When Elsie entered her boudoir, flushed
with laughter and breathless with running, she threw
herself on the azure couch, and gathering her ringlets
in a mass between her hand and the warm cheek under
which it was thrust, fell into a deeper train of thought
than was usual to her.
“It’s done, and I don’t
care. He loves me, and I must be loved. He’s
rich, generous, devoted, worships me and always will,
that’s one comfort. There’ll be no
one to halve his devotion or his money with me, no
one to look glum if I want to be a little bit extravagant.
Grant never refused me anything in his life, but I’m
always afraid to ask half that I want. But with
Tom everything will be my own. He won’t
ask a question. Such laces as I will have!
As for cashmere shawls and silks, he shall get them
for me by the dozens. Elizabeth won’t say
that such things are out of place then. I shall
be a married woman, free of her and this old house
too, free of everything, but but ”
Elsie started up, breaking this selfish
train of thought with the action.
“I wish she’d stop talking
to me; I don’t want to hear about it. Why
won’t she bear her trouble alone, if she will
make trouble about what isn’t to be helped?
I’ll have no more confidences with her, that’s
certain. It is like breaking one’s heart
up in little pieces. I don’t want to keep
secrets, but forget them; and I will, too, in spite
of her. She shan’t make me eternally miserable
with her pining and remorse.”
Elsie paused before a mirror as these
thoughts rose in her mind and half broke from her
lips. She was threading out her curls and trying
the effect as they floated, like golden thistledown,
over the roses of her cheek. All at once she
started, and a look of pale horror stole to her face;
the hand which had been wandering among her hair dropped
to her side, turning cold and white as marble; the
lips which had been just parted with an admiring smile
of her own beauty, lost every trace of color.
She still gazed intently into the glass, but not at
herself. Beyond her pretty image, reflected from
the distance, sat a man with a pen in his hand, as
if just arrested in the act of writing. Rich shadows
of crimson drapery lay around him, and a gleam of pure
light from a half-closed upper blind fell across his
head, lighting it up grandly.
It was a magnificent picture that
Elsie gazed upon, far beyond her own image in the
glass. But she only saw the man, without regard
to his surroundings, and the very heart in her bosom
turned sick with loathing or with fear.
It was North, looking at her through
the open door, with a sneering smile on his lip North
in the very chamber of her brother’s wife, quietly
seated there as if he had been master of the house.
For a full minute Elsie stood, forming a double picture
in the glass with that bold, bad man, then her color
came hotly back, and she turned upon him, brave with
indignation.
“You here!” she said,
advancing into the room till its crimson haze overwhelmed
her. “You here, and in this chamber!
Get up at once and begone. If my brother finds
you under his roof he will shoot you on the spot.”
“Never fear, pretty one,”
said North, with an evil gleam on his face. “Two
can play at a game of that sort. If he made the
first assault nothing would give me more pleasure.
Self-defence is justifiable in law, and his will is
made.”
Elsie was trembling from head to foot,
but she leaned one hand heavily on the table that
he might not see her agitation.
“Man, man, you would not you
dare not meet my brother. You that have wronged
him so!”
“Excuse me,” said North,
biting the feather of his pen and looking down on
a sheet of note-paper on which he had been about to
write; “I do not see this wrong so clearly.
If a woman’s heart will wander off in any forbidden
direction, am I to blame because it flutters into my
bosom? And if other hearts follow after ”
“Stop!” cried Elsie, stamping
her little foot passionately on the carpet. “How
dare you speak of a fraud so black, of treason so
detestable! I am his sister, sir, and have something
of his courage, frivolous as people think me.
Persecute her or provoke me too far and I will tell
him all.”
“Indeed you would not,” answered North,
quietly.
“What should prevent me?”
“She will. You dare not break a solemn
promise to her.”
“I dare!” she almost shrieked,
clenching her little hand in a paroxysm of rage.
“I will, if ever you come here again.”
“No; I think not. Women
are weak creatures, but they generally find strength
to keep secrets that bring ruin in the telling.
You cannot be over anxious to see this proud brother
of yours commit murder on ”
“On a villain a household traitor a a ”
Elsie stopped for want of breath.
“Be quiet,” said North,
rising sternly and towering over her. “I
have no dealings with you. One might as well
reason with a handful of silkweed thrown upon the
wind.”
“But I will have something to
say everything to say. You have pursued
her, plundered her, tortured her long enough.
More than once she has been on the brink of discovery
by your persistence in prowling over the grounds and
from her attempts to conceal your rapacious extortions.
All this must end.”
“With all my heart; let the
lady accede to my terms and I disappear.”
“What are those terms?”
“I will write them, and your own fair hands
shall give her the note.”
Elsie did not answer, but her white
lips closed firmly, and her blue eyes glittered like
steel in the glow of a hot fire, as he dipped his
pen deliberately in the bronze inkstand and began to
write.
“There,” he said, folding
the note and presenting it to her with a princely
air, as if her courage had impressed him with respect;
“place this in her hands and she will know how
to carry it out.”
Elsie took the note and hid it away
in the folds of her dress.
“Do not fail,” he said,
before taking his hat from the table.
“I will not,” answered
Elsie. “But these cruel visits must cease
now and for ever. I will give the note only on
this condition.”
“Her answer will decide that. Now, good-bye.”
He reached forth his hand, smiling
pleasantly upon her; but she clenched hers, as if
tempted to strike him for the insolent offer, and turned
away biting her pale lips.
The hand, rejected with such disdain,
fell towards the hat which North placed lightly on
his head, casting one glance in the opposite mirror
as he did so. Then, with the elastic step of
a man retiring from a festival, he left the chamber,
while Elsie looked after him with wondering eyes and
parted lips, astonished by an audacity which was absolutely
sublime.
The young creature stood with bated
breath till his light footsteps died away in the nearest
passage. She listened anxiously, but heard no
door close or further movement of any kind. His
exit was noiseless as his entrance had been.
When Elsie was left alone she sat
down in the dim light of Elizabeth’s room, pushed
the hair back from her forehead and pressed both palms
on her temples, where pain was throbbing like a pulse.
She moaned and cried out under the sudden anguish,
for resistance to suffering of any kind was killing
to this young creature, and the reaction which followed
that passionate outburst of feeling left her helpless
as a child.