In the upper apartment of a cottage
standing alone by the roadside on the outskirts of
Boston, Miranda, pale and dejected, sat gazing vacantly
at the light of the solitary lamp that lit the room.
The clock was striking midnight, and the driving rain
beat dismally against the window-blinds. But
one month had passed since her elopement with Philip
Searle, yet her wan cheeks and altered aspect revealed
how much of suffering can be crowded into that little
space of time. She started from her revery when
the striking of the timepiece told the lateness of
the hour. Heavy footsteps sounded upon the stairway,
and, while she listened, Philip, followed by Bradshaw,
entered the room abruptly.
“How is this?” asked Philip,
angrily. “Why are you not in bed?”
“I did not know it was so late,
Philip,” she answered, in a deprecating tone.
“I was half asleep upon the rocking-chair, listening
to the storm. It’s a bad night, Philip.
How wet you are!”
He brushed off the hand she had laid
upon his shoulder, and muttered, with bad humor:
“I’ve told you a dozen
times I don’t want you to sit up for me.
Fetch the brandy and glasses, and go to bed.”
“Oh, Philip, it is so late!
Don’t drink: to-night, Philip. You
are wet, and you look tired. Come to bed.”
“Do as I tell you,” he
answered, roughly, flinging himself into a chair,
and beckoning Bradshaw to a seat. Miranda sighed,
and brought the bottle and glasses from the closet.
“Now, you go to sleep, do you
hear; and don’t be whining and crying all night,
like a sick girl.”
The poor girl moved slowly to the
door, and turned at the threshold.
“Good night, Philip.”
“Oh, good night there,
get along,” he cried, impatiently, without looking
at her, and gulping down a tumblerful of spirits.
Miranda closed the door and left the two men alone
together.
They remained silent for a while,
Bradshaw quietly sipping his liquor, and Philip evidently
disturbed and angry.
“You’re sure ’twas she?” he
asked at last.
“Oh, bother!” replied
Bradshaw. “I’m not a mole nor a blind
man. Don’t I know Moll when I see her?”
“Curse her! she’ll stick
to me like a leech. What could have brought her
here? Do you think she’s tracked me?”
“She’d track you through
fire, if she once got on the scent. Moll ain’t
the gal to be fooled, and you know it.”
“What’s to be done?”
“Move out of this. Take
the girl to Virginia. You’ll be safe enough
there.”
“You’re right, Bradshaw.
It’s the best way. I ought to have done
it at first. But, hang the girl, she’ll
weary me to death with her sermons and crying fits.
Moll’s worth two of her for that, matter she
scolds, but at least she never would look like a stuck
fawn when I came home a little queer. For the
matter of that, she don’t mind a spree herself
at times.” And, emptying his glass, the
libertine laughed at the remembrance of some past
orgies.
While he was thus, in his half-drunken
mood, consoling himself for present perplexities by
dwelling upon the bacchanalian joys of other days,
a carriage drove up the street, and stopped before
the door. Soon afterward, the hall bell was rung,
and Philip, alarmed and astonished, started from his
seat.
“Who’s that?” he asked, almost in
a whisper.
“Don’t know,” replied his companion.
“She couldn’t have traced
me here already unless you have betrayed
me, Bradshaw,” he added suddenly, darting a
suspicious glance upon his comrade.
“You’re just drunk enough
to be a fool,” replied Bradshaw, rising from
his seat, as a second summons, more violent than the
first, echoed through the corridors. “I’ll
go down and see what’s the matter. Some
one’s mistaken the house, I suppose. That’s
all.”
“Let no one in, Bradshaw,”
cried Philip, as that worthy left the room. He
descended the stairs, opened the door, and presently
afterward the carriage drove rapidly away. Philip,
who had been listening earnestly, could hear the sound
of the wheels as they whirled over the pavement.
“All right,” he said,
as he applied himself once more to the bottle before
him. “Some fool has mistaken his whereabouts.
Curse me, but I’m getting as nervous as an old
woman.”
He was in the act of lifting the glass
to his lips, when the door was flung wide open.
The glass fell from his hands, and shivered upon the
floor. Moll stood before him.
She stood at the threshold with a
wicked gleam in her eye, and a smile of triumph upon
her lips; then advanced into the room, closed the door
quietly, locked it, seated herself composedly in the
nearest chair, and filled herself a glass of spirits.
Philip glared upon her with an expression of mingled
anger, fear and wonderment.
“Are you a devil? Where
in thunder did you spring from?” he asked at
last.
“You’ll make me a devil,
with your tricks, Philip Searle,” she said,
sipping the liquor, and looking at him wickedly over
the rim of the tumbler.
“Ha! ha! ha!” she laughed
aloud, as he muttered a curse between his clenched
teeth, “I’m not the country girl, Philip
dear, that I was when you whispered your sweet nonsense
in my ear. I know your game, my bully boy, and
I’ll play you card for card.”
“Bradshaw” shouted Philip,
going to the door and striving to open it.
“It’s no use,” she
said, “I’ve got the key in my pocket.
Sit down. I want to talk to you. Don’t
be a fool.”
“Where’s Bradshaw, Moll?”
“At the depot by this time,
I fancy, for the carriage went off at a deuce of a
rate.”
She laughed again, while he paced
the room with angry strides.
“’Twas he, then, that
betrayed me. The villain! I’ll have
his life for that, as I’m a sinner.”
“Your a great sinner; Philip
Searle. Sit down, now, and be quiet. Where’s
the girl?”
“What girl?”
“Miranda Ayleff. The girl
you’ve ruined; the girl you’ve put in my
place, and that I’ve come to drive out of it.
Where is she?”
“Don’t speak so loud,
Moll. Be quiet, can’t you? See here,
Moll,” he continued, drawing a chair to her
side, and speaking in his old winning way “see
here, Moll: why can’t you just let this
matter stand as it is, and take your share of the
plunder? You know I don’t care about the
girl; so what difference does it make to you, if we
allow her to think that she’s my lawful wife?
Come, give us a kiss, Moll, and let’s hear no
more about it.”
“Honey won’t catch such
an old fly as I am, Philip,” replied the woman,
but with a gentled tone. “Where is the girl?”
she asked suddenly, starting from the chair.
“I want to see her. Is she in there?”
“No,” said Philip, quickly,
and rising to her passage to the door of Miranda’s
chamber. “She is not there, Moll; you can’t
see her. Are you crazy? You’d frighten
the poor girl out of her senses.”
“She’s in there.
I’m going in to speak with her. Yes I shall,
Philip, and you needn’t stop me.”
“Keep back. Keep quiet, can’t you?”
“No. Don’t hold me,
Philip Searle. Keep your hands off me, if you
know what’s good for you.”
She brushed past him, and laid her
hand upon the door-knob; but he seized her violently
by the arm and pulled her back. The action hurt
her wrist, and she was boiling with rage in a second.
With her clenched fist, she struck him straight in
the face repeatedly, while with every blow, she screamed
out an imprecation.
“Keep quiet, you hag! Keep
quiet, confound you!” said the infuriated man.
“Won’t you? Take that!” and
he planted his fist upon her mouth.
The woman, through her tears and sobs,
howled at him curse upon curse. With one hand
upon her throat, he essayed to choke her utterance,
and thus they scuffled about the room.
“I’ll cut you, Philip; I will, by
Her hand, in fact, was fumbling about
her pocket, and she drew forth a small knife and thrust
it into his shoulder. They were near the table,
over which Philip had thrust her down. He was
wild with rage and the brandy he had drank. His
right hand instinctively grasped the heavy bottle
that by chance it came in contact with. The next
instant, it descended full upon her forehead, and
with a moan of fear and pain, she fell like lead upon
the floor, and lay bleeding and motionless.
Philip, still grasping the shattered
bottle, gazed aghast upon the lifeless form.
Then a cry of terror burst upon his ear. He turned,
and beheld Miranda, with dishevelled hair, pale as
her night-clothes, standing at the threshold of the
open door. With a convulsive shudder, she staggered
into the room, and fainted at his feet, her white arm
stained with the blood that was sinking in little pools
into the carpet.
He stood there gazing from one to
the other, but without seeking to succor either.
The fumes of brandy, and the sudden revulsion from
active wrath to apathy, seemed to stupefy his brain.
At last he stooped beside the outstretched form of
Molly, and, with averted face, felt in her pocket
and drew out the key. Stealthily, as if he feared
that they could hear him, he moved toward the door,
opened it, and passing through, closed it gently,
as one does who would not waken a sleeping child or
invalid. Rapidly, but with soft steps, he descended
the stairs, and went out into the darkness and the
storm.