CHAPTER XXXI. THE MYSTERIOUS MEETING
After more than a fortnight spent
in the highlands of Scotland, Jerome passed hastily
through London on his way to the continent.
It was toward sunset, on a warm day
in October, shortly after his arrival in France, that,
after strolling some distance from the Hotel de Leon,
in the old and picturesque town of Dunkirk, he entered
a burial-ground such places being always
favorite walks with him and wandered around
among the silent dead. All nature around was hushed
in silence, and seemed to partake of the general melancholy
that hung over the quiet resting-place of the departed.
Even the birds seemed imbued with the spirit of the
place, for they were silent, either flying noiselessly
over the graves, or jumping about in the tall grass.
After tracing the various inscriptions that told the
characters and conditions of the deceased, and viewing
the mounds beneath which the dust of mortality slumbered,
he arrived at a secluded spot near where an aged weeping
willow bowed its thick foliage to the ground, as though
anxious to hide from the scrutinizing gaze of curiosity
the grave beneath it. Jerome seated himself on
a marble tombstone, and commenced reading from a book
which he had carried under his arm. It was now
twilight, and he had read but a few minutes when he
observed a lady, attired in deep black, and leading
a boy, apparently some five or six years old, coming
up one of the beautiful, winding paths. As the
lady’s veil was drawn closely over her face,
he felt somewhat at liberty to eye her more closely.
While thus engaged, the lady gave a slight scream,
and seemed suddenly to have fallen into a fainting
condition. Jerome sprang from his seat, and caught
her in time to save her from falling to the ground.
At this moment an elderly gentleman,
also dressed in black, was seen approaching with a
hurried step, which seemed to indicate that he was
in some way connected with the lady. The old
man came up, and in rather a confused manner inquired
what had happened, and Jerome explained matters as
well as he was able to do so. After taking up
the vinaigrette, which had fallen from her hand, and
holding the bottle a short time to her face, the lady
began to revive. During all this time, the veil
had still partly covered the face of the fair one,
so that Jerome had scarcely seen it. When she
had so far recovered as to be able to look around her,
she raised herself slightly, and again screamed and
swooned. The old man now feeling satisfied that
Jerome’s dark complexion was the immediate cause
of the catastrophe, said in a somewhat petulant tone,
“I will be glad, sir, if you will leave us alone.”
The little boy at this juncture set
up a loud cry, and amid the general confusion, Jerome
left the ground and returned to his hotel.
While seated at the window of his
room looking out upon the crowded street, with every
now and then the strange scene in the graveyard vividly
before him, Jerome suddenly thought of the book he
had been reading, and, remembering that he had left
it on the tombstone, where he dropped it when called
to the lady’s assistance, he determined to return
for it at once.
After a walk of some twenty minutes,
he found himself again in the burial-ground and on
the spot where he had been an hour before. The
pensive moon was already up, and its soft light was
sleeping on the little pond at the back of the grounds,
while the stars seemed smiling at their own sparkling
rays gleaming up from the beautiful sheet of water.
Jerome searched in vain for his book;
it was nowhere to be found. Nothing, save the
bouquet that the lady had dropped, and which lay half-buried
in the grass, from having been trodden upon, indicated
that any one had been there that evening. The
stillness of death reigned over the place; even the
little birds, that had before been twittering and
flying about, had retired for the night.
Taking up the bunch of flowers, Jerome
returned to his hotel. “What can this mean?”
he would ask himself; “and why should they take
my book?” These questions he put to himself
again and again during his walk. His sleep was
broken more than once that night, and he welcomed the
early dawn as it made its appearance.