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Title: Sworn to silence
or, Aline Rodney's secret
Author: Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller
Release date: January 25, 2026 [eBook #77775]
Language: English
Original publication: New York: George Munro's Sons, 1883
Credits: Demian Katz and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (Images courtesy of the Digital Library@Villanova University.)
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SWORN TO SILENCE
or, ALINE RODNEY’S SECRET.
By MRS. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER.
[Illustration: THE SWEETHEART SERIES
GEORGE
MUNRO’S
SONS,
PUBLISHERS.
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Copyright, 1898, by George Munro’s Sons.
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FERD. T. HOPKINS, Proprietor, 37 Great Jones Street, New York
Sworn to Silence;
or,
ALINE RODNEY’S SECRET.
By MRS. ALEX McVEIGH MILLER.
[Illustration]
Copyright 1883, by George Munro.
[Illustration]
(SWEETHEART)
NEW YORK:
GEORGE MUNRO’S SONS, PUBLISHERS,
17 to 27 Vanderwater Street.
[Illustration:
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À LA SPIRITE
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]
THE MOTHER’S MISSION.
[Illustration: 1840
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SWORN TO SILENCE.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
CHAPTER XI.
CHAPTER XII.
CHAPTER XIII.
CHAPTER XIV.
CHAPTER XV.
CHAPTER XVI.
CHAPTER XVII.
CHAPTER XVIII.
CHAPTER XIX.
CHAPTER XX.
CHAPTER XXI.
CHAPTER XXII.
CHAPTER XXIII.
CHAPTER XXIV.
CHAPTER XXV.
CHAPTER XXVI.
CHAPTER XXVII.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
CHAPTER XXIX.
CHAPTER XXX.
CHAPTER XXXI.
CHAPTER XXXII.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
CHAPTER XXXV.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
CHAPTER XL.
CHAPTER XLI.
CHAPTER XLII.
CHAPTER XLIII.
CHAPTER XLIV.
CHAPTER XLV.
CHAPTER XLVI.
CHAPTER XLVII.
CHAPTER XLVIII.
CHAPTER XLIX.
CHAPTER L.
CHAPTER LI.
CHAPTER LII.
CHAPTER LIII.
CHAPTER LIV.
CHAPTER LV.
CHAPTER LVI.
CHAPTER LVII.
CHAPTER LVIII.
CHAPTER LIX.
CHAPTER LX.
CHAPTER LXI.
CHAPTER LXII.
CHAPTER LXIII.
CHAPTER LXIV.
CHAPTER LXV.
CHAPTER LXVI.
CHAPTER LXVII.
CHAPTER LXVIII.
CHAPTER LXIX.
CHAPTER I.
“Fair roses from far countries
Around my portals twine;
Bright on their radiant faces
Caressing sunbeams shine,
But my neighbor over yonder
Has a fairer rose than mine.
“I see his dainty cottage
Beyond my garden bowers,
High o’er it, tall and stately,
My shadowing mansion towers;
But my neighbor’s Rose of roses
Is sweeter than my flowers.”
The family carriage of the Rodneys stood before the gate, and Mouse and
Kitty, the two sleek gray ponies, champed their bits impatiently while
the Rodneys, great and small, issued forth in gala attire.
They were going to the picnic in Walnut Grove--mamma, papa, Effie, and
little Max--all but Aline, and _she_ was in disgrace and forbidden to
go. (Not that the command itself would have been sufficient to detain
her, but she was locked into her room, “in durance vile,” and left in
charge of the cook for safe-keeping.)
Aline was usually in disgrace with the family. She had the sweetest
face and the warmest heart in the world, but with her high spirits
and willful ways she had a most lamentable faculty for getting into
mischief of some sort daily, and it was for some more flagrant offense
than usual that mamma had sternly vetoed the picnic to-day and locked
her into her room to meditate on her many and grievous faults.
The culprit, from her upper window, flattened her pretty piquant little
nose against the window-pane and gazed after the departing quartet with
great sparkling tears in the lovely eyes whose rare and peculiar shade
of deep purple-blue had been caught from the far-off strain of Irish
blood that flowed in her veins. They were “sweetest eyes were ever
seen,” at once arch and tender and shaded by long, black-fringed lashes
overarched by--
“Slender brows of shining jet,
Limned against the forehead’s snow,
Like triumphal arches set
O’er the conquering eyes below.”
The Rodneys entered the carriage, and Aline flung them one last
despairing kiss from the tips of her slim white fingers, but no one
saw except, perhaps, her little brother, who looked up regretfully
and saw the lovely, girlish face smiling at him through its sparkling
tears. Then the carriage door was closed, Mouse and Kitty broke into a
sedate trot, and the sweet face retired from the window and hid itself
in a small square of snowy linen. Aline’s heart was for the moment
completely broken.
It was no small trial to be shut up in that hot, stifling little
chamber all that lovely, sunny July day. She thought of the beautiful
green grove close by the shining river, with the light winds ruffling
its cool breast, of the happy gathering of young people, the games,
the dancing, the hamper baskets of cold chicken and sweetmeats,
indigestible pickles and pies and cakes, prepared for the gay,
unceremonious dinner, and her heart sunk heavily. She would not
willingly have foregone the delights of that day for anything she
possessed. Any other punishment she could have borne with equanimity,
but it did seem as if mamma had been actuated by malice prepense in
forbidding the picnic to which Aline had looked forward eagerly for two
long weeks.
She wept some bitter tears, distinctly tinctured with anger, into her
snowy handkerchief, then she wiped her eyes and looked about her for
some means of passing the tedious time away. Her mother had brought her
up a volume of sermons, by way of profitable reading. Aline vented her
spite and disappointment most unjustifiably on the unoffending volume,
by tossing it out of the little end window into her neighbor’s garden,
and the innocent missile, in its rapid descent, hit her neighbor
sharply upon the head.
When she saw what she had done, a little cry of dismay broke from
her lips. The great gray stone mansion standing in the beautiful
garden next door to Mr. Rodney’s cottage was known throughout the
little village of Chester as a haunted house; and its owner, the
dark, moody-looking man who had just returned from a protracted
sojourn abroad, was generally considered a very mysterious man. He was
immensely rich, a bachelor, and handsome in a dark, corsair-like style
that the girls of Chester considered very fascinating although it was
so inaccessible.
As for the gentleman himself he neither knew nor cared what the good
villagers thought of him. He was among them, but not of them. He sought
no society and received no guests. He dwelt alone and lonely in the
grand old mansion where several generations of his ancestors had lived
and died, and which popular imagination peopled with ghosts. Indeed, it
was positively asserted that at the dread midnight hour shrieks of woe
had been heard to issue from the deserted house, and lights had been
seen flashing from window to window as if waved in phantom hands. The
Delaneys had been a hard, proud, cruel race, so said Mme. Rumor, that
knowing dame, and it was no wonder if some of them returned to earth in
spirit to bewail the deeds done in the flesh.
The humbler home of the Rodneys, a simple two-storied cottage, stood
next the gloomy gray stone mansion, and the small end window of Aline’s
little room overlooked the beautiful garden where the taciturn,
grave-browed master strolled at will, and smoked his choice Havanas
and switched off the heads of his splendid roses and lilies with his
slender ebony cane as if hating all things beautiful and sweet.
Many a time and oft Aline had watched this strange, mysterious unknown
neighbor of theirs through a crevice in the white curtain, and
speculated curiously over his history, while she inwardly deprecated
the fact that those splendid flowers belonged to such a monster.
“The cruel wretch! To snap off their heads with his ugly stick! I
should like to knock _his_ head off!” Aline often muttered indignantly
to herself, and lo! now in her eagerness to place the obnoxious book
forever beyond her mother’s reach, she had almost compassed her wish.
She saw the tall, straight figure reel a moment under the suddenness
of the blow, saw him put his white hand quickly to his head, where a
sharp corner of the book had inadvertently struck it. In her terror
and dismay she uttered a little cry of alarm and regret. He looked up
quickly at the sound--so quickly that she could not retreat.
As he looked up he saw the sweetest girl face he had ever beheld in
his life--beautiful even through its frightened pallor--with startled,
wide-open blue eyes, the long black lashes curled upward, giving them
an expression of almost infantine innocence and purity. The delicate
oval of the lovely face was daintily broken by a deep dimple in the
rounded chin, the parted red lips disclosed teeth like pearls, and the
dark, silken hair, worn in short, babyish rings on the round, white
forehead, fell over her shoulders in long, loose, natural ringlets to
the slender, rounded waist. Framed in the small, white-draped window,
with a vine of his own rare clematis clambering up from his garden and
twining luxuriantly about the casement, she looked like some beautiful
picture--a picture that Oran Delaney carried in his heart to his dying
day, “unforgotten in every charm.”
For her, she looked down into the dark, wondering eyes of her
mysterious neighbor, and set her little teeth and held her ground
bravely, determined not to fly from his wrath. Some confused,
remorseful dread of mamma’s and Effie’s anger at this new scrape
flashed into her mind momentarily; poor mamma, who thought that for
this one day, at least, she had secured her willful, thoughtless
darling from the commission of the smallest bit of mischief--and she
determined to make a treaty of peace with this _bête noir_ of hers, in
order to secure his silence, little dreaming that with this culminating
act of folly the story of her life would begin.
Aline was ordinarily a brave girl, but she was honestly frightened now
at what she had done. Oran Delaney was an ogre in her eyes, and her
youthful imagination, fired by the descriptions she had heard of him,
recoiled in dismay at the thought of his wrath. Of course he would
suppose that she had hurled the book at his head on purpose. His anger
would be something fearful, she did not doubt. Would he report her
conduct to her parents? She resolved frantically that, at all odds, he
should not do that. She could not endure it.
CHAPTER II.
She tried to summon a smile to her lips, but they only quivered
instead. Spite of her innocent propensity for getting into trouble,
Aline was very sensitive. The ludicrous side of her position did not
strike her in her awe of Oran Delaney. She summoned all her fortitude
to her aid, and looked down into the dark, handsome face, waiting to
hear him speak.
But he did not do so. His upraised eyes stared straight into her own
with a gaze full of wonder and perplexity; his dark mustached lips even
smiled slightly. He would not speak. He was evidently waiting for her
to take the initiative.
Seeing this, Aline made a great effort. She leaned out of the window,
and gasped, rather indistinctly:
“I--I beg your pardon, Mr. Delaney. I didn’t mean to throw the book
out--that is, I meant to throw it out, but I didn’t mean to hit you! I
didn’t know you were there!”
Having mumbled out this comprehensive apology, Aline waited anxiously
for his answer.
She saw a smile creeping around his lips, as the ludicrous state of
the case dawned on him. The face that looked so cold and stern, as she
watched it daily under the shadow of his broad-leaved hat, did not
appear so terrible now, as he stood with uncovered head gazing up at
her. It even had a beauty of its own, if one fancied straight, even
features, an olive skin, dark, magnetic eyes, dark, clustering locks,
tossed carelessly back from a broad, intellectual brow, and a smile
that, when it curved the mustached lips, lent the charm of fascination
to his whole face. That smile, as it shone on Aline now, inspired her
with unconscious courage. She continued, pleadingly:
“I hope you will excuse me, sir, and--and--if you please, I hope you
will not tell mamma.”
He picked up the book, and, turning the leaves, asked, in a deep,
musical, slightly amused voice:
“If you did not intend the missile for me, may I ask why you threw the
book out at all?”
“I was mad,” said Aline, flushing a little at the admission.
“Mad--with such a good book as this? Sermons, aren’t they?” inquired
Oran Delaney, lightly, as if talking to a child, which, in fact, she
appeared to be, as seen at the window. Her face looked very young.
He could not judge of the tall, rounded figure as she rested on her
elbows, and looked down at him.
“Yes--sermons--but awfully dry, you know,” she returned apologetically;
“but, after all, you know, I oughtn’t to have thrown them away; mamma
wouldn’t like it. Will you please throw the book back to me, Mr.
Delaney?”
He made several attempts to do so, but Aline was not clever at
catching. It eluded the white, outstretched hands every time, and fell
back into her neighbor’s garden. They both laughed. Aline began to
think that her neighbor might not be such an ogre, after all.
“Twice you have let it fall back upon my head,” he said. “You are too
clumsy to catch it at all. Come down to the window in the first story,
and I will hand it up to you.”
“I--can’t,” replied Aline, flushing very red indeed.
“Why not?” wonderingly.
“I am locked into my room,” flushing deeper with shame.
“Impossible! Who is your jailer?” inquired the gentleman.
“Mamma; she has locked the door and gone off, leaving me here to read
those dreary sermons that I threw away.”
There is a moment’s silence. Aline reads palpable surprise on her
neighbor’s face. The shame-flush deepens on her own.
Presently, with a laugh, he says:
“You must have been a very naughty girl, weren’t you?”
“I didn’t mean to be, but mamma and Effie said I was. So they went off
to the picnic, and locked me in here to punish me,” Aline said, growing
confidential as her dread of Mr. Delaney grew less. “And oh, if they
ever find out that I threw a book and knocked your hat off, I shall
never hear the last of it. You won’t tell--will you?” pleadingly.
“What would they do to you?--lock you into your room again?”
“Worse than that, perhaps. I dare say they would devise some new
punishment worse than any I have suffered yet,” sighing.
“Are they cruel to you?”
“Oh, no, only when I get into scrapes, as they say I am always doing.
I am mischievous, they say, but I never mean to be. The way I get into
trouble is like I did just now, you see, without knowing it,” she
explains, plaintively.
“A spoiled, willful child,” Oran Delaney says to himself, smiling;
then, aloud: “Well, about this book--how am I to return it to you?”
“I don’t know--and mamma will be so vexed with me,” plaintively.
“Cannot you think of a plan?”
The sweet entreaty in the blue eyes moved him strangely. He looks
around.
“Let me see. There is a step-ladder hereabouts used by the gardener in
training vines against the wall. I might climb that.”
“Oh, pray do,” she clasps her hands entreatingly, and he goes away in
search of the article.
Returning with a light, convenient step-ladder, he places it against
the side of the house beneath the window. Her voice arrests him as he
is about to ascend it.
“Oh, if you please, Mr. Delaney, I should like a bunch of your nice
roses,” this rather timidly.
“Should you?” he says, surprised; then he looks around him at his
beautiful garden glowing with all the lavish wealth of July--roses and
lilies, and all the sweet sisterhood of flowers. From the green bowers
and blooming beds of the garden, he lifts a keen glance to the upper
windows of his stately house. The blinds are tightly closed at every
window, an air of gloom and desertion pervades the scene. His glance
goes back to that girlish face that is sweeter than all his flowers.
“You love flowers?” he says.
“Oh, so much!” she breathes, clasping her hands in pretty unconscious
earnestness. “I wish that your garden were mine!”
“Are you aware that you are transgressing the tenth commandment?” he
inquires, dryly.
“Am I? I don’t care. I can’t help envying you that splendid garden. You
may have your house, and its ghosts, and welcome, but I do want your
flowers.”
“Ghosts,” he says, and a slight frown darkens on his brow.
“Yes, there _are_ ghosts in that big, gloomy house, aren’t there?
People say so, at least,” she answers.
He makes no answer. The half smile he has worn until now fades from
his face. He remains lost in thought a moment, then abruptly turns the
subject.
“Since you like flowers so well, you may come down and take all you
want.”
“How?” she asks, bewildered.
“Down the ladder,” he replies, carelessly, and Aline catches her breath.
To be permitted to set foot in that lovely spot, than which it seems to
her the garden of Eden had not been lovelier--to fill her hands with
those exquisite flowers, and her heart and soul with their fragrance.
It seems too good to be true. But, down the ladder? Would that be
right? A premonitory vision of mamma’s horror darted into her mind. She
set the temptation side by side with the scolding and the punishment,
and weighed them, and, a true daughter of Mother Eve, she let her own
willful desires triumph.
It was so pleasant to think of escaping from that stifling chamber, and
reveling in green grass and tender flowers and springing fountains. She
asked herself if it could be very wrong to escape from her prison for a
very little while? As for descending the ladder, she did not mind that
very much. I am ashamed to state that my heroine had been reproachfully
accused of tomboyish propensities by her relations.
She looked down a little wistfully into Oran Delaney’s dark, proud face.
“Do you think it would be very wrong if I came down?” she said.
“I cannot see where the harm would be,” he replied, lightly.
“Then, if you will go away down that path there, I will come down the
ladder and get some roses,” said Aline; and he laughed and walked away.
CHAPTER III.
When she had set foot in the garden and he came back to her, he was
honestly surprised. He had thought her a precocious child of thirteen.
Here was a tall girl up to his shoulder, with a figure that was
rounding into the gracious curves of womanhood--eighteen at the very
least, he decided, in spite of her childish manner and the simple blue
gingham dress whose ruffled skirt was still short enough to betray half
an inch of _écru_ stocking above the top of her trim little buttoned
boots.
She looked back a little apprehensively at the step-ladder at the
window.
“You may move the ladder until I get my flowers,” she said. “I am
afraid that if cook came up to see after me she would find me out.”
He was rather amused at her pretty air of command as contrasted with
her frightened, appealing tones of a little while ago. He obeyed her
command, then sat down carelessly on a rustic seat, and watched her
as she flitted about among his flowers. First she adorned herself,
after the manner of a vain woman, with a bunch of rosebuds in the soft
little fichu of white lace at her neck, and another at the belt of her
white apron. Then she roved about from flower to flower, daintily and
capriciously as a butterfly, but culling sweets as industriously as
a bee, her white apron soon being filled with the scented beauties.
Absorbed in her delightful occupation, time flew unheeded. She seemed
to forget her neighbor, and the grim, gray house, whose shadow reached
out long and dark and forbidding across the garden and compassed her in
its gloom like a fateful prophecy.
He watched the child, as he called her to himself, idly, and yet with
that something of interest that even the cold and world-hardened
cannot deny to youth and happiness. Something of pity mingled with his
careless thoughts. She seemed so young, and gay, and light-hearted, and
he knew that it could not last, that the years would overtake her, and
teach her that
“Youth’s life is but a brief one,
Foam from an ebbing sea.”
She passed out of sight under the shady arches of the trees, and for a
little while Oran Delaney forgot her. He smoked a cigar with his hat
drawn over his eyes, and his moody brows drawn together. The sudden
silvery tinkle of a bell from the house aroused him to a remembrance of
luncheon and his guest.
He glanced around him, and caught the glimmer of a blue dress among
the trees. Following it, he found her hovering over a bed of exquisite
pansies, murmuring softly to herself little exclamations of girlish
pleasure and delight.
“I hope you will forgive me for rousing you to the prosaic realities
of life,” he said, “but my luncheon is ready, and I came to ask you to
share it.”
“Luncheon!” She glanced up with a startled face. “Is it so late as
that?”
“‘How softly falls the foot of Time, that only treads on flowers!’” he
quoted. “Yes, it is two o’clock”--glancing at his watch--“has not your
physical entity already reminded you of that fact?”
“If you mean that I ought to be hungry by this time, I believe it is
true,” said she, smiling. “Although I had not thought of it before,
I believe I should like a biscuit. But I must go home now; I cannot
stay to lunch with you. Do not look at this great load of flowers, Mr.
Delaney; I am afraid you will scold.”
“You have tried to carry off every one in the garden, I see,” he
returned, uncaring. “But my peaches and grapes are as sweet and lovely
as my flowers. Come and try them.”
Another temptation! Nothing ever tasted so delicious to Aline as the
sunny side of a peach. She was curious over Mr. Delaney’s lunch, too,
and wondered who prepared it, and what the inside of that great house
looked like. Ever since they had come to the cottage to live, she had
been curious over it. Should she let the opportunity to enter it and
see go unimproved?
Aline was a true descendant of our common mother Eve--she preferred
knowledge at any risk. Her curiosity and her liking for peaches carried
her beyond the bounds of prudence. She went boldly into the “lion’s
den.”
Dear reader, do not think my heroine altogether bold and frivolous.
She was only simple, innocent, and ignorant. She had never been to
Wisdom’s school. She was at heart a child still, with a child’s free,
willful impulses.
It did not occur to her that it was very improper to accept Mr.
Delaney’s careless invitation to go into his house and take lunch with
him. She wished very much to do so, and, being used to having her own
way--very often with only occasional condign punishment, such as she
had received to-day--she went.
She went, and she was almost startled at the gloomy magnificence of
the long and stately dining-hall, with its costly carpet, thick and
soft as moss, its dark, rich, walnut furniture, glittering side-boards,
paneled walls, and splendid pictures. On one end of the long, imposing
table was spread a delicate, luxurious luncheon of cold chicken, flaky
biscuit, sweetmeats, and cake, with grapes, peaches, and wine. The
service was of gold, and silver, and crystal, and glittered in the
subdued light that stole into the room through the closed curtains.
There was no attendant in the room, and the whole house appeared
as silent as the tomb. Nevertheless, Aline enjoyed her lunch very
much; its mysterious origin seeming as if served by magic, and the
costly plate on which it was laid did not detract from its charm. In
her enjoyment of the delicate repast she quite forgot her original
intention of eating only just one peach and hurrying home. She
discussed the whole bill of fare with the keen appetite of a healthy
girl used to out door exercise and fresh air; and then she was quite
frightened to find that it was three o’clock.
“Cook will have taken luncheon up to my room and found out that I have
gone. What shall I do?” she said, growing suddenly frightened and
lifting her large, anxious eyes to her entertainer’s face.
“Cook will not tell of you, I hope. Will she?” asked Mr. Delaney,
coolly peeling a peach with his white, aristocratic hand, on which a
magnificent diamond glowed with iridescent fire. “Have this peach,
Miss--Miss--do you know I haven’t found out your name yet?”
“It is Aline--Aline Rodney. I thought you would know that much, as we
are neighbors,” she said; then returning to her grievance, she added:
“Cook will certainty betray me. You should have sent me home sooner.
Why didn’t you?”
“That would have been discourteous,” said Oran Delaney, with his
winning smile; “and, besides, Miss Rodney, I forgot you. Will you
pardon me for it? I was smoking and dreaming, you see, and you escaped
my mind for the moment.”
“‘Out of sight, out of mind,’” said Aline, quoting the old adage with
perfect good humor. “Well, it was just the same with me. I thought
of nothing but the flowers until you came up suddenly behind me. But
I must go home now and see if I am found out. Ah, dear me, I am into
another scrape, and, indeed, indeed, I never dreamed of it when I came
down into the garden. I shall have to go down on my knees to cook, and
beg her to keep it silent about the ladder and the book.”
“Since you feel so sure that you are found out, there can surely be no
need to haste to return to your prison,” said Oran Delaney, toying with
a purple, bloomy bunch of grapes. “An hour more or less cannot matter
materially, I suppose, in the extent of cook’s wrath?”
“N--no, I suppose not,” said Aline, paltering with temptation weakly.
“And I do hate to go back to that lonely room just yet. But, perhaps,”
gazing at him, anxiously, “perhaps you would like for me to go. Perhaps
you are weary of me.”
A sudden sigh, deep, subtle, profound, breathed over his lips. He
looked at her strangely.
“I am weary of everything,” he said, abruptly. “But if it pleases you
to stay, child, pray do so. It will be no annoyance to me.”
From being terribly afraid of him at first, Aline had become quite
trusting and confidential. She looked at him with a smile.
“Thank you for your kind permission,” she said. “I will not go just
yet. There are some things I should like to find out before I go home.”
“You are very frank.”
“Do you think so?” asked his unconventional guest. “And will you answer
truly what I am about to ask you?”
“_Cela depends_,” he replied, with a slight frown.
“That means that you anticipate impertinent questions from me!” she
laughed, easily. “But do you know, Mr. Delaney, that you have long been
an object of curiosity to me?”
“You flatter me,” said Oran Delaney, lightly.
“I don’t know whether the curiosity is flattering or not,” said
frank Aline. “The greater part of my curiosity is over this great,
gloomy-looking house of yours. Is it really haunted, as they say?”
“It is haunted by my presence--nothing more ghostly than that,” he
replied, laconically.
Aline looked as if she did not quite believe him, but she went on,
perseveringly:
“Do you really live in this house all alone, sir?”
“Yes,” he replied.
Her large eyes wandered over the delicately prepared luncheon, then
returned to his quiet face.
“But, really now, Mr. Delaney, there must be a housekeeper here. Else
by whom could your meals be served?” she said.
“By the fairies,” he replied, with perfect gravity.
“You don’t expect me to believe that?” said Aline, pouting her rosy
lips.
“I hope you will. At least it is the only answer I can give you,” he
retorted.
Aline looked curiously at him. There was a slight smile on his face,
but he spoke in grave earnest. She understood then that the secrets of
the haunted house would remain secret still. He had no mind to reveal
them to her.
The rich color rose to her face as it suddenly flashed over her that he
must think she made him a poor return for his courtesy by her pointed
questions.
“I beg your pardon for my impertinent questions,” she said. “I did not
really mean to be rude. I was merely thoughtless.”
“You are freely forgiven,” he answered, courteously.
“And now I will thank you for your kindness, and go,” Aline continued,
moving from the table and turning toward the door.
Mr. Delaney walked by her side and opened the door for her with his
quiet, courteous air.
“You have done me the honor to be curious over my old house, Miss
Rodney,” he said. “Perhaps this glimpse of its interior has not
satisfied you. Do you care to examine any of the other rooms?”
They were walking slowly along, side by side on the echoing floor of
the wide, marble-paved hall, and Aline had just opened her lips to
speak, but her answer, whether negative or affirmative, will never be
recorded. It was frozen on her lips by a terrible interruption.
The strange, brooding stillness that reigned throughout the great, gray
stone mansion, was broken startlingly by a loud, prolonged shriek--a
shriek of such terrible, diabolic, blood-curdling rage and hate, that
it seemed to freeze the blood in Aline’s veins, and to cause every
individual hair to stand erect upon her head with horror.
Instinctively she threw out her hand, and clutching Mr. Delaney’s arm,
stared up into his face with wide, terrified blue eyes, like a child’s
appealing for protection.
The shriek was repeated, followed by another, and another, each more
terrible than the last. Those fearful cries struck terror to Aline’s
heart. She could not determine whether they issued from male or female
lips. It seemed to her frenzied fancy as if they did not belong to a
human being, but rather to some vicious and diabolic spirit of the
nether world. It
“Was neither man nor woman,
It was neither brute nor human,
’Twas a ghoul.”
CHAPTER IV.
As those wild, unearthly cries rang through the house, Oran Delaney
stood for a moment like one rooted to the floor. His face had whitened
to the ghastliness of death, a smoldering fire flashed from his
splendid dark eyes, he ground a fierce, smothered imprecation between
his strong, white teeth.
“What is it? Oh! Mr. Delaney, what is it?” shuddered Aline, clinging
convulsively to his arm.
He started, and looked down at the sweet, white face, with its
frightened blue eyes and chattering teeth. He did not answer, for again
that dreadful, diabolic shriek of anger, frightening all the sleeping
echoes into hideous sound, rang through the house:
“Ah--h--h! Ah--h--h!”
This time it sounded nearer, as if the ghostly utterer were coming
rapidly upon the scene. Horror flashed from Oran Delaney’s eyes.
With a sudden, swift, abrupt movement he shook the little, clinging
hands from his sleeve, and moved toward the grand stairway that led to
the upper regions of the house.
With his foot upon the stair, he turned and looked back, pierced by the
low, reproachful wail of fear and pain that burst from Aline’s lips.
He saw the beautiful, graceful figure of the girl standing in the
dark, gloomy hall, lighting its gloom with her beauty, like a flower
or a star.
Like one distraught, he waved his hand to her.
“Fly, fly!” he shouted, hoarsely. “Lose not a moment! To linger in
this terrible place means death!” Then he flew up the wide and winding
stairway as if his feet were winged, and the girl, whose own willful
folly and curiosity had brought her to this pass, stood like one rooted
to the spot, filled with trembling and horror.
She knew not where to fly. She was in the center of a long, dark
hall, with doors opening into rooms on either hand and at either end.
Through one of these latter doors she had come with Oran Delaney to
the dining-room, but to save her life she could not have told which
one. Oh, how horrible it was standing there, with those strange shrieks
ringing in her ears, and feeling, with a strange despair at her heart,
that Oran Delaney had fled from her like a coward, and left her to
perish of this mysterious, unknown danger, rushing nearer and nearer!
“Ah--h--h! Ah--h--h!” again rang shrilly in her frightened hearing,
and, impelled by maddening fear, Aline sprung wildly forward and rushed
to one of those wide hall doors, which she hoped would give her egress
from this horror-haunted house, into sunshine and security again.
She reached out her white hand gropingly for the door-knob, opened
and fled through it as if pursued by a legion of fiends. It swung
to heavily behind her, and her feet sunk deep into the velvet pile
of a fine, rich carpet like softest moss. She was in the long and
lofty parlors, where the dust lay thick upon the linen covers of the
costly furniture, and the gleaming mirrors and splendid paintings were
curtained from the sight. A cry of despair escaped her lips as she
realized the truth.
“It was the wrong door. I must retrace my steps,” she thought; but even
as she laid her hand upon the knob she was startled by those hideous
screams again--this time they seemed to come from the hall itself, and
with a stifled exclamation Aline darted into the curtained alcove of
a bay-window and let the heavy draperies of velvet and brocade fall
heavily around her. She had scarcely done so before a hand turned the
door-knob softly, something swished through the door, it closed again
and she was conscious of an alien presence in the room. She could
hear distinctly a heavy, muffled breathing, and the rustle of drapery
trailed over the floor.
Aline’s heart seemed beating in her throat almost to suffocation.
She crouched upon the floor, her young face pale as death, her sweet
eyes wild with horror of she knew not what invisible evil that was
approaching her with swift, cat-like movements across the echoless
floor. Was it ghost or human? she asked herself, fearfully.
Crouching there, a little crumpled blue heap in the darkness, fearing
to breathe lest her presence might be betrayed by even that stifled
sound, Aline summoned courage to draw aside the lightest fold of the
curtain to form a tiny aperture through which, herself unseen, she
might see what or who had entered the darkened, dreary, deserted
parlor. Curiosity, our little heroine’s besetting sin, had not deserted
her yet, despite her fear and terror.
She gazed fearfully through the tiny crevice in the curtain, and it
was only by the exercise of a strong will power that she prevented
herself from crying out aloud.
A little dwarf-like, misshapen _something_, clothed in trailing
garments like a woman, was approaching the alcove steadily and swiftly,
as if guided by the unerring instinct of hate and murder to the
hiding-place of its prey. The crooked hideous form was clothed with
rich white satin and lace, all soiled and frayed as if from a terrible
struggle, for there were wet and gory blood drops all spattered down
the deep flounces of white lace that adorned the front breadth of the
robe.
Over a monstrous head, covered with rough matted locks of coarse black
hair was thrown a long and splendid bridal veil of costly Brussels
lace, and this, too, was soiled and tattered like the bridal robe.
There was no face visible, for a mask was worn above it--a horrible
mask of thick black crape; and Aline shuddered as she thought of the
distorted features it hid, for the narrow slits for the eyes were not
cut in a level line below the brows, but by some dreadful freak of
nature the eyes of the creature were placed one below the brow, the
other far down upon the cheek, and in this distorted form they glared
through the holes of the mask like the yellow orbs of a tigress filled
with the spirit of destruction.
But these monstrous, baleful eyes were not all that struck terror to
Aline’s heart as she knelt there, shuddering in the semi-darkness of
the death-trap into which she had blindly rushed.
The long, skinny, claw-like hand of the creature presented a yet more
terrible aspect to her straining gaze, for the long white kid gloves
that covered them were stained with crimson gore, and one hand grasped
a slender, jewel-hilted dagger, from whose shining blade dripped human
blood!
The wild instinct of self-preservation blazed up in Aline’s heart. She
thought of the beautiful, sunny world outside this horrible haunted
house, and the fierce desire for life flamed up within her. Should she
die here like some wild thing caught in a trap, without one effort for
escape?
She sprung to her feet and made a desperate rush past that horrible
creature toward the door, but the footsteps of hate were swifter even
than those of fear. Even as she tore open the door she felt the sharp
clutch of cruel fingers on her arm, she was whirled violently backward,
and the murderous dagger, already red with human gore, flashed in
the creature’s hand, and the next instant sheathed itself in Aline’s
breast. She fell across the door-sill, and lay motionless in a pool of
her own spurting life blood.
CHAPTER V.
The town-clock of Chester clanged the midnight hour out heavily from
its hoarse, brazen throat--twelve!
Aline opened her blue eyes languidly--they were heavy, as if weighed
down with lead--and looked about her.
They fell upon a scene utterly new and strange to her.
She was lying on a downy, rosewood couch, with draperies of pale blue
silk and snowy lace, in the center of a large and high-ceiled room
hung with azure silk, the elegant rosewood furniture being upholstered
in the same lovely material. Everything about her breathed of unlimited
wealth and taste, and the sweet aroma of flowers floated delightfully
through the beautiful apartment from the delicate vases on the mantel,
which had been filled with the choicest wealth of the garden by a
lavish and unsparing hand.
“She revives, doctor,” said a woman’s voice.
Aline lifted her eyes quickly. An elderly grave-faced woman had come
forward to the bedside, and was bending curiously over her. She was
dressed in a nurse’s cap and apron, and had a kind, though homely
looking face.
“Who are you, and where am I?” asked Aline, gazing at this strange face
in bewilderment.
“Hush, my dear! You are sick, and must not talk,” answered the nurse
with a slight frown.
She moved aside, and Aline saw two men behind her. A cry of fear broke
from her lips. Both wore masks upon their faces; but, in the tall,
well-knit figure of the foremost one, she recognized Oran Delaney.
He came forward and bent over Aline, whispering, hurriedly:
“Miss Rodney, I beg you, as a special favor, to keep silence a little
while. Say nothing to this stranger of how you came by your wound.”
Her wound! She gave a start and memory rushed over her. She was
conscious too of a sharp, stinging pain in her breast, and the clothing
upon it, she perceived, was stiffened and red with clotted blood. So
that horrible creature had not quite killed her!
She made no answer, for Oran Delaney moved quickly away, giving
place to the masked physician. The nurse brought a basin of water,
sponges, and linen, and he deftly bathed and dressed the wound, gazing
curiously, now and then, at the beautiful, frightened face of his
patient, who lay still as death with only a smothered moan, now and
then, instantly stifled on her pale, almost icy, lips.
“I will be as gentle as I can,” he said to her, kindly, but Aline did
not speak. She had closed her eyes and relapsed into unconsciousness.
When she unclosed them again, the masked physician was gone. She was
alone with the quiet, grave-looking nurse in the dimly lighted room. A
sensation of fear came over her. Why was she kept in this mysterious
house with this strange woman? Where was her mother?
She looked at the stranger, and asked, anxiously.
“Am I in Mr. Delaney’s house?”
The woman gave her a quiet, affirmative nod in reply.
“And mamma--have you sent for her?” inquired Aline.
“You must not talk, my dear,” answered the woman, soothingly.
“You have not answered my question, and I want mamma, I must have
her!” Aline cried out, in her imperious young voice, for she had
forgotten her fear of her mother’s anger in her terror at the mysteries
surrounding her. Oh, to be back under the safe little roof of the
cottage that nestled under the shadow of this frowning mansion, to
fling her arms around her mother’s neck, confessing her folly and
pleading for forgiveness.
“You do not answer me,” she said, after waiting vainly for an answer
from the quiet nurse. “Tell me, why am I detained in this house?”
“You ought to know how you came to be here, miss,” the woman answered,
almost sullenly. “As for the rest, you are seriously wounded, and not
able to be moved.”
“Then you should have sent for my mother,” said Aline, with pretty,
peremptory dignity. “She will be dreadfully frightened at my absence.
Let some one bring her at once.”
“Let us wait until to-morrow, dear,” said the nurse, persuasively.
“I cannot wait,” said the girl, uneasily, and with an unutterable
yearning at her heart for the mother whom she had so often grieved by
her follies and willfulness. “Where is Mr. Delaney? Go, and send him
here. Surely he will let me have mamma.”
The woman glided softly out, and Aline, left alone in the strange room
with its shadowy corners and dimly burning lamp, shuddered with fear.
What if that dreadful, murderous creature should return and finish her
work!
“I shall die here miserably, and never see mamma and home again. Oh,
how terribly I am punished for my thoughtlessness and folly!” wept
Aline, filled with bitter repentance.
The door unclosed, and Oran Delaney walked slowly into the room,
followed by the nurse, who sat down discreetly at a distance from the
bedside of her troublesome patient.
He turned up the dim, flaring night-lamp so that its full light fell
on Aline’s beautiful, pale, distressed face. He had removed the
disfiguring mask that hid his features from the masked physician, and
his dark face looked stern and pallid and troubled.
“You sent for me?” he asked, in his grave, quiet voice.
“I want mamma,” she answered, like a child.
His slender, straight, dark brows met in a slight frown.
“Miss Rodney, you must not excite yourself. I cannot answer for the
consequences if you do,” he said.
“I am not excited, I am quite calm; but I want mamma. Will you not
bring her to me?” she pleaded.
He laid his warm, strong hand gently for a moment on the dimpled little
white ones that lay outside the silken counterpane.
“My child, I am very sorry, but--I cannot,” he answered, slowly.
She tore her small hand violently from his clasp, and looked at him
with the dignity of a suddenly awakened womanhood flashing into her
fair young face.
“Mr. Delaney, surely I have misunderstood you,” she said. “You do not
mean that you will let me lie here suffering, dying, and refuse to
bring my friends to me?”
“Dying? Oh, no, it is not so bad as that,” he said, almost
shudderingly. “You have only a flesh wound, Miss Rodney. With patience
on your part, and good nursing from Mrs. Griffin, here, you will be
quite sure to recover.”
“And in the meantime?” she asked, with a wistful meaning in her voice
that he could not affect to misunderstand.
He turned his head aside, disconcerted, perhaps, by the steady gaze of
the blue eyes.
“In the meantime, Mr. Delaney?” she repeated, in a slightly raised
voice.
He turned toward her again, and answered, abruptly, almost sternly:
“I hope they will not be seriously alarmed about you, Miss Rodney,
for it is quite impossible for me to make any communication to them
regarding your whereabouts.”
CHAPTER VI.
A cry of reproach, astonishment, and dismay came from Aline’s lips.
“You will not be so cruel,” she cried. “What have I done to you that
you should punish me so?”
“I do not mean to punish you, Miss Rodney. On the contrary, I am
exceedingly sorry that I cannot grant your wish,” he said. “But there
are reasons--” he paused abruptly, and did not finish the sentence.
“Strange reasons they must be that can keep a mother from the side of
her suffering child,” cried Aline, with all the harshness of a young
girl’s judgment.
A heavy sigh breathed over Oran Delaney’s lips. His dark eyes turned to
hers with more sadness than sternness in their gloomy depths.
“They _are_ strange reasons,” he said, bitterly. “Ah, Miss Rodney, I
was wrong, I was culpably thoughtless when I brought you into this
house! You should not have come! No one ever crosses the threshold
of my home. Do not ask that your friends should be brought here. I
can never consent. I can only beg your pardon for my folly in leading
you into this death-trap. It is a horror-haunted house. The legend of
Hades should be written over its portals: ‘Who enters here, leaves Hope
behind.’”
His voice had an indescribable cadence of bitterness and regret in it.
The dark, handsome face was profoundly grave and stern, the gesture of
the hand as it brushed back the waving locks of dark hair that fell
over his broad brow, was full of a hopeless woe. But Aline was too
young and thoughtless to comprehend the tokens of despair in a man
whose age almost doubled her own. Yet she was strangely impressed by
his concluding words. She repeated them over thoughtfully:
“‘Who enters here, leaves Hope behind.’ Ah, Mr. Delaney, I hope the
legend will not come home to me!”
But the day came when she knew that it had done so--that the shadow of
the old gray stone house had stretched itself out long and dark, and
fatally, across the budding hopes of her lifetime.
He did not answer, and she went on impatiently;
“If my friends may not come to me at least let me go to them. I am
not too ill. Surely, I may be moved. It is such a little distance,”
pleadingly.
“It is quite impossible that you should leave this house until your
wound is healed,” he answered, decisively, and Aline, completely
crushed by his answer, began to weep heart-brokenly.
He waited in painful silence for her to grow calmer. Like many another
man, he was unable to reason with a woman’s tears.
But Mrs. Griffin came forward, feeling her presence needed now. She
said grimly to her master who stood gazing blankly before him:
“If she is allowed to go on like this she will fall into a fever. I
shall administer the composing draught the doctor left with me.”
“Yes, that will be best,” he said, relieved. “I do not wish her to be
excited, certainly. Miss Rodney,” he just touched one of the hands
that hid Aline’s face, “pray do not take it so hard. You shall soon be
restored to your home and friends, I pledge you my sacred promise! Only
be patient a few days.”
But the girl only wept more bitterly, and when Mrs. Griffin brought the
composing draught she angrily waved it away. She would have none of it.
“I never saw such a great, willful baby,” declared Mrs. Griffin,
vexedly. “She needs the medicine. I’m afraid she’ll not get on without
it.”
“I hope you will not drive us to use force with you. It is quite
imperative that you should obey the physician’s orders,” remonstrated
Oran Delaney.
“I do not wish to be put to sleep like a child. I wish to talk to
you about your cruelty in keeping me here!” Aline sobbed out angrily
through the white hands that hid her tear-stained face.
“We will talk about that to-morrow,” he replied, and suddenly Aline
felt a strong arm passed around her shoulders, her hands were drawn
away from her face, the point of a teaspoon was pressed against her
lips, and held there firmly in spite of her struggles, until she had
swallowed every drop of the odious draught.
“How dared you?” she cried, her face flaming with anger and resentment;
and Mrs. Griffin remarked dryly:
“If you act like a baby, you must expect folks to treat you like one.”
Aline turned from her to the rash offender, who did not look very
frightened or sorry, but only amused at her ebullition of wrath.
“I beg your pardon,” he said, gently, but coolly. “I did not wish to
offend you, Miss Rodney, but it was quite necessary you should take
the doctor’s prescription. Do not think too hardly of me for doing my
duty,” and then he walked quietly out of the room.
CHAPTER VII.
Aline was so indignant at the gentle force Mr. Delaney had used in
compelling her to swallow the physician’s prescription that she angrily
resolved not to submit to its influence, but to lie awake in spite of
it, and bemoan her hard fate, in being thus cruelly separated from
home and friends. She indulged herself for a little while in the most
vehement sobs and tears, reckless of the injury she was doing herself
in her feverish condition, and willfully intent on making herself as
disagreeable as possible to her hard-hearted jailers.
But the potent drug she had unwillingly taken was stronger than her
will. The lids fell lower and lower over the heavy, tearful eyes, her
moans grew fainter and fainter, until at last they ceased altogether,
the dark lashes drooped upon the warm, flushed cheeks, and she fell
asleep like a grieved child, sighing now and then in her slumber, and
tossing restlessly, as if her sorrow had followed her even into the
land of dreams.
Mrs. Griffin remained on guard by her side a patient, untiring watcher,
like one accustomed to such nightly vigils, until the brief summer
night passed away and the “gray-eyed morn” peered in through the close
drawn shutters upon the beautiful girl who still remained wrapped in
deep, unbroken slumber.
The grim, careful nurse looked at the fair, sleeping face from time to
time with irrepressible admiration. She contrasted it, in fancy, with
a monstrous face on which she was compelled to gaze daily, and she
shuddered at the difference.
“She is as beautiful as an angel. How terrible it would have been if
that devil had murdered her!” she thought.
She left the room after awhile, and locked the door after her,
remaining absent nearly two hours. When she returned with a light,
appetizing breakfast arranged upon a tray, Aline was awake and gazing
dreamily around her at the unaccustomed room.
“You feel better after your sleep, I hope, Miss Rodney, do you not?”
she inquired, and Aline was obliged to admit that she did, feeling half
ashamed at the petulance she had displayed before falling asleep.
She found that, in spite of her painful wound and her anxiety, she had
a very fair appetite for breakfast. She determined that she would get
well, as fast as she could, in order to leave this dreadful house and
return to her home. She wondered anxiously what poor mamma would say to
this last new adventure of hers, more terrible than all the rest. She
would not punish her by anger and blame and coldness, surely. Had she
not already suffered enough?
Poor Aline thought that she was well cured now of her mischievous
propensities. After this she would never indulge her willful,
thoughtless desires again. She would be as prim and perfect as her
sister Effie, whom now she heartily reproached herself for having
called a “starched-up old maid.”
When she went home again she would beg Effie’s pardon, she was resolved
upon that. They would be so frightened, so glad to have her back, they
would forgive her for all her wildness and carelessness in the past if
she promised never, never to do so again.
She lay musing in this wise, remorsefully, when she was suddenly
startled from her castle building by a repetition of the terrible
shrieks of the day before. The awful sounds woke all the sleeping
echoes of the place into dreadful concert. Aline screamed aloud in
nervous terror and hid her face in the bed-clothes.
Mrs. Griffin bent hurriedly over her.
“Do not be frightened, my child,” she said. “I am compelled to leave
you for a little while. But I shall lock your door securely. No harm
shall come to you again.”
She went away, and even though Aline heard the bolt turned carefully
in the lock and the key drawn out, she felt terribly afraid that that
hideous creature who had assailed her on yesterday, would gain access
to her again and complete its murderous work. The cold dews of anguish
beaded her white brow as she lay there alone in the beautiful azure
room, listening to those wild, unearthly screams. She was afraid to
look out from behind the shelter of the silken cover where she had
hidden her eyes, fearful that they might be blasted by the sight of the
_thing_ that had appeared to her in the parlor yesterday.
She thought of the simple cottage home where papa and mamma and Effie
and Max were even now bewailing her loss, perhaps, and her heart
swelled with passionate longing and regret. Ah, only to be with them
again in the safe shelter of home and love!
The key clicked softly in the lock again. This time Mr. Delaney
entered. He looked very pale and grave, but he carried a delicate
basket of fresh flowers in his hand that filled the room with sweetness
and beauty. He drew the silken cover gently away from Aline’s face.
“Poor child, are you so frightened?” he said, compassionately. “Look
up. The cries are hushed now. There is nothing for you to fear.”
CHAPTER VIII.
The terrible, blood curdling cries that had so startled Aline had,
indeed, suddenly ceased. The mysterious mansion had returned to its
strange, brooding silence.
Forgetful of her anger against Mr. Delaney in her fear and terror,
Aline clung nervously to his arm with one trembling little hand.
“Oh! Mr. Delaney, what is it--that terrible creature I saw yesterday?”
she cried out fearfully.
His dark face was strangely agitated as he turned it upon her wistful
face.
“Then you really _saw_ it?” he said, almost as if speaking to himself.
“Yes, I saw it. Did you suppose it struck me that murderous blow
_invisibly?_” she questioned, with something like awe.
“I had hoped--” he began, then paused, after his abrupt fashion of
leaving sentences unfinished.
“Answer me,” exclaimed Aline, in her sharp, imperious young voice.
“What was it that struck me with that blood-stained dagger yesterday?
What was it I heard shrieking like a lost soul to-day? Tell me!”
“It was a ghost,” he answered, turning his head away.
“I do not believe you,” cried Aline. “It was not a ghost. It was
something warmed by the breath of life. It clutched me with warm,
living fingers. It was strong and swift. Oh, Heaven, how terrible it
was!” she shuddered. “Was it really a human being?”
“It was a ghost--a mystery! I can tell you no more,” repeated Oran
Delaney.
And then, with that strong will, which Aline already began to subtly
recognize, he changed the subject of the conversation.
“Have you forgiven me for my rudeness of last night?” he inquired, with
a touch of gentleness in his voice.
“No,” Aline answered, tartly.
“I have brought you these beautiful flowers as a peace offering,” he
continued, unruffled by her childish resentment. “You cannot refuse
them, for I know that you love flowers very dearly.”
“I shall never love them again,” she replied, obstinately. “I shall
always remember that my fondness for flowers brought down all this
trouble upon my head.”
“I beg your pardon; it was your fondness for peaches,” he retorted,
with a slight gleam of mirth. “If you had not come into my house to
take luncheon with me, nothing would have happened.”
“I should never have come into your garden even but for the flowers,”
she replied, offended that he should remind her of her appetite for
peaches.
He smiled, and then a subtle sigh drove the evanescent gleam away.
“Well, we will not quarrel over the cause,” he said. “The result is the
same. I am sorry you will not have my poor flowers. I hoped they would
beguile some of the tedium of your illness.”
He put the basket on a stand near her and sat down.
“Mrs. Griffin has sent me to take care of you during her absence,” he
said. “But if my presence is disagreeable, Miss Rodney, you can send me
away at any moment.”
Aline inwardly wished that she was brave enough to do so, but she was
too nervous and frightened to take him at his word. There was a sense
of protection in his presence that she could not forego even to gratify
her spite at him.
So she lay silently gazing at his dark, stern profile under her long
lashes until he turned suddenly and caught the curious gaze of the
large liquid blue eyes. He smiled slightly as they fell before his.
“You have not said whether I am to stay or go,” he said.
Aline hesitated a moment, then answered in a low, half-angry voice:
“Stay.”
“Thanks. I was afraid you would send me away,” he said.
“I would, but--but I am afraid to stay here alone,” she replied with
spirit.
Something like anger flashed into his dark face a moment, but was
quickly dispelled by the thought, “Why be angry with a willful child
whom I have unavoidably offended?”
“You are very frank. I quite understand that I am retained in your
presence merely in the character of a watch-dog,” he replied, with some
_hauteur_. “But while I _am_ here, pray make me of service if possible.
Can I do anything for you--talk to you--read to you?”
She caught eagerly at the last suggestion.
“Yes, you may read to me. I do not like to talk to you. You make me
angry when I talk to you,” she said.
“You are very flattering, Miss Rodney. However, I do not forget that
you are sick. We pardon the discourtesies of invalids,” he said,
calmly, going over to a little stand littered with volumes bound
prettily in blue and gold.
“What is your preference--prose or poetry?” he inquired, carelessly
turning them over.
“Poetry,” she replied.
“Naturally--being young,” he muttered, half to himself.
“Do you mean to say that I shall not love poetry when I grow old--like
you?” she asked, purposely adding the sting of the last words.
But he faced around toward her with an expression of the most palpable
amusement.
“Do I appear very old in your eyes, Miss Rodney?” he inquired.
“‘As old as the hills’--you are, aren’t you, sir?” she replied, with
malice prepense.
“I was three-and-thirty yesterday, my frank lady,” he answered, coolly.
“As for you, judging from your words and manner, I should guess that
you are about ten years old.”
The delicate shaft of sarcasm went home. Aline knew that she deserved
it, and that she had been behaving rudely to the courteous gentleman
under whose roof she was. But she was by no means prepared to
acknowledge her fault. She was bitterly angry with him, because he had
refused to communicate with her friends.
“Please go on with the poetry,” she said, assuming an air of dignity,
and taking no notice of his last words.
He opened the book he was holding, and commenced to read a poem quite
at random:
“How many years will it be, I wonder.
And how will their slow length pass,
Till I shall find rest in silence, under
The trees and the waving grass?
“Many there be in the world who love it,
Who cling to its trifles and toys;
But I could never find aught to covet
Among its vanishing joys.
“But once, indeed, was my heart elated,
And pleased with a dream of its own--
A beautiful dream it was, but fated
Soon to be overthrown.
“Death, like a shadow, fell and darkened
The light that had shone so clear--
How oft since then have I vainly hearkened,
And prayed for his coming near.
“But he cometh not, and I vainly wonder,
How will the long years pass,
Till I shall find rest in silence, under
The trees and waving grass.”
He paused and Aline, impressed against her will, but determined not to
show it, cried out, almost peevishly:
“Why did you read such a doleful thing? I do not like sad poetry.”
“That is the fault of your youth again,” he quietly answered. “Now I,
on the contrary, rather admire the pathetic style. The time may come,
perhaps, when that very poem will please your fancy. Nay, you may even
subscribe to the sad sentiment it embodies.”
“I should never do that if I lived to be as old as Methuselah!” cried
Aline, with the rash confidence of youth, and Oran Delaney smiled--that
slow, pensive smile whose latent sarcasm she already began to
understand with the swift intuition of woman.
“Why do you despise youth, Mr. Delaney?” she cried out, hotly.
“I do not despise it, I only pity it,” he answered.
“I can fancy age deserving pity, but not youth,” she answered,
resentfully. “Why do you pity it?”
“For its illusions,” he answered, and this time the sarcasm had faded
from his voice and face. Both were genuinely sad.
“Its illusions--what are they?” queried the girl, and again he smiled,
sadly.
“Do not ask me. They will come home to you soon enough, as they have
done to me. Youth is the happiest period of life. I pity it because
it comes to an end. I do not despise it, and I fully subscribe to the
poet’s plaint:
“‘The loss of youth is sadness
To all who think or feel--
A wound no after-gladness
Can ever wholly heal.’”
Aline lay very still for a moment, gazing silently at him with a
feeling of vexation that she had permitted herself to listen to him
with interest and even with an unconscious latent sympathy. She was
about to make some careless answer to show her utter indifference, and
to provoke him again, when she suddenly observed that he had turned
deathly pale, and that a stream of blood was pouring from inside his
coat sleeve down upon his hand.
“You are wounded, too!” she cried out in dismay, and feeling a deathly
faintness stealing over her at sight of the trickling blood.
“It is nothing--a mere flesh wound--a scratch,” he muttered, tearing
off his coat, hastily, and then Aline saw that his shirt-sleeve had
been torn open and his arm bandaged above the elbow, but the linen
had become loosened in some way, and the gaping wound was bleeding
profusely.
He tried clumsily to draw the crimson bandage tighter about the wound,
but he was very awkward with his left hand, and he did not succeed.
Aline could not help being sorry for him.
CHAPTER IX.
She had a very tender heart, this little willful heroine of ours,
and although she thought that she hated Oran Delaney she would not
willingly have seen him suffer. She saw that he was growing pale and
faint from loss of blood, and she could not keep from pitying him.
She cried out, hastily:
“Come here, Mr. Delaney. I will fasten the bandage for you.”
He looked surprised, but he came to the bed and held down his arm
within the reach of her little white hands. She drew the band tighter
and bound her handkerchief tightly around it. The blood ceased to flow,
but her own hands were stained with blood when she had finished.
“Does it frighten you much?” he asked. “You look very pale.”
“No, I am not frightened,” bravely. “Tell me--how did you come by your
wounds?”
“In much the same manner as you came by yours,” he replied, reservedly.
“Through that horrible--_something_?” she inquired, with a shudder.
“Yes.”
A gleam of intelligence flashed from Aline’s eyes.
“Ah, now I begin to understand,” she said. “You met it first. It was
your blood I saw upon the knife and the hands and the dress?”
“Yes.”
“And you did not run away from me to--to save yourself? I
thought--thought--” She paused and looked at him, half inquiringly.
“Well, what was it you thought?” he inquired.
“When you left me in the hall, you know,” she said, with some
embarrassment, “I believed that you had deserted me and fled like a
coward, leaving me to the mercies of that terrible creature. I was
mistaken, perhaps.”
He looked at her with a slow flush rising through the pallor of his
face.
“Every moment I am with you, Miss Rodney, I learn more and more how
contemptible I am in your eyes,” he said, with irrepressible chagrin.
“But I told you I was mistaken,” said the girl, with unconscious
repentance in her voice. “Was I right?”
“I met the danger first,” he answered, simply.
“Yes, I understand, and I am sorry I thought you a coward. I beg your
pardon,” she said, gently.
“You are freely forgiven,” Mr. Delaney replied, quietly, as he brought
a damp sponge and carefully removed the blood-stains from her delicate,
dimpled white hands.
She submitted quietly to the operation, though he had half expected
that she would snatch her hands away in petulant anger.
“I am a great deal better to-day, am I not, Mr. Delaney?” she inquired,
as he resumed his seat.
“I think so,” he replied. “Your wound was not serious. It was struck
too hastily. I hope you will soon recover now. You are bearing it very
bravely.”
“Thank you! And when are you going to let me go home?”
The wistful tone of the young voice struck him like a reproach. He
turned away his head as he answered:
“As soon as your wound is healed. That will be in a few weeks, I hope.”
“Can I say or do nothing that will induce you to let me go now?” she
entreated.
“That would be impossible. You are not able to be moved yet. The result
of such an imprudence might be most serious.”
“And you will not communicate with my friends?” she went on.
“I am sorry to be compelled to deny you that gratification,” he
replied, with decision.
“And in the meantime they must suffer all the pangs of doubt and
suspense. Oh, Mr. Delaney, is that right, is it just?” cried the
wounded captive.
“There are many things in this world, Miss Rodney, that are
neither right nor just,” he replied. “This may be one of them; but
circumstances will not admit of my acting otherwise. I am compelled to
keep you hidden here, unknown to any one, until you are well enough to
be returned to your home.”
“You have no pity for them, nor for me!” she cried, almost wildly.
“I cannot follow the bent of my feelings. I am compelled to pursue this
course,” replied the mysterious recluse.
“Do you not know,” she said, “that my friends will be very angry with
you for keeping me hidden away from them? What if I should die here in
this dreadful house?”
“They would never know what fate had overtaken their darling,” he
answered, gloomily.
Aline stared at him with wide, terrified blue eyes. Indignation was
rising within her again--indignation added to something like fear.
CHAPTER X.
“Mr. Delaney, I cannot understand you,” she said. “You talk strangely.
I am tempted to believe that you cannot be sane, that you are not in
your right mind.”
He looked at her steadily with his grave, dark eyes.
“Do I look like a lunatic, Miss Rodney?” he inquired.
“No, but you talk like one,” she cried out, petulantly. “Do you really
imagine that you can keep my presence here a secret from my own people?
Do you not know that they will search for me until they find me?”
“They are already searching for you, but I am quite sure they will
never find you,” he replied. “The last place where Mr. Rodney would
think of looking for you would be here in his neighbor’s house.”
She knew that it was true. Her heart sunk heavily, but she cried out,
spiritedly:
“But when I go home and tell him--what then? Are you not afraid of his
anger when he knows the truth?”
“He will never know,” Oran Delaney replied, strangely.
The pale face on the snowy, lace-fringed pillow grew paler still, the
blue eyes darkened with agitation.
“Not know?” she cried out, passionately. “Why, what can you mean?”
“You will not tell him,” he replied.
“Now I am quite, quite sure that you are mad,” said Aline. “Do you
think I shall not tell them all when I go home?”
“I am quite sure you will not!”
Aline could not speak for a moment. She was mystified by Mr. Delaney’s
words and manner. She almost began to believe him mad indeed. To what
did his strange talk tend?
While she puzzled within herself he drew his chair nearer to the
bedside--near enough indeed to touch her pulse with his cool fingers.
“Pray do not excite yourself unduly,” he said. “There is really
no necessity for it. Cannot we discuss this matter coolly and
dispassionately, and come to an understanding?”
She drew her hand away with a heavy sigh.
“I do not believe I can discuss it coolly,” she said. “I am frightened
at the mysteries of this house, and the mysteries with which you choose
to surround me. I am here within a stone’s throw of my own home,
wounded, helpless, a prey to grief and anxiety, while my friends are
seeking me everywhere in sorrow and distress. I cannot be calm and
cool. I am perfectly wretched. How can you explain away these things?”
“Will you listen to me while I try to do so?” asked Oran Delaney.
“Yes,” she answered, impatiently.
“It will not take long,” he said. “In the first place, Miss Rodney, I
take some blame upon myself for this. I should not have brought you
into my house--I should not even have admitted you into my garden. But
I thought you a lonely child, and was carelessly willing to gratify
your penchant for my beautiful flowers.”
“Those dearly bought flowers!” sighed Aline.
“Through your own thoughtlessness and mine,” he continued, “you have
stumbled upon the mystery of Delaney House--a mystery too terrible to
be given to the world--a secret I will guard with my very life, if need
be. Therefore--” He paused, after his odd fashion, and gazed gravely
into her face.
“Therefore,” she repeated, wonderingly.
“The Delaneys have been a proud race from the beginning--I am the
proudest one yet,” he said. “That which you know of Delaney House, Miss
Rodney, you shall never be permitted to carry across its portals to
blazon to a curious, mocking world!”
“Do you mean to kill me?” shuddered the girl, shrinking in terror from
the dark, stern, agitated face.
He started and looked at her.
“Poor child! Have I indeed frightened you so much?” he asked. “I must
indeed be an ogre in your eyes! No, Aline--you are such a child, let
me call you so--no; I do not mean to kill you. I am not a murderer. I
shall simply bind you by an oath of silence when you leave this place.”
“An oath of silence?” she repeated, vaguely.
“Yes,” he answered, steadily. “I shall swear you to silence regarding
your whereabouts during the time you have been away--silence regarding
the wound you have received--silence regarding me--silence, in short,
as to everything that can throw the least light on your strange
disappearance from your home.”
“And if I refuse to swear?” Aline exclaimed, gazing at him almost
defiantly.
“If you refuse, you will never be permitted to leave Delaney House,” he
answered, firmly.
“Never?” she echoed.
“Never!” he reiterated.
CHAPTER XI.
The strange and perfectly unaccountable manner of Aline Rodney’s
disappearance from her home had excited a great sensation in the town
of Chester. Such a harrowing mystery had never before agitated the
pretty little country town. Mr. Rodney, Aline’s father, was the only
lawyer the town could boast, and although not wealthy, was a prominent
member of society in Chester. His two pretty daughters had been
educated as carefully as his means would allow, and were the boast of
the town for their beauty.
Effie Rodney was a hazel-eyed beauty, with soft waving tresses of
chestnut brown and a complexion of the loveliest red and white,
combined with features of the purest Grecian type. She was twenty-three
years old, and so stately, quiet, and dignified, that her more volatile
sister, Aline, audaciously dubbed her an old maid.
Mrs. Rodney was a pretty woman of the same type of beauty as Effie.
Mother and daughter were remarkably alike, both being tall, extremely
graceful in appearance, and very dignified in manner. To both of them
the wild and willful ways of blue eyed Aline were a perpetual wonder
and annoyance. They loved her, but she was a sore trial to their
patience, and their understanding. She was so gay, so willful, so
thoughtless, that, as Mrs. Rodney expressed it, she kept her family
“in hot water all the while.” They could never tell what mischievous
prank their pretty Aline would be into next. Never were two sisters
more unlike than Aline and Effie, both in mind and looks, although they
were really fond of each other. Both were beautiful, but one was like a
stately, bright-plumaged bird-of-paradise, the other like a brilliant
humming-bird, always on the wing, never at rest in its aerial flight.
Neither Mrs. Rodney nor Effie could understand Aline’s complex
character. She was wild and willful, but she was also warm-hearted and
loving. She was always getting herself into some kind of mischief,
always being blamed by mamma, and lectured by Effie. If papa had not
petted her and Max adored her she could not have stood it. But the
forces for and against being very equally divided she was enabled
to hold her own with tolerable equanimity. Sometimes, mamma, acting
upon a mistaken sense of duty, allotted to Aline some quite severe
punishments, as in the case of the imprisonment the day of the picnic;
but there was always papa to pet and soothe his injured little girl,
Max to load her with sugar-plums, and even stately Effie to lament that
her darling little sister had to be punished. So Aline, with all the
faults of her head and heart, was dearly beloved and bitterly missed
and mourned in the home from which she had so strangely dropped out
like a link from a golden chain.
The incredulous horror on returning from Walnut Grove and finding her
gone was something better imagined than described. They examined the
empty room, they peered beneath the bed, behind the curtains, within
the wardrobe, while little Max, in a fit of absent-mindedness, pulled
out the bureau drawers, and even lifted the tray of her Saratoga trunk
in a vain search for the lost one.
Beautiful Aline had flown from the dreary room like a swift-winged
bird from the prison bars of its cage. They called her name, but she
answered not. They sought her in her dearest haunts, but they found her
not. They were face to face with a mystery.
Cook had not anticipated such alarm on the part of the family. She had
missed the young lady several hours ago when she had taken up luncheon
to her, but being used to the mischievous pranks of her young mistress,
had believed that she was hiding herself somewhere within the room.
She had set down the tray on a stand and gone away, locking the door
behind her.
It was locked still when they came home from the picnic rather earlier
than they would have done, but that they were anxious over Aline--poor
Aline who had missed all the delights of the picnic because she had
been a naughty girl yesterday and left undone those things which she
ought to have done, and done those things which she ought not to have
done.
Aline had deserted the sewing-machine and the ruffles mamma had set
her to hem yesterday and gone a-fishing with ten-year-old Max and
his comrade Harry Jones. She had coaxed away from cook the sponge
cake that was destined to accompany the cream at dinner, and she had
triumphantly packed it into her lunch basket and shared it with the two
boys that day on the river bank where they cast their lines into the
waves. And she had come home with the end of her nose and the back of
her neck blistered red, her dress-skirt soiled and “brier-torn,” like
Maud Muller’s, and her pretty bare hands turned brown, while Max came
trailing behind her with his pantaloons rolled up to his knees, his
feet and limbs all yellowed with river mud, and a string of ridiculous
little shining minnows in his hands. It was bad for Max--it was utterly
disgraceful for that great girl, Aline, decided mamma and Effie. It
was a case that called for punishment, more especially as Aline could
not even be induced to repentance for her fault. She insisted that she
had not meant any harm and that she had done nothing wrong. She could
not be brought to see her error in the light that her mamma wished her
to see it in. So Mrs. Rodney, deeming this an extreme case, resorted
to extreme measures. She knew that Aline had set her heart on the
picnic in Walnut Grove--therefore she kept her away to meditate on her
misdeeds, and, if possible, to win her to repentance. She even dared
hope that under the stress of such punishment Aline might be brought to
promise “never to do so any more.”
But, after all, she had been sorry to punish her bright Aline so
hardly. She thought about it at the picnic. It rather damped her
pleasure in the gay and festive scene. She told herself that if Aline
was brought to a proper state of submission she would make it up to
her. She had kept the girl back somewhat, deeming her childish and
unformed. She would lengthen her dresses now, put up her careless,
girlish ringlets, and let her take her place in Chester society as a
grown-up young lady. Perhaps the importance of the change might thrust
dignity, as it were, upon the willful girl.
She confided her plans to Effie when she could get her away for a
moment from the knot of admirers who always surrounded the pretty Miss
Rodney. Effie coincided with her mother. She was too secure in the
consciousness of her own beauty to be jealous of her younger sister’s
charms, and she thought that it was quite time for Aline to give over
childish ways.
So they went home sorry for Aline’s long day of confinement, and full
of kindly intentions toward her, eager to hear of her repentance,
and to give her the kiss of pardon; and they found her place vacant,
her chair empty. They were full of incredulous dismay at first. They
thought it must be one of her practical jokes, and that she would
return to them presently full of glee over the fright she had given
them, and eager to hear how they had passed the day from whose
pleasures she had been ruthlessly debarred.
In the meantime, they were full of wonder over the way in which the
runaway had escaped from her room. The little chamber formed a small
wing of itself on the left side of the cottage. It had three windows,
one of which looked down upon the front of the street, another into
the small, brick-paved back yard, and the third into the beautiful,
neglected garden of Delaney House. It was quite impossible, they
thought, that Aline could have escaped through either of these
second-story windows unless she had made a rope from the sheets of her
bed. But the downy little nest where Aline rested her fair form nightly
was undisturbed in its snowy order. She had certainly not escaped that
way, but had gone through the door, and the Rodneys were fain at first
to accuse the woman whom they had left in charge of connivance at her
freedom.
Cook denied the accusation sturdily, and, having a good reputation for
veracity, no one presumed to doubt her vehement asseverations.
The mystery thickened. They discussed the possibility of Aline having a
skeleton-key to the door, and inclined to that belief. In no other way
could they account for her absence.
Night fell; and now, indeed, they began to grow alarmed. Aline was
known to be an arrant little coward in the dark. Her little feet would
have carried her flying homeward long before night overtook her.
“She has gone to some of the neighbors,” Mrs. Rodney suggested, and her
husband and little Max set out to see.
She was not found at any of the neighbors. She did not come home that
night, nor for many another succeeding night. It grew into a most
absorbing mystery, the strange disappearance of a young girl from her
home. It was not a matter of local interest merely, but of general.
From the local papers the item was copied into the papers all the
country over. It excited a great interest and sympathy. It became one
of the sensations of the day. Search was made far and near. Personals
appeared in the newspapers; the largest rewards Mr. Rodney could afford
were offered for his daughter’s return. He was half mad with cruel
anxiety; he hurried hither and thither in search of the lost one.
But, in all his grief and anxiety, in all his suspicions, no warning
instinct ever prompted him to look into his neighbor’s house.
It was the strangest thing that had ever happened in Chester. In the
pretty quiet town no such sensation had ever been heard of before.
A young girl locked into her room in the safe sanctuary of home had
disappeared in the strangest manner, and not the slightest clew could
be found to the mystery. Add to this that the missing girl had been
a general favorite, loved for her winning ways, and admired for her
beauty, and you may form some idea of how Aline Rodney was missed and
mourned.
The panic only became greater as days went by, and there came no
tidings of her fate. People were frightened. Young girls shivered in
their rooms by day and by night. What if a like fate should befall them?
Mrs. Rodney’s grief and remorse were extreme. The thin crust of pride
and dignity melted around her heart, and she realized that she had been
hard and stern to the lost one. She blamed herself as the cause of
Aline’s flitting, and her self-reproach was most bitter. When proud,
hard natures melt, no one can calculate the effect. Mrs. Rodney’s
sorrow and remorse completely prostrated her. She became seriously
ill, and her physician declared that there was no telling how her low,
nervous fever would end, unless her terrible suspense could be broken
by news of her lost daughter.
Those were weary days for the Rodneys. Effie was wretched, her mother
ill, Mr. Rodney worn to a shadow, and little Max’s grief unceasing.
They began to realize what a sunbeam in the house had been the
bright-eyed girl whom they had blamed so often. Now, when she was worse
than dead to them, mamma and Effie began to realize her worth. Papa and
Max had known it all the while.
Two weeks had elapsed, and Effie was sitting by the bedside of her sick
mother one evening, when a stranger’s card was brought to her. She
looked at it in some surprise. “Dr. Anthony,” she read, slowly. “Why,
mamma, have you called a new physician?”
“No, I have not,” said Mrs. Rodney. “It is a stranger, dear. Go to him
quickly, please. Perhaps he brings us news.”
Her eyes grew bright with hope and excitement, and Effie’s heart beat
a trifle quicker, too. What if her mother’s surmise were true, and
they were about to hear news of Aline? She did not even stop for the
customary womanly peep into the mirror, but hastened down to the parlor
to meet the stranger.
CHAPTER XII.
A tall, decidedly handsome man rose to meet Effie as she glided into
the pretty little parlor with that stately grace that her admirers
called so queenly. He waited with a courteously bowed head for her to
address him.
She did so in a silvery-sweet voice, and with a slight blush.
“I am Miss Rodney, Dr. Anthony,” she said, glancing at the card which
she still held in her hand. “Papa is away from home, and mamma is quite
sick. Can I serve you in any way?”
His dark eyes rested on the beautiful, gentle face in uncontrollable
admiration a moment, then he said, in a clear manly voice:
“I have called in the vague hope of serving this afflicted family, Miss
Rodney.”
“In what way, sir?” inquired Effie, as she waved him back to his seat,
and sunk into one herself.
“In that calamity which has excited the sympathy and sorrow of the
whole country,” he answered, respectfully.
Effie’s heart gave a muffled throb of joy at the suggestive words.
“God bless you, sir, if you bring us any tidings of our dear Aline!”
she exclaimed. He saw that he had excited extravagant hope within her,
and said, hastily:
“Do not build too much upon my words, Miss Rodney. I do not wish to
deceive you. It may be but a vain quest upon which I am come, but some
facts in my possession I have thought best to lay before your father
in the vague hope that they might somehow lead to news of your lost
one.”
Seeing how much he had damped the springing hopes in her breast, he
said, anxiously:
“Miss Rodney, is there in your possession a photograph of your missing
sister?”
She could not understand why such a deep shadow fell over his frank,
manly face, as she answered:
“No, Dr. Anthony, my sister’s picture was never taken in her life.”
“That is most unfortunate,” he said. “I had counted so much upon her
picture.”
“I do not believe papa would like to have Aline’s picture published in
the papers. He shrinks from publicity,” said Effie, reservedly.
“You misunderstand me. I have no such intention,” said the young
physician. “Nothing is further from my thoughts, Miss Rodney. I
quite agree with your father that any unnecessary publicity is most
distressing. In the absence of Mr. Rodney, may I state my reasons to
you?”
“You may,” Effie answered.
“Thank you. I will try to do so,” he said. “In the first place, I
will say that I have lately seen a girl, under very distressing
circumstances, who answers to the published descriptions of your
missing sister.”
“When? Where?” exclaimed Effie, agitatedly. The young physician’s face
grew grave and perplexed.
“I can readily tell you when,” he answered; “but the strangest part of
the mystery is that I cannot tell you _where_.”
Miss Rodney’s fair face reflected the perplexity on his.
“Dr. Anthony, I do not understand you,” she said. “How can such a
thing be? You have seen her; but you cannot tell where. Pray, explain
yourself.”
“I am about to do so,” he answered. “Then you will readily understand
the seeming discrepancy in my statements.”
Effie bowed silently, and settled herself to listen. His frank,
handsome face, and quiet, earnest manner inspired her with confidence
in him, although he was a stranger whom, ten minutes ago, she had never
beheld. She was most anxious to hear what he could tell her of that
girl whose description answered to that of Aline.
She fixed her bright hazel-brown eyes upon his face with an earnestness
that Dr. Anthony found very fascinating.
“In order to be quite sure of dates,” he said, “I will ask you to tell
me that of Miss Aline’s disappearance.”
She named it quickly, and he exclaimed, with a sudden brightening of
his dark eyes:
“The dates correspond! Oh, how much I would give at this moment for the
counterfeit presentment of Miss Aline Rodney!”
In a moment he continued:
“I live at the little town of Maywood, some five miles distant from
this, Miss Rodney. I have practiced medicine there for several years,
and may say, without vanity, that I have built up quite a creditable
practice there and in the surrounding country--at least. I am always
busy.”
Effie bowed silently, and he went on:
“Some strange things happen to a physician in the course of his
practice, Miss Rodney. A mysterious thing happened to me on the night
of the date you mentioned just now.”
CHAPTER XIII.
Miss Rodney’s face was pale with emotion and anxiety. She hung eagerly
upon Dr. Anthony’s words.
“A mysterious thing,” he repeated. “I was closing my office at eleven
o’clock that night, preparatory to going home, when, in the darkness, a
stranger touched me upon the shoulder and said, in a muffled voice:
“‘Come with me at once, doctor. A lady needs your professional
services.’
“I am so used to being called out at night, Miss Rodney, that at first
I thought nothing of the request. I have ridden miles and miles on the
darkest nights through the peaceful country neighborhood hereabouts
without fear or molestation. So I said, carelessly to the man, whose
face I did not see clearly by reason of the extreme darkness: ‘Is it a
long distance? If not, I will walk, as my horse has been put away for
the night.’
“‘A matter of two miles or more,’ he answered, in the same low, muffled
voice in which he had first addressed me. ‘But my buggy is here at the
corner. Come with me and I will send you back. We have no time to lose.’
“So careless and fearless had I become in my career as a physician,
that I felt no alarm at his proposition. I carelessly assented, and
accompanied him to the corner, where I found a fine horse and buggy
waiting for us as he had said. He sprung in and he drove rapidly to the
outskirts of the town, when I, being weary of the silence maintained by
my companion, inquired the name of the person I was called to attend.
“To my surprise, the man replied in a cool, quiet voice, as if there
were nothing strange in what he was saying:
“‘That is a secret, Dr. Anthony, and must remain so.’
“Nothing like this had ever occurred to me in my professional
experience. I was indignant at this answer. I did not choose to bestow
my medical skill upon a patient who thus withheld confidence from me. I
told him so rather hotly.
“My companion, who was evidently a gentleman, laughed easily.
“‘Tut, tut,’ he said, ‘all physicians can relate instances of
mysterious cases.’ This was one of them. My services were needed,
and no harm would befall me, while at the same time I should be most
liberally rewarded, but the lady’s name must remain unknown to me,
as also the place of her residence. ‘For which reason, doctor,’ he
continued, in the same cool, quiet, gentlemanly voice, and producing
a large handkerchief, ‘I shall be compelled to blindfold you for the
balance of the distance.’
“His cool masterful tone irritated me exceedingly. I answered quickly
that I would not submit to such terms--that he must employ other advice
for the case; I would not attend.
“‘I will have nothing to do with a mystery,’ I said. ‘All must be fair
and open, or I will not attend.’
“He laughed at first, and tried to persuade me; but, finding that I was
resolute, and insisted on being let out of the buggy, he became angry.
“‘Your unreasonable mood forces me to a rash alternative,’ he said. ‘I
am obliged to compel your obedience.’
“I felt the cold muzzle of a pistol pressed against my cheek. I was
myself unarmed and powerless.
“‘Attempt to get out, and you are a dead man!’ he said. ‘You have no
resource but to obey me. If you are a wise man, you will permit me to
tie this bandage over your eyes, and to go on without further parley.’
“I am not a coward, Miss Rodney--I hope you will not form that opinion
of me,” continued the handsome young physician, “but I flatter myself
that I possess a modicum of common-sense. I found myself in the power
of a desperate man, and I considered that my best plan would be to
yield to his will; besides, there was a spice of romance in the affair
that appealed to the imaginative part of me. I made a virtue of
necessity, and accompanied my stern companion, though I must confess
that my anger rose when he bound the handkerchief about my unwilling
eyes. The darkness of the night was so dense that he might have spared
me that inconvenience.”
Effie listened, with her heart upon her lips, for him to come to the
story of the mysterious patient. It was Aline, of course--Aline, ill or
dying! How terrible it seemed! It cast a strange, new light upon the
mystery of her disappearance.
“I went with him; but I am quite sure that he deceived me regarding the
distance,” said Dr. Anthony. “Instead of being two miles, I am certain
that we drove five, at least, before his fleet-footed horse came to a
stop. Then I was helped from the buggy, and led up a flight of what
seemed, from the sound of my feet upon them, to be wide, marble steps.”
CHAPTER XIV.
The speaker paused to take breath a minute, and then resumed:
“A heavy door opened to admit us into the wide, dimly lighted hallway
of what must have been a large, aristocratic mansion. Here the
eccentric stranger removed the handkerchief from my eyes and coolly
clapped a mask upon my face instead, with the odd remark:
“‘You will have need for your eyes here, but none for your features,
Dr. Anthony, as I do not wish my patient ever to recognize you abroad.
Therefore, I request that you wear this mask.’
“I acceded to this polite request of course, you know, Miss Rodney,
not being in a condition to refuse,” said the young man, with a sly
sense of the humorous, “and then I saw beside us a neat-looking elderly
woman with a lamp in her hand, evidently a nurse. She led up a wide,
beautiful stairway of polished walnut, along another hall, and so into
a lady’s room--the most beautiful room I ever saw!” said Dr. Anthony,
with enthusiasm.
“It was large and airy, and hung with rich blue silk and white lace.
The furniture was rosewood, upholstered in blue silk, and on the marble
mantel and the ivory brackets against the wall were vases of flowers,
statuettes, and expensive _bric-à-brac_. You see, I made good use of my
eyes when I was given leave, Miss Rodney,” said the physician, with a
smile.
“Yes, doctor, but now about your mysterious patient?” breathed Effie,
anxiously.
“Yes, now I am coming to that, for I am afraid the preliminaries have
sadly wearied your patience,” he said. “There was a rosewood bed in the
center of the room, Miss Rodney, draped in rich blue silk and canopied
with snowy lace in the richest pattern, and among the lace-trimmed
pillows lay a girl--a corpse, I thought at first, for she was deathly
white and still, her eyes were closed, and the white garments about her
breast were all dabbled with blood.”
Miss Rodney shuddered and grew very pale.
“Oh, poor little Aline!” she sighed. “Tell me how she looked, Dr.
Anthony.”
“She was very young. She looked almost child-like,” said Dr. Anthony.
“She had a fair round face with a dimpled chin and beautiful features.
Her hair was dark and curling, her brows and lashes were jetty black
and of wonderful beauty. Her eyes, much to my surprise when she
recovered from her swoon, were dark, rich blue, like wet violets. I had
thought they would be black, before she opened them.”
“It was my sister!” cried Effie, in tones of conviction. “You have
described her very accurately.”
“I went up to her side, and looked down at the beautiful, silent face,”
he went on; “and the stranger, who, I have forgotten to say before,
wore a thick, heavy mask upon his face, followed me. In a moment he
turned to the nurse, angrily:
“‘How is this?’ he said. ‘I told you to put a mask upon her face!’
“‘And so I did, sir, but her protracted swoon so frightened me, that I
removed it to give her air, and forgot to replace it. I hope there is
no harm done, sir.’
“He muttered something angrily, then stepped quickly back, for at
that moment the wounded girl opened her eyes and flashed them around
the room. They fell on the face of the nurse, and she cried out, in a
startled tone:
“‘Who are you, and where am I?’
“She spoke no more, for my strange guide bent over her and whispered
something in her ear, and she relapsed into silence. He then directed
me to examine her wound, and I obeyed him.”
“Was--was it fatal?” asked poor Effie.
“No, although it had been meant for that,” he replied. “It was a
knife-wound, and had been meant for the heart, but glanced aside and
inflicted a flesh wound instead. I bathed and dressed the wound, but
before I finished, she had again relapsed into unconsciousness.”
“And you learned nothing?” sighed Effie.
“Nothing,” he answered. “Before I came away, the unknown stranger
drew off his coat and showed me a deep, jagged cut on his own arm. I
bathed and dressed his wound also, was rewarded for my services by a
twenty-dollar gold piece, and after submitting to the blindfold again,
was driven to my home by my mysterious employer. That is the end of
my story, Miss Rodney. Does it throw any light on the mystery of your
sister’s disappearance?”
“None, Dr. Anthony. It only deepens the mystery,” she answered,
mournfully.
“And yet it is in some sort a clew,” he said, thoughtfully. “If
the young girl I saw is your sister it proves that she is confined
somewhere within a radius of five miles from Maywood. Have you thought
of that, Miss Rodney?”
“If the girl you saw is really my sister, it proves also that she is a
prisoner somewhere,” Effie said, musingly. “It places the mystery in
a new aspect altogether. We had thought that Aline, offended by her
punishment that day, had run away merely to annoy us, and that, when a
sufficient time had elapsed, she would return to us again. Can it be
that she was abducted and imprisoned?”
“It looks that way,” said Dr. Anthony. “At any rate, I have thought it
best to come here and tell my story. You understand now why I wished
to see a picture of the missing girl. I could then have told most
certainly whether the girl whose strange wound I dressed was your
sister.”
“It is most unfortunate that we have never had a picture of Aline; but
your description corresponds exactly with her appearance,” declared
Effie.
“She was very beautiful. Even if I never see her again, I shall never
forget her charming face,” said Dr. Anthony.
He rose to go as he spoke, and the look of respectful admiration he
bent on Effie’s sweet, sad face seemed to mutely declare that he would
never forget her, either. Her long lashes drooped, and a delicate blush
rose to her cheek, reminding him that his thoughts were too plainly
expressed in his eyes. She thanked him in sweet, courteous phrases for
his information, and half timidly requested him to call again, and
recount his strange story to her father.
Dr. Anthony very willingly promised to do so. He was very sorry for the
afflicted family, and very much interested in the hazel-eyed Effie.
She, on her part, was vaguely interested in him.
“The most interesting young man I ever met,” she mentally decided,
recalling the handsome face and clear, frank voice, after he had gone
away.
She went back to her mother’s bedside, and related Dr. Anthony’s story.
Mrs. Rodney was greatly excited. Aline’s mysterious absence assumed a
new phase. She was full of wonder and dismay and grief.
“My dear little Aline! She may be dead ere this!” was the burden of her
grief, and it became so hysterical and violent during the long hours
of the night that Effie regretted she had told her the strange story.
She was relieved when her father came home next morning from another
fruitless quest. She felt that the charge of her grief-stricken mother
was becoming too heavy for her. No one could soothe Mrs. Rodney’s
bitter grief but her patient, though almost distracted husband.
CHAPTER XV.
Mr. Rodney did not wait for Dr. Anthony to return to Chester. His
anxiety was too great. He drove over to Maywood in the early morning to
see the young physician.
He heard the whole story over again. It impressed him strangely. He
believed with the doctor that the mysterious wounded girl was Aline
herself.
“I have been haunted by that belief ever since I heard the story of
your daughter’s disappearance,” he said. “I feared you might think me
foolish or presuming, but I could not rest until I had gone over to
Chester and told you my story.”
“For which kindness I am most grateful to you,” said Mr. Rodney,
grasping his hand cordially. “Who knows but that this information will
lead to my daughter’s recovery?”
He found the young doctor most intelligent and agreeable. He consulted
with him as to the best method of following up this strange discovery.
Both agreed that it would be well to confide the matter to a skillful
detective. Mr. Rodney sent to New York at once for the most noted one
in the service.
They agreed that they would keep the strange story of the doctor’s
experience a profound secret from the public. If once it became
publicly known, it might put the villain on his guard. He might hustle
Aline off to another place.
When Mr. Rodney went home, he gave Dr. Anthony a most cordial
invitation to come over to Chester and visit him. The doctor was not
slow to avail himself of the courtesy. It was the beginning of a most
pleasant friendship.
Perhaps hazel-eyed Effie had something to do with it. It is certain
that she enjoyed the non-professional visits of the Maywood physician
as much as was consistent with the trouble and anxiety she was
enduring. And Dr. Anthony certainly found the fair, dignified young
lady very fascinating. He came often to the dainty little cottage
home that nestled in the shadow of the tall trees and pretentious
towers of Delaney House. He was so gay and cheerful, so determinately
hopeful, that he sometimes wiled Effie to a momentary forgetfulness
of their loss and sorrow. He made little Max fond of him. He pleased
the nervous, fretful, invalid mother still prostrated by her grief and
remorse. His even, sunny temper and handsome face always brightened the
cottage parlor when they shone in it. All claimed him as a friend and
comforter.
The New York detective came down promptly to Chester. He was quite
willing to undertake the case. He flattered himself that he should
unravel the mystery.
They showed him the little end room from whence Aline had been so
strangely spirited away. He examined it with a great interest. He
stood at each of the three windows in turn, and gazed curiously out.
The front one gave him a perspective of a quiet little village street.
The back one looked out on a brick-paved yard, and a tiny kitchen. The
end one presented a more inviting prospect. It showed him the green
and flowery garden of Delaney House. The quiet, rustic seats, the cool
spray of the fountains, the deep shade of the trees, the delicate
fragrance of the flowers, all inspired one with a sense of peace and
rest; and the master of all this wealth of summer sweetness, as he
walked among the quiet graveled paths, did not inspire one with any
suspicion. One envied him, rather, he looked so calm and peaceful, as
though the cares and sorrows of the weary world touched him not, hidden
as it were, behind his high stone walls and grim, forbidding towers,
with their close-shut windows.
Yes, here he still walked daily, as on that day when willful Aline
had gone to her fate along a path as rosy and flower-strewn as ever
delighted the eyes of heedless youth. His dark, grave face gave no
hint of the secret he held, and expressed no sympathy nor sorrow for
the shadow that had fallen on his neighbor’s house. He appeared calm,
grave, indifferent to all things but himself.
The New York detective studied the house and the man with a good deal
of interest. He asked questions about them, but he stood well back from
the window, and did not permit Mr. Delaney, by any chance, to observe
his curious glances. He was very cautious.
Mr. Rodney was a man of quite acute perceptions. He quickly saw where
Mr. Lane’s suspicions were insensibly drifting.
“Your suspicions are tending in quite the wrong direction,” he said:
“Dr. Anthony is quite sure that the house where he saw the wounded girl
is quite five miles distant from here.”
It was a curious yet so natural mistake that all had drifted insensibly
into it. Dr. Anthony had said that he was carried at least five miles
from Maywood to the mysterious mansion. No one had reflected that
Maywood was five miles distant from Chester, or if they had it did not
connect itself at all with the mystery of Aline’s disappearance. No one
except the keen-witted detective dreamed for an instant of connecting
Delaney House with the mystery, and his suspicions were at once
diverted by his employer’s confident remark. He turned his attention at
once to another subject, and gave up the vague idea. Delaney House was
destined to hold its secret yet.
“With one black shadow at its feet,
The house thro’ all the level shines,
Close-latticed to the brooding heat,
And silent in its dusty vines;
And ‘Ave, Mary,’ was her moan,
‘Madonna, sad is night and morn;’
And ‘Ah,’ she sung, ‘to be all alone,
To live forgotten and love forlorn.’”
Mr. Lane gave his closest attention and best talents to the solution of
the mystery, and he felt perfectly confident of success. When had he,
the most able detective in the great city of New York, failed in any
undertaking? It was not likely he should be foiled here in this little
country town.
He settled himself at the pretentious hotel as an invalid gentleman
in search of health. He had his own private buggy sent down from the
city, and he made solitary excursions into the surrounding country in
quest of the Goddess of Health, as he pretended. Sometimes he varied
the monotony of these trips by going afoot. No one suspected his real
reasons for being in the town. He passed everywhere for that which he
represented himself to be.
Weeks came and went, and he was no nearer the solution of the mystery,
no nearer the finding of Aline than when he first came to Chester. A
baffled feeling began to grow upon him, but still he would not own
himself defeated, would not give up the quest.
It was quite impossible that he should fail, he told himself, inspired
by the natural self confidence of one who has always succeeded.
Some day he would be sure to find the aristocratic mansion with the
beautiful blue room where the wounded girl was hidden away from the
yearning hearts of those who loved and mourned her.
CHAPTER XVI.
Aline Rodney possessed a very quick and passionate temper. She had
been very injudiciously spoiled by her father, and very injudiciously
punished by her mother. The result showed itself in a willful
capricious temper that could not bear contradiction and restraint.
When Mr. Delaney firmly reiterated his assertion, that she should
never be permitted to leave Delaney House unless she solemnly pledged
herself to silence regarding her sojourn there, Aline’s young heart was
filled with the bitterest anger and rebellion. She was unaccustomed
to absolute control. Her mother’s efforts in that direction were weak
and fitful, her father’s love made him blind to the inherent obstinacy
of her nature. When Oran Delaney, strong and masterful as he was by
nature, undertook to dictate to this spoiled, petted child, he found
that he incurred a serious risk.
I am ashamed to record this of my heroine--such characters are expected
to realize our ideal of perfection--but she flew into a passion. She
scolded Mr. Delaney in the bitterest terms her sharp little tongue
could devise. She reproached him angrily, laying all the blame of her
presence in the house upon his broad shoulders, and utterly ignoring
her share in it. She was half-maddened by her sense of wrong and
injury, and when she found that all her remonstrances broke against his
strong, firm will, like water against a rock, she relapsed into violent
hysterics.
She was not your ideal of a heroine, reader, nor mine, nor Oran
Delaney’s! His proud lip curled, half in pity, half in scorn, at her
passionate ravings. He was not at all frightened by her anger. He said
to himself that it was the impotent, unreasonable anger of a child,
and that she had a decidedly shrewish temper; but at the same time he
could not help seeing how beautiful she was in her anger and spite.
Her blue eyes sparkled through the tears that filled them, a crimson
color glowed upon her cheeks. Her voice, even at its sharpest, trembled
with her sense of injury, and had a certain pathos that made it sound
musical. Her whole proud spirit was aroused. She defied him to carry
out his assertion, and then, in unreasoning contradiction of herself,
she declared that she would remain at Delaney House until her bright
eyes were dim, and her dark hair gray, before she would take the oath
of silence he demanded of her. She would never submit to such tyranny
and injustice.
If Aline had been well and strong, Mr. Delaney would have laughed at
her anger; but he grew apprehensive now. It was not well for her to
excite herself. He regretted his precipitancy in acquainting her with
his intentions. He wished that he had temporized with her.
“But how was I to know that she would take it so hardly?” he muttered
to himself.
He was greatly relieved when Mrs. Griffin suddenly put in an
appearance. She was honestly aghast at the state of the patient, and,
while hurriedly mixing a composing draught, she gave loud utterance to
her anxiety.
“This will be the death of her! A fever will be sure to set in. I
cannot imagine what you have said to excite her so much, Mr. Delaney.
It was very imprudent.”
“I did not know she would take it so hard,” he muttered, glancing
uneasily at Aline, whose angry reproaches had subsided into low,
smothered sobs and heart-broken wails.
“You had better leave her to me, now,” she said. “I can coax her to
take this medicine, perhaps, when you are gone.”
He went up to Aline, and held out his hand.
“I am sorry you think so hardly of me,” he said. “Try to forgive me,
won’t you, Aline?”
“I will never forgive you,” Aline, cried out, resentfully, as she
pushed the offered hand away. And Mr. Delaney went away, then, without
another word or look.
But Mrs. Griffin gave her a glance of lively reproach.
“For shame, Miss Rodney!” she cried. “You might treat Mr. Delaney
civilly, at least, considering that he saved your life.”
“When?” demanded Aline, desisting from her sobs in sheer surprise.
“There, now! I always said I had a long tongue. Mr. Delaney told me not
to tell,” muttered the nurse.
“When did he save my life?” demanded the girl, in her pretty,
peremptory way.
“Don’t worry, Miss Rodney, that was a mere slip of the tongue, just
now,” said Mrs. Griffin, as she approached with the wine-glass of
medicine.
“I shall not take the medicine unless you tell me what you meant by
saying that Mr. Delaney saved my life,” declared Aline, coolly.
“Won’t you? Then I shall have to call him back to pour it down your
throat, as he did last night,” threatened the nurse, vexed at the
willfulness of her patient.
“You will do no such thing, for I shall immediately tell him what you
said, and ask him if it is true,” declared the perverse girl; “but,
if you tell me the truth, I shall not tell him that you betrayed his
confidence.”
Mrs. Griffin looked thoroughly vexed, but seeing what a headstrong
nature she had to deal with, she meekly capitulated.
“If excitement weren’t so hurtful to you, I’d let you do your worst, my
spoiled young lady,” she said; “but, for your own sake, and to save you
from another fit of temper, I’ll tell you the truth. Mr. Delaney saved
you from that _creature_ that assaulted you yesterday. She had already
wounded him upstairs, but he pursued her, and reached the parlor just
in time to prevent her from giving you a second stab with her dagger;
and if she had succeeded in that second attempt, you would have bidden
good-by to this world, my pretty one!”
Aline shuddered at the emphatic tone. Mrs. Griffin held out the
medicine to her, and she swallowed it meekly, without a word of
remonstrance. Her pretty face, still flushed from her anger and tears,
looked very grave.
“I am very glad he saved my life,” she said, after a minute,
thoughtfully. “I should not like to die yet. I am too young, and the
world is too lovely.”
“As well die young as old,” growled the grim nurse. “One is saved a
deal of pain by it.”
“You are an old croaker, like Mr. Delaney,” Aline exclaimed,
impatiently. “I dare say I shall be as hopeful and happy and as much in
love with life when I am old as I am now!”
“Let us hope so,” said the old woman, dryly; then she added, with some
spirit, “As for Mr. Delaney being an old croaker, Miss Rodney, he is
not old, let me tell you. He is only a little past thirty. I nursed him
when he was a baby.”
“Did you, really, Mrs. Griffin? How strange!” cried Aline, trying to
realize the fact that Mr. Delaney had ever been a baby. She looked
at Mrs. Griffin meditatively a moment, and, as a vision of the tall,
handsome man in bibs and long skirts came before her mind’s eye, she
burst out laughing.
“Well, I never saw such a child--crying one moment, laughing the next!”
cried Mrs. Griffin, offended at her levity.
“Don’t be angry, nurse. I was only laughing at the idea of that stern,
dark man ever being a baby. Tell me, did you really nurse him? And was
he a pretty baby? And was his mamma very fond of him?” cried volatile
Aline.
“His mamma died when he was born, Miss Rodney. She was as young as you
are, I believe, but she had a vast deal more dignity than you have,”
Mrs. Griffin said, reprovingly.
“I have no dignity at all. I have heard that every day of my life, and
I am eighteen years old,” said Aline, rather soberly; “and this poor
young mother who died so sadly, Mrs. Griffin, was she a pretty girl?”
“How you do fly from one subject to another, miss!” cried Mrs. Griffin.
“Yes, she was very beautiful. But, my dear, I don’t think that Mr.
Delaney would like for me to discuss his family affairs with a
stranger. Suppose you shut your eyes and go to sleep. You have had too
much excitement already.”
Aline could be a very sweet, obedient child when it pleased her to be
so. She relapsed into one of those gracious moods now. She nestled her
dark head down upon the pillow and obediently closed her eyes.
But she was not asleep, although the grim nurse “laid that flattering
unction to her soul.” She was busily thinking. “So Mr. Delaney saved my
life,” she was saying to herself. “Why did he not tell me? I might not
have been quite so abominable to him then. What a little wretch he must
think me! I am sorry his mother died when he was a baby! I don’t think
I should have had a very pleasant life if my mamma had died like that,
even though she scolds me and punishes me sometimes.”
She was unconsciously penitent for all her rudeness and anger toward
Mr. Delaney. He had saved her life. That was a great boon in Aline’s
eyes. She was young and fair, and life was very sweet.
“I should not have been quite so bad if only I had known,” she repeated
to herself. “I will be kinder to him after this. I do not want him to
think me a little heathen. But he should not keep me here against my
will. He must know that I want to go home!”
While she lay thus apparently sleeping, but in reality busily thinking,
the nurse watched her anxiously. She believed that the girl was asleep,
but she did not like to see the bright, warm color that began to burn
fitfully on the fair cheek beneath the long, dark fringe of the lashes.
“I do not like the look of it,” she muttered, shaking her gray head,
ominously. “’Twill be a mercy if fever doesn’t set in after all that
passion she was in. And if it does, he daren’t bring the physician
again. The risk will be too great.”
She started when the blue eyes unclosed presently and looked up into
her face. They were unnaturally dark and bright.
“Send Mr. Delaney to me,” she said, “I am not going to tell him what
you said, nurse, oh, no! Only send him here.” He came, and when he saw
the hot flush on her cheeks, and the brilliant light in her eyes he was
frightened. They were unnatural.
Aline put out her dainty, dimpled hand to him.
“I was very rude to you,” she said, simply. “Will you pardon me, Mr.
Delaney?”
He clasped the small hand gently and assured her that he was not
offended in the least. He knew that he had given her great cause to be
angry with him.
“Still I need not have been such a little wretch,” she said,
“and--and--I punished myself when I would not take the flowers. I
wanted them very much! Will you give them to me now?”
He brought the little basket to her, and she buried her hot face among
the cool, dewy leaves of the roses. She began to talk to them in a
childish whisper, that suddenly grew into a loud, meaningless, vacant
babble. Oran Delaney looked anxiously at Mrs. Griffin.
“Great Heaven!” he said, “what ails her? What does it mean?”
She shook her gray head gloomily.
“It is fever! I feared as much,” she said. “The excitement was too
great in her weak, wounded condition. Heaven only knows how it will
end.”
It was fever indeed. Aline’s reckless indulgence of her wrath had
wrought the worst possible results. Fever and delirium had set in. The
wound which they had thought so lightly of at first now threatened to
terminate fatally.
“If she dies, it will be I who have killed her. I was a fool; I was mad
surely when I told her all I did,” said Oran Delaney to himself.
The fever set in high, and strong, and violent. It was pitiful to hear
the sweet, high-pitched voice raving of the dear ones from whom she was
cruelly separated. As she fought the hard battle between the opposing
forces of life and death she called upon them all to help her--mamma,
papa, Max and Effie, all those dearly beloved ones who were so near and
yet so cruelly far.
CHAPTER XVII.
The long, sweet summer days glided past into September. Already the
parti-colored leaves of autumn began to be whirled through the air
by the cool sweet breeze. There were hints of autumn coolness in the
breeze as it sighed among the trees in the little country town of
Chester.
Those summer days from July until September had been full of suspense
and sorrow to the Rodneys. Each day had been full of disappointment
and harrowing suspense. Each day had only added to the impenetrable
mystery that hung around the fate of the lost daughter. The New York
detective, baffled for once in his life, had given up the case and
returned to New York. In all his expeditions, in all his search, he had
failed to find the house with the marble steps, the house that held
the mysterious blue-and-white room where the beautiful wounded girl
was hidden away. Mr. Lane was moody and irritable over his failure. He
had conscientiously tried to succeed in finding Aline, and he could
not understand why he had failed. After the fashion of many other
unsuccessful people he sought some one else to lay the blame upon,
and Dr. Anthony’s broad shoulders were selected for that purpose. Mr.
Lane sarcastically denied the existence of the blue room, the masked
villain, and the wounded girl. He did not hesitate to declare that Dr.
Anthony had dreamed the whole thing.
Dr. Anthony was not shaken in his convictions by the great detective’s
incredulity. But he was very good-natured. He admitted that he had told
a startling tale. He gave any one who chose full liberty to disbelieve
it. For himself he was puzzled, vexed, chagrined at his own self, for
he had made some private excursions on his own account and he had
failed as ignominiously as Mr. Lane in finding the mysterious house
and the mysterious maiden. It chagrined him to think that he had been
so cleverly blinded, but he never once subscribed to the detective’s
theory that he had been fooled by an hallucination of the brain.
“My imagination is not so brilliant as you would give me credit
for,” he said, laughing. “A poet’s brain might produce such a vision
of peerless beauty off-hand, but not that of a prosaic physician.
It was not a dream, it was not an hallucination, it was a strange
reality. I shall assert that always, the whole world to the contrary
notwithstanding.”
But although the great detective had grown incredulous over the story,
the Rodneys had not. They placed the most implicit faith in the doctor.
He remained their valued friend, and Chester saw more of him in those
days than Maywood. All his spare time, which did not really amount to
much, since he had a large and steadily increasing practice, was spent
at the little cottage home that nestled under the towers of Delaney
House--the great house of the town. Through those troublesome days and
nights he and Effie were learning the first tenses of that old, old
lesson ever new--to love.
Greatly to the surprise and joy of all, Mrs. Rodney had rallied from
her illness and was slowly convalescing. She was strong enough now to
be brought down into the pretty parlor every evening and rest upon
a reclining-chair while the ebb of talk flowed on around her, to
which she listened with languid interest. The town folks were very
sympathetic and social, deeming it a sort of duty to visit and comfort
the afflicted family. Some one or other dropped in every evening, so
that the Rodneys, whatever other sorrow they labored under, could not
complain of loneliness. But with the cool, short autumn evenings, and
as the loss of Aline Rodney grew an old, old story, other interests
began to usurp the place of the great sensation. Visitors grew less
frequent at the cottage. They preferred to linger at their own
firesides. It was only Dr. Anthony now who came every evening, if he
only had time to look in for ten minutes. Every face brightened at his
coming, every heart felt lighter for his words of cheer.
But once he had quite a whole evening at his disposal. He had been
visiting a patient near Chester, and as soon as he could he went to
the cottage, and putting his horse into the stable announced that he
had several hours to spend with his friends. All were pleased at the
prospect, for a dull drizzling rain had set in, and the evening had
promised to be lonely. More than once, as the wind sighed in the trees
and the rain pattered down upon the roof, had been recalled Bryant’s
appropriate lines:
“The melancholy days are come,
The saddest of the year.”
Dr. Anthony’s coming put quite a new face upon the evening. They
indulged in some little cheerfulness. They did not forget Aline, but
they tried to take some little comfort in their lives. It is impossible
to grieve always.
“We bear the blows that sever,
We cannot weep forever.”
Papa sat by the shaded reading lamp with a new book. Mamma was resting
in her low, reclining-chair, looking pale but pretty in her soft garnet
cashmere and the little lace cap on her wavy brown hair that began to
show some lines of gray since Aline had gone. Her idle white hands were
folded in her lap. They were mostly idle now. She had no heart to work,
but a gentle, pensive smile illumined her fair face this evening.
Effie had opened the long-disused piano and was singing softly, while
Dr. Anthony turned the leaves of her music. She wore a blue dress
and a late September rose in her soft braids of hair. Max had fallen
asleep on the sofa. The quiet repose of each figure, the pretty, simple
parlor, the autumn flowers in the vases, the low fire that burned
upon the hearth to dispel the chill of the rain, all made up a pretty
picture of home-comfort that had a very alluring appearance to the
passers-by, who chanced to glance through the unshuttered windows at
the scene. Effie’s song, too, as floated out upon the night air, was
very sweet and sad:
“Mother, now sing me to rest,
For the long, long day is done;
Fold me to sleep on thy breast
As the night folds up the sun.
“For my heart is heavy with fears.
And my feet are aweary with play;
Hide me from life’s lengthened years--
Fold me from weeping away.
“These flowers, so blessed and sweet,
I’ve gathered from far and from near;
I lay them all down at thy feet--
They are wet with many a tear.
“But, mother, now sing me to rest,
Take back the lone child, tired with playing;
Fold me to sleep on thy breast--
All the day long vainly straying.”
The soft hush of silence that fell as Effie’s voice died away was
broken by a shrill and piercing scream. Mrs. Rodney had sprung to her
feet with a strength no one had believed her possessed of. She stood
erect in the center of the floor, her slim forefinger pointed at the
window, her eyes wildly dilating, her face pale and agitated, while
shriek after shriek burst from her writhing lips:
“Aline! Aline! Aline!”
Every one turned to the spot indicated by that quivering forefinger.
Every eye beheld a wild white face with dark dilated eyes and streaming
hair, pressed for a moment against the window-pane. Then, while they
yet gazed, it was swiftly withdrawn and vanished in the darkness and
the falling rain like a phantom of the night.
Effie’s voice rang out wild and horror-stricken above her mother’s
piercing wails:
“A ghost! A ghost! Ah, now I know that our poor Aline is dead!”
Dr. Anthony stood for a moment like one rooted to the spot. He had
recognized on the instant the beautiful pale face of the mysteriously
wounded girl in the blue room. It was true, then, as he had believed.
She was no other than Aline Rodney.
He stood still a moment like one stupefied, then, turning suddenly,
rushed to the door, flung it open, and disappeared in the rain and
darkness of the wild autumn night.
Mr. Rodney, after one moment of dazed indecision, flung down his book
and rushed after him.
Effie flew to her mother’s arms.
“Oh, mamma, she is dead, Aline is dead--our dear, dear little Aline!”
she sobbed, in a passion of despair.
Little Max, awakened by the sound of their anguished voices, ran to
them and added his frightened voice to the tumult of the scene. Mrs.
Rodney continued to wail heart-brokenly.
“Aline! Aline! Aline! Oh, I am justly punished for my harshness to you!
It was your ghost looking in at the window just as you looked down at
me that day from the window of the room where I had locked you! Oh, my
child, my poor dead darling, forgive, forgive, forgive! Come back to
me, Aline, and tell me you will forgive me!” As if in answer to her
passionate appeals, the door was flung suddenly open again, and Mr.
Rodney and Dr. Anthony re-entered the room. They walked slowly, for
they carried a wet and dripping burden between them, which they laid
upon the floor at Mrs. Rodney’s feet.
CHAPTER XVIII.
It was the figure of a girl wrapped in a long black water-proof cloak,
whose concealing hood, fallen back from her features, showed them
pale as death, with a pallor more remarkable by contrast with her
night-black brows and lashes, and wet and dripping dark hair. It was
Aline Rodney’s face, but the eyes were closed, and the trance of deep
unconsciousness was upon her.
They knelt down beside her and loosened the dripping wet cloak from
her lissom, slender form. It was their own Aline, indeed. The slight
pretty figure was clothed in the simple blue gingham dress she had worn
the day they last beheld her. The same neat buttoned boots were on the
small pretty feet. They did not seem to have been worn or damaged in
all the time she had been away from home.
Mr. Rodney lifted her helpless figure in his arms and carried her to
the fire. He wrung the water from her dripping tresses and bathed her
face with restoratives that Effie hurriedly brought. In a very few
moments she revived. The dark-blue eyes fluttered open, she looked up
into her father’s face, she saw them all kneeling around her--mamma,
Effie, Max, all her dearly beloved ones, and a smile beamed on her face
and a cry of thankfulness broke from her lips.
“Oh, papa, oh, mamma, am I really home again? I am so glad, so glad! I
can scarcely realize it!”
They half smothered her with kisses and caresses. They quite forgot Dr.
Anthony standing apart, a happy, sympathizing, though silent spectator.
Mrs. Rodney took her restored daughter in her arms, her tears rained on
the beautiful white face.
“Oh, Aline, Aline,” she cried, “you must forgive me for punishing you
so! I thought it was for the best. I did not dream that anything would
go wrong. You are not angry now, are you, my dear? I have suffered so
much, my love. I have been ill. I have almost died of grief since you
went away; you must never leave me again.”
Aline returned the kisses and caresses with interest. She was quite
ready to forgive and forget.
“I will try to be a good girl hereafter, mamma dear, so that you need
never punish me again,” she said, wistfully and earnestly, and so
differently from the former willful, perverse girl, that Mrs. Rodney
was moved to sudden tears.
“Oh, my darling, where have you been?” she cried. “We have been looking
for you everywhere. We have even had a great detective down here from
New York trying to find you.”
Aline gazed silently into her mother’s face as she propounded these
eager questions. Her lips moved, but no sound came from them.
“We heard all about the mysterious blue room, and--and your dreadful
wound, and the man in the mask--and everything!” continued Mrs. Rodney,
frantically, “but look where we would, we could not find you, and we
were afraid you had been cruelly murdered. Oh, my darling, tell me
where you have been?”
“Where have you been, Aline?” echoed her father, with unconscious
sternness.
“Where?” cried Effie, with painful anxiety.
“Where?” asked Max, with boyish curiosity.
But to all of these anxious questions, and the more anxious look that
accompanied them, Aline Rodney answered not a word.
Her dark head still rested against her father’s breast, and one arm was
drawn lovingly around his neck. There was a smile of ineffable joy and
peace on her face, but at Mrs. Rodney’s reference to the little room
and her wound a look of wonder came into the dark-blue eyes.
“Mamma, who has told you all that?” she exclaimed.
“We have heard it all from Dr. Anthony, who dressed your wound that
night,” cried Mrs. Rodney. “Oh, Aline, who was it that wounded you so
cruelly, my dear? and where were you, and why did you not send for me?”
A look of sorrow and regret flashed over the sweet white face.
“Mamma, I cannot tell you,” answered Aline.
CHAPTER XIX.
They gazed at her in amazement. What was this? Aline not to tell where
she had been these three months! What could she possibly mean?
“Aline, darling, you do not perhaps understand your mother. She is
asking you where you have been. You must tell her, my child,” said Mr.
Rodney, gently.
Aline answered him in the same words:
“Papa, I cannot tell her.”
Something very like anger came momently into Mr. Rodney’s kind eyes
as he looked down into the sweet young face that lay nestled lovingly
against his arm.
“No more willfulness, Aline,” he said, almost sternly. “You have run
away from us and caused us a great deal of anxiety and sorrow. You have
almost broken my heart, and your mother has been near to death’s door.
You do not deserve that we should receive you back with so much love
and forgiveness. But now that we have done so, you must be frank and
explicit with us. You must tell us where you have hidden yourself so
securely from us while we have been seeking you everywhere at so great
an expense and trouble, to say nothing of our sorrow and anxiety.”
“Papa, it does not matter where I have been so that you have me back
again safe and secure,” cried simple Aline.
She could not understand the dark frown that clouded his brow.
“It matters everything,” he declared. “What new whim possesses you,
Aline, that you should deny us thus? Do you not suppose that we should
be anxious over your whereabouts after hearing all that we have done?”
“I cannot understand who has told you so much, papa,” said the girl in
wonder.
Mr. Rodney made a sign to Dr. Anthony. He came forward into the range
of Aline’s vision.
“Doctor,” said Mr. Rodney, “do you recognize my daughter as the wounded
girl whom you attended in the mysterious blue room?”
Aline gazed in wonder at the strange face as it looked down upon her.
She rather liked its expression, it was so cheery and handsome, with
its brown eyes, brown mustache, regular features, and expression of
good nature.
He looked steadily and admiringly at the beautiful young face.
“I could swear to her identity,” he said, firmly. “It is the face of
the wounded girl in the mysterious blue room.”
“I have never seen you before,” cried Aline. “How do you know these
things which you assert?”
He smiled. Aline could find no fault with that smile. It was so kind
and reassuring. He answered, pleasantly:
“You have never seen me, Miss Aline, because I wore a mask when I
dressed your wound that night. But I remember your face distinctly.”
He turned to Mr. Rodney. “May I tell her the story of that night?” he
asked.
Mr. Rodney answered, “Yes.”
Aline lay listening silently, with dilated eyes, to his strange story.
“I was full of sympathy for you,” he said. “I felt quite sure that
there was something wrong. I did not like the strangeness of it all. I
have tried again and again to find your strange prison, that I might
rescue you from your bondage. I have been your friend ever since that
night. If any one has maltreated you, Miss Aline--if you have been
detained in that strange house against your will, tell me where to find
the wretch, and I will punish him for you.”
“You are very kind, but I have nothing to say,” Aline answered, in a
low voice of unconscious regret.
He looked at her in surprise.
“Do you mean to make a secret of it?” he asked her, in his clear, frank
way.
“Yes,” she answered, calmly, and looking straight into his face with
her blue, resolute eyes.
“But, my dear young lady, why should you do that?” he said, perplexed.
“That is my own affair,” she answered, with something of her old
imperious temper ringing in her voice. “My business cannot concern
you--a stranger. I consider that you are talking to me in a very
impertinent fashion.”
Mr. Rodney put his hand hastily over the willful red lips.
“Your temper is not improved by your sojourn away from us,” he said, in
a tone of marked displeasure. “Listen, Aline; this gentleman is not to
be treated as a stranger by you. He is a valued friend, and, moreover,
he is engaged to your sister Effie. He will be your brother, but I hope
you will never cause him as much anxiety as you have done the rest of
us.”
Aline put out her white hand frankly to the doctor.
“I congratulate you,” she said. “Effie is the dearest girl in the
world!”
“So I think,” said Dr. Anthony, frankly; adding, gayly, “I think a
great deal of you, too, Miss Aline, since but for you I might never
have seen your sister!”
They all laughed. Aline made up her mind that he would be a charming
brother-in-law.
“I should say that my running away has proved quite advantageous to the
family,” said she archly, as she kissed the blushing Effie.
She thought that every one would agree with her. She could not
understand why they all looked so grave. She had been brought up so
simply and innocently in this quiet country town she had no knowledge
of evil.
“Why do you all look so grave?” said she, pettishly. “If you aren’t
glad to see me, perhaps I had better go back where I came from.”
“Where _did_ you come from, Aline?” exclaimed her father.
“You dear, curious old papa, I shan’t tell you!” replied Aline, with
her merry laugh that sounded like music.
“You are jesting, Aline, but it is not an appropriate subject for
a joke,” said her father. “Come, dear, I do not like to be kept in
suspense. I am waiting to hear why you ran away from us, and where you
went.”
She lifted her head from his arm, and looked up into his face with her
bright, wide-open eyes. She saw that he was not jesting, that he was
in intense earnest. She was inclined to resent his curiosity, as she
termed it to herself.
“Really, papa, I cannot imagine why you make such a fuss over it,” she
cried, with all the freedom of a spoiled child. “I should think you
already knew why I went away. It was because I didn’t wish to stay
in that hot, stuffy little chamber all day while you were enjoying
yourselves at the picnic. So I went out for a little while, I meant to
return directly, but--” she stopped short, and a sudden flush mounted
up to her white forehead.
“And why did you not return, Aline?” her mother cried out, quickly.
“What reasons did you have for staying?”
“I had the very strongest of reasons, mamma,” said the girl, and now
they saw that she was half laughing, half crying. “The very strongest
reasons, for I could not return.”
“But why, dear?” asked Effie, leaning on her lover’s arm, and looking
deeply interested.
“Ah, ‘why, why’!--how you all do ring the changes on that one word,”
cried Aline, in pretty petulance. “When I say that I do not mean to
tell you, why cannot you leave me alone?”
She was in the most palpable earnest. They all saw that. They did not
know what to say to her. She was so childlike, so innocent, she could
not understand why it was really so necessary that she should explain
her absence to them.
“Tell me one thing, Aline, my darling,” said her father, coaxingly.
“How did you get out of your locked room?”
She locked her white hands around his arm and looked up into his face.
There was a deep, warm color on her face, and her eyes were misty as if
with tears that she bravely held back.
“Papa, darling,” she said, with a sudden quiver in her fresh young
voice, “do not be angry with me, dear. Indeed, indeed, I do not want to
be naughty or willful or unkind to you. But I cannot tell you how I
left my room that day any more than I can tell you how I came back to
you to-night.”
There was a dead silence. Aline did not know how strangely her words
sounded to them all. She did not know that there was anything so
strange and reprehensible in her silence. She did not realize that she
was no longer a child, but a woman, every day of whose life should lie
fair and open like a spotless page to every eye.
Her father put her suddenly out of his arms into a chair by his side.
“Aline, you are tired to-night. Perhaps you will tell us your story
to-morrow?” he said, half inquiringly.
“Neither to-night nor to-morrow, papa,” she replied, in a vaguely
troubled tone, for she began to feel alarmed at their persistency. “No,
nor ever!”
“Do you realize what you are saying, Aline?” Mr. Rodney inquired, in a
strange, measured tone, and gazing deliberately into her grave, sweet,
perfectly frank blue eyes.
“Yes, papa, I realize it,” she replied, innocently.
“You will stain the whiteness of your life, of your young womanhood,
with a secret at whose nature no one can guess--you will deliberately
place yourself under a ban. You will not reveal this strange secret
even to your parents--do you mean all this, Aline?” he asked,
agitatedly.
“Yes, papa dear,” answered Aline.
CHAPTER XX.
Mr. Rodney gazed at his daughter for a few moments in blank silence.
It had suddenly dawned upon him that, with all her childish ways and
innocent young beauty, Aline was a woman in years.
“Standing with reluctant feet,
Where the brook and river meet,
Womanhood and childhood fleet.”
She was eighteen years old, but until to-night she had seemed like a
child. She had the frank heart of a child, and her mother had never put
her forward in society as a woman. The bloom had never been brushed
from her heart by a lover. She had never had a secret from her parents
in her life. She had been open, frank, and guileless, and singularly
confiding.
Her course now was utterly unlike Aline’s former ways--it was strange,
unfilial, and incomprehensible.
As he gazed at her silently now, the subtle change in her struck him
most forcibly. It existed not only in her mind, but her face.
Now that he looked at her more closely, he saw that Aline’s pretty
oval face had grown thin and pale; her eyes, always large and bright,
were more so than ever now. They were not the happy, careless eyes of
the child Aline. They had a brooding shadow in them--a new expression,
almost of pain. The red, smiling lips had acquired a certain gravity.
There was a soul looking out of the beautiful pale face now, illumining
its ethereal loveliness like the light behind a crystal vase.
“Some new experience of life has come to the child since she left us.
Her mind is expanded and developed into that of a woman,” he said to
himself.
With that thought came trouble, sorrow, and vague regret, mixed with
a certain horror of the mystery she persisted in throwing around the
months of her absence. Tremblingly he asked himself what did that
strange reserve mean? Was it the impenetrable veil thrown around a
disgraceful secret?
Disgraceful! He started and chided himself. Was he linking the thought
of disgrace with her, the child of his heart, his bright, beautiful
darling, who had always been his favorite child? No, no, sin could
never touch her, she was too pure, too true, too innocent. He gazed
anxiously into her sweet, blue eyes, and in spite of the vague shadow
he saw there, they were still frank, and open, and honest; she was
still as innocent as a child, although as lovely as a woman. Whatever
had come to her in those months of absence, deepening her experience of
life, it had not brought her any worldly knowledge. The thought that
any one could think hardly of her for that secret she was keeping had
never dawned upon her inner consciousness.
Mr. Rodney knew the world with all its evil ways, and he was a man of
strong intellect and strong impulses. He vaguely scented trouble if
Aline persisted in her strange course of conduct.
Her simple air as she answered his last question almost dismayed him.
What a child she was still in spite of her years!
“Look at me, Aline,” he said, gravely.
She turned her sweet, flower-like face obediently to his, and met his
stern inquiring look with the full gaze of her lovely violet eyes. The
full white lids and long, curling black lashes raised fully from them,
gave them an air of innocent candor and tender appealing. It was not
possible that sin or shame could stain the pure white soul looking out
at him from those splendid portals of light.
“Aline,” he said, abruptly, “I can scarcely credit the sincerity of
your refusal to speak. Perhaps you have not counted the cost.”
“The cost, papa?”
Honest amazement looked out at him from the dark-blue orbs.
“The cost,” he repeated, with stern brevity.
“But, papa, I do not understand you. I went away because mamma had
punished me, and I was vexed and did not mean to stay in all day.
And--and--I could not come back when I wished to do so. There were
reasons why I could not do so--all my own fault, remember, papa; and so
when I come at last--when I come back loving you all more dearly than
ever, and quite determined not to be naughty ever again, you look at me
so strangely, you talk to me so sternly. You ask me, have I counted the
cost? I do not understand you in the least, papa. What do you mean by
the cost?”
“The cost of your silence,” he said. “Do you not know that it is
strange, unnatural? Do you not know that I have a right to know where
you have been, my child?”
“Of course I know that, papa. And I have always told you everything,
haven’t I, papa?--haven’t I, mamma? I have never kept a secret from you
in all my life; but I thought that if I chose to keep this one, you
would not care--that it would not matter greatly. I do not see how it
could matter to any one! But you are angry, papa. Was that what you
meant by the _cost_? Shall you lock me in my room again if I refuse to
tell?”
He stared at her, stupefied. What could he say in the face of such
innocence and ignorance?
She rose from her seat impulsively, and threw herself down on her knees
before him, folding her white arms across his lap, gazing up into his
face earnestly and lovingly.
“Papa”--there was a wistful trouble in her voice, a sound as of unshed
tears, a patient humility--“papa, you shall punish me as much as you
please! I quite deserve it; I am willing to bear it. I will do anything
you say without a murmur. I cannot tell you where I have been; I cannot
tell you how I went away; but no one is to blame but myself. You know
how wild and willful I have been. I brought all this upon myself, and I
will bear the consequences. Punish me as you will, papa, only forgive
me and love me again!”
“Aline, this is the most sheer obstinacy,” he said, looking down at the
lovely tear-stained face, for two great sparkling tears had flashed
from under her dark lashes and rolled down upon her cheeks. “I do not
wish to punish you--I only wish to forgive you, but you make it too
hard for me by your willfulness. Tell me the truth, my darling.” He
bent down suddenly and clasped her in his arms with inexpressible love
and earnestness. “Tell me, Aline, where you have been; and if you have
suffered wrong at the hands of any one, I will find means to punish
that wrong in the most terrible fashion!”
She slipped from his arms to the floor, and crouched there, with a
strange trouble written all over her face.
“Papa, I can tell you nothing--nothing!” she murmured, in hoarse,
strained accents.
All the tenderness in his face was displaced by sudden anger.
“Aline, I no longer plead to you for your obedience,” he exclaimed,
sharply--“I _command_ you to tell me the truth!”
CHAPTER XXI.
Aline sprung to her feet and regarded her father in consternation.
His tenderness and love had given place to fierce anger and authority.
His face was pale and stern, his lips set in a rigid line, his
dark-blue eyes, so like her own, blazed ominously.
“I _command you_,” he repeated, hoarsely. “Do not continue to trifle
with me any longer, Aline. Tell me where you have been.”
“Papa, I would tell you it I could, but I cannot do so,” she answered,
gently, almost humbly, and retreating a pace from him toward her sister.
But he waved her away from Effie’s side with sharp authority.
“Stand back,” he said, “you have no right by your sister’s side until
this mystery is explained away. Now, will you tell me the truth?”
“I cannot,” she still repeated, and her lips began to quiver. She
turned a piteous, pleading gaze upon her mother’s face. It touched
a responsive chord in Mrs. Rodney’s heart. She who had always been
harshest to Aline was tenderest now.
She came forward and laid a soft, pleading hand on her husband’s arm.
“Oh, Mr. Rodney, do not tease the child,” she said. “See how white and
ill she looks! leave her alone now. She will tell us some time when she
is better--will you not, my darling?”
Aline flew to her mother’s arms and hid her face on her breast, but
she did not answer her pleading question, she only broke into low,
hysterical sobs. She was frightened at her father’s anger, her heart
and brain were in a whirl. How different was this homecoming from what
she had expected! The dear father who had always loved her best, who
had always defended her girlish escapades, had turned against her now.
She did not understand that in the very fact of the idolizing love he
had borne her lay the secret of her father’s anger. Because he had
loved her the best of all he felt her defection the worst of all. To
him she had always been loving and obedient. He could not understand
her strange disobedience now. It filled him with mingled fear and
anger. He was wounded in his love and his pride.
He looked coldly at his wife as she stood with her daughter clasped in
her maternal arms mingling her tears with those that flowed from the
girl’s blue eyes.
“Mrs. Rodney, I hope you will not interfere in this matter,” he said,
with distinct coldness. “I alone must deal with Aline now; I alone
dictate her punishment.”
“Punishment! I thought there was to be no more talk of that. We have
punished the child too much already!” cried the remorseful mother.
“God bless you, mamma!” whispered the girl, gratefully.
“Be silent. I will have no interference in my management of Aline,” he
repeated, angrily.
They all looked at him in wonder. No one had ever seen Mr. Rodney
really angry before. His favorite daughter quailed before the white
heat of wrath that distorted his proud, handsome face. He advanced
and drew her deliberately from Mrs. Rodney’s arms and placed her in
a chair. At his authoritative manner Aline’s fair face flushed, and
something of his own high spirit flashed into her eyes.
“Papa, you have no right to treat me thus!” she cried. “Why do you
humiliate me before this stranger?” and she glanced at Dr. Anthony, who
was regarding her with gravely sympathetic eyes.
“I have already told you that Dr. Anthony is not to be regarded as a
stranger--” began Mr. Rodney. But the doctor himself interrupted him by
stepping forward and addressing him.
“She is right,” he said. “Although Miss Aline has not a better friend
on earth than myself, we are actually strangers to each other. I should
have remembered the fact before, but that my deep sympathy and interest
in her caused me to forget. I crave her pardon for my seeming rudeness,
and I will now take my leave.”
He bowed himself out, and left the beautiful culprit alone with her
family. They stood around her silently--the weeping mother, the
compassionate sister and brother, the father, who had made himself her
judge, who was repressing every instinct of tenderness in his anger at
what he deemed a girl’s waywardness.
“Aline, you think me harsh and cold,” he said. “God knows no man ever
had a harder task than mine. I do not think you understand what will
follow upon this rash act of folly and this culpable silence of yours.
Shall I tell you?”
“If you please, papa,” answered Aline.
CHAPTER XXII.
She was regarding him with some little curiosity. It was quite plain to
be seen that she had not the faintest idea of the nature of that cost
at which he vaguely hinted. There was nothing but a perfectly blank
wonder on the beautiful, girlish face.
In the face of her utter innocence and ignorance it was all the harder
to tell her the truth. He looked at her almost despairingly.
“Aline, I almost wish now that we had not brought you up in such
simplicity and innocence,” he said. “Perhaps, if you had known the
world better, you might not have erred like this.”
She looked at him attentively.
“Papa, I cannot see that the world has anything to do with me, simple
Aline Rodney,” she said. “It seems to me that nobody was harmed by my
absence except mamma and the rest of you, to whom I belong!”
He fairly groaned.
“There is some one else who was harmed more than all the rest of us,”
he answered.
“Who was that, papa?” innocently.
“Was ever such ignorance?” he asked himself, even while he answered,
aloud: “You, Aline!”
Her face brightened, comprehensively.
“That is quite true,” she said, “I was harmed the most of all, for I
not only had to bear the pain of my absence from you, but was tortured
with remorse and anxiety. I was never away from home in all my life
before, you know, papa, and when I was so ill, oh, how I longed for
mamma and the rest of you. And then, I was so angry and so sorry
because I could not send for you, and--and--” she paused, with a
shocked exclamation, and put her hand over her lips.
“So you really were ill--poor darling!” cried Effie.
“I did not mean to say that,” cried Aline. “Oh, I am so thoughtless,
I shall tell everything yet,” she sighed in dismay, and again the
expression of anger clouded her father’s face.
“Aline, you have quite misunderstood me,” he said. “I did not at all
refer to your own sensations in your absence, but to a more serious
matter. I will be plain with you, Aline. I meant solely what other
people would think and say of your absence, and your refusal to explain
it.”
“_Other_ people, papa?”
“Aline, why will you repeat my words in such a parrot-like and
exasperating fashion?” he cried, sharply.
Her lips quivered sensitively.
“I beg your pardon,” she said, simply. “I cannot think what makes me so
stupid.” She put her hand wearily to her brow for an instant. “My head
aches. Perhaps that is the reason. Please bear with me, papa. I am sure
I shall understand you presently.”
He was touched inexpressibly by her childish humility. Something like
softness and regret quivered in his voice, as he answered:
“I do not wish to be hard upon you, child. It is my fatherly regard for
your welfare that urges me to sternness. It seems as if you have not
the faintest idea of my meaning.”
“I am ashamed to confess that I have not, papa. It is all owing to my
own stupidity that I fail to understand you,” she said, with wondrous
gentleness.
He made a despairing gesture.
“I am sure I do not know how to make you understand,” he said, “I am
sure I wish I did not need to try. Unfortunately, it becomes my duty.
Remember that, Aline.”
“Yes, papa.”
He stroked his rippling brown beard nervously with his long, white
fingers. How hard it was to show the evil nature of the world to this
simple-hearted child! He said to himself, passionately, that he would
almost rather cut off his right hand than be obliged to do it.
“When I said other people, Aline, I meant the world in general, and the
people of Chester--the people among whom you live in particular,” he
began.
She bowed her dark head gravely. She did not in the least know what to
say. His remarks appeared quite irrelevant in her eyes.
“You have some friends among them. You like them, they like you,” he
said.
“Oh, yes,” she answered with a smile, and he continued, desperately:
“When they hear that you have come home, Aline, and that you refuse to
reveal where and with whom you have been, they will suspect that your
strange silence hides some disgraceful mystery. They will refuse to
associate with you; they will point the finger of scorn at you.”
CHAPTER XXIII.
Mr. Rodney paused when he had uttered those words and looked gravely
at his daughter. She had not quite taken in his meaning yet. She was
looking at him with an air of blended surprise and incredulity.
“Papa, you must please excuse me for repeating your words over
this time,” she said, anxiously. “You see I want to be sure that I
understand you. Do you say that people will suspect _me_ of something
disgraceful?--that they will have nothing to do with _me_?--that they
will point the finger of scorn at _me_?”
“That was what I said, Aline,” he replied.
The blue eyes turned inquiringly to her mother’s face.
“Is it really true, mamma, or is papa only teasing me?” she asked,
slowly.
“I am afraid it is only too true, my dear,” Mrs. Rodney answered, with
a great, strangling sob.
A look of horror came into the great blue eyes.
“But, mamma”--she unconsciously turned from her father’s pale, stern
face to her mother’s gentler one--“I have done nothing wrong. Why
should my friends treat me so?”
Mrs. Rodney could not answer her. She looked at her husband.
“Aline,” he said, “do you remember when you were a little girl at
school, the first line you used to write in your copy-book?”
“Yes, papa,” she replied, with a half-smile on her red lips. “It was
this, ‘Avoid the appearance of evil.’”
“Exactly. Well, it is a maxim that goes with us through life. We should
not only avoid evil, but even the appearance of it. Do you understand
me, Aline?”
She bowed in silence.
“The world, society, people in general, my child, judge almost wholly
by appearances. When there is a mystery, where there is secrecy, where
every day of a young girl’s life does not lie fair and open to the
public view, they suspect guilt, and they visit their suspicions on the
offender in unstinted measure.”
A great change had come over Aline’s face. It was white and startled,
the lips were drawn in a line of pain. He had made her understand at
last. There was no need to ask as he did, half sorrowfully:
“Can you make the application, Aline?”
A long, deep, heavy sigh quivered over the girl’s lips. She raised
her eyes to his as if deprecating his words. Her voice was full of
sorrowful anxiety.
“Papa, is the world really so hard?”
“I do not call it hard, Aline--only just,” he answered.
She sighed and remained silent.
“Only just,” he repeated. “It asks that a woman’s life be kept fair
and pure and spotless, open to the eyes of all beholders. It does not
tolerate secrets or mysteries. But it is not hard, it is only just. All
pure men and women concur in its decision.”
She did not speak, only gazed into his face with her large, clear eyes,
as if waiting to hear more.
“Aline, you are young, you are beautiful, you love life, you are of
a most social disposition,” he said. “Can you afford to shroud your
absence during those three months in a veil of mystery? Can you afford
to have your whole life blighted and ruined as it will be if you
persist in your silence? Can you do without hope and pleasure, without
love and lovers, without friends and without respect?”
Every word fell clearly and coldly. When he ceased there was a deep
silence in the little parlor. They could hear the wild autumn winds
sighing outside, hear the steady downpour of the rain, ceaseless as
though “the heart of heaven were breaking in tears o’er the fallen
earth.”
Aline was sitting motionless, her dark lashes drooped against her
cheeks, one small hand pressed unconsciously against her beating heart.
“Of what are you thinking, Aline?” he asked, impatient of her strange
silence.
She raised her eyes slowly, and looked at him with a mute misery that
pierced his heart.
“Only of what you said, papa,” she answered. “Need it really be so bad
as that?”
“No, it _need not be_ if you choose to save yourself,” he answered,
almost savagely. “You have only to speak, Aline, only to clear yourself
from the appearance of evil. You will surely do so now when I have so
patiently explained to you the terrible cost of your silence. You will
not persist in your suicidal willfulness.”
She sprung from her chair and stood leaning against the back of it,
gazing at him with burning cheeks and heaving breast.
“Papa, you are only trying to frighten me,” she cried out, hoarsely.
“It cannot be so bad as you say! You exaggerate it all! I have
done nothing wrong, I am guilty of nothing but the willfulness and
disobedience you have pardoned in me a thousand times! Why should any
one be angry, why should any one blame me when I have done nothing
wrong?”
“Nothing wrong? Do you call it then nothing to have stayed away these
three months?” he asked her.
“Oh, surely you know I would have come home before if I could, papa!”
she cried, clasping her white hands together in her earnestness.
“Who or what has hindered your return to us, Aline?”
“Papa, I must not tell you,” she wailed.
“You mean you will not,” he said, with bitter chagrin, for he had not
believed her resolve would be proof against the penalties it entailed.
“I will not, then, since you will have it so,” she broke out, with a
sort of desperate despair, while her blue eyes drowned themselves in
sudden raining tears.
Then suddenly, before any one could prevent her, she flung herself face
downward on the floor, and broke into stormy, tempestuous sobs and
tears.
They gazed at her in consternation--no one attempted to soothe her.
What could they say to the willful child who was rashly determined to
blight her own young life?
At length, just as suddenly as she had thrown herself down, she sprung
up again. She went to her father and stood meekly before him, hushing
her sobs by a great effort of will.
“Papa, if all be as you say, then is my life indeed ruined,” she said,
despairingly; “I must bear my fate, for I cannot change it. Oh, how
gladly I would speak if I could! Listen to me, papa, dearest. I am not
willful, I am not wayward, I would give one half of my life to have the
liberty to tell you all you ask! But, papa, mamma, Effie, Max--my dear
ones all, I am the most unhappy, most unfortunate girl in the world,
for I have sworn an oath never to speak, never to reveal the secret of
those three months. You may do with me as you will; the world may wreak
its vengeance on me as it will, but I cannot help myself. I must bear
it as best I can. My lips are sealed. I am solemnly sworn to silence!”
While they yet gazed upon her in speechless horror, she gasped,
staggered, threw out her hands for some support, and missing it, fell
heavily upon the floor. When they lifted her up she appeared like one
dead.
CHAPTER XXIV.
They were startled and frightened. This was twice that her senses had
yielded to unconsciousness that night. The strong, bright, pretty Aline
who had left them three months ago had never fainted in her life.
“What dreadful experience she must have passed through since she left
us! How pale and thin she looks!” Mrs. Rodney cried, in anguish.
Effie wept silently. She had never known how dear was her volatile
younger sister until now. She knelt beside her, chafing the cold, white
hands between her own, warm, rosy palms, while she silently prayed for
Aline’s recovery.
They wished now that Aline’s hasty words had not driven Dr. Anthony
away, for her swoon was a long and deep one. All their efforts
failed to rouse her. She remained cold and white, with scarcely any
discernible pulse, and the most slow and muffled heart-beats. Her limbs
seemed to grow more rigid and deathly every minute.
They removed her to her own little chamber, and laid her on her little
white bed. No one guessed that, from the tower window of Delaney House,
a pair of eyes had been watching anxiously for hours to see the light
flashing from the little end window so long darkened by its owner’s
absence.
When it appeared, shedding a glow of light upon the dying foliage of
the garden, and Oran Delaney saw the moving figures behind the white
curtain, he experienced a sensation of relief. The child was at home
again, surrounded by those dear ones for whom she had pined. She would
soon forget the brief shadow he had thrown over her life for a little
while. They had taken her home and forgiven her, and all would go on as
before in his neighbor’s house. The thought lifted a burden from his
heart. He gave a sigh of relief, and threw himself down upon his couch
to seek refuge from his haunting thoughts in uneasy slumbers.
Meanwhile, Aline lay locked in that deep trance of unconsciousness.
They tried every method of rousing her, but their efforts did not meet
with the least success.
She lay mute and pale before them like one dead. The dark lashes lay
all stirless upon the marble-white cheeks; her lips did not unclose to
repeat those sorrowful words whose bitterness seemed to have broken her
heart. She seemed to have passed away without a regret from that world
in which henceforth she had no part save sorrow: and her father, as he
gazed upon the pale and rigid face almost wished that it were so.
She was so sweet and beautiful and he had had such great hopes for her.
How could he bear to see her live with this great shadow of silence and
mystery upon her life? How could he bear that the cold, carping eyes of
her little world should rest upon her in suspicion and distrust? And
for himself; he was very proud; how could he endure to be pointed at
as the father of a girl whose willful silence most probably concealed
terrible disgrace.
“I wish that she had never been born!” he cried out, in the bitterness
of his heart, and then when his own heart reproached him, he made
excuses to it. “She can have no happiness in life, no respect, no
confiding love, no domestic bliss, no peace. There will always be a
shadow on her life. She had better be dead, or never have been born.”
He remembered those wild words of the Spanish student:
“Yet I fain would die!
To go through life unloving and unloved;
To feel that thirst and hunger of the soul
We cannot still; that longing, that wild impulse,
And struggle after something we have not,
And cannot have; the effort to be strong;
And, like the Spartan boy, to smile and smile,
While secret wounds do bleed beneath our cloaks:
All this the dead feel not--the dead alone!
Would I were with them!”
“The girl is like me. She is proud, although she is so loving. I
believe she would sooner be dead than live the life that lies before
her,” he said to himself.
And he was right. The cold, gray, rainy dawn peeped in at the windows
and saw Aline struggling slowly back to life and consciousness. She put
out her hands and pushed them away from her with their restoratives.
She would have none of them. She flung out her hands in despair.
“You should have let me die!” she cried out, wildly. “How could any one
wish for me to live?”
“Oh, my darling, do not talk so!” cried her mother, forgetting
everything save the passionate mother-love that filled her heart. “You
must live to be my comfort when Effie is taken from me. You know she
will be married soon to Dr. Anthony, and I should be so lonely, when
she went were it not for you, my love!”
“Oh, mamma, how can I be any comfort to you?” cried poor Aline, in
despair. “You will be ashamed of me--you will never--never forget all
that my willfulness has brought on me--perhaps you will hate me after
awhile. If you did, mamma, I could not blame you. I quite deserve it, I
know!”
“Hush, my darling! How could a mother hate her child?” cried poor
Mrs. Rodney, tearfully, and forgetting all her dignity in genuine
mother-love. “I do not believe you are guilty, Aline! How could my
little white-souled girl be a sinner? Live for me, Aline, and we will
not care for the world. We will let it go by. We will not heed its
smiles or its frowns.”
But Aline sighed in heaviness of heart. Her trouble was too fresh, her
wound was too deep for her to find comfort anywhere.
“Oh, mamma, you are so good to me,” she cried. “I never knew how good
before. I do not wish to live. I am proud, though you might not have
thought so in the old, willful days. I cannot live such a life as my
father has painted for me. I shall die like a flower that has no rain
and no sunshine. And that will be best. I do not care to live!”
And this was the girl who had dreamed of finding life all fair and
desirable at fourscore--who had laughed at Oran Delaney’s croakings
such a little, little while ago.
She lay there among the snowy pillows, in the little room for which she
had sighed so often, and vainly thinking that she would be so glad and
happy when she returned to it once again, and she wished in her heart
that she might die.
She was quite a different girl at dawn from the one on whom yesterday’s
sun had set. Then her life lay before her, all bright and fair, like
a landscape in the morning sun. Now it was like the same scene at
twilight, with the sad rain falling and dimming all in its somber veil.
“I am done with my life, if all is like they tell me,” she said,
soberly, to herself. “What shall I do with all the years that lie
before me yet till I die?”
Like a flash, her thoughts went back to Delaney House and the beautiful
blue room that had held her a captive those three months. Before her
mind’s eye came a dark, grave, handsome face; in her ears rang a deep
and musical voice, with a tone of subtle melancholy. He was reading the
poem she had not cared to hear, but which seemed at this moment to have
burned itself in on her memory:
“How many years will it be, I wonder
And how will their slow length pass,
Till I shall find rest in silence under
The trees and the waving grass?”
“Perhaps you may even subscribe to its sad sentiments some day,” Oran
Delaney had said to her, and how scornfully she had derided the idea.
Was she the same girl? Scarcely. She had a vague fancy that she would
wake up presently and find that she had been sleeping and dreaming some
horrid dream.
She furtively pinched herself, and found that she was not dreaming
at all. She was broad awake, and the new day was shining in at her
windows, chill and murky and sunless, like the life that lay before her.
“And all for such a little, little act of folly,” she said to herself,
with a terrible sinking at the heart.
Mr. Rodney suddenly came over to her. He took Aline’s cold white hands
and smoothed them gently between his strong warm ones.
“Aline,” he said, “do you think it quite right to hold yourself bound
by the oath you spoke of? Do not the dreadful consequences it entails
on you justify you in breaking it?”
She shook her head slowly.
“I do not care,” she replied.
“It must be a very solemn oath that can bind you under such
circumstances,” he said, slowly. “Is your decision quite unalterable,
my dear?”
“Yes, papa,” she replied, with a deep sigh.
He was silent for a moment, and an echo of her own sad sigh drifted
over his lips. When he looked back at her again there was a new light
in his eyes.
“Aline, I have been thinking of a new plan,” he said.
“A new plan?” she echoed.
“Yes; I cannot bear to see your life blighted, all your chances of
happiness destroyed. We will go away from here and make our home in
some distant spot, where this strange story can never follow you. You
may yet be happy.”
Her young heart thrilled with sudden joy. She looked at him with
grateful affection.
“Papa, would you, indeed, do so much for me?” she inquired.
He bowed silently, and gently pressed her hand. Aline forgot his
harshness and anger of a little while ago, and remembered only the
patient, unalterable love that was ready to make such a sacrifice for
her sake.
“And you, mamma?” she inquired, turning her wistful eyes upon Mrs.
Rodney’s pale and altered face.
“I am quite willing, dear,” she replied.
“You are too good and kind to me, papa and mamma; I do not deserve it.
I must not let you make such a sacrifice for my sake!” she cried.
“There is too much at stake to call it a sacrifice,” Mr. Rodney
answered.
“At least we need not make it yet,” Aline cried, musingly. “Oh, papa,
I can hardly believe yet that my friends will be unkind to me, that
they will believe evil of me because I am fettered by a mysterious vow.
Let us make the trial. Let us give them the chance to trust me if they
will. Do not let us go away just yet. Let us stay and be convinced.
Perhaps the world is not so hard as you think. How could it be so
unjust and cruel?”
CHAPTER XXV.
Mr. Rodney gazed sadly at his daughter. He saw that she could scarcely
bring herself to believe that which he had told her.
“I see how it is, Aline,” he said to her, gravely. “You are inclined
to doubt my assertions. You do not altogether believe what I have told
you.”
She was shocked when he put the truth before her in so plain a fashion.
She did not know herself how strong a vein of incredulity ran through
her painful thoughts.
“Oh, papa, forgive me,” she said, penitently. “I did not mean to doubt
you. It was only my unfortunate manner of expressing myself. I was
hoping against hope. Will you forgive me for my implied doubt? It is so
hard to give up hope.”
He only pressed her hand in silence, and she continued:
“Even if they thought hardly of me, might they not in time relent?
Might I not live down the scandal even if they were cruel enough to
make a scandal out of nothing?”
“You might in time,” he answered, “but it would be a long while first,
so long that your youth and beauty would be faded, and they would
forgive you because they could no longer envy you.”
“So long as that?” she asked, with a heavy sigh.
“Yes, dear, nothing but time will heal that wound,” he answered.
She lay silently musing.
She could not bear to give up the beautiful, bright world which she
loved so well, and in which she had such unbounded faith and hope.
It was a great temptation to her to accept the sacrifice her father
proposed making. She had the innate selfishness of youth which thinks
that the world was made for itself. She did not understand how great a
sacrifice it was that her family would make. In her ignorance of the
world, she could not know.
But while she dallied with the temptation to accept it, she found
herself restrained from leaving Chester by a vague, yet subtle,
feeling she could not understand. It was stronger than her will, it
was some influence outside of herself that she could not analyze, but
it was most powerful. It drew her one way, while her reason and her
will seemed both to point in a contrary direction. She yielded to it
blindly, not knowing that it was fate, that “Divinity that shapes our
ends, rough-hew them as we will.”
She looked gravely at her father, who had been watching her face,
anxiously noting the changing emotions of its expressive features.
“Papa, my mind is made up,” she said, with almost womanly calmness. “I
shall not go away. I will remain in Chester.”
“Remain!” he echoed, surprised at her decision.
“Yes, I will remain. I will not act a cowardly part, and run away from
my trouble. I will stay here and live it down if my hair grows gray and
my eyes dim in the effort.”
“You will have to be very brave if you do so, Aline,” he answered, not
without a certain admiration of her high spirit.
“I intend to be,” she answered, with a sigh.
He could not help feeling relieved at her decision. He was not a rich
man. All his income was derived from his legal practice. To begin life
anew in another place meant a hard struggle, although he would not have
shirked it in the interest of the child he loved so fondly. But now
that her own decision made it unnecessary, a burden was lifted from his
mind.
He bent down and pressed his lips to her fair, white brow.
“God bless you, and help you, my daughter,” he said.
Her lips quivered, the quick tears rushed into her eyes. She let the
lids drop over them hastily, and the bright drops rolled like crushed
pearls down her cheeks.
“Aline, you are exhausted. I have been too thoughtless,” he said,
remorsefully.
“Yes, I am tired,” she answered, wearily. “I should like to go to
sleep.”
They kissed her, and went away softly, but Aline did not go to sleep.
She lay, broad awake, in the chilly, rainy dawn of the new day, looking
drearily into the future.
“I have lost my life,” she said, mournfully, to herself. “For, if I
live it down, I shall be old by then, and nothing but the grave will
lie before me.”
She recalled some verses she had read in a book at Delaney House.
“Rudderless, we drift athwart a tempest,
And when once the storm of youth is past,
Without lyre, without lute, or chorus,
Death, a silent pilot, comes at last.”
Death! She gave a shudder in spite of herself. She had always had the
keenest love of life, the greatest enjoyment of its pleasures. She was
sanguine, ardent, impetuous. Even now, when she looked at Death across
a bridge of sorrow, she felt a little afraid of it. She bewailed her
blighted life, her irrevocable folly. She would have to pay the cost of
her girlish willfulness by the sacrifice of all that was best in life.
Bitterly she bewailed her fault and Oran Delaney’s hard heart, that had
brought this doom upon her.
“If I had known the cruel price I must pay for my silence, I would
have died before I would have pledged myself to it. But Mr. Delaney
must have known. He is older than I am--he knows the world. How cruel,
how wicked he must be to doom me to such a fate!” she said to herself,
indignantly.
Moved by a sudden impulse, she slipped from the bed, threw a light
shawl about her shoulders, and went over to the window. She peered down
through a crevice in the curtain at the wonderful garden whose blooming
beauties had lured her so innocently to her fate.
Oh, how changed was the scene as she gazed upon it now!
The roses all were dead, the leaves were blown from the trees, and
lay in sodden drifts across the path. Some late autumn flowers,
chrysanthemums, asters, and others of their kind, were breaking into
lavish bloom in their neglected beds, but the rain and storm had beaten
them prostrate to the ground, with broken stalks, and faces prostrate
on the earth. All was dreariness and desolation, and the gray stone
towers of grim Delaney House seemed to frown more darkly than ever
now that she knew what influence potent for evil pervaded its gloomy
interior.
She gazed wistfully at it through the fine impalpable mist of rain that
obscured all things. She saw a figure emerge from the gloomy portals
into the deeper gloom of the rainy dawn. It was Mr. Delaney. He walked
slowly with downcast head and his hands behind him, smoking a cigar as
was his usual morning habit. Its fiery spark gleamed fitfully in the
dull light, and the fine blue smoke curled upward and lost itself in
the mist.
Drawing the curtain closer Aline watched him, herself unseen. She found
a singular fascination in doing so, and when she saw his glance turn
musingly once or twice up to her window her heart beat strangely--with
anger she thought.
“He has spoiled all my life, but does he realize that he has done so?”
she asked herself, musingly. “Could he be so deliberately cruel?”
It almost seemed to her that he would not have done so could he have
known.
“Could any one be so hard, so cruel, as to willfully blight a young
girl’s life?” she asked herself, with a sort of wonder, as her eyes
followed Oran Delaney in his dreary saunter along the wet, graveled
paths. “He saved my life once. Why should he make it valueless to me?”
As she gazed at the dark, grave face under the brim of the wide slouch
hat, it seemed to her that it was not hard nor cruel, only profoundly
grave and sad. A longing came over her that he should know all that had
transpired that night since she came home.
“If he knew, he might perhaps relent and release me from my vow of
silence,” she thought, eagerly.
She remained at the window watching him thoughtfully until he
disappeared from view in a turn of the path, then she turned aside
to her writing-desk and drew out pens and ink and paper. She wrote
hastily, and almost incoherently:
“MR. DELANEY,--They are all very angry and surprised because I would
not tell them where I have been. Papa says that people will think
strangely of me if I do not tell. He says they will think I am guilty
of something--I do not know what--and that they will not associate
with me, and that I shall never have any more peace or pleasure in
my life. You did not know these things when you bound me to silence
and secrecy. Did you, Mr. Delaney? I feel quite sure you did not. You
could not have been so heartless as to ruin all my life like that!
But now that I have told you, will you not have pity on me? Release
me from my promise and let me speak, I pray you.
“ALINE RODNEY.”
She put the poor little appeal into an envelope, and when night came
she tied a little weight to it and threw it far out into the garden,
hoping that Mr. Delaney would find it there the next morning.
CHAPTER XXVI.
Aline’s return to her home created quite a little stir of pleasant
excitement in the town of Chester.
The friends of the Rodneys vied with one another in the speediness of
their calls upon the young lady.
They found her pale, calm, and more beautiful than ever, for she had
gained a certain quietness and repose of manner that became her to a
charm. There was a softer tone in her voice, a gentler light in her
eyes. She seemed eager to please and divert all who came.
The good townspeople came all agog with curiosity. They expected to
hear all manner of romantic stories from the returned girl. They plied
her with all sorts of curious, not to say impertinent, questions.
They were astonished and indignant when they heard that they were not
to learn anything. To each and all Aline returned the same reply:
“I prefer not to discuss the subject with any one.”
This refusal, spoken so gently yet firmly, and not without a certain
wistfulness, silenced further curiosity with her. Indeed, it would have
been the height of rudeness to have persisted.
But, baffled with Aline, they turned to Aline’s family. Every one felt
that her strange story belonged most naturally to the public. They were
astounded when they found the Rodneys uncommunicative on the subject.
No one could understand such strange reserve. Every question, every
hint was met by a quiet evasion that effectually silenced curiosity.
The social world of Chester woke up gradually to the fact that the
Rodneys meant to keep the cause of Aline’s absence a dead secret.
Popular indignation was roused to fury. Mr. Rodney’s prophecy did not
prove itself a dead letter by any means, for the loud tongue of scandal
was not lacking to add its quota to the tumult. The worst things
possible were hinted and then spoken outright in the circles of Mme.
Rumor.
The whole family were socially ostracized in less than a month. Each
member came in for a share of the obloquy that had fallen on Aline’s
head. The silence each was compelled to maintain was held in the light
of crime. From being prominent members of the most select circles in
Chester they were coolly dropped by all. No one left cards, no one sent
invitations.
Every one turned the cold shoulder.
There was only one friend who remained faithful to the Rodneys in their
troublous time.
This was Effie’s noble and handsome lover, Dr. Anthony.
While the town gossiped and sneered, his neat buggy was seen before
the Rodneys’ door more frequently than ever. Effie, Aline, or Mrs.
Rodney were often seen driving with him through the wide, pretty
streets, and people were fain to acknowledge that “that girl,” as they
contemptuously called her, was prettier than ever in spite of the cloud
of mysterious disgrace that clung about her. She and Dr. Anthony had
become great friends. He could not help admiring his betrothed’s young
sister even while he deprecated the silence she maintained at so bitter
a cost to herself and her friends.
And while the weary days waned and faded, Aline was waiting with a
breaking heart for some sign or token from Oran Delaney.
It was many days now since the little white-winged prayer for mercy had
fluttered from her hands down into the garden of Delaney House.
She had watched and waited, she had hoped and prayed, but no answer had
come to her frantic appeal. Yet she knew that he had found it and read
it.
She had been watching through a tiny rent in her curtain which she had
made expressly for that purpose. She saw him tear it open and read it,
then slowly walk away without even glancing up at her window.
Days went and came. There was no day in which Aline did not watch
that tall form pacing up and down, though sensitively shrinking from
observation herself. She spent many hours alone in her room, and it
became insensibly a fascinating occupation to watch for his appearance
as he came out for his daily walk, which he did whether it was gloomy
or bright.
There was one thing which inspired her with a feeling of pique. It was
that he never turned his eyes up to her window, never by any chance
gave a sign or token that he was conscious of the wistful blue eyes
watching him behind the white lace-bordered curtain.
Of what was he thinking? Why did he so persistently ignore her prayer?
Had he really forgotten her? She asked herself these questions over and
over, but no answer came from the silent lips of Oran Delaney as he
walked up and down his lonely garden.
Aline grew half frantic sometimes watching him thus. A bitter rebellion
grew up within her heart. Why did he not speak--why did he treat her
with such silent contempt, for she interpreted his silence to mean
nothing less!
One day her father came home to dinner with a rather excited look upon
his face.
He glanced across at the beloved daughter whose willfulness had brought
such sorrow upon them all. She sat in her place as usual, but she
scarcely tasted her food, only toyed with it while her thoughts seemed
far away, and her long lashes drooped against her pale cheeks.
“Aline!” he said, abruptly.
She started like one in a dream, and dropped her fork. The blue eyes
looked quickly at him with a startled expression.
“Yes, papa,” she answered, in the low, sad voice that had grown
habitual with her since her return.
“Mr. Linton called upon me to-day,” he said.
“Mr. Linton?” she repeated, blankly.
Mr. Linton was a banker, and quite an important personage in the social
element of Chester.
“He brought me something for you,” continued Mr. Rodney, and he reached
across the table and laid a small folded package by Aline’s plate.
She looked at it in wonder, without touching it.
“What is it, my dear?” inquired Mrs. Rodney, with womanly curiosity.
“Open it, Aline!” said her father.
“Is it a letter, papa?” she asked, and the note of keen eagerness in
her voice did not escape his alert hearing.
“Were you expecting a letter from any one, my dear?” he asked,
pointedly.
“Yes--no,” she answered, dejectedly, and a scarlet flame leaped up into
her cheeks, then faded out into deathly white.
“Why don’t you open your package, Aline?” said her sister.
“Yes, why don’t you?” echoed Max, in a voice of lively curiosity.
She did not touch it still--only looked at her father.
“Do you say it is not a letter, papa?” she asked.
“It is not a letter,” he replied.
CHAPTER XXVII.
Aline could not keep the expression of bitter disappointment out of her
face. Her lips quivered sensitively, and a mist of tears dimmed her
eyes.
A wild hope had sprung into her mind that Mr. Delaney had sent her an
answer at last, although she could not understand why he had done so
through the medium of Mr. Linton.
But her father’s negative reply at once dispelled the springing hope.
She was bitterly disappointed, and she could not keep her emotion from
showing in her face. Every one could see it plainly.
“She did expect a letter, and she is disappointed at not receiving it,”
said her keen-witted father to himself. “It is something better than a
letter, Aline,” he said, aloud. “Shall I tell you what it is, since you
show no disposition to look at it?”
“If you please, sir,” she replied, indifferently.
“It is a check-book and a certificate of deposit in the Chester Bank of
the sum of ten thousand dollars,” he replied, with sparkling eyes, and
watching her closely to see how she received the news.
She showed nothing but a blank surprise.
“Ten thousand dollars? But what has that to do with me, papa?”
“Everything, Aline, for it is all yours,” he replied.
“Mine!” she exclaimed.
“Yes, yours!” he replied.
“But, papa, I do not understand it at all,” she said, when some of the
expressions of amazement had ceased around the table. “I have no money
at all, you know, and I do not think you have ten thousand dollars of
your own. So how can it be mine?”
“It is yours by the free gift of some person unknown, Aline, who has
placed it at your disposal in the bank.”
“Oh, dear, who could it have been?” cried Mrs. Rodney, while Effie and
Max looked the image of silent amazement.
“I am sure I do not know,” Mr. Rodney replied. “Can you guess who it
was, Aline?”
“No, papa,” she replied.
He was watching her closely, as he had fallen into a habit of doing
since she had come home. There had been a look of wonder on her face at
first, but she had scarcely spoken before it was replaced by a sudden
look of comprehension. A deep, betraying blush overspread her face, and
showed him that she _knew_.
“Aline, are you quite, quite sure?” he asked.
“Of what, papa?”
“That you have no knowledge of the person who placed the money in bank
to your account?” he replied.
The hot blush burned deeper in her face. She put up her fair, cool
hands to hide it. She was silent a moment, and then she lifted her
dewy, violet eyes frankly to his grave face.
“Papa, I will not speak falsely to you,” she said. “I think--I could
guess who the person--might be?”
“Well, dear?” he said, interrogatively.
She understood the stifled pleading in his voice. The blue eyes fell
sensitively.
“You see, papa, I am only guessing--I am not sure,” she explained,
tremulously.
“Am I to have the benefit of your surmise, my child?” he asked.
“Papa, forgive me,” she pleaded; “I cannot tell you.”
“Tell me this,” he said: “Was it the person who bound you to silence?”
“Perhaps so--I cannot tell,” she answered, reluctantly.
She was very guarded. He saw that it was useless to press her.
“Shall you accept this munificent gift, Aline?” he asked.
A sudden flash of scorn and anger leaped into the blue eyes, her lip
curled. She took up the unopened package, reached across the table, and
laid it beside him.
“I shall not accept it!” she replied, with bitter brevity.
He was disappointed. Ten thousand dollars would have been so much to
her and to them all. They might have taken it and gone away from this
place, where the finger of scorn was pointed at them for her fault.
They might have made themselves a new home far away from the tongues
of scandal that were busily wagging against them here. But he did not
press her.
“You know best, my dear,” he said, simply.
“Yes, I know best,” she answered, with a sort of passionate anger in
her clear, young voice, “I know best, and I tell you I despise that
money, so given! I despise the donor! I will never touch one cent of
it! I trample upon it! Base money, were it piled as high as the stars,
could never recompense me for my blighted life and lost hopes! Tell Mr.
Linton he may tell his generous patron to take back his sordid wealth!
Tell him that honor is dearer than gold!”
Mr. Rodney replaced the package carefully in his breast-pocket.
“Very well, dear, I will return these to Mr. Linton, if you are quite
sure you are acting for the best?” he said.
“You may be quite sure, papa, that your daughter could not act
otherwise than I have done in this matter,” she replied, with decision.
And she arose and left the room hurriedly, leaving her untasted dinner
upon the plate. Then they discussed the affair in all its phases. They
concluded that Aline was enveloped in a most baffling mystery.
“Could Mr. Linton tell you nothing?” inquired Mrs. Rodney.
“Nothing at all. He said the transaction was a _bona fide_ one. All
legal matters were carefully observed. He received the money in genuine
bank bills of a large denomination, but of the mysterious investor he
could tell me nothing. He shrouded himself in a thick veil of mystery.
Linton was himself most curious over the matter.”
“It is very strange,” said Mrs. Rodney, and they all echoed her
thought. It was very strange, all of it. This new development only
added interest to Aline’s secret. An air of romance was thrown around
it by the offer of that large sum of money. What terrible wrong had
Aline sustained, and why was she offered this as a recompense?
Of one thing the Rodneys had become convinced. Dr. Anthony’s story of
the wounded girl in the blue room was not a fiction. Mrs. Rodney had
furtively examined her daughter’s breast while she slept, and she had
found the scar of a wound upon it. Her heart had swelled with bitter
anger toward the merciless wretch who had hurt Aline. She longed for
vengeance, but she was powerless to do anything in the face of this
tormenting mystery.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
Aline ran away to hide herself in her room in a flurry of mingled
emotions.
This was the way in which Oran Delaney had answered her pleading letter.
Not a line, not a word, only a shower of gold flung at her feet, as
if this could make up to her for all she had lost, for the pleasures
that belonged to her youth, for the love that ought to bless her
womanhood, for the worldly respect and applause that she had forfeited
so innocently and rashly.
She threw herself down into a chair and buried her face in her hands.
Stifled sobs shook her frame, and bright crystal drops fell through her
fingers.
She felt as if she hated Oran Delaney. He was cruel and heartless, she
said to herself, indignantly. What did she care for money? She had
her youth and beauty, her tender heart, her desire for the pleasures
of life. With all this heritage of youth she could have had happiness
enough if only--if only she had not lost that fair fame, that open
record of life without which all else availed her nothing.
She wept bitterly for this terrible misfortune that had fallen upon
her. She was young and beautiful and pure, but a great, horrible, inky
blot had fallen on the whiteness of her life, and she could never wipe
it out by the words of explanation that would have cleared away the
hideous stain. People believed ill of her. Women, especially young and
fair ones like herself, passed by her with sneers and averted faces.
She was as innocent and as spotless as they were, but no one would
believe it. Because she would not satisfy their curiosity they believed
she was a sinner. There was one text that every one took and preached
from. It was this: “Where there is secrecy there is guilt.”
By this standard Aline was judged and condemned. The fierce rebellion
of her heart against this unjust sentence availed her nothing. The
world’s code was many hundreds of years older than she was. It said in
so many words: “A woman’s life must be like an open book, that every
eye may read. If there is even one leaf folded down, one page the world
may not scan, then there is a shameful secret written on it.”
There was one leaf folded down in the book of her life. It was as pure
a record as any other; it only recorded the punishment that had come
to her for her girlish willfulness and folly. But no one would believe
it. She cried out against the hardness and wickedness of the world that
could so misjudge her!
“The world must be full of wickedness, or people would not be so ready
to believe evil,” she said.
The hardest part of her trouble was that her family were compelled to
be sharers in her disgrace. Because they had taken her home again,
because they would tell nothing of her absence, people were angry with
them, too. They were all under ban alike.
“My beautiful Effie, it is too bad that this shadow should rest upon
her life--she who was always so much admired and beloved!” she sighed
over and over. “Ah, me, if only I could speak!”
But the iron fetters of her vow chafed and hurt her. There was no going
back on that solemn pledge of silence. She might beat her wings as she
would against the bars that held her, but there was no escape for her,
no release from her sorrow. She could have exclaimed with the poet:
“Oh, Life, is all thy song
Endure and die?”
It seemed to her little less than an insult to offer her money to
console her for the cureless wound that had laid desolate her life. She
said to herself that she would have to be reduced to beggary--ay, that
she would starve on a crust in the street before she would touch a cent
of Oran Delaney’s money. He had refused her even a word--he had thrown
her his gold like a bone to a dog. Well, she would let him see that she
would never touch it. She would die first, she said to herself, in her
passionate pride and resentment.
So the days passed by. It was little more than a week before the news
of the money in the bank for Aline became disseminated far and wide,
thanks to the gossiping tongue of the genial Banker Linton. The busy
tongue of scandal wagged afresh over this delicious tid-bit.
Opinions were divided over Aline’s course. There were some who said
that she should have accepted the money, that was doubtless offered to
her in reparation for wrong that had been done her. This class thought
that she was very quixotic in refusing, and even very foolish. The
money would have done her a vast deal of good. She might have gone away
somewhere with it, and made herself a new home where the story of her
mysterious absence was not known. Decidedly, she had acted foolishly in
refusing, said these wiseacres.
There was another class who found Aline’s action rather admirable. They
argued that if the girl had suffered wrong at the hands of any one,
mere money could not repair the injury done. They applauded her spirit
in declining such atonement. This new element of romance added fresh
fuel to the flame of scandal. It was considered that the case against
Aline was quite proven now, for who would give her ten thousand dollars
unless to condone an irreparable wrong?
Aline was none the wiser for their praise or blame. Neither penetrated
to her quiet cottage home. Day after day dragged itself wearily along,
and a dreary, apathetic calm began to settle down on the girl. She had
lost heart and hope and given herself up to despair.
She rose from her sleepless bed one morning, and went to the window and
drew back the curtain, and looked at the dreary morning sky stretching
chill and cold over all the land. It was gray and sunless like her
life, she thought, wearily, and dropped her eyes and sighed heavily.
The down-dropped eyes suddenly fell on a bit of paper lying outside the
window on the narrow sill and held down by a piece of gravel. It was
addressed to herself in a strong masculine hand, and Aline’s heart beat
quickly as she lifted the sash and drew it in.
“At last,” she said, as she hurriedly tore it open and ran her eager
eyes over the clear, bold chirography.
Only a few lines, hurried and incoherent as her own had been, but
strong and earnest like the writer:
“Aline, you refused the money because you guessed that I had sent
it,” ran the brief note. “Oh, for God’s sake, take it, child, and
believe that it is your own as the gift of a heart that bleeds
because it has wronged you, and because it can make no other
atonement than what lies in sordid gold. Let your father take the
money and make a new home for you all in some distant city where this
unmerited persecution may not follow you, and where you may have all
the social pleasures due to your youth and beauty and innocence. Take
the money and use it. It is only due, and I shall never forgive you
if you continue to willfully refuse it. D.”
She ran her eyes slowly over the brief note twice. It only excited her
anger and contempt. She said to herself that he was a coward, strong
man as he was, to make a weak girl suffer for the sake of that hidden
secret he guarded so jealously. Oh, that she had never taken that oath
of silence upon her girlish lips!
How grim and gray and frowning the towers of Delaney House appeared
in the dull, cold light. All the years of her girlhood it had been a
pleasure to her to watch the mysterious mansion, with the picturesque
ivy creeping about and covering the grim, hard angles and small-paned
windows with beauty. She had watched the sunset lighting its windows
with splendor every evening; she had gazed upon the beautiful garden
with rapturous delight; she had speculated often, with girlish
curiosity, over the motives that made Oran Delaney an alien from his
kind, shut up in that gloomy house, and but seldom seen in the streets
of the town. It had not always been thus. Ten years ago, before Oran
Delaney went abroad, and before the Rodneys came to live in Chester,
he had been friendly, genial, social, mixing freely with the best
society of the town on his annual visits from college, and was liked
and admired by all. After his father’s death he had shut up the old
family mansion and gone abroad. He had remained away several years, and
returned to his home a strange and altered man. He no longer sought
society, he did not visit nor receive visits, he gave no invitations,
and accepted none. He seemed to have become an inveterate recluse,
and remained isolated in the lonely mansion, haunted by the ghosts
of his dead-and-gone ancestors, perhaps, for there were rumors of
strange sounds and blood-curdling shrieks heard by day and by night by
those who passed his home. Aline had heard all these tales from the
townsfolk, and her girlish interest had been strongly roused. Yet how
little she had dreamed of the subtle influence Delaney House and its
strange master would exert upon her life!
She held the note in her fingers, and gazed dreamily at Delaney House,
thinking, with a shudder, of the strange, horrible, unearthly creature
hidden within its walls, and of the long days of illness and sorrow she
had suffered from the creature’s rude assault.
“_He_ thinks that gold can pay me for all that I have suffered--for all
I suffer now!” she breathed, with bitter sarcasm.
As she stood there in her long white dressing-gown, with her loose dark
hair falling heavily over her shoulders, Mr. Delaney came out with his
cigar.
It was the first time that Aline had been visible at the window since
she had returned. Usually she sprung back from sight at the moment of
his appearance.
A new mood came to her now. She stood there calmly, holding the paper
in her hand, and fixing her gaze steadily upon the darkly handsome,
brooding face visible under the wide-brimmed hat. He did not see her at
first, but at length the angry intensity of her gaze seemed to draw his
eyes upward by some subtle fascination. In a moment he saw her standing
there, pale, proud, angry, holding his letter in her clinched white
hand.
Even at the distance at which he stood, he could see the angry flash of
the deep violet eyes as they steadily regarded him. Her gaze held his
a moment as if trying to pour all the wrath that filled her being into
his inner consciousness, then--
Even while he still regarded her with his dark, soulful eyes in mute
inquiry, she lifted her hands and tore the pleading letter into
fragments, that fluttered swiftly from her hands and fell down into the
garden among the winding paths. It was her only answer to his prayer.
When the last white strip had fluttered from her disdainful fingers,
she removed her magnetic gaze from his, stepped backward, without word
or sign, and dropped the white curtain between them.
CHAPTER XXIX.
Mr. Lane, the New York detective, who had so ignobly failed in the
search for Aline Rodney, did not easily recover from that unprecedented
defeat.
He was acute, wary, and intelligent, with a boundless stock of patience
and persistence, and these qualities had always insured him success in
all his undertakings. Failure was a new experience with him. He chafed
under it. He could not understand it.
If pressing business matters had not recalled him to New York, he would
have persevered indefatigably for months in the effort to find the
missing girl. It was not in his nature to give up a quest easily. Only
the stress of circumstances had induced him to give up this one. When
he had thrown it over and returned to New York, it weighed on his mind.
He hated to own himself conquered. Amid the stress of other pursuits,
he often recalled the case in which he had been defeated. He would
shut his eyes amid the din and noise of the city, and recall the quiet
country town that had been the scene of such an unfathomable mystery.
He did not like to think that he, who had worked up the most difficult
cases in the great cities, had been completely baffled by a simple slip
of a girl in a country town that, with all its pretentiousness and its
exclusive society, was scarcely better than a village.
Although he had ridiculed Dr. Anthony’s story of his beautiful,
mysterious patient, it had made an impression on him that was not
easily shaken off. He often asked himself in the easy, slangy language
of the day, whether there could be anything in it.
He thought sometimes that he had been too hasty and incredulous in
condemning the story because all his efforts to find the mysterious,
hidden maiden had failed. Dr. Anthony was certainly a man to be
trusted, being frank, reliable, and most intelligent. And he had not
taken umbrage at Mr. Lane’s credulity. He had been frankly amused at
it. When Mr. Lane had quoted, for his benefit,
“Keep probability in view,
Lest folks believe your tale untrue.”
He frankly admitted that his story had an air of romance.
“Notwithstanding which,” he gravely added, “it’s an o’er true tale.”
Spite of this little chaffing, the two men having been frequently
thrown together grew to like each other. There were attractive
qualities in each one that pleased the other. They became quite social
and friendly. When the detective returned to his city home he found it
a pleasure sometimes to pause in the whirl of this strange life and
drop a few genial lines to the Maywood physician. Dr. Anthony, in his
turn, found it pleasant to reply.
So that even before the gossipy newspapers chronicled the fact of Aline
Rodney’s return to her home, Mr. Lane was made cognizant of it through
the medium of the young physician’s letters.
He was amazed and rather indignant. It was bad enough that she had so
cleverly covered up her traces and stayed away as long at it pleased
her, but that she should come home and keep her secret still was far
worse. He had no vulgar curiosity over the girl, but he had a strong
professional interest. She had baffled him and damaged his reputation
as an invariably successful man. He was distinctly conscious of an
inward pique.
“I should like to shake the naughty little runaway! What business has
she to outwit me?” he said to himself.
Sometimes he almost made up his mind to run down to Chester and have
a look at this girl who could keep a secret so well. She would be
well worth looking at, he fancied, from Dr. Anthony’s enthusiastic
description of her beauty. Then, too, she must have brains and will
besides her beauty, or she could not have kept her secret against the
odds that had been brought to bear against her. Decidedly he meant to
see her.
But steady business kept him rather against his will in New York. He
put off his trip from time to time waiting for a convenient season.
So the autumn months waned and winter was upon him before he had
given himself the promised visit. At Christmas he received one of Dr.
Anthony’s pleasant, friendly letters. It contained among its closing
messages an invitation to Mr. Lane to be present at his friend’s
marriage on the 1st of January in the pretty little Gothic church the
Rodneys attended in Chester.
CHAPTER XXX.
Marriages were not much in Mr. Lane’s line. He was forty and a
confirmed old bachelor--at least that was what his friends said and
what he said himself. He had never put his neck under the galling yoke
of matrimony. He rather pitied Dr. Anthony’s weak-mindedness in that
respect, but he considered that if there was any excuse for him it was
Effie Rodney’s grace and beauty. These were certainly tempting enough
to an ordinary, susceptible man.
But Mr. Lane did not feel sufficient romantic interest in the union of
the lovers to make a point of witnessing the marriage. He was about to
decline, on the plea of urgent business, when a sudden thought arrested
him with the ink yet wet on the pen. Why not make an opportunity for
seeing Aline Rodney by accepting Dr. Anthony’s cordial invitation?
He changed the contemplated No to Yes, adding a single proviso: he
would come if Dr. Anthony would guarantee that Aline should not know
that he was a detective, and that he had vainly tried to trace her in
her mysterious absence. He fancied that the young lady might conceive
an antipathy to him, and vaguely suspect ulterior designs from his
presence at Chester.
Dr. Anthony replied on the part of himself and the Rodneys, that Aline
should be kept in entire ignorance of Mr. Lane’s profession, and look
on him merely as the friend of the physician.
Receiving this assurance, the detective decided to attend the nuptials
of his friend, arriving in Chester on the day previous to the happy
event.
Dr. Anthony took him that evening to call on the Rodneys.
“I have told Aline that I expect a friend from New York,” he said. “She
is prepared to meet you and suspects nothing.”
Mr. Lane thanked his friend for respecting his scruples.
“I have a fancy to study the young lady, with the advantage on my side.
Perhaps I may get at the bottom of the mystery yet. It has become
more incomprehensible than ever since the story of the little fortune
offered and refused.”
“It is most romantic,” answered Dr. Anthony, “and the strangest part of
it all is that I believe Aline would be glad to confess the whole truth
were she not restrained by her vow of silence.”
“How does she bear the suspicion and scorn of those who were once her
friends?”
“She is crushed by it. One can see that she is almost heart-broken.
She is pale and sad. She shrinks sensitively from observation. She can
scarcely be persuaded to go outside the door.”
“Will she be present at the marriage ceremony in the church?”
“Yes, by Effie’s earnest wish and prayer. My darling has very solemn
ideas connected with marriage. She believes that the sacred rite should
always be celebrated in church wherever possible. Aline, by Effie’s
earnest wish, will accompany her to the altar.”
“I am most curious to meet the young lady,” said the detective.
“You will be quite sure to admire her,” said Aline’s prospective
brother-in-law. “She is very beautiful.”
Mr. Lane had heard this so often that he only smiled. It occurred to
him, however, that if she were prettier than Effie she would have to be
very pretty indeed.
“I shall take you to call at the cottage this evening,” said Dr.
Anthony. “You will then have an opportunity of meeting Aline. The rest
of the family you have met already.”
They went, and although Mr. Lane had expected to meet a very pretty
girl indeed, he was surprised and amazed when he saw Aline Rodney.
He saw a tall, graceful figure, exquisitely molded in the delicate,
symmetrical curves of early womanhood. She wore a simple dark-blue
cashmere dress, and the round, white throat rose from it with a
certain stately grace and pride that was very excusable, seeing what a
beautiful face shone above it like a peerless flower upon its stem. She
was pale, but her skin was like the cream-white petals of a tea-rose.
Her hair was darkest brown and loosely curling; her features were
exquisite; her eyes were large and of the rare violet tinge so much
admired, so seldom met; her brows were slender and black, and the long,
fringed lashes were black, too, and made her eyes appear black in their
shadow.
Mr. Lane was as much struck by Aline’s bearing and manner as he was by
her beauty. She had no ungraceful self-consciousness or awkwardness.
Her bearing was easy, graceful, and even distinguished. It was
natural, not acquired, for she had never mingled in society, and had
had but few advantages of travel and culture. He wondered at that even
more than at her beauty. It did not occur to him that the heavy cross
that had fallen on her life had had the effect to intensify her natural
grace into a grave, proud dignity, that in its silent way seemed like
a mute protest against the wrongs she had sustained. The girl had
budded into the woman, forced into untimely maturity and gravity by the
refining power of sorrow.
She was very quiet. She did not speak to Mr. Lane unless he pointedly
addressed her. She rarely met any strangers, and when she did, she
supposed that they knew her strange story, and despised her. She
remembered always that
“One venomed word,
That struck its coward, poisoned blow,
In craven whispers, hushed and low--
And yet the wide world heard.”
Mr. Lane could talk very well when he would. It pleased him to converse
with Aline Rodney. He was very gracious and affable with her, giving
her no smallest hint or sign that he knew her strange story. While
Effie touched the piano-keys with soft, lingering chords of music, and
her lover hung enraptured over her, the detective sat apart and bent
himself to the task of amusing Aline.
He did not find it very easy at first. She was shy and cold; she seemed
to take no interest in his words. She kept thinking, morbidly, to
herself:
“He knows my story, and he accordingly despises me.”
But, as he continued to talk to her pleasantly, unmindful of her quiet
reserve, a new thought came to her.
“This good-looking, agreeable friend of Dr. Anthony is from New York.
It is not possible that the story of my trouble has reached the great
city. Perhaps he does not _know_.”
There was inexpressible comfort and relief in the thought.
Unconsciously the tense bands about her heart began to loosen. It was
pleasant to meet any one, even a stranger, who did not distrust and
suspect her. She ventured to lift her frank, blue eyes to his face, and
when she saw how kindly he was regarding her with his attentive gray
eyes, she took heart of grace to talk to him, because she believed that
he did not know. Some of her old impulsiveness returned to her. She
began to take an interest in his conversation.
He on his part began to see what a charming girl she might have been
if this shadow of some unknown sin had not fallen on the whiteness of
her life. Once or twice she even laughed aloud, and he said to himself,
even though he was intensely practical and not in the least romantic,
that her laughter was as sweet as a chime of music.
He talked to her of the world, of the gay cities, of the people he
had met, of the places he had visited, and she listened with delight.
She had never met any one like Mr. Lane before--any one who had seen
the world and knew it thoroughly in both its good and bad phases. She
became so interested that she forgot momently the brooding shadow of
trouble that hung always over her. Her old love of life and the world
returned to her. A soft color glowed on her cheeks, her eyes beamed as
she cried out, vivaciously:
“Oh, how I envy you, Mr. Lane! You have traveled, you have seen the
world, you have enjoyed life! There is nothing I should like better!”
He looked at her with a smile. Her beautiful face was momently radiant.
She was full of eager anticipation and desire.
“You would like to travel?” he said.
“Oh, so much!” she cried, clasping her shapely white hands together
in the earnestness of her feelings, and carried out of herself by
excitement.
“Have you ever been in New York, Miss Rodney?” he inquired, with
apparent carelessness.
A little laugh that was half pity and half self-scorn rippled sweetly
over her lips. She was evidently amused at his entire ignorance of her
traveling record.
“New York!” she exclaimed. “Why, Mr. Lane, would you believe that I
have never been away from Chester in my life?”
CHAPTER XXXI.
The sweet, high pitched voice reached every ear in the room distinctly.
Every one was surprised at the assertion; but they saw that Aline had
forgotten herself, and all were wise enough not to take any apparent
notice of the admission. She continued, confidentially.
“You see, Mr. Lane, we lived on a farm in the country, about two miles
from Chester, while I was a child. Before I was grown up papa sold the
farm, and came to live at the cottage here, and here we have been ever
since, and I have never been five miles from Chester in my life.”
She saw some sort of a wonder on his face, and added, gayly:
“I see that you are wondering at me, Mr. Lane. Perhaps I should not
have confessed to such lamentable ignorance of the world around me?”
“On the contrary, I am charmed to have you confess it.
“‘Where ignorance is bliss,
’Tis folly to be wise.’”
She looked at him in some little wonder. The tone of his voice was
peculiar; but when she looked at his face, it appeared perfectly calm
and frank. After a moment’s silence, he continued:
“To one versed in the lore of the world as I am, it is refreshing to
meet with one so guileless and so innocent of the evil of the world.
I am not so enviable as you think me, Miss Rodney. A knowledge of the
world is not conducive to love of life.”
She had been slowly gathering her thoughts together while he talked.
Quite suddenly the memory of her own knowledge of the world rushed over
her--the knowledge that had come too late to save her from the evil.
Her face grew suddenly pale. She recalled the admission she had made
just now, “I have never been away from Chester in my life.”
She grew frightened at the thought that she had almost betrayed the
secret she was sworn to keep. Fortunately, this man to whom she was
talking knew nothing and could make nothing of what she had said. But
Dr. Anthony and the others--had they heard?
She glanced furtively around her. No one was observing her. Effie’s
fingers were still straying over the piano, waking low, soft chords,
and the doctor’s head was close to hers, as he whispered love’s
delicious nothings in her willing ears. Mr. and Mrs. Rodney were
looking over the pictures in the new magazine. Max had fallen asleep,
as usual, on the convenient sofa. She thought, with a sigh of relief,
that no one except Mr. Lane had been paying any attention to her.
“But I must be more careful next time. I shall betray everything some
time if I suffer myself to relapse into my old thoughtless self,” she
thought, and she became so suddenly quiet and _distrait_ that Mr. Lane
began to wonder in his mind if he had unwittingly offended her.
She did not give him a chance to find out, for just as he was on the
point of asking her whether he had been so unfortunate, she made some
slight excuse for leaving the room and did not return that night.
But Mr. Lane’s brief interview with her had given him material for
grave reflection.
He had quite decided in his own mind that she was pure, true, and
innocent, as she was beautiful.
He said to himself that her trouble, whatever it was, might have come
to her through folly or waywardness, but never through deliberate sin.
He was a close reader of human nature, as his profession necessitated
he should be. He knew that he had made Aline temporarily forget her
trouble, and he believed that every word that she had spoken to him
had been the pure, unadulterated truth. Those frank blue eyes were
the very well of truth and purity. They had looked at him frankly and
guilelessly, and they had no falsehood in them.
Her frank and thoughtless admission had let in such a flood of light
upon his mind as would have frightened Aline indeed could she only have
known it.
“I have never been away from Chester in my life,” she had said, and the
words rung in his hearing long after her fair, bewildering face had
vanished from his sight.
If this were true, and Mr. Lane did not in the least doubt the
assertion, what became of Dr. Anthony’s romantic story?
The place where Dr. Anthony had been called to attend the mysteriously
wounded girl must have been about five miles from Maywood, declared the
physician.
“Chester is five miles distant from Maywood.”
Mr. Lane repeated these words to himself, and his face began to burn
and his heart to thump against his vest pocket.
He seized his hat and went out into the night air to cool his glowing
face. Out under the cold, wintery sky, with its host of gleaming stars,
he mentally shook himself.
“I have been a stupid dolt, a stark, staring idiot,” he cried,
vehemently. “I shall never pride myself on my skill and acumen again.
Only to think that I never reflected on that plain fact that Chester
is five miles from Maywood. The girl has never been out of Chester, and
oh, what a consummate stupid I have been.”
He was angry with himself, indeed. He accused himself of the most
inexcusable stupidity. Only to think how he had scoured the country
for miles around Maywood and never thought of Chester. It was the most
natural mistake in the world, but he was bitterly angry with himself
for having made it.
He walked along the pavement in front of the cottage, so absorbed in
thought that he scarcely heeded the cold winter wind that sighed among
the leafless trees and around the gables of the cottage. With the sight
of Aline’s beautiful, innocent face had come an even deeper desire to
fathom the secret of that strange absence.
“I will find it out this time; but will she thank me for it? Will any
one thank me?” he asked himself, soberly, and he decided that it could
not hurt Aline Rodney to have the truth revealed. He did not believe
that any willful guilt could hide behind that smooth, white brow and
those clear, true eyes.
“She would undoubtedly reveal it herself but for the vow of silence
that binds her,” he said to himself. “I may even be doing her a favor
by tracing out the secret and revealing it to her parents. Anyhow, I
shall make it convenient to remain down here a week or two, and ‘we
shall see what we shall see.’”
Absorbed in his thoughts he walked on past the strip of fence in
front of the cottage a few paces down the street, without observing
that he was directly before the tall, imposing gray stone mansion
known as Delaney House. It stood well back among its leafless trees
and ghost-like evergreen shrubberies and cedars that showed like
sober-suited sentinels in the cold, white light of the moon. The house
looked gloomy enough with its closed doors and heavily shuttered
windows from whence no friendly light streamed forth to cheer the weary
passer-by, but Mr. Lane did not notice it as he walked slowly past
absorbed in his own vexing thoughts.
Absorbing as they were they were doomed to have a sudden and startling
interruption.
The night had been intensely still save for the low whisperings of the
winter wind as it swept past in restless sighs, but suddenly its calm
was broken by a long, low wail that broke shudderingly upon the silence
and repose of the hour, and swelled high and still higher until it
became a fearful shriek of mad rage and impotent anger most terrible to
hear:
“Ah--h--h! Ah--h--h!”
That loud, terrible, prolonged shriek fell suddenly and startlingly
upon the ears of the detective. He sprung backward with a smothered cry
and stared upward to where the sound seemed to issue forth.
His eyes fell upon the dark, silent façade of Delaney House.
“Ah!” he breathed, and like a horrible echo came that fearful shriek
again.
“Ah--h--h! Ah--h--h! Ah--h--h!”
It seemed to float over his head and die away in the wandering breeze.
Again he glanced up at the dark lowering front of Delaney House.
This time its darkness was illumined by a line of light that glanced
momentarily through the shutters, then abruptly disappeared.
CHAPTER XXXII.
He stood silently gazing at the windows where the light had so
strangely flickered and disappeared with almost the swiftness of a
flash of lightning. He was full of wonder over what he had heard and
seen.
“What a horrible voice!” he said to himself. “It was neither that of a
man nor woman, and yet it sounded distinctly human. What was it? I have
heard such shrieks within the walls of madhouses, nowhere else. Can it
be that some unfortunate lunatic is confined in Delaney House?”
He stood still, listening and watching some time, but he neither saw
nor heard anything more. The mansion had returned to its usual gloom
and silence. It almost seemed to him as if those fearful shrieks and
that swift flash of light had been the figment of his own disordered
imagination.
He went up to the front gate, which, like the fence, was of tall ornate
ironwork, surmounted by bristling spear-heads, and softly tried the
latch. It was unlocked and yielded readily to his touch. He entered the
lovely neglected grounds and strolled through the quiet paths, careful
to keep in the shadow and well out of the patches of wintery moonlight
that gleamed on some of the white, graveled walks. He did not himself
understand the strange caprice that had driven him to enter the private
grounds of one who was wholly a stranger to him, but it led him blindly
on.
“If the owner should catch me trespassing on his grounds I might find
myself rather _de trop_,” he thought, grimly, but he did not turn back.
He did not think it likely that the master of Delaney House would
wander in that dreary, deserted garden on such a night.
Leaving the vicinity of the house, he strolled slowly on and came out
at that end of the garden which was simply walled by the gable end of
Mr. Rodney’s cottage. Still in the shadow himself he saw a sudden light
thrown on the ground by the reflection of the light from a window. He
glanced up quickly and saw that it shone from the casement of Aline
Rodney’s room.
He drew back further into the convenient shadow cast by a tall, dark
evergreen-tree, and looked up. He saw that the curtain at the window
had been drawn aside by a small white hand. The next moment he saw a
fair young face gazing out wistfully through the pane into the moonlit
night whose mystic shadows lay long and dark around Delaney House.
It was Aline Rodney’s face. He gazed upon it, eagerly, as it stared out
with parted lips and wide, despairing eyes at the dark, gloomy house.
“What is she doing there? What interest can she have in Delaney House?”
Mr. Lane asked himself, soberly.
The beautiful grave young face gave no answer to his question. There
was upon it an expression of wistful sadness and pathetic sorrow that
went to his heart, strong man though he was. She remained for some time
gazing sadly out into the wintery darkness, then slowly retired and
dropped the heavy curtain between herself and the dreary scene.
Mr. Lane retraced his steps back through the shrubbery toward the house
again. He went around to the front entrance and looked curiously at the
great carved oaken door.
He was struck by a coincidence with Dr. Anthony’s story.
The front door was reached by a flight of wide, marble steps.
“Strange!” he muttered to himself. “What if this should prove to be the
house!”
He gazed longingly at the dark stone walls. He would have given
anything could his gaze have pierced through them in quest of the
hidden blue room of Dr. Anthony’s story. A dozen vague suspicions were
floating formlessly through his mind, but each thought hovered like a
dark-winged bird of omen around Delaney House.
“Can it be that the secret is hidden here?” he asked himself. “Have we
all been searching far and wide for Aline Rodney while she lay wounded
and hidden at her father’s very door?”
The suspicion took hold upon his mind with startling pertinacity. It
grew into a settled belief even while he stood there gazing fixedly at
the close shut, forbidding looking door.
“Well, if it be so or not, I shall find it out before I leave Chester
again,” he said to himself, with a certain resolution in his tone, as
he let himself out of the gate into the street again.
He went back to the cottage and met Dr. Anthony coming out to look for
him.
“I thought you had run away, Lane. Where have you been?” asked the
doctor.
“I came out to smoke a cigar. You know my old bachelor habits,” Mr.
Lane answered indifferently.
“You must be half frozen. It is a very cold night. Come in and warm
your fingers before we go,” said his friend.
They went in, and though they rallied Mr. Lane on his long absence in
the cold night air, he did not say one word on what he had seen and
heard. The time had not come yet.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
The next night was the wedding-night. It was the first day of January.
Dr. Anthony and Effie had chosen to begin their new life with the new
year.
No invitations had been issued for the marriage, but the church doors
had been thrown open for the accommodation of those who cared to
attend. When the bridal party entered the church, they were surprised
to find that it was closely packed by the population of Chester.
Curiosity had drawn thither all those among whom Effie had formerly
moved, and who had scornfully dropped her because of the mysterious
secret that had darkened her sister’s life.
Effie had always been considered very beautiful and graceful. She had
never looked more so than when she glided up the aisle on the arm
of her handsome, noble-looking lover. She was so proud to have been
chosen by him that she carried her fair head undauntedly, in quiet
indifference to the whispers and glances on every side.
They could not withhold the meed of praise that her beauty claimed.
After all, she had done nothing herself to merit blame. It was only
the shadow of Aline’s dishonor that was reflected upon her. Every one
knew how wild and willful Aline had always been, and how her mother and
sister had tried to curb her in her mischievous pranks and thoughtless
way. Seeing the constancy and devotion of the handsome young physician,
some were moved to repentance for the slights they had put upon the
beautiful bride who looked queenly in her simply made robe of white
satin and the long flowing veil fastened to her dark-brown hair with
snowy orange blossoms. The bridegroom’s gift, a lovely pearl locket
containing the fac-simile of his own handsome face, rested against
her heart, suspended by a slender golden chain. It was an amulet of
happiness to Effie. In spite of the world’s scorn, an ineffable joy had
come to her through her sister’s adventure, since but for it she might
never have become acquainted with the doctor.
But curiously as the crowd gazed upon Effie, they regarded Aline with
even more interest.
She entered the church in advance of the bride, and leaning lightly on
the arm of Mr. Lane, having been preceded by her parents, who entered
first of all.
Every eye turned on the tall, slight young figure in its graceful
drapery of white silk and cashmere. The long, childish curls had been
put up in womanly fashion on the small head in loose waves and puffs,
and as if in mute protest or defiance of their censure, Aline had
fastened a pure white lily in their silken darkness. She carried her
head high as if in conscious rectitude, and her air was that of one
whose thoughts were turned wholly inward upon herself with no jarring
consciousness of the hostile eyes that followed her with scorn and
suspicion in their cold and curious gaze.
Pausing before the chancel rail, Aline and her companion silently
separated and permitted the bridal pair to pass between them to where
the white-robed rector waited, book in hand, to pronounce the solemn
words of an irrevocable union.
The loud triumphant peal of the wedding-march died away into silent
echoes. The rustle and murmur of the perfumed throng grew still.
All waited in thrilling silence while the beautiful words of the
marriage-service fell slowly on the air.
Aline had never been present at a marriage before. She was deeply
impressed by the solemn, beautiful service. She listened with
down-dropped eyes and a grave, sweet look on her fair face.
“What solemn words, and yet how sweet!” she said to herself. “Doctor
Anthony and my sister will have to love each other very dearly to live
up to those heavenly words!”
She had never given one serious thought to the subject of marriage
before; but now, as she gazed at the happy faces of the two, and
listened to the beautiful, thrilling vows that bound them, some idea of
the bliss of a true marriage came into her mind.
“It must be like a heaven upon earth,” she said to herself, and then
quite suddenly she recalled some words her mother had said to her one
day:
“No one will ever wish to marry you, my poor Aline. No man would take
you with such a stain upon your life as that hideous mystery you guard
so jealously.”
Was it true? Would no one ever love her as Dr. Anthony loved her sister
Effie? Would nothing so beautiful as love ever come into her life? She
sighed unconsciously, and with the sigh she lifted her eyes--she never
could have told you why--lifted them, and at a little distance met a
pair of eyes gazing straight into her own with a strange, magnetic
fire--Oran Delaney’s!
She did not know what had caused her to look up at that moment, and she
knew just as little why she blushed when she met that intent gaze--a
blush that burned her pure face like fire.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
Mr. Lane felt rather proud than otherwise as he walked up the aisle of
the church with Aline Rodney by his side. Her exquisite beauty filled
him with admiration, and he had already decided in his mind that she
was as pure and innocent as she was fair.
He did not care in the least for the opinion of censorious Chester.
If Aline had been a princess, he could not have shown her more
deferential respect than that which he now accorded her. He had the
greatest admiration for her, mingled with pity and sympathy. He said
to himself that he would help her out of her trouble if he could, and
he honestly believed, that the surest way to do that would be to find
out the secret she held and make it public. He had been vexed with her
before he saw her--vexed because she had so baffled investigation and
curiosity. He had determined then, out of pure vexation, to track her
down. Since they had met, his feeling had changed. He was none the less
determined to ferret out her secret, but now he was actuated by pity
and sympathy combined with a belief in her innocence. He decided that
he would say nothing to Dr. Anthony or the Rodneys. He would pursue his
investigations alone. They should hear and know nothing until success
had crowned his efforts.
He studied the fair face keenly whenever he had an opportunity of doing
so. Its varying expression, the lights and shadows that shone in the
dark-blue eyes, had an actual fascination for him. He watched her as
closely as if he expected to find on her lovely, mobile face the key to
the mystery that shadowed her life.
Standing a little apart from her while the marriage ceremony progressed
between her sister and Dr. Anthony, he kept his eyes fixed on her face
and saw the new softness that came upon it as she listened to the
beautiful words of the service. He saw the dark, curling lashes flutter
upward a moment and remain fixed, he saw the blush stealing over her
face, dyeing even the whiteness of her low brow in its radiant glow. He
followed the direction of her eyes, and saw the apparent cause.
At a little distance from the bridal party stood a tall distinguished
looking man leaning lightly against the chancel rail. He was a man to
be looked at twice, for his dress and hearing betokened both wealth and
refinement. It was a handsome face, too, dark and proud and reserved,
with a latent fire in the eyes that had a dark, southern splendor, all
their own.
It was this man at whom Aline Rodney was looking with startled pathetic
blue eyes while the beautiful color rose in burning waves over her fair
young face. Mr. Lane saw the dark eyes and the blue ones hold each
other one moment with a glance he could in nowise fathom, and then,
without a sign of recognition, the gentleman turned his head away.
Aline’s dark lashes fell and the color slowly faded from her face.
Mr. Lane was puzzled.
“Does she know the man? It is not likely that she would blush so at the
glance of a stranger. And yet they gave no sign of recognition,” he
said to himself.
He watched Aline more closely than ever, but he made no discovery. She
did not look at the handsome stranger again; neither did he look at
her; and when the brief service was over he hurriedly left the church
and disappeared in the moving throng.
The Rodneys with Mr. Lane and the newly married pair went back to the
cottage. They were to have tea together, simply and sociably, and then
the doctor and his bride were going off on a little tour before they
settled down to housekeeping in the pretty little village of Maywood.
Aline was very silent and _distraite_. She was overwhelmed by the
parting from her sister. Heavy tears hung on her thick, dark lashes
as she looked at Effie and realized that their pleasant and loving
home-life together was forever ended. Henceforth another home would
claim her sweet sister as its priestess, and she would be the central
sun around which the lesser planets of another household revolved.
“Sitting by the fireside of the hearth,
Feeding its flame.”
CHAPTER XXXV.
Mr. Lane was anxious to find out if Aline was acquainted with the
stranger who had made her blush in the church. He watched his chance,
and when the family were discussing the crowd that had filled the
church, he said, carelessly:
“I saw one person who was so handsome and distinguished looking that my
curiosity was awakened. One but seldom sees such a fine-looking man.
He stood on the left of the chancel rail. Perhaps you noticed him, Mr.
Rodney?”
“Yes, I did; and the more particularly because I was surprised to see
him there,” Mr. Rodney answered. “It was our unsocial neighbor, Mr.
Delaney.”
“Mr. Delaney!” The detective started and glanced furtively at Aline.
He saw that she had turned her head away abruptly, but the side of her
cheek that was visible was crimson, like a rose. She was holding her
satin fan against her breast, and its plumed edge fluttered with the
quick beat of her heart.
“I have not seen Mr. Delaney at any public gathering or church for
several years before,” continued Mr. Rodney. “He is one of the most
inveterate recluses I ever heard of. His presence in the church must
have been intended as a special mark of respect and compliment to
Effie.”
“But, papa, we have none of us the least acquaintance with him,” said
the bride.
“No matter. He is our next door neighbor. I have no doubt but he
attended the wedding out of respect to us,” insisted Mr. Rodney.
“For my part, I cannot imagine how he ever found out about the
marriage,” said Mrs. Rodney. “He never goes out, and no one is ever
seen going in. It is quite too bad that Mr. Delaney does not marry,
and give his grand old house a mistress. She would lead society in
Chester--that is, if she would condescend so far, which is not likely,
the Delaneys being proverbially proud.”
Mr. Lane having adroitly turned the conversation into the channel he
wished, listened eagerly, just throwing in a word here and there until
he had elicited all that there was to tell, or, at least, all that
was known of the taciturn master of Delaney House. To that part which
related to the alleged ghosts that haunted Delaney House, he listened
with a great deal of interest.
“Since you have named it, I will relate my own experience,” he said.
“Last night I supposed you would laugh at it. Now I see that you will
not even be surprised.”
“What is it?” they asked him in surprise.
“It is only that I heard the ghost of Delaney House last night,” he
replied.
“You heard it!” they echoed, and Dr. Anthony asked, gravely:
“When?”
“It was last night when I went out on the pavement to smoke my cigar.
I strolled down the street a little way, and was suddenly brought to
a dead stop by the sound of a loud ringing shriek fearful enough to
have proceeded from one of the denizens of Hades. I paused and looked
up, for the sound had seemed to float in the air above me, and I found
myself in front of Delaney House.”
Every one was deeply interested--every one uttered some exclamation or
another except Aline. She alone took no part in the conversation. She
had not even looked around. She sat by the reading-lamp and was looking
into a book, but Mr. Lane saw that she was turning its leaves quite at
random and with strangely nervous hands.
“Is her indifference real or feigned?” he asked himself. “The most of
people would be interested in my story--why not Miss Rodney? Her sex
are not usually deficient in curiosity.”
“And you really heard the ghost, Mr. Lane?” cried Effie, with awe
struck eyes. “Well, you have been more highly favored than we have! In
all the years since we came to Chester we have never heard the reputed
ghost.”
“That is because you are so widely separated from the house by the
beautiful grounds,” said Mr. Lane. “Now, I heard it twice, for when I
looked up at the first sound it was repeated in a louder and even more
blood-curdling voice than before, and a flash of light gleamed through
the shutters for an instant, then faded into Cimmerian darkness and
gloom again.”
“Do you hear that, Aline?” cried little Max. “Oh, don’t you wish that
you had heard it? Do you remember how we used to talk about the Delaney
ghost before you went away?”
“Yes, dear,” she answered in a constrained voice, without turning
toward the little social group gathered around the fire.
“I was puzzled and alarmed when I heard that sound last night. I
thought perhaps Delaney had a crazy wife or sister. I had not heard
about the ghost then,” said Mr. Lane.
“Mr. Delaney is not married,” said Mrs. Rodney.
“No? And are there no females resident in his house?” inquired the
detective.
“I have heard that there is a solitary housekeeper, but I have never
seen her,” she replied.
“It was, then, really a ghost that I heard,” said Mr. Lane. “I am
surprised. I did not really believe in the existence of spirits in this
practical nineteenth century.”
No one made him any direct answer. It is true that a vein of
superstition runs through most people even in this enlightened age.
The Rodneys had heard so much about the Delaney ghost that they hardly
questioned the veracity of the story. And yet they did not care about
confessing it to Mr. Lane. It was just possible that he might turn the
story into ridicule. He appeared to be very hard and practical, without
any romantic weaknesses.
So the conversation drifted into other channels, and Mr. Lane made no
effort to prevent it, having learned all that there was to be told on
the subject. He quietly stored away all that he had heard in his mind,
and no one had any idea that he was specially interested in Delaney
House and its strange master.
In a little while the time for the parting came. Dr. Anthony and his
bride were to have a little bridal tour South. They went away, followed
by tears and regrets and a score of good wishes, symbolized by lavish
shower of old slippers that Max threw after the departing bride.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
“Aline, will you come down to the river and skate this morning? The ice
is ten inches thick, and as smooth as glass,” said Max Rodney to his
sister the morning after Effie’s marriage.
She shook her head with a slight, wintery smile.
“Do not tempt me, Max,” she said, “you have got me into too many
scrapes in the past, and now I have promised mamma that I will never do
so any more.”
The handsome, rosy-cheeked boy, with the skates slung carelessly over
his shoulder, regarded her with palpable disappointment.
“Oh, Allie, do come,” he said. “Do you remember last winter what
glorious fun we had on the river? And now it is smoother and better
than it was then. I know you would like it, and I’m sure mamma would
not care.”
“I cannot go, Max,” Aline answered, sadly. “Please do not tease me,
there’s a good boy.”
The light-hearted boy went up to her and pulled away the white hands
that half shielded the pale, pretty face. He was too young and
thoughtless to know much of the sorrow that had come to Aline.
“Aline, what has come over you?” he said. “It used to be that I would
rather you came out with me for a lark than any fellow I know. But ever
since you were lost and came back, you have been changed. Why is it?”
“It is nothing, Max, only that mamma thinks I am getting too old to be
your childish playmate any longer,” Aline answered with a forced smile.
“Bosh! Is that all? Why, there’s lots and lots of grown people on the
river this morning. You need not be a childish playmate this time.
There are lots of older people to keep you company. Say, will you come?”
“I cannot. I would not go among those people for anything,” she
answered.
“I don’t see why. You can skate better than any of them--you are just
like a bird,” he said. “I say, sister, I shall ask mamma. Will you go
if she says yes?”
“Not even then!” she answered, half hesitatingly, for the proposal was
not without its charms.
Her old passion for out-of-door sports returned to her. She longed
to be skimming the glittering ice with her light swift feet, and
feeling the rush of the cold sweet breeze against the cheeks that had
grown pale and thin in the months while she had been hiding herself
sensitively within doors from the sneers and frowns of those who had
traduced her so bitterly.
“You will come if mamma will come too, won’t you?” persisted Max,
unwilling to yield the point.
“Mamma will not go,” replied Aline.
The door opened, and Mrs. Rodney came suddenly into the room. She had
a lugubrious look on her face and her eyelids were pink from weeping.
She had been having a private crying spell over the loss of her elder
daughter.
She had caught Aline’s words, and now looked inquiringly into her pale
face. But eager Max forestalled the question that trembled on her lips.
“Mamma, I want you and Aline to come down to the river with me for the
skating. Will you come?”
Mrs. Rodney looked at Aline’s pale cheeks and heavy eyes, and her first
resolve to negative the proposal died on her lips. She saw the girl was
fading and drooping in her enforced seclusion.
“Should you like to go, my dear?” she asked.
“With you, mamma,” Aline answered, wistfully.
“Very well. We will go for a little while. Wrap yourself up warmly,
dear, and Max shall get your skates ready.”
Aline ran up to her room, full of pleasurable anticipation, for she
was an expert skater, and always enjoyed being on the ice. A girlish
impulse prompted her to make herself as pretty as possible. She let
down her dark, curling hair loosely over her shoulders, and donned a
dark-red cashmere trimmed with silvery fur, a warm, wadded jacket of
red, and a jaunty fur cap having a little bird perched on one side.
Then she sallied forth with Max and Mrs. Rodney, who was so warmly
wrapped up in cloth and fur and thick veils that barely the tip of her
aristocratic-looking nose was visible to the beholder.
They had a bracing walk of half a mile in the cool, fresh air of the
clear, wintery morning, and then the river burst upon their view like
a sheet of silver, dotted about with merry youths and maidens who were
sliding merrily about over the crystal expanse, without a thought of
danger.
Many of them were Aline’s old friends and companions with whom she had
been a prime favorite until that mysterious trouble fell upon her. Her
heart warmed to them as she saw the smiling, familiar faces and heard
their merry voices. A longing came over her to be friends with them
again, to touch their hands, to hear their voices talking to her in
the old friendly, familiar way. Everything was so gay, so merry, so
unceremonious, she half hoped they would relent and welcome her to her
old place among them.
Poor Aline! The light came into her violet eyes, the rich color flushed
her cheeks at the thought. She looked wistfully at the groups that
dotted the shore and the river as she came up. Her heart beat with
anxiety and expectation. Would any one speak to her? Would any one of
all these, her old friends, give her one friendly clasp of the hand?
Vain thought, vain hope! As they saw her coming among them with her
eager, expectant face and her winning beauty, every one turned aside
with cold, averted looks, and scarcely restrained sneers. In a moment
she stood solitary, with her mother and Max, in a spot where only a
moment ago more than a score of people had been. They had tacitly
deserted and ignored her. That strange sense of loneliness in crowds
so often felt by the sensitive heart came over her now. Something
like a strangling gasp came from her lips, and then she shut them
tightly together, and held her small head high, with a proud, stag-like
movement that was almost defiance. In her heart she was saying,
bitterly: “They may scorn me as they will, but they shall not crush
me! I have done no wrong, and in time I shall live down their cruel
slanders!”
“Do not mind them, Aline,” her mother whispered tenderly; but Aline
heard the quiver in her mother’s voice, and it sent a fresh pang to her
own heart.
“Never mind, Max,” she said to the boy, who was kneeling down to fasten
her skates. “Do not put them on, please. I shall not skate. I had
rather go home.”
“Oh, no, not yet--” he began; but just at that moment a shabbily
dressed old woman pushed him aside and came up in front of Aline.
She had a basket of cheap laces on her arm, which she paraded
ostentatiously.
“Will the leddies buy some of my pretty things--collerettes, _jabots_,
cuffs, scarfs--de finest things in lace,” whimpered she.
Mrs. Rodney shook her head with a smile.
“We want nothing at all, my good woman,” said she.
“Let me tell the young lady’s fortune, then. I am a fortune-teller, and
I tell de truest fortunes you ever heard. I have told a many for the
young gents and leddies this morning. They say every word is true. This
is the sweetest face I have seen yet. Let me tell her what is past and
what will be,” cried the old crone, loquaciously.
“No, no, go away! We do not wish to hear anything!” said Mrs. Rodney,
impatiently.
But Aline turned her blue eyes wistfully upon her mother’s face.
“Oh, mamma, I should like it so much,” she said, pleadingly.
“Like _what_, my dear?” inquired Mrs. Rodney, uncomprehendingly.
“To have this good woman read my past and future,” Aline answered, with
a blush.
“But, my dear, she cannot possibly know anything of the kind.
Fortune-tellers are all frauds. They only guess at things,” said Mrs.
Rodney.
“I should like to hear what she has to say,” insisted Aline, willfully.
“Oh, very well, my dear, just as you please, but you will only hear
a pack of stories,” Mrs. Rodney replied; but she crossed the old
fortune-teller’s coarse palm with the traditional silver piece, and
Aline drew the warm glove from her delicate hand expectantly.
The old lace-vender set her basket down on the ground and took the
little hand into her own large and brown one.
“What is this I see?” she said, squinting her gray eyes at the rosy
palm. “The line of life is crossed with sorrows. You have had a great
trouble in your life. You are very unhappy, and you are doomed to be
even more unhappy--”
“Do not tell her such jargon,” broke in Mrs. Rodney, impatiently.
“I but read what I see, madam,” said the seer. “And I see nothing but
blight and sorrow. I cannot understand it, for I see no love in her
past--none of that love that makes or mars a woman’s life. The shadows
come from other things, from other influences. And yet--” she paused
and looked searchingly into Aline’s marble-white face.
“And yet--” repeated the girl in a tone of eager inquiry.
The fortune-teller went on without removing her keen gaze from Aline’s
wistful face:
“And yet, although you have never loved, there is a man mixed up in
your past and future strangely. He is dark and grand and handsome,
but he has cast a shadow on your life, a thick, dark shadow so dense
you cannot see beyond it. You blush, yet the man is nothing to you. I
cannot understand it.”
It was true that Aline was blushing hotly, and she was gazing in wonder
at the strange old woman.
“Go on,” she said, in a low, almost pleading voice “Tell me--will those
dark clouds ever be lifted from my life?”
“It is hard to tell. I said I could read your future, but the clouds
that overhang it are too dark and heavy. I cannot pierce their gloom.
Perhaps the sun may shine for you again, perhaps, never! Let me see!”
She held the little palm close up before her eyes.
“Ah, there is a _secret_! You are young to hold so much hidden in your
heart. I may tell you this much. You will never be happy until that
secret is openly revealed! It will cost you too much to keep it hid! If
there are any who love you they will never rest, they will never cease
striving to fathom the secret that has shadowed your life so darkly.”
She dropped the little hand abruptly, caught up her basket, and strode
quickly away, leaving Aline and her mother stupefied with surprise.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
“What an old hag! Her hands were coarse like a man’s and her voice
too!” cried vivacious Max. “It was no kind of a fortune, either. She
did not say anything about your marrying. But I hope you never will;
it was bad enough to lose Effie. I hope no one will ever persuade you
away, Allie. No one is good enough for you!”
“I am flattered by your extravagant opinion of my perfections. I think
you need give yourself no uneasiness as to losing me,” Aline replied,
making him a demure little courtesy.
He laughed, and nodded.
“I am glad of that. But come now, let me fasten your skates. You must
come on the ice with me. You promised, you know, and I shall not let
you go back on your word.”
“I would rather go home, Max,” Aline answered.
“No, dear, you need not be put down so easily. You may go on the ice
with your brother a little while, then we will go home,” said Mrs.
Rodney. Her pride and resentment had both been roused by the cavalier
treatment Aline had received. She knew that her daughter was the most
beautiful girl on the spot. No one there could at all compare with her.
She was an accomplished skater too. Something like defiance rose in her
mind. She would not let them drive Aline away with their scorn. She
had as much right here as her severe judges. “Go on the ice with your
brother a little while,” she repeated; “then we will go home.”
She stood silently on the shore watching them as hand in hand they
skimmed blithely across the icy surface of the beautiful river. Her
thoughts were busy while her eyes followed the form of her beautiful
girl in the bright costume that accorded so well with the gay scene.
The strange words of the old lace-vender filled her with wonder.
“How did she chance upon the truth so cleverly?” she asked herself.
“What did she know of Aline’s troubles and her fatal secret? What did
she mean by the dark man who influenced Aline’s life? Was it true--or
why did Aline blush at her words? I have a mind to follow the woman and
find out what she knows.”
She looked around her, but the old woman had already disappeared from
sight.
“As well, perhaps,” Mrs. Rodney, muttered to herself: “she could tell
me nothing. I dare say it was all guess-work. It is so easy to prate
of dark clouds and secrets and dark men--it is the stock in trade of
fortune-tellers.”
But she was very uneasy in her mind. There was a great pain in her
heart as she watched Aline.
The girl had forgotten her trouble for a little while in the
exhilarating excitement and exercise. Her eyes sparkled, her cheeks
glowed with pleasure. She and Max were the best skaters on the river,
and the girl thoroughly enjoyed her triumph. She looked like some
bright winged bird in her scarlet costume, and many eyes followed her
course in unwilling admiration.
“Aline, I will tell you something,” said Max, as they skated sociably
along, side by side. “I believe that old woman was a man dressed in
woman’s clothes!”
Aline’s heart gave a quick throb.
“Why do you think so, Max?” she said.
“Well, because she had boots on, and her feet were large, and her
hands, too, and her voice was coarse and squeaky, as if she tried to
alter it to a woman’s. Didn’t you notice it yourself, Aline?”
“She was rather masculine-looking, certainly; but, then, many women are
so. I have no doubt she was what she appeared to be,” said Aline, after
giving the matter a moment’s grave consideration.
Max was silenced but not convinced, and presently he looked round at
her again.
“I will tell you something else,” he said. “There is a man watching
you. Perhaps it is the dark man the fortune-teller talked about.”
“Where?” asked Aline, with a start.
“Do you see that great tree down the bank at some distance from the
crowd? There is a man round one side of it. He is looking at you. He is
tall and dark, and has on a great fur overcoat. I believe--that is, he
looks like him--that it is Mr. De--Ah! ah! help! help!”
The revelation of what Max believed was never finished, for, all
unknowingly, and in her interest in his words, Aline had gone upon
a dangerous place, where the ice was cracked and thin. A little in
advance of her brother, although clinging to his hand, she felt the
treacherous ice giving way beneath her, and, like a flash, tore her
hand from his and threw it far from her. All in an instant there was
a loud crash, the treacherous element gave way, and Aline sunk down
into the cold waves. Max was left alone upon the ragged edge, screaming
aloud for help in the frenzy of his despair.
* * * * *
All in a moment there arose a great hubbub of excitement. All eyes
turned upon the spot where Aline had broken through the thin crust of
ice and gone down into the cold, dark waves. With the thoughtlessness
born of excitement, the crowd made a rush for the spot. Some slipped
and fell, and were heedlessly trampled, and deserted in the terrible
rush. A panic was imminent. It seemed as if all were bent upon
satiating a wild curiosity, and the solid ice, beginning to tremble
beneath the burden upon it, might have broken through, and precipitated
the crowd, pell-mell, into the same dark waves that had ingulfed Aline;
but, at that moment, a loud, stern, authoritative voice rang out
clearly and sharply:
“Stand back, all of you! Do you not see that you are liable to cause
her death as well as your own? Go back before the ice breaks through
with your weight!”
The stern voice seemed to put reason into their bewildered minds. There
was a moment of flurry and indecision, and then the excited crowd
began to veer toward the shore. No one was left in the vicinity of the
dangerous ice except little Max, screaming piteously on the brink of
the abyss into which his sister had disappeared.
But, an instant more, and the form of a tall, handsome man was seen
crossing the ice, carefully yet fearlessly. As he neared the thin ice,
he threw himself carefully down upon it, and crept slowly along to the
edge of the precipice. He had thrown off his coat, and was in his shirt
sleeves, so that every one knew what was in his mind, and no one was
surprised to see him drop cautiously over the ragged edge of the ice,
and so down into the deep, running water.
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
It was an act of heroic daring that appealed to all, even to hearts
less brave. A cry rose up from the shore, a shout of admiration for the
hero’s bravery, a cheer to give him courage in his daring deed.
Some one drew little Max away from his perilous position, and carried
him screaming to the shore, where Mrs. Rodney had fallen down
fainting with the shock of Aline’s fall. Some men went for a rope,
knowing instinctively that it would be needed if Aline Rodney and the
adventurous hero were ever rescued from the river.
When they had found one, fortunately near at hand, they returned, and
went over the ice cautiously, by lying down flat upon it and creeping
slowly along. Then they peered over the icy edge of the opening into
the dark, swirling river.
Joy! joy! The icy current had not swept the hero away. He was there,
with his head above the waves, and supporting on his arm the drenched
form of a girl whose dark head drooped heavily, and whose chill, white
face and closed eyelids showed that death or deadly unconsciousness had
stolen upon her.
He looked up and saw them peering down at him, and shouted, hoarsely:
“A rope, quick, with a slip knot! I cannot sustain her much longer. I
am freezing to death!”
They knotted the rope hurriedly and threw it down. In a moment he threw
the rope over the girl’s limp body, tightened it, and they drew her up
safely. In the same manner they rescued him, and again the loud shouts
of joy rose up from the shore.
They carried the girl’s limp, wet body to the shore, and her preserver
followed after. It was the tall man Max had seen behind the tree--it
was Oran Delaney.
People looked at him in wonder. It was so seldom that he appeared in
public that it always caused surprise to see him. His sudden appearance
in this romantic _rôle_ was a nine days’ wonder.
But he did not stay to hear their wondering congratulations. Mrs.
Rodney had recovered from her faint, and he hurriedly placed her
with the frightened Max and the still unconscious girl in a passing
conveyance, then wrapped himself in his furred overcoat and hastened
home.
Mrs. Griffin was astonished and frightened when her master walked in so
wet and cold. She exclaimed loudly upon his plight.
“It is nothing. I have only had a fall into the river,” he replied,
carelessly.
“But I thought that the river was all frozen over?” she said, perplexed.
“Yes, but I broke through the ice,” said Mr. Delaney.
“Oh, dear, dear, then you have got your death of cold!” cried Mrs.
Griffin in alarm.
“Pray do not make me out a girl or a baby,” he said, impatiently. “When
I get some warm, dry clothes, I shall do very well.”
She busied herself in laying them out for him, and when she had done
this she made some warm drinks for him.
“To drive the cold out of your system,” she said, fussily, but kindly.
He drank something just to please her, and then he hurried away from
her, disregarding her pathetic entreaty that he would go to bed and
wrap up warmly in blankets, that his wetting and freezing might not do
him any harm.
“As if there were danger, when my heart and brain are on fire,” he said
to himself.
He went up to a quiet little chamber in the tower, and peered, with
burning eyes, down at a little white-curtained window of his neighbor’s
house. He could dimly see figures moving about the little room as if
they were busy over something.
“Has she revived?” he asked himself, anxiously. “Poor child! she went
under the black water twice before I reached her. It was only the
strength of my despair that enabled me to bring her up to the surface
again. Oh, how fearful it was! the cold, black water, the jagged ice,
the terrible danger! And yet I would risk life and limb again a hundred
times to save her life!”
CHAPTER XXXIX.
“Ah, dearie me, but it’s a lonesome life, after all,” sighed Mrs.
Griffin.
The good soul was sitting by the comfortable stove in the commodious
kitchen of Delaney House, intent upon the concoction of some savory
broth that was simmering on the stove. It was on the evening of the day
that Mr. Delaney had saved Aline Rodney from drowning.
The bright, sunny morning had ended in a dreary, overcast evening,
with hints of snow in the air. The warm, spacious kitchen was very
comfortable, but it was intensely quiet and still, even to dreariness.
The audible ticking of the clock, and the soft purr of the little gray
kitten at Mrs. Griffin’s feet, seemed to make the stillness and quiet
even more marked and oppressive to her peculiar mood.
“It’s a lonesome life,” she repeated. “It is hard even for me, and I do
not see how Mr. Delaney bears it at all, used as he has been to society
and amusement. Sometimes I fairly long for the sight of a friendly face
and the sound of a kind voice besides my master’s. I never felt the
dreariness of my life as much as I have done since Miss Rodney came and
went away. Spoiled child as she was, she brought a bit of life into the
house!”
She sighed and mechanically lifted the lid of the stew-pan and stirred
the savory broth with a long-handled spoon.
“Tap! Tap! Tap!”
That ghostly sound broke so suddenly upon the silence of the room,
that Mrs. Griffin gave a violent start and dropped her long spoon upon
the floor with a hideous clatter, disturbing kitty’s peaceful slumbers
by a thump upon her little pink nose, accompanied by a few drops of hot
broth that sent her pattering into the corner with a spiteful meow. The
good woman mechanically reached for the spoon and looked toward the
door.
“Tap! Tap!” came the low knocking again, with as ghostly a sound as
ever Poe’s fabled raven produced.
Mrs. Griffin stared at the closed door with an air of stupid amazement,
and made no move to open it.
“Whoever can it be?” she asked aloud, and a squeaky, peculiar voice
from outside, answered immediately:
“Open the door, my good woman, and see!”
“What impudence! There, then, I won’t do it!” replied Mrs. Griffin,
who, although dying of curiosity to see her visitor, knew better than
to admit any one within the walls of Delaney House.
“You’re the first woman, then, that I ever knew to turn a poor peddler
from the door, and it’ll be to your sorrow as you did so,” replied a
bantering voice outside. “I have a basketful of notions, and I’m just
from New York with the biggest bargains of the season. Come, don’t
be churlish, mistress. Open the door, and let me come in and warm my
frozen fingers, even if you won’t buy one of my nice lace collars.”
Mrs. Griffin’s eyes had brightened at the mention of the peddler. The
majority of women have an unexplainable propensity for buying from
peddlers, and Mrs. Griffin was no exception to the rule. Besides, she
was dying of loneliness and _ennui_. She intensely desired to speak to
some one, and to have better companionship, if only for an hour, than
the purring gray kitten.
She hesitated. And we have always heard--have we not, reader?--that the
woman who hesitates is lost. She remembered that her stock of pins and
needles and tapes and buttons needed replenishing. Why not embrace this
excellent opportunity for the purpose? She might easily do so, and Mr.
Delaney be none the wiser, and no harm done. She would take care that
the harmless peddler did not penetrate beyond the kitchen.
The cheery, seductive voice of the person outside sounded pleasantly
in her hearing. She felt that she would be all the better for a little
human contact with that world from which she was so closely secluded.
She softly turned the key and opened the door, meaning to have some
little colloquy with the peddler before she admitted her; but that
worthy frustrated her intention by immediately stepping across the
threshold, with the proverbial impudence of the class.
“So you thought better of your first intentions, did you?” she said,
genially, to the astonished mistress of the kitchen. “Second thoughts
are best, aren’t they? Well, you were wise to let me in. I shall sell
you the biggest bargain of the season.”
And then she laughed, and set her basket down upon the floor, and
warmed her brown fingers by the stove.
Mrs. Griffin was dumfounded by the ease, not to say impudence, of the
female peddler, who already had taken a seat and was gazing about the
large apartment with careless curiosity.
“You must please not to laugh so loud,” she said. “If my master hears
you he will come down and turn you out. I should not have let you in
anyhow, only that I needed some things in your line. Strangers are not
allowed in here. You shouldn’t have entered the grounds.”
“I did not know there were any orders against it. You see, I’m a
stranger about here, and seeing such a fine large house I naturally
thought to myself, ‘Here’s the place to sell my nice goods to the
ladies.’ But if there’s any offense, ma’am, I’ll humbly take my leave,”
said this artful old woman, beginning to replace the tempting things
she had drawn from her heavy basket.
“Well, well, let me have my buttons and things first,” said Mrs.
Griffin, who had not expected to be so soon taken at her word. “You may
show me your things, only be quiet about it. I shouldn’t care to have
my master disturbed.”
“And your mistress, hey? Wouldn’t she like to buy some of my pretty
laces?”
“There isn’t any mistress. There’s only my master and me. I’m cook and
housekeeper both,” Mrs. Griffin replied, as she poised a black lace cap
on her fingers, and mentally wondered if it wouldn’t be becoming to her.
They had the usual haggling, the old woman good-humoredly putting down
her goods to Mrs. Griffin’s own prices, remarking as each new purchase
was laid on the pile at the housekeeper’s elbow: “I told you I would
sell you the biggest bargain of the season. They don’t call me Cheap
Jane for nothing!”
“Is that your name? How funny!” said the housekeeper, laughing.
“That’s what they call me,” said the female peddler. “Mrs. Broadcloth
is my real name, though.”
Mrs. Griffin had to laugh again. She thought that the name of
Broadcloth was even more amusing than that of Cheap Jane. There was a
dry humor about the peddler that she rather enjoyed after her forced
seclusion from companionship with her kind.
“Perhaps you’d like a cup of hot tea before you start out again, Mrs.
Broadcloth,” said she, with reckless hospitality.
“Thank you kindly,” was the reply, and the old woman drew out a short,
black pipe from, some recess under her coarse cloak. “While you draw
the tea, I suppose you will let me smoke my pipe by your fire,” she
said.
“Certainly,” assented Mrs. Griffin, and then her heart suddenly misgave
her.
It occurred to her that, under the peculiar circumstances of the case,
she was making almost too lavish a show of hospitality.
“Only suppose that Mr. Delaney should happen in! It isn’t likely he
will, but then I’ve heard say that the most unlikely things are always
happening,” she thought, apprehensively to herself.
“I will step up to his room and see if he wants anything,” was her next
thought, with a view to forestalling his possible intrusion on the
prohibited guest.
Fortune favored her artful design. At that moment a bell rung from the
upper room that Mr. Delaney occupied as a bed-chamber.
Mrs. Griffin turned to Cheap Jane, who was contentedly puffing away at
her stubby pipe.
“There is my master’s bell now,” she said. “Will you just set here all
quiet while I step up and see what he wants?”
“Yes, go. Don’t mind me,” replied Mrs. Broadcloth, affably.
The housekeeper opened the door into the hall, closed it carefully
behind her, and went up to Mr. Delaney’s room.
To her surprise, although it was barely six o’clock, he had retired to
bed. There was a feverish flush on his face, and his dark eyes gleamed
restlessly.
“Oh, Mr. Delaney, you are ill,” she exclaimed.
“Hardly that,” he replied, with a forced smile; “but I am certainly
somewhat the worse for the wetting I received this morning.”
“Oh, sir, you should see a physician!” she exclaimed, alarmed at his
feverish looks.
“No; the last one did me harm enough by his long tongue,” Mr. Delaney
answered, angrily. “I will have nothing of the kind. I need no one--I
shall be all right in the morning.”
She saw that persistence would only irritate him, and dropped the
subject.
“Can I do nothing for you?” she inquired, anxiously.
“No; I have myself taken some drops that will soon cool my fever. I
shall not take any supper; but, after a while, you may bring me a cup
of tea--nothing else.”
She beat a hasty retreat, sorry for his sickness, but reflecting that
it stood her in good stead at this particular time, when her loneliness
had led her into such imprudence as admitting a human being under the
tabooed portals of Delaney House.
“I will go and make the tea, and get her away as soon as I can,” she
thought, hurrying down the wide stairway, along the hall, and so into
the kitchen again, where she had left Cheap Jane contentedly, puffing
at her pipe.
“Well, now, Mistress Broadcloth, I will put the tea to draw,” she
began, then stopped and stared, and rubbed her hand across her eyes.
The great kitchen was empty, save for the gray kitten under the stove,
purring away in lazy contentment. The old woman and the big basket were
vanished from the scene as if they had never been. The door by which
she had entered a little while ago, stood wide open, letting in the
cold and the gathering darkness.
Mrs. Griffin ran down the steps and into the grounds in search of the
missing peddler; but the darkness and a haze of snow were beginning to
fall together, and they soon drove her into the house again.
“Ah, well-a-day! the strange old creature has taken herself off without
her tea, and just as well, perhaps, for I was on needles and pins for
fear of being caught in her company,” commented the housekeeper.
CHAPTER XL.
Aline Rodney’s feelings on plunging through the broken ice into the
cold, black waves of the river may be better imagined than described.
A shiver of mortal cold and terror rushed over her as the icy current
came in contact with her warm, tender young body. She went down, down,
down, with a swift rush and a terrible sensation as of suffocation,
into the infinite depths of death, it seemed to her, and then arose
to the surface and felt the cold, sweet air in her face again with a
sensation of exquisite relief.
Aline had some little knowledge of swimming. She tried to hold herself
up in the water until relief should come. And a great horror came over
her at the thought of being whirled away under the ice and beyond all
hope of rescue. How terrible it would be to perish miserably under that
sheet of solid crystal, where but a little while ago she had sported
gayly and fearlessly, but which now rose between her and the world like
a glittering wall of destruction.
She made an effort to keep from drifting away from the wide, ragged
opening in the ice made by the falling through of her body. She knew
that if once swept beneath that terrible crust her death would be
certain. The sounds from above came to her faintly, deadened by the
ringing in her ears, and by the wild shrieks of her brother nearer
at hand. She was conscious of a vague anxiety over her mother, faint
wonder if any of those people who hated her would try to save her life,
and then a numbness induced by the fearful cold overcame her wholly,
her arms ceased to beat the waves in frenzied endeavor, and she felt
herself sinking again to rise no more.
It was at that awful moment that Oran Delaney sprung boldly into the
terrible death-trap, fearless of danger, and only intent on saving that
frail, weak girl from imminent danger.
When he first sprung into the river the little dark head was going down
beneath the waves. He was compelled to dive twice before he succeeded
in retaining a hold upon her. When, after a desperate struggle, he
succeeded in holding her above the water, he was almost exhausted
himself. He feared that he would succumb to the dreadful cold himself
before assistance could arrive.
The forethought of the man who had so fortunately brought ropes stood
him in good stead now. A little longer in the cold waves must have
exhausted his remaining strength.
He was frightened when they were drawn out of the water, and he saw
Aline’s face clearly. It was pinched and blue, and the parted lips
and closed eyelids looked like death. Had he been too late? he asked
himself, anxiously.
He saw the unconscious form placed in the vehicle, and driven away
toward home with a silent, speechless trouble in his heart. His
thoughts followed her, in fancy, to that little white chamber where her
parents and the old family doctor hung anxiously over her, trying to
infuse life into the chill and rigid form, that seemed as if it would
never breathe the warm breath of life again.
“Oh, that I had never taken her to that fatal river! She would not have
gone if I had not urged it!” cried poor Mrs. Rodney, wringing her white
hands in despair.
She remembered the old fortune teller’s strange words: “The clouds that
overhang your future are so dark and heavy I cannot pierce their gloom.
Perhaps the sun may shine for you again, perhaps never!”
“It was a true prognostication! That old crone did, indeed, read the
cards of fate truly! It was the shadow of death that hung over my poor
darling!” cried the anguished mother in mingled grief and wonder.
But she was wrong. The tangled thread of poor Aline’s life was not
broken yet. Her little feet were not done wandering yet through the
weary mazes of the world.
Insensibly a little warmth began to creep about the poor chilled body,
under the stress of their patient endeavors, a faint pulse fluttered
about her heart, and at length the black fringe of the lashes trembled
feebly against her cheeks. The old physician, standing anxiously over
her, with his hand upon the blue-veined wrist, looked up, and said,
kindly, to the distracted mother:
“Thank God, she revives! She will live!”
CHAPTER XLI.
“Aline, you have not asked me who saved your life, yet?”
“No, mamma.”
It was the morning after Aline’s almost fatal accident, and she was
sitting up in an easy-chair before the fire, in a pretty, bright blue
wrapper. She was very pale and quiet. She had been listening to her
mother, who had been telling her the details of her rescue, and who now
remarked in wonder:
“Aline, you have not asked me who saved your life, yet.”
“No, mamma,” the girl answered, in a tone of visible embarrassment,
while a faint color rose to her cheeks.
“I should think you would be curious over it,” said Mrs. Rodney, in a
tone of slight disappointment.
“I have not thought about it,” the young girl replied, evasively.
“Then you will be astonished when you learn who the person was--the
very last one you or any one else would have thought of,” declared Mrs.
Rodney.
“You make me feel quite curious, mamma,” said Aline, with a faint
smile, and a tone so listless it belied her assertion of interest.
“I do not suppose, if you guessed all day, that you would come at all
near the truth,” pursued Mrs. Rodney.
“I suppose not,” answered Aline, laughingly.
She leaned back wearily, and watched the leaping flames of the fire
with a smothered sigh. Oh, if only her mother would but drop the
subject.
But Mrs. Rodney had no intention of doing so.
“Indeed you would not,” she went on. “You would sooner think of any one
else that you ever knew, though indeed you never knew this gentleman!”
“Then it was a stranger,” said Aline, seeing that an answer of some
sort was expected, and feeling a guilty consciousness of deceit, for
she had an intuitive knowledge that Mr. Delaney had saved her life. She
had caught a glimpse of his darkly handsome face behind the tree Max
had pointed out to her just as she crashed through the thin ice into
the river.
“Yes, it was a stranger, although you have seen him a thousand times,
and although you know his name. Prepare to be surprised, my dear. Only
think, it was our unsociable neighbor, Mr. Delaney!”
Aline knew that she was expected to appear greatly surprised, but to
have saved her life she could not have enacted such a fraud. She was
too frank and honest. She could only falter out, embarrassedly:
“Mr. Delaney!”
“Yes! I knew you would be surprised. Every one was,” said Mrs. Rodney.
“I was surprised, and, to tell the truth, Aline, I was proud, too. Just
to think, after the mean way the Chester people had treated us, that
the richest and grandest man in the place should risk his life to save
yours! Oh, how grateful I feel to him for his kindness!”
“Grateful!” murmured Aline, in an indescribable tone.
“Yes, indeed!” cried Mrs. Rodney. “Why, my dear, you might have
perished for any help those other men would have given you--that is,
they did bring a rope, but that would not have been any good if Mr.
Delaney had not gone into the water and brought you up from the bottom.”
“It might have been better had he left me there,” the girl murmured,
half to herself.
Mrs. Rodney shuddered at the bare thought.
“Oh, how glad I am that he did not,” she exclaimed. “I feel like going
down on my knees to thank him for his bravery!”
“Thank _him_! Thank Oran Delaney? Oh, mamma!” cried Aline, with
irrepressible agitation.
“Why, yes, my dear; of course we should thank him,” cried Mrs. Rodney,
“and yet, strange as it seems, your papa and I are at a loss to know
how to do so. You see, he is so strange. Although he saved your life,
he has never called or sent to inquire how you are. And yet, one would
suppose he would take that much interest in you, seeing that he risked
his life for you.”
“I dare say he would prefer not being thanked,” murmured Aline.
“Do you think so? And yet, it would look very ungracious in us to
neglect doing so. It would appear as if we thought the saving of our
daughter’s life not even worthy a word of thanks. I should not like to
have him think that we undervalued either your life or his services,”
said Mrs. Rodney, with natural pride.
“What can it matter what he thinks? I should not say one word to him,”
cried Aline, with sudden peevishness.
Mrs. Rodney gazed at her in surprise.
“Aline, I never did understand your strange nature,” she said, rather
coldly. “Do you mean for me to think that you are not grateful to Mr.
Delaney for his inestimable service in saving you from such a horrible
death?”
Aline flushed under the rebuking glance her mother bent upon her.
“Not exactly that, mamma,” she said. “But Mr. Delaney is so unsocial
and retiring, I thought he might not care to be intruded upon, even to
receive our thanks for what he has done. Of course I am grateful. I
was dreadfully frightened down there in the water. I did not want to
die, although I had as well be dead as living, since my life is ruined
and blighted. But I dare say Mr. Delaney has almost forgotten the
occurrence by now, and I do not think we have any right to intrude upon
his privacy even to air our gratitude.”
Mrs. Rodney did not take this view of the case at all.
“I should not think it an intrusion if any one came to thank me for
saving life,” she said. “In any case, I shall thank him; but, since he
is so reticent and unsocial, perhaps the best way would be to send him
a letter--don’t you think so?”
“Yes, I think so,” answered Aline, closing her eyes with a weary sigh.
She thought of the letter she had thrown into the garden to him,
begging him to save her good name by allowing her to break the vow of
silence he had imposed upon her. He had refused her prayer; he had
allowed her hopes to be ruthlessly blasted, without lifting a finger to
prevent it; and yet he had risked his life to save hers. She could not
understand it.
“Why was he there? People say he never goes out; yet he was at the
church, and he was at the river. Was he watching me?” she asked
herself, and the thought only made her wonder the more. What did his
interest mean? “Twice I have owed my life to him,” she thought. “And
yet he has suffered me to lose that which was dearer than life--my good
name! I do not know what to think of him--while I hate him for the one
thing, I must needs be grateful to him for the other.”
She closed her eyes and lay musing on those perplexing questions. Her
thoughts went back to the days she had spent at Delaney House, and
to the horrible mysterious Thing that had so terribly assaulted and
wounded her. She wondered, as she had often done before, what that
creature was to Oran Delaney. Why did he shut himself up alone in that
great gloomy house with such a terrible companion for his solitude? She
shuddered at the thought of it--the ghost of Delaney House as he had
called it. The remembrance of those awful, maniacal shrieks rung in her
hearing often, and often, chilling the bounding life-blood in her young
veins.
“Perhaps it will kill Mr. Delaney some day,” she said, to herself, and
she shuddered at the thought. Death seemed a terrible thing to this
fair young girl in whose veins the tide of life flowed so strong and
free. She dreaded the cruel grave, its darkness, its nothingness, its
gloom.
The sudden opening of the door roused her from the gloomy musings that
began to steal over her.
Mr. Rodney entered abruptly.
Aline turned her head with a smile toward her father, but the gentle
beam faded from her lips, and a cry of terror broke from her at sight
of his face.
He was pale to ghastliness, his blue eyes seemed to almost emit sparks
of fire, so angrily did they blaze upon her. His face was almost
contorted with the strong agitation that possessed him.
Aline half started up, filled with a blind terror.
“Papa!” she gasped.
He caught her roughly by the shoulder and shook her so fiercely that
she fell back in her chair, hiding her white face fearfully in her
hands. He looked as if he were about to kill her as she crouched in
her chair, with her face hidden from his wrathful gaze, while she
trembled like a leaf in a storm.
Mrs. Rodney sprung up and ran hurriedly to him. She caught his arm in
both her delicate white hands.
“Oh, Mr. Rodney, pray do not be so rough with Aline! You will kill
her!” she cried.
He shook her off rudely almost as he had shaken his daughter. Indeed,
he was so strongly agitated, that he did not seem to know the extent of
his violence.
“Better for her if she were dead!” he broke out, bitterly. “Better for
us if she never had been born!”
“Oh, papa, what have I done?” Aline wailed out, frightened by his
fierce denunciations.
“Done! What have you not done?” he stormed at her, fiercely. “Oh,
wretched, shameless girl, whom I have nurtured at my fireside and in my
heart! How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is to have such a child!
Would to God you had perished yesterday rather than live for me to tell
you your shame to-day!”
“Shame!” the girl broke out with sudden passion and violence, while the
deep color flooded her exquisite face with crimson. “Do not apply that
word to me, papa! I have done nothing, nothing!”
“What can you mean?” gasped Mrs. Rodney, growing as pale as her
daughter.
He glared at them fiercely, his handsome face disfigured by passion.
“I mean,” he said, dropping his voice to a low, tense sound of intense
bitterness--“I mean that I have discovered Aline’s shameful secret.”
“Papa, papa, you have discovered it! You know it, and yet I have not
had to break my vow! Oh! how glad I am!” cried Aline, and a light of
joy broke over the fair face, almost transfiguring its beauty. Such
happy roses glowed on her countenance, such a radiant light shone in
the deep blue eyes as struck her father with wonder.
“Aline, I cannot understand what you mean,” he said, sharply. “I have
discovered nothing that could make you happy. This, that I have to
tell your mother, is enough to strike you dead with shame at her feet,
because you have so dishonored her!”
CHAPTER XLII.
A moment of utter silence ensued upon Mr. Rodney’s excited declaration.
Mrs. Rodney had fallen into a chair like one stunned at her husband’s
dreadful words. She stared alternately from his face to Aline’s in
hopeless bewilderment.
But although she was in a maze of wonder, her bewilderment did not by
any means equal that of her daughter.
Aline had attempted to rise from her seat, but her extreme weakness
forced her to grasp the back of her chair with both hands. She clung
to it tightly, leaning against it while she regarded her father with
startled, wide-open eyes, and slightly parted, tremulous lips. As he
gazed at the fair, wondering, innocent face, he was suddenly reminded
of her childish days. Just so the beautiful face had looked many a
time when, as a willful child, she had been reprimanded and blamed
innocently for many pranks that she had not done; just so the dew of
unshed tears had seemed to glitter on the dark, curling fringe of her
lashes. The appealing innocence of that look cut him to the heart for a
moment, and then he was angry with himself for his weakness. How dare
she look so pure and true when she was such a sinner?
In a moment she spoke--gently, almost appealingly.
“Papa, there must be some mistake. You said you knew my secret?”
“Yes, to my sorrow,” he replied, bitterly.
“But, papa,” she spoke in a slow, grieved tone, “if you know it, as you
say, why, then, do you talk of shame to me? It you know that secret you
say you know, you must be aware that I have done nothing to blush for.
Why should I fall down dead at my mother’s feet when I have done no
wrong?”
“Aline, why do you try to keep up that wretched farce?” he exclaimed,
hoarsely, while his eyes flashed luridly. “My God, you, the child we
loved so dearly, the child we thought so innocent and true, you have
been the falsest-hearted girl that ever a mother bore! Even while we
were searching for you in anguish of soul, deeming you lost or dead,
you were heartlessly hiding yourself away in the house of the rich man
yonder. You were living with him in terrible shame. Say, is this not
true?”
“As God is my judge, papa, you accuse me falsely!” she answered,
lifting her white hand solemnly to heaven, while her beautiful face
flushed a vivid burning scarlet.
“You deny that you were at Delaney House?” he asked.
“I cannot answer that question, papa; but I _can_ deny, and I do deny,
your other accusation.”
“Your word does not signify much in this case,” he said. “I already
have the proofs that you stayed, during the three months of your
absence, at Delaney House.”
The beautiful blush seemed to burn deeper on the fair young face.
“Papa, who is my accuser?” she inquired, in wonder.
“You shall know by and by,” he answered. “I am going to ask you some
questions now. Mind that you answer them truly. There is no longer any
need to keep back the answer to anything I may ask you. All is known.”
“All?” she echoed, faintly, and with palpable wonder.
“Yes, all,” he replied. “And first you were at Delaney House, during
the whole three months of your absence. It is too late to deny it. You
must confess all.”
“But my oath,” she said, looking at him with wide, questioning eyes.
“Is of no avail, since I have found out the truth without your agency,”
he replied. “The secret is a secret no longer. You may answer freely
all that I ask you.”
She looked at him dubiously with those beautiful eyes that seemed to
mirror her soul’s purity.
“I should be glad to answer you, papa, if I thought it were quite
right,” she said.
“You can take your papa’s word for that,” interposed Mrs. Rodney,
rather peevishly. “He has never deceived you in anything, has he,
Aline?”
“No, mamma,” she replied.
“Then tell him what he asks you,” said her mother.
Aline turned her eyes back to the pale, stern face of her father.
“Papa, I admit that I was at Delaney House those three months,” she
said, simply.
“And you were dangerously wounded in the beginning of your stay there,”
he said. “Don’t deny that either, Aline. You bear the scar on your
bosom in witness of the fact.”
“I admit the wound,” she replied, in the same gentle, obedient way as
before.
“I must now require you to tell me how you received it,” said Mr.
Rodney, watching her closely.
She started, and looked earnestly at him.
“You said that you knew all, papa,” she replied, with a touch of vague
reproach in her tone.
He could not conceal the embarrassment her words caused him. His
eyelids fell and he stood silent a moment gazing down at the floor.
“You said that you knew all, papa,” Aline repeated, reproachfully.
“I know the most and worst,” he replied, looking up at her. “There are
some trifling details with which I am unacquainted. I depend on you to
make me acquainted with them.”
“But, papa--” she said, and paused, tremblingly.
“Well?” he said.
“You know, papa, it would be wrong for me to tell you anything about
that fatal absence of mine. It would be breaking my oath of silence,”
she replied.
He stifled an impatient exclamation between his mustached lips.
“But, my child,” he said, in a softer tone than he had yet used, “did
you not promise just now to answer all of my questions?”
The blue eyes dilated in innocent surprise.
“Oh, no, papa,” she replied. “I thought it could do no harm to admit
anything that you already knew; so I did not hesitate to own that I had
been at Delaney House, and that I received my wound there. But of the
manner in which I received my hurt I cannot tell you since you do not
know. I am bound to silence. I cannot break my word of honor.”
CHAPTER XLIII.
Mr. Rodney regarded his daughter with a disappointed and baffled air.
He had set a trap to surprise all the details of her secret from her,
deeming it no harm to do so. But she had been too quick-witted for him.
He saw that he was to learn nothing from her that he did not already
know.
He was bitterly angry with her. His outraged pride prompted him to
denounce her in the bitterest terms, and to drive her forth from his
roof as one unworthy to dwell in the home she had dishonored. Something
stronger than his own will held him back.
As he gazed at her clinging feebly to the back of the chair, weak and
white from the effects of her accident yesterday, and with that look
of helpless innocence on the fair young face, his conviction of her
guiltiness was staggered. In the face of all the evidence, in the face
of her terrible silence, he could scarcely believe that his beautiful,
petted daughter was a deliberate sinner. Yet what was the meaning of
the mystery in which she shrouded her absence from her home? Why had
she gone to Delaney House, and what had she been doing there? If Oran
Delaney had wronged his little darling, he said to himself, fiercely,
his life should pay the forfeit.
“Aline,” he said to her with startling abruptness; “tell me, what is
Oran Delaney to you?”
She shivered and started as if an icy wind had swept across her.
“Tell me,” he repeated sharply, “what is Oran Delaney to you?”
The sweet, frank blue eyes lifted earnestly to his face.
“He is nothing, papa,” she replied.
“Nothing _now_, you mean,” he said. “Well, I will put my query in
another shape. What _has_ he been to you?”
Her heart thrilled bitterly at the pointed question.
An impulse came over her to tell him the truth--to say, bitterly and
truly, “He has been the evil genius of my life; he has spoiled my
life for me; he has blighted all the budding hopes of my youth, and
made earth a wide Sahara, where I must walk with blistered feet and a
fainting heart.”
This would have been the truest answer she could have made, she
said, bitterly, to herself; but she shut her lips over the unspoken
words--they were not for her to say.
“You do not answer me, Aline,” said her father, and then she answered,
gravely:
“I can only repeat what I said to you before. He is nothing to me.”
He walked away from her, and went over to the window that overlooked
Delaney House and its beautiful spacious grounds. Drawing aside the
curtain, he looked out upon the scene. The winter snow was falling in
soft, thick flakes, and had been falling thus all day. The ground was
covered with a soft, white carpet, pure and unspotted, for no footfall
had smirched its virgin purity. Through the veil of softly falling
flakes the gloomy gray outline of Delaney House glimmered indistinctly
like a picture. To his wretched, distracted mind, filled with harrowing
suspicions of his child, recurred a line or two from a familiar poem:
“Once I was pure as the snow, but I fell--
Fell, like the snow-flakes, from heaven to hell!”
A groan forced itself through his pale, drawn lips.
“My God!” he said, hoarsely. “Only to think, Aline, that while we were
distracted over your unknown fate, while we sought you everywhere,
while sleep was a stranger to our eyes and food tasted bitter on our
lips, through the terrible strain of our anxiety for you, that you were
hidden away in my neighbor’s house, within a stone’s throw of your own
home! It was wicked, cruel, heartless!”
“Heartless!” she echoed, with weary bitterness, and a look of agony
came over the white face. She recalled that time so well when she had
sorrowed to feel what they would think of her at home; how they would
miss her and grieve for her, blaming her for the terrible silence she
was forced to keep.
“Aline, will you tell me one thing?” he asked. “I suppose it cannot
greatly matter in the keeping of your secret. I am most curious to know
how you left your room that day.”
“I went through that window, papa,” she answered, thinking that she
might tell him the truth thus far, at least.
“But how?” he inquired, in palpable astonishment.
“Down a ladder,” she replied.
“Placed there by Oran Delaney?” he inquired, smothering a terrible
imprecation on his writhing lips.
“Yes, papa,” she answered, wearily, for she was weak and tired, and in
his excitement he had not thought of sparing her feeble strength.
“So then there was really an intrigue carried on between you?” he burst
out, wrathfully.
“No, papa, there was not. I had never spoken to Mr. Delaney in my life
until that day,” she replied, with such candor that he could not but
believe her.
“How then did it happen that you allowed him to place a ladder for you
to descend upon?” he asked.
The pale face grew suddenly scarlet again.
“Papa, it was the fault of my own willfulness,” she sighed.
“I told you so, Aline. I always knew that your willful ways would bring
you into trouble,” cried poor, half-dazed Mrs. Rodney.
“Yes, mamma, dearest, and your words came true--as true as any words
ever spoken in this world,” cried Aline, meekly; and she added, with a
long, heavy sigh, “I do not believe any one ever paid a greater price
for an innocent folly than I have done.”
Her mother broke into low, heart-broken sobbing, and buried her face in
her handkerchief.
“Tell us how it came about, Aline,” said her father, impatiently.
“It was just in this way, papa. I was angry because I was left at home
that day, and I threw the book mamma had given me to read out of my
window into Mr. Delaney’s garden.”
“Well, go on,” he said, as she paused a moment.
Aline continued:
“You see, papa and mamma, I had no idea Mr. Delaney was walking in his
garden that morning. But he was, and when I threw the book it struck
him sharply on his head. He looked up and saw me, and then I was
frightened at what I had done. I spoke to him. I apologized to him and
explained that it was an accident.”
“And then?” asked Mr. Rodney.
“He excused me after amusing himself with me a little while. He
evidently thought me nothing but a child,” said Aline. “I am sure I
acted like a child. I told him how much I wanted some of the beautiful
roses in his garden. So he brought an old step-ladder, placed it under
the window, and told me to come down and take all the flowers I wanted.”
“My God!” groaned her father, gazing at her in despair.
“I did not mean to do anything wrong. It was only one of my willful
escapades, and I never thought that it could end more seriously than
my other girlish freaks. I went down the ladder, papa, but, indeed,
indeed, I did not mean to stay ten minutes. I just meant to have one
breath of the sweet air under those shady trees, and a bunch of the
roses, and then to come back before cook should find out my absence.”
“Why, then, did you stay?” he inquired.
“That, too, was the result of my thoughtlessness and folly. When I
found myself in the garden, among the beautiful flowers, I wandered
away by myself, absorbed in the pleasant task of gathering a huge
bouquet to brighten my lonely room. I was so charmed that I forgot
everything else in my fascinating task. The poet has given us a pretty
and appropriate quotation, papa,” she said, looking at him with a
faint, quivering smile on her marble-white face.
She repeated it softly:
“Too late I stayed--forgive the crime!
Unheeded flew the hours.
How noiseless falls the foot of Time
That only treads on flowers!”
Then she resumed, in a low, sad voice:
“It was just like that with me, papa. I did not remember anything but
my pleasure in the sweet, fragrant flowers. I kissed their fragrant
velvety faces a hundred times. I patted them softly with loving hands.
I knelt down and whispered to them as if they had been sentient, human
beings. I was filled with pleasure at their lovely forms and exquisite
colors. I gathered one here, another there, until my hands were full.
Never did Time fly so fast. It trod on flowers, indeed, but, ah me! ah
me!” she sighed, clasping her small hands together in agony, “since
then its flight has been slow and dreary, over thorny paths with
bleeding feet.”
They gazed upon her in troubled silence, knowing not what to say.
“Even then, papa, mamma, if I had come home when I found out that it
had grown so late all might have been well,” she said. “But the fatal
curiosity our common Mother Eve bequeathed us led me on to my fate.”
Again they had nothing to say to her. They hung eagerly on her next
words.
“A bell rang from the house, then, for luncheon, and Mr. Delaney
came to ask me to go to share it,” she went on. “It was then that my
inexcusable folly began. If I had come back home all would have been
well. My foolish curiosity led me to enter the great house of which I
had heard so much.”
Mrs. Rodney groaned aloud in bitterness of spirit.
“I went into the grand dining-room and had my lunch--a delicate,
luxurious lunch that appeared to have been spread by invisible
hands, for no one appeared except Mr. Delaney and myself. I feasted
luxuriously, then came out into the hall to return home, full of sudden
dread that the cook had discovered my protracted absence.”
“And then?” inquired Mr. Rodney, anxiously.
A look of fear and dread and bitter regret came over the white face of
the tortured young girl. She answered, slowly:
“Then something happened that was the cause of my remaining hidden away
wretched and maddened for three long months, that seemed longer to me
than all the years of my life that had gone before.”
“And that something? You must tell us what it was, Aline,” said her
father, sternly.
“No, papa, I cannot tell you. I have sworn never to reveal it,” Aline
replied, despairingly.
CHAPTER XLIV.
Again a disappointed and baffled expression crossed Mr. Rodney’s fine
face. He was cruelly tortured by this dreadful secret that lay, like a
great, inky blot, on the fair fame of his beautiful, beloved daughter.
“Aline, did you know that it was wrong for you to take such an oath?”
he inquired.
A piteous look came over the sweet, pale face.
“It was hard for me to do so, but I did not know that it was wrong,”
she replied. “I was perfectly ignorant, papa, of the dreadful
consequences that would follow upon my silence.”
“I wish to Heaven that you had never suffered any one to bind you to
such a promise,” he cried.
“But, papa, he--I mean, I could never have come home unless I had taken
the solemn vow asked of me. At first I refused. I was determined to
reveal all when I reached home. I was stubborn in my refusal to submit.
But--when I found that I would never be permitted to come back unless I
gave way, I yielded. I was so homesick and wretched, papa, that I could
not hold out.”
He crossed the room to her and took one of the cold, nerveless hands in
his.
“Aline, forgive me for asking you so hard a question,” he said, “for
sometimes I am tempted to believe in your innocence still, in spite of
all the circumstantial evidences to the contrary. My daughter, will you
swear that you are as innocent and pure as when you left your home that
dreadful day?”
She lifted her white hand to Heaven and looked at him fearlessly with
her bright, clear gaze.
“Yes, papa, I swear before Heaven that I am as pure as when I went
away,” she replied.
Then there was silence for a moment. Mrs. Rodney had fallen down upon
the bed, weeping bitter, but quiet tears. Mr. Rodney walked over to
the window, and stood looking out again at the gloomy outlines of his
neighbor’s house. It had acquired a strange fascination for him since
he had learned that his daughter had been hidden there so long
“I wonder,” he broke out, abruptly, “what I have ever done to Oran
Delaney that he should have done this thing to me?”
Aline had sunk wearily into her chair again. She looked around at him
now, earnestly.
“Papa, I am sure you have done nothing,” she said. “There are reasons
relating to himself that compel him to wish the story of my presence in
his house unknown.”
“One thing I must know, Aline. This man who has so cruelly blighted all
your prospects in life, does he love you?”
“No, papa,” she replied, with something like wonder at his question.
“Yet yesterday he risked his life to save yours.”
“I think he meant that in some sort as a reparation,” she said, timidly.
“Then it was he that sent you the ten thousand dollars?” interrogated
her father, quickly.
“It was he,” she replied.
“Then you were right not to accept it,” he exclaimed. “Oran Delaney
must make you a greater reparation than that for the ill you have
sustained at his hands.”
“He will not reveal the secret--we need not hope for it,” Aline said,
despondently.
“A thousand revealed secrets could not clear the stain from your name,
my poor child,” he answered “You are irretrievably compromised by your
stay in his house. There is but one atonement he can make you, and I,
as the guardian of your honor, shall force him to that if it be at the
point of the sword.”
“Would you murder Mr. Delaney?” she exclaimed, in horror.
“I will meet him on the field of honor and fight him until one or
both of us be dead,” Mr. Rodney answered, so resolutely that Aline
shuddered. A vision of the scene he threatened rushed over her mind.
Oh, what a terrible price she was paying for the willful folly of that
summer day long past!
“Papa, you said there was one atonement he could make,” she said,
timidly. “Will you tell me what you meant?”
“He must make you his wife, Aline. He must give you the shelter of his
proud, honorable name to wash away the stain he has cast upon your
own. In no other way can he make atonement for his fault,” Mr. Rodney
exclaimed.
CHAPTER XLV.
Mr. Rodney’s firm and decisive declaration had the effect of
frightening his fair young daughter. She looked at him, piteously.
“But, papa, I do not want to be married,” she exclaimed, with such a
childish air of dismay and surprise that he could have laughed if he
had not been so miserable. “I do not want to be married, I should not
like to be married,” Aline repeated, forlornly.
“But, my dear, all women marry,” said her father.
“Not all,” replied she; “I know several who did not. There are Miss
Palmer, Miss Brown, Miss Robinson.”
“Cross old maids, all of them,” Mr. Rodney replied. “I hope you will
never be an old maid, Aline. Indeed, you must not think of such a
thing. You will have to marry, and the man you marry must be Oran
Delaney.”
“I dare say he will not want to be married any more than I do,” said
Aline, with unconscious hopefulness.
A certain hard and grim expression came over Mr. Rodney’s handsome face.
“He will not have much choice in the matter,” he replied.
“Oh, papa!” the young girl cried, and a deep color rose up all over her
face.
“Well?” he said.
“Would you give me to one who took me unwillingly?” she asked, in a
tone of blended shame and reproach.
He was silent a moment, and his brows knitted themselves together in
a straight, hard line. Aline, gazing wistfully at him, saw that gray
hairs had come into his brown locks that were not there a few months
ago. Her heart thrilled with pain and remorse.
“Aline, I do not know how to answer you,” he said. “God knows that I do
not wish to force you upon any man. But your good name is irretrievably
compromised, and nothing can clear it except a marriage with Oran
Delaney. As you are, you can never hope to hold up your head in society
again. As his wife, you would soon live down the scandal that now
assails you. You would have some chance of happiness. He owes you this
reparation, and I, as the true guardian of your happiness and honor,
shall compel him to make it. It he refuses--” he paused, and an ominous
light came into his eyes.
“If he refuses,” she echoed, faintly.
“Then I will kill him, or he shall kill me!” he replied, bitterly.
Aline sat gazing at him like one stunned. All the horror of her
position rushed over her.
Was there indeed no other way out of the labyrinth of error in which
she was involved than by this dreadful forced marriage?
All the native pride within her rose up in arms against it. Could she
give herself up to be an unwilling bride forced upon an unwilling
bridegroom?
She shrunk sensitively from the thought. Better be dead, she thought.
She looked at her father and said, with a babyish quiver of the sweet,
red lips:
“Papa, I wish that Mr. Delaney had not saved me yesterday. I should
then have been spared all this trouble and distress. My poor life is
only a sorrow and disgrace to you all.”
Mr. Rodney did not answer. Perhaps his troubled thoughts ran in the
same channel.
Aline waited a moment for him to speak, but as he remained silent and
abstracted, she asked, timidly:
“Papa, will you not tell me how you became possessed of my secret?”
“What good can it do you to know?” he inquired.
“None that I can think of,” she replied, wearily. “It was only my
natural curiosity that prompted me to ask the question.”
“At some other time, Aline, I will tell you,” said her father. “I would
prefer not to do so at present.”
And after a moment’s hesitation, he abruptly left the room. Aline
remained sitting wearily in her chair, gazing into the leaping flames
of the bright coal fire with sad blue eyes that could scarcely see for
the thick mist of tears that filled them. Her heart ached drearily in
her breast. Something like despair thrilled through her as she sat
there with her small hands folded on her lap.
“It were better if I had died yesterday--ay, it were better if I never
had been born,” she murmured to herself, with a sudden passionate
bitterness.
CHAPTER XLVI.
While Aline sat gazing drearily into the fire that winter eve, the
grave, taciturn master of Delaney House lay languidly on a silken couch
in his quiet library.
The dark, handsome face had a worn and weary expression. It was pale,
too, and the dark eyes were dim and heavy. His head rested wearily on a
crimson satin cushion, and one hand was pressed against his brow, as if
in pain.
There was a light tap at the door, and then Mrs. Griffin entered and
replenished the fire, that had commenced to burn low behind the steel
bars of the grate. Then she stood looking at him anxiously a moment.
“Your head aches?” she asked, questioningly.
“Slightly,” he replied, indifferently.
“Can I do nothing for you?” the old woman questioned, kindly.
“No; it does not matter. The pain will wear itself out by and by.”
She looked at him wistfully a moment, then went out quietly, leaving
him to silence and repose again.
The fire crackled merrily in the grate, the clock ticked softly on
the marble mantel. Outside, the noiseless flakes of snow fell lightly
against the window-pane. Gradually the twilight began to fall, and
shadows gathered in the room.
Mr. Delaney lay very still and quiet, with half-closed eyes shaded by
his hand, his fine features grave even to sadness. In the gathering
obscurity a heavy sigh drifted over his lips.
Mrs. Griffin came back, lighted the library lamp, then paused and
regarded him with a strange expression.
He removed his hand and looked at her with his heavy eyes.
“What is it?” he asked.
“Oh, Mr. Delaney, there’s some one to see you!” she exclaimed.
He started up, all his gravity and calmness stirred by angry
displeasure.
“Some one to see me? Have you forgotten my orders to admit no one?” he
exclaimed.
“No, sir, I have not forgotten,” she answered. “But she did not knock.
She came slipping in so softly, like a ghost, that I was frightened.”
“She? Whom?” he exclaimed, hoarsely.
“Miss Rodney, sir.”
“Miss Rodney--Aline--here in this house? My God!” he cried, abruptly.
“Yes, sir, down in the kitchen, waiting to see you,” said Mrs. Griffin.
“You see, I forgot to lock the door, and just at dark the knob turned
soft like, and she came gliding in, still as a ghost and pale as one,
too, sir. And she says to me, weak and nervous-like, ‘I _must_ see Mr.
Delaney, quick. Go and ask him to give me an interview.’”
He could only stare at her in blank astonishment.
“I was so surprised and frightened, sir, that I did not speak one word
to her, but just left her standing there shivering in the middle of the
room, and came away to do her bidding. Now, what answer shall I take
back? Will you see her, Mr. Delaney?”
He hesitated a moment, and Mrs. Griffin added, respectfully:
“I think she’s in a hurry, sir, and perhaps she’s afraid to stay down
there alone.”
He drew a long breath and answered:
“Very well. You may show her up here.”
Mrs. Griffin turned the dim lamp up to a brighter flame and hastened
away to do his bidding.
Oran Delaney remained standing in the center of the beautiful, lofty
room, gazing expectantly at the door.
In a minute he heard Mrs. Griffin’s heavy footsteps in the hall, with
light, quick ones pattering beside them. The door opened quickly, and
Aline entered alone.
She was wrapped from head to foot in a long, dark cloak, from which
her pale face gleamed like some beautiful white flower. Her dark blue
eyes were black with excitement, her parted, panting lips, from which
the breath came in quick little gasps, showed the haste with which she
had sought his presence. She stood just inside the door, a dark, chilly
little figure from which the melting snow-drops ran down in little
rills upon the velvet carpet.
Mr. Delaney shook off the trance of wonder that held him and went
forward to meet her.
“Miss Rodney, what has brought you back to this ill fated house?” he
exclaimed.
“I knew you would be surprised,” she answered quickly. “Mr. Delaney, I
came here to ask you to marry me!”
CHAPTER XLVII.
If the solid earth had parted beneath Oran Delaney’s feet, he could not
have been more surprised than he was at those words from Aline Rodney’s
lips. He did not answer, only stared at her in hopeless bewilderment.
“I came here to ask you to marry me,” she repeated, clearly, thinking
he had not heard her, and no blush stained the pale cheek, the white
lids did not droop over the blue eyes that gazed at him frankly and
gravely. What did she mean? Had she gone mad under the stress of her
great trial?
He went over to her and lifted one of the white hands that hung by her
side. It was cold as ice as he held it in the warm clasp of his own.
“Aline, child, I do not understand you. What was it you said to me?”
He saw a little shiver creep over the slender form, but she looked up
at him bravely, and repeated her words:
“I want you to marry me, Mr. Delaney.”
“To marry you, Aline? Do you then love me, my poor child?” he asked,
gazing into the clear eyes with sudden compassion.
She shook her small head gravely.
“No, but I want to be your wife,” she said, and the words filled him
with the most utter bewilderment.
There she stood, a young, beautiful, intelligent girl, usurping his
sex’s prerogative with a calm, unblushing face and clear, frank eyes
that regarded him with the innocent light of a child’s--the calmness of
an unawakened heart.
“You do not love me, yet you wish to be my wife! Aline, are you
dreaming, or am I?” he asked, drawing her forward into the warmth of
the bright fire, for little shivers of deadly cold were shaking the
girlish form from head to foot.
He saw a sudden, passionate pain flame into the pale face. She threw
out her hand with a gesture of despair.
“No, I am not dreaming, nor are you,” she said. “I would to God that we
were! This reality is more horrible than any dream!”
“But, why--why should you wish--wish to--to--” he began, and paused,
unable to continue, and feeling a shamed consciousness of a fiery,
uncontrollable color overspreading his face. To be wooed in this calm,
business-like fashion by this ridiculous child was too strange, too
absurd for anything, and yet there were little thrills of rapturous
emotion tingling along his nerves, his heart was beating quickly with
emotion.
The girl’s eyes had wandered to the leaping flames of the firelight.
She turned them back gravely to his face.
“Why do I wish you to marry me?” she said. “I will tell you, Mr.
Delaney. The secret of my stay in this house has been discovered!”
“You have broken your oath!” he exclaimed in sudden anger.
She stood before him in proud silence, neither denying nor assenting to
his affirmation.
Gazing at the fair face a moment he felt that he had wronged her by the
brief suspicion.
“Aline, forgive me. I see that I am suspecting you unjustly,” he said.
“But tell me, who has revealed the secret?”
“I do not know,” she answered. “But only a little while ago papa came
in and charged me with it. He was very, very angry.”
“Angry with you?” he questioned.
“Angry with you,” she answered, a faint color creeping into the pallid
face. “He told me that you had forever compromised my good name, and
that I could never take my place in the world, in society, unless you
married me.”
She was speaking to him with the simple directness of a child. He was
staggered by her simplicity--assurance he would have called it in any
other woman.
“And so he sent you here to ask me?” he said.
A look of terror came over the fair face. She glanced around her,
fearfully.
“No, I have stolen away, and if he misses me he will come here to seek
for me,” she said. “I must hurry back, but first I must have an answer
to my question. Tell me, Mr. Delaney, will you do as I have asked you?”
CHAPTER XLVIII.
It was the strangest question Oran Delaney had ever heard from a girl’s
lips. He said to himself that Aline Rodney’s simplicity was simply
matchless. If she had been reared within the walls of a convent she
could not have seemed more ignorant of the offense she was committing
against society, against the creed of the whole world, in asking a man
to marry her, and thus usurping his masculine prerogative.
Breaking in upon his stupid silence, she continued:
“Only a marriage in name, you know, Mr. Delaney. I should not live with
you, of course. Neither of us would care for that. If you gave me the
shelter of your name at the altar I would go back then to my father’s
house, and never trouble you again!”
“You do not know what you are saying!” he cried out, passionately.
“Never trouble me again! Oh, my God!”
“Indeed I should not, Mr. Delaney!” she cried out, hastily, and quite
mistaking the cause of his agitation. “I should never come here again.
All that I wish is to satisfy papa and the world. The simple marriage
ceremony would do that.”
“And you would be content with that, Aline?” he asked, gazing down into
her splendid violet eyes with a look she could not understand.
“Quite content,” she answered, letting the long fringe of her lashes
droop low before that anxious gaze.
“But I am a wealthy man, you know, Aline,” he said. “Should you not
wish to have some of my income settled upon yourself?”
She raised her blue eyes fearlessly to his face.
“I think I have told you before that the wealth of the world could not
make up to me for the trouble you have caused me,” she said, proudly.
“And you would refuse it even as my wife?” he asked.
“Yes,” Aline answered, steadily, and then there was a brief silence.
The man turned his back upon her and walked to the furthest corner
of the room. In that moment he was paltering with the most terrible
temptation of his life. The angels of good and evil were fighting
fiercely for his soul.
She waited in nervous impatience for him to return to her, and when he
did after a few minutes, she spoke eagerly, without waiting for him to
speak:
“Well, your answer, Mr. Delaney--is it yes or no?”
He parried the question by one that was cruel and cut deep:
“Miss Rodney, do you know that it is a bold and unmaidenly act for you
to ask a man to marry you?”
The barbed shaft went home. The slight form quivered as if transfixed
by an arrow, the blue eyes dilated and looked at him with an agony of
reproach in their lustrous depths.
“Did you not know it?” he repeated, harshly, almost sternly, while he
averted his eyes in cold disdain.
“I should have known it if--if only I had stopped to think,” she
cried, and the great waves of crimson began to roll over her face on
which he would not look. “I was so frightened for you that I put self
aside. I thought only of saving you, and now”--she broke down suddenly,
and finished the sentence through hard, dry sobs, “now you scorn and
despise me!”
“Why were you frightened for me?” he asked, curiously.
“No matter--and yet God knows I would have saved you if I could--do
not forget that, Mr. Delaney, since you will not marry me!” she cried,
desperately.
“No, I will _not_ marry you!” he cried, with a furious bitterness that
was quite inexplainable. “Oh, go, girl, go! Why do you stay here to
torture me thus?”
“I am going,” she answered, with a proud bitterness, as she tore the
door open and rushed from the room. She ran along the hall, down the
stairway, flew through the hall and the kitchen, pausing not until she
found herself again out in the dark, starless night, with the soft,
swift flakes of snow still falling steadily, and wrapping old Mother
Earth in a pure white winding sheet.
“I shall never go home again--never!” said the girl, lifting a white,
desperate face in the wintery darkness. “May God pity and guide me in
my wretched exile!”
CHAPTER XLIX.
Oran Delaney drew a long breath of relief as the door closed behind the
slender form of Aline.
He had been face to face with a great temptation, and he had mastered
it by the strength of an indomitable will. But the great drops of sweat
beaded his white brow as he sunk into a chair and gazed blankly at the
carved oaken door that had shut Aline out from his sight.
“She thinks me cold, cruel, heartless,” he muttered. “But, oh, my God,
what if I had taken her at her word? Ah, no, no, better let her go pure
and innocent, though miserable, than such a fate as that, poor child.”
He remained silent a few moments, then rose from his chair and began to
pace restlessly up and down the floor.
“Ah, Heaven, if only I knew what to do!” he cried. “It is a shame that
her pure, sweet life should be sacrificed to the keeping of my bitter
secret. Ah, if only I could beat down my wretched pride and confess the
truth! Aline, Aline, I would give uncounted gold if only I had never
seen your face.”
His distracted thoughts received a sudden and startling interruption.
A sound he had not heard for years echoed loudly through the house.
It was the peal of the long-unused door-bell. Once, twice, thrice, it
echoed through the house, loudly and harshly, as if grasped by a hasty
and authoritative hand.
Mrs. Griffin came flying into the room and met her master coming out.
“Oh, sir, the door-bell,” she gasped, breathlessly.
“Go back and guard her,” he answered. “I will answer the bell myself.”
He went with slow steps along the hall. Something told him what was
coming. He was not surprised when he opened the door and saw his
neighbor on the threshold.
“Mr. Rodney!” he exclaimed.
“Mr. Delaney!” replied the other as he stepped deliberately into the
wide, dimly-lighted hall.
And then they stood gazing at each other in silence a moment. Mr.
Rodney spoke first in low, deep voice of concentrated bitterness and
repressed fury.
“I have come for my daughter,” he said.
“She is not here,” Mr. Delaney answered, steadily.
Mr. Rodney’s hand clinched itself as it hung by his side, until the
sharp nails were buried in the tender flesh.
“Do not answer me with falsehoods,” he said, fiercely. “She has fled
from her home, and I am quite sure that she is here.”
“I repeat that she is not here,” answered the master of Delaney House,
with a forced calmness. “She was here but a little while ago, but she
went away again.”
“Went away again,” repeated Mr. Rodney, with white lips. “Where did she
go?”
“Where should she go but to her home?” queried Oran Delaney, in amaze.
“Where, indeed?” echoed the distracted father. “You might better ask
yourself that question, Oran Delaney! You who have ruined her young
life, might know better how to answer it!”
“Come with me, Mr. Rodney. We have much to say to each other,” said
Oran Delaney.
He led his uninvited guest up to the quiet library where but a little
while ago Aline had stood, asking him to save her ruined life by making
her his wife. It was the father now instead of the daughter--quite a
difference, Oran Delaney said to himself, with grim pleasantry.
He placed a chair for Mr. Rodney, but the latter declined it and stood
up stiffly, with his arms folded over his breast. Their glances met,
and Mr. Delaney saw bitter hatred in the dark-blue eyes whose likeness
to Aline’s struck him with a strange pain.
“You have come to curse me, Mr. Rodney,” he said, drawing a long, deep
breath.
“I have come to do more than that,” the man answered, passionately. “I
have come to demand reparation for my daughter’s wrongs!”
CHAPTER L.
It was exactly what Oran Delaney was prepared to hear. Nay, he would
have been disappointed if the proud, noble looking man before him had
not made that passionate, determined assertion. He said to himself
that, if he had been the father of Aline Rodney, he would have killed
any man who had thus shadowed her life. He knew that he had a true man
and a devoted father to deal with, and the groan that struggled up
from his breast was not one of fear, but rather of grief that he could
not make the reparation demanded.
“Let me ask you one question, Mr. Rodney,” he said. “Who has betrayed
Aline’s secret to you?”
Mr. Rodney looked at him steadily, as he answered:
“I have no objection to telling you, sir. It was a New York detective,
who has been upon Aline’s track ever since her first disappearance from
her home.”
“How has he discovered it?” Mr. Delaney exclaimed, while a terrible
pallor overspread his face. He knew what those keen New York detectives
were. Was all his humiliating secret, indeed, revealed to the carping
world?
“I cannot tell you that,” Mr. Rodney answered. “It is the man’s own
secret. Suffice it to say that I am now fully aware that Aline spent
the three months of her strange absence under this roof. You will not
deny that fact?”
“Would to God that I could!” groaned Oran Delaney, involuntarily.
“Ah! you are frightened at the consequences of what you have done!”
sneered the outraged father.
It he had expected to arouse a tempest of wrath in the other by his
contemptuous sneer, he was mistaken. Mr. Delaney looked at him gravely,
even sadly, but he made no answer to the angry words, His heart and
mind were in a tumult. He could not think clearly. Aline’s beautiful,
anguished face kept rising between him and her father. It haunted him,
he could not banish it from his thoughts.
“Because I have grieved her so, I will speak no angry words to her
father,” he said to himself.
He turned to the angry man and said, with grave dignity:
“I am quite willing to offer you all the reparation in my power, Mr.
Rodney, for the injury I have done you and your daughter.”
“I think you know that there are but two ways of settling our
difficulty,” Mr. Rodney said, gazing sternly into the troubled eyes of
his neighbor.
“You mean--”
“The first way would be to marry my daughter and give her the shelter
of your name,” said Mr. Rodney.
“And the second?” queried his neighbor.
“Satisfaction at the sword’s point” the other answered, sharply.
“A duel?” Mr. Delaney exclaimed.
“Yes.”
Then for a brief space they were silent, and gazed gravely at each
other. The visitor was the first to break the deep, strange silence
that reigned in the room.
“You have your choice, sir. Which shall it be--a death or a bridal?”
“Most unfortunately, I can have no choice in the matter,” Oran Delaney
answered, in calm, repressed tones that showed no trace of fear or
dread. “It must be the duel.”
“You refuse to marry Aline--you prefer death rather than be the husband
of my beautiful child!” Mr. Rodney exclaimed, in mingled anger and
wonder.
“I have already told you that I have no choice,” the other answered.
“Of course you will allow me to doubt that assertion?” sneeringly.
“I will allow _you_ to do so for your daughter’s sake: but it would not
be safe for any other man to say so much before my face.”
They gazed fixedly at each other. Mr. Rodney’s lips were just starting
to speak, when the contemplated words were frozen on his lips by a
terrible interruption. That terrible voice, which any one who had ever
heard it never forgot, rang suddenly and startlingly through the house,
waking all the sleeping echoes into awful life. Mr. Rodney’s blood
tingled in his veins, every individual hair on his head seemed to stand
erect with horror. He sprung forward and caught Mr. Delaney by the arm.
“What is it?” he cried, hoarsely.
His host did not answer for a moment. He stood still, listening to
those ringing cries with a look like despair on his face.
“What is it?” Mr. Rodney repeated.
Then Mr. Delaney turned his tortured eyes on the other’s face.
“It is the ghost of Delaney House,” he said, in a changed and hollow
voice.
“The ghost!” Mr. Rodney cried.
“Yes,” Mr. Delaney answered, and then both were silent, while those
shrill cries filled their ears with a horrible din.
A pause, and then Mr. Delaney said, abruptly:
“Do not think me inhospitable, but you had better go. Delaney House is
no place for you or any one. It is haunted. It is the abode of unhappy
spirits. Go now, and send some one to me in the morning on the business
you propose.”
Mr. Rodney obeyed mechanically. He was so surprised and confused by the
sudden, dreadful sounds that still assailed his ears that he seemed to
have no volition of his own. He moved toward the door that Mr. Delaney
held open, and passed quickly through it, followed by his host.
“Are you sure that Aline is not here?” he asked, as they passed through
the hall, his mind suddenly recurring to the fact of her absence an
hour ago which had been discovered by her mother and reported to him in
a frenzy of alarm.
“I give you my word of honor that she left me only a minute before you
entered. You must have met her only for the darkness of the night. I
am quite sure you will find her at home when you return,” Oran Delaney
answered, confidently.
“I shall send a friend to you in the morning to make arrangements,” Mr.
Rodney said, presently.
“Very well. I shall make my will to-night,” Mr. Delaney answered, with
grim pleasantry.
Then he opened the heavy door and ushered his visitor out into the
snowy night, in whose gloom and darkness Aline had disappeared a little
while ago.
CHAPTER LI.
When the retreating footsteps of his neighbor had died in the stillness
of the night, Oran Delaney closed and locked the door against the outer
darkness and returned to the library. He walked to the hearth and stood
there gazing thoughtfully down into the glowing fire.
“The last night of my life, perhaps,” he said, half aloud. “Ah, me! how
terribly I have been tempted to-night! How easy it would have been to
have flung honor to the winds and yielded to the impulse that prompted
me to seek happiness at whatever cost. Happiness--‘ay, there’s the
rub’--should I have been happy? Would not conscience have pursued me
with the bloodhounds of remorse?”
The weird shrieks of the fabled ghost of Delaney Hall had died away
into silence now. In the stillness of the room a heavy sigh was
distinctly audible as it drifted across the dark mustached lips.
“Poor child! Now I understand why she came to me on that strange
mission to-night. She would have sacrificed herself to appease her
father’s wrath and to save me! And I had to be cruel and unkind to her
because I was not free!”
The wind sighed in the trees outside, and the bare branches rustled
eerily. He thought to himself, with a shudder, that the snow must be
deep by now. It had been falling almost steadily since yesterday. He
remembered how the melting flakes had trickled down from Aline’s dark
cloak.
“It must be cold and deep by now,” he thought. “I wish to Heaven that I
were lying beneath it! Perhaps I shall be soon.”
He went to his desk, drew out writing materials, and began to write
steadily. Half an hour passed in this occupation, when he was suddenly
startled again by the loud alarum of the door-bell. The harsh clang
pealed through the house discordantly. He pushed back his chair and
hurried out into the hall.
“It grows late. Who can be coming now?” he said.
He opened the heavy door, and in the dim light of the hall lamp again
saw Mr. Rodney’s face. It was pale with deadly wrath, the blue eyes
were lurid with rage.
“You have deceived me, Oran Delaney,” he blazed forth, in accents of
concentrated rage and hate. “Aline has never returned to her home. She
is still here!”
“Here!” echoed the astonished master of Delaney House.
“Yes, here!” Mr. Rodney answered, stormily. “You need not deny it! Oran
Delaney, if you do not give me back my child, I will kill you where you
stand!”
The other reached out and drew the half-frantic man into the hall,
closing the heavy door.
“My God, what do you mean?” he cried. “Aline not returned to her home?”
Astonishment and dismay were depicted on his countenance, but the
infuriated man would not believe the signs of alarm and dread written
on the face of the man whom he believed to be the destroyer of his fair
young daughter’s happiness.
“Do not act a part with me,” he cried. “I warn you I will not bear it.
Aline has left her home and fled to your protection. If you do not
immediately restore her to me, I will not answer for the consequences!”
“She is not here, Mr. Rodney. I swear to you that she left this house
five minutes before you entered it, this evening.”
“I will not listen to your prevarications. I _know_ that Aline is here.
I will not leave Delaney House to-night without her!” cried Mr. Rodney,
in a low tone of deadly menace, as he fixed his lurid, blazing eyes on
the face of the man whom he hated with a terrible hate.
He was cruelly tortured. The thought of Aline’s dishonor was like a
thorn in his heart. He was filled with a deadly rage against her. She
was so young and beautiful to be so wicked. He felt as if he could
easily kill her--her and the man who had so cruelly wrecked her young
life.
The grim, hard smile that played around his writhing lips in the dim
light of the stately old hall was terrible to see.
“I am a desperate man,” Mr. Rodney continued, hoarsely. “You have taken
from me my ewe-lamb. You must look to yourself. I shall not leave this
house to-night until I find her. If you do not give her up, I shall
search the house for her--ay, even if I have to pass over your dead
body to do so!”
They stood looking at each other steadily. Oran Delaney had whitened to
a deadly pallor.
“Mr. Rodney, you know not what you ask,” he said. “Can you not take my
word of honor that your daughter is not here? If you searched my house
thrice over you would find nothing but dust and gloom and ghosts of the
dead past.”
“What about the hidden blue room?” sneered Mr. Rodney.
Mr. Delaney changed color at those words.
“The blue room?” he stammered.
“Yes, the blue room where you kept my child hidden so long. Let me look
there,” said Mr. Rodney.
“It is empty. There is no one there,” said Mr. Delaney.
“It is a falsehood! I do not believe you!” Mr. Rodney cried out, beside
himself with fury, and for a moment there reigned an ominous silence.
The hot blood leaped to Oran Delaney’s dark face, his black eyes blazed.
“I come of a race that does not brook such words as those, Mr. Rodney,”
he said, coldly and sharply.
“Clear yourself of the imputation, then, by proving your innocence,”
the other retorted.
“My word is my proof,” Mr. Delaney replied, proudly, and again there
was a short silence.
Mr. Rodney, goaded to madness by his wrongs, raised his head and
regarded his foe fixedly.
“I do not take your words as proof,” he said, angrily. “I demand the
right to search this house. Do you allow it?”
“No!” thundered Mr. Delaney, fiercely.
“Then I shall do so without your consent!” exclaimed Mr. Rodney,
advancing and attempting to thrust him aside.
Oran Delaney firmly barred his further progress by placing himself
between him and the stairway.
“You dare thwart a wronged and maddened father!” cried Mr. Rodney, in
almost maniacal wrath. “You thus bring down doom upon your own head!
Thus do I avenge poor Aline’s wrongs!”
A pistol gleamed in his upraised hand; there was a sharp report, a
flash of fire, a cloud of thick smoke. Oran Delaney fell forward on his
face, and lay there motionless.
CHAPTER LII.
Mr. Rodney did not pause to see the result of his maddened deed. He
threw the smoking pistol far from him, sprung over the body of his
prostrate victim, and rushed up the stairs, two at a time, in his
eagerness to find his runaway daughter.
At the head of the stairway he found himself in another long, wide
hall, richly carpeted and dimly lighted by a large swinging lamp. On
either side stretched a row of closed doors, and as he gazed at them
irresolutely one on the left opened hurriedly, and a woman rushed out
and came running down the hall toward him. His heart leaped into his
mouth. Could that be Aline?
But as she came quickly up to him, he saw that he was mistaken. It was
not Aline. It was an old woman in a cap and glasses.
She ran up to him and caught him quickly by the arm, and then he saw
that there had been a mutual mistake, for when she saw his face she
recoiled from him in terror.
“My God!” she said, “I thought that it was Mr. Delaney. What are you
doing here, sir?”
“I am seeking my daughter. Bring her to me, woman,” he cried, wildly,
catching her by the sleeve as she was about to rush away from him.
“You are Mr. Rodney,” she said, looking curiously into the strange face
with its wild, excited eyes.
“Yes, I am Mr. Rodney,” he answered, in hoarse, strained accents. “I
am the father of the wickedest girl that ever cursed a father’s life.
Woman, woman, where is my Aline? Bring her here to me, that I may curse
her for her sins!”
“O, Mr. Rodney, she is not here,” cried Mrs. Griffin, regarding his
wild strange visage tearfully.
“It is false. I _know_ that she is here,” he thundered at her.
“Oh, sir, you are mistaken. Miss Rodney is not here,” she answered.
“But I heard the sound of a shot. What was it? My master--”
“Yes, I have murdered your master. He stole my pure darling from me,
and now he has paid for the sin with his life. He lies down there in
his own hall, shot to the heart by an avenging father,” cried Mr.
Rodney, with a harsh laugh, of satiated hate and revenge.
Mrs. Griffin did not wait to hear another word. She pushed him from
her, with a piercing cry of grief and terror, and ran headlong down the
stairway. Mr. Rodney, released from her detaining presence, set about
his search for his missing daughter.
Outside, the soft, cruel snow still fell with slow regularity, and the
rising wind tossed it into deep, treacherous drifts. He dreamed not
that while he sought her amid the gloomy splendor of Delaney House, his
fair and tender Aline was wandering in all the perils of that winter
night. He did not believe the combined assertions of Oran Delaney and
his housekeeper that Aline was not in the house.
Where could she be but here? he thought, and in his heart he vowed that
if he found her he would kill her, too--the wicked girl who had broken
her father’s heart and made him a wretched murderer.
In his horror at her sin, he was fast becoming a monomaniac. The blood
upon his hands only whetted his thirst for more. In his madness, it
seemed to him that the horror of her sin could only be wiped out in her
blood, shed as an expiation.
He had vaguely noticed that the door from whence Mrs. Griffin had
issued had been left slightly ajar. Perhaps she was in there, he
thought. He would go and see.
He crept softly along the hall toward the door of that room. He vaguely
wondered if this was the hidden blue room of Dr. Anthony’s story.
Would his sight be blasted by the sight of her, his little Aline, who
had been the pet and darling of his life, sitting there contentedly
in splendid sin, mistress of the vile wretch whom he had slain in his
anger?
He crept softly to the door and peered in through the narrow crevice
made by the slight opening of the unlatched door. He peered into the
room, and it was with difficulty that he repressed a cry of horror.
Heavens! Was this a fiend that his straining gaze encountered?
It was a large, splendidly furnished room into which he gazed, all
purple and gold, with soft, luxurious couches and chairs, large, fine
pictures on the walls, and everything that could please the eye save
and except the many little objects of delicate _bric-à-brac_ in which
feminine eyes and tastes delight. The room was utterly void of such
trifles. It was splendidly, even garishly furnished, but everything was
strong and substantial. There was nothing light and airy in the large,
lofty apartment, with its large, white lamp swung from the ceiling
out of reach, and the glowing fire before which a wire guard had been
carefully placed.
But the wire guard had been ruthlessly torn away from the fire now, and
the sole inmate of that luxurious room was a creature that might have
struck terror to a heart even more desperate than was the lawyer’s as
he gazed into the room.
“My God, what is it? Can it be a human creature, or is it a fiend from
the nether world?” he asked himself.
He might well ask himself the question. The creature on which he gazed
was a small, misshapen thing, with such horribly distorted features,
as caused a shudder of loathing to run through Mr. Rodney. The crooked
form was clothed with an almost barbaric splendor of apparel--in
crimson satin, embroidered in golden thread, while the fire of
priceless diamonds flashed from the yellow arms and neck, and upon the
tangled braids of coarse, black hair that fell down her back.
She--for he had concluded that it was a woman from the long, black
hair, and the womanly apparel--had snatched a fire-brand from the
glowing grate, and was now running about the room, uttering discordant
shrieks of fiendish glee, while with a ruthless, vandal hand she held
the flaming brand now here, now there, against the satin hangings and
the filmy lace curtains, the lambrequins, the silken fringe of the
chair-covers, until all became a smoldering mass, through which small
jets of lurid flame began to creep weirdly.
Mr. Rodney gazed for a moment like one fascinated upon this horrible
scene, and then he made a bold and desperate dash into the room.
He ran up behind the horrible fire-fiend, threw his arm over her
shoulder, and wrenched the flaming brand from her clasp, threw it down
upon the floor, and trampled it into a black, charred mass. Then he was
obliged to turn round and defend himself.
For the dreadful woman had thrown herself fiercely upon him, and was
choking his life out with her long, talon-like fingers and sharp nails,
that held his throat in a vise-like pressure. Half strangled, he made
a supreme effort against the furious maniac, and succeeded in tearing
her hands away from their murderous hold. She was wonderfully strong
and agile, but he held her firmly, and wild screams of rage issued
from her distorted lips. He recognized the sounds as those that had so
frightened him in the earlier part of the evening.
“This, then, was the ghost of Delaney House!” he thought grimly. “My
God what can this terrible creature be to Oran Delaney, and does Aline
know of her existence?”
He held her firmly by both hands while she bit and tore and raved in a
frenzy of maniacal fury. He was perplexed what to do with her. He knew
that she was a dangerous creature, but he would not have harmed her for
the world. She was already too terribly blasted in body and mind. But
he longed to make some disposal of her that he might make some effort
to quench the smoldering flames that already filled the room with a
thick and suffocating black vapor.
She solved the question for him herself by suddenly wrenching her hands
from his and making a rapid exit through the open door. It did not
occur to him to follow her. Instead he threw all his energies into the
task of subduing the flames.
He tore down the heavy satin hangings and trampled them beneath his
feet, he found an ewer of water and deluged the smoking cushions of the
chairs and lounges fighting bravely amid the smoke and fire, reckless
that his strong hands were torn and burned with the superhuman efforts
that he made.
CHAPTER LIII.
But when all was done that a brave and energetic man could do Mr.
Rodney found that his efforts had been spent in vain.
The maniac fire-fiend had fired the filmy lace curtains and the blaze
ran along the inflammable material, licking it up with a fiery tongue
of flame and mounting to the ceiling where it ignited the curtain-rods
and then the ceiling. The lawyer gazed at it an instant, and seeing the
leaping tongues of flame spurting out he realized that he could do no
more toward stopping the fire. He ran out of the smoking-room to give
the alarm in the street, forgetting for a moment the terrible deed he
had done and that his own safety demanded instant flight.
Rushing wildly down the stairs he encountered Mrs. Griffin coming up at
a pace as headlong as his own.
She caught him entreatingly by the arm.
“Oh, sir,” she cried “you have not quite killed him! He breathes
yet--he can talk a little. Oh for pity’s sake bring some one to him. I
cannot leave him alone to go myself.”
Her words recalled him to himself. In the excitement of the past few
moments he had momently forgotten that down-stairs in the wide hall lay
a man whom he had ruthlessly slain. It rushed over him now with a keen
pang of remorse.
“He lives!” he exclaimed and there was a keen note of relief in his
voice. Already the thought of murder had begun to lie heavily on his
hitherto unspotted soul.
“Yes, and you must bring a doctor quick,” Mrs. Griffin said imploringly.
He glanced back up the wide stairway into the hall. It was already
filled with a volume of thick smoke that was pouring out from the
doorway of the room he had just quitted.
“Look!” he said.
Her glance followed his.
“My God! have you fired the house?” she cried, in a terrified tone.
“No; but it was fired by the hand of a deformed maniac in that room you
quitted,” he answered.
“And she?” cried Mrs. Griffin.
“Has escaped!” he answered.
“Oh, I always thought it would come to this!” cried the housekeeper,
wringing her plump hands. “I thought she would murder us all in our
beds, or set fire to the house; and she has done it, just as I thought
she would. And where is she, Mr. Rodney--not in that room, surely?”
“No; she ran away after she had half strangled me!” he replied, with a
shudder at the remembrance of the uncanny creature.
“My God, then she has escaped! Oh, what will Mr. Delaney say? I must
go and find her! She must not leave the house!” cried Mrs. Griffin,
breaking from him and continuing her flight up the stairs.
He followed and overtook her.
“Woman, are you mad?” he cried to her. “Of course she must leave
the house. Every one must leave it. It will be burned to the ground
presently! And hark you, if my erring child is here--if she perishes in
this holocaust of flame--her blood will be upon your head!”
“Oh, Mr. Rodney, she is not here!” Mrs. Griffin answered, so earnestly
that he could not but believe her. “She was here a little while ago,
but she went away. I let her out of the kitchen door myself. I saw her
go away.”
“Then, where can she have gone?” he cried distractedly.
“I do not know; but I must find that poor crazy soul!” she cried,
again breaking from him and fearlessly rushing into the smoke filled
hall.
Mr. Rodney ran down the steps, flung wide the front door, and sent his
voice ringing out into the snowy night:
“Fire! fire! fire!”
A distant shout answered him from some belated wayfarer whose ear had
been caught by the ominous words. He waited for no more, but, leaving
the door ajar, ran back into the hall, and knelt down by the side of
the man whom, in his murderous wrath, he had tried to murder just now.
Mr. Delaney lay quite still and motionless in the spot where he had
fallen, save that Mrs. Griffin had turned him over upon his back,
giving him better facilities for breathing. The long fringe of the
lashes lay dark and stirless, against his cheeks, but his chest heaved
faintly, showing that life was not quite extinct. Strange to say, Mr.
Rodney was overjoyed to find that he lived.
“I am glad I did not kill him,” he muttered. “For deeply as I have been
wronged, it was terrible to feel myself a murderer.”
He examined the wound, and found that his bullet had entered Mr.
Delaney’s shoulder near the breast, but not necessarily in a vital
part. With care he might, perhaps, recover.
“But what shall I do with him now?” he thought, in perplexity, hearing
a babel of voices outside. “He cannot remain here, and it would be too
dangerous to remove him far.”
He decided rapidly that he could not do less than to remove him to the
cottage.
By some strange revulsion of feeling, he was now most anxious to save
the life of the man whom but a little while ago he had been tempted to
kill.
A score of men came hurrying over the threshold of the open door just
then. By the help of some of these the wounded man was carefully
removed to Mr. Rodney’s house, a physician was hastily summoned, and
the men returned to the scene of the fire. The only fire-engine the
small town afforded was quickly upon the spot, and every effort was
made to save the burning house.
But all in vain. The devouring element had obtained too deadly a
headway. It was impossible to beat back the swiftly encroaching
flames. They leaped into the air like hydra-headed serpents, coiling
and twisting in mad delight over their doomed prey; they lighted the
darkness of the snowy night into fierce and lurid grandeur; they licked
up at a breath the beautiful articles of _virtu_ that generations of
dead and gone Delaneys had gathered in their ancestral home at the
cost of many thousands of dollars. They spared naught that came in
their way, and when the gray dawn looked with dim eyes at the scene of
desolation, nothing remained of the Delaney House but a huge black pile
of smoking ruins.
CHAPTER LIV.
It was a strange mockery of fate that had thrown Oran Delaney, wounded
and helpless, beneath the roof of the man whom he had injured, and who
had wounded him near unto death.
Yet so it was; and he was likely to remain there several weeks, for
the physician, who was summoned to attend him, declared that the wound
was a serious, if not fatal, one, and that it would be some time before
he could be moved with safety.
Mr. Rodney, who had been temporarily maddened by excitement last
night, had come to his senses now. He made no attempt to fly from the
consequences of his assault upon Oran Delaney. He went and delivered
himself up to the authorities, accusing himself of the crime.
They laughed at him at first--it was so strange for a man to accuse
himself of crime without even a witness to testify against him--but
he insisted that his statement was true; so they put him under bonds
to appear when Mr. Delaney was well enough to come into court, and
released him.
In a day or two, when he was well enough to be seen, he told Oran
Delaney what he had done.
“So that, whether you live or die, your wrong will be avenged,” he
said, grimly.
“I do not wish it so,” said Oran Delaney, gravely. “In any case, I
shall not appear against you. You only did what I, in your place, would
have done. No one can blame you.”
Mr. Rodney said to himself that if the man’s sense of honor was so
lively, he should not have acted as he did with regard to Aline. He
said nothing, however--only turned upon his heel and left the room. His
heart was on fire with anxiety, for he had heard no word of Aline since
that snowy eve when, finding that her secret was discovered, she had
fled from her home.
Neither had any trace been found of the escaped lunatic who had fired
Delaney House. Mrs. Griffin had been so suffocated by the smoke and
flame of the hall that she had been unable to prosecute her search far.
She had been forced to retreat before she had penetrated all the rooms.
It was the same way with the men who had gone to the rescue. The smoke
and flame had beaten them quickly back. So it was not certainly known
yet whether the dreadful creature had fallen a victim to the fury of
the fire her own hand had kindled, or if she had wandered out into the
stormy night and perished in some of the huge drifts of snow that the
wild wind had blown together in out-of-the-way places.
But the storm was over now, and the deep snow was melting away. It was
three days since Delaney House had been burned.
The hidden secret for whose keeping poor Aline Rodney had paid so dire
a penalty, belonged to the world now. Oran Delaney, in the troubles
that had crowded thickly upon him, had thrown pride to the winds and
revealed all.
Let us listen to him as he tells his own story to Mr. Rodney.
“I will tell you my story briefly now,” he said, “and then you will
understand why I have led such a strange, retired life. And,” he added,
with a dark-red flush creeping over his handsome face, “you will know,
too, that I have never harmed your beautiful young daughter as you
think. She is as innocent and pure as she is fair.”
Somehow the words carried conviction to Mr. Rodney’s heart. He waited
eagerly for the story Mr. Delaney had promised to tell him.
His first words filled him with horror and amazement.
“That poor, deformed maniac whom you saw in that upper room, who set
fire to Delaney House, was my wedded wife,” he said, with a shudder he
could not repress.
“Great Heavens, your wife! How could you wed that creature?” Mr. Rodney
cried out, startled.
“How, indeed!” echoed Mr. Delaney, with a groan. “But that is what I am
about to tell you. I was made the innocent victim of a terrible fraud.”
Mr. Rodney began to feel strangely interested in this man whom his
avenging bullet had laid low upon a bed of pain. He waited eagerly for
further disclosures.
“Who could have perpetrated such a monstrous fraud?” he exclaimed.
CHAPTER LV.
A look of bitter pain came over Mr. Delaney’s handsome face at those
words from Mr. Rodney’s lips.
“Who could have been so cruel, so wicked?” repeated the lawyer.
And then Mr. Delaney answered:
“One to whom I owed a debt of gratitude, and who caused me to pay the
heaviest price man ever paid for a like debt.”
“I do not understand you,” said Mr. Rodney.
“I did not suppose you would. My reference was too obscure. I will
make my meaning more clear,” said Mr. Delaney. “When I first went on
my travels abroad, I met in France a native of that agreeable country,
by name Monsieur Sanson. Our first meeting was on an occasion, when he
saved my life, in what manner I will not now relate, as my strength
would not hold out for the recital. But we became friends from that
hour, and in course of time fellow-travelers. I found my new friend one
of the best-read and most agreeable men I had ever met. He was clever,
cultivated, full of _bon camaraderie_--in short, a man of the world,
full of wit and _bel esprit_. He was middle-aged and good-looking and
appeared to have the means of living well, and even extravagantly, at
his command. He told me that he had no family ties with the exception
of one daughter, a young and lovely creature then being educated in the
retirement of a convent school. Of this daughter, his ‘_chère_ Julie,’
as he lovingly called her, he never wearied of talking and expatiating
on her manifold perfections. Once he showed me a small portrait of her.
It represented the loveliest brunette I ever beheld. I fell in love
with her and begged to be presented, but he laughingly refused, telling
me that he did not intend to have his plans for _chère_ Julie spoiled
in that way. After awhile he told me more seriously that in France the
parents seldom permitted daughters to have any male acquaintances,
fearing unfortunate love-affairs for them, as they were usually
affianced by their parents to men of wealth and position.”
“I have heard that that is the way they manage affairs of marriage in
France,” said Mr. Rodney at this point.
“I found it so to my cost,” groaned Oran Delaney, and then there was a
short silence. He lay still with closed eyes, breathing heavily.
“You have unduly wearied yourself in talking so much. Defer the
remainder of your story until you are better,” said Mr. Rodney.
“No, I will go on. I am anxious now that the secret I have kept so long
in my morbid pride should be revealed. I am anxious to clear the name
of Aline from the stain I suffered to rest upon it to save my own,” he
answered.
“My poor Aline. Shall I ever find her?” sighed the wretched father.
“God grant you may. Oh, if I only were not chained down to this bed
by my weakness, I would search the world over, but I would find her!”
cried Oran Delaney with feverish impatience.
A vision came over his mind of the fair young face and the sweet
supplicating eyes, he seemed to hear her voice again as she spoke the
strange words that made the warm blood run tingling through his veins
with rapture.
“I want to be your wife,” she had said, in her clear, frank voice, with
her large eyes lifted childishly to his face, while in her exceeding
innocence she had never dreamed of the passion of pain and despair in
the man’s heart as he refused her request.
“Ah, Heaven, if only I might have taken her at her word,” he sighed to
himself, “I would have taught that young heart to love, and that soft
cheek to blush at my glance. I would have won her heart as well as her
hand. Aline, my poor darling, where are you to-night?”
He put away the thought of her with a great effort of will and returned
with a shudder to the subject of his story.
“I was young and impressible, Mr. Rodney. My heart was touched by the
beauty of the picture I had seen, and Monsieur Sanson’s refusals to
present me to the original only fanned my boyish passion into hotter
flame. I importuned him often, but he only laughed at me, artfully
leading me on by his apparent reluctance to yield to my desires. Ah,
what a simple, gullible young fool I was in those days.”
He paused and drew his breath with a heavy tortured sigh.
Mr. Rodney held a reviving cordial to his lips. His heart was pierced
with remorse as he looked at the pale face and heard the weak voice,
and realized what a wreck he had made of the strong man.
“It would be much better if you waited until you are stronger before
you finish,” he said, compassionately, though his anxiety to hear the
rest was very strong.
“No, I cannot wait. Let me tell my story and clear Aline’s name, then
if I die, what matter? I have long been weary of life,” sighed Oran
Delaney.
There came to him across the mist of the long intervening months a
memory of the words he had read to Aline when she lay wounded and
impatient in the beautiful blue room--the words she had rejected in the
blindness of her ignorant youth:
“How many days will it be, I wonder,
And how will their slow length pass
Till I shall find rest in silence under
The trees and the waving grass?”
“Not long now, perhaps,” he thought, wearily, for he felt strangely
weak and faint, and his sufferings were most severe from his wound.
He cleared his throat and slowly proceeded:
“When I look back at that past time, Mr. Rodney, I am lost in wonder at
the consummate young fool I was in those days. Would you believe me,
sir, that in my infatuation for a girl I had never seen, but of whose
perfections I had been told day by day for months, I proposed to marry
Monsieur Sanson’s pretty little school-girl daughter?”
“Impossible!”
“I did, Mr. Rodney, and I was in the most serious earnest. Monsieur
Sanson pretended to be shocked when I laid the matter before him, but
promised that he would consider it, and assured me that he would have
no objection to an American son-in-law, declaring that he admired
Americans individually, and as a nation, to a most excessive degree. I
was delighted at his blarney, which slipped from his tongue as easily
as from a son of the Emerald Isle.”
CHAPTER LVI.
“Monsieur Sanson must have been a villain,” exclaimed Mr. Rodney,
vehemently.
“He saved my life once, and now he is dead. I scarcely feel at liberty
to express my real opinion of the man,” said Mr. Delaney.
“All obligations were canceled by the wrong he did you,” said Mr.
Rodney.
“Perhaps so. He saved my life, but then he certainly made it valueless
to me,” said the wounded man, musingly.
After a moment, he continued:
“After a short time and without any further solicitation on my part,
he consented to allow me to consider the beautiful Julie my _fiancée_,
but only on condition that we never met until the bridal day. Although
I was most eager to meet my fair intended bride, I was forced to
acquiesce in his decision. Indeed, I did not greatly care to change
it. I was carried away by the romantic idea of never meeting my bride
until the hour that gave her to my eager arms. Its very difference to
the customs of my own country had its peculiar charm for me. Monsieur
Sanson wrote to his daughter, and she consented to the marriage in a
_naive_ pretty letter that transported me with rapture. It was arranged
that the fair one would leave her convent school to become my bride in
about six months. Do I weary you with all this preliminary explanation,
Mr. Rodney?” inquired the invalid, pausing suddenly.
“On the contrary, I am deeply interested in your story,” replied the
lawyer.
“I will hasten to the end, then,” said Oran Delaney. “We continued our
travels for awhile, when about two months before the time set for my
marriage, Monsieur left me, to return to his villa at Nice, ostensibly
to make preparations for the marriage. He was to write to me when to
come, but in little more than a week I was telegraphed to go to his
death-bed. He had accidentally shot himself.”
He was growing excited now. The feeble breath came from his lips in
great palpitating gasps.
“You are over-tasking yourself,” Mr. Rodney reminded him again.
“No, I shall soon have done now,” Mr. Delaney answered. “Well, I went
with all haste to Nice, and I arrived there late one night, and found
Monsieur Sanson dying, indeed. They told me that he had been handling
a revolver when it exploded in his hand, fatally wounding him. He lay
at the point of death, and his one anxiety was his fair young daughter
whom he was leaving alone in the world. Would I have any objection to
fulfilling my marriage contract now, he asked me, that he might die
satisfied?
“I told him I would marry Julie at once, and his mind was at once
relieved of its load of care. Preparations were made for a midnight
marriage. A priest was summoned. Everything was arranged with perfect
legality.”
He paused and swept his aristocratic white hand wearily across his brow.
“How it all comes back to me,” he said. “It was a beautiful summer
night. A wind from the sea came into the room through the open windows,
mingled with the breath of tropic flowers. A dim light burned in the
room where the dying man lay breathing heavily. They brought my bride
in to me. I could not make out either her face or her form for the
great billows of snowy lace in which she was enveloped from head to
foot, but I fancied that all womanly loveliness was centered in her
form. Well, they made her my bride, and then led her quickly from the
room, for Monsieur Sanson’s death-hour was near at hand. He thanked me
feebly for what I had done, and then he bound me by a solemn oath to
protect and cherish his Julie as long as she lived, never leaving nor
forsaking her.
“‘I have already promised the priest all that,’ I said, in wonder.
That was no matter, he said, and persisted in his request that I would
solemnly swear to do what he asked. An oath made to a dying man would
be more sacred, he said.
“Though I thought him unreasonable, I could refuse nothing to a dying
man; so I took the oath he asked of me. I thought it could not greatly
matter anyhow. I had no idea of ever forsaking my fair young foreign
bride. I was too much infatuated with the charming young creature the
fertile imagination of the Frenchman had painted for me.
“He died in a little while after the ceremony and left me to comfort
his bereaved daughter. It was not until after the funeral that she
allowed me to see her. She was prostrated by the shock of her father’s
death, they told me.
“Oh, Mr. Rodney, can you guess what a terrible shock it was to me when
I beheld her at last?
“I had in my mind the vision of an angel. I imagined my bride lovely in
mind as in person, and thought myself most fortunate in the possession
of such a perfect creature.
“When they showed me the creature to whom I had bound myself--the
misshapen, deformed, blighted creature, with a mind as blasted and out
of shape as her body--do you wonder that I almost went mad?”
“Surely the laws of any land would have freed you from such a
creature!” exclaimed Mr. Rodney, indignantly.
“I made no attempt to free myself,” said Oran Delaney. “I was so
shocked at finding myself placed in such a terrible position, so
ashamed of the foolish ease with which I had fallen into the trap set
for me, that I was like one dazed or stunned. It was some little while
before I realized it, and then the weight of my oath to the dying held
me back from taking any steps toward freeing myself from my horrible
incubus.
“Monsieur Sanson had left a letter for me, too. It was a confession.”
“A confession!” repeated Mr. Rodney.
“Yes. It appeared that the story of the accidental shooting was all a
hoax. The man had given himself the death-blow with a suicidal intent.”
Mr. Rodney uttered an exclamation of horror and dismay.
“He had committed suicide, but why?”
“Because he had run through his property and was reduced to beggary.
He had led a fast and gay life and had nothing left to live upon. The
villa and all its furniture were mortgaged beyond their value, and were
to be seized. There would be nothing left for him and the deformed
maniac, his daughter, whom, despite her afflictions, he seemed to
cherish with a strange morbid affection.”
Mr. Rodney could not repress a shudder of disgust. He thought of his
three brilliant, beautiful children with a feeling of pride, and he
wondered that even a father’s heart could have cherished tenderness for
the dreadful, misshapen maniac of Delaney House.
“So he formed that dreadful plan for providing his deformed and maniac
daughter with a husband to take care of her, and then he consummated
it in the way I have told you. When it became impossible to enjoy the
wealth and pleasures of this world any longer, he sent himself out of
it, with a shocking deliberateness, and shifted his burden upon my
shoulders.”
“He was a villain! But you were not compelled to accept the loathsome
legacy he bequeathed to you. The marriage, being with a person of
unsound mind, was really null and void in the eyes of the law,” said
the lawyer.
“I did not resort to the law to help me out of my trouble,” said Oran
Delaney. “I was too proud, for one thing, to let the public know
how shamefully I had been duped. I was bitterly ashamed of my own
credulity; besides, I was weighted down by the solemnity of my oath to
the dying. I could not forsake poor Julie Sanson, even though I had
been so horribly duped and deceived. I had sworn to devote my life to
her; and, in his letter of confession to me, Monsieur Sanson again
committed his daughter solemnly to my care, urging that, as he had once
saved my life, it was but right that I should devote it to the daughter
left so helpless and forlorn by his sinful death.”
“He had much better have let you die, than saved your life to such a
horrible end!” exclaimed Mr. Rodney.
“Much better,” sighed Oran Delaney. “But, as it was, I accepted his
dying charge. I brought Julie Sanson to America, and confided her to
the care of my old nurse, Mrs. Griffin. I have lived at Delaney House
in seclusion for years, shunning my kind, because in my morbid pride,
I had sworn that the carping, censorious world should never know my
dreadful secret. Mrs. Griffin has been most faithful in her trust.
“We lived on quietly there, and poor Julie’s mania developed itself
in two forms. She had a fierce thirst for human blood, and a most
inordinate love for finery, delighting to array her dreadful form in
the richest robes and most brilliant jewels. In the hope of subduing
her bloodthirsty mania, I humored the harmless taste for dress to a
great extent. I constantly made additions to her wardrobe, of the most
gorgeous and dazzling apparel, and I provided her with a jewel-box of
splendid paste imitations of diamonds. She never wearied of decking
herself in these things, and would be quiet and docile for weeks
together in placid enjoyment of them. Again her mania for shedding
blood would seize upon her, and she would fly at me and at Mrs.
Griffin in a fury of rage, with murder flashing from her eyes. On one
occasion she accidentally got out of her room, possessed herself of a
tiny jeweled dagger, and flew through the house like a raging lioness
seeking her prey. On that occasion she wounded me first, and then your
beautiful Aline!”
As if overcome with horror, he groaned aloud and buried his face in the
pillow.
“Much as I would like to hear the remainder of your story, I must
refuse to listen to you longer now, for I can see that you are
completely exhausted,” said the lawyer. “I shall leave you now to
repose. To-morrow, if you are better, you may continue your story.”
“But I am so anxious to clear Aline in your eyes that I am too
impatient to postpone my story,” said Oran Delaney feebly, for it was
quite true that he was exhausted by the efforts he had made.
“Nevertheless, I shall refuse to hear any more to-day,” answered the
lawyer, with a smile. “I am going out now, and I shall send Mrs.
Griffin in to take charge of you.”
He left the room, and the old nurse came in and installed herself by
his pillow. The next morning, after the refreshment of a sound night’s
sleep, he continued his story to Mr. Rodney.
CHAPTER LVII.
“I would sooner have died than have wronged your willful, innocent
child, Mr. Rodney,” he said. “When she came into the garden that day I
had no thought but her pleasure. She seemed but a child to me, and I
saw no harm in her going into Delaney House with me to share my lunch.
I had been so long secluded from the world that I did not remember its
hard rules. I was pleased with the beautiful, happy girl, and I thought
that her people had treated her unfairly, in leaving her at home,
while they went away to enjoy themselves. In a languid, careless way I
allowed her to enjoy herself. It seemed very easy to her to do so.”
“She had a sunny, happy temper when all went well with her,” said Mr.
Rodney, with a heavy sigh to the memory of his self-exiled daughter.
“Yes, I thought so,” said Oran Delaney, echoing the sigh. “I saw that
she was willful and a trifle wild, but I thought nothing of it. She was
too young and fair to be worldly-wise. Poor child, would that she had
been! She had never then entered the fatal portals of Delaney House.”
“Fatal indeed!” groaned the afflicted father.
“I blame myself that I let her enter there,” said Oran Delaney. “The
child must have charmed me, for I forgot my usual prudence and allowed
myself to be pleased in her happiness. She ate her lunch with me, then,
frightened at the flight of time, left me and ran out into the hall to
go home. It was then that the accident happened to her.”
Mr. Rodney listened with painful interest.
“While she was going though the hall,” continued Mr. Delaney, “a series
of horrible shrieks saluted our ears from the upper hall. Horrified at
my carelessness I bade Aline fly home, and I rushed up the stairs to
confront the dangerous maniac. I met her in the upper hall, arrayed in
all the splendor of her wedding-robes, with a flashing dagger in her
hand and fury flashing from her eyes. She rushed at me with a murderous
shriek, and before I could disarm her she had thrust the keen point of
her dagger into the fleshy part of my arm. The keen pain threw me off
my guard a moment, and in that moment the would-be murderess escaped
me and flew down the stairs. Heedless of my wounded arm, I followed
her, but was just one minute too late. Just as I reached her, she had
pursued Aline through the deserted parlor, and the poor girl fell
across the threshold wounded in the breast by the maniac’s dagger. I
came up to them just in time to arrest the second descent of the blade.
Mrs. Griffin came to my assistance, and together we disarmed Julie, and
locked her into her room again.”
He paused, drew a heavy sigh, and then continued:
“Then my folly and selfishness began. I knew that I ought at once to
apprise Aline’s parents of her accident, and yet I also knew that to
do so must be to disclose the hidden secret of my deformed and maniac
bride to the world. My morbid self-consciousness shrunk from it. I felt
that I could not endure the ordeal. Hastily, and without counting the
cost to the victim of Julie’s dreadful mania, I decided upon my course.
I removed Aline to a comfortable chamber, and Mrs. Griffin attended
upon her faithfully. I went to Maywood and brought Doctor Anthony to
see her. He did not consider the wound dangerous, so I did not have him
renew the visit. I considered it too hazardous to my secret. You may
well look at me reproachfully, Mr. Rodney. I can understand now how
culpably I acted, but then my conscience was deadened within me by my
sensitive horror of the world’s finding out my bitter secret.”
Mr. Rodney had no words to answer him. He sat listening in painful
silence.
“Aline was very angry, when she recovered consciousness and found that
I was determined not to apprise her parents of her situation. I told
her that she should never leave Delaney House until she swore solemnly
never to divulge the secret of her whereabouts and the manner in which
she came by her wound. She refused in the bitterest terms at first,
declaring that she would never keep the secret from her parents. I
told her that she should never even see them again until she obeyed my
dictation.”
“My poor girl!” sighed Aline’s father.
“I was hard and cruel; I recognize it now, although I did not then
comprehend the enormity of what I was doing,” said Oran Delaney. “Aline
was bitterly angry. She declared that she would never submit to such
injustice; and she worked herself up into such a state that she became
dangerously ill. There were six weeks when we nursed her night and day,
scarcely believing that she would live from one day to another.”
“And yet you would not let us know! I do not believe that I can ever
forgive you,” cried Mr. Rodney.
“I can never forgive myself,” Mr. Delaney answered, sadly. “But I was
willfully blind; I never once realized the full enormity of my offense
against you and your daughter--my selfish misery made me desperate. I
was agonized by her sufferings, but I never once relented. When she at
length convalesced and renewed her entreaties to go home, I steadily
refused to allow her to do so until she had bound herself to solemn
silence. She was as obdurate as I was, at first. She affirmed that
she would never do so. But, at the end of three months, her girlish
patience gave way, and, in her anxiety to see her dear ones again, she
weakened and solemnly bound herself to all that I asked her. Then,
after telling me, in a gush of girlish passion, that she hated me, she
went home.”
He paused, and there was a deep silence in the room. He was thinking
of the night when the graceful young figure had flitted out from the
doors of Delaney House, leaving it darker and more gloomy than ever.
He recalled the last moment of her stay, when, with her small hand
clinched in bitter, impotent wrath, she had said, scathingly:
“I hate you, Oran Delaney, for all that you have made me suffer!”
The words had pierced his heart like a sword point. They had remained
with him ever since, growing harder to bear day by day. He could not
bear that those frank blue eyes should rest on him with hate and scorn.
It was like a wound in his heart.
CHAPTER LVIII.
Mr. Rodney was thinking too. He remembered the night that Aline had
come home. All that was strange in her manner then was explained away
now. He remembered how hard and stern he had been with her; how he had
been goaded to desperation by the fear that she was a miserable sinner.
A weight of care was lifted from his mind by Oran Delaney’s revelation.
“God, I thank Thee!” he cried, lifting his hands involuntarily to
heaven, “that my beloved daughter is proved innocent of all the evil
laid to her charge.”
“She is innocent as an angel,” said Oran Delaney. “I do not ask you to
believe my unsupported testimony. Mrs. Griffin will confirm all that I
have told you.”
He was silent for a moment, then added, gravely:
“I wish you to make public to the world all that I have told you, Mr.
Rodney. It is my dearest wish, whether I live or die, to have Aline’s
memory cleared from all stain. Let all my folly and shame be known, all
my pride and weakness, so that she be proven innocent and deserving.”
“It is hard upon you, but it is only just to Aline and her family,”
said Aline’s father.
“It is just, and I deserve it,” said Oran Delaney. “The world will
censure me; but let it do so, I am ready to bear it. Indeed, it will be
a relief to my mind to have the truth known. I am weary of evasion and
concealment, even if concealment were possible any longer.”
A look of grave anxiety was on his pale, drawn face.
“There is a weight upon my heart that nothing can shake off,” he said.
“Poor Julie Sanson--she whom I swore to the dying never to leave nor
forsake--oh, what has been her terrible fate? Is she dead in the ruins
of Delaney House, or in the drifts of snow?”
“Whichever has been her fate, it is a most happy release for her
imprisoned soul,” said Mr. Rodney. “You cannot regret her!”
“No; only the horrible manner of her death, if, indeed she be dead,”
Mr. Delaney answered.
“I do not believe that there can be any doubt as to that,” said Mr.
Rodney. “If she had lived, we must have heard of it. My own opinion is
that she never escaped from the burning house.”
“It is most unlikely,” said Mr. Delaney, and then he lay silent, musing
deeply: “Was Julie Sanson, the poor, deformed lunatic dead, indeed? Was
he free, indeed? Free--his heart gave a great throb of almost painful
rapture at the thought--to marry Aline Rodney if she would give herself
to him?”
“Tell me one thing,” said Mr. Rodney, breaking in, abruptly, on his
musing mood. “Why did Aline come to you that night when I found out her
secret?”
They looked at each other, steadfastly. A hot, red flush mounted to
Oran Delaney’s face.
“She wished me to save the honor of her name by linking it with mine,”
he said, in a low, pained voice.
“And you?” said Mr. Rodney, anxiously.
“I was not free, you know. I was bound to Julie Sanson by that wretched
farce,” answered the other.
“You refused her request?”
“I could do no less,” Oran Delaney answered, in a low, tortured voice.
“My God, then, the child has been driven desperate! Who would have
dreamed that my fury that night would have driven her to such a step!
I shall never see her again. She has gone away and died of shame for
her thoughtlessness,” cried Mr. Rodney, wringing his hands in impotent
despair.
“No, no, it was not thoughtlessness, it was the act of an angel,”
cried Oran Delaney. “It was to save me from the threatened duel. She
had no thought of self at all! And I, oh, my God, if she had not been
an angel, I should have taken her at her word, for the temptation was
almost too great for human endurance. For I love her, Mr. Rodney, with
all the madness of a first, great love. Guess how cruelly hard it was
to me to hear her sweet voice pleading for that which would have been
Heaven itself to me, and to be forced to put her away from me!”
CHAPTER LIX
There was a moment’s silence and Mr. Rodney gazed steadily at the
flushed face and sparkling eyes of the man who thus avowed his love for
beautiful Aline.
“I love her,” he repeated. “She won my heart in the three months while
she stayed in Delaney House. At first I thought her a spoiled willful
child, whose sharp tongue and determined obstinacy excited my anger,
but as I grew to know her better, when I found out what a warm and
tender little heart beat under all her brusqueries and waywardness,
she stole into my heart, unconsciously to myself. I would have given
all the world for the power to make her my wife. But, alas! even as I
love her, she hates me, and justly, too, I own, for she has been most
deeply wronged by my cowardly silence: I cannot blame her if she never
forgives me for my fault.”
Mrs. Griffin came in with some tea and toast. While she was arranging
it Mr. Delaney asked, suddenly:
“Will you tell me now, Mr. Rodney, how you became possessed of the
secret of Aline’s whereabouts?”
The lawyer glanced with a smile at Mrs. Griffin.
“If I should tell you that your good nurse there is the traitor, would
you believe me?” he said.
Mrs. Griffin looked at him, red with indignation.
“Indeed, sir, you need not charge it on me,” she said, quickly. “Mr.
Delaney knows that no one is more faithful to his interests than I am.
Why, sir, I carried him in these arms when he was a baby, and do you
think any one could make him believe I could betray anything he wanted
kept secret?”
The humorous twinkle in Mr. Rodney’s blue eyes deepened. He waited
until the old woman had arranged the invalid’s repast to his
satisfaction, and then said slyly:
“Your new lace cap is very becoming, Mrs. Griffin. I should like to
know where you bought it?”
It was very fortunate that the nurse had put down the tea-tray, for
otherwise she must certainly have dropped it, such a start she gave
at those words. She stared at Mr. Rodney, her complexion turning to a
brilliant crimson.
“Why, what do you mean, Mr. Rodney?” she gasped amazedly.
“Have you forgotten Cheap Jane?” he asked, smiling.
Instantly Mrs. Griffin’s mind went back to that snowy eve when, in
her loneliness, she had been overpowered by the temptation to admit
the female peddler within the tabooed precincts of Delaney House. The
guilty red of her cheeks grew brighter. She glanced apprehensively at
her master. He was gazing at her in wonder.
“What does he mean?” Oran Delaney asked her.
She shook her head, and glanced inquiringly at Mr. Rodney.
“Yes, I remember Cheap Jane,” she said. “But what has that to do with
Miss Rodney and my master?”
“If you will tell Mr. Delaney all that you know about Cheap Jane, I
will show you the connection,” he replied.
Mrs. Griffin was heartily ashamed at the thought of her adventure with
Cheap Jane being exposed; but she saw that it was too late to attempt
concealment. She made a virtue of necessity, and related the story to
Mr. Delaney, frankly apologizing for her fault.
“I know I did wrong,” she said, turning to Mr. Rodney; “but still I
cannot see what harm was done by my imprudence. The old creature only
stayed a little while.”
“That is where you are mistaken,” said Mr. Rodney. “Cheap Jane spent
the night in Delaney House.”
“Spent the night?” she echoed, staring at him stupidly:
“Yes,” he replied.
“But how could that be?” exclaimed Oran Delaney, looking up from his
untasted toast. He was too much excited to eat.
“It happened in this way,” said the lawyer. “When Mrs. Griffin went
to answer your bell, the peddler slipped into a deserted room, and
hid herself and her basket of potions in an unused closet. She thus
remained in Delaney House all night.”
Mrs. Griffin wrung her plump hands, and cried out, dejectedly, “The
wretch!”
But Oran Delaney did not utter one word; he only gazed inquiringly into
the face of the lawyer.
“She remained at Delaney House all night,” repeated Mr. Rodney. “After
the inmates were locked in unsuspecting slumber, the hidden peddler
came forth and prowled through the house. You were sick that night,
Mr. Delaney. In your fever and unrest you talked to the walls in your
room--you revealed the secret of Aline’s stay in your house.”
“Great Heaven!” he cried.
“It is strange, but true,” said the lawyer. “And your uninvited guest,
the peddler, who had stolen into your house like a thief by night,
heard all. It was from him I learned all I knew--namely, that Aline had
been a wounded prisoner in Delaney House.”
“You said ‘from him’--yet I understood that the peddler was a woman,”
exclaimed Oran Delaney, quickly.
“A man in disguise,” explained the lawyer.
“Then it was no common person--the plan was a deep-laid one,” said Oran
Delaney, with an inquiring look into the other’s face.
Mr. Rodney shook his head.
“No, it was not I,” he said. “It was a detective whom I employed last
summer to trace Aline. He failed at first, but when she came back to us
and refused to reveal the secret of her absence, he set himself to work
to ferret out the truth.”
“And succeeded,” said Oran Delaney, with bitter sadness. “And where is
your clever detective now?”
“He is again on the track of my missing daughter. I have for the second
time employed him to find her.”
“He shall be richly rewarded if he succeeds,” exclaimed Oran Delaney,
earnestly.
He lay silent for a moment, and then added gravely and thoughtfully:
“I can bear no resentment against your clever detective, Mr. Rodney. I
am glad now that the truth has been found out. A burden is lifted from
my heart.”
“You are not angry with Mr. Lane for his bold invasion of your house,
and his betrayal of your secret?” exclaimed Mr. Rodney.
“No, I am not angry. I am glad that the truth has been revealed. I feel
quite curious to see your Mr. Lane.”
“Perhaps you will permit me to bring him to see you?” said the lawyer.
“Willingly,” answered Oran Delaney.
He did so the next day, after he had told Mr. Delaney’s story to him,
and the good-looking detective spent an hour with the wounded man. Mr.
Delaney was most anxious that Aline should be found.
“Only find her,” he said, earnestly, to Mr. Lane, “and you shall name
your own reward.”
A strange expression gleamed in the eyes of the detective.
“I shall make every effort to find her,” he said. “But I tell you
frankly, Mr. Delaney, I am not working up this case for money.”
“Of course you have a professional interest and reputation at stake,”
said Mr. Delaney.
“It is not that, either,” said the detective.
They gazed steadily into each other’s eyes.
“I will tell you the truth, Mr. Delaney,” said Mr. Lane. “I find that
my early professional interest in this case has merged into a romantic
one. People call me a woman-hater where I am best known, and I confess
that female society has hitherto had no charms for me. But the beauty
and sweetness of Miss Rodney have won my heart. If I find her I shall
ask no reward from her father except her hand, if she will give it to
me.”
Mr. Lane paused and waited for a reply. He did not dream what an
agonizing pang tore through Oran Delaney’s heart in that moment.
“Do you think she loves you, Mr. Lane?” he faltered then, in a hollow
voice.
“Scarcely; for I have had no chance to woo her,” said Mr. Lane. “And
yet it is so much better that she should marry that perhaps she will
waive that consideration. Afterward I could teach her to love me.”
Again that fierce, jealous pang tore through Oran Delaney’s heart. A
vision came over him of the beautiful young face and the violet eyes
with their shady lashes of deepest jet. How much more beautiful it
would be when the woman’s heart was awakened in her. How that charming
face would be glorified by love!
“Ah, Heaven, only to call her mine!” he groaned to himself. “It is
cruel, cruel, that this man should take advantage of her trouble to try
to win her. He has no right to her. She is far above him. Her beauty
and sweetness make her the peer of any one in the land.”
He silently repeated some lines to himself:
“A king might lay his scepter down,
But I am poor and naught;
The brow should wear a golden crown
That wears her in its thought.”
He looked fixedly at Mr. Lane.
“Why do you say that it will be better for Miss Rodney to marry?” he
asked, slowly.
“Surely, you know that her long stay in Delaney House has so damaged
her maiden fame that she can never take her proper place in the world
until sheltered by some good man’s name,” said the detective.
“You forget that I have explained everything, and that Miss Rodney’s
reputation is cleared from every shadow of blame,” exclaimed Mr.
Delaney.
“No, I do not forget it. But I know that the world is censorious and
cruel, and I am not sure whether it will accept your statement as true.
At any rate, I am prepared to help Miss Rodney all that I can. I am
rich and prosperous. I will marry her and take her away forever from
this place where she has suffered so much if she will have me.”
He paused a moment, and then added:
“Of course if you were not already married, Mr. Delaney, you would be
the most proper husband for Miss Rodney, but, as it is, I feel myself
quite free to woo and wed her if I can, and to save her from all the
troubles she would be likely to endure, unmarried.”
He went out and left Mr. Delaney to some bitter reflections.
CHAPTER LX.
When Mr. Delaney’s physician came next day he declared that his patient
was not as well as he had expected to find him. He looked apprehensive
over him.
“What have they been doing to you?” he asked, brusquely.
“I have had the best of care, doctor,” Mr. Delaney answered.
The old physician looked at him, curiously. The dark, handsome face was
grave, and there was a settled sadness on it. But the tone, more than
the words, struck the physician. A heartache ran drearily through it.
“You are fretting over something,” he said. “Come, Delaney, this will
not do. You will never get well at this rate.”
Oran Delaney only smiled, but he said to himself that he did not
greatly care. He had long been tired of his life. What matter how soon
the end came. There would be no one to grieve for him, except his
faithful old nurse. He thought of Mr. Rodney, but he said to himself
that no jury in this southern land would convict him even if his victim
died. All would think him justified in avenging his daughter.
That day Mr. Delaney made his will. He left Mrs. Griffin a comfortable
legacy, left a large sum of money to take care of the maniac, Julie
Sanson, if she was ever found, and the residue of his large fortune he
bequeathed unconditionally to Aline Rodney.
And then he said to himself that he was ready to die. He had provided
the best he could for the future of the girl whom he loved, and he had
no more left to live for. His life had been ruined in its prime by a
bad man’s treachery. Hope, love, happiness, henceforth could be only
names to him. He did not care to live.
A great despair had fallen upon him. He had wakened up to the one
grand passion of his life, and it was utterly hopeless. He loved Aline
Rodney, but she hated him for the sorrow he had brought into her young
life. She would marry Mr. Lane, perhaps, when she came home again, and
Oran Delaney said to himself, with a pang of the bitterest despair,
that he would rather be dead than live to see the fair young creature
he loved the wife of another.
Days went and came, and he lay there wearily and hopelessly, and the
physician went and came daily, growing more and more puzzled over him.
“He goes down hill every day, and yet, the case was very favorable at
first,” he said to Mr. Rodney. “I am puzzled over him. I am afraid it
is the mind wearing out the body. What do you think about it?”
“I have the same opinion as you,” the lawyer answered. “It is not the
wound I gave him, it is mental trouble that is killing him. It is the
old fable of the sword wearing out the scabbard.”
“Can nothing be done?” asked the old physician, who had become deeply
interested in his new patient.
“Nothing, I am quite sure,” Mr. Rodney answered, for he knew now all
the pain and sorrow and remorse that were killing Oran Delaney.
“Then he must die. All my medical skill can avail nothing to save him,”
answered the physician, regretfully.
In the meantime Mr. Rodney had followed out Mr. Delaney’s wishes. He
had made public all that strange secret, whose keeping had cast that
black shadow over Aline’s life.
Chester was all agog with curiosity and excitement. It was a nine days’
wonder.
As often happens in such cases, there was a complete revulsion of
feeling. The great wave of public sentiment rolled toward Aline in
a gush of pity and sympathy. The world was not as bad as Mr. Lane
had believed it. No one was found to doubt the story Mr. Delaney had
told on what all believed to be his death-bed. It was so strange and
romantic, it appealed so powerfully to that love of the wonderful and
mysterious inherent in all hearts, that every one believed it. If Aline
had been at home society would have made her the heroine of the hour.
It would have taken her to its heart of hearts, and worshiped her as
blindly as it had wronged her. It would have made atonement for its
hasty judgment, but pity and regret were now alike too late. Aline had
vanished out of her old life as utterly as if she were dead and buried.
The places that had known her knew her now no more. In her home they
mourned her as one dead.
In the stress of her trouble and anxiety, poor Mrs. Rodney had taken
down to her sick-bed again. The pretty, self-possessed, dignified lady
was completely broken down. She blamed herself as the author of all her
beautiful daughter’s sorrow.
“I was too harsh, too strict with her. Her faults were only those of
youth and inexperience, united to high spirits. Her punishments were
too severe, and I am rightly punished for my hardness of heart,” wept
and sighed the poor mother, in the long winter nights, while she
tossed upon her sleepless bed, tormented with remorse and misery over
the treatment she had given Aline.
A month passed away, and it was time for the return of Dr. Anthony and
Effie from their bridal tour. They were to settle down to housekeeping
in a pretty house the doctor owned at Maywood.
Mrs. Rodney yearned for Effie’s return. She longed to pour into her
sympathizing ears all her sorrow and despair at the loss, for the
second time, of her beautiful Aline.
The cottage was a most dreary place for sunny-tempered Max Rodney,
in those days. He missed his beautiful sisters, the gentle, graceful
Effie, and the light-hearted, volatile Aline. His mother was always
in tears, now, and seldom left her room. Besides, there was a real
invalid in the house, and the enforced quiet was most irksome to the
high spirited lad whose gay voice, blending with his younger sister’s,
had been wont to waken joyous echoes from garret to cellar of the roomy
cottage. In despair, Max took to spending the most of his time from
home, unreproved by his grief-stricken parents, who had become almost
apathetic in their dumb, agonizing sorrow for their lost daughter.
And one day, when the sun was shining brightly, and the winter snows
that had lain for weeks upon the frozen earth were melting under its
genial glow, Max came home from a long excursion with “the boys,” and
burst into his mother’s room like a small cyclone or tornado.
“Mamma,” he cried, all in a flurry, “may I go into Mr. Delaney’s room?
I have something to tell him.”
Mrs. Rodney looked curiously at the flushed cheeks and sparkling blue
eyes of her handsome boy.
“Why, what is it, my dear?” she asked. “You know the doctor wishes to
keep Mr. Delaney very quiet. He is very low now, and we must do all
that we can to make him well; for if he died, people would look upon
your dear papa as a murderer!”
She shuddered; but the boy’s eyes flashed, and he cried out, proudly:
“No one would call papa a murderer, mamma, even if Mr. Delaney died. He
was right to shoot Mr. Delaney if he thought he had my sister shut up
in his house. I have heard a lot of people say so. If I had been a man,
I should have shot him myself.”
“But you are not a man, Max, so you must not talk so boldly. What is
this that you have to tell Mr. Delaney?”
“A bit of news that will please him, I dare say,” said the boy.
“Oh, Max, is it news of Aline?” quivered the poor mother.
“No, no, mamma; for of course I would tell you that first,” said the
boy.
“Then what can it be? You know we must not excite Mr. Delaney, dear. It
might be his death. You must tell me what you have heard, and then I
can decide better if you may be allowed to tell him.”
“Oh, mamma, I wanted to be the first to tell him,” objected the boy.
“I am sorry; but we must not run the risk, indeed,” Mrs. Rodney said.
Max looked disappointed.
“Well, then, I cannot keep it any longer!” he burst out. “We--that is,
the boys and me--we have found Mr. Delaney’s crazy wife--”
“Impossible!” Mrs. Rodney exclaimed.
“Under a melted snow-drift,” continued Max. “She must have been dead
a long time--ever since that night she set fire to Delaney House, I
guess--for she is in a very bad state; but we are perfectly certain
that she is the one. She is dressed just as papa described her, in the
finery and the jewels. Do you think that Mr. Delaney will be glad,
mamma?”
“Glad that the poor creature is dead, Max?” she cried, quite shocked.
“Yes, mamma,” he replied, undauntedly. “Everybody should be glad, for
what pleasure could that poor, afflicted creature have in her life, and
why should one wish her to live? Mr. Delaney will be glad, I know, and
no one can blame him!”
“Hush, dear, you do not know what you are saying,” said his mother,
“and, besides, this is all surmise on your part. It may not be the
woman at all.”
“Very well, mamma, we shall soon know, for they have sent me to bring
Mrs. Griffin to identity her,” he said.
It all turned out as the little lad had said. The poor creature who
had lain for long weeks under the frozen snow-drifts proved to be
Julie Sanson, indeed. The mystery of her fate was solved at last. She
had not perished in the fiery flames that consumed Delaney House. She
had wandered out into the dark and stormy night and met her death in
the cold, white, drifting snow that wrapped the earth like a ghostly
winding sheet.
It came upon Oran Delaney with a shock that the deformed maniac was
dead. It pained him that death had come to her in such horrible shape.
Indeed, the very existence of such a creature upon the earth had always
seemed to him something for which one might almost arraign Divine
Providence. Why was it permitted?
“I cannot understand it,” he said. “And it pains me that she died
so hard a death. Yet I cannot be sorry that she is dead. She was a
horrible burden upon my life, and her existence was a joyless one. I
thank God that having done my duty by her, I am free at last.”
They buried her quietly and simply, but the circumstances were so well
known that a large number of people attended the burial. Every one
rejoiced that Oran Delaney was free at last from the horrible fetters
that had bound him. He had become quite a hero in these few days.
When his strange story became well known it excited the greatest
sympathy and pity. Many of the townspeople would have liked to call
upon him to express their feelings, but this was strictly forbidden
by the physician, who prescribed the strictest quiet for his patient.
Every one was very sorry for him, although under the peculiar
circumstances of the case no one ever blamed Mr. Rodney for what he had
done. Every father sympathized with him, and declared that with the
same provocation they would have done the same.
Effie came at last. Dr. Anthony drove over from Maywood with her the
morning after their return. There was a most affecting meeting between
mother and daughter. Mrs. Rodney fell on the bride’s neck in tears.
Effie listened to her story of Aline’s disappearance, with a strange
look upon her beautiful, happy face.
“And he is here, Effie, Mr. Delaney is here,” she said. “It is stranger
than a novel, is it not? Aline lay wounded and ill in his house once,
and now here he is in ours, wounded and dying.”
CHAPTER LXI.
Dr. Anthony was most anxious to meet Oran Delaney when they told him
the story of all that had transpired while he and Effie were absent
upon their bridal tour.
Mr. Rodney undertook to ask Mr. Delaney’s permission to present his
son-in-law to him. He felt rather dubious over it. He was not at all
sure that he would care to meet Dr. Anthony under the new conditions in
which he found himself.
To his surprise Mr. Delaney was willing and eager to meet the
young physician whom he had treated so cavalierly on that
long-to-be-remembered night. He declared that it would not excite him
at all. On the contrary, it would be a relief to see him and ask his
pardon for his rudeness.
Dr. Anthony was surprised when he entered the room and saw the man whom
he remembered so vividly, although he had never seen his face. He now
beheld one of the handsomest men he had ever seen in his life in spite
of the pallor and emaciation of illness and hopelessness. He thought he
had never seen such splendid, fathomless dark eyes as those that now
turned upon his face with something that was almost humility in their
sad gaze as he extended his hand.
“Dr. Anthony, I do not know how to ask you to forgive me for the way
I treated you,” he said. “But I was half maddened with fears for Miss
Rodney. That must be my excuse.”
“I am not at all angry with you,” said Dr. Anthony, with his frank
smile. “I can find it in my heart to excuse your rashness, considering
the circumstances of the case.”
And after that the two men were good friends always. The genial,
handsome young doctor, who was so happy with his fair young bride,
had a great fund of pity and sympathy for the man who, while but a
few years older than himself, had had his whole life blasted by the
treachery of one whom he believed his friend.
“You cannot know how I regret it all,” said Oran Delaney, unburdening
his heart to this new friend as men do sometimes on rare occasions to
one another. “If I could go back to that day and undo all the harm I
caused Miss Rodney by my stubborn pride, I would give all that I own,
my poor life into the bargain. I was mad and blind. I had brooded over
my secret until it assumed such gigantic proportions of shame and
sorrow that I grew morbid over it. I would have risked anything rather
than have it revealed to the world. I was frantic with fear when that
poor lunatic attempted Miss Rodney’s life. I believed that the poor
girl would surely betray my secret if I let her go free. So I bound her
by that cruel oath--how cruel I did not know; for I did not think of
the dreadful consequences to her.”
“Dreadful, indeed!” assented Dr. Anthony.
“And now, if by the sacrifice of my life I could bring her back to
her friends, I would most gladly die,” said Oran Delaney, with an
earnestness that carried conviction to the hearer’s heart. “I pray
daily to God that Mr. Lane will succeed in finding her.”
“I do not believe that he will ever do so,” said Dr. Anthony with
_empressement_.
“You do not surely believe that she is dead!” cried Oran Delaney, with
horror and despair in his face and voice.
Dr. Anthony looked pityingly at the pale, handsome face lying on the
white pillow with the ruddy blaze of the firelight casting a sort of
false glow on its deep pallor. He saw that Oran Delaney’s remorse and
despair and grief were most genuine.
“You do not surely believe that she is dead?” he cried in the utmost
despair, and Dr. Anthony answered, sadly:
“Why not? No tidings have come to you of her fate. Is it not most
probable that she has perished in the cruel snow-drifts even as poor
Julie Sanson did?”
Mr. Delaney shuddered, and put up his thin, white hands before his face.
“Oh, for Heaven’s sake, do not name Aline, in the same breath with that
creature!” he cried. “No, no, I cannot believe that she is dead! Heaven
would not be so cruel! She will come back, my beautiful darling, even
if it is not until the cold earth is heaped upon my breast!”
Then with a great effort he threw off the terrible agitation that
possessed him; he looked at Dr. Anthony and said, sadly:
“In my weakness I have revealed my secret to you, Doctor Anthony. I
love Aline--have loved her ever since she was an inmate of my home. My
shame and sorrow and remorse for all that I have done are killing me by
inches. If she does not come back soon I shall never see her. I shall
be dead--killed by my love and sorrow!”
“I am sorry for you!” cried Dr. Anthony, melted by the exceeding grief
of the other. “But indeed you must not agitate yourself like this. It
is very hurtful to you.”
He hastened to feel the patient’s pulse, and seeing that he was
considerably agitated, administered the composing draught that stood
ready upon the little table, and went out to seek his wife, who was
with her mother.
CHAPTER LXII.
The early winter eve was falling drearily when Dr. Anthony went out of
the room, and left Oran Delaney alone, watching the dark shadows that
already began to creep about the corners--fantastic shadows cast by the
leaping blue and yellow flames of the fire.
He lay still and watched the eerie darkness closing in with strange
feelings. Just so was his life ebbing to a close, just so the shadows
of eternity were falling around him. Life’s brief day was almost
ended. It seemed to him that already he felt the chill of the grave in
which he would soon be lying.
“When I am dead she will come back,” he said to himself. “She will be
here again in her old home, with all the shadows lifted from her, and
she will be happy. Poor little wronged Aline! I should like to see her
just once more to ask her to forgive me for my fault. To the dying all
things are forgiven.”
He closed his eyes and lay thinking of the time when he had first met
her, a lovely, volatile creature, who half vexed and half amused him.
He did not dream then that she would be his fate. Now memory went back
and recalled her to his mind as the fairest vision that ever blessed
man’s eyes.
He hardly knew how love had come to him first. He could recall the
time when he had been most angry with her, when he would have liked,
above all things, to give her a hard shaking for her petulance, her
unreasonableness, her childishness. He thought it must have been in
those days when she lay ill and unconscious, and he had hung above her
in an agony of fear lest she should die there away from all who loved
her and grieved for her. He had fancied that the blue eyes dwelt upon
him wistfully, and followed him even in the wildness of delirium with a
strange half recognition. Then in the long, slow days of convalescence,
when she was helpless as a child, the sweet, pale, reproachful face had
crept into his heart. When in her anger she would tell him that she
would stay at Delaney House and die there before she would take the
cruel oath required of her, he was conscious that his heart had beat
half gladly at the thought of her staying beneath the same roof with
him and his misery. But he put the thought away from him as selfish,
and tried to be glad when she broke down at last, and pledged herself
to the silence he required of her.
That night when she went back to the cottage he had spent in a
miserable vigil watching her window with haggard, anxious eyes, yet
little dreaming of all that was transpiring behind it, or how bitterly
the girl would have to suffer for her silence. Man-like, he had not
thought of the world’s busy tongues, always wagging in cruel despite.
Well, it was all over now for Aline, and all over for him. He would not
believe that she was dead. He could not fancy those violet eyes closed
in the eternal sleep--those sweet lips silent forever! God would not be
so cruel now when life was opening so fairly for her, the shadows all
gone from her sky and her pathway bright with the sunshine. She would
come home and be happy after he was dead.
Deeper and deeper grew the shadows in the room. The fire sputtered and
sparkled, and a cinder fell noisily from the grate. He had become so
very nervous that even that little thing made him start and open his
eyes.
He opened them and glanced about the room. A cry broke from his lips.
He was not alone!
Just between him and the flickering firelight stood a girlish, graceful
figure with loosely falling hair, and a lovely white face turned
toward him. The blood around his heart seemed suddenly to turn to ice.
“What was it? A lying trick of the brain?
Yet I thought I saw her stand,
A shadow, there, at my feet.
High over the shadowing land.
* * * * *
The ghastly wraith of one that I know.”
CHAPTER LXIII.
After that one cry of surprise and wonder, Oran Delaney could not
utter another word. He stared speechlessly at the fair vision that had
arisen, as it were, between him and the flickering firelight.
Until this moment he had had an abiding conviction that Aline Rodney
was not dead. His conviction was staggered now. How else had she come
there, a silent shadow in his room, save from the world of shadows?
“She is not of us, as I divine;
She comes from another stiller world of the dead.”
He lay still and awe-stricken, gazing at the fair young face that shone
so white in the dim light. It was turned fully toward him, and the
large blue eyes were fixed upon his face in an intent gaze. He quivered
under it, and keen arrows of pain shot along his nerves, but he could
not turn his eyes from the vision. Not a feature, not a curve, not an
outline escaped him. He noted how soft and long were the dark, curling
tresses that fell in loose waves upon her shoulders, how gracefully the
plain dark robe was fitted to the slender figure, how proudly her white
throat rose from the dark folds.
Death had not robbed her of that superlative beauty that charmed the
eyes of all beholders. The frank, violet eyes, the arch red mouth, the
adorable little nose, the cream-white skin, the dark waving hair all
were here as of yore, and thrilled his heart again with a passion of
love and despair.
He gazed and gazed, his nerves strained to their utmost tension, and
she stood there moveless, stirless, breathless, it almost seemed, for
his own tense, heavy breathing drowned all other sounds in the room.
At length with a great effort of will, he broke the bonds that held
him, and cried out, hoarsely:
“Aline, Aline, have you come back from the dead to reproach me?”
It was like an electric shock galvanizing the seeming ghost into life.
The girl started and made a step forward. She came nearer and nearer
until she was leaning toward him, and her sweet, warm breath floating
over his cheek. This was no ghost, but a living, breathing, sentient
woman!
“Oh, Mr. Delaney,” she cried, with something like awe in her voice, “is
it possible that you take me for a ghost?”
He could not speak for joy. His brain reeled deliriously. Could it be
Aline Rodney in the flesh? Aline Rodney, come back to him before he
died, looking at him kindly, speaking to him gently? Should he not
awaken presently and find it all a delusive dream?
He put out his wasted hand and touched her warm, white wrist.
“Let me touch you, for I cannot believe my eyes,” he said, wistfully.
“Is it really you, Aline, or only the blessedest dream that ever dazed
a man’s senses?”
She did not repulse him. She let him hold her hand in his a moment that
he might assure himself of the reality of this vision.
“Yes, it is really I,” she said, reassuringly, and then she added,
curiously, “Why did you take me for a ghost? Did any one tell you I was
dead?”
“No, no, it was only my fancy. I was dazed when I opened my eyes and
saw you there. I had not heard a sound except the cinders falling from
the grate. What could I think but that you were a ghostly visitant from
another world?”
She stood gazing down at him, seeming to forget that her hand still lay
lightly in the clasp of his.
“They told me to come in softly,” she said. “They thought that you
might be asleep. So I turned the knob softly and came in. But when I
saw that your eyes were closed I was just going away quietly again when
you awakened.”
“It was very good of you to come,” he said, softly pressing the warm,
white hand that lay passive in his. “I did not deserve it. I thought
that you would hate and scorn me too bitterly ever to speak to me
again. Thank you a thousand times for coming.”
Something came into the wistful face into which he was anxiously
gazing--kindness, pity, almost sadness.
“Yes, I have been very angry with you,” she said, with a curious catch
in her breath. “I meant that you should never, never see my face again.
But they told me that you were--were ill, and then I came. You know we
forgive all things to the dying.”
CHAPTER LXIV.
He had felt that he was slowly dying; he knew that the physician and
all the others thought so, too. He had not cared for it. He had rather
exulted in the thought, for he had grown weary of his ruined life.
But when Aline Rodney in those few frank words told him that he was
dying, it touched a chord in his heart that thrilled with the keenest
pain. There came to him a pang that was like despair at the thought of
leaving the world with her in it.
For the first time since that horrible night that had freed him from
the hated fetters that bound him to the deformed maniac, he recalled
his freedom with a vague, wild rush of happiness at all that was
possible to him now, if only--if only that gaunt, black shadow of death
had not stretched out its dark wings over him.
The pang was sharp and bitter. He loved her, and to his fancy it seemed
as if fate had created this beautiful woman to be his wife. They had
been at war with each other, and yet his heart had gone out to her
with its whole freight of manly love and devotion. Must he die now and
leave her for some other happy man--Mr. Lane, perhaps, of whom he was
morbidly jealous?
A great longing for life took possession of him. Oh, if only he had
battled harder to save this existence, which now he prized so much! He
hated himself when he remembered that the physician had said that he
had recklessly flung away his life by his despondency and hopelessness.
He pressed closer in his the little hand, and looked yearningly into
the sweet girl-face with his hollow, burning, dark eyes.
“So you forgive me all?” he said, and she answered, gravely, “Yes, all!”
“Forgiveness is the boon we grant to death,” he said, mournfully. “But
if I were going to live, Aline, would you be less kind? Would you
refuse to forgive me then?”
He waited anxiously to hear what she would say, though he knew that
it could not greatly matter now whether she answered him yea or not.
It was too late now. He was drifting too near to the borders of the
Shadow-Land.
She looked at him with a faint, almost tender smile on her exquisite
red mouth.
“I would forgive you if you lived just as freely as I forgive you
dying,” she answered. “You have made all the atonement you could, and I
thank you and bless you for it.”
“You know all; they have told you all,” he said, with a faint flush
creeping into his wan cheeks.
“Yes. I have heard all. It was very hard for you, Mr. Delaney. You must
have been half mad with your trouble; so I forgive you now all that you
have made me suffer. Perhaps it will make your dying-bed easier,” said
Aline, with the wonderful pity and forgiveness of a true woman’s heart.
“Easier!” he repeated, with a groan, and she did not know that it only
made it harder. “For if I lived, and she forgave me, I might win her
yet,” he said to himself. “Oh, how hard it is to die knowing all this!”
The door opened softly, and the nurse entered with the inevitable tea
and toast. She laid fresh coal on the fire and lighted the lamp. Then
she nodded at Miss Rodney, with a smile.
“He will get well, now that you have come back and forgiven him,” she
said.
“I hope that he may,” Aline answered, with frank simplicity.
And again she did not know how much harder these words of hers made it
for the man who knew that he was sinking daily in the Valley of the
Shadow of Death.
“What would I not give to live?” he inwardly groaned.
“I must go back to mamma now,” said Aline moving to the door.
His dark eyes followed her entreatingly.
“Do not go so soon,” he pleaded. “You have not told me yet where you
have been and how you came back, and I am so anxious to hear.”
“Do stay a little longer, Miss Rodney,” pleaded Mrs. Griffin, and Aline
readily consented to do so.
CHAPTER LXV.
It looked very pleasant and cozy in the sick-room, with the curtains
drawn and the bright fire. Aline sat down in the easy-chair Mrs.
Griffin wheeled forward for her, and was quite unconscious what a
picture of fair, girlish beauty she made sitting there, in her pretty
dark blue dress with her dark hair falling over her slight, pretty
figure.
“Do you know,” she said, looking at the nurse, “that this reminds me of
the time when I was at Delaney House?--only that it was I who was ill
then, and not Mr. Delaney.”
“Can you recall those times without being angry with me, Aline?”
inquired Mr. Delaney, half fearfully.
“I told you I had forgiven you all, Mr. Delaney,” answered Aline, as if
that implied everything.
“Thank you,” he answered, dropping his head back, with a sigh, upon the
pillow.
Mrs. Griffin busied herself in preparing the little table by the
bedside, which she now wheeled forward with the simple repast neatly
arranged upon it.
“Do you know that I could not swallow a mouthful now?” he said, looking
at her with a slight smile. “I am so impatient to hear Aline’s story,
that I can think of nothing else.”
“But he must keep up his strength, mustn’t he, Miss Rodney?” said Mrs.
Griffin, anxiously.
“Most certainly! And I shall not begin the telling of my story until
after he has eaten every bite of his toast and swallowed every
mouthful of his tea,” answered that young person, with her usual cruel
directness.
He looked at her imploringly.
“Do you not know that I am far too much excited to eat?” he said.
“If that is the case, I am very sorry that I came,” exclaimed Miss
Rodney. “I was told, particularly, that you must not be excited. So I
will take myself off at once.”
“Do not go, Miss Rodney,” pleaded the nurse, while the invalid cried
out, anxiously:
“Stay, Aline, and I will at once proceed to devour every morsel on the
plate.”
“Very well. In that case I may permit myself to remain awhile longer,”
she replied.
She sat down again and watched him taking his tea. There was a very
sober, grave expression on her face while she did so.
She was shocked at the change that had taken place in Mr. Delaney since
that snowy night, barely five weeks agone, when she had asked him to
marry her and he had refused her request.
Then he had been tall, strong, handsome, full of life and health. Now
how pale, how wan, how shadowy, appeared the wasted face in which the
great burning black eyes appeared so large and solemn.
“Poor fellow! he will not be here long. How dreadful to think that my
papa should be the cause of his death,” said the girl to herself, with
a great wave of pity and regret sweeping over her heart.
He finished his toast and looked at her with a wan smile.
“Now, Aline, you will tell me where you went when you left me that
night,” he said, pleadingly.
A wave of crimson swept over her face. She recalled the mission upon
which she had gone to him that time.
“I know what you are thinking of,” he said. “But it was a noble
motive that prompted you that night. You would have saved me from the
consequences of your father’s wrath. Ah, Aline, I was horribly tempted
to take you at your word; but if I had done so I should but have done
you deeper wrong.”
“Yes, I know now, and I thank you for what seemed cruel then,” she
answered, simply, but the blush still burned her face. She could not
recall that hasty, impulsive action without the deepest shame.
He gazed at her with sorrowful eyes and an aching heart. Ah, how soon
the grave would hide him from the sight of those sweet, blue orbs!
While the blush still burned her fair face she said to him with a half
smile:
“Did you think I should be rendered so desperate by your refusal that
night, that I should go away and drown myself?”
“I thought you would go back home, and I was horrified when I found
that you had not done so,” he replied.
“No, I was too wretched to go back,” she said. “I was in a fever of
unrest and trouble when I came to you that night. My brain was on fire.
I had not stopped to think or to reason. I acted on impulse wholly. But
your sarcasm, your sternness, stunned me, cooled me. When I staggered
out of Delaney House I was almost dead with shame and despair for what
I had done.”
She put up her hand a moment to hide the sensitive quiver of her lips,
then resumed:
“My first thought was to get away from my home. I longed to break loose
from old associations and hide myself from all who knew me. I turned my
steps away from Delaney House, and staggered along in the snow until
my sense of physical discomfort cooled my reckless mood. I began to
think that I must stop somewhere or I should perish in the cold. Then I
remembered my sister Effie, who had gone South on a bridal tour.”
She looked from him to Mrs. Griffin, with a smile in her blue eyes.
“You were expecting to hear something tragic, but my story is the most
prosaic one imaginable. I was not meant for a heroine at all; I am
too afraid of discomfort and trouble,” she said, with a soft little
laugh. “When I started I was quite desperate; I did not care where I
went. But when the snow beat into my face and chilled my feet, I became
discouraged. I did not want to go back, but I longed intensely to be
with some one who loved me, and to be warm and comfortable.”
“Poor dear!” sighed Mrs. Griffin, sympathetically.
“I had some money in my pocket,” continued Aline. “Papa had given it
me to buy a black silk dress. I walked to the next station from here,
bought a ticket to Florida, and went to Effie and Dr. Anthony. You
see, Mr. Delaney, there was nothing remarkable at all in my second
disappearance from home,” she said.
“You should have written to your parents,” he said.
“I am ashamed to say that I would not do so,” she answered. “I thought
that if I let them all think that I was dead, my father would drop
the subject of the threatened duel. I did not want him to be killed,
neither did I want you to be hurt, for, angry as I was, I shrunk from
the thought of bloodshed. So I would not write myself, nor would I
suffer Effie to write.”
“You would have spared us all much unhappiness had you done so,” he
said.
“I came home to Maywood with them at last,” she said. “By that time
they had argued me into a more reasonable mood. I was willing to return
home; but that morning they came over to Chester I did not come with
them. I sent them before me as _avant couriers_, with the caution not
to tell them unless they were very anxious over me. They brought back
such news that I was stunned. Delaney House burned to the ground; the
deformed maniac dead; you wounded by my father’s hand and your whole
story revealed; my own name cleared from obloquy, and my friends all
ready to crave my pardon for their unkindness. It took my breath away.”
He smiled in spite of his pain as he saw the sudden joy-light flash
over her face. What mattered all that had happened to him so that she
was saved, this fair sweet girl who had suffered so unjustly.
“You must be very angry with papa, aren’t you, Mr. Delaney?” she asked,
wistfully.
“Angry? No! I have never blamed him. In his place I should have acted
the same, no doubt,” he replied, calmly.
“But I am very sorry, and so is papa. I came over this morning, and it
was one of the first things he told me. He would give anything in the
world to undo what he has done!” exclaimed Aline.
“Anything?” he repeated.
“Anything!” she reiterated, earnestly.
“And you, Aline?” he questioned.
“I feel worse than papa over it,” said the girl in her frank, innocent
way.
CHAPTER LXVI.
Mrs. Griffin had slipped out of the room quietly with her tray of empty
dishes a moment before. They were alone. Aline shivered a little. He
looked so wan and ill, what if he should die here alone with her?
She half rose from her seat, trembling with agitation, and made a step
toward the door.
“Are you going so soon?” he asked wistfully.
It flashed over her that it was cowardly to leave him alone because she
was afraid to see him die. When he held out his hand to her she went up
bravely to his side.
“I will try not to be afraid,” she said to herself.
“You are going before I have said all that I wish to say to you,” he
said.
A sudden light flashed over her face.
“Oh, and there is something I must say to you--I had nearly forgotten!”
she exclaimed.
“Well,” he asked, looking up into the wide blue eyes regarding him
attentively.
“They told me you had made a will--that you had left me a great
fortune. Oh, Mr. Delaney, that must not be! I cannot take it!” she
cried, earnestly.
“You must, Aline. It is but a small reparation for all the sorrow I
have caused you,” he said.
“But I do not wish to do so. I refuse to accept it!” she cried.
“You are a rash and foolish child, or you would not refuse to accept a
fortune, Aline,” he said.
“No matter. I will not have it,” she said, resolutely.
“You do not know what pleasures it will procure you,” he argued.
“I shall not care for them,” she replied. “You must leave your fortune
to some one else, Mr. Delaney.”
“To whom?” he asked.
“I do not know. Any one you wish,” she replied, indifferently.
All in a moment he caught her hand with a strength she had not deemed
him possessed of, and drew her toward him.
“Aline, darling,” he whispered, with his lips very near to her cheek,
“will you not let me leave the fortune to my wife?”
She staggered back from him, the color flowing out of her cheeks.
“Your wife?” she faltered.
“Yes, my wife,” he said. “Oh, Aline, do not turn away from me so
coldly. I love you, my darling, and I could die happy if I could call
you my wife, if but once before that great final hour. Oh, Aline, will
you give yourself to me for the little while I have to live? I do not
deserve such happiness, I know, but it will be such a boon to me that
you cannot refuse. It is only for a little while, you know, only to
soothe a dying hour!”
She gazed at him, bewildered by his eloquence, her face growing deadly
white.
“Do you hear me, Aline?” he asked. “I am asking you to be my wife. I
love you devotedly. I have loved you ever since I first met you. Will
you not grant my request?”
“I do not want to be married, Mr. Delaney, and--and--you are only
asking me because--of--that--night,” she said, slowly, with downcast
eyes.
“On my honor, no, Aline. I am asking you because you won my heart long
before that dreadful night, and because it would make me happy in dying
to know that I had left you my fortune and my proud old name. It is a
most honorable name. Aline, even you, so beautiful and sweet, need not
disdain it,” he said.
She did not answer a word. She seemed like one dazed by the suddenness
of all this.
“You said you would do anything to atone for your father’s sin, Aline,”
he said, earnestly. “Will you do this? Would it be very irksome to be
my wife a few days or hours, as the case might be? It would only be a
little while, remember.”
She raised her large, earnest eyes to his face.
“It would be only a little while--that is true,” she said reflectively.
“I wonder what my father would wish me to do?”
“Will you let me ask him?” said Oran Delaney, eagerly.
“Yes, you may ask him, and I will do just what he tells me. I owe him
that much obedience in return for all the sorrow I have caused him,”
said Aline, with her pretty, childish directness.
CHAPTER LXVII.
“I will do just what papa tells me,” said Aline, trustingly, and an
eager light of joy gleamed in Oran Delaney’s eyes. He fancied that Mr.
Rodney would be kind to him--that he would give him the boon he craved.
He was right in his surmise. The lawyer was disposed to be very kind
to the man whom he had wounded near unto death. Now that the truth
had come to light, now that his beautiful daughter was safe at home
again, he was sorely repentant for what he had done. He was haunted by
remorse. He would have given anything in his power to undo the deed he
had done in his bitter wrath.
And now when Oran Delaney told him in a few frank words that his
descent into the dark grave would be soothed if he might call Aline
his bride before he died, he was most eager to grant him this boon.
Aline, touched with a strange awe at the nearing presence of death, and
willing to atone for her father’s sin, consented at once to give her
hand to the man who at best could claim it but a few short hours.
Every one of the household was quite willing for this strange marriage.
They argued that it did not matter, even although Aline did not love
him, as it was for such a very little while.
So the very next morning there was a strange and quiet marriage in
the sick-room. Aline, arrayed in all the wedding finery of Effie, and
lovely as a dream in the new gravity and dignity that had settled
upon her, stood by the sick-bed with her hand in Oran Delaney’s and
responded to the solemn marriage service that made her his own until
Death should part them--Death, that stood silent and unseen in the room
even now, fearful of being robbed of his prey.
Oran Delaney’s voice rang clear and steady in the beautiful responses.
Aline’s was low and firm. As in a dream, she felt the wedding-ring
slipped on her finger, she heard the clergyman’s blessing. There was
a little stir about her, and then mamma and Effie were kissing and
crying over her, her father and Dr. Anthony were pressing her hand.
She shook herself free from them all presently, and tried to realize
what had happened to her. She, Aline Rodney, who, such a little, little
while ago had been a willful, thoughtless child, was married! She was
no longer Miss Rodney--she was Mrs. Delaney, and in a short while she
would be a widow. How strange, how dream-like it all seemed.
She turned suddenly and looked at her bridegroom. He was regarding her
with a wistful yearning in his beautiful dark eyes. At the same moment
Effie whispered in her ear:
“Your husband would like to kiss you, darling.”
She went to his side and bent her head so that he might kiss her
cheek. He pressed his mustached lips softly against it, whispering,
fondly:
“Thank you, and God bless you, my wife.”
And then the dark head fell and the eyes closed. For a minute they all
thought that he was dead, for no breath or pulsation could be detected.
Mr. Rodney was in despair.
“Oh, this is too dreadful!” he cried. “I had hoped that he would
rally, that God would spare his life, and that I might be saved the
wretchedness of knowing myself a murderer. And you, too, my poor child,
are a widow in the hour of your bridal!”
CHAPTER LXVIII.
But Dr. Anthony, who had been making a careful examination of the
patient, looked around at these words, and said, hurriedly:
“No, no, you are mistaken. I can detect some signs of life yet. It is
only a deep swoon. Let all leave the room except the nurse and myself,
and let the attending physician be sent for immediately.”
They all retired, and Aline went to her own room to strip off the
wedding finery. Then she locked herself in for the remainder of the day.
Mr. Lane came that day fresh from an unsuccessful quest after Aline,
and was amazed and delighted when he heard that she had come home, and
that she had been in Florida all the time with Dr. and Mrs. Anthony. He
grew red and pale by turns when he heard that Aline was married to Mr.
Delaney. She was the only woman he had ever loved. A swift pain tore
his heart as he realized that she was lost to him forever, for although
her husband was dying, she would be too far above him socially as the
wealthy widow of Oran Delaney for him to ever aspire to her hand.
He remained silent a few minutes fighting down his pain and
disappointment, and at length reason came to his aid and told him
it was better so. He was quite old enough to be Aline’s father, and
besides she was socially his superior. He put away his broken dream
from him with a suppressed sigh, and declared that he was glad that
all had turned out so well. All would be well with Aline now. Fate had
settled her future for her. No one would ever dare to asperse her now
when she bore the proud name of Delaney.
He would have liked to see her and congratulate her, but they told
him that she was locked into her room, refusing admittance to any, so
he went away, leaving his best wishes for her and her husband if he
ever rallied sufficiently to receive them. That night he went back to
New York, and in his busy life tried to forget the sweet, luring face
of the girl who had lured him into such a sweet, momentary dream of
domestic happiness. He never loved again, never wooed nor wedded. A
memory of Aline always remained with him, but it became in time only
a sweet and pleasant one, unmixed with pain. Several years after that
day of disappointment and pain, he met her in New York, and then he saw
the wisdom of his loss. She was far too brilliant and beautiful ever to
have linked her lot with his. He smiled and murmured to himself: “Fate
is above us all!”
Aline was very sweet and kind to him when they met. She had heard the
story of his attachment to herself long before that, and at first she
had been inclined to laugh at the old bachelor’s romance, but when she
heard how kind a motive had blended with his love, she felt more kindly
toward him. In her youth and beauty and perfect happiness she could
well spare a kindly thought to one who had loved her in vain.
She laid her round white arms fondly about the neck of him who had made
her life so bright and blessed.
“I am sorry for him, dear,” she said. “But I never could have loved any
one but you, my own, own darling one.”
CHAPTER LXIX.
Aline’s momentous bridal day waned slowly to its close.
The physicians remained with Mr. Delaney all day, then left him to Mrs.
Griffin’s care and went away. He was better, they said, but he must
have careful nursing.
The wintery day was fading into darkness. Mrs. Griffin had slipped
out for the tea and toast again, and Mr. Delaney lay among his snowy
pillows, gazing thoughtfully into the bright fire. His lips moved, and
he murmured, sadly:
“She will hate me, perhaps.”
The door opened softly. His bride of a day came gliding in, clad in her
simple dark-blue dress, the loose curls falling on her shoulders.
“You are better?” she said, coming up to him. “Ah, I thought you were
dead this morning!”
She sat down in a low chair by the side of the bed, very close to him.
His heart beat with sudden rapture.
“Yes, I thought that I was dying, too,” he said. “You remember that
moment when I kissed your cheek? Well, just then I had a sensation as
of falling from a great height. I thought it was the last of earth,
that I had looked my last on your beloved face, that I was surely
dying!”
“We all thought so,” she replied, calmly and gravely.
He reached out and took her hand in both his own.
“Aline, will you look at me?” he asked.
She lifted the shyly drooping lashes from her violet eyes and gazed
into his face, frankly and steadily.
“Aline, do you realize that you are really my wife?--that you belong
wholly to me?” he asked her.
“Yes,” she answered quietly.
“Is there any sorrow, any regret, any repulsion in the thought?” he
inquired, and she answered in a low voice:
“No.”
“I have something to tell you,” he said, “but oh, Aline, I am afraid.”
She grew very pale at those words from his lips. She looked at him
anxiously.
“You need not be afraid to tell me. Go on. I will try to bear it,” she
said, with a falter in her voice.
“But, Aline, my own, my darling, you must not hate me for this,” he
said, passionately. “Indeed I did not know! I believed I was surely
doomed! And, now, now if only you could forgive me for my unconscious
deception, I should be the happiest man in the world.”
She bent her blue eyes on him full of reproach and pain.
“Happy--at dying? Happy--at leaving _me_?” she said, in a low, strange,
bewildered voice.
And for a moment they gazed wonderingly at each other. Then he
spoke--almost incredulously:
“Aline, have you misunderstood me? I have been trying to tell you that
the doubt is over. I have rallied from my illness! Love and joy have
wrought a miracle! _I shall live!_”
“You--will--live?” she gasped, and stared at him, speechless.
“Oh, my dear, are you so sorry? Do you regret that you gave yourself
to me? Oh, I would far sooner have died than this!” cried out Oran
Delaney, in a passion of despair.
But she caught the hand he threw out in his frenzy of despair and
pressed her lips upon it.
“Ah, Heaven, how glad I am!” she cried; and he answered, wonderingly:
“And you are not sorry--you do not hate me, Aline?”
“No, no, I love you,” she answered, hiding her face against his hands.
“I think I must have loved you long, but I did not know it until I
believed you dying. Oh, I thank Heaven that it has so kindly granted my
prayer!”
“Your prayer, darling?” he said, gathering her in both arms tightly, as
if he never meant to let her go again.
She whispered, with her lips against his cheek:
“I have been locked into my room all day, Oran, praying, praying, on my
knees, that your life might be spared to me. And Heaven has granted my
prayer. You will live for me, my husband!”
THE END.
“Look it up in the Dream Book.”
THE MASCOT DREAM BOOK,
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Nothing which is natural in entirely useless. Dreams must be intended
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and during sleep we often dream. Why is this? Does the mind naturally
and irresistibly act in a certain way, while we sleep, and this without
any possible useful purpose? Certainly not. Common sense, philosophy,
and history will contradict this supposition. Mankind, in all ages
and countries, have agreed in believing that dreams have a spiritual
origin, and, to a certain extent, a useful purpose.
In this little book the interpretation of dreams is reduced to a
system. If the reader can not assent to the interpretations of dreams
as here set forth, at least a great deal of entertainment will be found
in reading them.
IN ADDITION TO
THE MASCOT DREAM BOOK
THIS LITTLE MANUAL ALSO CONTAINS THE FOLLOWING:
Divination by Cards--To Know Whether a Woman will Have the Man She
Wishes--To Know Whether a Person will be Married--Concerning Children
Born on any Day in the Week--Fortunate Days, Months, and Years--To
Cast Your Nativity--The Way to Get Rich, and Live Happy in the
Marriage State--Curious and Instructive Information on Physiognomy,
etc.
The Mascot Dream Book is of pocket size, and it can be carried without
inconvenience.
For sale by all newsdealers, or sent by mail, on receipt of 10 cents,
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These books are printed on good paper, in large type, and are bound in
handsome photogravure covers of different designs. A complete list of
CHARLOTTE M. BRAEME’S works is published in this series.
Charlotte M. Braeme.
22 His Perfect Trust.
24 The Heiress of Hilldrop.
25 For Another’s Sin.
26 Set in Diamonds.
27 The World Between Them.
28 A Passion Flower.
29 A True Magdalen.
30 A Woman’s Error.
32 At War with Herself.
33 The Belle of Lynn.
34 The Shadow of a Sin.
35 Claribel’s Love Story.
36 A Woman’s War.
38 Hilary’s Folly.
39 From Gloom to Sunlight.
40 A Haunted Life.
41 The Mystery of Colde Fell; or, Not Proven.
42 A Dark Marriage Morn.
43 The Duke’s Secret.
44 His Wife’s Judgment.
45 A Thorn in Her Heart.
46 A Nameless Sin.
47 A Mad Love.
48 Irene’s Vow.
49 Signa’s Sweetheart.
51 A Fiery Ordeal.
52 Between Two Loves.
53 Beyond Pardon.
54 A Bitter Atonement.
55 A Broken Wedding-Ring.
56 Dora Thorne.
57 The Earl’s Atonement.
58 Evelyn’s Folly.
59 A Golden Heart.
60 Her Martyrdom.
61 Her Second Love.
62 Lady Damer’s Secret.
63 Lady Hutton’s Ward.
64 Lord Lisle’s Daughter.
66 Lord Lynne’s Choice.
67 Love Works Wonders.
68 Prince Charlie’s Daughter.
69 Put Asunder; or, Lady Castlemaine’s Divorce.
70 Repented at Leisure.
71 A Struggle for a Ring.
72 Sunshine and Roses.
73 Thorns and Orange-Blossoms.
77 Under a Shadow; or, A Shadowed Life.
78 Weaker Than a Woman.
79 Wedded and Parted.
80 Which Loved Him Best?
81 Wife in Name Only.
82 A Woman’s Temptation.
83 A Queen Amongst Women.
84 Madolin’s Lover.
87 The Sin of a Lifetime.
88 Love’s Warfare.
89 ’Twixt Smile and Tear.
90 Sweet Cymbeline.
93 The Squire’s Darling.
94 The Gambler’s Wife.
95 A Fatal Dower.
96 Her Mother’s Sin.
97 Romance of a Black Veil.
98 A Rose in Thorns.
99 Lord Elesmere’s Wife.
291 Queen of the Lilies. Sequel to Lord Elesmere’s Wife.
103 The Mystery of Woodleigh Grange.
185 A Willful Maid.
186 A Woman’s Love Story.
194 Bonnie Doon.
212 Lady Latimer’s Escape, and A Fatal Temptation.
213 My Poor Wife.
214 Jessie.
215 Phyllis’s Probation.
216 Betwixt My Love and Me.
217 Suzanne.
218 Prince Charming.
222 The Ducie Diamonds.
223 Lady Muriel’s Secret.
224 “For a Dream’s Sake.”
225 Under a Ban.
226 “So Near, and Yet So Far.”
227 A Great Mistake.
228 The Wife’s Secret.
229 For Life and Love.
230 The Fatal Lilies.
231 A Gilded Sin.
232 Ingledew House.
238 In Cupid’s Net.
234 A Dead Heart.
235 A Golden Dawn.
236 Two Kisses.
237 The White Witch.
238 At Any Cost.
239 A Bitter Reckoning.
240 My Sister Kate.
241 His Wedded Wife.
242 Thrown on the World.
243 Between Two Sins.
244 The Hidden Sin.
245 James Gordon’s Wife.
246 A Coquette’s Conquest.
247 A Fair Mystery.
292 The Perils of Beauty. Sequel to “A Fair Mystery.”
248 Wedded Hands.
249 Griselda.
250 Margery Daw.
251 In Shallow Waters.
252 Society’s Verdict.
253 If Love Be Love.
254 The Actor’s Ward.
255 A Willful Young Woman.
256 Marjorie.
257 Lady Diana’s Pride.
258 A Hidden Terror.
259 A Struggle for the Right.
260 Blossom and Fruit.
261 On Her Wedding Morn.
262 The Shattered Idol.
263 The Earl’s Error.
264 An Unnatural Bondage.
265 Golden Gates.
266 A Modern Cinderella.
267 Lured Away.
268 Beauty’s Marriage.
269 Guelda.
270 Dumaresq’s Temptation.
271 Jenny.
272 The Star of Love.
273 A Woman’s Vengeance.
274 Dream Faces.
275 The Story of an Error.
276 The Queen of the County.
277 Her Only Sin.
278 A Fatal Wedding.
279 Under the Holly Berries, and Coralie.
282 Redeemed by Love.
286 Lady Ethel’s Whim, and My Mother’s Rival.
287 Daphne Vernon, and An Alluring Young Woman.
289 Love’s Surrender, and Marion Arleigh’s Penance.
309 A Woman’s Honor.
Robert Buchanan.
220 The Master of the Mine.
221 The Heir of Linne.
Rosa Nouchette Carey.
50 Not Like Other Girls.
85 Only the Governess.
Sylvanus Cobb, Jr.
107 Ivan, the Serf.
108 The Queen’s Revenge.
Mrs. E. Burke Collins.
161 Lillian’s Vow.
162 Sold for Gold.
Marie Corelli.
20 The Song of Miriam.
92 Vendetta!
Jean Corey.
148 The Dance of Death.
163 A Heart of Fire.
Victoria Cross.
144 A Girl of the Klondike.
145 Paula. A Sketch from Life.
Dora Delmar.
152 Cast Up by the Tide.
153 The Scent of the Roses.
A. Conan Doyle.
65 A Study in Scarlet.
143 The Sherlock Holmes Detective Stories.
“The Duchess.”
74 The Honorable Mrs. Vereker.
75 Under-Currents.
76 A Born Coquette.
91 April’s Lady.
Alexander Dumas.
86 Camille.
281 The Bride of Monte-Cristo.
May Agnes Fleming.
135 The Heiress of Glen Gower.
136 Magdalen’s Vow.
137 Who Wins?
138 Lady Evelyn.
139 Estella’s Husband.
140 The Baronet’s Bride.
141 The Unseen Bridegroom.
Charles Garvice.
1 The Marquis.
5 A Wasted Love (On Love’s Altar).
7 Leslie’s Loyalty (His Love So True).
9 Elaine.
11 Claire (The Mistress of Court Regna).
13 Her Heart’s Desire (An Innocent Girl).
15 Her Ransom (Paid For).
17 A Coronet of Shame.
21 Lorrie; or, Hollow Gold.
124 She Loved Him.
207 Only a Girl’s Love.
208 Leola Dale’s Fortune.
209 Only One Love.
210 His Guardian Angel.
288 Farmer Holt’s Daughter, and Woven on Fate’s Loom.
293 The Earl’s Heir (Lady Norah).
294 For an Earldom (Love’s Dilemma).
295 The Lady of Darracourt (Lucille).
296 The Heir of Vering.
297 The Gipsy Peer (The Usurper).
298 Jeanne (Barriers Between).
299 So Nearly Lost (The Springtime of Love).
300 So Fair, So False (The Beauty of the Season).
301 My Lady Pride (Floris).
302 Staunch as a Woman (A Maiden’s Sacrifice).
303 The Spider and the Fly (Violet).
304 For Her Only (Diana).
305 Under the Shadow (Iris).
306 A Woman’s Soul (Behind the Footlights).
307 It Was For Her Sake (Olivia).
308 Staunch of Heart (Adrian Leroy).
310 My Lady of Snow, and other stories.
311 Leave Love to Itself, and other stories.
312 The Woman Decides, and other stories.
Wenona Gilman.
154 Hearts and Lives.
155 Blind Dan’s Daughter.
156 Val, the Tomboy.
157 My Little Princess.
Mrs. Sumner Hayden.
8 The Midnight Marriage.
118 Little Goldie.
Mary J. Holmes.
111 Tempest and Sunshine.
112 The Homestead on the Hillside.
118 The English Orphans.
122 ’Lena Rivers.
126 Meadow Brook.
201 Dora Deane.
202 Old Hagar’s Secret.
Rudyard Kipling.
115 Ballads and Other Verses.
116 Drums of the Fore and Aft.
Laura Jean Libbey.
2 Beautiful Ione’s Lover.
4 All For Love of a Fair Face.
6 Daisy Brooks.
8 Little Rosebud’s Lovers.
10 A Struggle for a Heart.
12 Junie’s Love-Test.
14 Leonie Locke.
16 Madolin Rivers.
18 The Heiress of Cameron Hall.
285 Beautiful Victorine’s Folly.
Henry Seton Merriman.
130 The Phantom Future.
131 Prisoners and Captives.
142 Young Mistley.
Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller.
165 Lady Gay’s Pride.
166 Lancaster’s Choice.
167 Tiger-Lily.
168 The Pearl and the Ruby.
169 Eric Braddon’s Love.
170 Little Sweetheart.
171 Flower and Jewel.
172 Little Nobody.
Oliver Optic.
114 The Boat Club.
120 All Aboard!
121 Now or Never.
Effie Adelaide Rowlands.
149 A Charity Girl.
150 Husband and Foe.
151 Little Lady Charles.
178 The Man She Loved.
184 One Man’s Evil.
205 Carla.
283 Beneath a Spell.
284 Her Punishment; or, With Heart So True.
Charlotte M. Stanley.
174 Her Second Choice.
175 His Country Cousin.
176 Frou-Frou.
197 Sybil’s Secret.
Count Lyof Tolstoi.
101 The Kreutzer Sonata.
102 Anna Karénine.
E. Werner.
105 His Word of Honor: or, What the Spring Brought.
106 She Fell in Love with Her Husband; or, “Good Luck;” or, Success, and How He Won It.
109 The Price He Paid.
110 The Master of Ettersberg.
Miscellaneous.
19 Woman Against Woman.
Mrs. M. A. Holmes.
23 Addie’s Husband.
By the Author of “Jessie.”
31 Leonie, the Sweet Street Singer. By the Author of “For Mother’s Sake.”
37 Lady Audley’s Secret.
Miss M. E. Braddon.
100 The Dolly Dialogues.
Anthony Hope.
104 Martha; or, The Story of a Clergyman’s Daughter.
W. Heimburg.
117 The Royal Chase.
Amédée Achard.
119 Inez: A Tale of the Alamo.
Augusta J. Evans.
123 Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám.
125 In His Steps. “What Would Jesus Do?”
Rev. Charles M. Sheldon.
127 The Iron Pirate.
Max Pemberton.
128 The Hypocrite.
129 Dead Man’s Rock.
“Q” (Arthur T. Quiller-Couch).
132 A Parisian Romance.
Octave Feuillet.
133 Carmen: The Power of Love.
Prosper Merimée.
134 Prue and I.
George William Curtis.
146 Sappho. Alphonse Daudet.
147 Manon Lescaut.
L’Abbé Prévost.
158 The Banker’s Daughter.
Magdalen Barrett.
159 The Depth of Love.
Hannah Blomgren.
160 His Legal Wife.
Mary E. Bryan.
164 Shadow and Sunshine.
Adna H. Lightner.
173 Under Five Lakes.
“M. Quad.”
177 The Little Light-House Lass.
Elizabeth Stiles.
179 An Impossible Thing.
Katharine Wynne.
180 Woman, the Mystery.
Henry Herman.
181 Christie Johnstone.
Charles Reade.
182 The Blithedale Romance.
Nathaniel Hawthorne.
183 Through Green Glasses.
F. M. Allen.
187 Black Rock. Ralph Connor.
188 The Type-Writer Girl.
Olive Pratt Rayner.
189 The Story of L’Aiglon.
“Carolus.”
190 An Englishwoman’s Love-Letters.
191 Elizabeth and Her German Garden.
192 The Queen’s Book.
Queen Victoria.
193 The Best Policy.
Katharine Wynne.
195 The Danvers Jewels.
Mary Cholmondeley.
196 Madame Sans-Gene.
Edmond Lepelletier.
198 Love’s Martyr.
Laurence A. Tadema.
199 A Crimson Stain.
Annie Bradshaw.
200 Miss Kate. “Rita.”
203 “By the Waters of Babylon.” John B. Hopkins.
204 A Fortnight at the Dead Lake. Paul Heyse.
205 Mrs. Austen.
Margaret Veley.
211 Peg Woffington.
Charles Reade.
219 The Woman of Fire.
Adolphe Belot.
280 May Blossom.
Margaret Lee.
290 Wee Macgreegor. J. J. B.
The foregoing books are for sale by all newsdealers, or they will be
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Transcriber’s Notes:
This novel first appeared as a serial in the _Fireside Companion_ story
paper from October 1, 1883 to February 4, 1884.
Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected.
Some inconsistent hyphenation (childlike vs. child-like) was retained
from the original.
Table of contents has been added and placed into the public domain by
the transcriber.
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