She was not to remain long in suspense.
“In the first place,”
began Sally, slowly, “I wish to know what your
relations are, Bernardine Moore, with Doctor Jay Gardiner.
I must and will know the truth.”
She saw that the question struck the
girl as lightning strikes a fair white rose and withers
and blights it with its awful fiery breath.
Bernardine was fairly stricken dumb.
She opened her lips to speak, but no sound issued
from them. She could not have uttered one syllable
if her life had depended on it.
“Let me tell you how the case
stands. I will utter the shameful truth for you
if you dare not admit it. He is your lover
in secret, though he would deny you in public!”
Hapless Bernardine had borne all she
could; and without a word, a cry, or even a moan she
threw up her little hands, and fell in a lifeless
heap at her cruel enemy’s feet.
For a moment Sally Pendleton gazed
at her victim, and thoughts worthy of the brain of
a fiend incarnate swept through her.
“If she were only dead!”
she muttered, excitedly. “Dare I—”
The sentence was never finished.
There was a step on the creaking stairs outside, and
with a guilty cry of alarm, Miss Pendleton rushed from
the room and out into the darkened hall-way.
She brushed past a woman on the narrow
stairs, but the darkness was so dense neither recognized
the other; and Sally Pendleton had gained the street
and turned the nearest corner, ere Miss Rogers—for
it was she—reached the top landing.
As she pushed open the door, the first
object that met her startled eyes was Bernardine lying
like one dead on the floor.
Despite the fact that she was an invalid,
Miss Rogers’ nerves were exceedingly cool.
She did not shriek out, or call excitedly to the other
inmates of the house, but went about reviving the girl
by wetting her handkerchief with water as cold as
it would run from the faucet, and laving her marble-cold
face with it, and afterward rubbing her hands briskly.
She was rewarded at length by seeing
the great dark eyes slowly open, and the crimson tide
of life drift back to the pale, cold cheeks and quivering
lips.
A look of wonder filled Bernardine’s
eyes as she beheld Miss Rogers bending over her.
“Was it a dream, some awful
dream?” she said, excitedly, catching at her
friend’s hands and clinging piteously to them.
“What caused your sudden illness,
Bernardine?” questioned Miss Rogers, earnestly.
“You were apparently well when I left you an
hour since.”
Still Bernardine clung to her with
that awful look of agony in her beautiful eyes, but
uttering no word.
“Has she gone?” she murmured, at length.
“Has who gone?” questioned Miss
Rogers, wondering what she meant.
“The beautiful, pitiless stranger,”
sobbed Bernardine, catching her breath.
Miss Rogers believed that the girl’s
mind was wandering, and refrained from further questioning
her.
“The poor child is grieving
so over this coming marriage of hers to Jasper Wilde
that I almost fear her mind is giving way,” she
thought, in intense alarm, glancing at Bernardine.
As she did so, Bernardine began to
sob again, breaking into such a passionate fit of
weeping, and suffering such apparently intense grief,
that Miss Rogers was at a loss what to do or say.
She would not tell why she was weeping
so bitterly; no amount of questioning could elicit
from her what had happened.
Not for worlds would Bernardine have
told to any human being her sad story—of
the stranger’s visit and the startling disclosures
she had made to her.
It was not until Bernardine found
herself locked securely in the seclusion of her own
room that she dared look the matter fully in the face,
and then the grief to which she abandoned herself was
more poignant than before.
In her great grief, a terrible thought
came to her. Why not end it all? Surely
God would forgive her for laying down life’s
cross when it was too heavy to be borne.
Yes, that is what she would do. She would end
it all.
Her father did not care for her; it
caused him no grief to barter her, as the price of
his secret, to Jasper Wilde, whom she loathed.
It lacked but one day to that marriage she so detested.
Yes, she would end it all before the morrow’s
sun rose.