<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="center">BEATRIX HEARS THE SECRET.</p>
<p>Silence—awful silence! Beatrix could hear her own
heart beat as she stood there alone in the silence
and darkness of her own chamber, the hand that wears
Keith Kenyon's wedding-ring pressed against her
madly throbbing heart.</p>
<p>The full significance of the words to which she has
just listened does not reach her understanding. She
does not fully realize their awful meaning. Not now;
time enough for that later, when the numbness is gone
from her brain and she has the courage to stand face
to face with the bitter—the awful truth.</p>
<p>She stands staring straight before her into the darkness,
her hand pressing against her heart convulsively,
holding her breath to hear what may come next.</p>
<p>Serena's voice breaks the awful silence, low and hissing
like some venomous serpent.</p>
<p>"It is true—all true—true as gospel, mamma!" she
cried, exultantly. "There is no reason to doubt it—no
possibility of a mistake. It was the shock of discovering
the horrible truth that killed my father. You
know he just idolized Beatrix; and to find out that
for all these years he had been harboring an accursed
creature like that, whose very touch may be pollution—for
no one can tell when the disease may break out
in the system—simply killed him. Mamma, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span>
story is true; there is no doubt of it. This frightful
disease is transmitted from generation to generation,
and is incurable. But perhaps I had better read you
the letter. Mr. Demorest says that it is a terrible
revelation, which ought to be placed in the hands of
the authorities, for no leper should be allowed to go
at large in the streets of a city."</p>
<p>There was a ring of satisfaction in Serena's cold
voice. Truly, if "love is as strong as death," "jealousy
is as hard as hell," and knows no pity.</p>
<p>"But, Serena," Mrs. Lynne interposes, feebly,
"there is nothing to prove that this terrible disease has
developed in Beatrix. Her skin is as fair as a lily—a
wonderful complexion—"</p>
<p>Serena groaned. Complexion was her <i>bete noire</i>.
Hers was the color of a weak solution of coffee. Mrs.
Lynne went on:</p>
<p>"There is, in fact, as yet, nothing in the world to
make one put faith in the statement concerning Beatrix.
Don't let your jealous hatred of the girl lead
you astray. It will merely precipitate matters; and
you will have to prove all these things, you know,
Serena."</p>
<p>"Mamma you must think me an idiot. Of course,
I expect to prove all that I assert—at least, as much
as any one possibly can. We can only prove that
Mildred Dane—this girl's mother—was a victim of
the plague of leprosy; and any physician will tell you
that no child of a leper—especially when the leper is
a woman—can possibly escape the dark inheritance.
Sit down there in that arm-chair, mamma, and let me
read you the letter, the very letter that killed my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</SPAN></span>
father. When he tossed it upon the fire, fate decreed
that it should not be consumed. Fortunately, the fire
was low, and papa must have been nearly dead when
he attempted to destroy the letter, and with it all evidence
of the awful curse which is Beatrix Dane's inheritance.
But I found the scorched fragments of the
letter—it was only torn in four pieces—and I put them
safely away in a little tin box. When we came down
here to New Orleans some impulse prompted me to
bring the box and contents with me. I had heard papa
speak of a Mr. Demorest in this city who was wonderfully
ingenious and successful in deciphering and
restoring old papers. I found his address upon a card
among papa's private papers, and I brought the card
with me when we came to this city. I had no difficulty
in finding the man. I knew that it would cost me a
pretty penny; so it did. It has taken every dollar that
I had in the world, but it is well invested. I am more
than repaid for the outlay; for, oh, mamma, Keith
Kenyon will never make Beatrix Dane his wife now—never!
Listen to me while I read you the letter. It is
from old Bernard Dane to my father, and this is what
it says."</p>
<p>Silence once more, broken by the rustling of paper
as Serena unfolds the fresh sheet upon which Mr.
Demorest has transcribed the contents of the mutilated
letter—the silence of the very grave reigns throughout
the old house. The girl in the other room has thrown
herself into a low seat, and crouches there like some
hunted creature brought to bay, her heart overflowing
with awful and bitter anguish—a suffering so intense
that no words have ever been framed in any language<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</SPAN></span>
capable of expressing it. A cloud of horrible darkness
and despair envelopes her; she can see no ray of light;
she is groping in the gloom, still unable to fully comprehend
the nature of this wondrous horror that has
come into her life. She will realize it to its full extent
by and by.</p>
<p>Loud and clear, and with a ring of triumph in it,
Serena's voice falls upon the silence once more as she
reads that fatal letter aloud—reads to the bitter end.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"<span class="smcap">Doctor Frederick Lynne</span>,—I feel it is my duty,
now that Beatrix is grown and the time is coming for
me to remove her from your care, to reveal to you
the nature of the terrible future in store for her—the
dark inheritance which must inevitably descend
upon her sooner or later. You are a physician and a
scientific scholar, and you will comprehend and no
doubt feel intense interest in this strange and peculiar
case. Let me go back a generation or two. Mildred
Dane, the mother of Beatrix, was a Miss Baretta; her
parents were South Americans, and very strange and
eccentric people. They reared Mildred, who was an
only child, in the strictest privacy, and the girl grew
up in ignorance of the blight which was destined to be
cast upon her life. She was very beautiful, and very
sweet-tempered—too easily yielding to others. She
was forced by her parents into a distasteful marriage
with Godfrey Dane, an old man, but very wealthy.
One child was born, and Godfrey Dane died when it
was a few months old. That child was Beatrix—little
Beatrix who has lived with you all her life.</p>
<p>"I pass over Mildred's tragic death, and all other<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</SPAN></span>
events which do not bear directly upon the fate of this
child; it is with her alone I wish to deal. Dr. Lynne,
I am going to tell you all in as few words as possible.
Before her death, poor Mildred became a victim of
leprosy, and while her child was drawing from its
mother's breast the awful, incurable plague into its
system. That Beatrix will escape the scourge is simply
impossible.</p>
<p>"But it seldom makes its appearance before the age
of eighteen—it may be a little later or a little earlier,
but somewhere in the neighborhood of that age.</p>
<p>"So until she reaches eighteen there is no reason
to fear contagion to your family. I wish you to send
Beatrix to me at once; I would place her under the
care of an eminent physician, but all efforts will prove
unavailing; there is no hope for her; it is only a question
of time before the dread disease will develop in
her system. Send her to me at once. You will find a
letter accompanying this which will be explanation
enough for your family; but keep this letter as secret
as the grave. Never let Beatrix Dane catch a glimpse
of its contents, or the knowledge of what this letter
contains may kill her outright. And now I have made
a full explanation, I have no more to say. Send the
girl to me, and your responsibility ceases forever.</p>
<p class="sig1">
"Yours respectfully,</p>
<p class="sig2">
"<span class="smcap">Bernard Dane</span>."<br/></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Serena's voice rang out clear and distinct to the very
last. Then silence settled down, broken by Mrs.
Lynne.</p>
<p>"Good heavens!"—in an awe-stricken voice—"Serena,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</SPAN></span>
this is horrible! Do you think there was any
danger while she was with us? Oh! what if we have
been exposed to this dreadful thing! I wish that girl
was dead—dead and buried and forgotten. I hate to
think of her."</p>
<p>And not a word of pity for the hopeless wretch who
was doomed to suffer from this awful curse; the heart-broken,
wild-eyed creature in the adjoining room, who
crouched in the depths of the arm-chair and listened—listened
eagerly, intently, to every word that Serena
had read in the fatal letter. Not a word, or a cry, or
a groan, passed Beatrix Dane's lips as she crouched
there, and over her a great darkness settled; life
drifted away from her grasp; the graceful head fell
forward, and she lost consciousness. It was merciful
oblivion; but it was destined not to last.</p>
<p>She lifted her head at length, and gazed wildly
about her in the darkness. No sound reached her
ears; the next room was as silent as the grave. Mrs.
Lynne and Serena had gone to their own apartments
to talk over the horrible story which had come into
their possession. Beatrix was left alone—alone!</p>
<p>Alas! she felt that she was fated to be alone henceforth
and forever—to grope among dead men's bones—to
live like the lepers of old in deserted tombs—to
be an outcast forever—accursed, shunned!</p>
<p>In olden times the leper was compelled to announce
his own approach, veiling his face from the gaze of
those not like himself accursed, and to cry aloud,
"Unclean! Unclean!"</p>
<p>Some faint fragments of history strayed through<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</SPAN></span>
the girl's brain as she sat there, unable to realize as
yet the full depths of her own woe.</p>
<p>She had read of leprosy—the most horrible of all
known diseases, and which can never be cured. When
once the plague had appeared in her system, even her
very touch would be pollution.</p>
<p>Good God! she had kissed Keith's lips over and
over. What if—what if she had transmitted the curse
to him? Better for her to die than to bring this horrible
curse upon the man she loved!</p>
<p>She knew now, at last, the reason for her own isolation
in Bernard Dane's house. She must not mix
too intimately with other uncursed people, or they,
too, would become accursed.</p>
<p>Slowly, wearily, she arose to her feet and lighted
the lamp in her room. Then she went over to the
mirror and stood gazing upon her own face, her eyes
full of bitter woe. She could see no change there as
yet. The pearly skin was as fair and lovely as ever,
the beautiful dark eyes just as bright. She held up one
little hand and let the lamp-light gleam across it. It
was fair, and soft, and untainted. Yet all the same
the evil might lurk unseen, like a poisonous serpent,
in her blood, and when it became known it would be
too late—too late! And—oh, God in Heaven! was
there ever such a fate?—she was Keith Kenyon's
wedded wife. She had cursed his life; she had brought
ruin black and sure upon him; all his future happiness
was wrecked and destroyed.</p>
<p>"God pity me, I am lost—lost!" she moaned, bleakly.
And then with a low cry of anguish, the slight form
tottering weakly, she fell to the floor like one dead.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</SPAN></span></p>
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