<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="center">AN OLD MAN'S SECRET.</p>
<p>Yes, he was Serena Lynne's betrothed husband, and
bound in honor to make her his wife. The sharp
remembrance cut him to the heart like a sword. He
fell back with a cry of anguish, and the love-words
died upon his lips.</p>
<p>"May Heaven have pity!" he groaned. "I had forgotten—forgotten.
Don't look at me with such piteous
eyes. Beatrix! oh, Beatrix, my love, I have done
wrong! I have made a mistake, and my happiness
is wrecked. All my life is ruined and darkened
forever!"</p>
<p>Old Bernard Dane hobbled over to Keith's side and
laid a trembling hand upon his arm.</p>
<p>"Keith, my boy, I—I can't explain this to you," he
mumbled, brokenly.</p>
<p>He had not observed the scene which had just taken
place between Keith and the shrinking, trembling girl
who stood there, pale as a lily, before them. He had
not listened to Keith's impassioned avowal; he had
been deaf and unseeing to all that had taken place.
Keith's dark eyes flashed with an angry light.</p>
<p>"I wish no explanation," he returned, harshly;
"there is no excuse, no palliation of your conduct possible.
You have acted the part of an inhuman monster—a
madman! Yes, let us hope that temporary<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</SPAN></span>
aberration is responsible for your strange conduct.
Uncle Bernard, I warn you that if your attempt to torture
this poor girl should be repeated, I will appeal to
the authorities. You shall be confined in a retreat
for the insane. You are a dangerous person to go at
large."</p>
<p>The old man seemed strangely weakened and unmanned.
He uttered no word; no sound escaped his
dry, parched lips; but upon his wrinkled face there
was a look of abject terror.</p>
<p>Trembling like a leaf, he turned, and leaning heavily
upon his cane, passed from the room and closed the
door behind him. He went straight to the library—a
great solemn-looking apartment filled with well-laden
book-shelves, and with a huge escritoire standing beside
a window. The old man hobbled over to the
desk, and taking a bunch of keys from his pocket, he
unlocked the desk and turned to a small drawer at
the right. From this drawer he removed a small package
of old letters tied with a narrow black ribbon.
Removing the ribbon, he began to examine the letters,
reading them over hastily, one by one, the frown
upon his brow growing deeper, his dark, deep-set eyes
flashing with an angry light. When he had read the
last of the letters he replaced the somber ribbon and
returned the package to the drawer. Then bowing his
head upon his hand, Bernard Dane sat buried in profound
thought.</p>
<p>Whatever the subject that engrossed his thoughts,
it was not a pleasant one. That could be easily seen
by the lines of care upon his brow, the furrows of
anxiety—the evidence of a great trouble—that were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</SPAN></span>
plainly written upon his face. A look of intense anger
settled down upon it. He clinched his white hands
fiercely, and the deep, dark eyes gleamed like fire.</p>
<p>"To think of it all!" he muttered, harshly—"all
that I have borne for long years! The horror—the
agony of it! To think of <i>her</i>—the woman I loved,
who duped me, deceived me, made a mock of me!
But I canceled the account between us and wiped out
the score!" he went on, with a fiendish chuckle, rubbing
his hands together as he spoke. "I paid her back,
word for word, blow for blow! When I remember
<i>all</i>—when I think of that death-scene—I—I feel amply
satisfied. For all the suffering she caused me, she suffered
fourfold. And was it not almost miraculous that
the man who won her away from me—the man who
had been my best friend, who had deceived me and
fooled me to the top of my bent—in short, Guy Kenyon
himself—should have been placed in my hands—at
my mercy! He never realized the bliss that would
have been his. His cup of happiness was snatched from
his grasp before he could raise it to his lips, for she—she
<i>died</i>—ha! ha!—<i>died</i>! and no one knows—no one
but old Bernard Dane will ever know—how and where
she died. Poor child! After all these long years, can
it be that <i>pity</i> has come to life within this hardened
old heart of mine? But I can not help it, when I remember
how they forced her into an unholy marriage
with that old man. But still there were compensations,
for when her babe was six months old he departed this
life, leaving all his worldly possessions to his beautiful
young widow and her infant child. Then Guy Kenyon,
a widower with one son, came to the fore with his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</SPAN></span>
handsome face and winning ways. She had known
him and cared for him previous to her ill-starred marriage
with old Godfrey Dane, and it did not take long
to revive old feeling, to warm over the ashes of the
old love, from which the new arose like a phenix.</p>
<p>"Married or single, bound or free, it was all the
same, she never cared for me. And Guy Kenyon
would have wedded her if fate had not interfered—fate
in the person of old Bernard Dane. Ha! ha!
Bernard Dane—but not so old and ugly then as he is
now. <i>He</i> appeared, and in his possession proof positive
of the awful curse which rested upon her—upon
Mildred Dane. He loved her—there was no doubt
upon that score—he loved her, and the knowledge of
this fearful curse which rested upon the woman he
loved <i>killed</i> him. He did not long survive the fearful
knowledge of her secret. Then came the grand <i>finale</i>.
I placed his child Keith, then a boy of ten or eleven,
in the care of respectable people, after which I turned
my attention to <i>her</i>—to Mildred. I had sworn that
she should be my wife or nobody's. But even I, with
all my great love for her, could not, dared not, make
her my wife with the knowledge of that fearful, that
hideous curse hanging over her like a pall. I do not
like to recall that time," the old man went on, wearily,
pushing back the scanty locks from his wrinkled brow.
"She was like a mad creature when she learned the
truth, when I told her all. Poor, heartbroken Mildred!
She swore that she would take her own life, and—she
kept her oath. Ah, well!"—a fearful shudder convulsing
his frame—"it is an awful thing to reflect
upon. But I could not blame any living creature, and,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</SPAN></span>
above all, a young and beautiful woman, for committing
suicide under those circumstances. I risked my
own life in keeping near her as I did; but my heart
was heavy for her sake, and I could not leave her to
meet her awful doom alone. And in return for my
self-sacrifices, she hated me, defied me, died without
one word of kindness to me. <i>His</i> name—Guy Kenyon's—was
the last upon her lips. Was it not enough
to harden a man's heart against a woman to whom
he had given all, to whom he had dedicated his whole
life? Her cruelty to me hardened my heart against
her, living and dead. Ay, I even grew to hate her
memory. I fell upon my knees and swore by every
thing holy that I would be avenged.</p>
<p>"After that, as the years rolled by, and I hated
Mildred Dane's very memory—even as I had long
hated Guy Kenyon; hated him living, hated him dead—I
finally planned this marriage between the two descendants
of the man and the woman whom I hated.
It is a fiendish plot. I look upon <i>him</i> in his noble,
manly beauty, his true, warm heart and honorable
nature; I look upon <i>her</i> with her beautiful face, so
like that other face once loved, but now in death <i>hated</i>,
and something in the girl's piteous eyes makes my
heart quail. I am not altogether a demon, and I am
sick—sick of the whole plot. That girl's eyes! They
are Mildred's own—just as she used to look when she
was a sweet young girl, before they sold her to Godfrey
Dane for money. I can not shut out the look of
appeal in Beatrix's eyes; it makes my heart ache, hard,
and cruel, and bitter though it is. I pity her, I pity
him! I see my own error now, when, oh, God! it is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</SPAN></span>
too late; for they love each other. I would do anything
in my power to prevent the marriage between
them now; but they are young, headstrong, and I
shall fail in my attempt. Then, oh, heavens above!
the very thought of what must come, of what looms
up before them in the dark future, makes me sick and
faint. I have sought the best medical advice in the
country. Doctor De Trobriand, whose specialty is this
particular horror that threatens poor Beatrix's life, has
told me that the fire test is the only possible test of
which he knows. He advised me to attempt it, but
the girl refused. I could not explain to her and tell
her why I made so seemingly absurd and cruel a request
of her. I dared not tell her my suspicions—my
reasons for making this request; the knowledge would
drive her mad. And I have failed in the attempt, as
I have failed in everything else all my life long.
Curses upon it!"</p>
<p>He rose slowly to his feet and relocked the escritoire,
and then, with slow, unsteady steps, he returned
to his own room. Beatrix had gone, but Keith was
sitting alone before the fire, his face pale and stern,
his eyes full of sadness. The old man crept to his side
like a penitent.</p>
<p>"Keith, my boy, you will forgive me?" he quavered.
"What I did was for your good—and hers. Listen
to me, Keith. You will give up this marriage—this
mad marriage? I—I had always intended you two to
wed each other. For that purpose I have brought
you together; but since—since I have lived under the
same roof with that child, my heart is melted somehow,
and I can not consent to the awful sacrifice. You<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</SPAN></span>
don't know—Keith, you don't know—what a fearful
fate is in store for you if you persist in this mad marriage.
Forget that I had ever planned it—forget Beatrix
Dane!"</p>
<p>"I can not—I will not! I love her. Your warning
comes too late, Uncle Bernard."</p>
<p>The old man bowed his head upon his clasped hands,
and a fearful shudder crept over his gaunt frame. It
was all his own fault—all the result of his own mad
folly. His own hands would now overthrow the fabric
which he had patiently reared; but it was too late, and
only desolation remained. Surely Bernard Dane was
undergoing a strange transformation—the result of
contact with a pure young being like Beatrix Dane;
the great, sad, dark eyes which gazed so pleadingly
into his face had made the old sinner ashamed of himself.
He saw for the first time in the clear light of
reason his own wickedness, and his soul shrank back
ashamed. How could he ever have formed so vile a
plot—such a diabolical scheme to entrap two innocent
people—to wreck and destroy two young lives? Keith
Kenyon felt no pity for him. He never dreamed the
full iniquity of that which Bernard Dane had plotted
to do; but the fact that he had plotted in some way—that
he had thrown Keith himself and Beatrix together
only to sever the ties between them now, seemingly to
gratify a foolish whim of his own, made the young
man's heart grow hard as steel within his breast, and
a cold chill of horror crept over him. He felt disgusted
with the whole world, and with old Bernard Dane in
particular. Had he known the worst—the full extent
of Bernard Dane's crime—he would have fled from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</SPAN></span>
the house that very night in horror, and would never
willingly have looked upon the old man's face again.
He rose and stood leaning against the carved marble
mantel.</p>
<p>"I am very sorry, Uncle Bernard," he said in a low,
resolute tone; "but I <i>love</i> Beatrix, and I intend to
make her my wife. I will surmount every obstacle in
the way; but she shall be my wife! Good-night, sir."</p>
<p>He turned swiftly and left the room in haste, as
though determined to prevent any further remonstrance.
Up in his own chamber, he walked straight
over to his writing-desk.</p>
<p>He had made up his mind what to do, and the sooner
the disagreeable task was performed—was over and
done with—the better.</p>
<p>"I will do it at once," he muttered, resolutely. "Delays
are dangerous; and, besides, I shall be in a fever
of impatience for the answer. How terrible it will
be to wait for it! Two whole weeks—fourteen endless
days—before I can hope to hear from her in reply!
I will write to her at once—write to Serena Lynne—and
confess all, and beg her to release me. It was an
absurd engagement at best—a wrong—a wicked engagement,
for I do not love her; I have never cared
for her! I shall never care for her, though I live to
be one hundred. <i>Love</i>! Good heavens! the very idea
in connection with <i>her</i> is ridiculous, grotesque! Once
broken off, the engagement will soon fade from her
memory, and she will turn her attention to some more
suitable and worthy object than your humble servant.
She will not—dare not—refuse to release me!" he
cried, softly, an awful thought crossing his heart like a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</SPAN></span>
cold, slimy serpent. "She would not be a woman,
with a woman's heart, if she refuses to grant it."</p>
<p>Alas, poor Keith! He did not know—he did not
realize—that when a woman like Serena Lynne loves,
her heart hardens against all other women—the very
love in her heart crystallizes. She will fight for that
love, sin for it, die for it, but she will never give it up—never—while
she lives.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</SPAN></span></p>
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