She was a most magnificent looking
woman, as she sat within her richly furnished room
on that warm September night, now gazing idly dawn
the street and again bending her head to catch the
first sound of footsteps on the stairs. Personal
preservation had been the great study of her life,
and forty years had not dimmed the luster of her soft,
black eyes, or woven one thread of silver among the
luxuriant curls which clustered in such profusion
around her face and neck. Gray hairs and Maude
Glendower had nothing in common, and the fair, round
cheek, the pearly teeth, the youthful bloom, and white,
uncovered shoulders seemed to indicate that time had
made an exception in her favor, and dropped her from
its wheel.
With a portion of her history the
reader is already acquainted. Early orphaned,
she was thrown upon the care of an old aunt who, proud
of her wondrous beauty, spared no pains to make her
what nature seemed to will that she should be, a coquette
and a belle. At seventeen we find her a schoolgirl
in New Haven, where she turned the heads of all the
college boys, and then murmured because one, a dark-eyed
youth of twenty, withheld from her the homage she claimed
as her just due. In a fit of pique she besieged
a staid, handsome young M.D. of twenty-seven, who
had just commenced to practice in the city, and who,
proudly keeping himself aloof from the college students,
knew nothing of the youth she so much fancied.
Perfectly intoxicated with her beauty, he offered
her his hand, and was repulsed. Overwhelmed with
disappointment and chagrin, he then left the city,
and located himself at Laurel Hill, where now we find
him the selfish, overbearing Dr. Kennedy.
But in after years Maude Glendower
was punished for that act. The dark-haired student
she so much loved was wedded to another, and with
a festering wound within her heart she plunged at once
into the giddy world of fashion, slaying her victims
by scores, and exulting as each new trophy of her
power was laid at her feet. She had no heart,
the people said, and with a mocking laugh she thought
of the quiet grave ’mid the New England hills,
where, one moonlight night two weeks after that grave
was made, she had wept such tears as were never wept
by her again. Maude Glendower had loved, but loved
in vain; and now, at the age of forty, she was unmarried
and alone in the wide world. The aunt, who had
been to her a mother, had died a few months before,
and as her annuity ceased with her death Maude was
almost wholly destitute. The limited means she
possessed would only suffice to pay her, board for
a short time, and in this dilemma she thought of her
old lover, and wondered if he could again be won.
He was rich, she had always heard, and as his wife
she could still enjoy the luxuries to which she had
been accustomed. She knew his sister,-they
had met in the salons of Saratoga,-and though
it hurt her pride to do it, she at last signified
her willingness to be again addressed.
It was many weeks ere Dr. Kennedy
conquered wholly his olden grudge, but conquered it
he had, and she sat expecting him on the night when
first we introduced her to our readers. He had
arrived in Troy on the western train, and written
her a note announcing his intention to visit her that
evening. For this visit Maude Glendower had arrayed
herself with care, wearing a rich silk dress of crimson
and black-colors well adapted to her complexion.
“He saw me at twenty-five.
He shall not think me greatly changed since then,”
she said, as over her bare neck and arms she threw
an exquisitely wrought mantilla of lace.
The Glendower family had once been
very wealthy, and the last daughter of the haughty
race glittered with diamonds which had come to her
from her great-grandmother, and had been but recently
reset. And there she sat, beautiful Maude Glendower-the
votary of fashion-the woman of the world-sat
waiting for the cold, hard, overbearing man who thought
to make her his wife. A ring at the door, a heavy
tread upon the winding stairs, and the lady rests her
head upon her hand, so that her glossy curls fall
over, but do not conceal her white, rounded arm, where
the diamonds are shining.
“I could easily mistake him
for my father,” she thought, as a gray-haired
man stepped into the room, where he paused an instant,
bewildered with the glare of light and the display
of pictures, mirrors, tapestry, rosewood, and marble,
which met his view.
Mrs. Berkley, Maude Glendower’s
aunt, had stinted herself to gratify her niece’s
whims, and their surroundings had always been of the
most expensive kind, so it was not strange that Dr.
Kennedy, accustomed only to ingrain carpet and muslin
curtains, was dazzled by so much elegance. With
a well-feigned start the lady arose to her feet, and
going to his side offered him her hand, saying, “You
are Dr. Kennedy, I am sure. I should have known
you anywhere, for you are but little changed.”
She meant to flatter his self-love,
though, thanks to Maude Remington for having insisted
upon the broadcloth suit, he looked remarkably well.
“She had not changed at all,”
he said, and the admiring gaze he fixed upon her argued
well for her success. It becomes us not to tell
how that strange wooing sped. Suffice it to say
that at the expiration of an hour Maude Glendower
had promised to be the wife of Dr. Kennedy when another
spring should come. She had humbled herself to
say that she regretted her girlish freak, and he had
so far unbent his dignity as to say that he could
not understand why she should be willing to leave
the luxuries which surrounded her and go with him,
a plain, old-fashioned man. Maude Glendower scorned
to make him think that it was love which actuated
her, and she replied, “Now that my aunt is dead,
I have no natural protector. I am alone and want
a home.”
“But mine is so different,”
he said. “There are no silk curtains there,
no carpets such as this-
“Is Maude Remington there?”
the lady asked, and in her large black eyes there
was a dewy tenderness, as she pronounced that name.
“Maude Remington!-yes,”
the doctor answered. “Where did you hear
of her? My sister told you, I suppose. Yes,
Maude is there. She has lived with me ever since
her mother died. You would have liked Matty,
I think,” and the doctor felt a glow of satisfaction
in having thus paid a tribute to the memory of his
wife.
“Is Maude like her mother?”
the lady asked; a glow upon her cheek, and the expression
of her face evincing the interest she felt in the
answer.
“Not at all,” returned
the doctor. “Matty was blue-eyed and fair,
while Maude is dark, and resembles her father, they
say.”
The white jeweled hands were clasped
together, for a moment, and then Maude Glendower questioned
him of the other one, Matty’s child and his.
Very tenderly the doctor talked of his unfortunate
boy, telling of his soft brown hair, his angel face,
and dreamy eyes.
“He is like Matty,” the
lady said, more to herself than her companion, who
proceeded to speak of Nellie as a paragon of loveliness
and virtue. “I shan’t like her, I
know,” the lady thought, “but the other
two,” how her heart bounded at the thoughts
of folding them to her bosom.
Louis Kennedy, weeping that his mother
was forgotten, had nothing to fear from Maude Glendower,
for a child of Matty Remington was a sacred trust
to her, and when as the doctor bade her good-night
he said again, “You will find a great contrast
between your home and mine,” she answered, “I
shall be contented if Maude and Louis are there.”
“And Nellie, too,” the
doctor added, unwilling that she should be overlooked.
“Yes, Nellie too,” the
lady answered, the expression of her mouth indicating
that Nellie too was an object of indifference to her.
The doctor is gone, his object is
accomplished, and at the Mansion House near by he
sleeps quietly and well. But the lady, Maude
Glendower, oh, who shall tell what bitter tears she
wept, or how in her in-most soul she shrank from the
man she had chosen. And yet there was nothing
repulsive in him, she knew. He was fine-looking,-he
stood well in the world,-he was rich while
she was poor. But not for this alone had she
promised to be his wife. To hold Maude Remington
within her arms, to look into her eyes, to call his
daughter child, this was the strongest reason of them
all. And was it strange that when at last she
slept she was a girl again, looking across the college
green to catch a glimpse of one whose indifference
had made her what she was, a selfish, scheming, cold-hearted
woman.
There was another interview next morning,
and then the doctor left her, but not until with her
soft hand in his, and her shining eyes upon his face,
she said to him, “You think your home is not
a desirable one for me. Can’t you fix it
up a little? Are there two parlors, and do the
windows come to the floor? I hope your carriage
horses are in good condition, for I am very fond of
driving. Have you a flower garden? I anticipate
much pleasure in working among the plants. Oh,
it will be so cool and nice in the country. You
have an ice-house, of course.”
Poor doctor! Double parlors,
low windows, ice-house, and flower garden he had none,
while the old carryall had long since ceased to do
its duty, and its place was supplied by an open buggy,
drawn by a sorrel nag. But Maude Glendower could
do with him what Katy and Matty could not have done,
and after his return to Laurel Hill he was more than
once closeted with Maude, to whom he confided his plan
of improving the place, asking her if she thought the
profits of next year’s crop of wheat and wool
would meet the whole expense. Maude guessed at
random that it would, and as money in prospect seems
not quite so valuable as money in hand, the doctor
finally concluded to follow out Maude Glendower’s
suggestions, and greatly to the surprise of the neighbors,
the repairing process commenced.