The Fatal Discovery.
There is great bustle and confusion in the house of Mr.
Bates. Mantua-makers and milliners are coming in at unearthly hours, and
consultations of deep importance are being duly held with maiden aunts and the
young ladies who are to officiate as bridesmaids at the approaching ceremony.
There are daily excursions to drapers establishments, and jewellers, and, in
fact, so much to be done and thought of, that little Birdie is in constant
confusion, and her dear little curly head is almost turned topsy-turvy.
Twenty times in each day is she called upstairs to where the sempstresses are at
work, to have something tried on or fitted. Poor little Birdie! she
declares she never can stand it: she did not dream that to be married she
would have been subjected to such a world of trouble, or she would never have
consented, never!
And then Clarence, too, comes in every
morning, and remains half the day, teasing her to
play, to talk, or sing. Inconsiderate Clarence!
when she has so much on her mind; and when at last
he goes, and she begins to felicitate herself that
she is rid of him, back he comes again in the evening,
and repeats the same annoyance. O, naughty, tiresome,
Clarence! how can you plague little Birdie so?
Perhaps you think she doesn’t dislike it; you
may be right, very likely she doesn’t.
She sometimes wonders why he grows
paler and thinner each day, and his nervous and sometimes
distracted manner teases her dreadfully; but she supposes
all lovers act thus, and expects they cannot help it and
then little Birdie takes a sly peep in the glass,
and does not so much wonder after all.
Yet if she sometimes deems his manner
startling and odd, what would she say if she knew
that, night after night, when he left her side, he
wandered for long hours through the cold and dreary
streets, and then went to his hotel, where he paced
his room until almost day?
Ah, little Birdie, a smile will visit
his pale face when you chirp tenderly to him, and
a faint tinge comes upon his cheek when you lay your
soft tiny hand upon it; yet all the while there is
that desperate secret lying next his heart, and, like
a vampire, sucking away, drop by drop, happiness and
peace.
Not so with little Birdie; she is
happy oh, so happy: she rises
with a song upon her lips, and is chirping in the
sunshine she herself creates, the live-long day.
Flowers of innocence bloom and flourish in her peaceful
lithesome heart. Poor, poor, little Birdie! those
flowers are destined to wither soon, and the sunlight
fade from thy happy face for ever.
One morning, Clarence, little Birdie,
and her intended bridesmaid, Miss Ellstowe, were chatting
together, when a card was handed to the latter, who,
on looking at it, exclaimed, “Oh, dear me! an
old beau of mine; show him up,” and scampering
off to the mirror, she gave a hasty glance, to see
that every curl was in its effective position.
“Who is it?” asked little
Birdie, all alive with curiosity; “do say who
it is.”
“Hush!” whispered Miss
Ellstowe, “here he comes, my dear; he is very
rich a great catch; are my curls all right?”
Scarcely had she asked the question,
and before an answer could be returned, the servant
announced Mr. George Stevens, and the gentleman walked
into the room.
Start not, reader, it is not the old
man we left bent over the prostrate form of his unconscious
daughter, but George Stevens, junior, the son and
heir of the old man aforesaid. The heart of Clarence
almost ceased to beat at the sound of that well-known
name, and had not both the ladies been so engrossed
in observing the new-comer, they must have noticed
the deep flush that suffused his face, and the deathly
pallor that succeeded it.
Mr. Stevens was presented to Miss
Bates, and Miss Ellstowe turned to present him to
Clarence. “Mr. Garie Mr. Stevens,”
said she. Clarence bowed.
“Pardon me, I did not catch
the name,” said the former, politely.
“Mr. Clarence Garie,” she repeated, more
distinctly.
George Stevens bowed, and then sitting
down opposite Clarence, eyed him for a few moments
intently. “I think we have met before,”
said he at last, in a cold, contemptuous tone, not
unmingled with surprise, “have we not?”
Clarence endeavoured to answer, but
could not; he was, for a moment, incapable of speech;
a slight gurgling noise was heard in his throat, as
he bowed affirmatively.
“We were neighbours at one time,
I think,” added George Stevens.
“We were,” faintly ejaculated Clarence.
“It is a great surprise to me to meet you
here,” pursued George Stevens.
“The surprise is mutual, I assure
you, sir,” rejoined Clarence, coldly, and with
slightly agitated manner.
Hereupon ensued an embarrassing pause
in the conversation, during which the ladies could
not avoid observing the livid hue of Clarence’s
face. There was a perfect tumult raging in his
breast; he knew that now his long-treasured secret
would be brought out; this was to be the end of his
struggle to preserve it to be exposed at
last, when on the brink of consummating his happiness.
As he sat there, looking at George Stevens, he became
a murderer in his heart; and if an invisible dagger
could have been placed in his hands, he would have
driven it to the hilt in his breast, and stilled for
ever the tongue that was destined to betray him.
But it was too late; one glance at
the contemptuous, malignant face of the son of his
father’s murderer, told him his fate was sealed that
it was now too late to avert exposure. He grew
faint, dizzy, ill, and rising, declared
hurriedly he must go, staggered towards the door, and
fell upon the carpet, with a slight stream of blood
spirting from his mouth.
Little Birdie screamed, and ran to
raise him; George Stevens and Miss Ellstowe gave their
assistance, and by their united efforts he was placed
upon the sofa. Little Birdie wiped the bloody
foam from his mouth with her tiny lace handkerchief,
bathed his head, and held cold water to his lips;
but consciousness was long returning, and they thought
he was dying.
Poor torn heart! pity it was thy beatings
were not stilled then for ever. It was not thy
fate; long, long months of grief and despair were yet
to come before the end approached and day again broke
upon thee.
Just at this crisis Mr. Bates came
in, and was greatly shocked and alarmed by Clarence’s
deathly appearance. As he returned to consciousness
he looked wildly about him, and clasping little Birdie’s
hand in his, gazed at her with a tender imploring
countenance: yet it was a despairing look such
a one as a shipwrecked seaman gives when, in sight
of land, he slowly relaxes his hold upon the sustaining
spar that he has no longer the strength to clutch,
and sinks for ever beneath the waters.
A physician was brought in, who declared
he had ruptured a minor blood-vessel, and would not
let him utter a whisper, and, assisted by Mr. Bates,
placed him in his carriage, and the three were driven
as swiftly as possible to the hotel where Clarence
was staying. Little Birdie retired to her room
in great affliction, followed by Miss Ellstowe, and
George Stevens was left in the room alone.
“What can the fellow have been
doing here?” he soliloquised; “on intimate
terms too, apparently; it is very singular; I will
wait Miss Ellstowe’s return, and ask an explanation.”
When Miss Ellstowe re-entered the
room, he immediately inquired, “What was that
Mr. Garie doing here? He seems on an exceedingly
intimate footing, and your friend apparently takes
a wonderful interest in him.”
“Of course she does; that is her fiance.”
“Impossible!” rejoined he, with
an air of astonishment.
“Impossible! why
so? I assure you he is. They are to be married
in a few weeks. I am here to officiate as bridesmaid.”
“Phew!” whistled George
Stevens; and then, after pausing a moment, he asked,
“Do you know anything about this Mr. Garie anything,
I mean, respecting his family?”
“Why, no that is,
nothing very definite, more than that he is an orphan,
and a gentleman of education and independent means.”
“Humph!” ejaculated George Stevens, significantly.
“Humph!” repeated Miss
Ellstowe, “what do you mean? Do you know
anything beyond that? One might suppose you did,
from your significant looks and gestures.”
“Yes, I do know something
about this Mr. Garie,” he replied, after a short
silence. “But tell me what kind of people
are these you are visiting Abolitionists,
or anything of that sort?”
“How absurd, Mr. Stevens, to
ask such a question; of course they are not,”
said she, indignantly; “do you suppose I should
be here if they were? But why do you ask is
this Mr. Garie one?”
“No, my friend,” answered
her visitor; “I wish that was all.”
“That was all! how
strangely you talk you alarm me,”
continued she, with considerable agitation. “If
you know anything that will injure the happiness of
my friend anything respecting Mr. Garie
that she or her father should know make
no secret of it, but disclose it to me at once.
Anne is my dearest friend, and I, of course, must be
interested in anything that concerns her happiness.
Tell me, what is it you know?”
“It is nothing, I assure you,
that it will give me any pleasure to tell,”
answered he. “Do speak out, Mr. Stevens.
Is there any stain on his character, or that of his
family? Did he ever do anything dishonourable?”
“I wish that was all,”
coolly repeated George Stevens. “I am afraid
he is a villain, and has been imposing himself upon
this family for what he is not.”
“Good Heavens! Mr. Stevens,
how is he a villain or impostor?”
“You all suppose him to be a
white man, do you not?” he asked.
“Of course we do,” she promptly answered.
“Then you are all grievously
mistaken, for he is not. Did you not notice how
he changed colour, how agitated he became, when I was
presented? It was because he knew that his exposure
was at hand. I know him well in fact,
he is the illegitimate son of a deceased relative
of mine, by a mulatto slave.”
“It cannot be possible,”
exclaimed Miss Ellstowe, with a wild stare of astonishment.
“Are you sure of it?”
“Sure of it! of course I am.
I should indeed be a rash man to make such a terrible
charge unless perfectly able to substantiate it.
I have played with him frequently when a child, and
my father made a very liberal provision for this young
man and his sister, after the death of their father,
who lost his life through imprudently living with this
woman in Philadelphia, and consequently getting himself
mixed up with these detestable Abolitionists.”
“Can this be true?” asked Miss Ellstowe,
incredulously.
“I assure you it is. We
had quite lost sight of them for a few years back,
and I little supposed we should meet under such circumstances.
I fear I shall be the cause of great discomfort, but
I am sure in the end I shall be thanked. I could
not, with any sense of honour or propriety, permit
such a thing as this marriage to be consummated, without
at least warning your friends of the real position
of this fellow. I trust, Miss Ellstowe, you will
inform them of what I have told you.” “How
can I? Oh, Mr. Stevens!” said she, in a
tone of deep distress, “this will be a terrible
blow it will almost kill Anne. No,
no; the task must not devolve on me I cannot
tell them. Poor little thing! it will break her
heart, I am afraid.”
“Oh, but you must, Miss Ellstowe;
it would seem very impertinent in me a
stranger to meddle in such a matter; and,
besides, they may be aware of it, and not thank me
for my interference.”
“No, I assure you they are not;
I am confident they have not the most distant idea
of such a thing they would undoubtedly regard
it as an act of kindness on your part. I shall
insist upon your remaining until the return of Mr.
Bates, when I shall beg you to repeat to him what you
have already revealed to me.”
“As you insist upon it, I suppose
I must,” repeated he, after some reflection;
“but I must say I do not like the office of informer,”
concluded he, with assumed reluctance.
“I am sorry to impose it upon
you; yet, rest assured, they will thank you.
Excuse me for a few moments I will go and
see how Anne is.”
Miss Ellstowe returned, after a short
interval, with the information that little Birdie
was much more composed, and would, no doubt, soon recover
from her fright.
“To receive a worse blow,”
observed George Stevens. “I pity the poor
little thing only to think of the disgrace
of being engaged to a nigger. It is fortunate
for them that they will make the discovery ere it be
too late. Heavens! only think what the consequences
might have been had she married this fellow, and his
peculiar position became known to them afterwards!
She would have been completely ‘done for.’”
Thus conversing respecting Clarence,
they awaited the return of Mr. Bates. After the
lapse of a couple of hours he entered the drawing-room.
Mr. Stevens was presented to him by Miss Ellstowe,
as a particular friend of herself and family.
“I believe you were here when I came in before;
I regret I was obliged to leave so abruptly,”
courteously spoke Mr. Bates, whilst bowing to his
new acquaintance; “the sudden and alarming illness
of my young friend will, I trust, be a sufficient
apology.”
“How is he now?” asked Miss Ellstowe.
“Better much better,”
answered he, cheerfully; “but very wild and
distracted in his manner alarmingly so,
in fact. He clung to my hand, and wrung it when
we parted, and bid me good bye again and again, as
if it was for the last time. Poor fellow! he
is frightened at that hemorrhage, and is afraid it
will be fatal; but there is not any danger, he only
requires to be kept quiet he will soon
come round again, no doubt. I shall have to ask
you to excuse me again,” said he, in conclusion;
“I must go and see my daughter.”
Mr. Bates was rising to depart, when
George Stevens gave Miss Ellstowe a significant look,
who said, in a hesitating tone, “Mr. Bates, one
moment before you go. My friend, Mr. Stevens,
has a communication to make to you respecting Mr.
Garie, which will, I fear, cause you, as it already
has me, deep distress.”
“Indeed!” rejoined Mr.
Bates, in a tone of surprise; “What is it?
Nothing that reflects upon his character, I hope.”
“I do not know how my information
will influence your conduct towards him, for I do
not know what your sentiments may be respecting such
persons. I know society in general do not receive
them, and my surprise was very great to find him here.”
“I do not understand you; what
do you mean?” demanded Mr. Bates, in a tone
of perplexity; “has he ever committed any crime?”
“HE IS A COLOURED MAN,”
answered George Stevens, briefly. Mr. Bates became
almost purple, and gasped for breath; then, after staring
at his informant for a few seconds incredulously,
repeated the words “Coloured man,” in a
dreamy manner, as if in doubt whether he had really
heard them.
“Yes, coloured man,” said
George Stevens, confidently; “it grieves me to
be the medium of such disagreeable intelligence; and
I assure you I only undertook the office upon the
representation of Miss Ellstowe, that you were not
aware of the fact, and would regard my communication
as an act of kindness.”
“It it can’t
be,” exclaimed Mr. Bates, with the air of a man
determined not to be convinced of a disagreeable truth;
“it cannot be possible.”
Hereupon George Stevens related to him what he had recently
told Miss Ellstowe respecting the parentage and position of Clarence.
During the narration, the old man became almost frantic with rage and sorrow,
bursting forth once or twice with the most violent exclamations; and when George
Stevens concluded, he rose and said, in a husky voice
“I’ll kill him, the infernal
hypocrite! Oh! the impostor to come to my house
in this nefarious manner, and steal the affections
of my daughter the devilish villain! a
bastard! a contemptible black-hearted nigger.
Oh, my child my child! it will break your
heart when you know what deep disgrace has come upon
you. I’ll go to him,” added he, his
face flushed, and his white hair almost erect with
rage; “I’ll murder him there’s
not a man in the city will blame me for it,”
and he grasped his cane as though he would go at once,
and inflict summary vengeance upon the offender.
“Stop, sir, don’t be rash,”
exclaimed George Stevens; “I would not screen
this fellow from the effects of your just and very
natural indignation he is abundantly worthy
of the severest punishment you can bestow; but if you
go in your present excited state, you might be tempted
to do something which would make this whole affair
public, and injure, thereby, your daughter’s
future. You’ll pardon me, I trust, and not
think me presuming upon my short acquaintance in making
the suggestion.”
Mr. Bates looked about him bewilderedly
for a short time, and then replied, “No, no,
you need not apologize, you are right I
thank you; I myself should have known better.
But my poor child! what will become of her?”
and in an agony of sorrow he resumed his seat, and
buried his face in his hands.
George Stevens prepared to take his
departure, but Mr. Bates pressed him to remain.
“In a little while,” said he, “I
shall be more composed, and then I wish you to go
with me to this worthless scoundrel. I must see
him at once, and warn him what the consequences will
be should he dare approach my child again. Don’t
fear me,” he added, as he saw George Stevens
hesitated to remain; “that whirlwind of passion
is over now. I promise you I shall do nothing
unworthy of myself or my child.”
It was not long before they departed together for the hotel
at which Clarence was staying. When they entered his room, they found him
in his bed, with the miniature of little Birdie in his hands. When he
observed the dark scowl on the face of Mr. Bates, and saw by whom he was
accompanied, he knew his secret was discovered; he saw it written on their
faces. He trembled like a leaf, and his heart seemed like a lump of ice in
his bosom. Mr. Bates was about to speak, when Clarence held up his hand in
the attitude of one endeavouring to ward off a blow, and whispered hoarsely
“Don’t tell me not
yet a little longer! I see you know
all. I see my sentence written on your face!
Let me dream a little longer ere you speak the words
that must for ever part me and little Birdie.
I know you have come to separate us but
don’t tell me yet; for when you do,” said
he, in an agonized tone, “it will kill me!”
“I wish to God it would!”
rejoined Mr. Bates. “I wish you had died
long ago; then you would have never come beneath my
roof to destroy its peace for ever. You have
acted basely, palming yourself upon us counterfeit
as you were! and taking in exchange her true love
and my honest, honourable regard.”
Clarence attempted to speak, but Mr.
Bates glared at him, and continued “There
are laws to punish thieves and counterfeits but
such as you may go unchastised, except by the abhorrence
of all honourable men. Had you been unaware of
your origin, and had the revelation of this gentleman
been as new to you as to me, you would have deserved
sympathy; but you have been acting a lie, claiming
a position in society to which you knew you had no
right, and deserve execration and contempt. Did
I treat you as my feelings dictated, you would understand
what is meant by the weight of a father’s anger;
but I do not wish the world to know that my daughter
has been wasting her affections upon a worthless nigger;
that is all that protects you! Now, hear me,”
he added, fiercely, “if ever you presume
to darken my door again, or attempt to approach my
daughter, I will shoot you, as sure as you sit there
before me!”
“And serve you perfectly right!” observed
George Stevens.
“Silence, sir!” rejoined
Clarence, sternly. “How dare you interfere?
He may say what he likes reproach me as he pleases he is her father I
have no other reply; but if you dare again to utter
a word, I’ll ” and Clarence
paused and looked about him as if in search of something
with which to enforce silence.
Feeble-looking as he was, there was
an air of determination about him which commanded
acquiescence, and George Stevens did not venture upon
another observation during the interview.
“I want my daughter’s
letters every line she ever wrote to you;
get them at once I want them now,”
said Mr. Bates, imperatively.
“I cannot give them to you immediately,
they are not accessible at present. Does she
want them?” he asked, feebly “has
she desired to have them back?”
“Never mind that!” said
the old man, sternly; “no evasions. Give
me the letters!”
“To-morrow I will send them,”
said Clarence. “I will read them all over
once again,” thought he.
“I cannot believe you,” said Mr. Bates.
“I promise you upon my honour I will send them
tomorrow!”
“A nigger’s honour!”
rejoined Mr. Bates, with a contemptuous sneer.
“Yes, sir a nigger’s honour!”
repeated Clarence, the colour mounting to his pale
cheeks. “A few drops of negro blood in a
man’s reins do not entirely deprive him of noble
sentiments. ’Tis true my past concealment
does not argue in my favour. I concealed
that which was no fault of my own, but what the injustice
of society has made a crime.”
“I am not here for discussion;
and I suppose I must trust to your honour,”
interrupted Mr. Bates, with a sneer. “But
remember, if the letters are not forthcoming to-morrow
I shall be here again, and then,” concluded
he in a threatening tone, “my visit will not
be as harmless as this has been!”
After they had gone, Clarence rose
and walked feebly to his desk, which, with great effort
and risk, he removed to the bed-side; then taking from
it little Birdie’s letters, he began their perusal.
Ay! read them again and
yet again; pore over their contents dwell
on those passages replete with tenderness, until every
word is stamped upon thy breaking heart linger
by them as the weary traveller amid Sahara’s
sand pauses by some sparkling fountain in a shady oasis,
tasting of its pure waters ere he launches forth again
upon the arid waste beyond. This is the last
green spot upon thy way to death; beyond whose grim
portals, let us believe, thou and thy “little
Birdie” may meet again.