HIGH WORDS.
Looking again in the direction of
the hand, but telling herself that it was fancy, Lydia
sat down to wait anxiously for the doctor’s return,
while Capel went on, talking more or less incoherently.
“You know I love you,”
he said softly.“Katrine darling you
will be my wife.Let the world go its own way,
what is it to us?”
Lydia’s head sank lower, as
the tears of misery began to fall fast.
“The treasure,” he cried,
suddenly.“Ha ha ha!Let them search for it months years.They will never find it.I have it safely.Here.I’ll tell you.”
He beckoned with his finger as he
talked on, rapidly; and as Lydia raised her saddened
countenance, she saw that he was gazing at vacancy
and gesticulating with his free hand.
“Yes; I’ll tell you,”
he said.“Let the fools hunt.They’ll
never find it.Well?Why not?It
is mine.Look.You count along here do
you see one, eight, six, now press in the
key.There is a spring.Press it home
and turn.The door opens and there it is.For you, dearest the jewels are all your
own.”
As he went on talking rapidly, the
curtain moved softly again, and this time Lydia felt
that it was no trick of the light or wind, and, rising
from her seat, she went softly round to the other side
of the bed, took hold of the curtain and swept it
aside, to leave Katrine standing there in the faint
light shed by the shaded lamp.
“What are you doing here?”
“I came to see if I could help you.”
“And glided in like a thief,
to hide there, listening to his words.What is
it you want to know?Was it to hear him say he
loved you?” whispered Lydia, with her face full
of scorn.
“I do not understand you.”
“You do understand.And
it was not for that.You have heard him whisper
to you no waste upon you loving
words enough.”
“Really,” said Katrine,
who had recovered from her temporary confusion, consequent
upon the abrupt discovery of her presence.“Surely,
my darling little Lydia is not jealous?”
“Jealous?Of you?” said Lydia, scornfully.
“No; I am only sorry that he should have been
so blind.”
“To your incomparable charms?”
“No; to the character of the beautiful woman ”
“Beautiful?”
“Yes; beautiful woman, whose character ”
“How dare you!” cried
Katrine, and she struck the brave girl a sharp blow
across the face with her open hand.
“Beautiful as you are corrupt
and cruel,” said Lydia, without wincing.“I have not been blind.I have seen your
efforts to lead him on to tempt him into
the belief that you loved him, when your sole thought
has been of the money that was to be his.”
“It is false,” cried Katrine.
“It is true.I would not
stoop to watch you, but I have seen enough to know
you.Go back to your companion the
man who plots and plans with you to gain what you
will never find, and do not ”
“Do not what?” cried Katrine, with a malignant
look.
Lydia did not reply, but hurried back
to where Capel was trying to raise himself up, trembling
the while, as he gazed towards the window.
“Look,” he said harshly.“There.Don’t stop, Katrine, love.There is danger.Don’t stop now.”
Katrine’s face wore a strange
waxen hue, as she caught the sick man’s hand.
The painful position was brought to
an end by the coming of the doctors.Katrine’s
quick ear was the first to give her warning of their
approach, and without another word she softly left
the room, stealing away so quietly that when Dr Heston
entered, ushering in the great physician, Lydia hardly
realised that she was alone.
“Still the same,” said
Dr Heston.“Humph, yes.My dear madam,
will you permit me?”
Lydia looked piteously in his face,
losing her self-command the while, as Heston led her
from the room, and closed the door, while as she heard
it locked on the inside and the sound of the rings
passing over the rod, she sank down sobbing on the
lion-skin rug, burying her face in her hands, and
ignorant of the fact that she was being watched.