disguises
than the one he had adopted, while it was
so cautious that not even to himself would I betray
my knowledge of him until I could feel sure
that no mortal eye but ours beheld our meeting.</p>
<p class='c012'>As I had expected, he was an inmate of the
same hotel in which I had pitched my temporary
habitation, and when I first saw him there he
was emerging from the room next to mine, just
as I approached my room door, after partaking
of breakfast in the coffee-room. There were
other people in the corridor at the time, so I
quietly entered my own apartment and closed
the door behind me, for my joy would have been
too visible if I had done otherwise.</p>
<p class='c012'>But I knew that I should see Sergius again,
for I knew also that he was certain to remain in
Moscow until the expected visit of the czar took
place. Now that I had discovered the very location
of his room, it would be easy for me to
watch his movements, or at least so I thought.
It was, however, nearly nightfall ere I, peeping
through the chink of my partially opened door,
saw him return to his own room. And even
then it was impossible for me to make myself
known to him, for he was accompanied by a
stranger who might be either friend or foe, for
anything I knew.</p>
<p class='c012'>So I waited perforce with augmented impatience
until my longed-for opportunity should
come. It was very hard to know that he was
within a few feet of me, yet separated from me
by the barriers of caution and expediency for an
indefinite period. How astonished he would be
when he learned how very near I was to him!
And what hopes I pitched upon my persuasive
powers! No wonder that my impatience rose to
an almost agonizing pitch as the hours wore on,
and the stranger still lingered in my husband’s
room.</p>
<p class='c012'>I would have tried to listen to the conversation
of the two men, had I conceived it to be of
the slightest use. But there was no conveniently
placed connecting-door between the two
rooms through which scraps of conversation, if
not carried on in a low key, might have been
heard, and the constantly frequented corridor
was not an ideal resort for an eavesdropper. So
I was obliged to bide my time, ere I could make
any sign of my presence to Sergius.</p>
<p class='c012'>At last the low, unintelligible murmur of
voices ceased and there were indications that a
move was being made in the next room. “At
last!” I thought, “my weary probation is nearly
over. Sergius will soon be alone, and I can then
slip a note under his door that will warn him of
my presence.”</p>
<p class='c012'>But picture my disappointment when the two
men passed my room-door together! Sergius
was going out again with the stranger, and I
might not have another chance of seeing him
again to-night. For a moment I hesitated as to
what course to follow. Then I resolved to keep
my husband in sight, and to ascertain, if possible,
whither he was going.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was convinced that, be he never so cautious,
he was in danger from all sides, and, though
not probable, it was certainly possible that I
might be of service to him. Nina had told me
that my presence near my husband would only
be another source of worry and danger to him.
But I could not bring myself to believe this, for
I was resolved to be cautiousness itself.</p>
<p class='c012'>Indeed, I was so cautious that Sergius and
his companion were almost out of sight when I
emerged from the hotel portico, and I had to accelerate
my speed considerably before I succeeded
in bringing myself within measurable distance
of them. Sergius wore a gray wig and a flowing
beard of the same venerable hue. This in itself
would not have been disguise sufficient to blind
any one inclined to be suspicious of his identity.
But that he never lost sight of the extreme perilousness
of his position was borne into my mind
by his adoption of a somewhat feeble gait and
carriage, more in unison with his assumption of
the character of an old man than his own light,
swinging walk would have been.</p>
<p class='c012'>The stranger seemed young, being of a lithe,
supple figure, and destitute of hirsute adornment.
He wore smoked glasses, and his face
was disfigured by a singular contortion, which
seemed to draw his features all to one side. Now
and again, as they passed under a gas-lamp, I
was able to scrutinize them closely, and it did
not take me long to decide their errand was a
secret one, for they glanced back from time to
time, as if apprehensive of being followed, and
doubled up one street and down another, with
such a reckless disregard of distance and probable
fatigue that I was convinced they were
trying to elude pursuit.</p>
<p class='c012'>By the time this sort of thing had gone on for
over an hour, I began to feel desperately tired,
and was seriously contemplating the necessity
of returning to the hotel, when I saw something
that convinced me that Sergius needed some one
to give him a friendly warning, and banished
all sense of fatigue.</p>
<p class='c012'>The two men were being followed. A man
stepped from a doorway after they had passed
it, and, slouching into first one corner, then another,
contrived to keep near them, although he
did his best to avoid being seen in his turn.</p>
<p class='c012'>In an instant I thought of Count Karenieff.
Was it possible that he or his myrmidons were
already on the trail? That the fiends had almost
got my husband in their power, and that
his denunciation was already a thing accomplished!</p>
<p class='c012'>At thought of this awful possibility I turned
sick with dread. But I no longer hesitated
about revealing my own presence. At all hazards,
Sergius must be warned. He must be
made aware that an enemy dogged his footsteps.
And he must be cautioned against betraying
the secret resort of the Society to those interested
in, and intent upon, its destruction.</p>
<p class='c012'>With this object in view, I sprang forward,
and would soon have reached my husband’s side,
but for an occurrence which was as unexpected
as it was horrifying to me. The man who was
acting the spy upon Sergius and his companion
had also come to some sudden resolution; for he
also sprang forward, but was intercepted by two
individuals who appeared to have come upon the
spot by magic.</p>
<p class='c012'>I saw the glitter of gleaming steel, as a dagger
flashed in the moonlight. I heard a stifled,
gurgling cry, and before I could echo it, I felt
myself gripped by the throat and rendered for
the moment incapable of uttering a sound. It
seemed to me that my last moment had come.
My tongue clove to the roof of my mouth; my
breath seemed to be forsaking me; my eyes felt
as if they were starting from their sockets, and
the horrible dread of immediate violent death
possessed me.</p>
<p class='c012'>Presently—the time may have been a few seconds;
to me it seemed an age—the pressure was
taken from my throat, and even as my senses
were leaving me I felt a gag put in my mouth;
some heavy garment was thrown over me; I was
lifted from the ground, and was borne away,
possibly to endure a fate which I was no longer
even capable of imagining.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XII.<br/><span class='small'>“In mortal peril.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>When I once more became conscious of my
surroundings, I was seated in a chair, in the
center of a large, low-ceiled apartment, of which
the atmosphere was chill and damp and the
light feeble. I was supported on either side by
a figure clad in a long gray cloak and wearing
a gray hood and scarlet domino. As my scared
senses reasserted themselves more fully, I could
see that the room was peopled by many other
figures similarly attired, and that my presence
among them was the central subject of interest.</p>
<p class='c012'>Nay, there was one other object that must
have been of even more horrible interest than I
was! In front of the chair upon which I was
seated there lay a recumbent figure, covered by
a large square of black cloth. It was outlined
with horrible distinctness, and a shudder ran
through me as I realized that this was the dead
body of the man I had seen struck down while
in the act of shadowing my husband for some
purpose unknown to me, though I could not have
imagined that purpose anything but inimical to
his safety.</p>
<p class='c012'>And where was he, the beloved object for
whose sake I had braved the dangers which now
encompassed me? I looked around me, hoping
to recognize his figure among the many with
which I was surrounded. But alas! the enshrouding
cloaks and obscuring dominos would
not permit recognition, and my heart sank
within me as I thought that even were he here
he might find it impossible to be of service to
me without endangering his own life.</p>
<p class='c012'>At the end of the chamber in which I now
found myself was a slightly raised platform upon
which were seated seven or eight of the cloaked
figures. But I noticed that in their case the
cloak was black and the domino yellow, and I
conjectured rightly that they were the rulers of
the assembly. I was feeling acute bodily suffering,
yet that was for the time lost sight of in
the horror of possible speedy annihilation.</p>
<p class='c012'>Have any of my readers ever been in a situation
of mortal terror? If so, they will be able to
realize the acuteness of perception with which I
regarded everything around me, and the miraculous
swiftness with which the most irrelevant
ideas chased each other through my brain. Even
while trying to pierce the disguise of my possible
judges, I found myself wondering how dear little
Jerry was getting on, and whether Belle’s
wedding would be postponed again or not.</p>
<p class='c012'>But, after what seemed an interminable time,
the silence was at last broken by a voice which
ordered, in deep, impressive tones, “Remove
that covering.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Instantly four figures approached the object
lying in front of me, two from either side of the
room, and each one silently lifted a corner of
the cloth, and doubled it back, so as to expose the
corpse of a man whose countenance wore such
an expression of terror and agony as made me
use desperate efforts to cover my face with my
hands. But they were held tight by the two persons
who supported me on my seat, and the same
sonorous voice which I had already heard commanded
me to look upon the face that lay in
front of me, and ponder upon the fate mapped
out for all traitors to their country.</p>
<p class='c012'>Such a command was not reassuring, and I
relapsed into trembling passivity, while black
cloaks and gray cloaks proceeded to try the murdered
man after he was dead.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What is the name of that traitor?” was the
question I heard, from the lips of the man who
seemed to be the president of the assembly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Karol Gratowitzki.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What was his crime?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“He was a government spy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And his special mission?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“To dog the footsteps of Number Finis.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then he deserves his fate. Who was the
avenger?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Number Sixteen.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then his exemption from future death-service
has been earned.”</p>
<p class='c012'>At these words the man who had replied to
the above questions stepped forward, bowed to
those who were seated on the platform, uttered
a formula, of which I did not catch the import,
and then ranged himself upon the opposite side
of the room to the one he had previously been
standing at.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Remove the body,” was the next command.
In another moment the board upon which the
dead man had been laid was re-covered, and was
lifted up by four figures, who marched down the
room with it, and disappeared through a low
door, which was bolted after their exit, amid a
dead silence on the part of those left behind.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now my turn is at hand,” I thought, feeling
sick with dread, and looking in vain for a
friendly sparkle in the eyes of the silent figures
around me. My premonition was correct, for
the next words I heard referred to myself.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Who is the prisoner?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“We do not know,” was the reply.</p>
<p class='c012'>“How came she here?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“She was spying upon one of our chosen.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Did she betray antagonistic intentions?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes; she sprang forward, as if to strike,
simultaneously with the man who has already
been removed.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What weapons has she in her possession?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“None that we have seen. She has not yet
been searched.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Remove her, and search her.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Up to this point I had remained silent, for my
tongue refused to utter a sound. But the prospect
of suffering the indignity of having my
clothing removed for the purpose of examination
made me utter a startled protest. There
was, indeed, a tiny English revolver hidden in
my dress for defensive purposes. But how was
I to convince these stern martinets that I would
never have dreamed of hurting any one, unless
it was absolutely necessary, in order to save
either my own life or my husband’s.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed!” I cried, forgetting that I was not
speaking to a meeting of English people, “I assure
you that I am innocent of the remotest intention
of injuring any one belonging to you.
And surely I have already suffered indignity
enough!”</p>
<p class='c012'>There was a slight movement of surprise, as
if my nationality had been unsuspected, and then
one of the black-cloaked figures who had hitherto
not spoken stepped forward, and addressed the
president in a low tone. Receiving an affirmative
reply to some suggestion which he offered,
he proceeded to cross-question me in very good
English.</p>
<p class='c012'>I am sure that I created an unfavorable impression
where I was most anxious to be conciliatory,
for, after partially unfolding my story, I
was seized with sudden alarm on behalf of Sergius,
and forthwith became as reticent as I had
a few moments before been voluble. For was it
not possible that undue candor on my part might
betray some secret hitherto carefully preserved
by my husband? Suppose his marriage, while
still a member of this dread society, was against
the rules? And suppose I were betraying a
secret that might prove fatal to him, if I spoke
of his recent absence from the country for which
he had sworn to give up his life? Of all that
concerned his connection with the people who
now had me in their power he had told me nothing,
and in all likelihood his reticence on this
subject was entirely due to considerations of
personal safety. Perhaps he was under oath to
reveal nothing. How, then, was I to account
not merely for my knowledge of the fact that he
was a member of this society, but of the still
more perilous secret of his motive for returning
to Russia? Or of my own object in following
him?</p>
<p class='c012'>Would not my admission that my presence in
Moscow was the result of my private determination
to frustrate an event which they regarded
as necessary for the salvation of their country be
sufficient to procure my own death-warrant as
well as my husband’s? Mine because they
must necessarily regard me as an enemy, his because
he was, even if unwillingly, the cause of
my knowledge of their deadly secret. Alas!
where was he? Surely, if he were present, he
would at once have tried to save me from the
summary fate which hung over me. And yet,
to do so might be to risk his own safety.</p>
<p class='c012'>Truly, vanity was never reproved more cruelly
than mine was then! When the Princess Nina
had told me that, so far from my presence near
him being advantageous to Sergius, it might
prove an additional source of peril, I did not
believe her, since I meant to be too cautious to
run into danger. And here I was, in dire extremity,
and likely to involve my dear husband
in my own ruin, all because I had had too much
faith in the superiority of my own judgment.</p>
<p class='c012'>The position, too, was one that was very difficult
to understand. How did I come to be
classed with the man who had already succumbed
to the swift vengeance of this terrible
society? The solution of this question was beyond
my powers, but I was at least able to grasp
one fact. Sergius must be the Number Finis
whom the stranger was said to have been shadowing.
And his safety was of such importance
to the society that protectors, two and three
deep, followed in his wake.</p>
<p class='c012'>Some of these must have watched my pursuit
of him, and must have imagined me to be his
enemy. As this thought thrust itself forward,
I began to feel less despairing, but could still
not quite determine whether his speedy arrival
on the scene would be conducive to my salvation,
or to his undoing, and my brain became so
bewildered that I hardly knew whether to pray
for his prompt arrival or for his continued absence.
There had been a break in the stern
mode of conducting the inquiry. The door was
silently opened by the janitor, in response to a
signal from without, and three persons entered,
who evidently brought news of stirring import,
though its nature was not permitted to reach my
ears. There was a buzz of excited voices, and
the prevailing feeling seemed to be one of consternation.
Several people who had hitherto
kept silent joined in the conversation, and some
hurriedly left the apartment. Although I had
made wonderful progress with the Russian language,
it was still beyond my power to comprehend
very rapidly spoken utterances, and even
if the discussion had been carried on in a louder
tone I might still have been unable to grasp its
full import. But I could at least tell that the
news received was provocative of grief in the
breasts of some of this mysterious assemblage of
people, while others were stirred to menacing
anger.</p>
<p class='c012'>How this anger might affect my own fate was
impossible for me to tell. But at all events I
had received a momentary respite, and the dread
of instant death was removed from me. Even
my hands were now released, and had I been
able to do so I might have stood up unhindered.
But I was sick and giddy, from the combined
effects of the violence to which I had been subjected,
and of the mental distress under which I
was laboring, and could now do no more than
gaze helplessly around me, and wonder why
Sergius did not come to my rescue.</p>
<p class='c012'>Presently the excitement abated again, and
the cloaked figures resumed their places, the
three latest comers approaching close to where
I was sitting.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now, Brother Finis,” said the president,
“look closely at this woman, who was caught
dogging your footsteps, in company with a man
whom we know to have been a government spy,
and tell us if you have seen her before.”</p>
<p class='c012'>My heart leaped to my mouth at these words.
This must be Sergius, although the ample folds
of his cloak, and his hood and domino, had prevented
me from recognizing him.</p>
<p class='c012'>Hastily stepping forward, he now obtained a
full view of me for the first time. He did not
recognize me for a moment, owing to my disfiguring
wig. But when I looked appealingly at
him, clasped my hands in an attitude of distress,
and sobbed just the one word. “Sergius!” he
started as if struck by lightning.</p>
<p class='c012'>The next instant he had pushed both my bonnet
and my wig from my forehead, disclosing
my own dark curls, and as at last I succumbed
again to the faintness which had oppressed me
for so long, I heard, my husband’s voice exclaim:</p>
<p class='c012'>“My God! This is my wife!”</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XIII.<br/><span class='small'>“Paying the Penalty.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>“Look up, my darling, you are safe now,”
were the next words of which my returning consciousness
was cognizant. Opening my eyes, I
saw those of Sergius bent anxiously upon me,
and thankfully realized that I was embraced by
his strong arms and pillowed upon his warm
breast. Surely it was as he said. I was no
longer in danger, and might give all necessary
explanations without the paralyzing presence of
an assembly which put patriotism before every
other duty to humanity.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Thank God, I have found you!” I murmured,
while the tears of relief flowed down my
cheeks. “Oh, Sergius! how could you leave me
without one word of farewell?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I was compelled in honor to come here without
an instant’s delay. And it was hard enough
to tear myself away on my wedding-day, without
undergoing the agony of parting. Besides,
I knew that you would refuse to let me come
without you, and I dreaded to involve you in
danger.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yet you did not dread danger for my husband,
who is dearer to me than life.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed I did! But I dreaded dishonor still
more. And there was another danger of which
you are doubtless still ignorant. Had I not answered
in person the telegram which summoned
me hither, sudden death, at the hands of outraged
patriotism, would have overtaken me in
England. For our Society, which may strike
you as a small one, has its ramifications all over
Europe, and it never spares those who break
their oath of obedience.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But you barely escaped from St. Petersburg
without falling into the hands of enemies, and
even the strictest Society could hardly accuse
you of leaving the country to evade your oath.”</p>
<p class='c012'>By this time all haziness had left my mind,
and I felt altogether stronger. I raised myself
into a sitting posture, and prepared for my first
attempt to wean my husband from his determination
to do all which his associates wished
him to do. I looked around me to see that we
were quite alone, in a small room, and that the
door, which no doubt communicated with the
larger apartment, was firmly closed. Then, with
momentarily augmenting excitement, I began
to tell Sergius all about my own journey hither.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And do you know my principal object in
following you?” I continued. “Nina told me
that the special duty which demanded your presence
here was the <i>removal</i> of the czar. For
God’s sake, don’t lend yourself to so dreadful
a deed! I could not bear to think of you as a
murderer.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Even as I made this appeal I saw that it was
utterly useless. Sergius had pushed his domino
away from his face, and there was nothing to
hinder me from noting that he had blanched considerably
and that his eyes gathered an expression
of mingled anger and anxiety.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dora,” he said firmly, “you are treading on
ground that is more dangerous than you dream
of. Nina was a very foolish woman to make
such a wild assertion, and you are still more
foolish to act upon her information. Had I
deemed it advisable, I would gladly have
brought you with me. As I did not think such
a course wise, I overconfidently imagined that
my friends would have used some measure of
discreetness. I certainly did not give Nina the
particulars of my mission to Moscow, and even
if I had done so, I should never have dreamed
that she would betray my confidence.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed, Sergius,” I protested, “Nina is the
last woman in the world to betray her friends,
and it was because she saw me tortured with all
sorts of conflicting fears that she showed me the
purely political nature of your sudden departure,
which she no doubt knew without fresh information
from you. And she certainly never dreamed
that I would follow you, for I did not give her
the slightest hint of my intention to do so. It
was surely better for her to enlighten me than to
leave me a prey to the misery of unexplained
desertion.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Perhaps you are right, Dora. All the same,
your arrival here will certainly complicate matters
for me. Still, I can understand your desire
to learn as much as possible—and, why, I do
believe you must have been suffering from jealousy!
Tell me, is that so?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I knew that you had seen a woman at
Hyde Park Corner, whom you would have liked
to avoid while with me. She knew you, I could
tell. And she is so much handsomer than I am
that you must own it was natural for me to imagine
her power to be of a different nature to
what it has proved.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How do you know yet that she had anything
to do with my sudden departure?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t know. I can only conjecture.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I will tell you. You have gone
through such a bitter trial, and have suffered so
much, that I cannot be angry with you, even for
doubting my love. Vera Vassoffskoy is a member
of our Fraternity. So also is her husband.
Both have sad reason to hate an oppressive government,
for it has robbed them both of kindred
and fortune. But Madame Vassoffskoy, though
at one with us in all our general plans, hates individual
bloodshed. She was on a secret mission
to London when she saw me. Before she
left Moscow, she knew that the ballot had fallen
upon me, with reversion to her husband in the
event of my failure to appear on the scene in
time. I shrank back when I saw her, for I regarded
it as an evil omen to be confronted with
my secret obligations on my wedding-day. But
she was determined not to lose sight of me, and
tracked us home by means of a cab which she
called to her assistance. Having found my address,
her next proceeding was to have an official
message conveyed to me, commanding my instant
return to Russia, to fulfill the great plan for
relieving the sufferings of our oppressed country.
Death is the reward of disobedience to the mandates
of the Executive Council, and my grief at
leaving you at such a time showed me that I
could not have done my duty to my country if
I had witnessed your distress. Hark! there is
the signal! Our time is up, and we seem to
have explained so little. And you still look so
ill!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed, I am quite recovered now, and will
give you no trouble. To be with you is all I
want to make me happy and well.”</p>
<p class='c012'>It was even so. I felt that, by his side, I
could bid defiance to the threatenings of fate.
Sergius tightened his arms round me and kissed
me with all a young husband’s devotion. But
his caresses were rather those of one who is bidding
a painful farewell than of one just reunited
to the idol of his heart, after a trying separation.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You must trust me, darling, whatever befalls,”
he whispered; and, could it be true? were
those tears of grief which trickled down his
cheeks? I stood up in suddenly returned alarm,
but before I could question him at all there was
a much louder knock at the door than the first
one had been. Another second, and it was
thrown open. Sergius hastily replaced his domino,
and, kissing me once more, said: “I am
ready.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The next moment I was standing alone in the
little room. Sergius had gone. The door was
closed and bolted, and I was a prisoner once
more.</p>
<p class='c012'>Still I did not, for some time, realize that my
isolation and detention were to be of a prolonged
nature. But when more than an hour passed
away, and I had listened to the gradual dying
out of all sounds in the outer room, I was seized
by a species of panic. Was it possible that I
had really brought danger upon the head of
Sergius, and that he had already paid the penalty
for my rashness?</p>
<p class='c012'>I had seen with what little compunction the
presumed spy had been dispatched, and my despairing
fancy pictured my dear one already
weltering in his blood, while I would perhaps
be left to die in this cell of cold and starvation.
There was a little light available for me, though
not within my reach. It shone through an elevated
grating which communicated with the
larger apartment, and after a time this circumstance
afforded me a little hope.</p>
<p class='c012'>I concluded that, though the meeting was
probably over, the place could not be entirely
deserted. Otherwise the lights, feeble as they
were, would most likely be extinguished. Then
a new horror seized me. How many murders
might have been committed on these premises!
And how many corpses might be buried within
a few yards of me!</p>
<p class='c012'>I am not superstitious, in the general acceptation
of the term. But I always had a horror
of the near presence of death, and even the most
strong-minded among those who may become
acquainted with my history will admit that my
circumstances and surroundings were uncanny
enough to raise the hair of a much less nervous
individual than myself.</p>
<p class='c012'>My watch told me that I had been immured
in this underground room for two hours, and I
was feeling faint and sick with hunger; for it
was now verging on dawn, and I had had very
little food all the previous day, being too much
engrossed in watching for Sergius to attend
properly to my own bodily needs. Sleep refused
me its refreshing aid, though I would gladly
have welcomed the temporary oblivion of my
surroundings which it might have given me.</p>
<p class='c012'>After a time I fell into a species of semi-stupor,
from which I was roused by the entrance
of Sergius into my prison.</p>
<p class='c012'>I am not sure that coherency of thought was
not banished from me even after my husband
had pressed wine and food upon my acceptance.
I know now that I mechanically availed myself
of the refreshment brought to me, but I cannot
recall what transpired for a while, until a flood of
tears relieved my brain from the pressure which
the strength of my emotions exercised upon it.</p>
<p class='c012'>Then I was able to comprehend all that Sergius
had to tell me, and to realize how very
nearly I had compassed his ruin, though I did
not know until afterward what a battle he had
had with the sterner members of the Society,
whose motto was “Death to everything through
which our plans may risk betrayal.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Briefly, the position was this.</p>
<p class='c012'>Sergius had been strictly cross-examined concerning
me, and had been able to convince his
interrogators that I was really his wife. They
were also satisfied as to my fidelity and attachment
to him. But they declined to trust my
discretion at a time when a word might betray
their plans, and ruin their hopes of revolutionizing
the country. It was therefore decreed that
I was to be kept a close prisoner until such time
as Sergius should have fulfilled the obligations
that the Society demanded of him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“In other words,” I said, with a shudder, “I
am never to recover my freedom until you have
committed a hideous crime that would haunt us
all our lives. I would rather die at once.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My poor child! you speak out of the ignorance
born of residence in a free and happy
country,” said Sergius sadly. “Could you but
faintly realize the horror and misery that oppress
the subjects of the czar, you would pray with us
for the abolition of such a monstrous anomaly
as a fabulously wealthy ruler at the head of a
nation that is ground down to the lowest depths
of poverty and degradation. While incredible
sums are exacted for the support of a prodigal
court, each year sees a huge holocaust of the
victims of starvation and oppression! Our
rulers revel in costly frivolities, while famine
depopulates our country by tens of thousands!
No other European state can show such a perfect
system of barbaric misgovernment and corrupt
officialism as Russia. If any of the czar’s
subjects show symptoms of originality or strivings
after a better state of things, they are
promptly consigned either to the state prison or
to banishment, and all national reform has to be
made the subject of secret plottings by a handful
of men and women into whom patriotism or
special provocation have instilled a greater
amount of bravery than is possessed by their
downtrodden and broken-spirited compatriots.
The scoundrels whom despotism has put in office
abuse their privileges to a brutal extent that
would be tolerated nowhere else in Europe, and
must come to an end even here some day. Our
newspaper press is a dead letter, for it is so
supervised and gagged that nothing even approaching
a hint of discontent at the existing
state of things is allowed to appear. A strict
supervision is also exercised upon all our literature,
and even that which is imported from
other countries is examined so jealously that any
article or paragraph which can be construed into
disapproval of Russian politics is promptly detected
and blocked out. Police spies intrude in
our innermost sanctums, and true domestic privacy
is practically unknown among us. Nor is
this all. Physical oppression has been the heritage
of us Russians for ages, and the slightest
excuse is good enough to justify the confiscation
of our property and the deprivation of our liberty.
Liberty! why, even liberty of conscience
is not allowed us, and we are asked to believe
that God has gifted our cursed tyrants with the
knowledge of the only true way in which to
worship him. Whether it be Stundist or Jew,
it is all the same. The Orthodox priests, who
insult Christ by calling themselves Christians,
are ever ready to instigate an ignorant mob into
deeds of violence which are a disgrace to humanity.
Dare to differ from them in creed, and
you find yourself singled out for additional outrage.
Your house will be wrecked, your home
destroyed; your work taken from you, and all
manner of vile insult heaped upon you. If you
have wives and daughters, God might help
them, but you can’t, and the priest won’t raise
voice or finger to save them from the atrocities
of the mob, which must be allowed to reward
itself somehow for its readiness to support the
Orthodox Church.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But surely the government would not refuse
to punish those guilty of such shameful deeds?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear child, the government and the
Church will never fight each other, and the only
reward which a complaint against the latter
would bring forth would be the ruin of the man
who ventured to make the complaint.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But the czar. He is so powerful that a word
from him would put an end to many of these
evils. Surely if he knew—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“The czar! He must know. He has been
appealed to too often to be able to plead ignorance.
But if he, who is nominally at the head
of so huge a nation as ours, and who receives
imperial emoluments for doing his duty to that
nation, will not take the trouble to make himself
acquainted with the needs of the subjects whom
he is paid to govern and protect, then it is high
time that he be made to give place to some one
who will be honest enough to do the work for
which he is paid. We want peace and prosperity
at home, while our rulers neglect us in order
to annex other provinces and enlarge an empire
that is already too unwieldy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yet if this emperor is removed by violence,
he will be succeeded by his son, who will probably
govern just as he is doing, so that his murder
would only prove a fruitless crime.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not so. If his violent death does not frighten
his successor into more humane methods of government,
he will be removed in his turn. And
so it will go on, until the rights of an oppressed
people win the recognition that is demanded.
You feel horrified at the idea of one man being
turned over to avenging justice. How can you
put his life in the scale against the lives and
souls of the thousands who are the daily victims
of governmental oppression and official cruelty?
‘Vox Populi, vox Dei’ is our watchword, and
God and the People shall not always lift up their
voice in vain!”</p>
<p class='c012'>Oh, how noble my husband looked as he thus
eloquently vindicated the right of the people to
insist upon justice! And how strange it was
that I, who had come to Russia fully resolved
upon converting my husband to my own peaceable
ways of thinking, should end by sharing his
enthusiasm and by believing as he did. Yet so
it was, and in defiance of possible subsequent
conscience pricks, I began to look upon my husband’s
contemplated act as that of a brave, self-sacrificing
hero, rather than as the assassination
against which my soul had revolted. Since that
eventful night a reaction has set in, and I often
thank God that, after all, no bloodshed stains
my husband’s hands.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You will feel your isolation very much, I
am afraid,” said Sergius, after we had, by tacit
consent, tabooed further conversation anent the
czar.</p>
<p class='c012'>“If I can see you often, I will try to be as
patient as possible. But I cannot help being
anxious for your safety while you are away from
me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear girl you need not worry at all on
my account. You have seen for yourself how
carefully I am guarded.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, that is true. But I also know that
your position must be a precarious one, or you
would not be under the necessity of maintaining
the disguise in which I saw you. You are, too,
quite aware that you may be discovered and
arrested at any moment.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How do you come to that conclusion?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Without much difficulty. Your manner,
after leaving the hotel where I first saw you,
showed that you feared to be tracked. Even the
fact that your associates had mounted guard
over you, and saved you from the government
spy who was following you, is proof of the great
danger you are in. How thankful I shall be
when we are safe in England again!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“So shall I, my darling. Meanwhile, we
must make the best of the situation, which will
perhaps not be quite so dreary for you as you
imagine. You are to exchange this comfortless
place for a room in another part of the building,
where you will have every indulgence but that
of perfect freedom until it is deemed safe to permit
you to go abroad again. Ah! there is the
signal. Your fresh quarters are ready. Come,
Dora, but remember that you must not speak by
the way.”</p>
<p class='c012'>A few seconds later the door opened, and Sergius
led me past two figures holding lighted
candles, and in the wake of another, who pushed
aside a heavy curtain, beyond which was a narrow,
tortuous staircase, up which we climbed
until my weary limbs found it almost impossible
to go further. Fortunately, we had nearly
reached the top, and Sergius half carried me into
a room which was the picture of warmth and
comfort.</p>
<p class='c012'>A bright fire burned in the stove, and its enlivening
rays made me suddenly conscious of
the fact that I was shivering with cold. I sank
quite exhausted upon a comfortable lounge, and
it was like a transition to Paradise to find myself
housed again in a haven of warmth and comfort,
with the grateful odors of daintily prepared food
assailing me. Yet I could neither eat nor drink
of that which was set before me, and, so fatigued
was I by my experiences, that I yielded to the
languor which overpowered me, and was just
conscious of being kissed affectionately by my
husband, and covered over with multitudinous
wraps, when I sank into a sound and refreshing
slumber, from which I did not awake for several
hours.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XIV.<br/><span class='small'>“Long Live the People!”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>I was rested and refreshed by my long sleep,
and was glad to find that the events of the night
had had no ill effect upon my health. The room
in which I found myself opened into a smaller
one, fitted up as a bedroom, and in this place,
greatly to my astonishment, I saw all the luggage
I had taken with me to the hotel, which,
for many reasons, had better be nameless. How
Sergius had managed things so cleverly I could
not tell. But I was delighted to be able to remove
my disfiguring disguise, and make the
most of my natural appearance.</p>
<p class='c012'>Now that I was no longer a solitary damsel,
whose movements might attract undesirable
notice, I ceased to feel the need of appearing of
such mature age, and I actually felt glad at the
sight of my own homely presentment, after I
had attired myself in a frock which I knew Sergius
would like. While I was still busy touching
up my toilet, an elderly woman, of serious
but pleasing appearance, entered the room, and
asked if I would take my breakfast, or rather
lunch.</p>
<p class='c012'>On first seeing me, she looked rather surprised,
as if she had still expected to be confronted by a
becurled and bespectacled old lady. I was able
to understand her, and to reply to her, but was
relieved to find that she relapsed into German.
As I knew that language much better than Russian,
it was possible to get on very well with my
visitor, who told me that her name was Marie
Ivanovitch, that she was the nominal lessee of
this house, and that she had seen me on the previous
evening.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then there were women, as well as men, in
the assembly?” I exclaimed.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Certainly,” was the reply. “We women are
as much alive to the griefs of our country as the
men are, and the sexes are nearly equally balanced
in our Society. Our usefulness is sometimes
of a different nature to theirs, but, upon
the whole, we have as much work to our hands
as the men have.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And your work just now is to prevent me
from leaving this house?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Even so. But I trust that you will not find
your detention very irksome, since it is only the
consequence of necessary precautions for the
safety of your husband and others. And I cannot
impress upon you sufficiently the danger of
attempting to elude the vigilance of those whose
judgment ordered your stay here.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am not likely to do anything that will run
counter to the wishes of the Society, provided
Count Volkhoffsky approves of them.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What! Taking my name in vain?” cried
another voice at this juncture, and Sergius put
in an appearance.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I was just telling Madame Ivanovitch that I
would obey any orders of the Society that are indorsed
by yourself,” I explained, while I smiled
a glad welcome upon the face I loved.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And the particular command in question?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That I do not attempt to leave these
quarters.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I hope you will not. You are safer here
than elsewhere. And this is the only place in
which we could see much of each other.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say no more, my dearest. Wild horses shall
not drag me away without your approval.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“There, what do you say to that, Sister Ivanovitch?”
asked Sergius. “You see, my wife
has pledged her word to me to be obedient. In
fact, you need be under no apprehension of indiscretion
on her part. We both give you our
word of honor.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And yours is too well known to be doubted,
Brother Volkhoffsky.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sergius,” I said, as the worthy woman went
to see after our lunch, “I feel thoroughly ashamed
of myself for causing you so much trouble and
anxiety. I shall—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not another word, my darling. It does me
good to see you looking something like your own
bright self again. I ought never to have left
you behind, for I might have known that you
would have preferred to share danger with me,
rather than live a life of suspense and inactivity
at home.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My life promises to be inactive enough even
here now.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But at least you know where I am and what
I am doing, and that is something.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“To me it is everything. Life away from
you would be such a blank that I do not care to
picture anything so dreary.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Does the reader wonder at our ability to take
things so quietly, even with an awful tragedy
ever looming before us? I sometimes feel surprise
thereat myself, until I remember that, in
spite of our experiences, we were both still gifted
with the elastic spirits of youth, and that the
mere joy of being reunited was enough to make
us temporarily forgetful of painful subjects.</p>
<p class='c012'>Of course we had many confidences to exchange,
and Sergius removed my mystification
concerning several things. It seems that the
man with whom I had seen him walking on the
previous evening was Ivan Vassoffskoy, the husband
of the handsome young woman I had seen
at Hyde Park Corner, and the individual who
would have had to officiate as my husband’s substitute
in the event of his failure to respond to
the injunction to repair to Moscow at once.
Ivan Vassoffskoy had even more reason to dread
recognition by government spies than had Sergius,
for it was in Moscow itself that he had
been denounced, and, but for the injunction of
the Society, would ere now have sought safety
in flight. His wife was already in England,
having been deputed to carry out some plans for
the Fraternity, of which she also was a member.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ivan has wonderful powers of contortion,
which have saved him from discovery more than
once,” said Sergius, when speaking of his colleague.
“It would take his dearest friend all
his time to recognize his naturally handsome
face in the twisted and distorted visage which
he presents to the public gaze. I have only heard
of three people who could equal him in this direction.
These were an English actor, a Japanese
contortionist, and an English murderer.
All three used their peculiar talent to good purpose,
and were able to mystify whom they liked.
The murderer even went so far as to masquerade
in your Scotland Yard, although he knew that
detectives were on the lookout for him. If
Ivan’s powers of contortion serve him as well as
they served the English malefactor he will have
cause to be thankful for them.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I thought he looked very singular,” I said.
“But I would never have dreamed that he could
by any possibility be regarded as a handsome
man. But tell me, where were you going when
I saw you together?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“We were going to visit and take pecuniary
help to the wife of a man who has fallen a victim
to official rancor. He had the misfortune
to have a pretty daughter, who was beloved by
a youth in every way worthy of her. Now, although
both Olga and her father and mother
favored this young suitor, he had several rivals
for her hand. Olga is a very nice girl, but I
fancy that the good pecuniary position of the
family had something to do with the love of at
least one of those who proposed for her hand.
Be this as it may, on finding himself rejected,
he swore to be revenged both upon his rival
and upon the girl who had had the temerity
to award a man of his standing the insult of a
refusal.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“His threats were heard with dread, for he was
in a position of some importance, in which he
had facilities for dealing underhand blows at
those who were unfortunate enough to offend
him. A large proportion of the denunciations,
which result in death, imprisonment or banishment,
are the outcome of personal malice; and
when once a man or woman is in the position
of an accused prisoner, there is small hope of
delivery, especially if there is property to confiscate.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And did this bad man fulfill his threats?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Indeed he did. You shall judge what difference
this enmity made to Olga and her parents
when I tell you that her father and brother have
been sent to Siberia as political exiles. The
mother and daughter are reduced to poverty, and
have found it impossible to support the younger
children without help from friendly sympathizers,
who have to exercise the greatest precautions
in visiting them, lest they, too, fall into
the power of iniquitous officialism.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And Olga’s lover—what of him? Can he
not help them in their emergency?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Poor Paul! I fear there is little doubt that
he languishes in that living grave—the fortress
on the Neva.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How horrible! It makes me shudder to
think of it. Oh, Sergius, for Heaven’s sake
take care of yourself! What shall I do if evil
befalls you, and how can you escape it in this
dreadful country? I hardly dare hope that you
will reach England alive. How thankful I
would be if we could leave at once.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear girl, there are many things worse
than death. <i>That</i> I must risk. But you could
not retain your respect for a man whose oath
has been broken, and whose word of honor is
worthless. I will be as careful as is consistent
with my duty. More I cannot promise, even to
you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Was it true that I would rather welcome the
death of my hero than that which he conceived
to be dishonor? I think not. But I had not
the temerity to argue the question with him,
and, rather than distress him again, I tried to
put the ghastly picture of his so-called duty from
my mind.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Tell me, if you may,” I said, “what special
information it was that produced such a sensation
at the meeting last night?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“There is no reason why I should not tell you.
Some members of our St. Petersburg branch
have been denounced and tracked by informers
in the pay of Count Karenieff and his myrmidons.
Six of them have been arrested, and it is
not likely that they will ever recover their liberty
again. One lady, who was arrested some
weeks ago, and who was really innocent of conspiracy,
has been so monstrously treated that
she has died in prison. The circumstance of
her death would be regarded as an opportune release
from a life that could never again become
tolerable to her, were not the predisposing details
so horrible. She was grossly insulted by the
governor of the jail in which she was immured,
but refused to forget that she was an honorable
wife and mother. Nothing daunted by her indignant
rebuff, the scoundrel again insulted her.
This time the unhappy lady slapped her tormentor’s face,
and aroused in him the demon of revenge.
She was accused of attempting to take
the governor’s life, and was ordered to be subjected
to the frightful indignity of the knout.
In spite of her alternate prayers for mercy and
screams of resistance, she was dragged to the
place of punishment, forcibly stripped, and mercilessly
beaten.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The physical pain was something terrible to
endure, but one survives even worse things than
that. It was the moral degradation that ate into
her soul, and induced her to end her unhappy
life. How she obtained it no one knows. But
it is certain that she had poison in her possession,
and that she used it to good purpose.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How can such iniquities be permitted! You
make even me feel a longing to take part in the
downfall of a government that can sanction such
atrocities! To think that a noble woman’s end
should be so sad!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Her end? That has not come. She lives in
our souls, and cries aloud from the grave for
vengeance! Her death has revived the ardor of
both the enthusiasts and the lukewarm adherents
of the cause of the people, and will do freedom
more service than her life has done.”</p>
<p class='c012'>We had much more conversation in the same
strain, for I fully sympathized with my husband’s
accounts of the cruelties inflicted upon
his compatriots. But all subjects come to an
end some time, and our talk varied itself by excursions
to Greenby and to Courtney Grange,
not to speak of all we hoped to do when we were
once more at liberty to return to England and
take possession of the handsome house intended
for our reception.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And I have already written to the Michaelows,”
said Sergius. “Of course, neither their
name nor ours appeared in the letter. But they
will receive it indirectly, and they will understand
that we are together. This will allay
their anxiety about you, and all the particulars
of our adventures can be related when we see
them.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I wonder if such an event will really come
to pass?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“To be sure it will. I can’t have you always
imagining the worst. You must look at the
bright side of things.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Do you know what I would do if I had the
power?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Something wonderful, no doubt.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I would give you a drug, if such were obtainable,
that would make you oblivious of everything
but my presence and my wishes. Then I
would take you far away from Russia, and
would keep you there until there was no longer
any danger of your being recalled.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ah! Dora, I’m afraid I shall never make a
patriot of you.—But, whatever can be the matter!
Do you hear the commotion?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sergius! for Heaven’s sake, fly! Some one
has betrayed you! Those are government men
who are rushing upstairs! Oh, what shall we
do? How can you escape?”</p>
<p class='c012'>But my husband appeared much more astonished
than frightened, and hardly seemed to
notice what I was saying, for all his attention
was apparently concentrated upon the hurrying
footsteps without.</p>
<p class='c012'>In another moment our room door was flung
open without ceremony, and half a dozen people
entered, among them being Madame Ivanovitch.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The country is saved! Hurrah! Death to
the tyrant!”</p>
<p class='c012'>These and other exclamations became mixed
in an inextricable jumble, so excited were all the
speakers. Sergius saw that some great news
had arrived, and became as excited as the rest.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Silence, some of you,” he cried, “until I
know what has happened! You, Vassoffskoy,
what is it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“We have been anticipated. The czar will
never come to Moscow now! Our St. Petersburg
contingent has achieved the great deed.
The tyrant has been assassinated! Long live
the people!</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XV.</h2></div>
<p class='c011'>It was all quite true. The czar had been assassinated.
Though he was not killed outright
by the bomb which was thrown under his carriage,
it was known that he was mortally injured,
and could not live long. The messenger
who brought the news to Sergius had started
from St. Petersburg to Moscow as soon as the
deed was done, being previously armed with a
railway ticket and a passport, and was already
on his way to the frontier, whither it was advisable
for all other suspects to proceed at once,
if they would escape the tremendous hue and
cry which would doubtless be raised without
delay.</p>
<p class='c012'>In spite of the fact that I was the associate of
conspirators, the news which elated them horrified
me, and I was more than ever convinced
that my rightful avocation lay among scenes of
peace and domesticity. It was, therefore, all
the more strange that the whole of my grown-up
life so far should have been one of danger, turmoil
and excitement.</p>
<p class='c012'>Yet, as all things have their limit of prominence
in the ever-shifting kaleidoscope of life,
even so would that fever of existence, which is
variously termed “patriotism” and “treason,”
cease to influence my daily being ere long.
Such, at all events, was my hope, and I no
longer doubted that Sergius would at once use
his utmost endeavors to escape to England.</p>
<p class='c012'>But, for a time, it was difficult to obtrude individual
interests into the jumble of excited
comment in which the ever-increasing number
of fresh arrivals discussed the tragedy which
had taken place at St. Petersburg, and its probable
effects upon the members of the Society.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I suppose it will be no longer safe to meet
here after to-day,” said a man, whom I heard
addressed as Ivan Vassoffskoy, but whom I would
not have recognized as the man whom I had seen
with Sergius on that never-to-be-forgotten night
of adventure.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I do not think it was safe to meet here to-day,”
said another, who had just arrived.
“Just as I entered the passage leading round to
our secret entrance I fancied that a man brushed
past me, and I feel rather alarmed.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“One of ours,” remarked Sergius.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I think not,” was the reply, which seemed
to imbue all the company with a sense of insecurity.
“I challenged him in our usual way,
but received no answer, as must have been the
case if he had been one of us.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then why did you come in if you fancied
yourself followed?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Because I concluded that the ‘house’ was already
suspected. I did retrace my steps for a
few yards, but did not succeed in drawing the
man away from the vicinity of the passage. This
being the case, I thought it better to come in,
after all, in order to warn you. It is quite possible
that the passage is guarded already, and
that everybody emerging from it will be arrested.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You did well, brother,” was the verdict of a
tall, imposing man who had hitherto said little.
“I had already begun to doubt the wisdom of
meeting here much oftener, but was anxious to
await the great event before altering our plans.
As you all know, that event has taken place,
and, by the terms of our oath, we are no longer
a Society, although the consummation aimed at
has been not our work, but the work of our
brave St. Petersburg contingent. I proclaim us
morally and patriotically disbanded, and absolved
from all further duty or allegiance to the
rules of our Brotherhood. If, in the future, it
becomes necessary to give the government another
severe lesson, you all know how to communicate
with me, if I am still alive and in
freedom, and you all know that my sole aim in
life is to avenge the wrongs of the people. Before
the setting of another sun some of us will
be on our way to other lands, to seek that safety
and freedom of speech which is denied us here.
Some of us may have fallen into the hands of
the tyrants, and have no longer a hope left.
Others, confident that nobody suspects their
connection with us, will continue to live in and
about Moscow in comparative security, pursuing
a life of honest toil, and always ready to
afford an asylum to a patriot. But, whatever
be the fate in store for us, we have nothing to
reproach ourselves with, unless it be that our
fight for God and our right has not been drastic
enough.”</p>
<p class='c012'>All the details of this conversation were fully
explained to me by Sergius some days later,
when it was no longer dangerous to speak even
in whispers, as was the case while we were flying
toward the frontier. But although I had
not understood all that was said, I had gathered
enough to know that our situation was already
one of extreme peril, and I own that I felt terribly
alarmed. I was also angry with myself
for my husband’s sake, for I was sure that my
presence could not fail to hamper his escape from
Moscow. But I was not a little surprised to see
how stoically all these dangerous conspirators
received the news that their arrival had been
watched, and that their exit was probably cut
off by an outraged government at whose hands
they would find little mercy.</p>
<p class='c012'>This seeming mystery was, however, soon explained.
There were, on the upper landing, and
partly within the four rooms whose doors opened
on to this landing, over twenty people present,
none of whom appeared in the cloaks and dominos
which had imparted such an awful solemnity
to their meeting when I was taken captive
by them. This, Sergius told me afterward, was
because they knew that the catastrophe at St.
Petersburg had virtually disbanded them.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Take off your shoes, Dora,” whispered Sergius.
“And don’t be alarmed, darling. Our
danger is not nearly so imminent as you seem
to fear. We have long expected this crisis, and
have not allowed ourselves to be trapped like
rats in a hole.”</p>
<p class='c012'>While Sergius was speaking, he rapidly unlaced
his boots and took them off. Greatly to
my amazement I saw that all the other people
present were engaged upon the same task, and
I followed the general example, feeling sure that
it would eventually prove to be justified, by
reason.</p>
<p class='c012'>As soon as their noise-producing foot covering
was removed, all present began to throng into
the bedroom I had occupied for so short a time.
Some one touched a secret spring in the wainscoting,
which noiselessly yielded to a slight
pull given to it by Sergius, and revealed a cavernous
opening into which, with whispered injunctions
against making much noise, first one
and then another of the conspirators disappeared
with either boots or shoes in hand. One man
fetched a short ladder into the room, besides a
boot and a shoe, which had evidently been previously
in readiness for some special purpose.</p>
<p class='c012'>Sergius held back until all the others had
passed through the secret door. Then he raised
the bedroom window, which was one that
opened on to the roof. His next proceeding was
to throw the two shoes some distance along the
flat roofs of the adjoining buildings. Then,
leaving the window open, and the ladder by
which he had reached it still standing, he took
my hand and drew me into the space in which
our companions were making cautious and laborious
progress. Carefully closing the door behind
us, he stooped for a moment, and I heard a sharp
click, as of breaking metal.</p>
<p class='c012'>“There,” he said, in a low tone. “It would
take pursuers some time to follow us, for I have
broken the spring, and that door will never
yield again to gentle persuasion. Are your
shoes all right?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, I have them in my hand.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“And your money and jewelry is already
stowed in our pockets. Everything else you
must sacrifice. You are unfortunate with your
clothes.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Never mind, so long as I have you left. But
why did you throw those shoes out of the window?
And why did you leave the window
open?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“To lead probable pursuers off the scent, and
induce them to believe that we have escaped
through the window, dropping our shoes in our
hurry. A couple of houses along the flat roof
there is an easy means of descent to the ground,
by way of out-house tops, and thence into an unfrequented
back street. It will seem the most
natural way in the world to escape, and while
the enemy is following up the false scent we
shall all be making good progress in another
direction.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But suppose it is a false alarm, after all?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Listen!”</p>
<p class='c012'>I did listen, and no longer hesitated about
groping my way into the darkness beyond. For
noises, loud and threatening, penetrated to my
shrinking ears, and told me that the house had
already been forcibly entered. Of course the
doors had been locked behind us, and I could
hear that these were being beaten down with
heavy weapons.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now, silence, for your life!” whispered Sergius.
“Trust me to lead you to safety.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Not another word was exchanged between us
for several minutes, during which, having
crawled on to a sort of shelf, and covered the
opening by means of a spring sliding panel, we
found it necessary to crawl for some distance on
all fours, in a stifling atmosphere which threatened
to choke us. But at last this ordeal was
also over, and we emerged into another chamber,
similarly arranged to the one by which we
had entered the species of tunnel which we had
just traversed.</p>
<p class='c012'>I was by this time almost exhausted with terror
and haste, and was thankful indeed to be
told that the worst danger was now over. But
I exerted myself womanfully to hide the full extent
of my distress from Sergius, and have since
felt rather ashamed at times when he has insisted
upon praising my courage and fortitude.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You may put your shoes on again now,” he
said, “and we shall no doubt find some one in the
next room ready to give us a good brushing.”</p>
<p class='c012'>It was as he said. But it took a good wash,
as well as a good brush, to make us at all presentable,
and every requisite facility for furbishing
up one’s toilet was to be found here.</p>
<p class='c012'>“How strange it seems,” I said, “to have
come into such handy quarters. I understand
the comforts of the other end. But these two
little rooms seem to be only used for dressing,
and don’t communicate with a bedroom at all.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That is easily explained. We are now actually
in a theater, and these are the manager’s
dressing-rooms. He is one of us, and the whole
plan of escape is of his devising. That passage
along which we crawled is space taken from the
front upper rooms of three houses that we have
crossed. It was necessary to take off our shoes,
in order not to make too much noise over other
people’s heads; but even the chance of betrayal
on this score is practically guarded against, since
all these front rooms have been taken by various
members of our Fraternity. They would know
what a scrambling noise overhead meant, but
there is a possibility of antagonistic strangers
being sometimes present in some of the rooms,
so we are always as careful as possible. There,
now, if you have quite recovered your breath,
we will follow the rest of our friends downstairs.”</p>
<p class='c012'>In a few minutes we found our way down
staircases along corridors into what proved to be
the manager’s private room, and here the manager
himself was conversing with several of
those who had so recently escaped a mortal
danger.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ah! here you are, Brother Volkhoffsky,” he
said. “Do you think the alarm has been a false
one, or that the flight was unnecessary?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If my wife and I had been one minute later,”
was the reply, “all would have been lost. I had
only just broken the secret spring, when I heard
loud commands to surrender, while the door was
being violently assailed.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ugh!” shuddered one or two. “It’s as well
we’re out of it. But what had we better do
next?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I do not think that it would be advisable for
any more of you to leave the theater now,” said
the manager. “The police will be watching the
whole neighborhood very carefully just now.
You very likely all need refreshment badly, or
will before you have a chance of obtaining any
elsewhere. Four of you shall have some wine
and such substantial fare as I have already provided,
while the rest walk boldly on to the stage.
You must refresh yourselves in relays of four.
I don’t want too many people in this room at
once, as we are likely to be interrupted at any
moment, and my advice is that you spend as
short a time here as is consistent with a substantial
meal, which I again warn you will be
needed. I will give you all part of some play to
masquerade on the stage with, and if any prying
spies intrude, you will be supposed to be rehearsing
for to-night’s performance. As evening
approaches, the theater will be lighted up, and
before the real artists arrive you must so dispose
yourselves as to be able to join the audience
unobtrusively. You will then be comparatively
safe, as no one will imagine that people who
know the police to be on their track would spend
the evening listening to a comic opera, thus apparently
wasting valuable time. After the play
is over, you can emerge with the crowd, and go
your several directions in comparative safety.
After that it will be each one for himself, and
the God of nations for us all. And now, my
friends, I have my daily duties to perform, and
must attend to them at once, if I would avoid
the curse of suspicion. So good-by, and may
our unhappy country be no more under the necessity
of fighting against those whose duty it is to
help instead of to oppress!”</p>
<p class='c012'>This wish was fervently echoed by the rest of
those present. There was a solemn ceremony of
handshaking, and then the Society which had
exacted such a horrible duty from my husband
was disbanded forever, although many of its
members found it advisable to follow the manager’s
advice and abide in the theater until after
the evening performance. Sergius and I were
of the number; and, greatly to our relief, the
tickets and passports with which Sergius was
already provided were accepted at the railway
stations without suspicion.</p>
<p class='c012'>Our journey to the frontier, although desperately
fatiguing, proved uneventful, and when,
having traveled by the Brest-Litovsk route, we
found ourselves in Berlin, we felt able to express
to each other without fear our thankfulness
at our escape. In Berlin we stayed for a couple
of days, to take much needed rest, and to replenish
our shabby and scanty wardrobe, since we
did not care to return to England with nothing
but the clothes we stood up in.</p>
<p class='c012'>There was no need for Sergius to sell any of
our jewelry to provide ready money. He was
well supplied with cash, and had this not been
so he could have drawn upon a Berlin banker
whom he knew.</p>
<p class='c012'>A couple of days later we presented ourselves,
somewhat travel-worn, but otherwise in good
health, at the house of Prince Michaelow, in
Kensington, and I shall never forget the delighted
astonishment with which he and Nina
welcomed us “home” again.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Thank God!” said the former. “We never
expected to see either of you alive again.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You see, I fetched him home,” I said to
Nina, and I hardly know whether smiles or tears
most prevailed as I received my friend’s enraptured
caresses.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I can’t think how you have managed so
beautifully,” said Nina; “unless, indeed, you
only went part of the way.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“We went all the way, and Dora has gone
through all sorts of terrible adventures with no
end of pluck,” asserted Sergius.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It’s just wonderful! After the news of that
horrible assassination reached England, I felt
sure you were both doomed,” said Nina, with
a shudder, accompanied by another hug. “But
how did you escape so easily?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Perhaps we had better defer explicit particulars
for a little while,” interposed Prince Michaelow.
“I am thinking that one never knows
what may happen, and that it will be as well not
to betray the fact of your having been in Russia
again to any one. I suppose you were in St.
Petersburg?”</p>
<p class='c012'>This was said so significantly that I knew
what awful thing he was hinting at, and at once
exclaimed: “No, thank Heaven! Sergius has
been no further than Moscow. <i>That</i> was done
without him.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am so thankful!” chimed in Nina. “Of
course, I feel for the people. But it is an immense
relief to me to know that none of my
friends have killed the poor, misguided man.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You see,” said the prince, “we shall never
be able to make true patriots of our wives.
They are too English for that. But how will
this affect your future?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am just as much absolved from further
duty as if mine had been the hand which threw
the bomb. Our Society is disbanded, and will
never be reorganized on the same lines. While
still a member of it, I was resolved to fulfill the
terms of my oath to the letter. But that sort of
work does not suit me, and though I long for
the regeneration of my country, I am now convinced
that violence on the part of secret societies
can never cure the evils we deplore.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then you are not likely to join another secret
society?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Never! My political career is over. I cannot
sympathize with the government. I may
not work openly in the interests of the people.
And I will not lend myself again to secret plotting.
This much I have already told Dora. But
she does not know yet that I have resolved
never to return to Russia. Henceforth my life
is devoted to her happiness and comfort.”</p>
<p class='c012'>This was indeed glorious news, which helped
me to throw off the last talon of the incubus of
dread, and speedily recover the happiest spirits
imaginable. We decided to adopt the prince’s
advice, and to say nothing to any one about
having been elsewhere than on our originally
projected wedding-tour. We had returned
within the time expected, and I for one would
not have put it in Belle’s power to betray the
fact that Sergius was in Russia when the czar
was assassinated.</p>
<p class='c012'>So we duly took possession of our own beautiful house;
and then, as I really longed to see
Lady Elizabeth and Jerry, we went down to the
Grange, to pay a visit which my father had
strongly urged us to pay.</p>
<p class='c012'>And how different this journey to Moorbye
was to the last one! Then I was lonely, unloved,
miserable and homeless. Now I was the
possessor of everything that goes to make life
happy. And yet only a few months had elapsed
between the two visits. Early summer had but
given way to late autumn. Certainly, many
events had been crowded into a short space of
time. Nevertheless, it was nothing short of
wonderful that such results should have sprung
so rapidly from the ashes of what I had deemed
an almost incurable grief.</p>
<p class='c012'>I could not complain of my reception, for all
but Belle greeted me with warmth, and I was
positively thankful that she held aloof from me.
I was also glad that no one witnessed our meeting.
She had kept her room, when we first arrived,
on the plea of a headache, to which I inwardly
gave the name of envy. For, knowing
the superiority of Sergius to the Earl of Greatlands,
and thoroughly understanding Belle’s envious
nature, I knew that my good fortune could
but be a very bitter pill for her to swallow. We
encountered each other in the corridor, when I
was on my way to the dressing-room assigned
me, and it was characteristic of the nature of us
both that we merely bowed when we saw each
other. There was no sisterly kiss. Not even a
handshake. Apparently there was to be an
armed truce between us, and Belle’s first words
prepared me to understand that she hated me as
much as ever.</p>
<p class='c012'>“So,” she said, drawing her superb figure up
to its full height, and looking scornfully at me,
“you have managed to secure a title, after all!
Had you lived in the middle ages you would
have been burned as a witch, for nobody would
have believed that you used aught but magic
arts to ensnare your victims. And you have not
shown much decency, either, or you would not
have married so soon after—”</p>
<p class='c012'>Here Belle, callous and hardened as she was,
paused for a moment, and I finished the sentence
for her in a manner she little expected.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Since the death of <i>your</i> victim,” I said, now
feeling as relentless as she was herself. “Take
care how you goad me, or I may be tempted to
betray your secrets. For I know everything,
and one word from me could shatter your castle
of cards. While I am at it I will tell you something
else. Not long ago you deliberately meditated
my removal by the same means which
made your fiancé an earl. Take care how you
attempt to repeat such experiments. I am not
the only one in the secret. But it will be
safely kept, if you behave yourself, for the
sake of others, who would suffer by your downfall.
I hardly need hint that you would precipitate
that downfall by any attack upon my life,
since I am less likely to die unavenged than the
poor old earl. And now I have only one stipulation
to enforce. You must henceforth be civil
and polite to me and mine. In return I will refrain
from ever alluding to this wicked business
again. The possessors of your secret are as anxious
to guard it as if they were alike guilty with
you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Had Belle been struck into stone she could
not have been more rigid than she was. Her
face petrified with horror, and her eyes betrayed
the consciousness of guilt. She made no attempt
to interrupt me. But the look of relief
which overspread her face when I reassured her
that her secret was safe showed me that she
thoroughly understood the meaning of every
word I said, and convinced me that I need fear
no further insults from her in future. I had
not meant thus openly to confront her with her
own wickedness. But her insults stung me to
it, and my words certainly had the effect I desired.</p>
<p class='c012'>When, shortly afterward, I joined the others
in the dining-room, there was ample balm for
my wounded feelings. My father, having got
over the pique which he had first felt on discovering
that I was capable of carving my own fortunes,
and that I was not inclined to eat humble
pie, was becoming quite cordial with me, and
had evidently come to the conclusion that there
must be something in me, after all, since others
seemed to appreciate me so highly. As for Sergius,
it was impossible to resist him, and there
was every evidence that Mr. Courtney was already
feeling very proud of his new son-in-law.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth was looking much better, and
plied me with a great many questions relative to
my early Russian adventures. “I have missed
you very much,” she said. “But I have not felt
so anxious about you as might have been the
case had you been less energetic and self-reliant.
Besides, you knew that I loved you, and I expected
you would apply to me at once, if you
were in need of money. I also thought that, as
the friction was connected with Belle, you would
return to us as soon as she was married. But I
never dreamed that you would be the possessor
of a wealthy husband and a title. Certainly, in
your case, it has been proved that it is better to
be born lucky than rich. I wonder what Belle
thinks of it. She has never said anything to
me. She knows I would not listen to a word
against you. But I hope she does not mean to
be rude, or that her headache is not a mere pretext
to avoid you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You need have no fear,” I replied confidently.
“I met Belle in the corridor, and received
her congratulations. I think she means
to let bygones be bygones as much as possible
now. I daresay she felt that she had sufficient
cause to be ill-natured before. And, you know,
she must have been awfully disappointed when
she found she was not to live at the castle.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You said some strange words that morning,”
said Lady Elizabeth, sinking her voice to
a whisper. “The thought of what they implied
has almost killed me. The whole affair was so
dreadful that I did not know what to think. Do
you still—”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mother,” I interrupted hastily, “for Heaven’s
sake, pay no more heed to the ravings of a
grief stricken girl. It was unfortunate for us
all that your brother should have gained his title
under such tragic circumstances. But pray do
not think that anything but nature interfered
with my wedding. It served me right. I was
selfish and headstrong, and ought to have remembered
how cruelly Belle was disappointed.
It was a shame to say wicked things of her
besides.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, Dorrie! how thankful you make me. I
have of late begun to think it impossible that
either Cyril or Belle would stoop to criminality.
It was too awful to believe. Now that you are
also convinced, I feel thoroughly happy. And
how nice you are looking, too! You have such
pretty hair, and such a fine complexion. Your
figure, too, since you have become less thin, is
as good as Belle’s own. Your father remarked
a little while ago that it was wonderful what an
amount of good looks you were developing.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I believe I am too happy and well-cared for
ever to recover my former perfection of ugliness.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Now, Dorrie,” chimed in another voice, “it’s
really too bad of you. You don’t seem to be
able to spare me a minute. I don’t believe you
are half so jolly as you used to be.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, Jerry!” I said, kissing him affectionately.
“Didn’t I talk with you nearly all the
way from the station? And didn’t I discover
what a little fraud you are, for you couldn’t answer
my most simple French questions? And
haven’t you taken possession of Sergius ever
since?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, to be sure. I forgot that. But, oh
my! isn’t he a brick? He’s given me a sovereign,
and he’s going to buy me the jolliest pony
he can get, so that I can have plenty of riding in
the holidays.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Just at this juncture Mr. and Mrs. Garth,
who, it seems, had been invited to dine with us,
arrived on the scene, and there was a considerable
amount of congratulating and handshaking.
Then Belle came down, looking as quietly elegant
and beautiful as ever, though perhaps a
shade paler. She was very gracious when introduced
to Sergius, and impressed every one very
favorably by her brilliant conversation and
ready wit.</p>
<p class='c012'>Both my father and Lady Elizabeth looked
very happy and contented, and the evening was
spent sociably and harmoniously. There was
only one cankerous secret hidden beneath the
smiling surface of family unity. But that was
to be buried forever, I devoutly hoped.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What a pity Greatlands isn’t here,” said my
father, some time after we had all adjourned to
the drawing-room. “I’m sorry business kept
him in town this week. You see, Volkhoffsky,
he is doing the thing in style, and is very busy
making all necessary preparations for next
week’s grand event. Yes, one week more, and
then Belle, too, will have passed the portals of
matrimony.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Yes, one week more, and the final scene in this
life-drama will have been played. One turn more
of Fortune’s wheel, and we will ring the curtain
down upon these reminiscences of an ugly girl’s
life.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XVI.<br/><span class='small'>“Life and thought have gone away.”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Never had such a brilliant company been assembled
within the walls of Moorbye Church.
It was Belle’s wedding-day, and the sun shone
kindly upon the face of nature. Only a few
family friends had been invited down, but the
little church was filled to overflowing by the
gentlefolks of the neighborhood, who did not
think it <i>infra dig.</i> to undergo a lot of crowding
and elbowing for the privilege of witnessing an
earl’s wedding.</p>
<p class='c012'>Belle looked superb in her pearl-embroidered
satin gown as she walked up the aisle with my
father, and her bearing must have struck the
onlookers as unusually calm and dignified. I
fancied that I could detect a sign of anxiety in
the hurried glance she cast around in search of
Cyril, and that her face paled on discovering
that he had not yet arrived. Possibly she
thought of that other bridal morning, when the
bridegroom did not put in an appearance. As
yet, however, there was no need for uneasiness.
The train by which the Earl of Greatlands was
to come from town was only just due, and it
might possibly be a little late.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I feel very anxious,” said Lady Elizabeth to
me, in a voice low enough only to be heard by
myself. “Cyril ought to have contrived to be
here first. He has behaved very strangely altogether
of late, and I cannot help thinking that
something must be wrong with him. I hope he
is not ill.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Alas! I knew what was wrong with him, and
by this time my fears exceeded Lady Elizabeth’s
own. When I say that I feared, I speak advisedly.
For it had seemed to me that an interruption
to this marriage was a thing to be dreaded,
for everybody’s sake. True, real happiness was
not to be expected for either Belle or her husband.
But it was more fitting that these two,
who had sinned together, should spend the rest
of their conscience-haunted days together, than
that either of them should be left at liberty to
cast a shadow upon the life of any one else.
Perhaps it was very presumptuous of me to constitute
myself judge in such a case as this; for
to encourage criminals in the achievement of
that for which they have schemed and planned
hardly seems a justifiable way of making the
punishment fit the crime. Certainly the demands
of justice would appear to point to a very
different ending to our family troubles. But
what woman in my place would not have tried
to pit silence and oblivion against naked justice?</p>
<p class='c012'>It was a relief to us all when the Earl of
Greatlands, accompanied by Mr. Alwyn Gardener,
his best man, hurriedly entered the church
and walked toward the altar. But Mr. Gardener
appeared flushed and troubled, and the
bridegroom seemed to me to be looking like one
demented. For at one moment he bit his lip
and clinched his hand with all the air of one
who is doing a thing that is distasteful to him.
The next he was smiling at Belle, and gazing at
her with the exultant admiration of a proud and
happy bridegroom.</p>
<p class='c012'>Presently Mr. Garth and his two chosen assistants
began the marriage service, and the
interest of the onlookers was quickened in an
endeavor to hear the responses. Even yet I felt
apprehensive of interruption. But, so far, my
fears were unfounded, for the ceremony was concluded,
and soon all was smiles and congratulation.
The bride was kissed by relatives and
bridemaids, and I hoped that, among all the
fuss and excitement, the fact that I neither
kissed my sister nor shook hands with my
brother-in-law would pass unnoticed.</p>
<p class='c012'>There was to be a reception after the wedding,
and then the newly-married pair were to go to
Scotland for their honeymoon. We were quite
a merry party at the Grange, and even I, who
was so much behind the scenes, felt as if I almost
dared hope that the family troubles were
now over.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jerry was in high glee, for everybody liked
him, and the tips he got were enough to have
turned any ordinarily lucky schoolboy green
with envy. His holidays were almost over, and
no doubt some of the school-chums of whom he
spoke to me would soon show him how to get
rid of his pocket-money.</p>
<p class='c012'>The Earl of Greatlands excused himself somewhat
earlier than had been expected, on the plea
of feeling the need of half an hour’s quiet, as he
was considerably out of sorts. “It will be time
enough for you to get into your traveling dress
in three-quarters of an hour, dear,” he said to
Belle, whom he kissed again with all the ardor
of a lover. Then he went up to his room, while
Belle supported her honors a while longer in a
manner that won admiring encomiums from certain
individuals of the toadying order, who
never lose an opportunity of flattering their
superiors in station. When at last the bride
went upstairs, she had little time to spare for
dressing, but declined to take her two bridemaids
with her to facilitate the process.</p>
<p class='c012'>A minute later Marvel, who had accompanied
his master to Moorbye, rushed into the room in
which the rest of us were toying with time, and,
throwing his hands up with a despairing gesture,
screamed rather than shouted his dreadful
tidings—</p>
<p class='c012'>“My master is dead!”</p>
<p class='c012'>That was what he had to tell us, and a moment
later all was confusion and excitement,
which was augmented by the sound of despairing
shrieks from above.</p>
<p class='c012'>In common with others, my first impulse was
to rush upstairs to Belle’s room. I arrived first,
and found her standing in the middle of the
floor, alternately screaming and laughing, both
screams and laughter being such as can but proceed
from the tortured bosom of insanity. Beside
her, on the floor, lay an open letter. I
instinctively picked it up and hid it in my
pocket before any one else saw it. I knew,
without being told, that whatever awful tragedy
had taken place in the next room was explained
in that letter, and that it was the reading of it
which had driven my sister mad.</p>
<p class='c012'>There were plenty of affectionate hands ready
to help the stricken bride, and plenty of loving
hearts that would fain have lightened her woe.
But the blow had been too awful in its suddenness,
and had struck when she was least prepared
for it, just when she was at the zenith of her
triumph and satisfaction. It had extinguished
forever the light of reason from that beautiful
face, and had transformed the erstwhile smiling
bride into a hopeless maniac.</p>
<p class='c012'>Strangely enough, she seems to have forgotten
the present, and all memory of aught connected
with the family of Greatlands has been wiped
off her darkened mind. She will never betray
the part she bore in that other tragedy, and the
world speaks very pityingly of the beautiful girl
whose mental and social life ended on the very
day which had witnessed the climax of her ambition.</p>
<p class='c012'>The new Earl of Greatlands, being tender and
pitiful, would have established his father’s bride
of an hour in the dower-house, surrounded by
such comforts as she is capable of enjoying.
But to this plan neither my father nor Lady
Elizabeth were willing to consent, and she still
lives at Courtney Grange, one of the saddest
wrecks of humanity it is possible to meet with.
Interest in her surroundings she takes none, but
will sit and babble by the hour of the time when
she was a little one, and had no greater trouble
than to please an indulgent governess.</p>
<p class='c012'>My father has aged very much of late, and always
bears about him the impress of one who
has been cruelly stricken by fate. He had almost
worshiped his eldest daughter, in whom he saw
nothing but physical, mental and moral perfection.
To gaze upon her as she is, and to contrast
her present condition with what might
have been, is a daily torture to him, which robs
his life of much of its former animation and
spirit. Seeing how he takes the changed order
of things to heart, I often feel thankful that he
is quite unsuspicious of the fact that, but for
herself, Belle might now have been happy in
the love of husband and children, even as
I am.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lady Elizabeth, too, was greatly grieved for
a time. But as her sympathies are widely scattered,
and her interest in human nature is keen,
she finds sufficient employment for mind and
body to keep both in a healthy state of activity.
If there is one thing that she is more sorry about
than another, it is the fact that she could ever
have harbored unworthy suspicions against two
people whom she now firmly believes to be entitled
to be numbered among the innocents.
Thank God that she is spared the knowledge
which I possess! It would kill her.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jerry is now at Cambridge, and bids fair to
reward all the hopes centered upon him.</p>
<p class='c012'>As for myself, there is a perpetual problem
facing me, and that is—What have I done to deserve
all the love and happiness which are showered
upon me? Yes, there is one other—How
shall I repay Sergius for the transformation he
has wrought in my life? I am constantly trying
to do it, but never manage it quite to my
own satisfaction, though I believe my Russian
friends, all of whom now live within a short
distance of our house, entertain very exaggerated
views concerning my capabilities of making a
good wife.</p>
<p class='c012'>There is one other subject upon which the
future reader of these memoirs may possibly desire
a little enlightenment. He shall have it.</p>
<p class='c012'>Cyril, earl of Greatlands, who is said to have
accidentally poisoned himself by swallowing a
large dose of chloral in mistake for a milder
drug, sleeps by the side of his ancestors in the
Greatlands mausoleum, and only Dennis Marvel,
who is now the young earl’s valet, and myself
ever dream that despair and remorse drove
an apparently happy man to sever the life-chords
which had become a torture to him.</p>
<p class='c012'>So soon as I had an opportunity to do so unobserved,
I read the letter which had been the
last thing upon which Belle had gazed with the
light of reason.</p>
<p class='c014'>“My darling wife,” it ran, “I thought to
have overcome the horror which has been resting
upon me ever since I became an accursed
parricide. My God! how could I do it! And
how could you urge me to it! You, whom it
would not have been difficult to worship as the
outward embodiment of all that is pure and
holy! I have often asked myself if I were mad.
For I could not otherwise understand how it
was possible for me to continue loving the temptress
whose ambition has wrought my father’s
doom and mine. For I am doomed and accursed!
My days are filled with loathing of myself, and
my nights are one long dream of horror. For
me there is no salvation. I see my father’s
frowning face, and hear his curses even amid
the gay talk of the happy folk around us, and it
is more than I can bear. Therefore I have put
an end to it. When you pick this up from your
dressing-table, the man who murdered his own
father to gratify your ambition and his own
greed will be numbered among the dead. But
for you, who could coolly plan a murder, and
yet not be haunted by remorse, life still holds
many possibilities. You are now the Countess
of Greatlands. I have enabled you to gratify
your ambition. In return, you can make expiation
for your own guilt by devoting your gifts
to the interests and benefit of others. This I
pray you to do, repentant sinner that I am!
This I implore you to do, madly-loving husband
that I am! This I command you to do, wretched—but
but my strength fails me. I must bid you an
eternal farewell. God bless you, my darling,
and may His mercy be given to us both.</p>
<div class='c015'>“<span class='sc'>Cyril.</span>”</div>
<p class='c016'>I read this letter through, but though it moved
me terribly, it told me nothing I did not know
already. How would it be with others, though?
Would it not enlighten them more than was desirable
about secrets that were better kept? I
thought so, and I carefully burned the letter,
anxiously watching it shrivel beneath the action
of the flames, and guarding against the possibility
of the smallest fragment escaping to betray
the dark mysteries of the past.</p>
<p class='c012'>Does the reader blame me?</p>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div>THE END.</div>
</div></div>
<hr class='c017' />
<div class='figleft id002'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i337.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c012'><span class='c018'>After Bathing</span> the first time with <b>Pearline</b>, you feel as if you
never had been clean before, possibly you haven’t. Only baths like the
Turkish or the Russian can make you as clean as <b>Pearline</b> does.
There’s the same feeling of lightness and luxury after it, too.
Bathing with <b>Pearline</b> costs almost nothing. It’s like
everything else—you would long for it, if it were expensive, but
you’re apt to overlook it when it’s cheap. Directions on every
package.</p>
<p class='c012'><span class='c008'>Beware</span></p>
<p class='c012'>Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you “this is as good
as” or “the same as Pearline.” IT’S FALSE—Pearline is never peddled;
if your grocer sends you an imitation, be honest—<i>send it back</i>.</p>
<p class='c012'>JAMES PYLE, New York.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c004' /></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div><span class='c018'>BURNETT</span></div>
<div>- - - AT THE - - -</div>
<div><span class='c018'>CHICAGO EXPOSITION</span></div>
</div></div>
<hr class='c019' />
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>WHAT THE RESTAURATEURS AND CATERERS WHO ARE TO FEED</div>
<div>THE PEOPLE INSIDE THE FAIR GROUNDS THINK OF</div>
<div><b>BURNETT’S EXTRACTS</b>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c012'><span class='sc'>Chicago</span>, April 2d, 1893.</p>
<p class='c012'>Messrs. <span class='sc'>Joseph Burnett & Co.</span></p>
<p class='c012'><i>Gentlemen</i>: After careful tests and investigation of the merits
of your flavoring extracts, we have decided to give you the entire
order for our use, in our working department as well as in all our
creams and ices, used in all of our restaurants in the buildings of
the World’s Columbian Exposition at Jackson Park.</p>
<div class='c020'>Very truly yours,</div>
<div class='c020'>WELLINGTON CATERING CO.</div>
<div class='c020'>By <span class='sc'>Albert S. Gage</span>, President.</div>
<hr class='c007' />
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Chicago</span>, April 26th, 1893.</div>
<p class='c012'>Messrs. <span class='sc'>Joseph Burnett & Co.</span>,
Boston and Chicago.</p>
<p class='c012'><i>Gentlemen</i>: After careful investigation we
have decided that <span class='sc'>Burnett’s</span> Flavoring Extracts
are the best. We shall use them exclusively
in the cakes, ice creams and
pastries served in Banquet Hall and at New
England Clam Bake in the World’s Fair
Grounds.</p>
<div class='c020'>N. E. WOOD, Manager,</div>
<div class='c020'>New England Clam Bake Building.</div>
<div class='c020'>F. K. MCDONALD, Manager,</div>
<div class='c020'>Banquet Hall.</div>
<hr class='c007' />
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Woman’s Building</span>, }</div>
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>World’s Columbian Exposition</span>.}</div>
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Chicago</span>, April 21st, 1893.</div>
<p class='c012'>Messrs. <span class='sc'>Joseph Burnett & Co.</span>,
Boston and Chicago.</p>
<p class='c012'><i>Gentlemen</i>: We take pleasure in stating
that <span class='sc'>Burnett’s</span> Flavoring Extracts will
be used exclusively in the Garden Cafe,
Woman’s Building, World’s Columbian Exposition,
during the period of the World’s
Fair.</p>
<div class='c020'>RILEY & LAWFORD.</div>
<hr class='c007' />
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Columbia Casino Co.</span></div>
<p class='c012'>Messrs. <span class='sc'>Joseph Burnett & Co.</span>,
Boston and Chicago.</p>
<p class='c012'><i>Gentlemen</i>: We take pleasure in stating
that <span class='sc'>Burnett’s</span> Flavoring Extracts will be
used exclusively in the cuisine of the
Columbia Casino Restaurant, at the
World’s Fair Grounds, as it is our aim to
use nothing but the best. Respectfully,</p>
<div class='c020'>H. A. WINTER, Manager.</div>
<hr class='c007' />
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Transportation Building</span>, }</div>
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>World’s Columbian Exposition</span>.}</div>
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Chicago</span>, April 24, 1893.</div>
<p class='c012'>Messrs. <span class='sc'>Joseph Burnett & Co.</span></p>
<p class='c012'><i>Gents</i>: After careful tests and comparisons
we have decided to use “<span class='sc'>Burnett’s
Extracts</span>” exclusively in our ice creams,
ices and pastry.</p>
<div class='c020'>Very respectfully,</div>
<div class='c020'>SCHARPS & KAHN,</div>
<div class='c020'>Caterers for the “Golden Gate Cafe,”</div>
<div class='c020'>Transportation Building.</div>
<div class='c020'>“TROCADERO,”</div>
<div class='c020'>Cor. 16th Street and Michigan Avenue.</div>
<hr class='c007' />
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>“The Great White Horse” Inn Co.</span>,}</div>
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>World’s Columbian</span> }</div>
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Exposition Grounds</span>. }</div>
<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Chicago, Ill.</span>, U.S.A., April 26, 1893.</div>
<p class='c012'>Messrs. <span class='sc'>Joseph Burnett & Co.</span>,
Boston and Chicago.</p>
<p class='c012'><i>Gentlemen</i>: It being our aim to use nothing
but the best, we have decided to use
<span class='sc'>Burnett’s</span> Flavoring Extracts <i>exclusively</i>, in
the ice cream, cakes and pastries served in
“The Great White Horse” Inn, in the
grounds of the World’s Columbian Exposition.</p>
<div class='c020'>Very truly yours,</div>
<p class='c012'>T. B. SEELEY, Manager,
“The Great White Horse” Inn Co.</p>
<hr class='c019' />
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>The Restaurants that have contracted to use <span class='sc'>Burnett’s Extracts</span>, exclusively,</div>
<div>are as follows:</div>
</div></div>
<div class='lg-container-l c021'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>WELLINGTON CATERING CO.,</div>
<div class='line'>“GREAT WHITE HORSE” INN,</div>
<div class='line'>THE GARDEN CAFE, <span class='fss'>WOMAN’S BUILDING</span>,</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<hr class='c007' />
<div class='lg-container-l c021'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>COLUMBIA CASINO CO.,</div>
<div class='line'>THE GOLDEN GATE CAFE,</div>
<div class='line'>NEW ENGLAND CLAM BAKE CO.,</div>
<div class='line'>BANQUET HALL.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<hr class='c019' />
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c021'>
<div><span class='xlarge'>JOSEPH BURNETT & CO., BOSTON, MASS.</span></div>
</div></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c022'>
<div><span class='c008'>Pears’</span></div>
<div><span class='c008'>Soap</span></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c023'><span class='xlarge'>Wholesome soap is one that attacks the dirt, but not the living skin.
It is Pears’.</span></p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c004' /></div>
<p class='c023'> </p>
<div class='tnbox'>
<ul class='ul_1 c004'>
<li>Transcriber’s Notes:
<ul class='ul_2'>
<li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
</li>
<li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
</li>
<li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
form was found in this book.
</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul></div>
<p class='c023'> </p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />