Whatever my flash of conviction might
have been, all suspicions against Evelyn must have
been allayed by the manner in which she received the
information of the loss of the deposits behind the
mirror.
Her shrieks filled the house; another
physician was hastily summoned in Dr. Craig’s
absence, who gave her disease or seizure a Latin name wrote
a Greek or Hebrew prescription or something
equally unintelligible, and vanished ghost-like, in
the manner most approved of by modern practitioners.
There was no hard epithet that Evelyn
did not apply to Mr. Basil Bainrothe during her hysterical
mania, and before the doctor’s arrival; but,
on her recovery, she begged me to repeat nothing of
the sort, if she had been indiscreet enough to let
out her true opinion of him and his measures, in a
moment of irrepressible emotion. “For,”
she pursued, “it is expedient for us to keep
on terms with the man, at least for the present, and
in no way harass or exasperate him we are
completely in his hands now, Miriam we
must watch our opportunity ”
“I do not see that,” I
interrupted; “less now than ever, it seems to
me. What more can he do for or against us now?
Our property is all gone except this house,
plate, and furniture, and my mother’s diamonds all
of winch are tangible and visible, and in our own
possession. We have no debts you pay
house-bills monthly, and I, fortunately, have just
settled off every account I have in the world, and
have five hundred Spanish dollars to start anew with my
savings during papa’s lifetime. I hoarded
it, fortunately, in this form for a missionary purpose
you remember, Evelyn, but afterward changed my mind.”
“Yes, I remember; merely because
the person it was intended for prayed that the Jews
might finally be exterminated.”
“Was not that enough, Evelyn?
The man who could utter such a prayer was no Christian,
and unfit for religious teaching. Since then I
have come to the conclusion that there is a great
deal of undue and very impertinent meddling with the
heathen; who are entitled to their own mode of worship
as well as of government, and who I think are not yet
ripe for Christianity.”
“You have strange notions, Miriam;
you talk like an old French philosopher.”
“I never knew there was such
a thing a French sophist I am afraid you
mean. No, I am not a sophist, Evelyn; any thing
else than that! I wish sometimes I did not see
so clearly. I love, I idolize the truth alone!”
She colored sighed.
God knows I was not thinking of her at that moment,
or speaking with that reference, however I may have
had reason to do so.
Is it not strange that our dreams
often present to us, in our own despite, the vivid,
photographic pictures struck by sleep from the dim,
unconscious negative of our waking judgment, which
we refuse to recognize as verities in the light of
our open-eyed, daytime responsibility? I, who
had declared myself no sophist, knew later that I
had deceived my own heart, which spoke out so truthfully
in dreams of sleep, and refused to be silenced in
the dead hour of night, however I might stifle its
suggestions by day.
In one of these suggestive, or rather
reflected, visions, I saw Evelyn groping through darkness
to the side-gate which gave into the grounds of Mr.
Bainrothe from our own, made years before by my father’s
permission for the convenience of his friend; the
night was a dark and stormy one, yet she went forth
alone, or seemed to, in my vision, to seek a man she
detested, and with him connive the destruction of the
fortunes of the child of her benefactress, whose confidence
she abused.
Then I saw them returning together,
through that pantry-door which she had left unbolted,
though locked when she went out by another egress,
and which the man, who returned with her, readily unlocked
with the duplicate key he carried, not by my
father’s permission. This last I knew.
Now the scene was changed to the dining-room.
Again I saw the mirror swing back on its invisible
and noiseless hinges, and now the glare of a shaded
lamp fell in bands of light across its surface.
But I was inside this time, by the glamour of my dream,
and I saw them emptying the open chest painfully,
laboriously, stealthily; stopping now and then to
listen, to breathe, again working silently, industriously,
at their vocation of theft and crime!
At last all seemed accomplished.
A large, covered basket was partially loaded with
the contents heavy as lead and,
between them, they bore it out into the storm and
darkness again, and I heard the sound of the spade
and mattock at work on the graveled road.
Presently Evelyn came in again.
Her air was wild and frightened; her trembling hands
were stained with mud, seen by the light of the lantern
she bore, and which she again hung in its accustomed
place, stealing quietly away into the darkened hall,
to grope her way up-stairs. All this while the
farce of sending for Dr. Craig was being enacted, and
Morton was out on his fruitless mission in the rain!
Again it was morning, and I saw them
together in the library, while I still slept, consulting,
planning, plotting, writing, erasing, whispering;
soon to separate, however, this time. Their arrangements
being completed without restraint, for again the old
man was absent, doing the duties of another, who,
knowing not the motive of such request or bribe, was
content to work the will of a conspirator, and pass
the day in idleness at home, for the sake of a purse
of gold. Here ended my clairvoyance, if such
it was.
All this may have been imaginary part
of it probably was but the sense of the
dream was no doubt what my untrammeled judgment would
have suggested as truth, and what later but
let me not digress or anticipate here, in the thickest
of my troubles, the jungle-pass of my story as it
were, but strike on through a self-made path, it may
be, to the light that shines beyond the forest, even
if it lead into the desert!
Something in Evelyn’s suggestion
had struck me as the best to pursue under the circumstances,
although at first I so boldly repudiated the idea
of Mr. Bainrothe’s power. Unless I could
prove that he had removed the treasure for unworthy
uses why speak of it at all? I should
only irritate and set him on his guard by such allusions;
whereas, by a course of reticence, I still might learn,
as she had suggested, the truth when he least suspected
my purpose.
It would be so easy for him to deny
all knowledge of the concealed chest so
easy to lay the robbery on Morton, even if the first
were proved or even on Evelyn!
I had sent impulsively for Mr. Bainrothe
to come to me on the evening of my discovery, but
his visit was delayed by a necessity that kept him
from home all night, so that I had time to revolve
and resolve on my course of action before I saw him,
which was not until the following afternoon, and by
this time my mind had undergone a change. He came,
but not alone his son accompanied him.
I have reason since then to think
that Evelyn and Claude Bainrothe had met before their
cold and measured interview in my presence. It
was to me a painful and embarrassing one, and this
time the graceful ease was all on the other side I
was preoccupied and agitated, Claude courteous and
self-possessed, Evelyn lofty and confident, as though
she had lived or trodden down her emotions, and, to
my surprise, Mr. Basil Bainrothe wore his accustomed
deliberate and self-poised demeanor, making no reference,
not even by his expression of face or a glance of his
kaleidoscopic eyes, to the sad catastrophe with which
by this time I was but too well acquainted.
I had been reading newspapers eagerly
all day, when he came, and, from a contradictory mass
of evidence, had gleaned some grains of truth.
One fact was beyond contradiction a second
Samson had drawn down the ruins of a temple, not on
the heads of his foes alone, but his friends as well,
blinded, as he of old, by the treachery of that basest
of all Delilahs, a fawning public!
Yes, we were ruined; the only hope
now was in the honesty of Mr. Basil Bainrothe.
Should the gold I saw him hiding away not have been
appropriated to the purchase of bank-stocks should
it have been saved for me we might still
rejoice in wealth beyond our deserts, and equal to
our desires.
We still might keep the old, beloved
roof above our heads, preserve one unbroken circle
of family domestics live without labor,
or terror of the future. But would this be?
I waited, as I still think I should have done, for
Mr. Bainrothe to take the initiative in this proceeding.
Impatient and sick-hearted, I saw
day after day glide past, without an effort on his
part to explain or ameliorate my condition one
now of excessive and wearing anxiety.
At last he came. For the first
time in his life when a matter of business was in
question, he asked for me. I went to him alone
at my own instance, and somewhat to Evelyn’s
chagrin, I thought.
I found him in the library, of late
our sole receiving-room; the rest were closed and
fireless. For, since the certainty of our misfortune,
we had received no society, and would not long be
obliged to decline it, Evelyn thought.
Her opinion of the world little justified the pains
she had taken to conciliate it.
I found Mr. Bainrothe buried in the
deep reading-chair, always in his lifetime occupied
by my father, his hand supporting his head, his hat
and delicate ivory-headed cane thrown carelessly on
the floor beside him his whole attitude
one of deep dejection.
He started a little when I addressed
him by name, as if reviving from deep reverie then
arose and extended his hand to me, grasping mine firmly
when I gave it to him, which I did unwillingly I confess.
“Miriam,” he said, “this
is all very dreadful!” subsiding into his seat
again with a groan, and looking steadily and silently
into the fire for some minutes afterward. “Very
dreadful!” he repeated, shaking his head dismally;
“wholly unforeseen!”
He glanced at me furtively once or
twice to observe the effect of his words his
manner. Disappointed probably by my silence and
coolness, he again affected to be absorbed in contemplation.
“Have we any thing left?”
I asked quietly, at last weary as I was
of this histrionic performance of his, and anxious
for the truth.
“Nothing,” was the gloomy
reply that fell on my ear on my heart like
molten lead; “nothing but what you know of.
This house, this furniture, well preserved it is true,
but old and out of style. Your carriage and horses diamonds in
short, what you have in hand. That is all you
have left of the great estate of your mother.”
“It is enough to keep the wolf
from the door, at all events,” I remarked quietly,
“and I am thankful for a bare competence; but
why, under existing circumstances, were you in such
haste to remove the contents of the iron chest behind
the mirror, a portion of which you added to in September?”
He rose with dignity and advanced
to the corner of the mantel-shelf, on which he leaned
in a perfectly self-possessed position, one foot crossed
lightly over the other, I remember, and one hand at
his side a favorite attitude of his.
He interrupted my interrogatory with another, ever
an effectual aid in browbeating.
“How did you become possessed
of the knowledge that I kept gold there?” he
asked, coolly; “I had meant to have preserved
the secret of that spring until your majority, but
you women penetrate every thing. No, my dear
Miriam,” he continued, without waiting for an
answer, “unfortunately, the gold you refer to
was exchanged for worthless bank-stocks in September
last, according to the requisitions of your father’s
will; and, as that was the latest paid in of the loans
he had made, and as all other means had been invested
in like manner (and with a promptness characteristic
of me, I believe I may say without vanity), as they
fell into my hands. You will perceive, very clearly,
that every thing, beyond the property I have here
pointed out to you, is swept away.”
I sat confounded by his consummate
mendacity. His manner was entirely changed now from
one of gloomy depression, and absence of mind, to
jaunty self-complacency, and even a degree of defiance
was blended with his habitual coolness. It was
only from his lurid and kaleidoscopic eyes, on which
the light from an opposite window fell sharply, as
he was speaking, that a glimpse of the inner man could
be obtained. There was something confused and
excited in their expression that did not escape me,
but I kept my counsel, bewildered as I was.
“She has betrayed me!”
was my involuntary reflection; “he was on his
guard for my question or accusation; unconscious of
my daily examination, he has borne away my gold, and
it is lost to me forever!” And I clasped my
hands more closely.
All that I have stated in the last
two paragraphs, of my observation and reflections,
passed through my mind like a flash so that
there seemed scarce a momentary interruption between
his last remarks and those which followed although
so much had been recognized in the interval.
“It is unfortunate ” I said,
merely eying him calmly.
For the first time during our interview,
his eyes quivered drooped fell
before mine; but, recovering instantly, he gave me
a clear, cool stare in return for the quiet look of
scorn he encountered. I saw at once the hopeless
nature of the case.
“You will show me your accounts,
Mr. Bainrothe,” I observed, haughtily; “I
require this at least!”
“When you have attained your
majority, certainly, Miriam, not before. At present,
I have only Evelyn Erle to satisfy on that score, and
the law; I refer you to your guardian.”
“Or whomsoever I choose to substitute
as my guardian,” I said; “I believe that
privilege vests in me, being over eighteen.”
“There are outside provisions
in your father’s will that debar you, unfortunately,
from that usual privilege of minors of your age,”
he rejoined, quietly. “I regret this for
many reasons: I should be glad to quiet any doubts
you may entertain at once, but it is impossible that,
compatibly with self-respect, I can do this, after
what you have insinuated this morning; so you must
wait, with what patience you can command, for the
coming of your majority.”
“Nearly two years to wait!”
I cried; “I should die before then, if only
of impatience. No, I will know at once. I
will write to Mr. Gerald Stanbury I will
go to the president of the bank nay, to
Mr. Biddle himself. I will resolve this matter.”
“You will do no such thing,
my very dear young friend,” said Mr. Bainrothe,
advancing and laying his hand lightly on my arm I
shook it off, as if it had been a cold, crawling serpent.
He retreated quietly but quickly. “You
will do no such thing, Miriam,” he repeated,
resuming his post by the mantel-shelf, without evincing
the least discomposure at my behavior to him; “your
own good sense, your own good feeling will come to
your assistance when you look this matter fully in
the face, and dispassionately, which I must say you
are not doing now. I have not earned at your
hands mistrust and obloquy like this, Miriam; but,
for the sake of the past, I shall strive and bear
with the present. Who has inspired you with such
opinions of me?”
Accomplished hypocrite! He tried
to assume a much-injured air, to mingle forbearance
with his reproachful words; but my heart was as hard
toward him as a nether millstone, and his words made
no impression on my flinty feelings, not even enough
to strike fire therefrom, or sparks.
“No one,” I replied, “no
one; I judge for myself in all instances. Why
did you secrete gold in the dead hour of the night,
which, unless you bore it away in the same mysterious,
or even more subtle manner, ought still to be in its
hiding-place? Why did you preserve, even from
Evelyn, your knowledge of that retreat, and the payment
of the loan, which she asserts you have never communicated
to her, from first to last? Why make mysteries
of business transactions which, by the tenor of my
father’s will, she had a right to participate
in, and be consulted about. Why?”
“I will tell you,” he
interrupted, gravely, and not without emotion.
“Pause, and I will explain my reasons, painful
as it is to me to do this, and greatly as I compromise
myself by so doing, for, should you choose to be indiscreet,
I shall have gained a dangerous enemy. I have
no confidence in Evelyn Erie, in her truth, her sincerity,
her honesty, even. I would not place temptation
in her way. There, that is why I concealed the
secrets of the spring-lock and recess in the wall from
her, to secure them for you. As to the depositing
of gold in that iron chest, I did it simply because
I knew of no other place so safe and secret.
In my own house none such exists, and, as I never kept
gold for more than a few days after it was received,
I thought it scarcely worth while to place it in the
vaults of the bank. As I tell you, it was removed
in September.”
Surely no art was ever greater of
its kind than that he manifested on this trying occasion,
yet it fell to the earth, like the shedding scales
of a serpent, before my simple discernment. Yet
his words, his manner, did in some strange and unexplained
way greatly exonerate Evelyn in my estimation, at
least for a time, of complicity.
How could I consistently believe that
two persons, entertaining of each other such similar
and degrading opinions, could trust one another sufficiently
to become confederates? Alas! I did not reflect
that it is of such conflicting elements conspirators
and conspiracies themselves are usually made, and
that union of guilt creates eternal enmity.
I could not penetrate such depths
of guile! I surrendered myself readily, I confess,
to these fresh convictions. Evelyn was narrow,
selfish, scheming, but, at all events, was not in league
with this vampire. That was much. We might
still make common cause against him she
with her injuries to avenge, I with mine and
preserve intact, and without his hated interference,
that which was left to us at least.
There was comfort in the thought.
While these considerations were photographing
themselves on my brain, with that indescribable rapidity
of process whereby the action of the mind excels even
that of light, Mr. Bainrothe was again settling himself
down in my father’s deep chair, and now once
more addressed me in a sad and broken voice, perfectly
well suited to the occasion.
“Miriam,” he said, “I
too have been an extensive loser through the failure
of the Bank of Pennsylvania. Like yourself, with
the exception of the house I now reside in, and some
few small tenements I hold for rent, I find every
thing swept away from me. Claude, it is true,
is comfortable, and on his slender estate we must
both now manage to support ourselves. You see
marriage on his part is now simply out of the question.
He has his father to take care of.”
He said this last in so significant
a tone, and apologetic a manner, that its intent was
unmistakable, little dreaming how transparent my conviction
of his crime had made his motives.
“As far as I am concerned, it
was so eighteen months ago,” I responded, and
the blood rushed indignantly to my brow. “Yet
I hope,” I added, after a moment’s hesitation,
“that Claude may still marry and be happy.”
“You are still vexed with that
boy of mine, Miriam, I see that. Oh, you are
wrong, there! It was not for him, unfledged and
inexperienced, to weigh the precious diamond against
the paste pretense! He could not see you with
the eyes of riper judgment and deep feeling accorded
to those who have studied life, and learned its loftiest
lessons. Had he looked through my eyes, Miriam ”
(he was standing before me now, his arms extended,
his eyes blazing, his cheeks and lips strangely aglow),
“he would have seen you as you are, the rose,
the ruby of the world.” He seized my hand
impetuously, and pressed it to his lips, then rushed
wildly away. A moment later, he returned, silently.
I was standing before the silver cistern, I remember,
washing away with my handkerchief an invisible stain
from my hand, child-fashion, a loathsome impress,
when I felt his audacious arms thrown suddenly around
me, and his hot, polluting kisses on my face.
“I love I love you!”
he hissed in my ear, “and sooner or later I will
possess you!”
Before I could strike him, spit upon
him, strangle him with my hands the thief,
the midnight robber, the slave of lust he
was gone again. I heard my own wild shrieks resounding
through the house, like those of some strange lunatic.
I was for a time frantic with rage and shame.
But no one came to my succor, except poor old Morton.
He crept feebly from the pantry, and found me sobbing
in my father’s chair. As he stood meekly
before me, leaning on his staff, and looking in my
face, my only friend, so powerless to aid, the whole
desolateness of my position burst upon me, like an
overpowering avalanche, I bowed my head and wept.
“Bear up, bear up, my lamb,”
he said, in his weak, tremulous voice; “we have
the promise of the Lord to rely on. Has he not
said the seed of the just man should never know want
or beg bread? We must believe in the Gospel,
and be strengthened, Miss Miriam.”
And he laid his quivering hand lightly
on my head. I took it between both of my own,
and kissed it fervently, bathing it with my tears.
“Morton,” I said, “dear old Morton,
I have had such a terrible blow to bear shame!”
and again I was choked with sobs.
“Shame! Oh, no, my dear
young mistress! my birdie child; ruin is not shame!
This could never come near a Monfort, poor or rich!
See! such as these old hands are, they shall work
for you to the bone, and, if I understand matters
aright, we still have the good roof left over our
heads, and some little means for all immediate wants.
God will put some good thought in your mind before
long. Consult with Miss Evelyn; she is wise.
You are not the first high-born young ladies who have
had to teach a school.”
“Oh, bless you, bless you, Morton, for the thought!”
All idea of telling him (helpless,
as he was, to avenge it) of the degrading treatment
I had received was now laid at rest, and the practical
good sense of a suggestion, that, if successfully carried
out, would take us so completely out of the hands
of Mr. Bainrothe, and insure such complete independence,
was felt at once.
At a glance I saw the expediency as
well as the feasibility of the scheme.
Our large and secluded establishment
was well fitted for a boarding-school. Our father’s
spotless name, and our undeserved misfortunes, were
calculated to enlist popular respect and sympathy.
Evelyn’s decided manners and
liberal accomplishments, my better principles and
more solid attainments (I viewed things with the naked
eye of truth that day, and thus the balance was struck
in its rapid survey), might all be brought to bear
on our new vocation.
“This is the very thing for
us to do, Morton,” I said, after a pause, wiping
my eyes, and smiling up into his dear, old, withered
face, “I will acquaint Evelyn with it before
I sleep. Ay, and with other matters as well,”
I added, mentally. “God help me now! upon
her verdict every thing depends.”
I met Mabel on the stairway as I ascended
to my chamber. She hung about my neck, in a childish
way she had, and kissed me fondly. Perhaps she
had observed my agitated face, in which many emotions
contended, probably (as in my heart), but I only said,
“Let me pass now, darling! One thing
will,” I thought, “be secure, under the
contemplated circumstances your welfare
and education, whatever else betide beautiful,
and good as an angel, you shall be wise as well.”
“Oh! I forgot to tell you,
sister Miriam,” she cried, running up-stairs,
after we had parted, “Evelyn has gone out, and
left this note for you;” and she placed one
in my hand, adding:
“Mr. Claude Bainrothe was here,
while you were in the library with his father, and
they went away together.”
“Where did she receive him,
Mabel? the parlors are closed, you know.”
“Yes, but she was all ready
when he came. It was an appointment, I think
he said, to take a walk, and he stood at the front-door,
until she went down, only five minutes, sister Miriam.
He did not mind it at all. He sent her up the
letter he had brought from the office, and she read
it out loud to Mrs. Austin. I was there it
was very short.”
“What letter, Mabel?”
“Oh, about her aunt! This
note tells you, I suppose. Evelyn is rich now;
but she had to go to New York to see the lawyer, so
Mr. Claude Bainrothe said, before she could claim
the fortune.”
More and more bewildered, I made haste
to tear open the sealed note which Mabel had given
me. Its contents were scanty, and not fully satisfactory.
“MY DEAR MIRIAM: The ways
of Providence are truly strange and inscrutable, and
its balance ever shifting. This morning I rose
in despair, to-night I shall lie down rejoicing; for
a way is again opened to us that will put it beyond
his power to annoy or oppress us further.
God knows we have both suffered enough, already, at
his hands! My maiden aunt, Lady Frances Pomfret,
is dead, and makes me her heir. I will show you
the lawyer’s letter when I return. The legacy
is spoken of in the letter as small, because English
people compute property so differently from ourselves.
The attorney lives in New York, who is empowered by
my aunt’s English executor to transact this business,
and it seems I; must go to him, Mohammed-like, as
this mountain cannot come to me.
“Claude Bainrothe is polite
enough to offer to escort me to the boat, which I
shall barely reach in time; so, farewell for the present,
dear Miriam. I shall stay with Emma Gilroy, and
return in a very few days. Write to me, however,
if I should be detained, to her father’s care,
and keep a good heart, until the return of your fortunate
“EVELYN.
“P.S. You know it
is little matter, between sisters, which possesses
the property, so all share it. E.”
Claude Bainrothe called that afternoon,
and placed in my hand the copy of the codicil that
had been sent to Evelyn, together with the lawyer’s
letter to which she had alluded, and which, on consulting
with him, she found it unnecessary to take with her
to New York, her identity being already established,
beyond a doubt, with that of the legatee, in the eyes
of the American agent in possession of all the facts
of the case from the London attorney. I examined
the codicil closely, and could find no flaw!
It purported to be the last will of the Lady Frances
Pomfret, who revoked all other bequests, in order
to bestow her whole property on her niece, Evelyn
Erle.
I confess I had felt some doubts as
to the existence at all of such a person, of whom
I had never before heard mention made, until I read
her last bequest, and saw with my own eyes the business-like
letter, confirming the whole transaction of Mr. James
Mainwaring, the London attorney, with its foreign
post-mark, and huge office seal. This was accompanied
by one from a legal gentleman of New York, whose name
was familiar to me, as my father’s agent, and
which confirmed the truth of the matter in the most
effectual way; for, in his letter, Evelyn was advised
to come to New York and receive her legacy.
There was nothing more to be said,
certainly; still I had strange misgivings even then,
which I felt to be both unjust and ungenerous, yet
could not wholly banish, and again I examined the codicil.
Claude Bainrothe smiled; it was the
first time, let me state en passant, that we
had found ourselves alone together since his return.
“You scrutinize that will as if you were a legal
flaw-finder, Miss Monfort, instead of a very confiding
young lady of poetical proclivities.”
“It is very short!” I
said, sententiously, comparing at the same time the
handwriting with that of Mr. Mainwaring, who had in
his letter declared himself the copyist, the original
codicil remaining in his hands, together with the
will it had annulled, and finding them the same unmistakably.
“Short, but sweet,” he
remarked curtly, yet smiling again, and extending
his hand for it. “I suppose one of Earl
Pomfret’s children had trodden on the tail of
the old maid’s poodle she lived with
him it seems and offended her beyond repair,
or something similar had occurred, to make her change
her intentions, which were at first all in his favor,
and revoke her first bequest.”
“Mr. Mainwaring does not say
so,” I remarked, again glancing over his letter.
“He merely observes that it is only important
to send a copy of the codicil, since it revokes all
previous bequests. How did you know her first
intentions have there been other letters?”
“I suppose so,” he replied,
coloring slightly, “but what a lawyer you are!
I scarcely know how I got the idea, to be frank with
you; it may be incorrect after all, but Evelyn will
tell you every thing, of course, when she comes.”
“Let me see the codicil again,
Mr. Bainrothe,” and I examined it once more
closely, as if by some fascination I could not resist.
I remarked only one peculiarity in the document.
One word was written in a cramped manner, as though
space had been wanting yet much of the sheet
of paper on which it appeared was unoccupied this
was the word “thirty,” at the beginning
of the enumeration of moneys, for thirty thousand pounds
(repeated below in figures) was the sum set forth in
the codicil as the bequest of the Lady Frances Pomfret
to her niece Evelyn Erle! The five numerals that
represented the same idea as the written words occupied
half of the last portion of the last line, and seemed
to my invidious eyes to make an ostentatious display
of the power that may lie in a cipher, or an array
thereof.
I gloated over the record, with something
perhaps of that spirit which may have lurked in my
blood, from the time of Jacob, and which, so far,
had not evinced itself, except perhaps on that occasion
when my ear thrilled to the music of falling gold.
As I gazed, I mused on the strange
fate that took from one sister to enrich the other
so providentially, as it might have seemed.
The paper had fallen from my nerveless
hand before I knew it, and I was aroused from reverie
by Claude’s action in stooping for it, and his
voice saying:
“I will fold up this record,
Miriam; it seems to render you gloomy.”
“Thoughtful, certainly,”
I said, recovering myself, with that impulse of self-command
that belonged to me by nature; “no more not
envious, Claude, I assure you, however appearances
may be against me.”
“Of such a feeling no one could
suspect Miriam Monfort,” he said, gallantly;
whispering low in the next moment, “one year
has made strange improvement in your beauty, Miriam you
are hardly the same little dark, quick, yet quiet
girl, I parted with when I went to Copenhagen.
There is so much more pose and majesty more
sweetness about you now and Evelyn too
is changed oh! sadly sadly!”
“I have sometimes feared,”
I said, keeping down, as best I might; the emotions
conflicting in my bosom “feared that
she might be delicate, and that her energies consumed
her; you must control these, Claude!”
“I! why, what on
earth can I have to do with Miss Erle and her energies?
you speak in enigmas, Miriam!”
He was evidently embarrassed by the
cool, incredulous look I dropped upon him. “I
had supposed every thing was settled some time ago,”
I observed, quietly; “however, I will not bore
you with conjectures or questions, I shall hear every
thing, of course, when the proper time comes; until
then, I shall hope to act out Milton’s noble
line, and ‘stand and wait.’ And now,
if you have a few minutes to spare, do give me the
resume of your experience at Copenhagen.
What of the climate what of the people what
of the court? Are the women pretty or plain,
as a general thing and had Hamlet light
or dark hair, think you, from present indications
in the royal family? Or is it the same blood?
For you know that I have an enthusiasm about Denmark!
It is such a little, valiant, fiery, dominant state,
and their sagas of the sea-kings set my blood
on flame. This always was a weakness of mine,
you remember.”
“Yes, I recollect perfectly
how you used to run on about Elsinore. Well,
I went there frequently, Miriam, and can tell you all
about the dreary, decayed old town, to your utmost
satisfaction. Even your romance would fail, could
you behold it now.”
And Claude evinced considerable power,
as a word-painter, in the hour that followed, during
the early part of which Mabel appeared at the door,
was silently beckoned in by me, to remain a quiet and
delighted listener, almost to the end of the interview,
when Mrs. Austin suddenly summoned her away; and again
Claude Bainrothe and I were left for a few minutes
tete-a-tete. When my visitor departed,
or rose to do so, we shook hands frankly; and I thought,
on the whole, he seemed grateful for my mode of treatment,
and the interest I had shown in his narrative so
entire a proof of the disinterested nature of my feelings,
could he only have thought so! It had probably
been his intention to test and probe them in the beginning,
and he had succeeded.
He lingered a moment, however, on
the threshold, gazing at me earnestly.
“Miriam,” he said, reentering
and closing the door, “Miriam, I wish I could
be certain of your friendship. I may put it to
fiery proof before long. Can I rely on you to
support me then?”
“Claude,” I rejoined,
gravely, “if I can assist you in any useful or
honorable way, I shall be glad to do so, on general
principles alone. You did not respond fairly
to my friendly manifestations in times past, after after
a certain explanation, and the impulse has died away
since then, I confess. Our future lives can have
very little in common, I imagine.”
“Would you not help me to break
a loathed chain?” he asked, almost fiercely.
“Bonds are often forced upon a man,” he
continued, “by the very reason of his superior
strength. It is so hard to resist a pleading
woman! O Miriam! more than any one living, I respect revere love yes,
love you. Pity me! You can assign no secondary
reasons now to professions like these. You are
no longer rich no longer ”
“Miss Kilmansegg, with the golden
leg,” I interrupted, derisively. “Truly
you surprise me.”
“O Miriam! how can you treat
me with such heartless levity?” and he wrung
his hands bitterly. “I am pushed to desperation
already. I never knew, until I lost you, what
you were to me; how superior to all other women, how
pure, how unworldly, how strong, how rich in all mental
and womanly endowments! Hear me, Miriam,”
and he attempted to take my hand, an error of which
he was soon made conscious.
“Claude Bainrothe,” I
said, sternly, “I can tolerate you on one condition
alone that you respect me. You cease
to do this, you, the betrothed husband of another
woman! the moment you sully my ear with your addresses,
your effusions of sentiment. They are no
more, I know; but even these I will not endure from
you, nor yet from ” I hesitated;
a hated name had risen to my lips, but I repressed
it. He, the son, surely was not the father’s
keeper.
“You do me injustice; before
Heaven, you do!” he exclaimed, flinging back
his long curling locks impetuously, by a toss of his
superb head, and bending his blazing eyes upon me.
“Hear me, Miriam, I hold the clew to a secret
by means of which I can compel wealth to flow back
to your feet, in the old channels, if you will be
mine. You would not have thought this condition
hard a year ago. What has occurred to change you?
You loved me then by Heaven you love me
still! Oh, say so, Miriam, and make me doubly
blessed! Am I deceived in the expression of that
beaming eye? You will pardon, bless me;”
and he knelt humbly at my feet, and clasped my hand.
“Rise, Claude,” I said,
“and forgive me if a momentary feeling of triumph,
that may have lit my eye, was mingled with the feeling
of entire emancipation from all past weakness, which
this hour so surely proves, and so satisfactorily,
to my own spirit. You are to me like any other
stranger.”
He was standing sullenly before me
now, his head dropping on his breast, his hands loosely
clasped before him.
“You are deceived,” I
pursued, calmly, “if you imagine from any expression
of mine that one ray of love survives the ruin of other
days. I told you the truth when I said all was
over between us forever. Did you suppose me a
woman to sit down in the ashes because one man one
woman of all God’s manifold creation had
proved false, or treacherous, or ungrateful?
I should have wronged my youth, my soul, my descent,
my God, had I so yielded. Go and fulfill your
contract faithfully this time; a second rupture might
not go so well with you as the first. There are
persons who are singularly tenacious of their possessions,
and who number their bondsmen as a principal portion
of their property. Beware how you anger such!
Your father too. He would be conciliated now,
by what would once have incensed him. Evelyn
Erie is rich, Miriam Monfort is poor; why need I add
another word? The suggestion is perfect.”
Coldly, silently, angrily, he left
the room. I heard him stamp impatiently at the
hall-door, at some delay apparently in undoing its
fastenings his childish habit when provoked such
was his haste to be gone.
Yet I could scarcely judge, from what
had just occurred, taking this, too, in connection
with what had passed long before, when I alone was
the injured and forgiving one, that I had drawn down
upon my head his eternal enmity.
But thus it proved.