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Title: Carried by Storm. A Novel.
Author: Fleming, May Agnes (1840-1880)
Date of first publication: 1879
Edition used as base for this ebook:
   New York: G. W. Carleton;
   London: S. Low, 1880
Date first posted: 31 March 2010
Date last updated: 31 March 2010
Project Gutenberg Canada ebook #512

This ebook was produced by:
Brenda Lewis, woodie4
& the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
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available by the Internet Archive




  POPULAR NOVELS.

  By May Agnes Fleming.

  1.--GUY EARLSCOURT'S WIFE.
  2.--A WONDERFUL WOMAN.
  3.--A TERRIBLE SECRET.
  4.--NORINE'S REVENGE.
  5.--A MAD MARRIAGE.
  6.--ONE NIGHT'S MYSTERY.
  7.--KATE DANTON.
  8.--SILENT AND TRUE.
  9.--HEIR OF CHARLTON.
  10.--CARRIED BY STORM. (_New_.)

  "Mrs. Fleming's stories are growing more and more popular every day.
  Their delineations of character, life-like conversations, flashes of
  wit, constantly varying scenes, and deeply interesting plots, combine to
  place their author in the very first rank of Modern Novelists."

  All published uniform with this volume. Price $1.50 each, and sent
  _free_ by mail on receipt of price,

  BY

  G. W. CARLETON & CO., Publishers,
  New York.


  CARRIED BY STORM.

  'A Novel'

  BY

  MAY AGNES FLEMING,

  AUTHOR OF

  "SILENT AND TRUE," "A MAD MARRIAGE," "A TERRIBLE SECRET," "GUY
  EARLSCOURT'S WIFE," "A WONDERFUL WOMAN," "ONE NIGHT'S MYSTERY," ETC.,
  ETC.

  "When she is angry she is keen and shrewd,
  And, though she is but little, she is fierce."

  _Midsummer Night's Dream_.

  NEW YORK:

  Copyright, 1879, by

  _G. W. Carleton & Co_., Publishers,

  LONDON: S. LOW & CO.

  MDCCCLXXX.


  SAMUEL STODDER,
  STEREOTYPER,
  90 ANN STREET N. Y.

  TROW
  PRINTING AND BOOK BINDING CO.
  N. Y.




  CONTENTS.

  PART FIRST.

  CHAP.                                       PAGE

     I. Which is Highly Sensational              7

    II. Which Begins at the Beginning           14

   III. How Little Olga gets Lost               20

    IV. A Wild Girl of the Woods                27

     V. Sleaford's                              32

    VI. A Deed of Darkness                      41

   VII. Sleaford's Joanna                       47

  VIII. The Abbotts of Abbott Wood              54

    IX. The Misses Sleaford at Home             72

     X. Geoffrey Lamar                          90

    XI. In which Mr. Abbott Asserts Himself    100

   XII. "Nobody's Child"                       114


  PART SECOND.

     I. What the Years Make of Joanna          125

    II. In which Joanna Enters Society         138

   III. In which Joanna Caps the Climax        154

    IV. In which Joanna Runs Away              166

     V. In which Joanna Seeks her Fortune      182

    VI. In which Joanna Finds her Fortune      194

   VII. The Tragedy at Sleaford's              207

  VIII. Geoffrey Hears a Confession            217

    IX. A Long Journey                         228

     X. Leo's Ball                             241

    XI. After that Night                       251


  PART THIRD.

     I. After the Story Ended                  261

    II. After the Concert                      273

   III. After Long Years                       283

    IV. "Carried by Storm"                     293

     V. "Little Leo"                           301

    VI. "Joan Bennett"                         312

   VII. The Story                              321

  VIII. How Joanna Came Back                   331

    IX. How Joanna Paid her Debt               346

     X. "The Time of Roses"                    361

    XI. How Joanna Said Good-by                371

   XII. Wedding Bells                          387




CARRIED BY STORM.




PART FIRST.




CHAPTER I.

WHICH IS HIGHLY SENSATIONAL.


"Look at it well," says Miss Ventnor, "it is what you have never seen
before--what you may never see again--a Haunted House!"

One slim, gloved hand, looking like a perfect hand in dark gray marble,
points the dramatic speech. Miss Ventnor is given to dramatic and
epigrammatic little speeches at all times, but as she is _not_ given to
talking nonsense at any time, I know there is "method in the madness" of
this assertion now. And yet--a haunted house! I laugh a little, as I
lean out from the carriage to look.

"Do not laugh," says Miss Ventnor, austerely; "there is nothing to laugh
at. A dark and direful tragedy was enacted within the walls of that
gloomy red farm-house--let me see--four--yes, nearly five years ago. Do
you see that third window to the right, in the attic story? Well, a man
was murdered--stabbed to death in that room."

"Ugh! how horrid!" I say, with a shudder. If she had told me he had
drowned himself, or poisoned himself, or charcoaled himself, _a la
Franais_, or even hanged himself, or gone out of time into eternity by
any one of those other violent but unbloody gates, her tragedy would
have lost its most grisly element. But the average female mind shrinks
in repulsion from the thought of a severed jugular or a pool of blood.

"And ever since the house has been haunted, of course," says Miss
Ventnor, folding one gray kid calmly over the other. "It is a good house
and a fine farm, and since Sleaford's time--Sleaford was the victim--the
rent has been merely nominal. All in vain. Sleaford 'walks,' and in the
'dead waste and middle of the night' the struggle is re-enacted, and
panic-stricken, belated wayfarers fly. It is all nonsense, of course,"
says Miss Ventnor, changing suddenly from a Siddons' voice to a
practical, every-day one. "Sleaford, poor wretch, lies over yonder in
Potter's Field and troubles nobody. But the fact remains that people
will not live in the place, and the most audacious tramp and thief will
give the peach trees and melon patches of Sleaford's a wide berth, be he
never so hungry. And--I do not mind admitting that even _I_ would go
half a dozen miles roundabout rather than pass it alone after nightfall.
So take a good look at it, my dear, a _bona fide_ haunted house is a
sight to be respected and remembered, if only for its rarity in this
degenerate age. And this evening, after dinner, I will tell you all
about it."

I do not need the injunction--I _am_ taking a good look at Sleaford's!
Even without Miss Ventnor's ghastly legend the place could hardly fail
to impress one in a weird and dismal way. But just now the _mise en
scene_ is in keeping with the story. A gray, fast-drifting autumnal sky,
lying low, and threatening rain; a chill, complaining, fitful wind,
rising and falling over the rich rank marshes; a long stretch of flat
farm land, sear and brown, corn-stalks rattling their melancholy dry
bones, the orchard trees stripped and forlorn. In the midst the house,
long, low, a dull brick-color, broken panes in the windows, broken
fences around, no dog at the gate, no face at the casement, no smoke
from the chimneys, no voice to welcome or warn away. Desolation has lain
her lean brown hand upon it, and marked her own. Anything more forlorn,
more "ramshackle," more forbidding, no fancy can picture. And from being
a deserted house, no matter what the cause, from ghosts to bedbugs, to
being a haunted house, there is but a step.

"There it stands," says Miss Ventnor, musingly, her elbow on her knee,
her pretty chin in her hand,

    "'Under some prodigious ban,
      Of excommunication----'

and yet I can remember when Sleaford's was the rendezvous of all that
was youngest, loudest, merriest, in a radius of twenty miles--the
'jolliest old roost going,' as poor Frank Livingston used to tell me.
The Sleaford girls were the handsomest, reddest-cheeked, blackest-eyed,
loudest-laughing gypsies to be seen for a mile. There were two of them,
as much alike as peas in a pod, as round and rosy as twin tomatoes.
There were the two Sleaford boys, tall, strapping fellows, with more of
the wild gypsy strain even than their sisters, the best dancers,
wrestlers, rowers, singers, fighters, everything but the best
farmers--they never worked. There was Giles Sleaford himself, who went
up to that attic room one moonlight night, a strong, stalwart man, and
was carried down next morning--an awful spectacle. And last of all there
was--Joanna."

Miss Ventnor's voice takes a sudden change as it slowly--reluctantly, it
seems--pronounces this name, a touch of strong repulsion it has not had
even when telling the story of Sleaford's grisly death. She sits
suddenly erect as she utters it, and gathers up the reins.

"Let us go," she says, with a shiver; "it is a horrible place, haunted
by evil memories if by nothing more tangible. It is growing cold, too.
Do not look at it any more--it is uncanny. You will dream of Sleaford's
to-night."

"Wait!" I say; "look there!"

I speak in a whisper, and lay my hand on her arm. Miss Ventnor bends
forward. Over the broken pickets of the fence the solitary figure of a
man leans, his arms folded across the top, his eyes fixed steadfastly on
the house. A moment ago he was not there; we have not seen him approach;
the apparition could not have been more unexpected if he had risen from
the ground.

"Ah!" Miss Ventnor says, a half-startled look coming into her eyes, "I
did not know _he_ was here. That is the one man of all the men on earth
who could throw light on part of the Sleaford mystery--if he chose."

"And he does not choose?"

"He does not choose--I doubt if he ever will choose. I wonder--I wonder
what he has done with her!"

"With her? with whom? One of the black-eyed, tomato-cheeked Misses
Sleaford?"

"Misses Sleaford?" contemptuously. "No, Joanna. That is her window he is
looking at--the attic room next to the chamber of horrors. I wonder what
he has done with her," says Miss Ventnor, speaking to herself; "it must
have been worse than having a white elephant on his hands. That is
George Blake."

"George Blake! H-m! a commonplace cognomen enough for the hero of a
melodrama. Do I understand you to say this Mr. Blake eloped with Mlle.
Joanna?"

"No; Joanna eloped with _him_. He was the victim. Never mind now. I am
cold, and I want my dinner. I am going home. Get along, Frisky."

Frisky pricks up his ears, tosses his brown mane, and gets along. The
sound pierces through Mr. Blake's brown study; he turns sharply and sees
Miss Ventnor. She inclines her head, he lifts his hat--a moment, and we
are out of sight. In that moment I have caught a glimpse of a sallow and
rather handsome face, a slight and medium-sized figure, two dark eyes,
and a brown mustache.

"A _very_ commonplace young man to be the first lover in a melodrama," I
reiterate. "Is--ah--your Mr. Blake a gentleman, Olga?"

"My Mr. Blake!" repeats Miss Ventnor, laughing; "well, you wouldn't know
much difference. He is a newspaper man, a journalist, a penny-a-liner,
works on daily papers--is clever, they say, and has good manners. A
thousand times too good to have his life spoiled by a woman."

"My dear, that is the only thing of interest about him, the leaven that
lightens the whole man. There is always the element of the heroic in a
man whose life has been spoiled by a woman--if there is anything in him
it is sure to force it out. And men bear it so well, too! I dare say Mr.
George Blake eats his three meals per diem with as Christian a relish,
and writes twice as pungent paragraphs as before. Was Joanna pretty?
Quaint little ugly name, by-the-bye--Joanna."

Olga Ventnor does not reply. At last she lowers the reins and looks at
me.

"Do you believe," she asks, "in people being possessed?"

"Good gracious!" I cry, aghast.

It is the second startling speech within the hour, and really this last
is quite too horrid.

"Because," says Miss Ventnor, trenchantly, "if ever any human being was
possessed of a demon Joanna was! Now, do not ask any questions, for here
we are, and thumbscrews would not extort another syllable from me until
I have had my dinner."

       *       *       *       *       *

The threatening rain begins to fall with the falling darkness. It is
beating sharply against the panes as we descend to the dining-room half
an hour later. But plate-glass and crimson curtains shut out wind, and
rain, and night; a fire burns in the shining grate, the gas-lights in
their ground-glass lily-cups flood the deep red carpet, the gilt
picture-frames, the polished mahogany sideboard, the sparkling crystal,
and rough old silver of the dinner service. And Miss Ventnor, in
dark-blue silk, with a good deal of black lace about it, and a
sweet-smelling crimson rose in her hair, is quite an ideal hostess. But
all through soup and salmon, roast and _entrees_, jellies and pastry,
iced pudding and peaches, and black coffee, I think of the Sleafords and
the gloomy red farm-house, the awful upper chamber, the tomato-faced
maidens, the gypsy sons, the mysterious Joanna, and the lonely figure of
Mr. George Blake, leaning with folded arms on the broken rails, and
gazing at the lattice of the young woman who had eloped with him. Does
Mr. Blake prefer coming back here, and sentimentalizing over four
greenish panes of glass to gazing on the charms of Mistress Joanna in
the flesh?

After dinner, with slippers on the fender, the ruby shine of the fire on
her trailing azure silk and fine laces, and red rose and pretty fair
hair, Olga tells me the story of the Sleafords.

Outside there is the accompaniment of fast-falling rain, dully-sighing
wind, wetness, blackness, night. I set it down here in different words,
and much more than Miss Ventnor told me, much more than she knew herself
that memorable night. Bit by bit the strange affair has come to light,
and to the knowledge of those interested therein, among whom no one is,
or has been, more vividly interested than myself. If I do not carry
_you_ away as _I_ was carried away that evening, it is because pen, ink,
and paper do not constitute a handsome young lady in silk attire, with
sweet, clear voice, sweet, shining eyes, and a story-telling talent that
would have done honor to one of those improper creatures in the
Decameron, who told tales by moonlight in the garden of Boccaccio to
the listening Florentines. This, in _my_ way, and with additions, is the
story Olga Ventnor told me that wet October night--the tragic story of
the Sleafords.




CHAPTER II.

WHICH BEGINS AT THE BEGINNING.


The village of Brightbrook! You do not know it, perhaps, and yet it is
not unknown to fame or fashion in the heated months--but it was both,
twenty odd years ago, when Olga Ventnor first set her blue, bright eyes
upon it. A slim lassie, an only child, an heiress, a dainty, upright,
fair-haired fairy, all Swiss muslin, Valenciennes lace, Hamburg
embroideries, many tucks, and much ruffling. Straight as a dart, white
as a lily--a delicate little aristocrat, from the crown of her golden
head to the sole of her sandaled foot; idolized by papa, adored by
mamma, paid court to by friends, relatives, playmates, teachers,
servants, village folk--a small princess, by royal right of beauty,
birth, wealth. That is a correct picture of Miss Olga Ventnor, _tat_
ten.

And yet, in spite of all, of spoiling and flattery enough to ruin an
army of innocents, she was a charming child, simple and natural, with a
laugh all wild and free, pretty childish ways, full of flawless health
and rosy life. It was for her sake--the apple of his eye, and the pride
of his life--that Colonel Ventnor resigned Swiss mountains, Lake Como
sunsets, ascents of Vesuvius, Texan plains on fleet mustangs, yachting
adown the picturesque coast of Maine, camping out on the Adirondacks,
mountain trout baked in cream, and all the other delights of his
existence, and built this pretty villa in Brightbrook, and came down
here in the month of roses, with eight "in help," and a pretty, pallid,
invalid wife--foreswore all wild, wandering ways forever, so that little
Olga might run wild among the clover and buttercups, and from much fresh
air, and sweet milk, and strawberries picked with her own taper fingers,
grow up to blooming health and maidenhood.

Colonel Ventnor--he had served with distinction in the far West--was a
very rich man, and the descendant of a family of very rich men. Such a
thing as a poor Ventnor perhaps had never been heard of. They were
wealthy always, high-bred always, holding enviable positions under
government always, never defiling their patrician fingers with trade or
commerce of any kind, and, in a general way, considering their status
and superiority to all earthly pursuits, with quite as many brains as
was good for them. Of these mighty men, Colonel Raymond Livingston
Ventnor was the last, and little Olga, in her Swiss tucks and Leghorn
sun-hat, the very last daughter of the house, born, if ever embryo belle
and heiress was yet, with a golden spoon in her mouth.

"We must marry her to Frank Livingston in about ten years from now,"
said the family conclave, "and so keep everything in the family. Pity
she is not a boy--too bad to sink the Ventnor for Livingston--but Frank
can add the old name by and by, when he marries Olga."

Perhaps this imperial ukase was not read in form to the bride-elect, but
it met the approval of papa and mamma, and certainly was announced to
the future bridegroom, a slim, very pretty young fellow of eighteen or
so, with a passion for base-ball, and another for pencil drawing. He was
really a bright lad, and at this age quite a wonder to see in the way of
tallness, and slimness, and straightness. And he only grinned when his
fond mamma folded him with effusion in her arms, and announced, with
joyful tears, that he--he--her Francis--her darling boy, and _not_
Anselm Van Dyack, nor Philip Vandewelode, had been chosen for the
distinguished position of prince consort to the heiress of many
Ventnors.

"And you need never lower your family, nor slave yourself to death
painting pictures now, my dearest, dearest boy! Olga Ventnor's fortune
must be simply immense--IMMENSE!"

"All right, mother," says Frank, still grinning; "and when is it to
be--this week or next? Or am I to wait until she grows up? _I_ am on
hand always; when you want me please to ring the bell."

"Frank, this is no theme for jesting. They will not permit it for at
least ten years. Say her education is finished at eighteen, then two
years of travel, then the wedding. Meantime, whenever you see little
Olga be just as nice as possible--impressions made at her age often last
through life."

Frank throws back his head, and laughs immoderately. "Did I ever dream
in my wildest dime novel days it would come to this? Did I ever think
that, like Dick Swiveller, I would have a young woman growing up for
me? Don't wear that face, mother, or you will be the death of me. I'll
run down to Brightbrook next week, if you like, and do a little stroke
of courting, and hunt butterflies with the little dear until the end of
July."

So Frank runs down, and is made welcome at the pretty white villa, all
embowered in pink roses and scented honeysuckle, like a cottage in a
picture, and by none more gladly than little Olga. All that mere money
can buy is hers; but even money has its limits as to power, and it
cannot buy her a playmate and constant companion of her own age. The
child is a little lonely, surrounded by love and splendor. Brother or
sister she has never had, mamma is always ailing and lying on the sofa,
papa is away a great deal, Jeannette, the _bonne_, is lazy and stupid,
and says it is too hot to play, and in all Brightbrook there is no one
this dainty, little curled darling may stoop to romp with. Yes,
by-the-bye, there is one, just one, of whom more anon, but she is not
always available. So the little princess, forgetting the repose which
marks the caste of Vere de Vere, utters a scream of joy at sight of
Cousin Frank, and flings herself absolutely plump into his arms.

"Oh! I _am_ so glad!" she cries out. "Oh! Frank, how nice of you to
come. I've been wanting you every day of my life since we came down
here--oh, ever and ever so! Mamma, you _know_ I've been wanting Cousin
Frank."

Mamma smiles. Frank lifts the little white-robed, golden-haired,
rose-cheeked vision up higher than his head, kisses her, and with her
perched on his shoulder, and shrieking with delight, starts off for the
first game of romps. It is all as it should be. Mrs. Colonel Ventnor
settles her muslins and laces, lies back in her blue satin chair, and
resumes her book, very well pleased.

Frank's one week lasts well on into September. Brightbrook abounds in
cool hill-side streams and tarns, from which it takes its name, and
these sparkling waters abound, in turn, with fine trout. Fishing is
dreamy, lazy, _insouciant_ sort of work, suited to sleepy, artistic
fancies, and the young fellow spends a good deal of his time armed with
rod and line and lunch-basket, and waited upon dutifully by his devoted
little hand-maiden, Princess Olga. All the world adores her, she in turn
adores Frank. He is the handsomest, the cleverest, the dearest cousin in
all the world. He paints her picture, he bears her aloft in triumph on
his shoulder, he sings her German drinking songs, he teaches her to bait
her hook and catch fish, he takes her for long rambles in the woods, he
instructs her in the art of waltzing, he tells her the most wonderful
goblin tales ever human brains invented.

And all this without a jot of reference to his mother's romance of the
future. _That_ he laughs at--simply because she is the prettiest little
darling in the world, and he is fond of children. Marry her in ten
years--ten years, forsooth! Why not say half a century at once, and have
done with it? He is seventeen--ten years looks a long perspective, a
little forever, to eyes seventeen years old.

October comes. With the first bleak blast and whistling drift of maple
leaves, these birds of summer forsake their fragile nest, and flutter
back to the stately family home of the Ventnors on Madison avenue. The
pretty white villa, with its roses, and verandas, and conservatories,
and sun-dial, is shut up, and only an old man and his daughter left to
care for it until the next June honeysuckles blow.

Little Olga goes back to her books and her piano, under an
all-accomplished governess; Frank goes in for painting, and takes a trip
to the everglades of Florida. Early next summer the Ventnor family
return, making a mighty stir throughout Brightbrook, and in due course
down comes Mr. Frank.

A year has made its mark on this young man. His fine tenor voice is
changing to an ugly bass, a callow down is forming on his upper lip, and
is loved and caressed as a youthful mother may her first-born babe. He
is absent a great deal from the cottage, and he very seldom takes Olga
with him anywhere now.

Nobody knows where he spends his time. Olga is the only one who
inquires; Olga, piqued and pouting, yet too proud even at eleven to let
him see how much she cares.

"Where have you been _now?_" she will ask.

"Oh, up the village!"

It is his invariable answer, and it being a dull little village, and Mr.
Francis of a lively turn, and fond of life, even rough and rollicking
life, it is a little puzzling. Olga does not like it at all--he is not
nearly so nice as on the preceding year, he leaves her to Jeannette and
mamma, and amuses himself very well without her. The absences grow more
frequent and prolonged. He stays away whole days, and his latch-key
opens the hall-door gently far into the dim watches of the night. Lying
awake, looking at the summer moonlight stealing whitely in, the child
will hear that cautious click, that light footstep passing the door, and
presently the little Swiss clock on the mantel will chime out, silvery
and sharp, two or three. Three in the morning, and up at the village! It
_is_ odd. But presently the mystery is solved for Olga in quite a sudden
and awful way.




CHAPTER III.

HOW LITTLE OLGA GETS LOST.


"Cousin Frank!"

There is no reply. Stretched on the sun-steeped grass, his straw hat
pulled over his face, his long length casting a prodigious shadow in the
afternoon sunshine, Cousin Frank is leagues away in the lovely land of
dreams.

"Frank! Cousin Frank! Frank Livingston! Oh, dear!" sighs Olga,
impatiently. "No wonder he is asleep. It struck three this morning
before--Frank! Oh! how stupid you are! Do, _do_ wake up!"

Thus adjured, and further urged by the pointed toe of a most
Cinderella-like shoe of blue kid, Frank consents to slowly and lazily
open his handsome blue eyes.

"Oh!" she says, with a pout, "at last! You are worse than the Seven
Sleepers. Here you have been fast asleep for the past two hours, and all
that tiresome time I have been waiting here. I think it is horrid of
you, Frank Livingston, to act so!"

"To act so! To act how, fairest of fairy cousins? What has your Frank,
the most abject of thy slaves, Lady Olga, been doing now, to evoke your
frown? There is no harm in taking a snooze on the grass, is there?" says
Frank, with a prolonged yawn.

Miss Olga stands beside him, slim, straight, white, blonde, pouting, and
very, very pretty.

"There is harm in never coming home until half-past three in the morning
every night. If you didn't do that you wouldn't sleep on the grass all
the next afternoon. What would mamma say?"

He rises suddenly on his elbow and looks at her. Pretty well this, for a
demoiselle of eleven! She stands rolling the gravel with one blue
boot-tip, her wide-brimmed leghorn shading her face, the long, almost
flaxen ringlets falling to her slender waist, her delicate lips pouting,
the light figure upright as a dart.

"Princess Olga," Frank says, after a pause and a stare, "what an
uncommonly pretty little thing you are getting to be! I must make a
sketch of you just as you stand; that sunshine on your yellow curls and
white dress is capital! Do not stir, please, my sketch-book is here; I
will dash you off in all your loveliness in the twinkling of a
bed-post!"

Frank's sketch-book and Frank himself are never far apart. He takes it
up now, as it lies at his elbow, selects a fair and unspotted page,
points a broad black pencil, and begins.

"Just as you are--do not move. 'Just as I am, and waiting not, to rid
myself of one--some sort of blot,'--how is it the hymn goes? And so you
heard me come in last night? Now who would think such pretty little pink
ears could be so sharp!"

"Last night!" pouts Olga; "this morning, you mean. Half-past three. I
heard the clock strike."

"Don't believe the clock--it is a foul slanderer. Those little jeweled
jimcracks that play tunes before they strike always tell lies. Did you
tell mamma about it this morning, Olly?"

She flings back her head, and her blue eyes--very like Frank's
own--kindle.

"Tell mamma! I am not a tell-tale, Cousin Frank."

The young fellow, sketching busily, draws a breath of relief.

"Most gracious princess, you are a little trump. I ask pardon. Turn your
head just a hair-breadth this way. Ah! thanks--that will do. Well, now,
Olga, I _was_ out rather late; but I met some--some fellows, and we
played a game or two, and so----"

"Were you up the village?"

"Yes, up the village. You see, Brightbrook is such a deadly-lively sort
of place at the best, and a fellow must amuse himself a little in some
way. And that reminds me--I have an engagement at five. What's the time,
Olly? just look at my watch, will you?"

She obeys after a moment--a moment in which wistful longing and
precocious pride struggle for mastery. Then she stoops and looks.

"A quarter of five. But you said----"

A pause.

"Well, I said----"

"You said--you promised Leo Abbott yesterday that you would drive me
over there this afternoon, and we would have croquet and tea."

"Oh, did I?" carelessly. "Well, you must let me off, Olly, and make my
excuses to little Leo. Upon my honor, I cannot manage it--awfully sorry
all the same. But it need not keep you, you know; your papa will drive
you, or Peters will."

Peters is head coachman, the safest of charioteers. Papa is always
willing to drive his darling anywhere. But Olga Ventnor turns hastily
away, and the childish eyes that look at the setting sun are full of
tears she is too proud to let fall.

"There!" Frank says, after five minutes more devoted to the sketch;
"there you are, as large as life, but not half so handsome. Here it is
for a keepsake, Olga. When you are a tall, fascinating young lady--a
brilliant belle, and all that--it will help to remind you of how you
looked when a chickabiddy of eleven."

He tears out the leaf, scrawls under it, "Princess Olga, with the love
of the most loyal of her lieges," and hands it to her. She takes it, her
lips a little compressed, pique, pain in her eyes, plainly enough in
spite of her pride, if he cares to look. But Frank has a happy knack of
never looking, nor wishing to look, below the surface of things, and he
has something to think of besides his little cousin's whims just at
present.

"I am off," he says, jumping up. "And--look here, Olly--go to sleep like
a good little thing when you go to bed, and don't lie awake o' nights in
this wicked way counting the clock. It will bring gray hairs and
wrinkles before you reach your twelfth birthday. You will wake up some
morning and find, like Marie Antoinette, all these long curls turned
from gold to silver in a single night."

He pulls out one of the long tresses, fine as floss silk, to an absurd
length, as he speaks.

"And besides, I am going to reform, to turn over a new leaf, numbers of
new leaves, to become a good boy, and go to bed at ten. So say nothing
to nobody, Olly, and, above all, above everything, shut those blue
peepers the moment your head is on the pillow, and never open them, nor
the dear little pink ears, until six the next morning."

He gives the pink ear an affectionate and half-anxious tweak, smiles at
the grave face of the child, flings his hat on, and departs.

The little girl stands watching him until he is out of sight, then, with
a deep sigh that would have infinitely amused Master Frank could he have
heard, turns for consolation to the drawing. Is she really so pretty as
this? How clever Cousin Frank must be to sketch so--dash off things, as
he calls it--all in a moment. She has it yet, yellow, faded, stored away
among the souvenirs treasured most.

"Madame votre mere says will mademoiselle not come for one leetle walk
before her supper?" says the high Norman sing-song voice of Jeannette,
appearing from the house; "it will give ma'amselle an appetite for her
tartine and strawberries."

"Very well, Jeannette. Yes, I will go. Here, take this up to my room. I
will go on this way. You can follow me."

So, with a slow and lingering step, the little heiress of many Ventnors
sets off. She is a somewhat precocious little girl, old-fashioned, as it
is phrased, a trifle prim in speech and manner, except now and then when
the wild child-nature bursts its trammels, and she runs, and sings, and
romps as wildly as the squirrels she chases. Just at this moment she is
under a cloud. Cousin Frank has wounded and disappointed her. He will
not tell her where he goes or what he does all these long hours of
absence.

"Up the village" is vague and unsatisfactory to a degree; he has broken
his promise about taking her to Abbott Wood, and she likes to play
croquet with Geoff and Leo Abbott. Frank's promises, she is beginning to
discover, are very pie-crusty indeed; he makes them with lavish
prodigality, and breaks them without a shadow of scruple. All these
things are preying on Miss Ventnor's eleven-year-old mind for the first
few minutes, and make her step lagging and her manner listless. Then a
brilliant butterfly swings past her, and she starts in pursuit--then a
squirrel darts out of a woodland path and challenges her to a race--then
a tempting cluster of flame-colored marsh flowers catches her eye, and
she makes a detour to get them--then she finds herself in a thicket of
raspberry bushes, and begins to pluck and eat. Overhead there is a hot,
hot sun, sinking in a blazing western sky like a lake of molten gold.

In these woody dells there are coolness and shadow, sweet forest smells,
the chirp of birds, the myriad sounds of sylvan silence. A breeze is
rising, too. She goes on and on, eating, singing, chasing birds and
butterflies, rabbits and field mice, all live things that cross her
path.

All at once she pauses. Where is Jeannette? She has been rambling more
than an hour, she is far from home, the sun has set, she is tired, the
place is strange, she has never been here before. Her dress is soiled,
her boots are muddy; woods, trees, marshes are around her--no houses, no
people. Oh! where is she--where is her _bonne?_

"Jeannette! Jeannette!" She stops and cries aloud: "Jeannette! where are
you?"

Her shrill, childish voice echoes down the dim woodland aisles. Only
that, and the gathering stillness of the lonesome evening in the wood.

"Jeannette! Jeannette! Jeannette!"

In wild affright the young voice peals forth its piteous cry. But only
the fitful sighing of the twilight wind, only the mournful rustle of the
leaves, only the faint call of the little mother birds in their nests,
answer her. Then she knows the truth--she is lost!

Lost in the woods, far from any habitation, and night close at hand.
Jeannette has lingered behind to gossip; she, Olga, has gone heedlessly
on; now it is coming night; she is alone, and lost in the black,
whispering, awful, lonely woods!

She stands still and looks around her. Overhead there is a gray and
pearl-tinted sky, very bright still in the west, but with a star or two
gleaming over the tree-tops. In the forest it is already pitch-dark. In
the open, where she now stands, it will be light for half an hour yet.
To the right spreads the pine woods, whispering, whispering mysteriously
in the solemn darkening hush; to the left is a waste of dry and dreary
marsh land, intermediate and blankly gray in the gloaming. No house, no
living thing to be seen far or near!




CHAPTER IV.

A WILD GIRL OF THE WOODS.


What shall she do? The child is not a coward--she has been so sheltered,
so loved, so encompassed by care all her short life, that fear is a
sensation almost unknown. If it were noonday she would not fear now, she
would wander on and on, calling for Jeannette until some one came to her
aid, some one who would be sure to take care of her and bring her home.
But the gathering darkness is about her, the tall black trees stand up
like threatening giants, the deep recesses of the wood are as so many
gaping dragon's jaws, ready to swallow her up. Perhaps there are ghosts
in that grim forest--Jeannette has a wholesome horror of _revenants_,
and her little mistress shares it. Oh! what shall she do? Where is papa?
Where is Frank, mamma, Jeannette, any one--any one she knows, to come to
the rescue? She stands there in that breathless, awesome solitude, a
panic-stricken, lonely little figure, in her soiled dress, and muddy,
blue kid boots.

"Jeannette! JEANNETTE! JEANNETTE!"

The terrified voice pierces wildly the stillness, its desolate echo
comes back to her, and frightens her more and more. Oh! _what_ shall she
do? Must she stay here in this awful, awful place until morning! What
will become of her? Are there bears, or lions, or robbers in that
spectral forest? She has on a necklace of gold beads--will they kill her
for that?

"Jeannette! Jeannette!" she cries, in sobbing despair, but no Jeannette
answers. She is indeed lost, hopelessly lost, and the dark, dreadful
night is already here.

All this time she has been standing still, now a sudden panic seizes
her. Fiery eyes glare at her out of the vast depths of the wood, strange
weird moans, and voices in pain, come to her from its gloomy vastness.
She turns wild with fright, and flies, flies for life from the haunted
spot.

She runs headlong--how long or how far she never knows. Panting,
gasping, slipping, falling, flying on! She does not cry out, she cannot,
she is all spent and breathless. Something terrific is behind her, in
hot pursuit, ghost, goblin, fiery dragon--who knew what? stretching
forth skeleton hands to catch her--a phantom of horror and despair! And
still the silvery twilight deepens, the stars shine out, and still she
rushes on, a wildly-flying, small white figure in the lovely summer
dusk.

At last--overtasked nature can bear no more, she falls headlong on the
soft, turfy ground, her eyes closed, her hands clenched, and lies
panting and still. Is she dying, she wonders; she feels dizzy and
sick--is she going to die far from papa and mamma, and Frank, alone in
this lonesome place? How sorry they will all be to-morrow, when they
come upon her lying like this, all cold and dead. She thinks of the
Babes in the Wood, and wonders if the robins will cover _her_ with
leaves.

"Hullo!"

It is no voice of ghost or goblin. It is unmistakably a human salute,
and very close by. She lifts herself silently, too utterly exhausted to
reply, and sees standing beside her, in the dusk of the warm night, the
figure of--a girl? _Is_ it a girl? She puts back the tangled golden
locks, and gazes up in a dazed, bewildered way, at this apparition.

"Hullo!" says the voice, again. It is not a pleasant voice; the face
that looks down at her is not a pleasant face. It _is_ a girl, of twelve
or so, in a scant skirt, a boy's blouse belted with a strap of leather,
a shaggy head of unkempt reddish hair, a thin, eager, old-young face,
long bare legs, and bare feet.

"Hullo!"

For the third time she hails the prostrate Olga with this salute, in a
high-pitched, harsh tone, and for the third time receiving no reply,
varies it:

"I say, you! Ye ain't deef, are ye? Can't ye speak? Who are you? What
are you doin' here, this time o' night?"

Still no reply. The rasping voice, the scowling look, the wild air of
the unexpected figure, have stricken Olga mute with a new terror. No one
has ever looked at her, or spoken to her like this, in all her life
before.

"Deef are ye, or sulky--which? Git up--git up, I say, or I'll make ye!
Say, you! who are you? What are ye about here, lying on the ground?
Why--lor! ef it ain't the Ventnor gal!"

She has taken a stride toward Olga, who springs to her feet instantly.
They stand confronting one another in the dim light, the little white
heiress shaking with fatigue and fear, the fierce-looking, wild creature
glancing at her with eyes like a cat.

"Say! If ye don't speak I'll scratch ye, I'll bite ye--I'll pull your
ugly long hair out by the roots! Ain't you the Ventnor gal? Come
now--say!"

She makes a threatening step near. The poor little princess puts up two
imploring hands.

"Oh! please, please don't bite me! I don't mean any harm. I am only
lost, and fell down here!" A great sob. "I am Olga Ventnor, and I want
to go home--oh! I want to go home!"

She breaks down in a great passion of sobs. The impish-looking child
before her bursts into a discordant, jeering laugh.

"She wants to go home! Oh, she wants to go home! Oh! please somebody
come and take this young lady home! Look at her! Ain't she putty with
her old white dress, and muddy shoes, and shiny beads. Say, you! give me
them beads this very minute, or I'll snatch 'em off your neck."

With rapid, trembling fingers, the child unfastens the necklace, and
holds it out to her tormentor.

"What business have you, you stuck-up little peacock!" continues the
imp, wrenching, savagely, the costly trinket asunder, "with hair down to
your waist, yellow hair too, the color of your beads, and all in nasty
ringlets! Oh, lordy! we think ourselves handsome, don't we? And
embroidery and lace on our frocks, and pink, and blue, and white
buttoned boots, with ribbon bows! _I've_ seen you. And a French servant
gal to wait on us, in a white cap and apron! And a kerridge to ride in!
And white feathers in our hats, and kid gloves, and silk stocken's!
We're a great lady, _we_ are, till we get lost in the woods, and then we
can't do nothin' but sit down and blubber like a great calf! Why, you
little devil!" she takes a step nearer, and her tone and look grow
ferocious, "do you know that I hate you, that I would like to tramp on
you, that I spit at you!" which she does--"that I would like to pull out
every one of them long curls by the roots! And I'll do it, too, before I
let you go!"

The child is deadly white, deadly still with fear. She does not speak or
move, cry out or turn to run--some terrible fascination holds her there
breathless and spell-bound.

"What business have you," cries the creature, with ever-increasing
ferocity, "with curls, and silk dresses, and gold beads, and servants,
and kerridges, while your betters are tramping about barefooted, and
beat, and abused, and starved? You ain't no better nor me! You ain't so
good, for you're a coward, and a cry-baby, and a little fool! And I'm
goin' to hev them curls! And if you screech I'll kill you! I will! I
hate you--I've hated you ever since I sor you first!"

She darts a step nearer. Olga recoils a step backward. Still she makes
no outcry, no attempt to run. That fascination of intense terror holds
her fast.

"I know you, and I know all about you," goes on the goblin. "I know your
cousin, Frank Livingston; he comes to our house--he gives presents to
Lora and Liz Sleaford. He's sweet on Lora, he is. _She_ wears long
curls, Lor bless you, too. Like tar ropes they are, over _her_
shoulders. I'm Sleaford's Joanna; if I don't kill you, you'll know me
next time, won't you? And I hate you because you're a young lady, with
kerridges, and servants, and nothin' to do, and long yellow ringlets
down your stuck-up back."

The ringlets seem to be the one unforgivable sin; she glares at them
vengefully as she speaks.

"I'm goin' to pull them out. I never thought I'd hev the chance. There
ain't nobody here to help or come if you yell. I don't care if they beat
me to death for it, or hang me--I'll pull 'em out!"

She springs upon her victim with the leap of a wild-cat, and buries her
claw-like fingers in the pale gold of the clustering hair. There is no
mistaking her meaning--she fully intends it; her fierce eyes blaze with
a baleful fire. And now, indeed, Olga finds her voice, and it rings out
shrill, pealing, agonized.

"Papa! papa! Oh, papa!"

"Hi!" answers a sharp voice. Then a sharper whistle cuts the air. "Hi!
Who's that? Call again!"

"Papa! papa! papa!"

There is a crashing among the trees, and not a second too soon. With a
violent push, and--_an oath_--this diabolical Little Barefoot flings her
victim from her, and leaps away into the darkness with the fleetness of
a fawn.




CHAPTER V.

SLEAFORD'S.


It is not papa who comes rushing to the rescue, but it is a man who
stoops and picks her up--a young man with a gypsy face, a gun over his
shoulder, and two or three yelping dogs at his heels.

"What the dickens is the row?" he asks. "Hold up, little 'un. Good
G----! she's dead!"

It looks like it. She lies across his arm, a limp and inert little form,
all white drapery, blonde curls, and pale, still face. The moon is
rising now, the big white shield of the July night, and he takes off the
crushed Leghorn flat the better to behold his prize.

"By thunder!" he exclaims, aloud, "it's the little Ventnor. The little
great lady, the little heiress. Now, then, here's a go, and no mistake."

He stands at a loss, utterly surprised. She has been as a small Sultana
in the eyes of all Brightbrook, every one knows her, and to find her
like this, dead, to all seeming, murdered, it may be, appalls him.

"She wasn't dead a minute ago; she was screeching for her papa like a
good 'un. Perhaps she ain't dead yet. Maybe she's fainted or that,
frightened at something. Don't seem to be anybody here to frighten her,
nuther. Wonder what's gone with the French ma'amselle? Well, I'll tote
her to the house anyhow; if she's alive at all the gals'll fetch her
round."

He swings her as he might a kitten over his shoulder. He is a
long-limbed, brown-skinned young fellow of twenty, whistles to his dogs,
and starts over the star-lit fields at a swinging pace. All the way he
whistles, all the way his keen black eyes keep a bright lookout for any
one who may be in hiding. No one seems to be, for he reaches his
destination, a solitary red farm-house standing among some arid-looking
meadows. A field of corn at one side looks, in the shine of the moon,
like a goblin play-ground, but the house itself seems cheery enough.
Many lights twinkle along its low front, and the lively strains of a
fiddle greet him as he opens the door.

The interior is a remarkable one enough. The room is long and low, the
ceiling quite black with smoke, as are also the walls, the broad floor a
trifle blacker, if possible, than either; the furniture, some yellow
wooden chairs, two deal tables, a wooden sofa, and a cupboard, well
stocked with coarse blue delf. It is, in fact, the farm-house kitchen,
and in the wide fire-place, despite the warmth of the night, a fire is
burning. Over it hangs a large pot, in which the family supper is
simmering and sending forth savory odors.

The occupants of the room are four. On one of the tables is perched a
youth of eighteen, black-eyed, black-haired, swarthy-skinned, playing
the Virginia reel with vigor and skill.

Two girls, young women, as far as size and development make women,
though evidently not more than sixteen, are dancing with might and main,
their hands on their sides, their heads well up, their cheeks flushed
crimson, their black eyes alight, their black hair unbound--two wild
young Bacchanti.

The one spectator of the reel sits crouched in the chimney-corner, her
knees drawn up, her elbows on them, her chin in her palms, a singularly
witch-like attitude, barefooted, shock-headed, with gleaming, derisive
dark eyes.

The door is flung wide, and enters the young man of the woods, with his
burden, his gun, and his dogs. The reel comes to a sudden stop, and six
big black eyes stare in wild wonder at this unexpected sight.

"Why--what is it?" one of the girls cries--"a dead child, Dan? What for
the Lord's sake have you got there?"

"Ah! What?" says Dan. "Here, take her, and see if she's living or dead.
I can tell you who she is, fast enough, or who she was, rather, for she
looks as dead as a door-nail now, blessed if she don't. Here! fetch her
to if you can, you, Lora; it will be worth while, let me tell you."

He lays the limp child in the arms of one of the girls. The firelight
falls full upon the waxen face as they all crowd around. Only the
crouching figure in the ingle nook stirs not. There is a simultaneous
outcry of recognition and dismay.

"It's little Missy Ventnor!"

"It's the kernal's little gal!"

"It's Frank Livingston's cousin!"

"It's the little heiress!"

Then there is a pause, an open-mouthed, round-eyed pause, and gasp of
astonishment. It requires a moment to take this in.

"And while you're staring there like stuck pigs," says the sarcastic
voice of Brother Dan, "the young 'un stands a good chance of becoming a
stiff 'un in reality, if she ain't now. Can't you sprinkle her with
water, you fools, or unhook her clothes, or do whatever ought to be
done. You, Lora, tote her into the next room, and bring her round, and
you, Liz, dish up that hash, for I'm as hungry as a hunter."

Issuing these commands, he draws up a chair to the fire, as though it
were December, and proceeds to load a little black pipe to the muzzle.
Thus engaged, his eyes fall on the huddled-up figure opposite.

"Oh!" he growls, "_you're_ there, Miss Fiery Head, layin' in the
chimney-corner, as usual. Git up and set the table. D'ye hear?"

She does not seem to; she blinks up at him like a toad, and does not
stir. With an oath he seizes a billet of wood, and hurls it at her, but
she ducks with a mocking laugh, and it goes over her head. As he stoops
for another, she springs to her feet, and sets to work to do his
bidding.

Meanwhile, in the next room, the two sisters are doing their unskilled
best to bring Miss Ventnor "round." It is the parlor of the
establishment, has a carpet on the floor, cane-seated chairs arranged
primly around, a rocker to match, sundry gay and gaudy chromos on the
walls, china dogs and cats on the mantel, green boughs in the
fire-place, and a crimson lounge under the windows. On this lounge they
lay her, they sprinkle her plentifully with water, force a little whisky
into her mouth, slap her palms, undo her dress, and after some ten
minutes of this manipulation there is a long-drawn sigh and shiver, the
eyelids flutter, open, shut, open again, and two blue eyes look up into
the gypsy faces bending above her.

"There!" says one of the sisters, with a long breath of satisfaction,
"you're all right now, ain't you? Gracious! how white and limpsy you
was, to be sure. First time I ever saw anybody in a faint before in my
life. Drink a little drop of this, it's whisky and water."

But Olga pushes away the nauseous beverage with disgust.

"I don't like it," she says, faintly; "the smell makes me sick. Please
take it away." She pushes back her tangled hair and looks vaguely about
her. "Where am I?" she asks, beginning to tremble. "What place is this?"

"Oh, you're all right; don't be scared, deary," says the sister called
Lora; "this is Sleaford's. I'm Lora Sleaford; this is my sister, Liz.
Bless us, what a pretty little thing you are, as fair as a lily, I do
declare! I wish _I_ was; but I am as black as a crow. We all are, father
and all, even our Joanna, in spite of her horrid red hair. Don't be
frightened, little missy; we know who you are, and you are all safe. And
we know your cousin, Frank Livingston; he is a right nice fellow, comes
here most every night. Likely's not he'll be here in a little while,
now, and then he can take you home. Liz! there's the boys calling for
their supper, and I hear father. You'd better go and get it for them."

"Joanna's there," says Liz, not stirring; "let _her_."

"When you know very well she won't if she takes the notion," retorts
Lora, angrily; "there! there's father calling you. Now, you _must_ go."

It seems she must, for she does. Lora turns back again to her charge.
There is not much difference in these two sisters, and naturally, for
they are twins, but Lora is rather the better looking, and decidedly the
better natured of the pair.

"How did you come to be with our Dan, anyhow?" she asks, curiously.
"Where did he find you? and what on earth made you faint away?"

The question arouses memory. Olga shuts her eyes with a shudder, and
turns so white that Lora thinks she is going to faint again.

"Oh! that dreadful girl! that dreadful girl!" she says, with a
shuddering gasp.

"What dreadful girl? What do you mean? Did you get lost, and did
somebody scare you in the woods? What was she like?" demands Lora,
sharply.

But Olga cannot tell. She trembles, and shivers, and covers her eyes
with her hands, as if to shut out some dreadful vision. "She said she
would pull my hair out, and then--and then I got dizzy, and it got dark,
and--and that is all," she replies, incoherently.

"Now I wonder if it wasn't our Joanna?" Miss Sleaford says, musingly.
"It would be just like her--little imp! If I thought it was--but no,
Joanna was in the house ever so long before they came. Well, don't you
cry, little deary. Frank Livingston will be here pretty soon, and he'll
take you home. Now I'll go and get you something to eat. You're hungry,
ain't you, and would like some tea?"

"Oh, I only want papa!--nothing but papa!" sobs the child, quivering
with nervous excitement. "Oh, papa, papa, papa."

"Well, there, don't make a fuss; your papa will come directly, I tell
you. And you are all safe here, and needn't be afraid. Now I'll go and
get you something--toast and tea--if there is any tea. So stop crying,
or you'll make yourself sick."

Miss Sleaford departs. In the kitchen the two young men, and their
father, Giles Sleaford, are seated at one of the deal tables, partaking
of steaming hash with the appetites of hunters and constitutionally
hungry men. The father is like the sons, a powerful, black-bearded,
sullen-looking man. Evidently he has heard the story, for he looks up,
with a glower, as his daughter enters. "Well?" he says, in a growling
sort of voice; "how is she?"

"Oh, all right," Lora responds. "Crying for her papa, of course. She
won't take any of that stuff," pointing to the greasy dish of hash with
some disdain; "I must make her some toast, if there is any raised
bread."

"There ain't any raised bread," says Liz.

"Make her tea," suggests Dan; "that's the stuff they drink. Store tea,
and some short-cake."

"There ain't no tea," says Liz again.

"Get some, then," growls the master of the house; "she's worth taking
care on. Send to Brick's and get some."

"Joanna!" calls Liz, sharply; "d'ye hear? Go!"

She turns to the chimney-corner, where, crouched again, like a small
salamander, in her former attitude, is Joanna, basking like a lizard in
the heat.

"Won't!" returns Joanna, briefly; "go yourself."

"What?" cries Giles Sleaford, turning in sudden ferocity from the
table--"what?"

"Says she won't," says Liz, maliciously--"says go myself."

The man rises and takes down a horsewhip from a shelf near, without a
word. The dark, glittering eyes of the girl follow him, but she does not
stir. "Won't, won't she?" says Mr. Sleaford. "We'll see if she won't.
You little---- ----!"--two oaths and a hissing blow. "You won't go, won't
you, you little foxy ---- ----!"

With each imprecation, a cut of the whip falls across the shoulders of
the crouching child. Two or three she bears in silence, then with a
fierce scream of pain and passion, she leaps to her feet, darts across
the room, and spits at him like a mad cat.

"No, I won't, I won't, I won't!--not if you cut me in pieces with your
whip! I won't go for tea for her! I won't go for nuthin' for her! I
won't go for you--not if you whip me to death! I won't go! I won't, I
won't, I won't!"

The man pauses: used as he is to her paroxysms of fury she looks so like
a mad thing, in her rage at this moment, that he actually holds his
brutal hand.

"Oh, come, dad, you let her alone," remonstrates his younger son; "don't
cut her up like that."

But recovering from his momentary check, Giles Sleaford lays hold of her
to renew the attack. As he does so Joanna stoops and buries her sharp
white teeth in his hand. And at that same instant a small white figure,
with blanched face and dilated eyes, glides forward and stands before
him.

"Don't! Oh, don't!" Olga Ventnor says. "Oh! pray, pray don't beat her
like that!" She holds up her clasped hands to Giles Sleaford, who,
partly from the pain of the bite, partly from surprise, recoils and lets
go his hold. Instantly Joanna darts away, opens the door, and
disappears.

"That's the last of _her_ till dinner-time to-morrow," says the younger
Sleaford, with a laugh, "she'll roost with the bluebirds to-night. Dad
mayn't think so, but he'll drive that little devil to run a knife into
him yet."

There is many a true word spoken in jest, says the adage. In the dark
and tragical after days that somber speech comes back to young Judson
Sleaford like a prediction.




CHAPTER VI.

A DEED OF DARKNESS.


So it befalls, that in spite of threats and horsewhip, Joanna has her
own way, and does not go for the tea. Giles Sleaford retires to the
chimney-corner, grumbling internally, as is his sullen wont, and looking
darkly askance at the small intruder. He makes uneasy signs to his
daughters to take her back whence she came, as he fills his after-supper
pipe. Both his sons are already smoking, and the tobacco-laden
atmosphere half chokes the child.

"Come, dear," says Lora, taking her by the hand.

"But what is she to have to eat?" queries Liz. "I suppose, Jud, _you_
wouldn't go for the tea?"

"No, I wouldn't," answers Jud, promptly. "I'm dead tired. I don't stir
out o' this corner, 'cept to go to bunk to-night. Besides, she says she
don't drink it--heerd her yourself, didn't yer?"

"Perhaps she'll take milk," suggests Dan. "Ask her, Lorry."

"Oh, yes, please, I will take milk," Olga responds, shrinking into
herself; "anything. Indeed, I am not in the least hungry."

"And I'll poach her an egg," says Liz, brightening, now that this
difficult question of the commissariat is settled. "I'll fetch it in in
five minutes. You undress her, Lora, and put her to bed."

"But I want to go home!" Olga says, beginning to tremble again. "I must
not stay here all night. Papa and mamma do not know where I am. You must
not undress me, please. I must go home."

"But, little missy, you can't go home to-night. See, it is eleven
o'clock now, and even if Frank Livingston does come, which ain't likely
(though what keeps him I can't think), it will be too late for you to go
back to your home with him. It is a good three miles if it is an inch."

"Oh! what shall I do?" poor little Olga sobs, "and papa will be
frightened to death, and mamma will worry herself sick. Oh! I wish
Cousin Frank would come. But he will not--I know he will not. I made him
promise this afternoon."

"What?" says Lora Sleaford, blankly.

"I made him promise. He stays out so late, you know, and I made him
promise he would not any more. And that is why he has not come,"
explains Olga, with a sob.

"Well, I do declare!" cries Miss Sleaford, looking anything but pleased.
"_You_ made him promise! A bit of a dolly like you! Well--you see it's
yourself you have punished after all. If you had let him alone he would
have been here two hours ago, and you might have been home by this."

Miss Ventnor covers her face with her mite of a pocket-handkerchief, and
sobs within its folds. She is too much a little lady to do her weeping,
or anything else, loudly or ungracefully, but none the less they are
very real tears the cobweb cambric quenches.

"So you didn't want Mr. Frank to come here," goes on Lora, still
sulkily; "how did you know he came?"

"I did--didn't know. I only knew he--he stopped out late. And he
said--said--it was up the village. And I made him prom--promise he
wouldn't do so any more. Oh, dear, dear, dear!"

"There, there, stop crying," says Lora, relenting; "you'll certainly
make yourself sick. Here's Liz with something to eat. It ain't what
you're used to, I dare say, but you must take something, you know, or
you won't be able to go home to-morrow either."

This argument effectually rouses the child. She dries her tears, and
remembers suddenly she _is_ hungry. Liz comes forward with a big black
tray which is found to contain a glass of milk, a poached egg, some
raspberries, a bit of butter, and a triangular wedge of short-cake.

"Now," she says, "that's the best we can do for you. So eat something
and go to bed." She places the tray before the child, and Lora draws her
to a window, where a whispered conference takes place.

"Well, I never!" says Miss Sleaford the second, in high dudgeon; "the
idea! Gracious me! a chit like that, too!"

It is evident Lora is retailing the embargo laid on Master Frank's
visits.

"It is lucky she doesn't know about the presents, the jewelry and
things. What an old-fashioned little puss!"

There is more whispering, some giggling, and Olga feels in every
shrinking little nerve that it is all about her. She drinks the milk,
and eats the fruit, essays the egg, and mingles her tears with her meat.
Oh! how alarmed papa and mamma will be, and what a dreadful place this
is to spend a whole long night. Will they leave her alone in this room?
will they leave her in the dark----

"Now then!" exclaims Liz, briskly, "I see you've done, so I'll just take
the things, and go to bed. Father and the boys have gone already, and
I'm as blinky as an owl. Lora----"

"I'll stay for a bit," says Lora. She is not an ill-natured girl, and
she sees the speechless terror in the child's eyes. "You go to bed. I
can sleep it out to-morrow morning."

Liz goes without more ado. Lora sits down beside the little girl, and
begins to unbutton her boots. "You know you can't go home to-night," she
says, soothingly, "and you are sleepy and nearly tired to death. Now you
must just let me fix you up a bed here on the lounge, and I'll only take
off your dress, because you've no night-gown to put on. I'll stay here
with you, and to-morrow the first thing my brother Judson will go over
to your cottage, and tell your folks. Now be good; don't look so pale
and scary; there's nothing to be afraid of here, and I'm going to stay
with you all night."

"All night?" questions Olga, lifting two large earnest eyes.

"Oh, yes, all night," says Lora, who differs from George Washington, and
_can_ tell a lie. "Now, I'll fix your bed, and sing you to sleep, and
you will be at home to-morrow morning before you know it."

She produces sheets and a quilt, and improvises a bed, lays Olga in it,
and takes a seat by her side.

"I will sing for you," she says. "You shut those pretty blue peepers
right away, and don't open them till breakfast-time to-morrow."

She begins in a sweet, crooning voice a camp-meeting hymn. The low
singing sound soothes the child's still quivering nerves. Gradually her
eyelids sway heavily, close, open again, shut once more, and she is
fast. Then Miss Sleaford rises with a great yawn.

"Off at last, and a tough job it was. Hush! twelve o'clock! I thought it
was twenty. I wonder if that young limb, Joanna, is back? Most likely
not, though. It's queer she don't take her death o' fever 'n ague,
sleeping out doors."

She gives a last look at the sleeper.

"Fast as a church," she whispers.

She takes the lamp, leaves the room, shuts the door softly, and goes
up-stairs under the rafters to join her sleeping sister. The old red
farm-house is very still. In the kitchen black beetles hold high
carnival; in the parlor the moonlight streams in on the pale hair and
quiet face of the little lost heiress. Outside, the trees sway and
rustle in the night breeze, and the stars burn big and bright in the
mysterious silence of early morning.

One! two! three!

With a start Olga Ventnor awakes. It is the wooden Connecticut clock in
the kitchen, loudly proclaiming the hour. Awakes with a chill and a
thrill of terror, to find herself quite alone. Lora gone, the light
fled, the pale, solemn shine of the moon filling the place, and that
loud strident clock striking three. Oh, to hear Cousin Frank's footsteps
_now_ stealing up and on to his room! Oh, for Jeannette--Lora--any
one--anything but this silent, spectral, moonlit room!

Stay! What is that?

She is _not_ alone. Yonder in the corner, under the chimney-piece,
crouches a figure all huddled in a heap, knees drawn up, and arms
clasped around them. With appalling distinctness she sees it, the shock
head of hair, the thin, fierce face, the bare feet and legs. She has
seen it before. The moonlight is full upon it, the eyes are wide open
and gleam like a cat's. The creature sits perfectly motionless, and
stares before her. Perfectly motionless, also, Olga lies, in a trance of
terror, scarcely breathing, feeling numb and frozen with deadly fear.
The thing stirs at last, shakes itself, turns to the bed, glares at it,
and rises slowly to its feet. Olga's heart has stopped beating, she has
no voice to cry out, all her faculties are absorbed in one--seeing. The
apparition speaks in a muffled whisper to itself:

"I'll do it! I'll do it if they kill me--if they whip me till I'm dead.
I hate her; I always hated her. I hate 'em all, but her most. I never
thought I'd have the chance, and now she's here and asleep, and I'll do
it, I'll do it, I'll do it!"

She tiptoes to the bed; there is a gleam of blue steel. Is it a knife?
She is close--she stretches out one long, thin hand, clutches a handful
of fair, floating hair. The malignant face, the gleaming eyes, the wild
hair, are within three inches of Olga. Then, with a shock, the child
leaps from the bed, rushes frantically across the room, her shrieks
rending the stillness, flings open the door, and falls headlong in the
passage.




CHAPTER VII.

SLEAFORD'S JOANNA.


Out into the moonlight five hours before the child Joanna had fled, pale
with passion, pain, defiance, ablaze with wrath against all the world.
It is a customary mood enough with this elfish child, twelve only in
years, a score, if hatred, envy, malice, and all ill-will can age a
child. To be flogged like a hound, to be sent supperless to bed, to be
starved in attic or cellar, to swelter in fierce August noontides, or
shiver among the rats on bitter January nights, these are old and
well-known experiences in Joanna's life. To be forced to labor from
day-dawn until midnight, with every bone aching; to go barefoot through
slush and snow; to sleep and live worse than the dogs--for _they_ are
cared for; to hear only brutal words, and still more brutal oaths, from
her task-master's lips; to be jeered at, to go clad in rags--this has
been the life of this girl of twelve, the only life she can ever
remember. Lora and Liz are well, gayly clad indeed; they sing, they
dance, they idle, they work or let it alone as they choose. Is not
Joanna there, the household drudge, the homely, red-haired, rustic
Cinderella, with never godmother or other mother, in fairyland or out of
it, to come to the rescue with a pumpkin coach and a pair of glass
slippers? She knows that lovely legend of happy childhood, this most
unhappy little outcast, and sighs bitterly sometimes as she looks at the
big golden globes she cuts up for the cows and pigs.

There are fairy godmothers in the world, no doubt, and handsome young
princesses, but they never, oh, never come near Sleaford's Farm. And who
ever conceived a Cinderella with fiery-red hair, freckles, and long
mottled shins? A cinder-sifter she has been born, a cinder-sifter she
must die.

She has these thoughts sometimes, formless and vague mostly, but bitter
always. It would have been better if Giles Sleaford had left her in the
gutter to starve ten years ago, instead of fishing her out of it, as he
says he has done. He makes a great deal of that far-off city gutter in
his grumbling way, for she is not his daughter, this bare-limbed
unfortunate; she is nobody's daughter, so far as she can find.

He has taken her out of the slime where she was born, he tells her, and
slaves early and late to give her a home, and this is her thanks, dash
her! Her mother afore her was a good-for-nothin'--dash, dash her--what
can be expected from the unlicked cub of such a dam--dash her!
double-dash everything and everybody, his own eyes and limbs included.
Giles Sleaford was an Englishman once, he is a cosmopolitan now; has
tramped over the world in a vagabond sort of way, is a man under a
cloud, banned and shunned by his neighbors. He has neither bought nor
rented this farm, and yet he is in undisturbed possession. He does not
work; he fishes, shoots, prowls, drinks, fights; is a worthless brute
generally. Yet he has plenty of money, his daughters dress in expensive
finery, and there is a rough sort of plenty always at their house. He is
of horses horsey, and bets and loses heavily. He is a bit of a
prize-fighter, a little of a gambler, a dark and dangerous fellow
always. Some mystery shrouds him; he throws out vague hints now and
then of the power he holds over a certain very rich man and magnate of
the place. He is brutal to all, to his own sons and daughters, but most
of all to the hapless creature known as Sleaford's Joanna. That he has
not killed her outright in one of his fits of fury is not due to him,
one of the Sleaford boys or girls generally interfering in bare nick of
time. Their drudge is useful, they do not want her beaten to death, or
the prying eyes of the land brought to bear on their rustic household.
So Joanna is still alive to scour the woods, and terrify small,
fair-haired heiresses into fits.

The moon is shining brilliantly as she leaves the house. She looks up at
it, her hands locked together in a tense clench, her teeth set, her eyes
aflame with the fires of rage and hatred, her shoulders red and welted
with the stinging blows of the whip. It is a mute appeal to Heaven
against the brutality and cruelty of earth--that Heaven of which she
knows nothing, except that it is a word to swear by.

She wanders slowly on, not crying--she hardly ever cries. The silence,
the coolness, the beauty of the night calms her; she does not mind
spending it among the dewy clover, or under a tree; she sleeps there
oftener in summer than anywhere else. She takes a path well known to her
bare feet--it leads to her favorite _sulking_ place, as the Sleaford
girls call it, and is perhaps the ugliest spot within a radius of twenty
miles. It is called Black's Dam. An old disused mill falling to pieces
stands there, the water in the stagnant pond is muddy and foul. It is a
desolate spot in broad day, it is utterly dismal and dark by night. Some
fellow-feeling draws her to it--it, too, is lonely, is ugly, is
shunned. Black's Dam is her one friend. The ruined mill is haunted, of
course; corpse candles burn there, shrieks are heard there, it is
peopled by a whole colony of bogies. But Joanna is not afraid of ghosts.
Ghosts never horsewhip, never swear, never throws sticks of hickory at
people's heads--do nothing, in fact, but go about in white sheets after
nightfall, and squeal to scare people. The only corpse-lights she has
ever seen are lightning-bugs, the only supernatural screams the
whoo-whoo of a belated owl. The sheeted specters never appear to her;
when she is exceptionally lonely sometimes she would rather be glad of
the company of one or two. But ghosts are not sociable, they never seem
to have much to say for themselves, so perhaps it is as well. On rainy
nights she sleeps in the old mill; after unusually bad beatings she has
stayed there for days, feeding on berries, and been found and forced
back again at last, a gaunt skeleton. More than once she has sat and
stared at the green, slimy water until the desire to spring in and end
it all grows almost more than she can resist. "Only old Giles Sleaford
will be glad of it," she thinks; "I'll keep alive just to spite him."
And, sad to say, it is this motive that actually holds the creature back
from self-destruction many a time.

The tempter is very strong within her to-night, but Giles Sleaford is
not the object of her vindictive, suppressed wrath. It is Olga Ventnor.
She has grown so used to his oaths and blows that she looks for nothing
else; but a hundred demons seem aroused within her by the sight of the
beautiful, golden-haired, richly-robed child. _This_ is the sort to whom
fairy godmothers come, for whom magic wands are struck, who go to
balls, and dance with the handsome prince, and marry him, and live happy
forever after. This is what she might have been, but never can be. All
the beauty, and the riches, and the fairy gifts are for this little
curled darling of the gods; for her--the lash, the feeding of the pigs,
the rags, the rye bread, the ugly, ugly red hair!

She has reached the dam, and sits down on a flat stone on the brink. It
is unspeakably lonely--the moon shines in a cloudless midnight sky; the
water lies black, solemn, still; the old mill stands sinister,
mysterious, casting long shadows. Hardly a breath stirs; some frogs
croak dismally in the green depths--that is all.

She sits in her favorite attitude, her knees drawn up, her chin in her
palms, and stares vacantly before her. One thought, one only, possesses
her--her hatred of this delicate little beauty and heiress, with her
pearl-fair face and long light hair. She would kill her if she could;
she has all the will in the world at this moment to be a little
murderess. Shocking--unreal? Well, no; think how she has been brought
up--think of the records of juvenile depravity you read and shudder at
in the newspaper every day. The demon of envy holds her--a passionate
outcry against the injustice of her fate, that has given the golden
apples of life to this one, the scourings of the pig-trough to her.
"Unjust! unjust!" something within her cries, "why has she all--I
nothing?" It is the spirit that has hurled kings from thrones, wrought
revolutions, filled the world with communism--that will beat the air
impotently to the end of time. No savage could be more untaught than
this child. There was a Power up there who had created her, but who
looked down on all this and made no sign. There was a Heaven for
well-dressed, respectable ladies and gentlemen, and little heiresses.
There was a Hell for such as she, wicked and poor, where they would go
when they died, and burn in torment forever. This much she believes--it
comprises her whole theory of religion.

She sits for a long time brooding, brooding. She meant to have done
something to that girl that would mark her for life--spoil her beauty in
some way--but she has been prevented. No doubt by this time Frank
Livingston has come and fetched her home, and her chance is gone
forever. Frank Livingston, too, is a lily of the field, a handsome
dandy, but he awakens none of this slumbering gall and bitterness within
her. _He_ is simply something to be silently admired, revered, and
wondered at, a being of brightness and beauty, of splendid raiment,
lacquered boots, diamond studs, and a general odor of roses and Ess.
Bouquet. He is the prince to be worshiped at a distance, and not to be
lightly touched or spoken to. She wonders sometimes to behold him
pulling Lora about in very unprincely fashion, and to see that buxom
damsel slap his face, and frowsle his silky chestnut hair. For him, he
takes no more notice of this uncanny-looking child, with the eldritch
red locks, than of one of the half-dozen ill-conditioned dogs that yelp
about the premises. That he is the object of her silent idolatry would
have tickled Master Frank beyond everything.

She rises at last, shivering in the bleak night wind. She is as nearly
nude as it is possible to be in a state of civilization, and the chill
damp pierces through her tatters. Why she does not go into the mill
until the morning she never knows; she turns, instead, and walks slowly
back to the farm.

The house is all dark and silent. The dogs fly at her, but a word quiets
them; they, too, know Joanna's witch-like ways. Jud Sleaford swears she
spends half her nights riding the air on a broom-stick--she comes and
goes, like the night-wind, where she listeth.

She goes to the parlor window, and flattens her nose against the pane.
Her eyes are keen as any ferret's. Yes, there she is--she has not gone
home--asleep--_alone!_--in her power! The girl's eyes light; they
glitter in the dark. There she is, asleep, alone, in her power!

She goes round to a side window, opens it, and enters. Dogs, guns, and
men are plentiful at Sleaford's--bolts are scarce; there is no fear of
burglars. She enters, drops lightly to the ground, goes straight to a
shelf in the kitchen, takes down something bright and steely, and steals
into the parlor without a sound. Instead of going straight to the bed
she crouches in her corner, to brood, perhaps, over the deed of darkness
she is about to do, or it may be to count the cost. She will be blamed
in the morning, no doubt--is she not blamed for everything that goes
wrong? she will be beaten nearly to death--quite to death, perhaps, by
Giles Sleaford. Well, she does not care. They will hang him for it. If
she were quite sure about the hanging, she feels she would be whipped to
death without a groan.

The clock striking three arouses her. It is time to be up and doing--in
an hour or two the boys will be down. Indecision forms no part of her
character; she gets up at once, and approaches the bed with her
formidable weapon. It is the family shears, bright, large, keen as a
razor, and her object is--_not_ to cut off Olga Ventnor's head, but--her
hair!

Olga is awake, is staring at her, frozen with fright. She has not
counted on that, and with a snarl of baffled malice, she plunges her
hand in the golden tresses, and uplifts the scissors. But in the
twinkling of an eye the child springs from the bed, rushes from the
room, shrieking like a mad thing. There is a heavy fall, the sound of
startled voices up-stairs, and opening doors. In that moment the
scissors are flung aside. Joanna is out of the window, and away like the
wind to Black's Dam.




CHAPTER VIII.

THE ABBOTTS OF ABBOTT WOOD.


Three miles away from Sleaford's Farm, and nearly four from Ventnor
Villa, there stands the stateliest mansion in all the country round, the
pride, the marvel, the show place of Brightbrook. It is down on the
coast; the waves of the Atlantic wash up to the low sea wall that
divides it from a shelving and sandy beach. A beautiful beach, of late
years known to fame, and spoiled for all lovers of the quietly
picturesque by being transformed into a popular watering-place. But in
these days, fashion and capitalists have not marked it for their own,
and Brightbrook Beach is an enchanted spot, on whose fine white sands
you may lie the long summer day through, lazy, and happy, and cool, and
watch the sea-gulls swirl overhead, and the little, limpid, oily waves
wash and whisper up to your very feet.

The thermometer may stand among the hundreds elsewhere, down here it is
cool as some merman's grot. There are always breezes, and fishing boats,
and far-off yachts, and forever and forever the beautiful, changeful,
illimitable sea. Or you may lean over Mr. Abbott's low stone wall in
wild weather, the wind blowing great guns, both hands clutching your
hat, and watch with awe-stricken eyes the spirit of the storm abroad on
the waters. The great beetling green waves leap up like Titans, dashing
their frothy spray in your face; the roar is as the crash of Niagara.
Fascinated, you may stand for hours watching this war of the gods, and
go home, at last, inclined to opine that Brightbrook Beach in a storm is
even more bewitching than Brightbrook Beach in summer sweetness and
sunshine, and to envy John Abbott, Esquire, his handsome home, his
beautiful wife, his pretty little daughter, his colossal bank account,
and, most of all, that grand old ocean lying there for his perpetual
pleasure, a thing of beauty and a joy forever.

If Mr. Abbott's taste in a site is good, his style of architecture lies
open to question. It is a house as much like an old Baronial Hall as a
genuine American country-house can ever make up its mind to be. What Mr.
Abbott's idea in building a castle is, is known to Mr. Abbott only. A
grand Elizabethan manor, with turrets, and peaked gables, and quaint,
vine-clad stone porches, and painted windows, with stone mullions.

It is new, and it looks three hundred years old at least, and reflects
some of its seeming grandeur and antiquity upon its master, perhaps. And
Mr. Abbott needs it. He is painfully new. He would like a moat and a
drawbridge, and battlements, and a donjon keep, and a man-at-arms on the
outer bastion, and he could have afforded them all. For, though
extremely new, he is oppressively rich. He is so rich that his wealth
forces itself upon you aggressively. You are disposed to resent it as a
direct personal affront; no one man can logically have a right to so
many millions in bank shares, and bonds, and stocks, to whole blocks in
New York and Philadelphia, to the larger half of all Brightbrook, to
such gorgeous furniture, inlaid with precious woods and metals, to
pictures worth treble their weight in gold, to sculpture such as no one
short of a prince, or grand duke, or Yankee billionaire can possess, to
horses shod with the shoes of swiftness, to wines like molten gold and
rubies, to diamonds--Koh-i-noors, says Brightbrook, every gem of them.
It is true Mrs. Abbott seldom wears these rich and rare ornaments,
never, indeed, in Brightbrook, but she has them all the same, and then,
in some ways, Mrs. Abbott is a very--well, _peculiar_ lady.

For that matter, Mr. Abbott is a--peculiar--gentleman also. His servants
say so, with bated breath, and furtive glances behind them; all
Brightbrook says it, as he rides by, monarch of all he surveys, pompous
and stout. Colonel Ventnor says it with a shrug, and holds rather aloof
from him, although his claret and cigars are, like Csar's wife, above
reproach, and he is the only man of quite his own standing in the
place. The two ladies are much better friends, despite the
valetudinarian state of the one, and the--peculiarity of the other.

When Brightbrook points out to the stranger and pilgrim within its gates
the wonderful castellated mansion known as Abbott Wood, and expatiates
on its manifold beauties, it never fails to add a word of the still
greater beauty of Mr. Abbott's wife. She was a widow, Brightbrook will
tell you confidentially, when Mr. Abbott married her, a Mrs. Lamar,
widow of a young Southern officer, and mother of a six-year-old boy,
very poor, very proud, with the bluest of all blue Virginian blood in
her veins, and a pedigree----

"Oh! if you come to pedigree," says Brightbrook, with suppressed
triumph, "_there's_ a line of ancestry, if you like! Dates back to the
days of Charles the Second, and Pocahontas, and nobody knows how long
before. But she was poor, quite destitute, they do say, after the war,
and--and Mr. Abbott came along, immensely rich, as you may see, and--she
married him."

"But you do not mean to say," cries the tourist, a little scandalized,
"that that was _why_ she married him. Because she was quite destitute,
and he was immensely rich?"

"And a very good reason," responds Brightbrook, stoutly, "only--they do
say, he and she don't quite hit it off as--well, _you_ understand! She's
a great lady, and very proud--oh! most uncommonly proud, we must say,
and he----"

A shrug is apt to finish the sentence.

"And he is not," supplements the stranger. "No, I should think not, when
he marries any man's widow on these terms, and consents to be snubbed
forever after. You say she snubs him? flings her genealogical tree in
his face; invokes the spirit of Pocahontas and the dead and gone Lamar,
and all that sort of thing?"

"Oh, dear no!" cries out Brightbrook, shocked, "nothing of the kind.
Much too proud a lady for anything of that sort. Only--only she has a
crushing sort of way with her--holds herself like this!" Brightbrook
draws itself haughtily up, folds its arms, and flings back its head,
"and looks at you out of a pair of scornful eyes. Never says a word, you
know, but sweeps out of the room, like an empress going to the block.
That sort of thing puts a man down, you know. And then Mr. Abbott, he
curses."

"Ah! curses, does he?" says the tourist, laughing. "Well, that shows he
is human, at any rate. I think I might curse myself under such
provocation. The sweeping, empress sort of style must be deucedly
uncomfortable in a wife."

"And when he curses, Mrs. Abbott looks more haughty and scornful than
ever. She's a very pious lady, Mrs. Abbott."

"Yes, I should think so; pride and piety make a happy combination--a
pleasant curricle for any man to drive. So this magnificent dame
condescends to go to the village church on Sundays, and kneel among you
rustics, in perfumed silks and laces, and call herself a miserable
sinner? Or," seeing Brightbrook vigorously shaking its head, "perhaps
she stoops still lower, and patronizes the camp-meetings for which your
fine woods are so famous? No again! Then where _does_ she go?"

"Bless you!" cries Brightbrook, exultingly, "she has a chapel of her
own! _And_ a chaplain. _And_ an altar. And vestments. And candles--wax.
And incense. And a little boy in a purple silk dress, and a white lace
overdress. And the Rev. Mr. Lamb comes down every Saturday night, and
stays until Monday morning. They say she goes to confession to him. I
shouldn't think Mr. Abbott would like that. Bless you, she's high--ever
so high--what's that other word now----"

"Ritualistic--Anglican?"

"Thanks, yes. And the chapel, St. Walburga's, is a wonder; you really
must go over and see it. The carved wood from Belgium, and the painted
windows, with most beautiful saints, and the gold candlesticks, and the
floor of inlaid wood, and carved stalls along the sides, and no pews!
The pulpit, they say, is a work of art, and cost a little fortune
abroad. Artists and that come down from the city and rave about it. Oh!
you really must go to St. Walburga's on Sunday."

"I really think I must," says the stranger and pilgrim, and very likely
he goes. He finds the park thrown open; it actually is a park of many
acres, with green bosky glades where deer disport, sunlit terraces,
where peacocks strut, statues gleaming palely amid green gloom, flashing
fountains, casting high, cool jets, velvet lawns, all dotted with
brilliant beads of flowers, rose gardens, where every rose that grows
blooms in fragrant sweetness, and, best of all, with thick woodland of
maple and hemlock, beech and elm, willow and chestnut sloping down to
the very sea. Rustic seats are everywhere, cool avenues tempt the
unwary, with arching boughs meeting overhead, and shutting out the hot
summer Sunday afternoon sun, artificial lakes spanned by miniature
bridges, and tiny gondolas, fish-ponds, where swans float, and gold and
silver beauties sparkle. There is a gate-lodge that is a very bower of
sweetbriar and climbing pink roses. All this loveliness is thrown open
to Brightbrook every Sunday, and nothing pleases the master of Abbott
Wood better than to see his grounds filled with wondering, admiring,
well-dressed people. He comes out among these faithful retainers, nearly
all his tenants, and patronizes them blandly and oppressively.

Strains of music float from the painted windows of St. Walburga's, and
you are expected to assist at "vespers," as a delicate attention to my
lady. If you are a city stranger, you will most probably be singled out
by the watchful eye of Mr. Abbott, and taken through the house. You will
see armor and stags' heads in the hall--a hall wide enough to drive the
proverbial "coach-and-four" through, a great carved chimney-piece with a
coat-of-arms. It is the heraldic device of Mrs. Abbott's family, and it
is everywhere, emblazoned in the panes, in the wood-work, on the covers
of the books. The rooms are all lofty, frescoed or satin-draped, filled
with objects of "bigotry and virtue,"--the furniture--but the pen of an
upholsterer, or a Jenkins, would be required to describe _that_. There
are rooms in blue satin, rooms in ruby velvet, rooms in amber reps,
rooms in white and gold, a library all rose-red and dark oak, a
picture-gallery with portraits of the present house of Abbott, master
and mistress, Mr. Geoffrey, and Miss Leonora. There are flowers, and
birds, and beauty, and brilliance everywhere.

You go into the chapel, and its dim religious light soothes your dazzled
eyes and excited senses. The organ is playing--my lady herself is
organist--some soft Mozartian melody. Up in the pulpit, that costly
antique work of art and oak, kneels the Reverend Ignatius Lamb, in
surplice and stole, his eyes closed, his hands clasped, in an ecstasy!
He is suspected of a leaning Rome-ward, but it certainly does not extend
to his nose, which is snub. A pretty, curly-haired boy in the purple
silk and snowy laces of acolyte, stands slowly swinging his censer,
_vice_ Master Geoffrey Lamar, retired. Geoffrey Lamar is there, though,
a strong-looking young fellow of sixteen or so, with close-cropped dark
hair, a sallow complexion, and a rather haughty-looking face. He has not
inherited his mother's beauty--he is by no means a handsome boy. By his
side, very simply dressed, in dotted muslin, sits his half-sister, Miss
Leonora Abbott, a tiny fairy of eight, with a dark, piquant face, dark
loose hair, the little young lady of the house, sole child of John
Abbott, millionaire. Sole child, but not one whit more to him than his
wife's son, the scion of the dead and blue-blooded Lamar. It is well
known that Abbott Wood and half his fortune are to be his, that he looks
to this lad to perpetuate the family greatness--to merge his own
obscurity in the blaze of the Lamar brilliance, and become the ancestor
of a long line of highly-fed, highly-bred, highly-wed descendants. Every
man has his hobby, this is John Abbott's. He is self-made, he takes a
boisterous, Bounderby sort of pride in proclaiming it. He is an
uneducated man, _that_ speaks for itself, it is unnecessary to proclaim
it. He is a vulgar man, a loud-talking, deep-drinking, aggressive,
pompous, purse-proud man. His wife's guests were wont to shrug their
shoulders, suppress significant smiles, or protrude delicate under lips
as they listened. And seeing this, Mrs. Abbott has given up society,
that super-refined pride of hers has been excoriated a hundred times a
day by the rich clod she calls husband. She has renounced society,
buried herself in the solitude of Abbott Wood, with only her books, her
music, her easel, her children, for company. She sees as little of Mr.
Abbott as possible; she is always perfectly polite to him, she defers to
his wishes, and is a supremely miserable woman. Even her piety fails to
comfort her, and she is very much in earnest, poor lady, with her
pretty, picturesque, lady-like religion. She works altar-cloths and
copes, with gorgeous silks, and bullion, and gold fringe; she reads her
high-church novels; she plays Mozart in the twilight, and sings in
Gregorian chant in the chapel, but all in vain--that settled unrest and
misery leaves her not. "Dona nobis pacem" sounds from her lips like the
very cry of a soul in pain, but peace is not given. She despises her
husband, his loud vulgarity and blatant purse-pride, while her own heart
is eaten to the core with that other pride which the world tolerates and
honors, pride of birth and long lineage, and which, perhaps, in the eyes
of Him before whom kings are dust, is quite as odious as the other.
Perhaps that peace she seeks so despairingly might be found, if she
hearkened a little to the text from which the Reverend Ignatius is fond
of preaching, "Learn of Me, for I am meek and humble of heart, and ye
shall find rest for your souls."

For Mr. Abbott--well, he is sharper-sighted than his wife gives him
credit for, in spite of chill deference and proud politeness, he knows
that she scorns and disdains--that she has scorned and disdained him
from the first. And he resents it, silently, passionately. He loves his
wife. She would open those dark, lustrous eyes of hers in wondering
contempt, if she knew how well. But she does not know it--the scorn in
her eyes would drive him to murder her almost, and he knows that scorn
would be there. Coarse braggart and rich upstart he may be, but he would
lay down that strong life of his for her sake. And that she is colder
than marble, less responsive than ice, is at the bottom of more than
half these fierce outbursts of anger that so disgust and repel her.
Abbott Wood is a roomy mansion, and more than one skeleton abides
therein.

It has been said that something of mystery hangs over, and makes
interesting, the master of the house. Colonel Ventnor, riding with him
one day, has seen a little corner of that dark curtain which shrouds his
past, lifted. It was at the time Ventnor Villa was being built. Mr.
Abbott, glad of such a neighbor, had interested himself a good deal in
the proceedings, and saved the colonel a number of trips down from the
city. Colonel Ventnor, a refined man in all his instincts, did not much
like the rough-and-ready lord of Abbott Wood, but he was obliged by his
good-nature, and accepted it. It had happened some four years before
this memorable evening on which little Olga loses herself in the woods.

It is a dark and overcast autumn evening, threatening rain. Leaving the
villa and the workmen, they ride slowly along the high-road, Mr. Abbott
detailing, with the gusto customary with him when talking of himself,
some of his adventures as a San Francisco broker and speculator in '49.
Suddenly his horse shies as a man springs forward from under a tree, and
stands directly before him.

"Blast you!" roars Mr. Abbott, "what the ---- are you about? You nearly
threw me, you beggar! What d'ye mean by jumping before a gentleman's
horse like this?"

"Beg pardon, sir," says the man, with a grin and a most insolent manner,
"didn't go for to do it, Mr. Abbott. Don't use your horsewhip, sir," for
Mr. Abbott has raised it; "you might be sorry to strike an old friend."

He removes his ragged hat as he speaks, and the fading light falls full
upon him. John Abbott reels in his saddle, the whip drops from his hand,
his florid face turns livid.

"It is Sleaford!" he gasps, "by G----!"

Colonel Ventnor looks at him. He is a gentleman in the best sense of the
much-abused word--he swears not at all. Then he looks at the tramp. He
is a swarth-skinned, black-looking vagabond, as perfect a type of the
loafer and blackguard, he thinks, as he has ever seen.

"I will ride on, Mr. Abbott," he says, quietly; "much obliged for your
good-nature about those men. Good-night."

"Stay! hold on!" cries Mr. Abbott. The color comes back with a purple
rush to his face, his eyes look wild and dilated. "I--I do--I have known
this fellow in California. He's a poor devil that used to work for me. I
haven't anything to say to him in private. You needn't hurry on _his_
account, you know."

"Oh, certainly not," responds Colonel Ventnor. "Still, as there is a
storm brewing, I think it will be well to get to the hotel at once, and
so avoid a drenching. I will see you again before I return to town."

He lifts his hat and rides away, but not before he has heard the hoarse
laugh of the tramp, as he lays his hand with the same impudent
familiarity on Mr. Abbott's bridle.

Next day, when he returns to the villa, he finds that gentleman waiting
for him, and issuing sonorous orders to the masons. He is almost
offensive in his officious friendliness and voluble explanations.

"A poor beggar, sir, that I knew out in 'Frisco. Knew all sorts out
there--hundreds of the great unwashed, miners, gamblers, blacklegs, all
sorts. Had to, you know, in my business. Sometimes made some of them
useful--a man has to handle dirty tools in most trades, you know. This
fellow was one of them. Sleaford his name is--Giles Sleaford, a harmless
beggar, but lazy as the deuce. Think I must do something for him for old
acquaintance sake. Got a large family, too--lots of boys and
girls--quite a 'numerous father,' as they say. Where's the good of being
as rich as Rothschild if a man's not to do good with it? D---- it all!
let us help one another, I say, and when we see an unfortunate chap
down, let us set him on his legs again. I think I'll let Sleaford have
the Red Farm; there's nobody there, and it's a capital bit of land. He
wasn't half a bad sort; there were a devilish deal worse fellows than
Black Giles out in San Francisco."

Colonel Ventnor assents politely, and keeps his own opinion of Mr.
Abbott's dark friend to himself. Mr. Abbott has been looking him in the
eye, in a very marked manner, during this little speech. It is a glance
that says plainly enough, "This is my version of the affair--I expect
you to believe it, or take the consequences." But Colonel Ventnor's
quiet high-breeding is too much for poor Mr. Abbott always. It puts him
in a silent rage, much as his wife's calm, uplifted repose of manner
does.

"Curse them all!" he thinks; "these aristocrats are all alike. Look down
on a man as the dirt under their feet, if he ain't brought up to parley
voo fransey and jabber German and that. And they can do it with a look
too, without a word of bluster or noise. I defy any man alive to stand
up before the missis when she's in one of her white, speechless rages,
and look her in the eye. I wish I knew how they do it."

He sighs, takes off his hat, scratches his head perplexedly with his
big, brown, brawny hand, and slaps it on again a little more defiantly
cocked than before. "And now here's Black Giles," he thinks, gloomily,
"as if I hadn't enough on my mind without _him_. I wonder how much he
knows--I wonder----"

He mounts his horse and rides off, pondering gloomily, in the direction
of the Red Farm. It was a different-looking place in those days to what
it became later. Mr. Abbott was a very thorough landlord, no tenant
might wreck and ruin any farm of his. This Red Farm, so called from the
color of the house, and the great maples burning scarlet about it, was
one of the choicest bits of land in the State, and in high cultivation.
And here the Sleaford family came, two boys, three girls, the youngest a
mere child then, but a weird-looking, cowed starveling--and _squatted_.
It could not be called anything else; Giles Sleaford laughed from the
first at the notion of his farming, or even making the pretext. The boys
were like wild Indians--they fished, shot, snared birds and rabbits,
stole melons, robbed orchards, were a nuisance generally, and let the
farm look after itself. The girls were of the same ne'er-do-well stamp,
boisterous young hoidens, handsome "prize animal" sort of damsels, with
flashing black eyes, and impudent retorts for all who accost them. The
neighbors wonder--_why_ does Mr. Abbott, that most particular gentleman,
let this wild lot ruin the Red Farm, and bear it like the meekest of
men? Why does Giles Sleaford always have well-filled pockets, good
horses and clothes, whether he works or idles? They ask the question
more than once, and he laughs loud and long.

"_Why_ does he?" he cries. "Lord love you, that's little of what he
would do for me. He loves me like a brother. He's an uncommon fine
gentleman, ain't he? and got a lovely place, and a handsome wife--so I
hear. I haven't been there to leave my card yet. Why does he? Bless your
souls, he would turn out of his big house and give it to me, if I coaxed
him hard enough."

Brightbrook does not know what to make of it. It whispers a good deal,
and looks furtively at the rich man riding by. What secret has he in his
life, that Giles Sleaford is paid to keep? He looks like a man who might
have a dark record behind him. And what would Mrs. Abbott say if she
knew? But Mrs. Abbott does not know, gossip does not reach her; she
lives in a rarefied atmosphere of her own, with her dainty work, her
ornaments, her children, and the plebeian name of Sleaford penetrates it
not.

And so years go on. The Red Farm goes to ruin. Colonel Ventnor and
family come with the primroses, and depart with the swallows. Abbott
Wood grows more beautiful with every passing year, and the skeletons in
its closets grin silently there still, when it falls out that this
summer evening Olga Ventnor goes astray in the woods, and before ten at
night all Brightbrook is up and in quest.

       *       *       *       *       *

"She may be at Abbott Wood," Frank Livingston suggests--Frank
Livingston, calm and unhurried in the midst of general dismay. It is a
theory of this young man's that things are sure to come right in the
end, and that nothing is worth bothering about; so, though a trifle
anxious, he is calm. "She spoke to me," he adds, with a twinge of
remorse, "this afternoon about taking her there. Promised to go over and
play croquet with Leo and Geoff."

Colonel Ventnor waits for no more. He dashes spurs into his red roan
steed, and gallops like a madman to Abbott Wood. On the steps of the
great portico entrance he sees the master of the mansion, smoking a
cigar, and looking flushed and angry. A domestic white squall has just
blown over--not with the "missis;" there are never squalls, white or
black, in that quarter--with one of the kitchen-maids, who had done, or
undone, something to offend him. He has flown into a tremendous passion
with the frightened woman, cursing up hill and down dale with a
heartiness and fluency that would have done credit to that past-master
of the art of blasphemy, Sleaford himself. The fact is, his wife had
put him out at dinner, as she has a way of doing, and his slumbering
wrath has had to find vent somewhere. Now the fuming volcano is calming
itself down in the peaceful night air, with the help of a soothing
cigar. He stares to see the colonel ride up, all white and breathless.

"Little Olga? No, she wasn't there--hadn't been--was perfectly sure of
it. Lost!--the colonel did not say so! How was it?"

In a few rapid sentences Colonel Ventnor tells him. Mr. Abbott listens
with open mouth.

"By jingo! poor little lass! He will join the hunt immediately. That
French woman ought to have her neck wrung. He would be after the colonel
in a twinkling."

And he is--mounted on his powerful black horse. And all night long the
woods are searched, and morning comes, and finds the missing one still
missing. The sun rises, and its first beams fall upon John Abbott, tired
and jaded, coming upon Sleaford's. It is a place he avoids; he looks at
it now with a scowl, and for a moment forgets what he is in search of.
No one has thought of looking here; neither does he. He is about to turn
away, when the house door opens, and Giles Sleaford, unwashed and
unshorn, comes forth.

"Hullo!" he says, roughly; "you! What may _you_ want this time o' day?"

"We are looking for the colonel's little girl. You haven't seen her, I
suppose?" says Mr. Abbott, quite civilly.

"Haven't I?" growls Black Giles; "that's all you know about it. I have
seen her. She's here, and I wish she was anywhere else, keeping honest
people from their sleep. She's in there fast enough if you want her. Why
doesn't her own dad come after her? I should think _you_ had enough to
do to mind your own young 'uns, and your wife, from all I hear."

He laughs a hoarse, impudent laugh, that brings the choleric blood into
John Abbott's face, and a demon into either eye. But, wonderful to
relate, he restrains himself.

Other members of the hunt ride up now, and it is discovered that little
Miss Olga is very ill, and nearly out of her senses--why, nobody knows.
She woke up in the night, Lora supposes, and finding herself alone, took
fright, and ran screaming out into the passage, and there fell, striking
her head against the bottom stair, and hurting herself badly. Whether
from the hurt or the fright, she is at present in a very bad way, and
there is not a moment to be lost in removing her. Frank is of the party.
He takes his insensible little cousin in his arms and kisses her, with
tears of genuine remorse in his boyish eyes. If he had gone with her as
she wished, this would never have happened. Now she may never ask him
for anything in this world again. As he carries her out, a small figure,
looking like a walking scarecrow, with wild hair, pale face, torn
skirts, bare legs and feet, comes slowly and sullenly forward, and
watches him and his burden with lowering, scowling glance.

"Here you, Joanna!" calls out one of the Sleaford girls, sharply. "Come
into the house, and help redd up. Come in, this minute!" with a stamp of
her foot, "if you don't want a little more of what you got last night."

The girl makes no reply. She slowly obeys, but her eyes linger to the
last on Frank Livingston and his cousin. All the long light curls fall
over his shoulder, the poor little fever-flushed face is hidden on his
breast.

"One of yours, Sleaford?" says Mr. Abbott, graciously, looking after
Joanna. "I didn't know you had one so young."

There is nothing in this speech apparently to provoke laughter, nor is
it a time for mirth, but such is its effect on Mr. Sleaford. He opens
his huge mouth, and emits such a roar that the whole group turn and look
at him indignantly. The joke is so exquisite that he heeds not, but
laughs until the tears start from his bleary eyes.

"Glad you find me so funny," says Mr. Abbott, huffily. "You ain't always
in such good humor this time of morning, are you?" And then, as Mr.
Sleaford's only response is to take out his pipe, and indulge in another
fit of hilarity, he turns and rides indignantly away in the rear of his
party.

Mr. Giles Sleaford, left alone in his retreat, smokes between his
expiring gasps of laughter, and soliloquizes:

"'Is she one of yours, Sleaford?' And 'I didn't know you had one so
young!' O Lord! I haven't laughed so much in a month of Sundays. Old
Jack Abbott don't often make jokes, maybe, but when he does they're rum
'uns. 'Didn't know I had one so young!' It's the best thing I've heerd
this many a day--I'm dashed if it ain't."




CHAPTER IX.

THE MISSES SLEAFORD AT HOME.


"The story they tell is one that won't wash," says Frank Livingston. "I
appeal to you, Geoff. The notion of meeting a wild girl in the woods,
and being half scalped when Dan Sleaford finds her! Then, when they have
her safely housed and asleep, of that same wild creature coming down the
chimney----"

"Down the chimney?" exclaims Geoffrey Lamar, amazed.

"Oh! well, something very like it, and going at her again with uplifted
dagger. It's a fishy sort of yarn as they tell it. But," adds Frank,
reflectively, "it is a peculiarity of Dan Sleaford's stories that they
all _have_ a piscatorial flavor."

The two young gentlemen are pacing arm in arm under the horse chestnuts
surrounding Ventnor Villa. They form a contrast as they slowly saunter
there--young Livingston two years the elder, tall, slender, very
handsome, quick, volatile, restless; young Lamar shorter, stouter, with
a face that even at fifteen has a look of thought and power--a mouth
with that square cut at the corners that betokens sweetness as well as
strength, steady gray eyes, close-cut dark hair, and the careless,
high-bred air of one born to the purple.

"It does sound rather oddly," he remarks; "but what motive have they for
telling an untruth? And _something_ has frightened her, that is patent
enough. Poor little Olga!"

"They're a queer lot, these Sleafords," says Frank, reflectively--"a
most uncommonly queer lot. And there's a mystery of some sort hanging
over the head of the house. You don't mean to say, old fellow, that,
living in Brightbrook so long, you don't know any of them--eh?"

"Well, in point of fact, you see, I do _not_ live in Brightbrook much. I
spend Christmas and New Year weeks down here, and either the July or
August of every long--but that is all. One month I give to yachting, and
then, of course, all the rest of the year is spent at college. You are
here a good deal more than I am, and Abbott Wood is so out of the way.
As it happens, I have never even heard of these people until to-day."

Frank stares at him, then straight ahead, and whistles.

"Well, that is---- I say--you don't mind my asking, do you? have you
never heard your governor speak of them?"

"Never."

"Because Black Giles seems to know _him_ most remarkably well. Says he
used to be a pal of his, long ago, out in San Francisco."

"What?"

"Yes, I know it's a queer statement. And up the village they say----"

He pauses. A deep line graves itself between Geoffrey Lamar's eyebrows.
His step-father is a sensitive subject with him.

"Well," he says, rather coldly, "they say--what?"

"I wouldn't mention this sort of thing if you were Mr. Abbott's son,"
goes on Frank, magnanimously, "but it is different you know. Giles
Sleaford, when half seas over, has a way of talking--nasty, swearing
sort of way that makes a fellow long to pitch him out of the window--of
your governor. Red Jack Abbott--so the disrespectful old bloke calls
him--used to be out there in San Francisco the Damon to his Pythias. But
never mind," says Frank, pulling himself up, "you don't like the
subject; beg pardon for introducing it, but I am such a fellow to say
whatever comes uppermost. All these returned Californians have a shady
sidewalk in their past pathway, if we only knew it, I dare say."

Geoffrey Lamar does not seem to derive the cheerful consolation Frank
intends from this philosophical remark. A frown contracts his forehead,
and there is a pause.

"_You_ know those people very well," he says, after that full stop.

"Oh! uncommon. I'm _l'ami de la maison_--I have the run of the whole
house, like the family cat. It's uncommonly jolly. I'll fetch you some
evening, if you like. We have musical and danceable reunions. Jud plays
the fiddle, Dan the flute, Lora the banjo, and they all can sing. Lora
gives me lessons on the banjo!" Here Frank tries to look grave, but
suddenly explodes into a great laugh. "And we play euchre and seven-up,
and I lose all my loose cash regularly. It's the best fun going. George
Blake comes, and lots more. I would have asked you long ago, only you
_are_ such a solemn old duffer, and of too aristocratic a stomach to
digest such vulgar doings. But if you'll come I'll present you. They'll
kow-tow before you, for are you not, oh, potent young seigneur, the lord
of the land, and you shall have a good time. Not just at once, of
course; must wait until the princess, poor little ducky, is on her
little pins again before I go anywhere."

It will be observed that Mr. Frank's style of conversation is
exceedingly _degag_--quite free and easy, and of the slang a trifle
slangy. The prince of wild Joanna's imagination has a most unprincely
way of expressing himself.

"Say you'll come. Get rid of that owl-like face, and stop trying to look
like your own grandfather. What a fellow you are, Lamar! I would mope
myself into the horrors if I lived as you do. Say you'll come to the
very next Sleaford swarry. We have clam-bakes after the concert and the
valse  deux-temps; codfish chowder, barbecued rabbit, and
sich--everything highly genteel and _en regle_. And you can wash it down
with whisky ad libitum, or you can join the ladies in cider-cup and
bottled lager, if you prefer such effeminate tipple. You will come?"

"Yes, I will come," Geoffrey answers, laughing. "These are attractions
not to be declined. I say! stop a moment, Livingston--whom have we
here?"

A brilliant, black-eyed, buxom brunette, dressed in the loudest possible
style, pink, and purple, and yellow all swearing at each other in her
costume, advances toward them, a green parasol shading her already
over-ripe charms from the too ardent glances of the sun.

"What!" cries Frank, falling back and striking an attitude. "Do these
eyes deceive me? That form--that smile--that green umbrella! 'Tis she!
Lora! light of my eyes, beloved of my soul, whither away in such haste
with the thermometer up in the nineties. What! still silent! Speak,
loveliest of thy sex--speak, ere I perish! Whither goest thou in such
haste?"

Miss Lora Sleaford furls her green parasol, not at all discomposed by
this impassioned address, and administers a gentle rebuke with the
nozzle across Frank's shapely nose.

"Don't be a donkey," is her retort. "I suppose, considering I lost a
night's sleep with that little girl, and had a sight of trouble with her
every way, I have a right to walk up and ask how she gets along. Why
weren't you there last night?"

"Pressing business engagements, over which I had no control, my dearest
Lora; but I see those beauteous orbs are riveted on the manly
countenance of my friend. He is perishing for an introduction--was
begging me with tears in his eyes, just before you came up, to obtain
him the _entree_ to Sleaford's, and the acquaintance of Sleaford's two
lovely daughters. Come here, Geoff, a moment, will you. Miss Lora
Sleaford, allow me to present to you my young friend, Geoffrey
Valandigham Lamar."

Miss Sleaford bows gracefully, really gracefully, smiles
radiantly--black eyes, red cheeks, coral lips, dazzling white teeth, all
a-sparkle together. She evidently takes Frank's chaff as a thing of
course, and is perfectly well used to that style of address. Geoffrey
laughs, but reddens a little, with some of that becoming boyish
bashfulness that Frank Livingston has never known.

"Blush not, my Geoffrey!" says that young man of the world, with an
encouraging slap on the back, "Miss Lora's charms floor us all at
first, but we get used to 'em after a time. So will you. Don't be
ashamed of yourself--speak to her prettily--she's not half so dignified,
bless you, nor unapproachable, as she looks. So you're going to the
house, are you, Lora? That is a very pretty attention on your part. The
little one is asleep now. Doctor says she'll pull through. But what a
queer go it all is, this cock-and-bull story Dan tells, about a wild
girl, and the rest of it!"

"It is true enough. I guess it was our Joanna," replies Lora,
complacently adjusting a pair of flat gilt bracelets.

"You don't say so! Joanna! What a little devil's doll she is, to be
sure. Shall we see you home, my friend and I, after your call, my Lora?
Nothing would give us greater rapture, you know."

But Miss Sleaford declines, with a toss of her white feathers. She is
not going home, she is en route for Brightbrook--Dan and the trap are
waiting outside the gate. And so, with a parting bow and smile, intended
to do deadly execution on young Lamar, Lora trips away to the hall door.

Mrs. Ventnor, looking pale and anxious, receives her, and thanks her in
very fervent words, and a handsome present of jewelry, for her kindness
to her child. She has summed up Miss Sleaford at a glance, and sees she
is the type to whom breastpin and bracelets are always acceptable. There
is another lady in the room, a lady who looks like a queen in a picture,
Lora thinks, so grand, so stately, so beautiful is she. She awes even
Miss Sleaford, who is not easily awed. It is Mrs. Abbott, she knows; she
has seen her more than once; the mother of that dull, plain-looking
young fellow outside. And yet, though one is beautiful and the other
almost devoid of beauty, there is a resemblance between the two faces,
in the firm mouth and proudly-curved chin, in the level, rather chill
glance of the full dark eye, in the haughty poise of the head and
shoulders. For you need not look twice at young Geoffrey Lamar to know
that although he has not fallen heir to his mother's beauty, he has to
her pride.

This grand dame goes up to Lora, and holds out one long, slim white
hand.

"We are all your debtors," she says, in a slow, sweet, trained voice.
"In saving our dear little Olga you have served us all. If you will
accept this, as a little token of my great regard----"

She slips from her finger a circlet of rubies, and the quick blood comes
into Lora Sleaford's face.

"Thank you, ma'am," she says, almost bashfully. With some trouble she
gets the rich hoop on one of her fat fingers, and makes her courtesy and
departs, enchanted with her visit and its results.

But little Olga is really very ill, and lies tossing through the warm
July days, fever-flushed, wild-eyed, thirsty, wandering.

Over and over again the wild girl of the woods is bending above her, her
hands in her hair, her deadly weapon poised, and Olga's shrieks ring
through the room, and they have to hold her in her bed by force. All the
long lovely locks are cut off close, cruelly close to the poor little
burning head, and there are days when neither doctor nor nurse can tell
how that fierce struggle is to end.

Lora Sleaford comes often to inquire, and Joanna, crouching like a toad
in her corner, hears the story of the severed golden hair. A moment
after she has slipped from her place, and gone out into the night. She
throws herself down on the dark, dewy grass, and buries her face in her
folded arms. She has got the desire of her heart, and she is not glad; a
vague sort of remorse and unrest fills her. She did not want to kill
this little heiress, only to frighten her; to cut off her hair, not to
give her a brain fever. If she dies, will they hang her--Joanna? She
knows Lora knows, and has told others. Well, let them hang her if they
like; she did not mean to do it, and hanging cannot hurt much worse than
horsewhipping. She does not care; she is past care, past hope, past
help. It does not matter--nothing matters. Better to be dead at once,
and done with it. But she hopes this little girl will not die. And
presently--perhaps it is because she is all aching and half sick
to-night, great tears well up, and fill and fall from her eyes, that
burn generally with so baleful a light.

She has been beaten by Giles Sleaford, she has had her ears boxed by
Dan, she has been scolded by Liz, she has worked like a slave since
early morning, she is sore, and hungry, and hopeless, and sick.

"I wish I was dead," she sobs, her face hidden in the sweet wet grass.
"I wish I had never been born!"

       *       *       *       *       *

But little Olga does not die. She is a delicate child, and it requires
the best of medical skill and ceaseless care to bring her through. There
comes what is called the crisis--there is a night when no one at Ventnor
Villa nor Abbott Wood thinks of sleep--a night when Frank Livingston
paces the wet grass, under the summer stars, until day-dawn, filled
with fear and remorse for his share in the tragedy--a night when Colonel
Ventnor walks the halls and passages, pale as no one has ever seen him
pale before--a night when Mrs. Abbott sits through the long mute hours
clasping the hand of the sick child's mother in her own, and with bated
breath watching for that dread change. It comes, it passes, and burning
heat changes to profound slumber, and tossing delirium to gentle
perspiration, and little Olga is saved!

The news flies--it visits many homes, and sometime that day reaches
Sleaford's, where Lora relates it to the family assembled at supper.

"So you see, little monkey," she winds up, addressing Joanna, "you ain't
a murderer after all, and won't be hanged _this_ time. But you had
better look out, and not try that sort of thing again. You mayn't get
off so easy another time."

"It's only a question of a year or two--eh, Jo?" says Jud Sleaford,
tweaking the girl's ear. "You're bound to come to it some day. Of all
the little limbs of Old Nick _I_ ever met, you top the lot."

"I am what you all have made me," the child flashes out, with sudden
fire, jerking herself free. "I only wonder I haven't killed somebody
long ago--some of _you_, I mean. I will yet, if you don't let me alone."

A growl from Giles silences her, but in her poor, darkened, heathenish
little soul that night there is a wordless thanksgiving for the news she
has heard.

"I don't know what got into me," she thinks, with a feeling akin to
compunction; "she never did nothin' to me when all's said and done. I'm
sorry I scared her; I'm sorry, yes, I am, that she's had to lose all
her pretty hair."

The other members of the Sleaford family circle are relieved also, but
for a different reason.

"I'm sure I'm glad of it," Liz says, in a querulous tone; "the place has
been like a grave-yard ever since that night; not a soul's been near the
house, except once, George Blake. Can't we have a dance, Dan, some night
next week?"

"And tell Frank Livingston, Dan, to fetch young Lamar," suggests Lora.
"I am dying for a dance. I saw two or three of the girls down at the
Corners yesterday, and they were asking when we meant to have another
spree."

"Dad means to go to the city next Tuesday," suggests Jud, "and as he
ain't particularly useful or ornamental on an occasion like that, I vote
we have the high jinks while he's gone."

This resolution is unanimously carried by the house, and next Tuesday is
fixed for the Sleaford _fte_. The young ladies at once set to work to
prepare their costumes and decorate the house. Dan issues the
invitations verbally, and all are accepted, including that extended to
Master Geoffrey Lamar. Frank goes without saying. With a load off his
conscience now that Olga is recovering, Frank is in wild high spirits
and ready for anything. He is generating a great deal of steam in these
days of Olga's convalescence, and requires a safety-valve of some sort.
He spends considerable of his precious time in the sick-room, and it is
found does Olga more good by his lively presence than all the doctor's
stimulants. Geoffrey Lamar and little Leo Abbott, too, are there a great
deal--their conversation and company excite the child a little, but the
good results counterbalance the evil. Still, four or five days of this
sort of thing--this state of unnatural goodness--has a depressing effect
on Frank, and the Sleaford "swarry" is hailed with rejoicing.

"We always present some little delicate offering to the young ladies on
these occasions," he remarks to Geoffrey, "not bouquets or floral litter
of that sort; but something sensible and solid. On various festive
seasons of this nature, I myself have contributed a ham, a plum cake, a
turkey, some port wine, and other graceful trifles of that sort. The
present being a special festival, it is my intention to appear in
company with two imperial quarts of champagne. You, young sir, being a
lily of the field, and this your _dbut_, will be exempt from taxation.
The honor of your presence is sufficient in itself."

"It rather reminds one of Mrs. Nickleby and the love-stricken old
gentleman in small-clothes, who threw the vegetable marrows," says
Geoffrey, laughing. "I wonder, Frank, you care to mingle with such a
lot. You really seem to like it."

"And I really do, my aristocratic young friend. Human nature in all its
varieties interests me in the abstract; human nature, as represented by
Miss Lora Sleaford, interests me consumedly in particular. A romp with
that girl is equal to a boxing-match any day to put a fellow in
condition. Leave all your fastidious notions at Abbott Wood, with your
evening dress; put on a shooting-jacket, and come and be happy."

They are the latest guests. The old red farm-house is all alight when
they draw near, the scraping of Jud's violin is their greeting as they
enter. Some half-dozen young ladies in gay muslin dresses, gilt brooches
and chains, and rainbow ribbons are there, and represent the Sleaford
"set" in Brightbrook. The young men are generally of a better stamp, and
muster stronger; the lower rooms look filled to overflowing as the two
late guests arrive. A momentary hush of awe greets Geoffrey Lamar, but
it does not last; the festive group here assembled are not awed easily
or long.

"For Heaven's sake do not introduce me to anybody!" whispers Geoffrey,
nervously, afraid of a torrent of Frank's "chaff." "Just let me alone,
and I'll drift into port myself."

There is one face present that he recognizes, that of George Blake, and
he seeks refuge by his side. Blake is a bright young fellow, poor, but
of good connections; his mother, a widow, teaches music in the village;
George, an only son, is at present beginning life in the office of the
Brightbrook _News_. He is about eighteen or nineteen--indeed, none of
the gentleman are on the aged side of twenty.

But Mr. Blake is destined for higher duty than playing protector--Miss
Liz Sleaford sails up, resplendent in crimson ribbons and cheap jewelry,
and claims him as her own. They are all in the parlor--Jud, the
musician, is perched on a sort of pedestal in a corner to be out of the
way, as there is not an inch of spare room for the coming engagement.
The dance is a waltz. Frank is spinning round with Lora, as a matter of
course, Mr. Blake is blessed with Liz, five other couples revolve and
bump against each other with much force, and great good-humor.

Geoffrey has seen a great many waltzes, but the energy, the vim, the
"go" of this one he has never seen equaled. And it is a night in early
August. The full harvest moon is pouring its pale splendor over the
warm, sweet world without; the faces of the waltzers are redder in ten
minutes than the moon was when it rose. The living whirlwind flashing
past him so confuses Geoffrey that he gets up at last, and with some
difficulty makes his way into the kitchen. This apartment has but two
occupants--Dan Sleaford, and a small, scantily-dressed damsel of twelve,
who appears to be assistant cook. Dan is the _chef_. At an early age he
developed one talent, a talent for clam chowder; many years of
cultivation, and that talent has soared to the heights of positive
genius. No "swarry" at the Sleaford's would be considered perfect
without a chowder; it is indeed the _pice de resistance_ of the feast,
and is generally the only dish contributed by the feast givers. So Dan,
in a state threatening spontaneous combustion, bends over the steaming
caldron, from which odors as of Araby the Blest are wafted out into the
silent night. The youthful person with him, in a sulky and slipshod
manner, is emptying numerous baskets, and arranging their contents on
the two deal tables, covered, at present, with very white cloths, and
set out with the blue delf, two-pronged forks, and a miscellaneous
collection of knives. It requires some skill on Mr. Sleaford's part to
keep one eye on the chowder, and bring it to the pitch of perfection for
which he is so justly celebrated, and keep the other fixed sternly on
his small assistant, to see that she purloins none of the provisions. On
the present occasion the spread is something gorgeous. There is, first
of all, the champagne--two silver-throated beauties contributed by
Frank. Then a basket of able-bodied little mutton pies, the delicate
attentions of Mr. George Blake, who has a weakness that way. Then a plum
cake, with sugar coating an inch thick, the luscious offering of the
young Brightbrook baker. Then a leg of lamb "with fixins," _anglic_,
peas and mint sauce. A bottle of mixed pickles, a wedge of cheese, a can
of sweet biscuits and sundries, the tribute by the representative of the
grocery. In addition, a great earthenware pot of tea is steeping for the
ladies, while the whisky and other spirituous fluids, together with a
box of cigars, adorn a shelf of the cupboard. These delicacies, with the
chowder--always with the chowder--comprise a supper fit for Brillat
Savarin or the Olympian gods.

Geoffrey takes a seat on the sill of one of the open windows, trying to
catch a breath of cool air, and amused in spite of himself by the
novelty of all this. Dan Sleaford politely essays conversation, but,
distracted between the chowder and his handmaid, the attempts are not
brilliant. In spite of his Argus eyes, Joanna manages to filch a mutton
pie, a handful of mixed biscuits, and a piece of cheese, and secretes
this victual somewhere about her garments. Geoffrey watches the elfish
child with curiosity; she is of a type he has never seen before. He has
a chivalrous veneration for all things feminine, engendered by his
beautiful and stately mother; but this changeling--it is difficult to
imagine her belonging to the same order of beings as his sister Leo, or
Olga Ventnor. This evening her best frock, such as it is, has been
donned; she wears shoes and stockings, and an effort has been made to
brush down the thick shock of darkly-reddish hair. He sees the pale,
pinched features--features not homely in themselves, but spoiled by an
expression of settled sullenness and gloom. She looks uncanny, and most
pathetically unchildlike. When Dan Sleaford girds at her, she shrinks as
if she expected a blow. Her hard life is written in every line of her
downcast and smileless face.

Inside, the fun waxes fast and furious; peals of laughter ring out, the
house quivers with the tread of the dancers. Jud's fiddle never falters
nor fails. A schottische follows the waltz, then a quadrille, then a
polka; then George Blake performs a solo, the Highland Fling--a dance
which has more genuine fling about it, as executed by Mr. Blake, than
any of the company has ever before beheld. Then there is a contre dance.
Then Dan Sleaford, crimson of visage, presents himself at the parlor
door, and in stentorian accents announces the chowder and
accompaniments, and tersely commands them to "come on!"

"What, Geoff, old boy! taking lessons in cooking?" cries Frank, wiping
his hot face. "Phew! what a blazer of a night!--and, by Jove! what a
girl Lora Sleaford is to spin! There's more go in her than in any human
being I ever met. She has been dancing every time, and hasn't turned a
hair, while I--I give you my word, old fellow, I'm fit to drop."

But a bumper of foamy iced lager restores the exhausted one, and the
company sit down to supper. A very noisy company it is, a very hungry
company too, and despite the height of the thermometer, boiling chowder,
steaming tea, roast lamb, and mutton pies disappear with a celerity
that speaks well for the faith the consumers have in their own powerful
digestions. Every one helps himself and his partner to whatever chances
to be handiest; cheese and pickles vanish in company, lamb and
pound-cake, mutton pies and peas. The gentlemen slake their thirst with
flagons of lager beer, or the more potent whisky; while the ladies
genteelly partake of hot tea and iced champagne, one after the other,
and with perfect equanimity.

It is all a wonderful experience to Geoffrey Lamar. For Frank--he and
George Blake--they are the choice spirits of the board. He is amused, a
trifle disgusted also, it may be, but the hilarity carries him away, and
he finds himself laughing almost as noisily as the rest. Once or twice
he glances about for the attendant sprite, but she is no longer in
waiting; every one helps himself. She is in a corner of the fire-place,
as though she felt the heat no more than a salamander, munching her
pilfered dainties, and staring, with bright, watchful eyes, at the
people before her. No one notices her, or thinks of offering her
anything to eat or drink. The dogs get an occasional morsel thrown
them--she gets nothing.

Supper over, dancing is resumed with ardor and vigor. There is singing,
too, spirited songs with ringing choruses, in which the strength and
lungs of the "swarry" is thrown. Miss Lora gives them--to a banjo
accompaniment--"Sing, oh! for a brave and gallant bark, a brisk and
lively breeze,"--which, having a fine resounding chorus, goes near to
lift the roof off. Liz does the sentimental, and warbles "Thou hast
learned to love another, thou hast broken every vow." Frank Livingston
trolls forth, in a very nice tenor, "Sarah's Young Man," and the
Messieurs Sleaford uplift their voices in a nautical duet. The remains
of the plum cake, and some cool lemonade are passed around among the
fair sex. The gentlemen adjourn at intervals to the kitchen cupboard for
a "modest quencher," a quiet cigar, and Geoffrey Lamar, growing rather
bored, keeps his seat on the window-sill, and wishes it were time to get
out of all this noise and heat, and go.

His interest in Joanna does not flag. She is a curious study, and he
watches her. After supper she clears off the things, washes the dishes,
puts them away, sweeps up the floor, all in profound silence, and with
deft, swift hands. Then, instead of going to bed, although it is past
midnight, she produces a tattered book, and resumes her corner to read.
With hands over her ears, eyes riveted to the page, she is seemingly
lost to all the tumult around her. He watches her in silence for awhile,
then he speaks.

"What are you reading?"

He has to touch her to make her hear--then she looks up. How changed her
look! the sullen moodiness has passed away, her eyes are eager, her face
bright with the interest of her book. But in that instant the old look
of dark, frowning distrust returns. She points to the page without a
word.

"'Monte Cristo,'" he reads. "Do you like it?"

She nods.

"But the first and last seems to be torn out--that must spoil the
interest, I should think. Do you read much?"

She purses up her mouth and shakes her head.

"Why?"

"No books--no time."

"You are fond of stories?"

"Oh! ain't I!--just!"

"Would you like me to bring you a book the next time I come?"

She looks at him, wondering, distrustful. He is a young gentleman, and
he is taking notice of her--he is speaking to her kindly. No one does
that. He is offering her a book--no one ever gives her anything. Her
sullen look comes back; she does not know what to make of it.

"I will bring you some books," he says, "and I will ask your sisters to
let you read them. Books that will suit you better than 'Monte Cristo.'"

"Sisters!" she repeats. "_I_ ain't got no sisters. But if you ain't
foolin'----" distrustfully. "You _are_ foolin', ain't you, mister?"

He assures her of his sincerity.

"Well, then, don't you go and bring no books here. 'Cause I wouldn't be
let to have 'em; old Giles would burn 'em up. But I know what you
_could_ do----" with a cunning look.

"Well--what?"

"Do you know Black's Dam, and the old mill down there in the woods?"

"Yes, I know them."

"Then--if you ain't foolin'--fetch 'em there, and leave 'em in the mill.
_I'll_ find them; no one else ever goes there. But I know you won't."

"You will see. You will find one there to-morrow night. What's your
name?"

"Sleaford's Joanna," she says, with a shrill laugh, "or Wild
Joanna--'tain't no odds which. I'm both."

"What is your other name?"

"Got no other name. Got no father, no mother, no friends, no nothin'.
I'm only Sleaford's Joanna."

She goes back to her book, and when, hours after, the _soire_ breaks
up, she is bending over Dumas' extravaganza still. Geoffrey bids her
good-night--the only one of the party who has addressed her the whole
evening.

And that brief conversation is the mustard-seed, so small as to be
hardly visible, from which all the dark record of the future is to grow.
There are many memorable nights in Geoffrey Lamar's life, but none that
stands out more ominously vivid than this.




CHAPTER X.

GEOFFREY LAMAR.


Geoffrey Lamar goes to no more Sleaford _soires_, he has no taste for
that sort of revelry, but he does not forget the odd, elfish child who
wastes midnight oil over the adventures of Dumas' wonderful hero.

He goes next day to Black's Dam, with a volume under his arm, and places
it on a rude seat he finds in the ruined mill. It is a dull, sunless
day, and the evil look of the place depresses him. What a strange,
hideous retreat this child chooses; it is like herself, eery and
frowning. The dark, stagnant pond lies under the gray sky, green and
poisonous, the dull croak of a frog making itself heard now and then.
It looks black and bad; so, too, does the deserted mill, falling dry
and tindery to decay. Heavy woods and rank undergrowth shut it in on
every hand. There is no path, long ago it was overgrown and forsaken,
only a slender line worn by the bare feet of the desolate child. A great
pity for the forlorn, ill-treated little creature fills him.

"Poor little wretch!" he thinks; "all work and no play, ignorance,
brutality, starvation--it is hard lines for her."

He leaves the book and returns to the village. He and Leo are due at the
villa to-day; they are to dine with convalescent Olga. It is the first
time she has left her chamber, and, robed in the daintiest of all her
dainty white robes, she is carried down by papa to where the table is
set under the trees, and where she is received with acclamations by
Frank, and Geoffrey, and Leo. All the long ringlets are gone, she looks
pallid and thin, but very, very pretty. She is the little queen of the
feast, she is petted and spoiled to her heart's content. And Olga likes
to be petted, and ceases to regret the loss of her lovely long hair, and
decides there are worse things in the world than brain fever, after all.

Late that evening, after a hard day's work--for it is wash-day at the
farm-house, and she has had to carry water from early
morning--Sleaford's Joanna steals out by the back way, and darts off to
her castle in the wood.

Some faint hope that the young gentleman who spoke to her last night may
keep his word stirs within her, but it is very faint. Joanna is not used
to people who keep their word, and why should he ever think of her
again? It surprises her when she remembers he noticed her at all.

Frank Livingston has been coming to the house for months, and has never
spoken to her a single word. She has provided herself with a candle in a
bottle, and some matches, in case the book _should_ prove to be there.
And if it does not rain, as it looks very much like doing, she will stay
at the mill all night.

The gray light of the overcast day is dying out when she reaches her
gruesome retreat. But it is not ugly or forbidding to Joanna; the
quietest, the happiest, the most peaceful hours of her life are spent
here. The frogs that croak in the green, slimy waters, croak at her with
the voices of friends; their ugly faces uplifted from the ooze are the
friendliest faces she knows. She has read "Robinson Crusoe" of late, and
wild visions of flying from Sleaford's farmstead, and taking up her
permanent abode here, rise before her ecstatically. To live here all by
herself, never to work, never to be scolded or beaten, that would be
bliss. But it is not practicable, the Sleafords would never let her go
like that--who would fetch water, and carry wood, and wash dishes, and
scrub floors, and make beds, and see to the dinner, and run errands, if
she left? And grapes do not grow in Brightbrook woods, nor wild goats
run about, waiting to be caught and eaten, as in Crusoe's lovely isle.

Still, she has done the best she can; she has brought an armful of clean
straw, a pillow and a quilt or two, a supply of candles and matches, and
spends many a tranquil summer night here, watching the stars shining
down on her, through the broken roof. These nights are the nearest
approach to happiness Sleaford's Joanna knows.

She reaches the mill, enters, and finds a book in red and gilt binding
lying on the bench. Her heart gives a bound--she has a passion for
reading; such a volume as _this_ she has never before beheld. She wipes
her grimy fingers on her frock, and takes it gingerly up. There is still
light enough to read the title, the "Old Curiosity Shop." It is full of
pictures, she gloats over them, the sentences look short, the print is
large and clear.

There seems to be plenty of conversation; as Joanna expresses it, "it
looks open-worky." She hugs the book to her breast, her eyes shine with
delight. Oh, how good of him--that nice, pleasant-spoken young
gentleman, to remember her--_her!_ whom nobody ever remembers; to come
all this way and leave this beautiful book.

A great throb of gratitude fills her, all good is not crushed out of the
child; then a pang swift and sharp follows. If he knew how bad she is,
how she has nearly killed poor little Miss Ventnor, would he have been
so kind? No, she feels sure not; he would shrink from her as from a
toad. She _is_ a toad, a venomous toad, Liz says so--an imp, Jud calls
her--a little devil is Dan's pet name for her--lazy little hussy, Lora
says, and Old Giles' names mostly are too bad to repeat. No, if he knew
what she was like, he never would fetch her any books.

It is dark now; she lights her candle and begins to read. She is not
afraid of being interrupted, no one ever comes to Black's Dam. More than
one wretched suicide has sought its villainous waters, and it is of
evil savor in the nostrils of Brightbrook. It is a weird picture, the
dark, stagnant pond, the dark woods, the dark night sky, the deep and
mysterious stillness, that glimmering light among the ruined timbers of
the old mill, and the strange little creature crouched in a heap,
devouring, with greedy eyes, the story of Little Nell.

Presently the sighing wind rises, falls, stirs the trees, wails
lugubriously through the pines, and then great drops begin to fall and
plash heavily on the roof. She neither hears nor heeds; she is far away
amid the Kentish meadows with Little Nell, held breathless and enchained
by the pathos of the tale.

She has never read anything like this; she laughs with Dick Swiveller,
she identifies herself with the marchioness, she is lost in wonder at
the goodness and wisdom of Nelly. It is very late, and she has read
quite half the book, when a large drop falls directly on the glittering
candle, and it splutters and goes out. It is burned nearly to the end
anyhow, it is useless relighting the fragment. She closes her book with
a profound sigh, and for the first time becomes conscious that it is
raining hard and that a gale is surging through the woods.

Well, it does not matter; her truss of straw, and quilts, are in a dry
corner, but she would as soon go home in the rain as not. But before
going anywhere, she sits for nearly half an hour, her knees clasped in
her arms, her black melancholy eyes staring out at the wet wildness of
the lonesome night.

That story of Little Nell troubles and disturbs her. How different from
Nell is she--how wicked, how miserable! But then no one has ever loved
her, or cared for her, or taught her. No nice old grandfather has ever
doted on _her_; no funny Kit Nubbles has been _her_ friend; no Mrs.
Jarley has protected and been kind to _her_.

She wonders what it is like to be happy, to have father, mother,
friends; a home without cursing, or drinking, or whipping; nice dresses,
and plenty of books to read. It would be easy enough to be good then,
but she--a strange, mournful wonder fills her as she looks back over the
brief years she can remember.

She is bad, no doubt; she is very bad--but what has she done to have
such a hard, hard life? She is only a poor little thing, after all; only
twelve years old. Was she born wicked, she wonders, and different from
other children? In a blind, pathetic sort of way she tries to solve the
riddle, but it baffles her. She gropes in utter darkness of heart and
soul. It would be pleasant to be good, she thinks, but it cannot be; no
one could be good at Sleaford's. And if she was born a little imp, as
they tell her, it is of no use trying. She can no more be like Little
Nell than she can be like Miss Olga Ventnor, or Miss Leo Abbott, with
their floating, perfumed hair and silk dresses, and fair faces, and
pretty, glittering trinkets. No, and she will not try; and so, with
another great hopeless sigh, Sleaford's Joanna gives up the puzzle and
goes to bed.

Three days after this it occurs to Geoffrey Lamar to take a second look
at the odd child at Sleaford's. So he mounts his horse, and rides slowly
into the woodland path that leads to the Red Farm. It is a mystery to
him, as it has been to others, why Mr. Abbott lets this shiftless lot
run riot in the best farm he owns, but it is a mystery he cannot fathom,
unless Frank Livingston's unpleasant hints have some foundation.

In his secret heart he neither likes nor respects his step-father; he
distrusts him, he shares his mother's unspoken shrinking and aversion.
All the man's tastes, and instincts, and ways are low. Geoffrey is a
gentleman, lad as he is, and the son of a gentleman; his feelings are by
nature refined; he hates coarseness, vulgarity, pride of wealth; his
intellect is beyond his years, and his reason tells him Frank's hints
are more than likely to be true. Mr. Abbott is good to him, is proud of
him, is fond of him, is lavishly generous to him, and the boy fights
with his feelings and keeps them down. He ought to be grateful, and he
is, but despite all that Mr. Abbott can come not one whit nearer to the
son than to the mother.

As he rides along, a sudden joyous caroling overhead makes him pause and
look up. Twit, twit, twit--twee-e-e-e! A whole shower of silvery notes,
but the bird is nowhere to be seen. Then the warble changes; a blackbird
whistles, a bobolink calls, it is the chatter of a squirrel, the
to-whit-to-whoo of an owl, the harsh croak of a frog, the shrill chirp
of a cricket, then rapidly the clear, shrill song of a lark.

Geoffrey sits dumbfounded. Has a mocking-bird been let loose in
Brightbrook woods? Suddenly a wild peal of laughter greets him, there is
a rustle of boughs, and from a tree under which he stands, a thin,
elfish face looks down.

"It's only me, mister, mocking the birds. I often do it. I can whistle,
too. Listen!" The sweetest, shrillest whistle he has ever heard takes
up the air "Sweet Home," and performs it as he could not do to save his
life. "There!" says the voice. "I'll sing for you now, if you like.
Didn't know I could sing, did you? All the Sleafords sing, law bless
you! but I only do when I feel like it. Did you ever hear 'Lanigan's
Ball?'"

A sweet, strong voice begins that classical ditty, and the woods give
back the melodious echo. Geoffrey Lamar listens in silent amaze. Why,
the elf is a prodigy!--a musical prodigy! Where, in that small, starved
body has she room for a voice like that?

She finishes at last, and whistles a bar or two of the air by way of
closing symphony.

"That was an awful nice book you lent me," she goes on. "I've read it
through twice. I haven't soiled it a mite, and it's down at the mill.
I--I'm lots obliged to you, you know. Didn't think you'd ever fetch it."

She descends a branch or two from her lofty roost, and brings herself to
a level with the rider.

"It _is_ Sleaford's Joanna!" says Geoffrey, his breath nearly taken
away. "Why, you must be a witch. Who taught you to sing and whistle, and
twitter like a bird, in this fashion?"

"Nobody taught me--taught myself. It's jest as easy as nothin' at all."

"Can you sing anything but 'Lanigan's Ball?'"

Joanna nods.

"Know a hymn. Lora heard your mar sing it at her meetin'. Goes like
this."

The silvery childish treble uplifts and peals out with a force that
fairly amazes him. The hymn, from those lips, amazes him still more. It
is "Rock of Ages."

    "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
    Let me hide myself in Thee!"

How strangely from those impish lips sound the grand, strong words!

    "Nothing in my hand I bring,
    Simply to Thy cross I cling;
    Naked, come to Thee for dress,
    Helpless, look to Thee for grace;
    Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
    Let me hide myself in Thee!"

"Upon my word, you are a marvel!" Geoffrey says, catching his bated
breath. "And so you like the book? Would you like another?"

"Oh!" ejaculated Joanna, rapturously; "wouldn't I just!"

"Well, you shall. I will leave it this evening at the mill. Who taught
you to read? Have you ever been at school?"

"School!" Joanna echoes, scornfully; "I guess not. Catch Old Giles
sending me to school. Not but that I'd like to go, mind you. No, Jud
teaches me. He ain't so bad, Jud ain't--don't curse nor hit me like the
rest. Teached me some writin', too, but not much."

"And you would like to learn more?"

"You bet! But 'tain't no use. Old Giles would beat me to death if I
spoke of such a thing."

"Do you mean to say he really beats and swears at you?"

Joanna laughs shrilly.

"Oh, no, not at all! _He_ wouldn't hurt nobody! Look here, mister!"

She uncovers her shoulders by a dexterous hitch, and shows him long
black and blue welts purpling the flesh.

"Did that last night; was drunk, you know. Beat me till I couldn't
stir."

"What had you done?" Geoffrey asks, sick at heart.

"Nothin' 'tall. Didn't fetch the boot-jack quick enough. Got me into a
corner where I couldn't wriggle away, and lashed me till Jud took the
whip out of his hand. Says he'll beat my soul out next time. May if he
likes. _I_ don't care."

She begins to whistle defiantly, but tears of pain and wrath well up in
spite of her, and she winks them angrily away.

"Poor little soul!" the lad says, strongly touched. And at the pitying
words all her bravado breaks down, and she suddenly covers her face, and
sobs wildly:

"I wish I was dead--I do! I wish I was dead and buried!"

"Hush," he says, distressed, "that is wicked. Don't cry; I am going to
try and do something for you. I am going to help you if I can. I am sure
you would be a good girl if you had a chance. It is a shame--a shame!
They use you worse than a dog!"

"Oh, dear! oh, dear! oh, dear!" the poor little wretch sobs. It is the
first time in her life the flood-gates have thus been opened. She cries
wildly now, as she does all things, as if her very heart were bursting.
It is the first time anyone has ever been sorry for her, and the
sympathy goes near to break her heart.

"Do not cry," he says. "Look here, Joanna, I will leave the book for you
to-night, and I will come to see you again in--let me see--two days.
Now, good-by, and do not get whipped, if you can, till I come back."

With which the youthful knight-errant of tattered damsels in distress
turns his horse's head, and rides slowly and thoughtfully homeward,
revolving in his mind a decidedly bold project, which, if carried into
effect, bids fairs to alter the whole future life of Sleaford's Joanna.




CHAPTER XI.

IN WHICH MR. ABBOTT ASSERTS HIMSELF.


The light of the August sunset lies low over Abbott Wood, as young
Geoffrey Lamar rides slowly up the shaded avenue, still lost in thought.
And yet not so deeply absorbed but that the glowing beauty of green
glade, and sunny slope, scented rose-thicket, waving depths of fern and
bracken, ruby lines of light slanting through brown boles of trees,
strike him with a keen sense of delight. It is _his_, all this fair
domain, this noble inheritance; no birthright, but the generous gift
promised him often by the master of Abbott Wood. And that sense of
proprietorship accents vividly his pleasure in its green loveliness, as
he rides up under those tall, arching elms. He is not an embryo artist,
as is Frank Livingston. He does not rant of light and shade, of breadth
and perspective, of tone and color, and backgrounds and chien-oscuro,
or the rest of the art-jargon in which his flighty friend excels, but he
loves every tree, and stone, and coppice, and flower, and bird about the
place, and means, please Heaven, it shall be his home, wander whither he
may, through life.

Mr. Abbott is in the stables, smoking and lecturing the grooms, when
Geoffrey resigns his horse to the boy who caters to him. He nods
affectionately to his step-son. It has been said he is fond and proud of
him--proud, after an absurd fashion, that the lad is a gentleman by
birth and breeding, while resenting at the same time the grave reserve
the youth maintains between them. But Geoffrey is in a grateful and
gentle mood at this moment; moreover, he is in the character of a
suppliant, and returns his step-father's greeting with cordiality.

"I've been deucedly put out just now, Geoff, my boy," Mr. Abbott says,
quitting the stables with him; "not so much with these fellows, though
they _are_ a set of lazy dogs, who shirk work whenever they can. But I
was down at Cooper's this afternoon, and the way that place is going to
wreck and ruin under that shif'less lot is enough to turn a man's hair
gray. I gave old Job a bit of my mind, let me tell you, and out they go
next quarter day, by the Lord Harry! Mind you, Geoff, when you're master
here, keep no tenants on your land like the Coopers. Out with 'em neck
and crop!"

"Cooper is not a model farmer," says Geoffrey, coolly, "but in
comparison with another of your tenants, his place is a paradise. I mean
Sleaford's--the Red Farm."

A dark frown bends Mr. Abbott's brows. He takes out his cigar and looks
at the boy.

"Sleaford's!" he growls. "What do _you_ know of Sleaford's? What takes
you there?"

"Frank Livingston took me the other evening. They had a dance of some
sort. But I have passed the place often, and can see. Besides, every one
is talking of it, and wondering you do not send them adrift."

"Every one be--every one had better mind his own business! You too," Mr.
Abbott would like to add, but he knows the state of haughty surprise
Geoffrey's face can assume when it likes, and does not care to provoke
it. "I don't explain to all Brightbrook--hang 'em--my reasons, but I
don't mind to you. Black Giles Sleaford was a--well, acquaintance of
mine out in San Francisco, some fourteen years ago, and he did me--well,
a sort of service, in those days. He's a worthless devil, I allow, but
what's a man to do? Turn his back on an old fri--acquaintance; and leave
him to starve, when he's rolling in riches himself? It's the way of the
world, I know; but, by Jupiter, it ain't John Abbott's way. So he's at
the Red Farm, and there I mean to let him stay. It ain't the same case
as the Coopers, at all. But look here, Geoffrey, boy, don't you go
there. I don't like it. I don't ask many favors; just grant me this one.
They're low, dear boy, and it ain't no place for a young gentleman born
and bred, like you. Livingston may go if he likes; he's a
good-for-nothing rattle-pate at best, but you're not of that sort. Don't
you go to Sleaford's, Geoff, any more--to please the old man!"

He lays his hand, in his earnestness, on the lad's shoulder, and looks
with troubled eyes down into his face. Geoffrey shrugs his
shoulders--the old, instinctive feeling of shrinking from his
step-father never more strongly upon him.

"I am not likely to go there as Frank does," he answers, carelessly; "he
likes that sort of thing--I do not. But once or twice more I believe I
must. I have a little project on hand connected with one of that family
which will take me there again--at least as often as that."

Mr. Abbott's gaze grows more and more perturbed.

"One of that family!" he repeats. "You don't mind my asking which one,
do you, Geoff? It ain't----" he hesitates; bully, braggart, bold man
that he is, he has a strong respect for this boy. "It ain't--excuse
me--one of the girls?"

He fears to meet that icy stare he knows so well from both mother and
son, and resents so bitterly. But to his surprise Geoffrey only laughs.

"Exactly, sir, one of the girls--the youngest. I will not tell you what
it is just now. You will think it absurd, I dare say. I will speak to my
mother first, and she will inform you. There! I see her on the terrace.
Excuse me, sir, she is beckoning."

He darts away, his face lighting. As a sculptor may regard some peerless
marble goddess, almost as a good Catholic may reverence some fair, sweet
saint, so Geoffrey Lamar looks upon his mother. To him she is liege
lady; to him she stands alone among women for beauty, culture, grace,
goodness. Her very pride makes a halo around her in his love-blind eyes.

John Abbott does not attempt to go after him. Neither mother nor son
need him or desire him; he would be but a barrier to their confidence,
a blot on the landscape. He feels it now, as he has felt it a thousand
times, with silent, impotent wrath, but his anger is mingled just at
present with another feeling--fear.

"His mother!" he says, vacantly; "he is going to tell his mother! One of
the Sleaford girls--the youngest. I--I don't like the look of this."

Mrs. Abbott stands on the terrace, the crimson western light falling
full upon her, and smiles as her son draws near. She is a beautiful
woman, tall, slender, olive-skinned, with dark, solemn, Southern eyes,
and languid, high-bred grace in every slow movement. She is like a
picture as she stands here--like a Titian or a Murillo stepped out of
its frame--in her trailing dress of violet silk, the delicate laces, the
cluster diamond at her throat, the guelder-rose in her hair. She looks
as a queen might--as a queen should--regal, royal, superb.

"I hope you are in very good humor, mother," is Geoffrey's greeting,
plunging into business at once; "because I have come to ask a favor--a
very great favor, you may think."

Mrs. Abbott's smile, faint but very sweet, answers. Her eyes rest on her
boy lovingly, lingeringly--he is very, very dear to her. She loves her
little Leo, too; but there is this difference--she loves Geoffrey for
his father's sake as well as his own.

"Do I ever refuse you anything, I wonder?" she says, slightly amused.
"You are a tyrant, Geoff, and abuse your power. It is one of my
failings, but I cannot say no."

"But I am uncommonly afraid you will this time. It is no trifle. It
will be a responsibility, and you may think it derogatory besides."

The smile fades from her face.

"_You_ could never ask me to do anything you thought that," she quietly
says.

"Nor do I--you may. It will be a bore, I am sure. The only thing to be
said in its favor is, that you will be doing good."

"Doing good can never be derogatory. Go on, Geoffrey, out with this
wonderful request. What a philanthropist, by-the-bye, you are getting to
be."

The proud, smiling look returns--she takes his arm, and they saunter
slowly up and down the terrace.

"Don't call names, madre mio," laughs Geoffrey. "Well--here goes! But
thereby hangs a tale, to which you must listen by way of prologue or
argument. The favor come after. Lend me thine ears then--I will a tale
unfold."

And then--not without dramatic power and pathos--he tells the story of
Sleaford's Joanna.

"She is treated as you would not see a dog in your house treated,
mother; she is in a very hot-bed of ignorance, and vulgarity and vice.
And I am sure she is not naturally bad. She has a love for reading which
speaks well for her, and her voice--ah! well, you will have to hear that
before you can believe it. This is the story, mother--the favor is, will
you stretch out your hand--this beautiful hand," the young knight
exclaims, kissing it, "and save that wretched child!"

"My Geoff!" the lady answers, a tremor in her voice, "how?"

"Send for her here--make Miss Rice give her lessons in English and
singing, lift her out of the slough of darkness in which she is lost
now. Save her body and soul! You can, mother."

There is emotion in the lad's voice, in his earnest face, in his deep,
glowing gray eyes. His mother stops in her walk, tears on her dark
lashes, both hands on his shoulders.

"My boy! my boy! but it is like you. Oh! I thank the good God for giving
me such a son. Yes, what I can do, I will. It is an awful
responsibility, an awful thought, that the life, the soul of any human
creature may be in our hands. If I can help her, save her, as you say, I
am ready. I say nothing in your praise. Heaven has given you a great
heart, my Geoffrey--your father's noble soul. To lift the lost, to save
the unfortunate, what can be nobler? Yes, I will do it. Send her here
when you will."

The outburst is over--she pauses. She seldom gives way to her feelings
like this. There is silence for a little; both descend to the lower
earth again.

"But she cannot associate with Leo," Mrs. Abbott says, in her usual
manner, "such a child as that!"

"Certainly not. What I thought was, that after Miss Rice had finished
Leo's lessons for the day, she should dismiss her, and take in hand
Joanna. Her name is Joanna. Leo always finishes by three--Joanna could
come from three to six. Of course, Miss Rice will be willing, and glad
of the extra salary."

"Of course. These people will make no objection to the little girl's
coming, will they? They must be very dreadful from what you say. I
wonder that Mr. Abbott, particular as he is, allows them on his land."

"Others wonder too," Geoffrey responds, dryly. "The fact remains--he
does. I really do not know whether they will object or not. I spoke to
no one, of course, until I had spoken to you. If they refuse, why, we
can do no more. I will ride over and see to-morrow. Meantime, I suppose
it will be necessary to mention it to Mr. Abbott."

"I suppose so"--the smooth brow of the lady contracts a little--she does
not like mentioning things to Mr. Abbott--"but it cannot matter to him."

"No, but still he likes----"

"Yes, yes, it shall be done. I see him yonder, and will speak to him at
once, if you like."

"Thank you, mother."

She approaches her husband. She walks with the slow, swaying grace of a
Southern woman, the lights and shadows from sunshine and trees flecking
the violet sheen of her dress. Her son watches her, so does her husband,
both with eyes that say, "Is she not the fairest of all the fair women
on earth?"

Mr. Abbott removes his cigar, and stands with a certain deference of
manner, as his wife draws near. If her dark head is lifted a trifle
higher than usual, it is instinctive with her when about to ask what
sounds to her like a favor. If the voice in which she speaks has a
prouder inflection than customary, it is unconsciously and for the same
reason. In briefest words she tells the story. Geoffrey has taken a
fancy to help a poor little village child--may she come here and receive
lessons from Miss Rice, when Miss Rice has finished every day with
Leonora?

It is not often Mrs. Abbott voluntarily seeks her husband, or asks him
for favors. His coarse face quite lights up into gladness now.

"Certainly, certainly, certainly!" he says, "anything you and Geoff
wish. Half a dozen village girls if you like, my--my dear. The lad's the
best lad alive--sensible, steady, good-natured. I'm fond of him, that I
am, Mrs. Abbott."

"Thanks," Mrs. Abbott says, bending her stately head. She turns to go,
has gone half a dozen steps, when her husband's voice reaches her.

"Nora."

She turns slowly. He seldom calls her by her name; he stands, looking
rather sheepishly now at his cigar.

"You've never been over to Laurel Hill--the new place I bought last
week. It's an uncommon pretty spot--eight miles t'other side of
Brightbrook. Suppose you let me drive you there to-morrow?"

If he were a suppliant lover he could hardly look more humble, more
anxious. The line between his wife's straight, dark brows deepens.

"To-morrow I dine with Colonel and Mrs. Ventnor."

"Well, next day then."

"Next day I am going up to New York to do some very necessary shopping."

"Well, the day after. Oh! hang it, Nora, say yes! You never go anywhere
with me now, and I don't so often ask you, neither."

"Certainly I will go," she says, but she says it so coldly, so
distantly, that the man sets his teeth. "I did not know you thought it a
matter of any moment. I will go the day after to-morrow, or whenever you
wish."

"I don't wish," he returns, shortly. "Don't trouble yourself, Mrs.
Abbott, I don't wish for anything. We'll never mind Laurel Hill!"

He resumes his cigar, turns his back upon her, thrusts his hands in his
pockets, and strides away. But half an hour after, as he still stalks
sulkily up and down, a thought strikes him, a most unpleasant thought.
It turns him hot all over.

"By the Lord!" he cries, taking out his cigar, aghast, "I shouldn't
wonder but what it _is!_"

A great bell, up in one of the windy, make-believe Gothic turrets,
clangs out; it is the dinner-bell of Abbott Wood. The master is not
dressed, a faint odor as of stables hangs about him, but he is in no
mood to conciliate his stiff wife, and make a dinner toilet. He is
chafed, rubbed over so much the wrong way, and it affords him a grim
sort of pleasure to set her at defiance, and outrage her sense of sight
and smell, by appearing just as he is. He marches into the dining-room,
grisly, forbidding, ireful. It is a beautiful and spacious room--the
dinner service is all in the way of plate, napery, crystal, china, that
money can do to make that most ungraceful necessity--eating--graceful.
Flowers are there in profusion, a golden after-glow fills the apartment,
the viands are as nearly perfect as possible, the mistress of the
mansion a fair and gracious lady, Geoffrey the most polished of youthful
Paladins, little Leo like an opera fairy in pink silk, but the master,
stern and unsmiling as the Death's Head of the Egyptian banquets, takes
his place, and begins his soup in unsocial silence and glumness. At last
he looks up.

"I didn't ask the name of the little beggar you propose to bring here,"
he says to Geoffrey. "Who is she?"

The youth glances at him in surprise. These sudden changes of
temperature are not uncommon in Mr. Abbott's moral thermometer, but they
are always disconcerting.

"Her name is Sleaford's Joanna--or more properly, I suppose, Joanna
Sleaford."

Mr. Abbott's spoon drops with a clash in his plate. As a thunder-cloud
blackens the face of the sky, so a swarthy frown darkens the face of the
man.

"I thought so," he says. "It's well I made sure in time. I withdraw my
consent, madam. No brat of Sleaford's ever sets foot in this house!"

"Sir!" Geoffrey cries, hotly.

It is the tone, the look, insolent beyond measure, addressed to his
mother, that stings him. For Mrs. Abbott, she does not say a word. She
looks once at the man before her, then back at her plate.

"Ah! sit down, my lad--there is nothing for you to get your mettle up
about. Only Sleaford's Joanna won't come here. Leo is _my_
daughter--I'll know who she associates with. And, by heavens! it sha'n't
be with a cub out of Giles Sleaford's den!"

The veins in his forehead stand out purple--he brings his clenched fist
down on the table until the glass rings.

Geoffrey's face flushes crimson, he looks at his mother, prepared to
resent this violence. She is a shade paler than usual, a little curl of
scorn and disgust dilates the delicate nostrils--otherwise she is
perfectly calm.

"Do not excite yourself, Mr. Abbott," she says, in slow, iced tones,
"there is really no need. Resume your dinner, Geoffrey. Of course it
shall be quite as Mr. Abbott wishes."

And then silence falls--such silence! Mrs. Abbott seems slowly to
petrify as she sits. Geoffrey's face is rigid with wrath. Mr. Abbott
makes short work of _his_ dinner, and departs without a word. Only
little Leo, of the quartet, dines at all.

But one sentence, at rising, passes between the mother and son.

"You will tell this poor child she cannot come," Mrs. Abbott says, and
Geoffrey nods.

But an obstinate look comes about his mouth; he is not easily baffled;
those resolute lips, that curved chin, were not given him for nothing.
Joanna may not come here, but he will go instead to Miss Rice, and
arrange with her to give the girl lessons at her own rooms. His
pocket-money is abundant; he will pay for her himself. She _shall_ be
taught, that is as fixed as fate, if he has to buy Sleaford's consent
with his last penny. Contradiction has the effect on young Lamar it has
on all determined people--it only redoubles his determination.

It rains the next day, a steady, drizzling, persistent rain. But he
cares very little for a wet jacket; sleeping on his resolution only
makes him more resolute. He mounts his "dapple gray" and rides through
the dripping woods to Sleaford's. No mocking-bird is perched among the
branches to-day, to waylay him with its delusive melody. He reaches the
house, puts his horse under cover, and enters. Only two of the family
are to be seen--Joanna, scrubbing a floor that very much needs
scrubbing, and Giles himself, smoking, in the corner, a meditative pipe.
He greets his visitor with a surprised nod, and watches him curiously.
For Joanna--it is evidently one of her dark days; her small face looks
cross and cantankerous, she curtly returns his salutation, she scrubs
the boards with ill-tempered vehemence. The rain beats against the
panes, the house and everything about it looks dismal and forlorn.

"Well, Joanna," Geoffrey says, in an undertone, "I promised to come, and
I am here. But my project has failed for the present. I intended you to
come to Abbott Wood every day for lessons, but it seems it cannot be. We
must hit on some other plan. You would not mind going up the village
every afternoon, would you?"

Before Joanna can reply, Sleaford takes his pipe from his mouth, and
breaks in. He has caught the words, low as they are spoken.

"What's that?" he demands, gruffly.

"I meant to tell you," Geoffrey courteously returns, "and ask your
consent. Of course, all this is subject to your control. Your little
girl is clever, I think, and has a fine voice. I intended to have her
taught, and that voice cultivated--always with your permission. I
thought at first of getting her to come every day to our house, but----"

"Well, but what?"

"It cannot be, it seems. Still, I can manage it. She can go to
Brightbrook and take her lessons there instead."

"Stop a bit," says Giles Sleaford, resuming his pipe; "why can't she go
to Abbott Wood?"

"Well," Geoffrey replies, with that frank regard for simple truth that
is characteristic of him, "the fact is, Mr. Abbott objects. Not that it
matters at all--the other way will do just as well."

"Stop a bit!" repeats Mr. Sleaford; "did you put it to your guv'ner, 'I
want to learn a little girl,' says you, 'that don't know nothin' but
cussin' and lowness, and make a lady out o' her!' Did you put it like
that?"

"Something like that--yes."

"Namin' no names at fust?"

"Exactly."

"And what did he say _then?_"

"Well, he said yes," answers Geoffrey, a little embarrassed, but still
adhering to truth.

"And when he found who it was he wouldn't. 'Give her a name,' ses he.
'Sleaford's Joanna,' ses you. 'I'm d--d if you do!' ses he, 'none o'
that lot comes here!' That was it, wasn't it?"

"Well, more or less," Geoffrey returns, laughing in spite of himself.
"You must be a wizard, I think, Mr. Sleaford. But it really does not
matter, you know; the other way----"

"Stop a bit!" reiterates Giles Sleaford. "Was it your intentions as how
your mar should look arter Joanner when she went up to the big house,
and kind o' help to eddicate her and that?"

"It was, but as I say----"

"Stop a bit! hold on--it ain't the same no way, sendin' her to the
village to a teacher woman. The gal shall go to your guv'ner's house or
she shan't go at all. Now you stop a bit, don't do nothin' afore
to-morrow, and maybe--I name no names, mind you!--and maybe she can be
let to go to your mar."

With which Mr. Sleaford relapses into ruminative silence and slowly
refills his pipe, which has gone out. There is a grim sort of grin on
his forbidding face as he does so, and he swallows a chuckle or two as
he watches the heir of Abbott Wood rise and go away.

"So Red Jack won't, won't he?" he says, half aloud, with one of these
suppressed chuckles; "because she's a Sleaford! Ah! well, we will see."




CHAPTER XII.

"NOBODY'S CHILD."


Mr. Abbott is sitting alone in the library at Abbott Wood. For the very
great personage he is in some respects, his position is an undignified
one. He has tilted back the carved and cushioned chair in which his
bulky body reposes, elevated his boots on the low black marble mantel,
and is rapidly filling the room with tobacco smoke. A frown still rests
on his brow; he has not forgiven his wife--he is not disposed to forgive
her; it is only one more added to the lengthy list of affronts she has
put upon him.

"And if ever I get a chance," he mutters, as he smokes, "I'll pay you
back with interest, my high and mighty lady!"

Little Leo has just left him. _She_ is his at any rate; he will have her
with him when he chooses, in the very teeth of her scornful mother. The
child is sufficiently fond of him; he is foolishly indulgent to her,
after the manner of his kind; but now she, too, has quitted him. Nine
has struck, and nurse has come and borne her off. At present he is
solacing himself with a pipe, the evening paper, and some crusty port,
until it shall be time to go to bed.

"A wet night, by jingo!" he says, as in the pauses of rattling the paper
he hears the dash of the rain against the glass, and the sough of the
wind in the trees.

The room in which he sits is a grand one--a hundred years old to look
at, at least: everything in it, about it, is richly hued, deeply tinted,
warmly toned. There is an oriel window, where sunset lights fall through
on a dark, polished oaken floor in orange, and ruby, and amethyst dyes.
A soft, rose-red carpet covers the center of the floor; a tiger-skin rug
is stretched in front of the shining grate. Mellow-brown panels are
everywhere where books are not. Books are many; hundreds of volumes in
costly bindings--purple, crimson, white and gold--not a "dummy" among
them all. There are bronzes, and a few dark paintings of the literary
lights of the world, quaint old furniture, all carved with arabesques
and griffin's-heads, and upholstered in bright crimson cloth. Here, too,
as in nearly every room of the house, is burned in the panes the
escutcheon of his Southern wife. It looks a very temple of culture and
learning, and, with the usual fine irony of fate, John Abbott is its
high priest. Not one, of all these hundreds of costly volumes, does his
stumpy brown fingers ever open; his literature is confined to the New
York and Brightbrook daily papers, and all the sporting journals he can
buy.

As he sits and puffs his clouds of smoke, and swallows his wine, there
is a tap at the door, and a man-servant enters.

"Well," inquires Mr. Abbott, "what now?"

"There is a man in the hall, sir, to see you particular. He says his
name is Sleaford."

The servant looks at him with covert cunning as he makes the
announcement. In a place like Brightbrook there can be no such thing as
a secret. The servants of Abbott Wood have heard of the Sleafords, but
this is the first time one of that celebrated family has presented
himself at the manor. Mr. Abbott drops his paper, and slowly rises from
his chair, a gray pallor overspreading the peony hue of his face.

"Sleaford!" he repeats, blankly; "did you say Sleaford?"

"Sleaford, sir--Giles Sleaford. He is waiting in the vestibule, dripping
wet. Told him I didn't know you were at home, sir, but would see. _Are_
you at home, sir?"

"Show him in, you fool, and be quick!"

The man retreats. Mr. Abbott resumes his chair, breathing quickly, that
grayish shade still on his face, and tries to resume his usual bluff,
blustering manner as well, but in vain. He is frightened--braggart,
boaster that he is; his hand shakes--he is forced to fling aside his
paper with an oath.

"Sleaford!" he thinks; "this time of night--and such a night! Good
G----! what is he after now?"

The door reopens, and, dripping like a huge water-dog, his hat on his
head, his hands in his pockets, Giles Sleaford stalks into the room.
"Oh, you _are_ to home!" he says, with a sneer; "the flunkey said as how
he didn't know. It ain't the kind o' night heavy swells like John
Abbott, Esquire, of Abbott Wood, would be like to go out promenadin'.
It's as black as a wolf's mouth, and comin' down like blazes."

"Sit down, Sleaford," says Mr. Abbott, in a tone of marked civility. He
sends one of the carved and cushioned chairs whirling on its castors
toward him, but Mr. Sleaford only glances at it with profound contempt.
"It is, as you say, the deuce and all of a night to be out in. But now
that you _are_ here, if there is anything I can do for you----"

"Ah! if there is!" returns Mr. Sleaford, still sardonic; "as if there
was anything a rich gent like Mr. Abbott _couldn't_ do for a poor bloke
like me. As if I would tramp it through mud and water a good three mile
for the pleasure of lookin' at your jimcracks, and axin' arter your
'elth. Yes, there _is_ somethin' you can do for me, and what's more,
you've got to do it, or I'll know the reason why."

The sneer changes to a menace. Mr. Abbott rises with precipitation,
opens the door quickly, and looks down the long, lighted passage. There
are no eavesdroppers. He closes the door, locks it, and faces his man.
The danger is here, and he does not lack pluck to meet it.

"What do you want?" he demands; "it was part of our bargain that you
were never to come here. Why are you here? I'm not a man to be trifled
with--you ought to know that before to-night."

"There ain't much about you, Jack Abbott, that I don't know," Sleaford
retorts, coolly. "Don't take on none o' your rich-man airs with me. This
is a snug crib--all this here pooty furniture and books cost a few
dollars, I reckon. You wouldn't like to swop 'em for a cell in Sing
Sing, and a guv'ment striped suit? What am I here for? I'm here to find
out why one o' my kids ain't to come to your wife to get a eddication,
if that there young sport, your step-son, says so?"

The two men look each other straight in the eyes--fierce, dogged
determination in Sleaford's, malignant, baffled fury in Abbott's.

"So! this is what you want, Black Giles?"

"This is what I want, Jack Abbott. And what I'll have, by the Eternal!
Mind you, I don't care a cuss about eddication, nor whether the gal ever
knows B from a cow's horn, but the young gent wants it, and you were
willin' till you found out who she was, and then you wouldn't. Now, I'll
stand none o' that. My gal's comin' up here to be eddicated by your
wife," says Mr. Sleaford, beating out his proposition with the finger of
one hand on the palm of the other, "which is a lady born and bred, and
by your step-son, which he's what all the gold that ever panned out in
the diggins can't make _you_--a gentleman. You forbid it yes'day--you'll
take that back to-morrow, and whenever the young swell says the word,
Joanner's comin' up here for that there eddication!"

All this Mr. Sleaford says, slowly and impressively--by no means in a
passion. His hat is still on his head--politeness with Black Giles is
not a matter of hat. And he fixes Mr. Abbott with his "glittering eye,"
while he thus dogmatically lays down the law. Mr. Abbott, too, has
cooled. Indeed, for two extremely choleric gentlemen, their manner has
quite the repose that marks the caste of Vere de Vere. The master of the
mansion takes a turn or two up and down the slippery floor before he
replies. The tenant of the Red Farm eyes him with stolid malignity.

"I wish you wouldn't insist on this, Giles," he says, in a troubled
tone, at last. "I have a reason for it. Come! I'll buy you off. I'll
give you----"

"No, you won't. I ain't to be bought off. She's got to come. But I'm out
o' cash. I want three hundred dollars."

John Abbott's eyes flash, but still he holds himself in hand.

"You are joking! Only last week I gave you----"

"Never mind last week, that's gone with last year's snow. It's no good
palaverin'--you know what I want. All your money wouldn't buy me off.
She's got to come."

Again silence--again broken by Mr. Abbott.

"How old is this confounded girl?" he demands, and mentally consigns her
to perdition. "Your girls ought to be all grown up, Sleaford."

"Ought they. Well, they ain't. She's twelve, just."

"Twelve! What nonsense! Why, your wife's been dead these sixteen years."

"Ah!" says Giles Sleaford.

It is a brief interjection, but the tone, the glare that goes with it
brings back the blood in a purple glow to the other man's face.

"We won't talk about _that_," says Sleaford between his teeth, "nor what
followed. 'Cause why? I might forget you was the richest, respectablest
gent hereabouts, and fly at your throat, and choke the black heart out
o' you. Gimme that money and let me git! The blackest night that ever
blowed is better than a pallis with you in it."

With a cowed look, Mr. Abbott goes to a desk, counts over a roll of
bills, and hands it to his tenant.

"Sleaford," he says, almost in a supplicating tone, "I wish you would go
away from here. People are talking. The Red Farm is going to the dogs.
It's not that I care for that. I don't care for that, but--but I don't
want people to talk. I've been a good friend to you, Giles----"

The wild-beast glare that looks at him out of Giles Sleaford's eyes
makes him pause.

"About money, I mean," he resumes hurriedly. "I'm not stingy, no man
ever called me that. Name your price and go. Back to San Francisco: you
can have a good time there; and let by-gones be by-gones. I'll come down
handsome, by Jove, I will."

Giles Sleaford pockets the money, and looks at him with wolfish eyes.

"I'm a poor devil," he says, "but if I was poorer, if I was a dog in a
ditch, I wouldn't take half your millions and leave you. I had work
enough to find you, Lord knows! But I _have_ found you, and while you
and me's above ground we'll never part."

He turns with the words and leaves the library. No more is said, no
good-night is exchanged. Mr. Abbott in person sees his visitor to the
door, and lets him out. The darkness is profound, a great gust of wind
and rain beats in their faces, but Giles Sleaford plunges into the black
gulf and tramps doggedly out of sight.

       *       *       *       *       *

Next day, as Geoffrey Lamar is leaving the house after breakfast, on
purpose to ride to the village and see Miss Rice, the teacher, his
step-father approaches, in a shuffling way, and lays his hand on his
shoulder.

"If I said anything t'other day at dinner," he says, gruffly, but
apologetically, "I want you to overlook it, dear boy. I was put out, and
I showed it. Let that little girl come whenever you like."

Geoffrey glances at him, rather haughtily. It is one of his failings
that he is slow to forgive.

"It is a matter of no consequence whether she ever comes here or not. I
am perfectly satisfied to let it drop."

"No, you ain't, dear boy--you know you ain't. You want her to come, and
so does your mother. I'm sorry--I can't say no more. Fetch her here and
forget my words."

"Very well, sir," Geoffrey returns in his grand manner--his head thrown
back, his mouth somewhat stern. It is a very natural manner with the
lad, and is exceedingly effective with most people. So it is to
Sleaford's he rides, instead of to the village, and the result is, that,
dressed in her holiday best, Sleaford's Joanna presents herself on
Monday afternoon at Abbott Wood to begin her education.

Mrs. Abbott looks at the wild creature in wonder and pity. Out in the
woods there is a certain free, lithe grace about the girl--in this grand
room, before this grand lady, she stands shifting from one foot to the
other, downcast of face, awkward of manner, shy, silent, uncouth. Even
the attempts at civilization, the shoes and stockings, the smoothed
hair, the washed and shining face, embarrass her by their painful
novelty. Miss Rice is there, a little, brisk, old body, with round,
bird-like eyes, and the general air of a lively robin, in her brown
stuff dress.

"My son tells me you can sing," Mrs. Abbott says in her slow, sweet
way. "Will you sing something for us that we may judge?"

As well ask her to fly! Joanna stands mute, a desperate feeling creeping
over her to make a dash for the door, and fly forever to Black's Dam.

"You cannot?" with a smile. "Ah! well, it is natural. Miss Rice will
play something for you instead, and I will leave you to get acquainted."

So Mrs. Abbott, with fine tact, goes, and Joanna draws a free breath for
the first time. So much beauty, and condescension, and silk dress, have
overwhelmed her. Miss Rice is insignificant--she never overwhelmed any
one in her life. She goes to the piano, and plays what she thinks Joanna
will like, a sparkling waltz, and a gay polka.

Joanna _does_ like it, and listens with rapture.

"Now tell me some of your songs, and I will play the accompaniment,"
says Miss Rice.

Joanna goes over half a dozen. "Old Dog Tray," "Wait for the Wagon,"
"Sally, Come Up." Miss Rice knows none of them.

"Here is 'Nobody's Child.' Can you sing that?" she asks.

As it chances, Joanna can, and does. All her embarrassment is gone with
Mrs. Abbott. Her strong young voice takes up the air, as Miss Rice
softly strikes the chords, and peals out full and clear. There is a
mournful appropriateness in every word.

    "Out in the dreary and pitiless street,
    With my torn old shoes, and my bare cold feet,
    All day I have wandered to and fro,
    Hungry and shivering, nowhere to go.
    The night's coming down in darkness and dread,
    And the cold sleet is beating upon my poor head.
    Ah! why does the wind rush about me so wild?
    Is it because I am Nobody's Child?"

Miss Rice listens, surprised and delighted. And Mrs. Abbott, just
outside the open window, listens too, and mentally decides that Geoffrey
was right. This girl is worth saving, if only for sake of that charming
voice. She sings with expression, the pathos of the words find an echo
in her untaught heart. She, too, is Nobody's Child.

"Oh, you have a lovely voice, indeed!" cries little Miss Rice,
enthusiastically, "and after a few months training--ah, well, only wait!
That will do now; we will see what else you know, and get out a few
books."

The "what else" turns out to be nothing at all. She can read with
tolerable correctness, and write a little. She cannot sew, knit,
crochet--knows nothing, in fact.

"It is virgin soil," says Miss Rice, briskly, to her patroness; "plenty
of weeds, and no cultivation. Well, we must pluck up the weeds, and
plant the seeds of knowledge. Good-day, my dear lady."

Miss Rice trips away, and Joanna more slowly follows. She passes the
Gothic lodge, and is well out of sight of that neat little structure,
when the master of Abbott Wood comes suddenly upon her, and stretching
out his brawny right hand, catches her by the wrist. He has been lying
in wait.

"You are Joanna Sleaford?"

She jerks away her hand. Roughness is the atmosphere of her life, and
impish Joanna is Joanna at once. "No, I ain't."

"Who are you, then? Don't tell me lies!"

"Don't you tell them! I am Sleaford's Joanna."

"What d'ye mean? It's the same thing."

"Oh, no 'taint. My name ain't Sleaford, mister." All Joanna's usual
pertness is in her elfish tone and face.

"What is it, then?"

"Don't know, and don't care. Sleaford's Joanna does as good as anything
else."

She begins to whistle--then breaks off to laugh shrilly.

"You'll know me next time for certain. What are you starin' at? It ain't
good manners, old gentleman."

To tell the truth, he is staring as Joanna has never been stared at
before in her life, a blank expression of new-born consternation in his
face.

"Little girl," he says, "I am Mr. Abbott, and I want you to answer me a
few questions. Who are you, if you are not Sleaford's daughter?"

"Told you before I didn't know. I don't tell lies. You mightn't think
so, but I don't. It's sneaky. Picked me up in a gutter, he says. Wish
he'd left me there. Gutter's better than his house any day."

"How old are you?"

"Jest gone twelve."

"Do you remember nothing of the time before you lived with Sleaford?
Nothing of your father or mother?"

"Never. Had none, maybe. Grew in the gutter, I guess. Say, mister, it's
getting late. I want to go home."

"Go, then," he says, mechanically.

He draws back, and she darts off fleetly as a squirrel. He stands and
watches her out of sight, that blank expression still on his face.

"Of all that could happen I never thought of that," he mutters. "I never
thought Black Giles was so deep. No, I thought of everything, but I'm
blessed if I ever thought of _that_."

She has disappeared, and the dinner-bell is summoning the master of the
house. He turns up the avenue, but all that day, and for many days
after, John Abbott muses and muses, and is strangely silent and still.

And so it comes to pass, that from that day a new life begins for
Sleaford's Joanna.





PART SECOND.




CHAPTER I.

WHAT THE YEARS MAKE OF JOANNA.


It is a December afternoon, and brightly, crisply clear. The last yellow
light of the wintry sunset, shining in between parted curtains of lace
and heavy crimson drapery, falls upon a young girl seated at a grand
piano, touching the keys with flexible, strong fingers, and singing in a
full, rich contralto, that makes everything in the room vibrate. It is
the winter drawing-room of Abbott Wood, a spacious and splendid
apartment, vast and lofty, but the trained, powerful voice fills it
easily. She is singing exercises and solfeggios; she has been so
practicing for the past hour, running up in showers of silvery high
notes, holding the highest, sometimes, so long and steadily that you
gasped from sympathy, and then running down the scale until the last
low, sweet tone melted into the chords her fingers struck. The girl is
young--seventeen--tall, slight, a little angular at present, but
promising well for the future. She is dressed in a black alpaca that has
seen service, and which is neither particularly neat nor well-fitting--a
rusty garment, that looks distinctly out of place in that glowing room.
Her hair, of which she has a profusion, and which is red-brown in hue,
but more red than brown, is knotted up in a loose and careless knot,
without the slightest attempt at the becoming. Her face is pale and
thin, the features good, but the expression set and severe for
seventeen.

"What a peculiar-looking girl!" people say of her when they see her
first, and are apt to look again with some curiosity. "She is not pretty
at all, but it is rather a--a striking face," and the word describes it
very well. It is not pretty; it is far from plain; and it is a face most
people are apt to look at more than once. It is what five years have
made of Sleaford's Joanna.

Five years! They work changes from twelve to seventeen; this is what
five years, much care, instruction, and painstaking on the part of good
Miss Rice have made Joanna. A slim young person, with a face that seldom
smiles; an unlimited capacity for discontent with her own life, that
increases every day of that life; an utter apathy as to dress,
tidiness, needlework; a conviction that she is hopelessly ugly, and that
it is of no use wasting time trying to redeem that ugliness; a delicious
voice, a tolerable amount of proficiency as a pianist--that is Joanna.

She sits alone. Voices and laughter--young voices--reach her from the
grounds; once her name is called, but she pays no heed. A gay group are
out there, enjoying the windless winter evening, but with gayety this
girl has little--has ever had little--to do. _Wild_ Joanna she can be
called no longer; she seems quiet enough; Sleaford's Joanna she is
still--the household drudge, even as she was five years ago, with
work-reddened, work-hardened hands. She grows tired of exercises after a
little, and begins, almost unconsciously, to sing snatches of
songs--English, German, Italian--a very pot-pourri. Then, all at once,
she strikes a few solemn, resounding chords, and begins Rossini's
"Stabat Mater," and the instrument quivers with force of those grand
tones--

    "Cujus animum gementum!"

It is a glorious anthem, sung with passion, pathos, and power.

"Bravo!" says a voice; "encore, mademoiselle. If I had a bouquet I would
throw it."

She glances round and smiles, and when she smiles you discover for the
first time that this girl might be _almost_ handsome if she chose. For
she has a rare smile, that quite transforms her sallow, moody face. She
has very fine teeth, too, not in the least like pearls, but fully equal
to those beautiful enameled half circles that grin at you from dental
show-cases.

"Sing 'When Swallows Build,' Joanna," says the new-comer, throwing
himself on a sofa near, and looking at her with kindly eyes.

It is Geoffrey Lamar down for the Christmas festivities--Geoffrey at
twenty-one, not so very much unlike the Geoffrey of sixteen. Grown
taller, though still not tall, looking strong and well-trained, both as
to muscle and mind, retaining that resolute mouth and chin, retaining
also that slightly haughty air, and those deep-set, steadfast, sea-gray
eyes. He retains everything, even that pleasant friendly regard for
Sleaford's Joanna, to which she is indebted for her power to-day to make
the room ring with the "Stabat Mater."

She turns over the music, and finds the song. "What have you done with
the others?" she asks, carelessly.

"Oh! Livingston is there, and where girls are concerned he is always a
host in himself. There were a great many pretty people present at the
Ventnors' last night," says Geoffrey, laughing, "but Frank was the belle
of the ball. Do you want me to turn your music, Joanna? Because, if you
do, I will sacrifice comfort to politeness and get up."

"No, don't trouble yourself," Joanna answers. "As you work so hard all
the rest of the year, I suppose you claim the right to be lazy at
Christmas. And besides, I am not used to politeness."

"No?" says Geoffrey, and looks at her thoughtfully; "it strikes me you
seem a trifle out of sorts of late, Joanna. You are as thin as a shadow
and nearly as mute. Tell me--is it the old trouble? Do these people
treat you badly still?"

She shrugs her shoulders, an impatient, ireful look darkens her face.
"What does it matter," she says, in a voice of irritated weariness. "I
ought to be used to it by this, but the trouble with me is, I get used
to nothing. Do not mind my looks--I am always thin and cross--it is
natural, I suppose; and as to being mute, when one has nothing pleasant
to say one had best hold one's tongue. Every one is good to me here,
better than I deserve. That ought to suffice."

She begins her song, but the impatient ring is yet in her voice.
Geoffrey lies still and watches her. He has the interest in her we all
have in the thing we have saved and protected; he would like to see her
repay that interest by blooming looks and bright laughter; but his power
fails, something is amiss. She is educated, refined, cared for, but she
is not happy--he has a vague, uneasy suspicion she is not particularly
_good_. Antagonistic influences are at work, driving her two ways at
once--here all is luxury, refinement, high-breeding, tender care--there
all is coarseness, vulgarity, brutal usage. Long ago Giles Sleaford was
implored to give her up altogether, but he obstinately and doggedly
refused.

"She is not your daughter," Geoffrey has urged. "You do not care for
her. Give her to us. She is none of yours."

"How d'ye know that, youngster?" Sleaford says, a cunning look in his
bleary eyes. "_I_ never said so, an' I'm the only one as knows."

"Well, if she is, then, you should have her welfare at heart. Let her
come to us for good and all. She is attached to my mother, and would
like it."

"Ah! I dare say! She's a lazy jade, an' would like to be a fine lady,
with nothin' to do but play the pianny and sing songs. But it won't do,
young gent. I don't see it no way. I ain't goin' to give up Joanna."

"If money is any inducement----" begins Geoffrey after a pause. He is
exceedingly tenacious of purpose--he hates to give up anything on which
he has once set his mind.

"Look a here, young gentleman," says Giles Sleaford; "I ain't got no
spite agin you. You're a game young rooster, and I respects yer. But let
this here come to an end. I won't give up Joanna to you or no living
man. That gal's the trump card in my hand, though the time ain't come to
play her yet. She may keep on goin' to your 'ouse--I've said so, and
I'll stick to it--but back here she comes, rain or shine, every night
for life. Now drop it!"

And so, night after night, Joanna turns from the beauty and grandeur of
Abbott Wood to the bleak ugliness and disorder of the Red Farm; from
good-natured Miss Rice to scolding Liz, or sneering Lora; from the
stately kindness of Mrs. Abbott to the imprecations of Black Giles; from
the melodies of Chopin and Schubert to the grimy kitchen labor, the
wash-board and scrubbing-brush of Sleaford's. It is an abnormal life,
two existences, glaringly wide apart, and the girl is simply being
ruined between them.

"Ah! that is fine," says a second voice, and a second face appears at
the open window. "My word of honor, Joanna, you _have_ a voice! Sing us
something else."

She starts a little, and something--it is so faint you can hardly can it
color--flashes into her face. She does not glance round, her fingers
strike a discordant chord, she stops confusedly, her head droops a
little.

"How like the Grand Turk, surveying his favorite Sultana, Lamar looks!"
goes on, sarcastically, this voice; "stretched out there, drinking in
all this melody. Luxurious sybarite, bid the Light of the Harem sing us
another. She pays no attention to my deferential request."

But before Lamar can obey, Joanna has begun again. Without notes this
time, some subtile chord of memory awakened, she sings a song she has
not thought of for years, the first she ever sung in this
house--_Nobody's Child_.

There is a pause. The trite saying of "tears in the voice" comes to the
mind of Geoffrey--pain, pathos, passion, are in the simple words. She
feels them--oh! she feels them to the very depths of her soul. Nameless,
homeless, parentless, a waif and stray, a castaway of the city
streets--nothing more. All the kind charity, the friendly good-nature of
these rich people, cannot alter that.

As she sings the last words, two young girls, who have been lingering in
the door-way, unwilling to disturb the music, enter. A greater contrast
to the words she has been singing, to the singer herself, can hardly be
imagined. They are heiresses, both; they have everything this girl has
not--name, lineage, wealth, beauty, love. They are Olga Ventnor and Leo
Abbott.

They advance. Leo's arm is around Olga's waist; she is one of the
clinging, affectionate sort of little people, as addicted to caresses as
to _bonbons_. She hardly comes up to Olga's shoulder, though but a year
younger. She is a pretty little brunette of fifteen, plump, pale,
dark-eyed, dark-haired, dressed in the daintiest and brightest of
costumes. She worships Olga, and looks up to her; she is her ideal,
immensely wiser, and more grown up than herself--her superior in every
way.

Miss Olga Ventnor, at sixteen, is certainly a very fair young lady.
Tall, slight, erect, graceful, the delicate head proudly poised, and
"sunning over with curls," still worn girlish fashion, loose on her
shoulders, the "flower face" quite without flaw, a little proud,
perhaps, but very, very lovely. The eyes are more purple than
blue--"pansy eyes" a stricken youth of eighteen has been known to call
them--a thought cold in expression, but rarely beautiful. She is dressed
in pale gray silk, very simply made, and trimmed with garnet velvet, a
ribbon of the same color tying back her profuse blonde hair--no rings,
brooches, bracelets, jewelry of any kind, yet looking, from top to toe,
the superb princess her Cousin Frank calls her.

It is the said Cousin Frank who stands at the window. He saunters in
now, and what the years have done for him is to transform an extremely
good-looking youth of seventeen into an extremely handsome young man of
twenty-two, with a most desirable light mustache, quick, restless blue
eyes, a vivacious society manner, and a pensive way of looking at young
ladies, and bending over them, and holding their fans and quoting poetry
at them, that even at two-and-twenty he has found very effective. That
Mr. Frank is a flirt of the most pronounced male order, and has been
consumed by four grand passions already, is a matter of history. He has
a studio on Broadway, and paints young ladies' heads very prettily. He
is also celebrated as the best leader of Germans in the city, and, in
short, is an ornament and acquisition to society. He, too, is down for
the Christmas festivities, and to make himself agreeable to his Cousin
Olga, home from school. Leo does not go to school--masters and Miss Rice
fuse knowledge into her at home.

"Why do you sing that, Jo?" Leo says, quitting her friend, and putting
that caressing right arm around the pianist instead. "It is a melancholy
little thing, and we don't want melancholy little things this happy
Christmas time. Do not sing it any more."

She touches the untidy reddish hair with a gentle touch. She is a loving
little heart, and she is very sorry for this poor Joanna, who has such a
hard life, and such disagreeable relations. It comes naturally to her to
love all by whom she is surrounded, to be generous, and unselfish, and
impulsive, and without a particle of pride. In this last, she is quite
unlike mother, brother, and bosom friend. Miss Ventnor glances across,
but does not go near the piano. She crosses to a distant window instead,
and Geoffrey Lamar gets lazily up from his recumbent position, and joins
her.

"It will certainly snow to-morrow," the young lady says, looking up with
those great "pansy eyes" at the twilight sky. "I am very glad. A green
yule--you know the proverb. Christmas without snow and
sleigh-bells--nature could not make a greater mistake."

"What lovely eyes!" Geoffrey Lamar thinks.

He has thought so often before, but each time they meet after a few
months' separation, this girl's beauty strikes him with the force of a
new revelation. He looks across at Frank Livingston, devoting himself
to little laughing Leo, with that _empressement_ he considers this sort
of thing needs, and his straight strong eyebrows contract. The sapphire
eyes may be never so bright, but they are bespoken.

Other eyes, black and somber, watch covertly Frank's flirtation. Leo is
a little girl, he cares nothing about her, he is merely keeping his hand
in, it is never well to get out of practice, but he looks at the same
time as if Miss Abbott were the only creature of her sex in the
universe.

"Do look at Joanna," Olga says; "what a dark and angry face."

"Truly," Geoffrey utters, in some surprise.

Her face _does_ look dark, angry, menacing; she strikes the chords of
the piano as though it were an enemy's face.

"What is the matter with her? A moment ago she was all right. She is an
odd girl--a girl of moods and whims."

"A girl I do not like," Olga Ventnor says, with a very decided uplifting
of the head; "a girl I fear and distrust. I wonder how you all can make
so much of her, Geoffrey--can think so well of her. I do not wish to
injure her, but I could never like her, or treat her as Leo does. Not
that there is much in that," she adds, laughing, "dear little Leo loves
all the world."

"You do not like her--you do not trust her," Geoffrey repeats; "now why,
I wonder! If it is because of your first meeting----"

"_That_ was nothing," Olga says, in the same quick, decided tone. "I
have forgotten and forgiven that long ago. She was only a wild,
half-savage child _then_. It is now I do not trust her. She is quiet,
she says little, she is attached to your mother, she likes Leo a
little, she studies hard, she sings well, she keeps her place, but----"

"Well," he says, smiling, "go on. What a wise-acre you are becoming.
But----"

He likes to hear her talk, to be with her, to look in those deep, purple
eyes, to meet that radiant smile. She is a beautiful creature, so
brightly beautiful that it is a delight only to look at her.

"It is not so easy to explain what I mean. You have read of men who tame
animals? They take a young tiger and feed it on milk. It grows up,
gentle, sleek, playful as a kitten. One day they give it raw meat, the
next it turns on its keeper, without warning or provocation, and tears
him to pieces. Joanna is like that tiger--to be trusted no more than the
tiger. You look shocked. I cannot help it. I know she is your
_protege_, and that you are bound to defend her, but it is the truth
all the same. I do not know it, I feel it. And one day you will see.
Now, do not let us talk about her. What are you doing in town? Walking
the hospitals? How dreadful! What do you want, studying medicine? As if
you ever meant to practice! Being a 'Saw-bones,' a 'Bob Sawyer!'" she
laughs, the clear girlish laugh that is sweeter than all Joanna's music
to his ears. "I like Bob Sawyer, but at the same time there is no sense
in your following his footsteps. You know you never mean to be a
doctor."

"Indeed, that is precisely what I do mean; what I hope, what I am
positively sure I shall be this time next year. Let me write M. D. after
my name, and I die happy."

"You will never be a doctor," the young lady repeats, in her decided
way; she is used to having opinions of her own, and having them listened
to with respect; "that is to say, a practicing doctor. It is your whim,
your hobby, and a very horrid one, I think. What dreadful sights you
must see, what shocking suffering, what frightful disease."

"Yes," he answers, gravely, "God knows I do--sights, suffering, I pray
you may never dream of. But to ameliorate all that, to heal the
suffering, to give health to disease, to soothe pain, is not that a
godlike mission, Olga?"

"To those to whom the sight and suffering are necessary--yes--to you,
no. One need not witness the misery of others in order to alleviate it.
You are going to be very rich; you will not work as a doctor. There are
enough without you, and they need it more than you do."

He smiles at her, at the fair, earnest, proud young face.

"You talk like my mother. What a wise little lady you are, princess! If
I thought _you_ could really take an interest in the matter----" he
stops, the color coming into his face.

"I take an interest in all my friends," Miss Ventnor says, with great
calm. "Frank, are we going home to dinner, or are we not? Because I
believe we promised mamma----"

Livingston needs no second bidding. He rises with alacrity, and is at
her side in an instant. Half an hour of Leo has bored him; the art of
flirtation is one of the lost arts, so far as she is concerned, and
Lamar has monopolized Olga long enough.

"I am so sorry you must go," Leo says, plaintively, "but as your mamma
is ill, and you have to take her place, Olga, I suppose you must.
Good-by, dear. Be sure you come early to-morrow evening."

For to-morrow is Leo's birthday, and there is to be a gathering of the
clans and a dance.

The four stand together, a charming group of young heads and fair faces.
The fifth looks at them, and holds herself aloof. She is as young as
they, she might be as fair under other circumstances, but she is not of
them; unlike them, she has not spoken a word, she has played on
steadily, no one knows what. They hear the piano, they see the
performer, and one is nearly as much to them as the other. They are kind
to her--yes, polite to her always, and there are times when she would
rather they struck her. She is Sleaford's Joanna--they are of the golden
youth of the earth, well-born, high-bred. Heaven and earth are not
farther apart than they.

Geoffrey and Leo go out with their guests. The windless, mild December
twilight, gray and star-studded, is beautiful, as they saunter to the
gate.

"And Olga predicts snow," says Geoffrey, laughing, "in the face of that
sky."

"If she predicts it you may be sure it will come," says Frank. "The
elements themselves dare not oppose the imperial will of the Princess
Olga!"

"Look at the new moon!" cries Leo, "and wish. What are you wishing for,
Geoff?--what do you wish for, Olga? _I_ wish for a snow-storm to-morrow,
and then a lovely night."

They all look. What do they all wish for? Geoffrey's eyes rest on Olga,
before he looks at the sky. His wish might be read, if there were eyes
to read it. Olga looks up too--for what does beautiful Olga Ventnor
wish?

    "'I saw the new moon late yes'treen,
      Wi' the auld moon in her airms,'"

she quotes. "I see her now. Do not come any farther, Leo, in your bare
head. It grows chilly; you may catch cold."

So they part. All the way back to the house Leo chatters, but Geoffrey
is silent.

"We have left Joanna alone all this time," she says, as they re-enter,
"beg pardon, Jo, but--why, she has gone!"

She has gone. She has risen a moment after they left, taken her hat,
gone out of a side door, and gone home. The grand portico entrance is
not for her, and the home she goes to is Sleaford's.




CHAPTER II.

IN WHICH JOANNA ENTERS SOCIETY.


"Mamma," says Leo Abbott, "I wonder why papa dislikes Joanna so much?"

They make a pretty picture, mother and daughter. Mrs. Abbott, gracious
and handsome as ever, sits at her embroidery-frame, with a basket of
silks, and floss, and zephyr, in rainbow shades, beside her. She is
making tapestry, like a medival countess in a baronial hall--a huge
piece, with four large figures. It is a Scriptural subject, "Susanna
and the Elders," though at this stage of proceedings it is not so easy
to tell which _is_ Susanna, and which _are_ the elders. Leo nestles on a
footstool at her feet. She is one of the caressing sort, who always
nestle on footstools and cushions, like kittens, and who like to purr,
and be petted. There is no affectation about it--it is all very natural
and very pretty in Leo.

The lady looks up from her frame, and her dark, large-lidded eyes rest
on her daughter.

"Are you not mistaken?" she says, quietly. "Why should your papa dislike
Joanna?"

"Ah! why indeed? I am sure I do not know--_I_ think Joanna charming. All
the same, papa dislikes her--more, he looks sometimes as if he were
actually _afraid_ of her!"

"Afraid! my child, what nonsense you talk."

But the inflection of Mrs. Abbott's voice as she says it is perfectly
calm--the faintest of smiles dawns about her mouth, as she takes a fresh
needleful of gold-colored silk, and puts a long, slanting stitch in
Susanna's back hair. As if anything of this wonderful discovery was new
to her!

"Well, perhaps it is nonsense," says Leo, resignedly; "all I have to
say, mamma, is, you watch papa the next time he and Joanna meet, and see
for yourself."

Mrs. Abbott's amused smile deepens.

"My dear," she remarks, "I will, if you will tell me this--when _do_
they ever meet?"

Leo looks up at her with puzzled eyes--then slowly a light breaks upon
her.

"That is true," she says, amazedly; "they never do meet. I have never
seen them in a room together in all these years! Now, how is that, I
wonder?"

"Watch and see," replies Mrs. Abbott, enigmatically, taking some
bister-hued floss this time, to shade the eldest Elder's complexion.
"What has started the subject now?"

"Why, this. Half an hour ago, after I left Miss Rice, and before Joanna
had come, papa called me out to take a walk with him in the grounds. I
went, and as we were going down the laburnum walk, Joanna came up--she
generally does take that side entrance. The moment papa saw her, he
stopped in what he was saying, looking _so_ flurried, you cannot think,
and drew me with him between the trees. 'I don't want to meet that young
woman,' he said. But, mamma, he watched her out of sight with the
strangest look! It was exactly (only that _is_ absurd) as if he was
frightened--as if he was afraid of _her!_"

"Well, my dear, you do not generally stand in awe of your papa--why did
you not ask him about it?" says mamma.

"Oh! I said: 'Why, papa, what is the matter? You do look so oddly! You
are not afraid of our Joanna, are you?' He gave me such a look--as cross
as he _can_ look at me, and he says 'Afraid! that be blowed! And _our_
Joanna, too! Who made her yours, I wonder! I don't like her, and I don't
like to see her gadding here. She's no fit chum for you--a gentleman's
daughter, by Jove!'"

Leo mimics her father's blustering voice so well, that Mrs. Abbott has
to laugh.

"Then he told me to run away into the house, and went off by himself.
But it is very odd, I think. I am sure Joanna has the manner of a
lady--when she likes--and is good enough to be companion to anybody."

"Ah! when she likes!" repeats Mrs. Abbott, significantly. There is a
pause. "Your friend, Olga, seems to share in your papa's dislike, Leo,"
she says, still absorbed in the Elder's leathery complexion.

"Yes," Leo answers, thoughtfully; "Olga does not like Joanna, and there
is not much love lost, I think. Joanna, mamma," laughs Leo, "could be
one of the good haters old Dr. Johnson liked, if she chose. I will tell
you though who _does_ like her more than his mother would quite approve
of, I guess, if she knew."

"Who?" demands Mrs. Abbott, looking startled, and letting the "I guess"
slip in the excitement of the moment.

"George Blake--Miss Rice's nephew, you know. He comes here sometimes
with Frank to play croquet. He is in the office of a New York daily
paper, and is quite clever, they say, and he runs down here once or
twice a week, to see his mother--he _says!_" Leo laughs.

"You think it is not to see his mother?"

"I think it is to see Joanna. You always send our Perkins home with her
when she is here late, and George Blake waylays them, and takes Jo out
of his hands. Perkins walks behind until they reach Sleaford's, then he
touches his hat, says 'good-night, Miss,' and comes home and tells the
others. And then I have seen him watch Jo when we all play croquet."

"It seems to me you see a great deal, little Leo," says mamma,
reprovingly. "Fifteen-year-old eyes and ears should not be quite so
sharp, and you should never, never on any account hearken to the gossip
of servants."

Miss Leo blushes. Her mamma has not permitted her to read many novels,
she has seen next to no "grown-up" society at all; all the same her
feminine soul tells her George Blake is a victim to the tender passion,
and consumed with love for Joanna.

"Does this George Blake make much money?" inquires Mrs. Abbott, after
another pause, deserting the Elder and returning to Susanna, her mind
projecting itself into the future of her _protege_. After all, the
young man might make a very good husband for the girl.

"Fifteen dollars a week," responds Leo, promptly, "and he pays seven out
of that for his board! And I don't think Joanna would make a good
housekeeper, or manage on fifteen dollars a week. And besides, she
wouldn't have him."

"My dear!" says her mother, smiling again.

"Oh, no, she wouldn't, mamma," Leo iterates with conviction; "she treats
him with the greatest disdain, scolds him when he meets her, and
sometimes makes him go back. But he meets her next time just the same. I
wonder what Miss Rice would say? She is awfully proud of George, thinks
he is going to be a Horace Greeley by and by----"

There is a tap at the door. It proves to be Miss Rice in person, who
wishes to know if Miss Leo will come and practice that duet she is to
sing to-night with Joanna. So Leo goes, and Mrs. Abbott takes another
strand of pale gold silk, and looks at Susanna's flowing tresses with a
very thoughtful face.

She thinks of Joanna and her husband. What Leo has discovered to-day for
the first time is a very old story to Leo's mother. It surprised her at
first, it puzzles her still, but she does not object to it--she has
found it useful in more ways than one. Mr. Abbott, in words, has never,
since that first day, objected in the least to the presence of
Geoffrey's ward, as they call her, but in action he has objected to her,
all these five years, as strongly as man can. He avoids her as he might
a snake; if they meet by chance he beats a retreat; if she enters a room
where he is, he leaves it; he breaks off whatever he is saying to listen
to her when she speaks. If she stays for dinner, as she has on one or
two occasions, he dines in solitude.

This is all very remarkable, but more remarkable still is that look his
face assumes at sight of her; that look is so extraordinarily like one
of shrinking fear. Who is this girl? What is she to the Sleafords? What
to her husband, that all this should be so? What secret binds him and
this man Sleaford together in its dark tie?

For Joanna, she is evidently unconscious of her power. She sees that Mr.
Abbott avoids and dislikes her, but she is used to that, and does not
mind. She dislikes him in turn, so they are quits. That she has any
further hold upon him, she is unaware. Mrs. Abbott thinks of all this,
but she has little desire to lift the vail; the screen that hides her
husband's past life is a merciful one; she shrinks from ever knowing
what lies behind. If she does not wish for the presence of Mr. Abbott,
when her children's young friends assemble at Abbott Wood, she has but
to keep Joanna by her side--he will not come. She takes advantage of
this to see rather more company than was her wont. Joanna's presence is
a guarantee that Mr. Abbott's uncultured remarks will not put her to the
blush.

Brightbrook has some very desirable residents now, very nice people,
indeed, who come there for the summer, and there is abundance of
pleasant society for Leo. Mr. Abbott intrudes not, for Joanna is
_always_ there to sing. Long ago, Mrs. Abbott, who really likes the
girl, would have taken her to Abbott Wood "for good" had Giles Sleaford
not resolutely refused to give her up.

Those five years have not altered him in any way, except that he daily
grows more besotted with drink and "dry rot." He lets Mr. Abbott
comparatively alone; his pockets are always well filled, his girls and
boys well dressed, the old rude plenty reigns at the farmstead, the old
"swarrys" still obtain, it is the rendezvous of a very lively lot of
young men and maidens. People have grown to accept Sleaford and his
thriftless family, and pretty well ceased to wonder at his connection
with Mr. Abbott. A billionaire is a privileged being. They are proud of
Abbott Wood and its burly lord; he has in a great measure made the
place, he is the Seigneur of the soil, owns half the village, and the
big white hotel that in summer is so well and fashionably filled.
Hillside breezes, trout streams, gunning, boating, bathing, fishing
(_see prospectus_), all are here, and city folk come with their wives
and little ones, their maid servants, and man servants (sometimes), and
enjoy them.

Mrs. Abbott likes Joanna, and takes an interest in her welfare. Yes, but
Joanna loves Mrs. Abbott, reveres her, admires her, thinks her the most
beautiful, accomplished, and perfect being on earth. Her worship of this
great lady is, to a certain extent, her religion, her salvation. If she
is tempted to do wrong, to give way to passion, the thought, "Mrs.
Abbott will not like it," is sufficient to restrain her. Her smile is
Joanna's guerdon, her praise the girl's delight, to please her is the
highest ambition of her life. The lady has tried to teach her, to make a
Christian of her, to give her yet a higher standard, but it is not so
easy to evangelize this young heathen. The leopard does not change his
spots; Joanna does not change her nature in spite of beautiful music,
painted windows, embroidered altar-cloths, and the flowery periods of
the Rev. Ignatius Lamb. She listens, and chafes inwardly--and yet, as
constant dropping will wear a stone, so five years of this have subdued
the girl, and made her turn her thoughts, with a certain stricken awe,
to those great truths she reads and hears. There is a Heaven, and she
may go to it, she, Sleaford's Joanna, quite as readily as fair Olga
Ventnor herself. _That_ fact she has grasped, and it does her good,
increases her self-respect, and spurs her on to better things. She is
far less fierce, she gives up bad language, she tries to listen in
silence to the taunts and sneers at home, to rise superior to her
surroundings. But oh! it is weary work--it is a never-ending struggle;
she falls back again and again, the old bitterness, the old despair,
clutch her hardly at times. Envy, hatred, and all uncharitableness
devour her heart, and tear it to pieces between them. It is an abnormal
life she leads, two lives, and she is supremely miserable. She strives
to be content, to be thankful--it is impossible. She loves Mrs. Abbott,
she reveres her, she would do anything in the world to win her
praise--the best of this poor Joanna begins and ends there. To her she
is passionately grateful; to the rest of the world her heart is like a
stone. Even to Geoffrey, her first friend, she is almost apathetic--she
likes Leo, that is all. There is, perhaps, one other exception, but this
exception only adds to her unhappiness--it fills her with a gnawing,
miserable unrest. She feels wicked and helpless, and all the time she
longs to be good, to be noble, to be true. Her good and bad angels war
strongly for the soul of Joanna.

Long ago she confessed her first sin--her attack upon Olga Ventnor. She
goes to Mrs. Abbott and confesses it voluntarily, looking downcast and
ashamed. The lady listens very gravely.

"I feared so," she says: "it is good of you to confess it, Joanna. To be
sorry for a fault is to amend it. But I think you ought to apologize to
Miss Ventnor."

"Oh!" Joanna says, with a gasp--_That_ is quite another thing--to tell
this kind, good, gentle lady is easy.

"I think you ought. It nearly killed her. She does not suspect, and she
will meet you here. I do not order you to do so--I leave it to your own
conscience. But I think you ought."

That is all. There is a struggle in the wild heart of Sleaford's
Joanna--the first struggle between right and wrong, and right conquers.
She goes lingeringly up to Olga Ventnor, standing for a moment alone,
and stammers out her confession.

"It was me," she says, confusedly. "I didn't mean to hurt you--only to
cut off your hair. I'm very sorry. I hope you--you don't mind!"

"_You!_" Olga exclaims, horror in her eyes. All the terror of that
terrible time returns to her. She looks at her with fear, with
abhorrence, and turns and flies.

Joanna stands mute, motionless. Half an hour after, when Olga, her first
panic over, and ashamed of what she has done, returns, she finds her
standing there still.

"I am sorry," Olga says, but her head is very erect as she says it--she
does not look sorry. "I do not mind in the least--now. I did not think
when I ran away. I hope _you_ do not mind."

The black eyes look at her. They are so fierce, so full of hatred, that
Olga recoils.

"I will mind as long as I live!" Joanna says, and turns from her,
striking down the hand she has half held out.

So ends Joanna's first impulse to try and be "good." Alas! most of her
impulses end in the same way.

       *       *       *       *       *

There are lights, and flowers, and fair faces, and music, and feasting
in silent, stately Abbott Wood to-night, for the little daughter of the
house is fifteen, and her friends, and Olga's, and Geoffrey's are down
from the city in force to wish her many happy returns. She has had her
wish. It has snowed all day, and now the moon, a brilliant Christmas
sickle, shines down on glistening snow, black, bare trees, gaunt hedges
and avenues, but it is windless, and still mild. It is no green yule,
and great fires blaze high in gleaming grates, for no abomination of
pipes or registers desecrate winter at Abbott Wood. The "mistletoe
bough" hangs from the drawing-room ceiling, though the custom of kissing
under it is more honored in the breach than the observance; holly, and
arbutus, and winter berries adorn walls and windows, and there are
flowers, flowers, flowers everywhere. A tolerably large company are
coming--nearly all young people, for it is understood it is little more
than a girl's party, after all.

"Remember! come early, Joanna," is Mrs. Abbott's last injunction; "and
be in your best looks and voice to-night."

Joanna shrugs her shoulders.

"My looks do not matter in the least. My voice I will try and have to
order," is her answer. It is for her voice she is here, she knows, not
for herself.

She comes early, and dresses in a little room that is kept for her use.
There is so much envy and bickering with Lora and Liz, that she keeps
but few of her things at home. Mrs. Abbott provides her dresses, of
course, but simple ones always. Joanna will have nothing else, and Mrs.
Abbott sees that gayety would not accord with the fitness of things. She
wears to-night a dress of dark-blue silk, but so plainly made that
nothing could be less smart; a gold cross and chain; her abundant
reddish hair braided as tightly and compactly as possible about her
small head, and she is ready. And she looks very well--"slim and
genteel, and quite the lady," Mrs. Hill, the housekeeper, tells her,
condescendingly, "only she ought to put a bit of pink ribbon or blue
flower in her hair."

Joanna laughs.

"To put pink ribbon in red hair would be to paint the lily, Mrs. Hill,"
she says, good-humoredly. Of personal vanity she has not a particle; her
red hair does not discompose her in the least.

She goes down, and Mrs. Abbott glances at her approvingly. Quite plain,
severely simple, yet well-dressed--it is as it should be; Joanna does
her no discredit.

"If only you sing as well as you look, my dear, I shall be quite
satisfied," she says, kindly.

Leo is there, all in white--a costly toilet, white lace over
pearl-colored silk, and strands of pearls in her dark, perfumed hair.
Her bronze eyes shine, her cheeks flush, her childish face is bright
with excitement. She kisses Joanna in childish glee. Mr. Abbott
reconnoiters once, sees Joanna, and flees.

The company come early, and come rapidly--it is in the country--city
hours do not obtain, and it is only Leo's party. A number of youthful
guests are staying in the house, nearly a dozen more come from Ventnor
Villa, with Olga and Frank.

Olga is like a vision, like an Undine, like a water-lily. She wears some
pale, sheeny silk, half silvery, half green, with quantities of tulle,
and bunches of pale pink roses. Even Joanna catches her breath as she
looks at her. That gold hair, that clear, star-like face, that imperial
poise of head and shoulders, that exquisite water-nymph dress.

"Oh!" Joanna says, "how lovely! how lovely!"

"How lovely!" a voice echoes.

It is Geoffrey Lamar, whose deep gray eyes glow as they look on this
Peri. A second later, and he is by her side. Frank Livingston, looking
insouciant and handsome, comes over to present his felicitations to Miss
Abbott. The rainbow throng meets, mingles, disperses. Joanna, in the
shade of a great _jardinire_, watches it all. Frank engages Leo for the
first dance; Geoffrey has Olga; others seek partners; dancing begins
almost immediately. Colonel Ventnor seeks out Mr. Abbott in the library,
and, with two other papas, enjoys a quiet game of whist.

The band music rings merrily out, the young people merrily dance. Joanna
does not dance. Young ladies are in the majority--as it is in the nature
of young ladies to be--and no one notices her until it is time to sing.
Then she glides to the piano, at a signal from Mrs. Abbott, and her fine
voice breaks through the chatter and hum, and talkers stop, perforce, to
listen. She sings alone, then with Leo, then alone again, for people
crowd around her, and there is soft clapping of gloved hands and gentle
murmurs of praise.

"Sing us a Christmas carol," says Mrs. Ventnor; "to-morrow is Christmas
Eve."

She thinks a moment, and then, in a softened voice, a little tremulous,
she sings a very old hymn:

    "Earthly friends may change and falter,
       Earthly friends may vary;
     He is born, who cannot alter,
       Of the Virgin Mary."

"Oh! how sweet!" Mrs. Ventnor says, tears in her eyes; "please--please
sing another. Your voice goes to my heart."

The girl lifts two dark, melancholy, grateful eyes to the lady, and
sings again:

    "He neither shall be born
       In housen nor in hall,
     Nor in the place of paradise,
       But in an ox's stall.
     He neither shall be rock'd
       In silver nor in gold,
     But in a wooden manger
       That rocks upon the mold."

Then she rises, and they make way for her to pass with a certain
deference and wonder.

"Who is she--that plain girl with the beautiful voice?" they ask in
undertones. As she moves on, Frank Livingston meets her, and holds out
his hand.

"It is the first time I have had a glimpse of you to-night, Mademoiselle
Cantatrice," he says. "You sing more and more like an angel every day.
You always make me want to go into a corner and cry whenever you open
your mouth!"

Joanna laughs. The compliment is ambiguous, to say the least, but her
somber face lights into momentary brightness at his careless words. The
next moment he is gone. He has espied Olga standing in a window-recess
alone. He bends above her, says something laughingly, encircles her
slight waist with his arm. Only for a second--with a most decided motion
she frees herself, and waves him off. It is all in a moment, but in that
moment every trace of gladness leaves Joanna's face. She turns angrily,
frowningly away. She will not sing any more. She goes out of the
ballroom, finds her shawl and hat, and sullenly quits the house. She
glances back at the lighted windows with a darkling face. Music follows
her, dancing is recommencing, she will not be missed. She does not care
if she is.

She walks down under the black trees to the gate. There she stops, folds
her arms on the top of the low stone wall, and stands still. There is
nothing more coldly melancholy than moonlight on snow; it suits her
mood, this steel-cut landscape, all ebony and ivory. As she stands, a
figure comes out of the shadow and approaches her. She stares at it, but
in no surprise or alarm.

"Oh!" she says, ungraciously enough; "it is _you!_"

"It is I. I thought you would come out, Joanna. You mostly do, you know.
Are you going home?"

"What are you doing here?" Joanna demands, still ungraciously, and not
moving.

"Oh, you know," George Blake answers. "It is my off-night, and I could
not keep away. Try and be civil to a fellow, Joanna. Are you going home?
Let me go with you."

She stands silent. George Blake is in love with her--she is amazed, but
not in the least flattered by the fact. Plain Sleaford's Joanna, as she
is, she has some nameless fascination for him. He has been in the habit
of going to the Sleafords' for years without being in the least smitten
by either of the fair Misses Sleaford. Suddenly, without knowing why or
wherefore, he is possessed of a passion for this girl, Joanna, that
holds him as with bonds and fetters. His mother would not approve;
Joanna snubs him unmercifully--all the same, his infatuation deepens
with every day.

"Are you coming?" young Blake asks; "or are you going back to the
house?"

She glances over her shoulder once more at those lighted windows, with a
frown.

"I will go home. Oh, yes, you may come. They will not miss me--they are
too well engaged."

"I suppose all the cream of the cream are there?" he says, gayly drawing
her arm through his, quite happy for the time--"the Van Rensselaers, the
Ventnors, and the rest. Livingston is there, of course?"

"Of course," she says, shortly.

"And devoted to the lovely princess? Ah, what a match he will
make!--beauty, riches, everything--must have been born with a diamond
spoon in his mouth--that fellow."

She does not reply. She shivers, and draws her shawl with impatience
about her.

"How cold it is!" she says, almost angrily. "Do not talk. Let us hurry.
It is nearly two o'clock."

But George does talk, gayly and fluently. He talks so much that he is
unconscious she listens in silence. They reach the farm, wrapped in
quiet and darkness, without meeting a soul. All are in bed, but Joanna
has a key.

"Good-night," she says, "and don't be so foolish waiting for me another
time. What would your mother say?"

He laughs.

"My mother thinks I am virtuously asleep in New York. We do not tell our
mothers everything. It would not be good for 'em. Good-night, Joanna."

He goes off, whistling, through the white, still, frozen night. Joanna
gets in, and reaches her room, but she does not go to bed. She sits
there in the chill, ghostly moonlight a long time--so long that the
moon wanes, and sets, and the stars fade out, and the deep darkness that
precedes dawn falls on the earth. Far off, at Abbott Wood, the gay
birthnight party is breaking up, and good-byes are being spoken, to the
merry music of sleigh-bells. But the dark morning sky is not darker than
the set face of Sleaford's Joanna.




CHAPTER III.

IN WHICH JOANNA CAPS THE CLIMAX.


It is the afternoon of New Year's Day--a windy and overcast afternoon.
Fast drifting clouds are blown wildly over a leaden sky, "onding on
snaw;" a gale surges with the roar of the sea through the pine woods;
far off, the deep diapason of that mighty sea itself blends its hoarse
roar in the elemental chorus. The marshes lie all flat and sodden with
recent rain and melted snow. It is a desolate picture on which the girl
looks who leans over the gate at Sleaford's, and gazes blankly before
her, with eyes as dreary as the landscape itself. She looks flushed and
weary, and with reason; the long soughing blast sweeps cool and kindly
as a friend's hand over her hot forehead. Her wild hair blows about in
its usual untidy fashion--her dress is a torn and soiled calico wrapper.
No "neat-handed Phillis," this, no spotless dimity household divinity,
but simply Sleaford's Joanna resting after the toils of the day.

The red farm-house behind her lies silent and somber, the bark of one of
the many dogs, now and then, alone breaking the silence. The household
are away, except the master, and he is sleeping off a heavy dinner,
washed down by copious draughts of whisky, in the upper chamber, sacred
to his use. For is it not New Year's Day, and have not Liz and Lora to
receive their gentlemen friends? Neither the weather nor the roads being
propitious, and Sleaford's being two or three miles out of the way, the
young ladies have accepted the invitation of a couple of their friends,
and have gone _en grande tenue_ to Brightbrook to receive. Dan and Jud,
in their Sabbath best, are "calling." Giles, Joanna, and the dogs are
keeping house.

It has been no holiday for the girl; she has never had a holiday in her
life. There has been a dinner party at the farm-house, and she has been
cook. The office has been no sinecure--there has been a goose stuffed
with sage and onions, a large, vulgar, savory bird, to roast--a turkey,
with dressing, to boil, a plum pudding ditto, sundry vegetables, and
stewed fruits, to go with these dainties. Yesterday a huge beefsteak and
kidney pasty was concocted, and a ham boiled. To these viands a select
company of six young ladies and gentlemen, exclusive of the family, have
turned their hungry attention. The Miss Sleafords, in brand-new silk
suits, have gone to meeting in Brightbrook, and brought their friends
back with them. Joanna has cooked, but has refused to wait at table.

"There is your dinner; wait on yourselves, or go without," she has said,
briefly, and they _have_ waited on themselves without much grumbling,
for everything has been done to a charm. Now they are gone again; she
has washed the dishes and "redd up," and, tired, flushed, heavy-hearted,
she stands leaning over the fence, looking with those great black,
melancholy eyes of hers, at that low-lying, fast-drifting sky.

But it is neither the weariness of labor, the dreariness of utter
solitude, the loss of a holiday that all the rest of the world is
enjoying, that weighs her down. To all these things she is inured;
custom has blunted their edge, she hardly feels their pain. It is
something else, something belonging to that other life that is not
connected with Sleaford's--that other life that seems to belong to
another world.

The changes that have occurred since the Christmas birthnight party are
these. The Ventnors have returned to town, their visitors with them.
Before going they had given a party, to which Joanna was bidden, in
kindliest, gentlest words, by kindly, gentle Mrs. Ventnor. The girl had
gone, of course; it was not optional with her to decline. She is asked
to sing, and goes for that purpose. The Abbotts are there, all who were
at Abbott's Wood the other night, and many more. Once more Olga, in
palest rose silk, looks lovely as a dream; everything she wears seems to
become her more than the last. Once more very young men flock around her
as butterflies round a rosebud; and at this party something has occurred
that has stung this poor, sensitive, morbid Joanna to the very heart.
Only Mrs. Abbott, and one other, have power enough over that heart to
sting it to its core--it is that other who unwittingly has done it.

Joanna has been singing. Some passionate pain at her heart makes the
song--a despairing love song--ring out with an intensity of power that
thrills all who listen. Mrs. Van Rensselaer, the greatest of all great
ladies, has taken the girl's hand in her grand duchess manner, and said
some overpoweringly condescending things. It is one of Joanna's
innumerable faults that she hates patronage, and all who patronize.
Instead of being overwhelmed by the gracious kindness of Mrs. Van
Rensselaer, who has patronized the greatest artists in her time, Joanna
frees her hand, and cuts the lady brusquely and decidedly short. She
turns her back deliberately upon her--her--Mrs. Van Rensselaer!--and
moves away. The lady stands petrified. The expression of her rigid
amazement and dismay, her stony stare, are too much for Frank
Livingston, who witnesses the performance. He retreats into a window
recess to laugh. There he encounters Geoffrey Lamar, who, with knitted
brows, has also beheld this little scene.

"By Jove!" Frank cries, throwing back his head, and laughing
explosively, "it is the most delicious joke! the great Mrs. Van
Rensselaer snubbed--snubbed by Sleaford's Joanna! Behold the glare of
that Medusa face! On my word, I believe she will have a fit!"

"Mrs. Van Rensselaer deserves it!" Geoffrey says, flushing with anger.
"Why cannot they let the girl alone? God has given her an exquisite
voice, and such women as that think to uplift her by their patronizing
praise. She has served Mrs. Van Rensselaer right!"

"Bravo, Geoff! Set lance in rest, and ride forth in defense of your
protege. Do you know what it reminds me of?--that old story of James
the First, the baronet-making king, and his nurse. The old lady asks
him, you know, to make her son a gentleman. 'I'll mak your son a
baronet, if ye like, Lucky,' says the king, 'but the deevil himsel'
wadna mak him a gentleman.' The cases are similar. You may make
Sleaford's Joanna a singer if you like, Lamar, but--your mother herself
cannot make her a gentlewoman."

He goes off laughing. A figure, standing motionless, hidden by a
flower-wreathed pillar, has heard every word. And the white marble of
the pillar is not whiter than her face. Livingston is quoting
Shakespeare over his shoulder as he goes:

    "Oh, when she's angry she is keen and shrewd;
     She was a vixen when she went to school,
     And though she is but little, she is fierce!"

An hour after he comes up to her, as she stands a little apart, after
singing again--a sweet little Scotch ballad, that has touched even him.

"I foresee we are all going to be proud of our Brightbrook nightingale,"
he says, gayly. "When your biography is written, we will recall--and put
on airs in consequence--that we knew and heard you first. By-the-bye,
the honor of discovery lies with Lamar. How was it, I wonder, that I,
knowing you so long before him, never found you out, or thought what a
singing bird you were?"

She looks at him. To this day he does not understand, perhaps, the fiery
wrath and scorn of her eyes. "_You!_" she says, and he winces and stares
at her tone. "You! Why, you never thought of any one but yourself in all
your life!"

"Upon my word," says Mr. Livingston, when he recovers a little, "here is
a facer! First she floors Mrs. Van Rensselaer--now me. What have I done,
I wonder? I haven't been patronizing, have I, Olga?"

Miss Ventnor's beautiful, short upper lip curls.

"She is never very civil, but to-night she is really quite too horrid.
Mrs. Van Rensselaer is _very_ angry." Then she remembers Joanna is her
mother's guest, and stops. "I suppose it is to be expected, poor
creature; the better way is to say nothing to her at all. This waltz is
yours, I think, Frank, if you wish to claim it."

If he wishes? Frank's blue, speaking eyes answer the question, but Olga
only laughs.

"Keep your sentimental looks for Rosa Brevoort, sir," she says, tossing
back her sunshiny tresses; "she believes in them--I do not. No, nor your
pretty speeches, either--so don't go quoting Tennyson at me! Young men
who quote poetry and look as you do at every girl you dance with, ought
to be bowstrung, or put in the pillory."

Miss Olga speaks with some irritation. She means what she says. She
laughs at Livingston's love-making; she derides his tender glances; she
declines being flirted with, but for some cause it annoys her. Perhaps
she does not choose to make one in the long litany of Frank's flirtees.
Of that family compact, settled five years ago, she has not heard a
word.

And this being New Year's Day, as she stands here alone, and untidy, at
the gate, Joanna is thinking of all this. Every day of her life she
chafes more and more; either existence, perhaps, she could stand, but
both are killing her.

"Why have I ever known these people?" her soul cries out in its
bitterness. "Better, oh! a thousand times better to drudge in Sleaford's
kitchen, to cook dinners, and wash pots and pans, and know no higher,
fairer life. I might live as an animal does then--eat, and sleep, and
never think. But to know them, to see their life, to mingle with it, to
be among them, but never of them--I cannot endure it much longer. It
will either end in my killing myself or running away!"

As she speaks, and she speaks aloud--much solitude has taught her the
habit--a man comes up the slushy road, and stands near her, unseen.

"Kill myself," she repeats, in a low, tense tone, "and why not? It is
the shortest solution to the difficulty. Perhaps even _he_ would care
then! But no," contemptuously, "he would say, 'By Jove, you know--poor
Joanna!' and waltz with Olga ten minutes after. Still, I swear, I have
half a mind to go down to Black's Dam and do it!"

At this moment she is handsome; her sallow cheeks flushed, her black
eyes shining with unholy fire. She strikes her clenched hand, in her
desperate mood, on the bar, so as to bring blood. The strange
fascination that has held George Blake from the first, sweeps over him
like a resistless torrent now. He leans forward, his face flushing
darkly red.

"Don't drown yourself, Joanna," he says; "do better. Marry me!"

She looks at him. She has not heard him; he has overheard her, but he
does not discompose her in the least. She looks at him a full minute
without speaking. It is one of the traits of Joanna's curious character,
that she can stare any man or woman alive out of countenance, without
winking once.

"Do better?" she repeats. "Would that be doing better?" Her eyes never
leave his face. "Are you rich?" she demands.

"No, poor--poor as a church mouse; a penniless beggar of a
paragraphist. But it would be better than Black's Dam."

"Would it?" she says again. "I am not so sure of that. Black's Dam would
end everything--going with you would not. It would be only exchanging
one sort of hardship for another. And I don't want to marry--_you!_"

"I am awfully fond of you, Joanna," the poor young fellow pleads. "I
would work for you. We could live in New York on my pay. And you would
have a good time. I get free passes to all the theaters, you know, and
all the sights, and that. We could board, you know. You would not have
to work. And you would like New York. Do think of it, Joanna."

"New York?" she repeats, and her great eyes light. "Yes, I would like
New York. I _will_ think of it, George Blake."

She declines further courtship--does not even ask her adorer in, and
dismisses him summarily enough.

"I wish you would go. I don't want to talk. I am tired to death--oh, so
tired! so tired!" drawing a long, hard breath. "I was up nearly all last
night. I will go in and go to bed."

"And you will think of it, Joanna?"

"Oh, yes, I will think of it. I would like to go to New York. I cannot
endure my life here much longer."

"And I may come soon again?"

"Come whenever you like," she says, half impatiently, half
indifferently. "I suppose I ought to feel pleased, I have so few
friends, but I don't. If I ever run away with you, you will be sorry for
it all the rest of your life."

It is an ominous prediction, and he thinks of it with bitterness of
spirit in after days. But the glamour is upon him now; he would not have
his eyes open if he could.

"I will risk it," he answers, fervently. "I will risk all things, so
that you come."

       *       *       *       *       *

Three days after this, Mrs. Abbott announces a second change.

"The week after next," she says, "Leo, and my son and I are going to New
York to spend a month with the Ventnors. The only difference it will
make to you, Joanna, is that you will go to Miss Rice's cottage for your
daily lessons, instead of coming here."

Joanna listens almost apathetically. Yes, the only difference. And yet
she is conscious of a pang in listening to the lady's calmly-kind words.
She loves Mrs. Abbott, and she loves so few--so few.

She goes home that evening, home to Sleaford's, and no prescience tells
her it is for the last time--the very last time, forever. She has no
intention of running away with George Blake; she thinks as little of him
as of the dry twigs that snap under her feet.

She feels wearied and aimless--the feeling is growing upon her day by
day. She saunters listlessly along, after a fashion very unlike her
naturally swift, strong, springy walk.

What is the use of feeling sorry Mrs. Abbott is going away? What is the
use of feeling sorry for anything--loving anything? It is only added
pain.

It is a perfect January evening--cold, sparkling, clear. There is snow
on the ground, white and undefiled, here in this woodland path--feathery
snow on the black, bare boughs. A brilliant sky is above, pale blue,
rich with sunset tints, pearl, ruby, orange, opal, paling slowly to
silvery gray. There is no wind. It is a sparkling January gem, set in
hazy mist. She reaches the house, takes one last wistful look at all
that loveliness of sky and earth, and goes in. The family are assembled,
all but old Giles. They are discussing some matter with considerable
eagerness.

"She won't do it," Liz is remarking; "not if you offered her as much
again. She has got all sorts of stuck-up notions since these people have
took her in hand. She won't go a step; you'll see."

"I _will_ see!" growls Dan Sleaford; "and what is more, I will make her
_feel_ if she refuses. Set a beggar on horseback, indeed! The old man
ought to knowed better than ever let her go."

"If she hadn't gone, neither you nor Watjen would want her now," remarks
Jud.

"Hush!" says Lora; "here she is!" and the conversation immediately
stops.

She glanced at them carelessly, and throws off her jacket and hat. There
is always plenty for her to do when she gets home; but, for a wonder,
neither of the girls issue orders now. There is a pause--Dan breaks it.

"Look here, Jo," he begins, in a wheedling tone, "I've got some good
news for you. Here's a chance for you to turn an honest penny at last.
You'd like to earn some pocket-money, wouldn't you?"

She looks at him distrustfully, and does not answer. Rough Dan Sleaford,
in this lamb-like mood, is a little more to be suspected than in his
natural state. He is a younger copy of his father--coarseness, cruelty,
drunkenness included.

"You know Watjen's? You've heard of Watjen's?" he says, in the same
insinuating tone; "him as keeps the lager-bier garden and concert hall
up the village? He's lately come from New York, you know, and does as
they do it there."

Yes, she has heard of Watjen's--a low drinking place, where the roughs
of Brightbrook most do congregate, and where the lowest of both sexes
perform for the amusement of the smokers, and drinkers, and bummers of
the place. She nods shortly.

"Well--he's an out-and-out good fellow is Watjen, and he's heerd of your
singin'--how you can tip 'em French and Dutch songs as easy as wink, and
play the pianny like everything. Well--(mind you, the best singers of
New York come and sing for him; the highest-toned sort o'
ladies!)--Watjen wants to engage you. He'll give you one-fifty a night,
and I'll drive you over and back every evenin'. There!"

Dan closes this brilliant offer with a flourish. To do Herr Watjen
justice, he has offered double that amount for each night, with the
promise of an increase, should Joanna find favor in the eyes of his
patrons. But Dan judges it is not well to dazzle her with the whole
splendid truth. Joanna sits mute as a fish.

"Well!" he cries, "don't ye hear! One-fifty a night to do what you darn
please with! D'ye hear?"

"I hear."

"Why don't ye answer, then?" Dan's voice and temper are rising. The
girls exchange aggravating, I-told-you-so smiles. "I want an answer. Is
it yes or no?"

"It is no."

She says it so composedly, that for a moment he cannot take in the full
force of the refusal. He gives a gasp, and sits with his mouth open.

"Wha-a-a-t!"

"I say no. I wouldn't sing in Watjen's beer garden for a thousand
dollars a night--for ten thousand dollars a night! I wouldn't set foot
in it to save his life and yours!"

There is no mistaking this time. Her voice rings with scorn, and she
turns to leave the kitchen. Dan Sleaford leaps to his feet like a tiger,
and seizes her by the arm.

"Say that again, d---- you!" he cries, hoarse with passion--"say it
again!"

She looks at him unflinchingly, her eyes flashing fire--literally
flashing fire.

"I wouldn't go to save your neck from the gallows," she says, between
her teeth, "where it is due!"

He waits for no more. The array of horsewhips from which Giles was wont
to select for her benefit is still there. He seizes one, blind with fury
and drink; there is a sharp hissing through the air, and it descends. It
rises and falls again, quick as light. _Then_, with a scream of passion,
pain, rage, that those who hear never forget, she turns upon him. In
that moment a mad power possesses her--she is stronger than he. She
wrenches the whip out of his grasp, lifts it--the butt-end this
time--and brings it down with all the force of fury across his head. It
lays it open--the whip has a heavy handle; a rain of blood pours over
his eyes, and blinds him. He relaxes his hold, staggers backward
blindly, and falls. There is a simultaneous shriek and rush, Joanna
flings the whip into the midst of them, and flies.

She is beside herself--she knows not what she has done, or whither she
is going. She rushes on like a mad thing, heedless of all obstacles, and
falls prostrate at last on the edge of Black's Dam. As a hunted animal
flies instinctively to its lair, so her feet have carried her here, and
here she falls, panting, spent, for the time being perfectly insane. Jud
Sleaford has often predicted that she will murder some of them, and
Jud's prediction seems to have come true at last.




CHAPTER IV.

IN WHICH JOANNA RUNS AWAY.


How long she lies she cannot tell. A panic of horror and despair at
herself and the deed she has done, fills her. Has she murdered him? She
has threatened often enough to kill some of them in her ungovernable
bursts of temper, if they will not let her alone. Has she done it at
last? It is not sorrow that stirs her, nor fear; it is a panic of
darkest despair and misery such as in all her miserable life she has
never felt before. She crouches there in the snow, feeling no cold, numb
soul and body. A hurried step crunches over the frozen ground. There is
an exclamation; a hand touches her shoulder, and strives to lift her
head.

"Joanna!" a breathless voice says; "Joanna, what is this?"

It is a friendly voice. She lifts her stricken, despairing eyes to a
friendly face. The sight breaks the torpor of agony; she springs to her
feet, and flings her arms about his neck.

"George Blake!" she cries, with a choking sob. "George Blake! George
Blake!"

The young fellow holds her to him--pity, terror, blank consternation in
his face.

"Joanna, what is all this? What have you been doing? What has that--that
brute been doing to you? Do you know they say that you"--he chokes over
the words--"that you have killed him?"

She gives a gasp, and still clings hold of him. The whole world seems
slipping away; she seems to stand in the wide universe alone in her
desolation, with only this single friend.

"I have been to the house," he goes on; "all is confusion there. Jud has
gone for a doctor. There is blood on the floor, and on the whip-handle
they say you struck him with. He is lying, bleeding still, and stunned,
on the settee in the kitchen. The girls say you have killed him. Oh!
Joanna, speak, and tell me what it is!"

She tries to do so. Her words are broken and incoherent, but he manages
to get at the story--the provocation, the attack, the reprisal. His eyes
flash with honest indignation.

"The brute! the cowardly scoundrel! You served him right, Joanna--you
acted in self-defense. Even if he _is_ killed, which I don't believe,
you have served him right. But he will not die. A beast like that stands
a great deal of killing. Don't shake so, my dear; don't wear that
haggard face--it will be all right. I tell you it is only what you ought
to have done long ago. The black, sullen dog! to take his horsewhip to
you!" He grinds his teeth. "I hope he will bear the mark of your blow to
his dying day!"

She slips out of his arms, and sits down on a fallen log, her hands
clasping her knees, after her old fashion, that miserable, hunted look
never leaving her eyes.

"I knew you would come here," the young man goes on, seating himself
beside her; "it is always your sanctuary in troubled times, my poor
Joanna. Oh, my dear, my dear! my poor, ill-used, suffering girl! if I
could only take your place, and endure all this for you!"

She holds out her hand to him silently. He is so good, so leal, her one
loyal friend and knight. Great slow tears well up, and soften the blank
anguish of her hopeless eyes.

"I will tell you what I will do," he says, after a pause. "I feel sure
the fellow will not die--these venomous reptiles are so tenacious of
life--still, we both feel anxious. If you will wait here, I will go back
to the house and find out. I will return and tell you the truth--the
worst certainty is better than suspense. Only promise me"--he clasps the
cold hand he holds hard--"you will not do anything--anything rash while
I am gone."

He looks toward the pond, lying dark and stagnant under the evening sky;
then his troubled eyes seek her face.

"Promise me, Joanna," he says, "you will stay here until I return."

"I promise," she says, and he knows she will keep her word.

He rises instantly, and without a moment's delay starts off on his
mission.

She keeps her word to the letter. She sits as he has left her, never
even stirring until he returns. The last opal-tinted gleam of sunset
dies away, the frosty January stars come thickly out, the night wind
rises bleakly, the frogs croak dismally down in the fetid depths of
their slimy pools. She does not stir; apathy succeeds agony; she hardly
feels; she is benumbed, stupefied--she neither cares nor fears longer.

Presently, but it is a long time, too, the footsteps crunch once more
over the frozen snow, and George Blake comes rapidly forward. One look
at his face tells his news--it is bright, eager, smiling; his step is
alert and buoyant.

"All right, Joanna," he calls, gayly. "It is as I said; the fellow is
going to live to grace the gallows yet. It is an ugly gash, and has let
him a lot of blood--as much as if he were a bullock--but it is bandaged
up now, and he's asleep. I heard the doctor tell him," says George,
laughing, "it was the best thing could have happened to him; it had
probably saved him a fit of apoplexy, and that he ought to keep you as a
sort of family leech, to break his head at intervals. 'It is very bad
blood,' says the doctor, 'and you're the better for losing a gallon or
two of it.'"

George's laugh rings out boyishly; the relief is so unutterable.

But she does not look glad, she does not speak, she does not smile. She
sits quite still, looking straight before her, at the pale, snow-lit,
star-lit landscape.

His face, too, grows grave as he regards her.

"And now, Jo," he says, resuming his seat beside her, "what next?"

He has to repeat the question before she seems to hear, then the blank
gaze turns to his face.

"You cannot go back there," he says, and he sees her shrink and shudder
at the thought. "You cannot stay here. Then what are you to do?"

She makes no reply.

In all the wide world, he wonders, as he watches her, is there another
creature so forlorn, so homeless as this?

"Perhaps you will go to Abbott Wood?" he suggests. And at that she finds
her voice, and breaks out with a great despairing cry.

"Oh, no, no, no! Never there! Never there any more! Oh, what will Mrs.
Abbott say? Oh me! oh me! oh me!"

He sits in silent distress. Great sobs tear and rend their way up from
her heart. She weeps wildly aloud. He has never seen Joanna cry
before--few ever have--and the tortured sobs shake him through and
through.

"Don't, Joanna!" he says. "Oh, do not! I cannot bear to hear you. Don't
cry like that!"

As well ask the tide not to flow. Repressed nature will have its
revenge; she must weep or die. She sobs on and on, until the paroxysm
spends itself, and she stops from sheer exhaustion. A jealous pang
wrings George Blake's heart--how she loves this Mrs. Abbott! But still
the question is unanswered--what is to be done--and the night wears on.
George's watch points to ten. He holds it out to her in silent appeal.

"Wait," she says. "Let me think. Let me think!"

The hysterics have done her good; her apathy is swept away; she is fully
aroused to a sense of her situation--to the importance of that
question--what next?

She sits and thinks. Impossible to return to Sleaford's--horror fills
her at the thought. More impossible still to go to Abbott Wood after
this terrible deed. Besides, even if she could, even if Mrs. Abbott
would consent to overlook her almost being a murderess, Giles Sleaford
would never let her stay. She would be brought back to the farm by
force--then, what is to be done?

She looks up at last; her black eyes turn to the face of her companion,
and fix there in such a long, searching stare that he is disconcerted.

"What is it, Joanna?" he asks. "You know there is nothing in all the
world I would not do for you."

"_Nothing?_" she tersely repeats.

"Nothing that man can do."

"You asked me the other day to marry you. Will you marry me _now?_"

"Will I?" his face lights up with quick joy--he catches both her hands;
"_will_ I? Oh, Joanna!"

"Will you take me to New York to-night, and marry me to-morrow?"

"Sharp work!" he says, "but even that may be accomplished. I will take
you to New York, and I will marry you! Joanna! Joanna! how happy you
have made me!"

"I!" she says, mournfully, "I make any one happy! Oh! George Blake, you
will hate me one day for this! I ought not to ask it--I am a
wretch--almost a murderess--not fit to be any good man's wife. And you
are good. Oh! I ought not! I ought not!"

"You ought--you must!" he exclaims, alarmed. "What nonsense you are
talking, Jo! Murderess, indeed! The pity is you did not give the cur
twice as much. Ah! what care I will take of you, Joanna, how happy I
will make you. You will forget this wretched life and these miserable
people. You shall have my whole heart and life."

"And your mother," she says, in the same mournful voice, "what will she
say? And your aunt--good Miss Rice? Oh! you foolish fellow! Take me to
New York, but do _not_ marry me. Let me earn my own living--I am young,
and strong, and willing, and used to hard work. I will be a
kitchen-maid--anything. No life can be so hard, so sordid, as the life I
lead here."

"I will marry you," he says, "I refuse to release you. You said you
would be my wife and you must--I cannot live without you. Oh! Joanna,"
the young fellow cries out in a burst of passion, "you torture me!
Cannot you see that I love you?"

She shakes her head.

"No," she says, "I cannot see it, nor understand it. What is there in
me--plain, red-haired, ill-tempered Joanna, to love? And I do not care
for _you_."

"That will come in time. I will be so good to you, so fond of you, you
will not be able to help it. Say no more about it, Joanna. I claim you
and will have you."

"Very well," she answers, resignedly; "remember, whatever comes, I have
warned you. Now settle all the rest yourself. I trust you--I am in your
hands."

"And I will be true to your trust," he says, fervently, "so help me
Heaven!"

He lifts one of her hands, the red, work-hardened hands, to his lips.
And then for a little they sit in silence.

It is a strange betrothal--the hour of night, the gloomy scene, white
snow, black woods, dead silence, starry sky, and Black's Dam, evil and
ominous, at their feet. All George Blake's life long that picture stands
out, distinct from all others, in his memory--he and this strange girl
who fascinates him, sitting there, the only creatures, it seems, left in
all the world!

"Let me see," he says, returning to the practical, "there is no up-train
to the city before five o'clock. That is the one I generally go by, when
I spend a night in Brightbrook. It is now past eleven: how are we to get
through the intervening hours? You will perish if we stay here."

"And I must have something to wear," says Joanna, glancing at her dress.
It is the grimy, well-worn old alpaca. "Let _me_ see. They are not
likely to sit up to-night with him, are they?"

"Not in the least likely, I should say. He is all right; was snoring
like a grampus when I left. Why?"

"I must get into the house, and get something to wear. I cannot go to
New York like this."

He sees that she cannot, but still he looks anxious and doubtful.

"It is a risk," he says.

"Not at all, if they do not sit up. I can always get in, and once in bed
I am not afraid of _that_ family. They sleep as if for a wager. It is a
risk I must run. I must have a better dress, a shawl and hat. And I can
wait indoors until it is time to start for the station."

"An hour will take us," Blake says. "Come then, Joanna, let us be up and
doing. I shall get into a fever waiting, if we stay here."

They go--starting on the first stage of that journey, that is to
lead--who can tell where?

It is nearly midnight when they reach the Red Farm. No sign of recent
tragedy is there--quiet slumber evidently reigns. It is better even than
they had dared to hope.

"Where will you wait?" the girl asks. "It will be cold for you."

"I will walk about," he answers. "The night is mild, and my overcoat is
proof against frost-bite. Only do not be caught, Joanna, or change your
mind, or fall asleep. I will never forgive you if you fail me now!"

"I will not fail," she says, firmly. "Before four I will be with you
again."

She leaves him, and admits herself after her old fashion--bolts and bars
are few and far between at Sleaford's. All is still. She takes off her
shoes and creeps up stairs and listens.

All still.

Now the question arises, what shall she wear? She does not want to
disgrace George Blake. Nearly all the things Mrs. Abbott has given her
are in her room at Abbott Wood--Liz and Lora immediately confiscating to
their use anything attractive she brings to the farm. She has absolutely
nothing of her own fit to put on. No--but the other girls have! Joanna
has not the slightest scruple in the matter. They take everything of
hers; it is a poor rule that will not work both ways. She will help
herself from Lora's wardrobe! They are of the same height. Lora is a
"fine girl," and stout enough to make two of such a slip as Joanna, but
fit does not signify. She softly opens the wardrobe, and begins
operations. It is a small closet adjoining their bedroom, and dark as a
pocket; but she has brought a candle-end with her from the kitchen. She
lights it now and sets to work.

As well take the best when she is about it! There hangs the new black
silk suit, gotten up expressly for New Year's Day, and worn on that
occasion only. She takes it down from its peg. Here is Lora's Sunday
hat, a black velvet beauty, with crimson roses and snowy plume. To twist
out this latter appendage is the work of a second--the red roses for the
present must stand. Now she wants a wrap. Here is a cloth jacket,
handsomely trimmed; she unhooks it. Then, as she is moving away, a last
article catches her eye. It is a crimson wool shawl, a rich and glowing
wrap, and the pride of Liz's soul.

Some faint spirit of _diablerie_, more than actual need, makes her add
this to the heap. She returns to the kitchen, her arms filled with her
spoils. She has already secured one or two little gifts of Mrs. Abbott's
and Leo's. A gold breastpin, a pearl and ruby ring, and her very last
New Year's gift--a little gold watch and chain--the watch Mrs. Abbott's
present, the chain Geoffrey's, the ring Leo's. And now in the warm
kitchen she arrays herself deliberately in pilfered plumes, with a sort
of wicked zest in the tremendous uproar there will be to-morrow. Dan's
mishap will be nothing to this--Liz and Lora will go straight out of
their senses.

"It is not stealing," the girl says to herself. "I have worked for them
all my life; I have earned these things ten times over. And they have
taken lots of mine--Mrs. Abbott's gifts. I have a right to take what I
want."

Whether or no, they are taken, and will be kept. Once dressed she seats
herself, and waits impatiently for the clock to strike four. She is
eager to be off, to turn her back forever upon this hated house, these
hated people--to begin the world anew. A new life is dawning for her;
whatever it brings it can bring nothing half so bad as the life she is
leaving. New York! the thought of that great city and its possibilities
dazzles her. Of George Blake she thinks little. He is, perforce, part of
that new life, but she would rather he were not. She does not care for
him; he tries her with his boyish fondness and insipid love-making.
Still, she cannot do without him--so Mrs. George Blake, willy nilly, it
seems she must be.

One, two, three, four! from the old wooden Connecticut clock. She draws
a long breath of relief, rises, makes her way out, as she made it in.

The night has changed--the morning is dark, damp, dismal. George Blake
is waiting, poor faithful sentinel. He comes up, his teeth chattering,
white rime on mustache and hair.

"At last," he says, wearily; "give you my honor, Joanna, I thought the
time would never come. What a night this has been! Shall you ever forget
it?"

She does not speak; she looks back darkly at the house she is leaving.

"Good-by, you dreary prison," she says. "I may be miserable in the time
that is to come, but I can never again be as miserable as I have been in
you."

"You shall never be miserable. Can you not trust me, Joanna?" he says,
reproachfully.

"Come!" is her only answer. He draws her hand through his arm, and they
are off, walking fleetly, and in silence, along the bleak, windy road.

It wants a quarter of five when they reach the station. It is quite
deserted, but there is a fire in the waiting-room.

He takes her in, and sees for the first time the silken robe, the velvet
hat, the crimson shawl.

"My word, Joanna!" he says, laughing, "how smart you are! As a
bridegroom cometh out of his chamber! Where did you raise all this
superfine toggery?"

"It belongs to Lora," answers Joanna, in the most matter-of-fact tone
possible, "all but the shawl--that belongs to Liz! The watch and brooch
are my own. I did not want to shame you by being shabby."

He stares at her, then bursts out laughing; but he is not best pleased,
either, at these vague notions of _meum_ and _tuum_. There is no time,
however, to remonstrate; the train rushes in almost immediately, and the
instant it stops the runaways are aboard.

"Now then!" George Blake exclaims, "we are off at last; let those catch
who can! In three hours we will be in New York."

It is a silent trip. The young fellow sits lost in a happy dream. He
will marry Joanna. They will board in the city for a little, then his
mother will "come round," and his wife can live with her, while he will
run down three or four times a week. By and by his salary will be
raised, he will become an editor himself, he will take a nice little
house over Brooklyn way, with a garden, a grape arbor, some rose trees
and geraniums, and he and Joanna will live happily forever after!

That is his dream. For Joanna, what does _she_ dream of as she sits
beside him, her lips compressed, a line as of pain between her eyebrows,
her eyes looking out at the gray, forlorn dawn. Nothing bright,
certainly, with that face.

They reach the city. The noise, the uproar, the throng, the stony
streets, bewilder her--she clings to her protector's arm. He has decided
to take her for to-day to a hotel, and not present her to his
landlady--an austere lady--until he can present her as his lawful wedded
wife. So he calls a "keb," and they are driven off to an up-town
Broadway hotel.

"Is it always as noisy as this?" she asks, in a sort of panic. "My head
is splitting already."

"Oh, you will get used to it," he laughs; "we all do. You won't even
hear it after awhile--_I_ don't. Here we are. Now you shall have
breakfast, and then I will start off, and hunt up a clergyman."

He squeezes her hand, but there is no response. She withdraws it
impatiently, and goes with him into one of the parlors, where George
engages a room for his wife, and registers boldly as "Mr. and Mrs.
George P. Blake." Mrs. Blake is shown to her apartment, where she washes
her face, smooths her hair, straightens herself generally, and then goes
down with Mr. Blake, to breakfast.

"Now, Jo," he says, when that repast is over, "you will return to your
room, and I will go out and get you something to read, to pass the time,
for I may be gone some hours. I will fetch a parson with me if I can;
if not, we will go this evening before a clergyman, and be married. Try
not to feel lonesome. In a few hours you will be my wife!"

Joanna does not look as if there were anything in this prospect of a
particularly rapturous nature, but she goes to her room, and later
accepts the magazines he brings her, to while away the hours of his
absence. But it is a long day. She yawns over the stories and pictures
for awhile, then throws herself on a sofa, and falls asleep.

It is late in the afternoon when she awakes. George is there to take her
to dinner, waiting impatiently.

"It is all right," he tells her. "The Reverend Peter Wiley is my friend;
I have explained to him as much as is necessary, and we are to go to his
house at nine this evening. I shall want some one to stand up with me,
so after dinner I'll run down to the office, if you don't mind being
alone a little longer, and get one of our fellows."

They dine, and George again departs; Joanna once more returns to her own
room. And now it is drawing awfully near--this great change in her
life--she is about to become George Blake's wife. As she sits here
alone, her face buried in her hands, her whole life seems to rise up
before her--her whole dark, loveless, most miserable life. A dreadful
feeling of sullen, silent anger possesses her as she sits alone here,
her hands clasped around her knees, her eyes staring straight before
her, after her usual crouching, ungainly fashion. All the wrongs of her
lifetime rise up before her, a dark and gloomy array. Fatherless,
motherless, what had she done to be sent into the world banned at her
very birth? Hard fare, hard words, hard blows, oaths, kicks, cuffs,
constant toil, half naked, half frozen, jeers, scorn, forever and
forever! There it stands, the bitter, bad catalogue, never to be
forgotten, never to be forgiven. A long lifetime of reprisal will be too
short to wash white the score her memory holds against almost every
human creature she has ever known.

And yet, stay! Not quite all--not George Blake, poor foolish fellow, who
has run away with her, or rather with whom _she_ has run away. The tense
lines of brow and mouth relax a little. It is too bad to have made him
do it; he will never know what to do with her all the rest of his life.
He will be sorry for it presently--she feels that, although, perhaps,
_he_ does not just now. But she has not thought of him, only of herself;
it has been her one chance of escape from that earthly hell, and she has
taken it. What is _she_ that she should spare any one! After all, George
Blake has asked her once, let him "dree his own weird," she will alter
no plan of hers out of pity for him; he is useful to her, and when his
day comes let him----

She stops. A quick footstep passes her door, a man's step, a man's voice
whistles a gay air. Both are familiar; they strike on her heart like a
blow. She springs up and flies to the door. Down the long passage a tall
figure goes. A lady passes him; the whistle ceases, he uncovers as she
goes by; then he too is gone.

For a moment she stands stunned, her face quite white, her eyes all wild
and wide, in a sort of terror, her heart beating thick and fast. Then
she darts to the window, and but just in time. He is passing out the
last light of the evening sky falling full upon him--handsome, as usual,
carelessly elegant, as usual--the dazzling image that has always
appealed so powerfully to this wild girl's imagination--that has made
him from the first, in her eyes, unlike any other man she has ever seen.
What is the charm? He is only a well-looking, well-mannered,
well-dressed young gentleman, the type of a class that in after years
she meets "thick as leaves in Vallambrosa," and yet, to the last day of
her life, something stamps Frank Livingston as a "man of men" among them
all. In one flashing glance those quick eyes take in every detail of
face, and figure, and dress, even to the rosebud and geranium leaf
peeping out from under his dark paletot, the white vest, the kid gloves.
There is but time for a glance. He lights a cigar, beckons a coup,
springs in, and is gone.

She sits down as she has been sitting before, but in a dazed sort of
fashion that frightens even herself. She tries to take up her train of
thought where she has dropped it--in vain. A swift, incomprehensible
revulsion begins within her. She will not marry George Blake--no, no!
never, never! She springs up again, and puts out her hands as if to keep
even the idea off. She will not marry George Blake--she will die first!
How has she ever thought of such a thing? Why has she ever come here?
Why is she staying here now? If she stays he will come back and make her
marry him. Make her! She laughs a scornful little laugh, all by herself,
at the thought. But then his pleading face and wistful boyish blue eyes
rise before her. And he is so fond of her, so ridiculously fond of her.

"Pshaw!" she says aloud, impatiently, "he is a fool to want me. He will
get over it."

But she must not stay--it will not do to meet him. She must have been
mad with misery ever to think of marrying him--_him!_ Alas, for George
Blake! The haughty head erects itself, the straight throat curves. In
one moment her mind is made up, beyond power of change. And all by one
fleeting glimpse of Frank Livingston going to the opera.

She puts on her hat--Lora's hat--pulls it well down over her face,
throws the heavy crimson shawl over her arm, and is ready to go. She
writes no line or word of farewell--what is there to say? And she is not
romantic. George will see that she has gone--that is enough. Where is
she going? She does not know--only--not to marry young Mr. Blake. She
opens the door, walks quickly down the long corridor, her head defiantly
erect, prepared to do battle with George Blake should they meet. But she
meets no one. The elevator is just descending; she enters and goes down.
A moment later and she is out, under the sparkling New Year stars,
alone, homeless, penniless, in the streets of New York.




CHAPTER V.

IN WHICH JOANNA SEEKS HER FORTUNE.


The yellow-tinted twilight has given place to silvery dark, lighted by a
broad full moon. All lamps in the great thoroughfare are alight, windows
are blazing like great jewels. Her spirits rise, the fresh night wind is
like strong wine, the old gypsy instinct of freedom awakes within her.
It is well! She is strong, she is _free_! Oh! blessed freedom, boon
beyond all boons of earth! And for one whole day and night she has
thought of resigning it for life-long bondage to George Blake! Free to
do what she chooses, go where she likes; the world is all before her, a
great city full of infinite possibilities is around her! No man is her
master; no man ever shall be!

She walks on and on, her blood quickening, her heart rising. She could
sing aloud in this first hour of her exultation. She is free! her old
life lies behind her, with its shame, its pain, forever and ever. She is
here in the city of her desire, the world all before her where to
choose!

How brilliant the scene is to those country eyes; how the lamps shine,
how the great windows flash out! But the roar, the rush of many people
and vehicles dizzies and bewilders her. Will she indeed ever get used to
it, as George Blake says? But she puts away the thought of George Blake;
a hot, swift pang of remorse goes with it. How cruel, how ungrateful he
will think her, and "ingratitude is the vice of slaves." She will not
think of him; it is all she can do to keep from having a vertigo, amid
all this light and noise.

Presently she becomes conscious that curious eyes are watching her. She
does not know it, but she is a conspicuous object even on Broadway. Her
great amazed black eyes, the unmistakable country stamp about her,
something out of the common in her eager face, the brilliant shawl,
render her a distinct mark in the moving picture.

And then all at once she realizes that she is being followed, that a man
is close at her elbow, has been for some time, and is looking down at
her with a sinister leer. He is a big, burly man, with a red face, a
mangy, purple mustache, all nose and watch-chain, like a Jew. She
glances up at him angrily; he only returns it with a smile of
fascinating sweetness.

"You was waitin' for me, my dear, wasn't you?" he says, insinuatingly.

She does not reply, only hurries on, her heart beginning to beat. A
policeman passes and eyes the pair suspiciously, but Joanna does not
know enough of city ways to appeal to him. She takes these tall men,
bound in blue and brass, to be soldiers, and is afraid of them. She
walks rapidly--so rapidly, with that free, elastic step she has learned
in treading the woods, that her pursuer anathematizes her under his
breath. She has got off Broadway now, and takes corners and streets as
they come, and still, with a perseverance worthy a much better cause,
her tormentor follows. He has no breath left for conversation. He is
stout, his wind is gone, he is gasping like a stranded fish; he lags a
step or two behind, and a stern chase is always a long one. Joanna is as
fresh as when she started. Suddenly she turns round and faces him, and
something in her eyes looks so wicked, so dangerous, that the fellow
stops. The next moment she has flown round a corner and disappeared.
There is nothing for the owner of the mangy mustache but to get on the
first car and go back.

She wanders on and on, glancing about her suspiciously now, lest the
florid gentleman should have successors, but no one troubles her. She
wonders where she is. Up here the streets are quiet; long rows of
handsome brown houses, as much alike as pins in a paper, are on either
hand. Pedestrians are few and walk fast; the blue and brass soldiers
pass her now and then, but say nothing. Lights gleam from basement
windows. She pauses and looks wistfully at the pictures within. Long
tables, laid with white damask, glass and silver sparkling as at Mrs.
Abbott's, servants moving about. Sometimes it is a parlor interior, a
long, glowing room lit with great glass globes, a young girl at the
piano, the music coming to where the homeless listener wearily stands;
mamma with a book or work, papa with his paper, little children flitting
about. A great pain is at her heart. Oh! what happy people there are in
the world! Girls like her, with bright homes, happy, cherished, beloved,
_good_. She is not good; she never has been, she never will be--it is
not in her nature. She has been born different from others--more wicked,
sullen, fierce, vindictive, and now, last of all, ungrateful. A great
sob rises in her throat; she moves hurriedly on. She is cold, and tired,
and homesick--she, who has never had a home, who, more than ever before,
is homeless to-night. The hard pavement burns and blisters her feet,
used to tread elastic turf. It is growing very late, and very cold.
Where shall she stay until morning? She cannot walk much longer; her
wearied limbs lag even now. What shall she do?

The quiet of these up-town streets begins to frighten her. The blinds
are all closed now; the sweet home-pictures can dazzle her no more. She
must get back to where there are light and life--to that brilliant,
gas-lit, store-lit street she found herself in first. But she cannot
find it; she is in another bright thoroughfare before long, but it is
not the same--it is the Bowery.

A clock somewhere strikes ten. Her head is dizzy, a mist is before her
eyes, her feet fail, a panic seizes her; she grasps a railing to keep
from falling. She can go no farther, come what may.

A little ahead there is a building that looks like a church. She moves
toward it, goes up the steps, and sinks down in a heap. A pillar screens
her partly; she crouches into the farthest corner, shuts her eyes, and
tries to rest.

What shall she do?

The question beats like a trip-hammer through her dazed brain. She has
no money, not one penny; she does not know one living soul of all these
restless hundreds who flit by. And yet it is characteristic of her
stubborn resolution that she never once repents having run away from
George Blake, nor thinks of making her way back to him. She knows the
name of the hotel she has quitted; it is probable she might find it
again, but the thought never occurs to her. Whatever comes, all that is
past and done with; she will never take a single step backward to save
herself from the worst fate that can befall.

What shall she do? She feels she cannot stay crouched here on the cold
stones all night. Whither shall she go?--to whom appeal? She has spent
many a night in the open air before--nights as cold as this--but the old
mill was her safe shelter, the familiar croak of her friends, the frogs,
her welcome, the solemn surge of the forest her lullaby. Here there are
men more to be feared than wild beasts, pitiless people, who look at
her with hard, staring eyes, the "car rattling o'er the stony street,"
noise, light, danger. She has spent no night like this in all her life.

Soon what she fears most comes to pass--the gleam of that fatal red
shawl catches the quick eye of a passer-by. He stops, pauses in the tune
he is whistling, peers for a moment, then bounds up the steps, and
stands beside her.

"Sa-a-y, you, hullo!"

She looks up. It is only a boy, a gamin of the New York streets, with a
precocious, ugly, shrewd little face--a boy of perhaps thirteen. The
infinite misery of her eyes strikes this young gentleman with a sense of
surprise.

"Sa-a-y," he repeats, "dodgin' a cop?"

The tone is questioning; the words, of course, are perfectly
incomprehensible. She does not reply.

"Sa-a-y! Can't yer speak? Dodgin' a cop?"

The tone this time is sympathetic, and is meant to reassure her. If she
is performing the action in question, he wishes to inform her he has
performed it himself, and that she may count on his commiseration.

"I don't know what you mean," she says, wearily. "I am from the country;
I have lost my way in the streets. I have no home, no friends. I was
very tired, and I sat down here to rest."

Her head drops against the cold pillar. She is utterly spiritless and
worn out. He stares at her for a moment, says "Golly!" softly to
himself, and slowly resumes his whistle. He is debating whether to
believe what she says or not.

"Sa-a-y!" he drawls, after a little, "got any money?"

"Not a penny."

He resumes his whistle once more. Once more the keen eyes of the boy of
the streets goes over her, takes in the silk dress, the gleam of gold,
the crimson shawl, the weary, weary face.

"Sa-a-y! what brought ye up to York?"

"I came with a--friend. But I did not want to stay. I came out and lost
myself. You need not ask me questions. I cannot tell you more than that.
I do not know what to do. I have no money to go to another hotel."

"_Another_ hotel! Cricky! We've been in a hotel--Fifth Avenoo or the
Windsor, I shouldn't wonder. Sa-a-y, I'm blessed if I don't believe
you're tellin' the truth!"

She looks up at him indignantly. The cute, boyish face is a good-humored
one, and his youth gives her courage.

"I wish you would tell me what to do," she says, piteously. "You belong
here, and must know. I cannot stay here all night."

"Should think not. Well, you might go to the station for protection."

"The what?"

"The station--_po_liss, you know."

"Why should I go there?" she exclaims, angrily. "I have done nothing
wrong. How dare you suggest such a thing!"

"Blessed if you ain't a green un!" the boy says, grinning. "If you won't
go there, and get lodgin' free gratis for nothin', where will ye go?
_Sure_ you got no money?"

"Certain. Not one penny."

"Well, what's that a shinin' so--a gold chain? If it _is_ gold--the real
Jeremiah, mind--you might put it up the spout, and get money that way.
_I'll_ show you your uncle's."

She looks at him with such bewildered eyes that he grins again.

"Oh! she's a green un, and no mistake. Looky here," he says, adapting
his conversation to his company, "if I get you a lodgin', a clean,
comfortable, 'spectable lodgin', will you pawn your jewelry to pay for
it? 'Cause if you will, I guess I can help you."

"Oh! most willingly!" she says, relieved.

The brooch and chain are gifts she hates to part with, but anything is
better than risking a night here. She rises at once, and hastily begins
to divest herself of them.

"Don't you take 'em off now," the boy says, good-naturedly.
"To-morrow'll do. Come along. It's a goodish bit of a walk. We might
take a car, but you've no money, and I haint earned salt to my porridge
to-day."

"Do you work?" Joanna asks, eyeing the box and brushes he carries.

"You bet! Sells papers in the mornin' and shines boots the rest o' the
time. Haint done a stroke worth a cent to-day. Times is awful bad," says
this man of business, despondently. "Gents that always took a shine
before, goes muddy now, sooner'n part with a blamed nickel!"

"Where are you taking me?" the girl inquires. She is in some
trepidation, although the lad's face is not a bad one, and she is dead
tired.

"Home, to our house--my old woman's, you know. Laundress _she_ is; does
up gents' and ladies' fine linen. We've got a spare room in the attic,
and now and then we lets it for lodgin' to girls out o' place--help, ye
know. Mother knows 'em by dozens. They pays a dollar and a half a week
and grubs theirselves. It's empty now, and I guess you can have it. You
look the right sort, you do. Mother don't take no other, mind you.
'Taint much farther--up four pair, but the roof's handy for dryin'."

Joanna is too spent to talk, so in silence they presently reach the
place. It _is_ up four pairs, and very long pairs at that; she feels as
though she could never reach the top. They do reach it, however; the boy
opens a door, there is a flood of light, a gush of warmth, and they are
"there."

It is now after eleven, but late as is the hour, the boy's mother is
still pursuing her avocation. Upon a stove glowing red-hot, stands an
array of smoothing-irons; at a long, narrow table in the middle of the
floor the woman stands, polishing the bosom of a shirt.

The room is perfectly neat and clean, two lamps light it brightly. The
woman herself is in a spotless calico dress and long white apron, and
looks both respectable and, like her son, good-natured. On a
trundle-bed, in a corner, two children lie asleep.

"Bless us, Thad, how late you are!" she begins. Then she sees his
companion, and stops inquiringly, but in no surprise, and smiles a
welcome. "Good evening, miss. Come in, and take an air of the fire. You
look half froze."

Joanna advances. The mother takes in, as the son has done, the silk
dress, the golden trinkets, the fine crimson shawl, and her face grows
first puzzled, then grave. She turns to her son, with something of a
frown, and motions him into an adjoining room.

"Who is this you have brought?" she asks. "_I_ don't know her."

"No more do I," Thad rejoins; "but she's all right--bet you ten cents on
it! She ain't no help--no more she ain't a street-tramper. She's a
country gal, and greener'n grass. Cut away from her friends, I guess,
and come to New York to seek her fortune. They all do it! Don't she hope
she may find it!"

"Where did you pick her up?" the mother asks, still dissatisfied.

Thad explains at some length. Thad's mother listens, neither satisfied
nor convinced.

"I'd rather have my room empty forever, you know that," she says, with
some asperity, "than harbor half the ruck that's going. If I thought she
_wasn't_ all right, I'd bundle her off again, and let her go to the
station, and box your ears into the bargain! I won't have girls picked
up from the streets. I only lodge respectable young women out of place."

"Well, _she's_ a respectable young woman out o' place," says Thad.
"S-a-y, mother, don't let us stand here jawin'. Give a fellow his
supper, can't you, and let him go to bed."

"And you say she's got no money?" says the woman.

"No; but she's got a gold chain, and the best o' clothes, and is willin'
to put 'em up the spout first thing to pay you. Say, mother, you can't
turn her out, so cheese it all, and give us some supper."

He returns impatiently to the kitchen, where Joanna still sits in a cane
rocker near the stove. The warmth, the rest, the silence, have lulled
her into sleep. Her head lies against the back, her hat is off, her
pale, tired face has the look of a spent child.

The woman bends over her, and gradually the perturbed expression leaves
her face. No--on that brow the dreadful brand of the streets has never
rested. She is little better than a child in years; the story she has
told Thad must be true. She is one of those foolish, romance-reading
country girls who run away from home and come to New York to seek their
fortunes. There are so many of them--so many! Poor souls! the fortune
they mostly find is ruin and sin for life, and a death of dark despair.
This girl has evidently been well off; her dress is of rich silk,
handsomely trimmed and made, she wears a gold chain and watch, a
breastpin, and ring. And the shawl on her lap; the woman's eyes glisten
as she lifts it. All her life it has been her ambition to own a shawl
like this, all wool, deeply, darkly, beautifully red. All her life it
has been an ambition unattained.

"I will keep her a fortnight for this shawl," she thinks, replacing it,
"if she's a mind to make the bargain."

Thad is calling lustily for his supper. It is soon set before him--some
slices of cold corned beef, some bread and butter, and coffee. The lad
falls to with an appetite, and his mother gently awakens Joanna.

"You must be hungry," she says; "take some supper and go to bed."

But Joanna is not hungry; she dined late, and fared well. She is very,
very tired, though, and will go to bed, with her hostess's permission.

"My name is Gibbs," suggests the matron, taking one of the lamps, "Mrs.
Gibbs. Will you tell me yours?"

For a moment there is a pause. She has no name. The hated one of
Sleaford is not hers; she would not retain it if it were. Blake, she
thinks of giving; but no, she has no right to poor George's name. The
only one that belongs to her is Joanna--Wild Joanna. Then it flashes
upon her--she has only to reverse that, and she is now christened for
life.

"My name is Wild," she says, "Joanna Wild."

"And you look it," thinks Mrs. Gibbs, going on with the lamp; "wild by
name, and wild by nature, I dare say. But you're not a street-tramper,
and that's a beautiful shawl, so it's all right."

The room is a tiny attic chamber, with a sloping roof, and lit by only
two lights of glass. The bed is wide enough to lie down on, but
certainly to turn in it would be a serious risk. Still it looks
perfectly clean, and that is everything. The floor is bare; one chair
comprises all the furniture there is space for.

"I hope you will sleep well," says Mrs. Gibbs, kindly. "There's a bolt
on the door, if you've a mind to, but you're quite safe up here."

"Thank you," Joanna says. "Good night."

Mrs. Gibbs returns to her son and her work--two is _her_ general hour
for retiring.

"Gone to roost, has she?" inquires Thad, still going into his supper
with energy and appetite. "She's a rum un, she is. Wonder if her mother
knows she's out?"

And so, by the mercy of heaven, Joanna is saved from the streets, and
sleeps deeply, dreamlessly, and long, in her hard little attic bed.




CHAPTER VI.

IN WHICH JOANNA FINDS HER FORTUNE.


With the rising of the next morning's frosty sun, Joanna's new life may
fairly be said to begin.

It is rather late when she descends to the room with the cooking-stove,
which is kitchen, parlor, dining-room, and children's sleeping-room,
inclusive. The little black stove so superheats it that the windows are
open, and two or three pots of hardy rose geraniums flourish on the
sills. They make a pleasant spot of color to the girl's country eyes,
with their vivid green leaves and pink blossoms. Sunlight finds the room
as tidy as lamplight. Mrs. Gibbs stands over a tub in a corner, washing,
a little boy and girl of five toddle about, each with a doll made out of
a bottle. This is the home scene that greets Joanna.

"Good morning," Mrs. Gibbs says. "How did you rest, my dear?"

Mrs. Gibbs' language and manners are superior to her station, and Mrs.
Gibbs greatly prides herself thereon. She is a person of literary
tastes, and has seen better days. The better days were in the lifetime
of the late Mr. Gibbs, when she had but little to do, and a great deal
of time to read romances, of which she is exceedingly fond.

Mr. Gibbs was by profession a mason's assistant, in other words, a
hod-carrier, and one day, overcome by sun-stroke, fell off a scaffolding
and was instantly killed. That was four years ago, and since then Mrs.
Gibbs had adopted the occupation of laundress, and wisely eschewed
romance. But what she has read has left its mark. Her eldest son making
his appearance about the time she completed "Thaddeus of Warsaw," was
named after that hero. After a pause of seven years, twins arriving
almost simultaneously with a copy of "Alonzo and Melissa," these
innocents were christened after that romantic pair. It is Alonzo and
Melissa who are now pressing to their chubby bosoms two root-beer
bottles, and pausing in their play to stare with round, wondering eyes
at the new-comer. Thaddeus has departed to retail the day's news, and
afterward "shine" gentlemen's boots.

"I slept very well," Joanna answers, and holds out her hand with a smile
to the little ones.

She loves children, and her eyes brighten at sight of them. Many good
traits are in the girl's character that have never had a chance to come
out--this is one of them. She has never known a child in her life.

Alonzo and Melissa look at her, and, with the intuitive instinct of
children and dogs, see in her a friend at once.

"Perhaps you won't mind getting your own breakfast?" says Mrs. Gibbs.
"I'm busy, as you see. There's the teapot on the stove, and the dishes,
and bread and butter are in the pantry. Set the table yourself and take
your breakfast."

"I feel as if I were a burden to you," Joanna says, "but I hope it will
not be for long. I have no money now, but the very first I earn I will
give you."

She says it with an honesty and earnestness her hostess sees is very
real. Mrs. Gibbs finds she "likes the looks of her" by daylight, though
she is an uncommon-looking young woman somehow, too.

"What do you intend to do?" she asks, rubbing away at the shirt she is
at work upon.

She smiles a little to herself as she asks--she knows so well what the
answer will be. All these girls who run away from their friends seem to
have but one idea--to go on the stage and dazzle the New York public as
full-fledged Lady Macbeths. They may leave home plain and unattractive
enough, but something in the air of the great city is to make them
beautiful and talented, and send them home to their relatives in a few
years, dazzling visions of loveliness, fame, and wealth. It happens like
that to their favorite heroines, why not to them? But Joanna's reply is
not to order.

"I intend to work," she says steadily; "there is no kind of housework, I
think, I cannot do. I am very strong, and very willing. I can wash,
iron, cook--I have done it all my life."

Mrs. Gibbs is so astonished that she pauses in her washing, and, with
suds up to her elbows, gazes admiringly at the speaker.

"Well! upon my word!" she says. Then she laughs, and vigorously resumes
her rubbing. "I didn't expect that, you see," she explains. "Work is the
last thing girls that run--come up from the country--seem to think of. I
have known lots of 'em, and I never knew one yet who wanted to work.
They can get enough of that at home. They want to go on the stage, and
be ballet girls, actresses, what not. They seem to think the New York
flagstones are made of gold. Poor things, they soon find out their
mistake! Sometimes they go back ashamed and half starved, sometimes
they stay on, and--ah! dear me, the city is a bad place for a friendless
country girl. And _you_ want to work. Oh, well! you will get that fast
enough; always plenty to do for willing hands and hearts. And
housework's easier got than most things, than places in stores, or
sewing, or genteel things like that. But I wonder, seeing it's a hard
life, that you came up for that. By your dress you should have been
pretty well off down there--wherever it is. You won't make enough at
housework, let me tell you, to buy silk dresses like that, and gold
watches and chains."

Joanna glances down at her silk robe and smiles, wondering what good
Mrs. Gibbs would say if she knew the truth.

"You must have had a good home," continues the widow, "and kind friends.
Take my advice, Miss Wild, and go back before it is too late. The city
is not what you think it. Go back to your good home, no matter how hard
you may have to work, and thank the Lord you've got it."

"It was not a good home," Joanna says, steadily. "I had not kind
friends. It was a bad, cruel place to live in. Yes, bad, and they were
bad people. I had no friends in that house."

"And yet your dress, your jewelry----"

"Oh! the dress! that is nothing!" the girl says, with a touch of her old
impatience; "the watch and chain were New Year gifts from a lady who
_was_ kind to me. But I cannot go back--I never will go back. I am
willing and able to work; you may recommend me without fear. The jewelry
I will sell and pay you--the watch I should like to keep for the lady's
sake," her voice falters a little. "You have been kind to me--you have
saved me from the streets. As sure as I live, you will find me
grateful."

There is silence. Mrs. Gibbs rubs away, Joanna clears off the breakfast
service. Suddenly the widow breaks out:

"Look here, Miss Wild, I don't want to take no mean advantage of you,
but, of course, I can't afford to keep you for nothing. But I will keep
you, board, and everything, for--say a fortnight--that will give you
time to look about you and get used to town, for that red shawl of
yours. There! I like that shawl. If you think it a fair exchange, say
so."

She looks eagerly as she makes the proposal, evidently fearing a
refusal. That anyone can possess such a beautiful garment, and be
willing to part with it, is what she does not expect. But Joanna's face
lights with relief at the offer.

"The red shawl!" she exclaims, laughing, and again wondering what honest
Mrs. Gibbs would say if she knew how she had come by it, "why,
certainly. I am glad to be rid of it--_I_ could not wear a red shawl if
I wanted to. I am sure I do not know why I bought it. Take it and
welcome."

The widow draws a long breath--the desire of many years is attained at
last.

"Well, I'm sure, I'm much obliged. It's a beautiful shawl, all wool,
soft as silk, and such a lovely color. I will tell you what I'll do,"
cries Mrs. Gibbs, in a burst of gratitude, "you shall stay for three
weeks, if you've a mind to, and Thad shall take you about Sundays, and
I'll find you a nice easy place in a small family, as waitress, or
nurse-girl, or something of the sort Would you mind wearing a cap, and
white apron?"

It appears, upon explanation, that Joanna _would_ mind those badges of
servitude, although otherwise preferring the situation of children's
nurse.

"Well, then, it must be general housework, I suppose," says Mrs. Gibbs,
"but never mind. I'll find you a nice, easy place, with only two or
three in the family, and every Sunday out. You must come to see me
often, and look upon this as your home whenever out of place."

Amicable relations of the warmest kind being thus established through
the medium of Liz's brilliant red shawl, no more is said. But fate has
decreed that Joanna is not to get that "nice, easy place," or begin life
as a maid of all work. Her voice and her five years' steady training
stand her in stead at last, in the very way she least expects.

It begins by the cordial friendship that springs up in the bosoms of
Alonzo and Melissa for Miss Wild. They take to her, and she to them, in
a way quite wonderful, considering the brevity of the acquaintance.

On the evening of the third day, as Joanna sits in the rocking-chair
before the glowing stove, with Melissa and her "bottle baby" in her lap,
it chances that, half unconsciously, she begins to sing. It is that
little Scotch song Frank Livingston used to like, "My ain ingle side."

Mrs. Gibbs is ironing. Outside a wild night is closing in, with high
wind, and lashing sleet, and rain. As Joanna sings and rocks, she is
thinking how this fierce tempest is surging through the pine woods,
rattling the timbers of the old mill, troubling the frozen depths of
Black's Dam. She shudders to think that but for George Blake--oh, poor
George Blake!--she might be lying at this hour dead in its foul waters.
What are they doing at Sleaford's?--what at Abbott Wood? What does Mrs.
Abbott, Geoffrey, Leo, think of her? Is George Blake seeking her through
the vast city in vain? Is Frank Livingston going to the opera, or the
theater, or a ball somewhere up in these stately brown-stone streets?

As she thinks she sings, and as she sings, Mrs. Gibbs gradually ceases
work, and listens with open mouth. The Scotch song is finished; she
begins another, a German cradle song this time, a crooning, sweet sort
of lullaby, that Leo used to like at this hour. The iron in the
listener's hand has grown cold; she stands lost in wonder at this
singing bird she has caged.

"Lord bless me, Miss Wild!" she says, when Joanna ceases, "wherever did
you learn to sing like that?"

The girl looked up at her vacantly, not yet returned from dream-land.

"Eh?" she says; "singing? Was I singing? I did not know it. I was
thinking of something else."

Mrs. Gibbs stares.

"Upon my word, Miss Wild," she exclaims, "you are a strange young woman!
Why, you sing like a--like a--like Mademoiselle Azelma herself!"

"Who is Mademoiselle Azelma?"

"She's a singing lady--a German. Who learned you to sing in German? I
declare, I never was more surprised in my life!"

"Indeed! Because I can sing? Oh, yes, I can sing--I can play, too,
although my hands do not look like it," Joanna says, smiling.

"You're the most wonderful young girl I ever came across!" repeats
wondering Mrs. Gibbs. "Who would ever think you could sing like that? Do
sing another--out loud this time. Never mind Lissy--she's asleep."

Joanna obeys. She uplifts that fine, pure, strong contralto of hers, and
sings "Roberto o tu che adoro," and the Italian, and the compass of
voice, and the thrilling sweetness of the song itself, completely
confounds good Mrs. Gibbs. She gives up utterly, and sits down.

"Well, I never!" she says, and stares blankly at the girl. "I never in
all my life!"--another stare. "I do declare I _never_ did!" says Mrs.
Gibbs, and gets up again with a gasp.

Joanna laughs outright. She has a delightful laugh--merry, girlish,
sweet--but its sound is so unusual it startles herself.

"Is it so very wonderful, then?" she says, still laughing. "I know I
sing well; I was well taught."

"Tell me this," says Mrs. Gibbs, almost angrily--"why did you say you
had no friends, when you have the education, and manners, and dress of a
lady? Why, your musical education must have cost a sight."

"I suppose it did. I told you I had one friend--the lady who gave me my
watch. When I was a little, half-starved, ill-used child, she heard me
sing, and thought my voice worth cultivating. She has educated me; I owe
her everything. She would have taken me for good, long ago, only those I
lived with would not give me up."

"Why did you not go to her when you ran away?"

"I would not have been allowed to remain. There were other reasons
besides. But you need not be afraid; I will work just as well when you
get me that place, as though I could not sing a note."

"_You_ work!" retorts Mrs. Gibbs, almost contemptuously; "with such a
voice as that! I will get you no place. I will speak to Mr. Ericson
about you instead."

Joanna looks inquiringly.

"Mr. Ericson is a German," says the widow, resuming her work--"a teacher
of music and singing. I do up his linen. His brother is proprietor of a
theater--a little German theater--and Mlle. Azelma sings there, and
makes ever so much money. But Mlle. Azelma is a very difficult lady to
get along with; whenever she is out of temper, it flies to her throat,
and she cannot sing that night. Professor Ericson swears at her awful in
Dutch, and says if he could get anyone to take her place, he would send
her about her business. Now, I have heard her, and I do think you sing
better than she does; and then you have been trained to singing, which
is everything. To-morrow I am going to take his shirts home, and you
shall go with me, and sing for him. If he takes a fancy to you your
fortune is made."

"But I don't want to go on the stage," Joanna says, blankly; "I could
not. I never was in a theater in my life. I never thought of such a
thing."

"Then you had better begin, for it's the very thing to suit you, with
that voice. You will earn ten times as much as in any other way, and if
you know how to take care of yourself, it's as safe as any other life.
It's a most respectable little theater, only not first-class, of course.
Fashionable people don't go there. Mr. Ericson has given me and Thad
tickets often. Make up your mind, my dear, that that voice wasn't given
you for nothing, or all that teaching either, and earn your living in
the easiest way. Come with me to-morrow, and let Mr. Ericson hear you."

Joanna is startled; the idea is new, but she is open to conviction. She
goes with Mrs. Gibbs on the morrow, and is presented in due form to Herr
Ericson, a little, yellow man, with a bushy white mustache and a
frowning brow.

"You can sing?" he says, scowling under his eyebrows at the girl. "Bah!
Mrs. Gibbs does not know singing when she hears it. You can play? There
is a piano--while I pay for my shirts, sit down and sing a song."

His brusque manner sets Joanna more completely at her ease than any
civility. He looks at her contemptuously. She will show this cross
little man she _can_ sing. She seats herself, plays a prelude, and
begins one of her best German songs. The little professor counts out his
laundress's money, stops suddenly, fixes his spectacles more securely on
his nose, rises hastily, crosses to the piano, and scowls a scowl of
intense surprise.

"Good!" he says; a trifle more snappishly though, if possible, than
before. "You can sing. And you have been trained. That is a very good
song, and rendered with expression. You want to go on the stage?"

Joanna shrugs her shoulders.

"I really do not care about it, Herr Professor. I never thought of such
a thing until Mrs. Gibbs suggested it."

"Humph! If I get you a place will you accept it?"

"A place?"

"A situation--an engagement to sing at my brother's theater. The salary
will not be much at first. You can go on in the chorus, and so get used
to the stage. And I have a project in my mind. Yes, a project----"

He breaks off, and walks rapidly up and down, his hands in his
pantaloons' pockets, frowning horribly, and biting his mustache.

"Look you here!" he says, "you can sing. You suit me. You are the sort
of a young woman I have been looking for for some time. Plenty can sing.
Bah! that is nothing! A voice without cultivation--that is the devil!
You have been trained. In a week you might go before an audience and
make your _dbut_. You shall go before an audience. You shall make your
_dbut!_ Tell me this--who are your friends?"

"I have none, Mr. Ericson."

"Good! Better and better! Friends are the very deuce! Now listen to me.
Hundreds would jump at the offer I am going to make, with voices as good
as yours, only not the cultivation--mind you! You have a voice--yes! You
will make a success--true! You will never be a great cantatrice!"
shaking one nervous finger at her; "do not think it. Not a Nilsson, not
a Patti--nothing like it--but a fair singer, a popular vocalist, that
you will be. And you shall make your _dbut_ at my brother's theater,
and you shall be paid, and you shall be my _protege_. Mlle. Azelma
shall go to the devil! But you will make no engagement with my brother,
for I have another project in my head," tapping that member. "Later you
shall hear. To-day I will speak to my brother; to-morrow night you
shall go on in the chorus. Good day!"

He turns them out of the room, then flies after, and calls back Mrs.
Gibbs. For Joanna, she is fairly bewildered with the rapidity of all
this.

"You take care of that girl, Madame Gibbs!" the professor says, frowning
fiercely. "Mark you! she has a fortune in her throat."

It all comes to pass as the professor wills. He is a sort of human
whirlwind, with no idea of letting any other living creature have a will
of his own where _he_ is. He does speak to "my brother"--a large, mild
man of true German stolidity. He provides a costume for the _debutante_,
and sends her on in the chorus. It is a small theater; the performance
is German, the actors, the singers, the audience are all German. Joanna
goes on and goes off with a phlegm that even Professor Ericson admires.
She is nothing daunted by all the faces, and is used to drawing-room
performances.

After a night or two, she begins to enter into the spirit of the thing,
and to like it. The professor loses no time; he begins at once to drill
her in Mlle. Azelma's principal roles. She hears that popular
prima-donna, and feels convinced she can equal her, at least. A spirit
of ambition, of rivalry, arises within her. The first time Azelma's
temper flies to her throat, she, Miss Wild, is to take her place.

That time is not long coming. Mlle. Azelma's latest costume fits badly,
her larynx is at once affected; that evening she is too seriously
indisposed to sing--something else must be substituted. Nothing else
_shall_, swears the Herr Professor. And in a beautiful costume, Miss
Wild, to the surprise of everybody, takes Mlle. Azelma's part, and
sings better than that lady ever did in all her life. The audience
applaud--they, like the management, are tired of the leading lady's
caprices. Herr Ericson glows with delight. He fairly clasps Joanna in
his arms when she comes off.

"You sing like an angel," he cries, in a rapture. "Mlle. Azelma may go
hang herself! Ah! I foresee my project will be a grand success."

Next day the project is unfolded. It is to travel through the country,
with Joanna, and another _protege_ of his, a young Italian tenor he has
picked up and instructed, and give concerts. Madame Ericson, who is also
a vocalist of no mean ability, goes with them. They will be a company of
four; and they will storm the provinces! They will make their fortunes!
They will see life! They will cover themselves with immortality!

It suits Joanna exactly. Already she is anxious to leave New York. Twice
she has passed Frank Livingston on the street, and once on horseback in
the park. On neither occasion has he noticed her, but the rencontre has
set her heart beating wildly. Riding in the park, with a young lady by
his side, he has looked like a demi-god in Joanna's dazed eyes,
something so far above and beyond her, that she wonders to remember she
has ever spoken to him at all. And her last words to him were a bitter
rebuke. She is not safe in New York; he, or George Blake, may meet and
recognize her, any day. To all who have known her, she wishes to be
forever lost.

Early in May the little company are to start. All this time Joanna has
gone on living with Mrs. Gibbs, whom she has paid and repaid, over and
over again. The rest of her earnings are swallowed up by a wardrobe,
which the Herr Professor insists shall be handsome and abundant. She is
to sing songs in character, and many costumes are needed to fit them
all.

The winter days fly by. May comes, warm and sunny. From Brightbrook she
has heard nothing. She does not want to hear. That life is dead and done
with, it holds no memory that is not of pain. Sleaford's Joanna lives no
more. Miss Wild does, and her new life seems to open pleasantly and
promisingly enough. About the middle of May they leave New York, and
Joanna is fairly launched in her new life.




CHAPTER VII.

THE TRAGEDY AT SLEAFORD'S.


And at Brightbrook?

It chances that Mr. Giles Sleaford is absent from the bosom of his
family while all these disastrous affairs are going on. Mr. Sleaford is
a patron of the ring, and a pugilistic encounter for the championship of
a town some forty miles away takes place about this time.

In company with some other congenial souls, Giles is on the spot,
betting heavily, drinking deeply, swearing roundly, and using his own
fists--mawlers, Mr. Sleaford terms them--freely when occasion offers.
And so it falls out that for nine days after the flight of Joanna, that
flight remains a secret to Black Giles.

On the evening of that ninth day Mr. Sleaford returns to his home and
family, blacker than usual, more savage than usual, a sadder, though by
no means a wiser man, cursing his luck, his eyes, the road, the weather,
and prefixing the British adjective "bloody" to each, as he jogs along.

The road is certainly rutty, the weather especially gloomy and raw. A
keen January wind is blowing, and driving the sleet in fierce, slanting
lines into Mr. Sleaford's inflamed and whisky-bleared eyes.

A great bitterness is upon him; the vanity of all things earthly, of P.
R. set-to's in particular, has been forced upon him rudely. The man he
has backed has been beaten, shamefully and hopelessly, and put in
chancery in three rounds. Put not your trust in prize fighters, has been
sadly brought home to Mr. Giles Sleaford.

He ambles on, on his jaded horse, stopping at every "pub," until, as the
black and sleety winter night is closing in, he reaches the Red Farm.

The cheery light of fire and lamp streams far out over the iron-bound
road; warmth and the savory smell of supper greet him. But Mr.
Sleaford's paternal greeting is growled out, strongly impregnated with
whisky fumes, and is a gruff command for Joanna to come and pull off his
boots. His (adjective) hands are so (adjective) froze that bless his
(adjective) eyes, if he can do it himself!

There is a pause; Jud and the two girls exchange glances. They are all
afraid of their father, except Dan, and Dan at the present moment is not
there. Neither is Joanna, Mr. Sleaford sees, but in her place is a
strapping country lass of fifteen or so, whom he eyes with surly amaze
and disfavor.

"Well, bless my (adjective) eyes!" repeats Mr. Sleaford, ferociously,
"what the ---- do you mean, by standin' there like a passell of stuck
pigs, and starin'? Why the ---- don't you call that gal?"

"Looky here, dad," says Jud, to whom the girls mutely appeal, "it's no
good making a row, but Joanna ain't here. She's cut and run--there!"

"Hey?" roars Giles Sleaford, staring in fierce amazement at his son.

"True as gospel, dad--cut and run a week--nine days ago--with George
Blake."

"And stole all our things--my new silk suit and hat, and Liz's shawl!"
chimes in Lora.

"Went off at break of day, to New York, with Blake," continued Jud,
plucking up heart of grace to face his formidable father. "Cut Dan's
head open with a horsewhip first, and all for wanting her to sing at
Watjen's."

Giles Sleaford's jaw drops; his eyes start as if about to fall from
their sockets. He is still "far wide"--he only takes in the one blank
fact that Joanna has run away.

"This is how it was," goes on Jud, seeing his parent's mystification.

And thereupon gives a dispassionate and perfectly correct version of the
whole proceeding. He does not spare Dan; in his heart Jud exults in the
pluck Joanna has shown, and chuckles inwardly whenever he looks at his
brother's wound. He, himself, has never lifted his hand to the girl.

Giles Sleaford listens in dead silence. Even after his son has done, he
sits staring with open mouth and eyes, quite rigid and mute.

This is so unexpected and thrilling that the Misses Sleaford exchange
apprehensive looks; they have expected an outburst of rage and red-hot
oaths--they hear neither.

With a snap, Black Giles's jaws come together again, as the chops of a
dog close over a bone. Then he takes down his short black pipe, and
slowly begins to load it to the muzzle--all without a word of comment.
He lights up, fills the kitchen with volumes of smoke, always in awful
and ominous silence.

Presently Dan comes in, and his father eyes in a peculiar way the
longitudinal strip of plaster that adorns his brow. No greeting, except
a grumbling sort of grunt on Dan's part, is exchanged.

Mr. Sleaford sits buried in profound reflection. Supper is announced,
strong and savory, as it is in the nature of the Sleaford repasts to be.
Fried beefsteak smothered in onions and grease, mashed potatoes, hot
buckwheat cakes and tea. Giles takes out his pipe, and falls to, with
the sharp-set air of a man who has traveled forty miles, and who does
not permit the loss of two hundred dollars, and a household drudge, to
impair his appetite. But the Sleaford family are, one and all, valiant
trenchermen and women.

Seen through the lighted windows, it is a cheerful picture enough of
rough, homely comfort and abundance--the bountifully spread table, the
five healthy, dark-skinned, highly-colored faces--but the repast is
eaten in perfect silence, except a few whispered remarks between the
girls.

Outside, the sleet is still lashing the glass, and the night has fairly
closed in, in dense darkness and storm. This is the subject of the
whispers, and a matter of some concern to the Misses Sleaford, who are
due at a dance some few miles up the village, and the unpleasant weather
is something of a damper to their expected enjoyment.

After supper, still without a word, Giles gets up, buttons his rough
coat, puts on his fur cap, twists some yards of red scarf about his
neck, and leaves the house. The young people look at each other
uneasily.

"Did you tell the old man?" asks Dan.

"Jud did," says Lora, "and he never said a word--not one single blessed
word. I wonder where he's going?"

"What d'ye bet it ain't to Abbott Wood?" says Jud, carefully putting his
beloved fiddle in its case. "That old red rooster up there knows more
about our dad than any one else. He's going for money. He's been pretty
well shook, for I know he backed the Brightbrook Beauty heavy, and he's
gone for another supply of the needful. I thought he'd raise the roof
when he heard of Joanna's bein' gone, but bless your eyes, he took it
like Mary's little lamb! I wonder where Jo is, to-night?"

"Yes, I wonder!" says Liz, viciously. "I wish I had her here for about
ten minutes, I would pay her out for my beautiful new red shawl."

If they could have seen Joanna at that moment, they would have seen her
"going on" in the train of Mlle. Azelma, and facing a New York German
audience for the first time.

"If you gals are coming, come," growls Dan. "I am going to get round the
sleigh, so be ready, as I won't wait--mind that."

The young ladies hurry off, giving sundry directions to Joanna's
successor, the stout-limbed rustic maiden, at present supping off the
fragments of the feast. They will not be home until morning; she need
not sit up for father, and she is to have breakfast for them, hot and
hot, when they return in the morning about six. Then they ascend to
their chamber to adorn themselves for the dance, envelop themselves in
shawls and "clouds," and finally stow themselves away in the back seat
of the sleigh, and are driven through the white whirling storm to their
destination.

Their father, meantime, has reached his, which proves to be, as Jud has
predicted, Abbott Wood. He still maintains that ominous composure which
has so surprised his family, but there is a fierce light of dogged
determination in his sinister eyes. It is something more than common
that takes him to Abbott Wood. Since he first became the tenant of the
Red Farm, fully six years before, he has only entered that house
once--one other stormy night. He is going there again, through darkness,
and tempest and wind, and this time, too, its master shall do his
bidding, or he, Giles, will know the reason why. As before, Joanna is
the cause that brings him.

He reaches the house, a huge black bulk in the darkness, but few lights
to be seen. He grinds his teeth, and shakes his fist at it, as he rings
a peal that brings two startled men-servants hurriedly to the door.

"Is your master in?" he surlily demands.

The men stare, but the fierce, black-bearded face commands civility, and
an answer.

Not in. At Brightbrook. Dinner party. Will be back to-night, but do not
know when.

"You're _sure_ he ain't in?" says Giles, eyeing the men in a way that
makes them step hurriedly back. "'Cause why? You'll save him some
trouble if he is, by tellin' him Giles Sleaford is here, and wants to
see him, uncommon particular."

He is not in, both men assure him, with the earnestness of personal
alarm.

"Hah! Werry well, then. When he does come in you tell him this: 'Giles
Sleaford's been here,' ses you. 'Giles Sleaford,' ses you, 'come through
all this here bloomin' storm a-purpose to see you to-night, and he
_must_ see you to-night. Giles Sleaford,' you ses, 'left them
words--_must see you to-night_. He can't wait, leastways he won't, not
here, but he'll wait for you at his own place,' you ses, 'till after one
o'clock, and _you'd better come!_ Them,' you ses, 'was Giles Sleaford's
own expressions.' You tell your master them words, my man, when he comes
from that 'ere dinner-party."

With which Giles Sleaford turns away, remounts his horse, and rides back
to the Red Farm.

The girl has not retired; she is nodding stupidly over the kitchen
stove. With an oath she is dismissed to bed, and goes. She is a dull,
lumpish creature, and is frightened to find herself alone with the rats
and black beetles, and this savage man.

She has Joanna's little room under the rafters, adjoining Giles's own,
and opposite the two occupied by the Sleaford boys and girls. She gets
into bed, and falls fast asleep in a moment.

She does not know how long she sleeps. All the events of that dreadful
night are blurred and confounded in her dull brain. She awakes suddenly
to the sound of the fiercely-beating storm, the rain, freezing as it
falls, lashing the windows like lines of steel, the wind roaring
dismally through the woods. It is very cold, too, and she shivers on her
hard bed.

Other sounds reach her from below, the sounds of voices talking--loud
and angry voices. Can the girls have come back? No, these are not girls'
voices, they are the harsh, strong voices of disputing men. More and
more frightened, she tries to hear--there are two, and both seem to be
talking together. Now she recognizes the voice of her master--the other
is unknown.

"You don't believe me!" She hears these words distinctly, shouted rather
than spoken by Sleaford; "by ----! then you _shall_ believe me! I have
them up-stairs in my room unbeknown to any in this house. Come along! by
---- you shall see them, you shall believe me! I have them, by the
Eternal, and what's more, I have _you_, and I'll not spare you! No, may
I be everlastingly ---- if I do!"

The imprecations with which this apostrophe is interlarded turns the
blood of the young person who listens, as she ever after informs her
audience, into a mask of ice. The sound of heavy footsteps stumbling
up-stairs follows, two men enter the adjoining room.

There is a fumbling noise as of a search, a smothered mumble of threats
and curses in the amiable tones of Mr. Sleaford--silence on the part of
the other man--then an exclamation of triumph.

"There!" cries Sleaford, "look there! Don't you touch 'em, or I'll let
daylight through you. Just look at 'em. Here's the first--you've seen
_that_ afore. Here's the second--look! that's new. Maybe ye believe me
now? Keep off--keep off, ---- you, or by all that's great I'll have your
blood! D'ye think I'll let them go, after keeping 'em these eighteen
years? Ha! you would, would you?"

There is a crash--it is a falling lamp, an explosion--a fierce
struggle--some dreadful oaths. _Then_--over the crash of the storm, of
lashing sleet and howling wind, there is a shriek, a dreadful, unnatural
scream of agony, then a heavy fall, a hollow moan, then silence.

The girl in the bed huddles up in a heap, frozen with terror. There is a
stamping sound; it is one of the men stamping out the flame of the oil,
then a pause, then rapid footsteps rushing down the stairs. A door
opens, shuts, then again there is the darkness, the tumult of the storm,
and silence in that awful inner-room.

It is a dreadful silence, dreadfully broken. A groan falls on the
strained ear of the poor terrified girl.

"Help!" a faint voice calls, "I am stabbed."

She does not dare stir, her teeth chatter, the bed shakes beneath her
with fright.

"Help!" says that failing voice once more, "for God's sake!"

She cannot move, she seems frozen fast to the bed wherein she crouches.
That terrible cry comes no more--profound stillness reigns in that
frightful next room.

How the hours of that night pass this frightened creature never can
tell. Her hair does not turn white, which speaks well for its stability
of color. She never moves--she has buried herself in a heap under the
bed-clothes, and lies there, shivering and quaking.

With the first gray streak of dawn she rises, numb and stiff, puts on
her clothes, opens with shaking hand the door, shuts her eyes fast, lest
they should light on some horrible specter, and bolts down stairs, out
of the horrid house, far over the soaked and sodden fields, as fast as
her legs can carry her, away, away, anywhere, anywhere, out of that
horrible place!

It is a wild, blusterous morning; the storm is not yet spent; jagged
clouds frown on the earth, surcharged with rain; the wind beats her
fiercely; the pallid, blank day has hardly begun. But at the nearest
house the goodman has risen, and is opening his doors and windows, when
a flying figure comes leaping toward him, flings open the house door,
and falls prostrate on the threshold. He picks her up, puts the panting
creature into a chair, and, in gasps, and incoherently, she tells her
tale. It is brief--murder has been done at Sleaford's.

The man sets off, rouses some few of the neighbors, and starts for the
house. On their way they meet the double sleigh holding the jaded sons
and daughters of the house, and to them the tale is unfolded. Five
minutes brings them to the farm. They hurry in, up stairs, and pause
involuntarily at that closed door. Even Dan stands for a moment, afraid
to see what is on the other side.

"Oh, go on!" cries Lora, with a hysterical sob.

"Open the door, man," says somebody; "it may not be as bad as you
think."

He obeys. A shocking sight meets their eyes. The signs of a struggle are
everywhere; the broken lamp, the charred floor, the overset chairs, and
blood--everywhere blood! It has crept under the bed, it has smeared the
furniture; it dyes to the hilt a long, curved, murderous-looking knife
lying near. Prone on the floor, on his face, a man is lying--a big,
broad-shouldered, burly man--his hands and clothes crimson with the
terrible tide that besmears everything.

"It is father!" says Lora, with a terrible cry.

They lift him up, and Liz falls backward at the ghastly sight, and
faints dead away. His face is rigid and besmirched; from his left side
blood still flows in black, coagulated drops. It is the master of the
house, destined never more to swear, or drink, or fight, or horsewhip,
while his name is Giles.




CHAPTER VIII.

GEOFFREY HEARS A CONFESSION.


It is the forenoon of the day after.

Mrs. Abbott sits alone in her favorite sitting-room--a dainty apartment
in white and gold; a carpet like snow, covered with purple and
yellow-hearted pansies; chairs like ivory, upholstered in pale, creamy
tints, that harmonize well with the calla-lily hue of the lady's
complexion. There are flowers in abundance--in pots, in vases, in
crystal cups; they fill the air with summer fragrance. There are but few
pictures, in heavy gilt frames, and these are portraits--her own, her
son's, her daughter's, one or two world-wide celebrities, and one
lovely, sunlit, Southern landscape. There are books everywhere, in
choice bindings; an open piano; rich draperies of creamy silk and lace;
and last, but by no means least, a fire burning brightly in the grate.

Mrs. Abbott herself, in a white cashmere morning-gown, trimmed with
Valenciennes, sits back in the puffy depths of a great chair, her book
lying idly on her lap, her dark, dreamy eyes on the fire, her thoughts
anxious and perplexed. Like all the rest of the world of Brightbrook,
she is thinking of the Sleafords.

It is not yet eleven, but ill news flies apace; it was brought to Mrs.
Abbott by Leo an hour ago. The servants never gossip in their lady's
presence, but they do not mind Miss Leo, and Miss Leo runs with the news
to her mamma. For Joanna's sake, a certain amount of interest attaches
to these people, and deeds of violence and bloodshed like this are rare
in this peaceful community. Some unknown man had visited Sleaford's late
last night, had had a quarrel with Sleaford, had stabbed Sleaford. That
is the vague version that has reached the mistress of Abbott Wood, and
that has set her thoughts wandering painfully to a subject she would
fain forget.

She has been inexpressibly shocked by the girl's conduct. She had hoped
to do her so much good, to lift her above her surroundings--a doubtful
sort of good, always--had hoped to refine and subdue her, had thought
that task accomplished, and now----! She has heard the whole disgraceful
story--how for little or no provocation the girl had set fiercely upon
one of the young men, and laid open his head with a blow of a loaded
whip-handle, how she fled to the woods, how she entrapped foolish young
George Blake into running away with her, how she has added robbery to
attempted murder, and gone to New York.

But the sequel is strangest, wildest of all; it almost exceeds belief.
When George Blake's frenzied mother and maiden aunt rush up in pursuit
of the fugitive pair, what do they find? A deserted bridegroom! What do
they hear? An incomprehensible story! She has run away with him--yes;
but she has also run away _from_ him! When Blake, with his friend,
reached the hotel some two hours after his quitting it, they found an
empty room, and a lost bride-elect. Poor George, like a man demented,
has been hunting the city ever since, but in vain. If the pavement had
opened and swallowed her she could not more completely have disappeared.
She has threatened suicide often--has she escaped Black's Dam to find
death in the North River? Mrs. Blake is jubilant, but hides her
feelings, and returns with the tale to Brightbrook.

And it is over this Mrs. Abbott is painfully pondering, as she sits and
looks at the fire. Geoffrey, too, is on the track; he scouts the idea of
suicide. He maintains that Joanna must have been insulted and goaded
beyond endurance. He has faith in her innate goodness and gratitude. In
running away from George Blake she has acted for his good. He does not,
will not, give her up. "If she is above ground I will find her!" he
says, in that quiet, inflexibly determined way of his; but as yet even
he has not obtained the faintest clew.

Down in the servants' hall two tall footmen stand aside with very grave
faces, and whisper mysteriously. They know rather more of the affair
Sleaford than most people, but they have an excellent place, little to
do, good wages, and they judiciously only whisper. Very late last
night, in all that storm, the man Sleaford was here, and left a
peremptory order for master, when master returned. Master rode home
about eleven, was given that message, swore roundly at the giver, turned
his horse, faced the sleet and wind, and rode off again. About two this
morning he returned, pale as a corpse, drenched, frozen, staggering,
_stained with blood!_ Stained with blood--his vest spotted, one of his
hands cut, his face bruised, as if in a struggle. All this is seen at a
glance. Then he went to his room, locked the door, and has not been seen
since. His man left his hot shaving-water and a cup of coffee in the
dressing-room. He did not appear at missus' breakfast. It has a very
ugly look; the two men have reason to whisper gravely over it, and hold
themselves apart.

But the birds of the air carry news of bloodshed. It is being rumored
already, in awe-stricken tones, through the village, who Giles
Sleaford's midnight visitor was.

Mrs. Abbott throws aside her book at last, with a heavy, impatient sigh,
and rises, and goes to a window. She draws aside the draperies and looks
out. A storm of wind and wet is sweeping past; the "January thaw" has
set in in pouring rain. The landscape looks all blurred and blotted out,
the sky black and low, the trees twisting and rattling in the gale.
Where is that unfortunate Joanna, this wild winter day? the lady thinks,
with a shiver. Poor creature! it seems of no use trying to do anything
with this sort of people; they are true to their own reckless natures,
and under that light outer coating of varnish are tameless and reckless
to the end.

As she stands and gazes at the drifting rain, she sees coming through it
the figure of a man. He approaches the house--some one of the servants,
she thinks. But a moment after there is a tap at the door, and one of
the tall men enters, looking flurried and startled.

"Well?" his mistress says, in some surprise.

"It's--it's a young man, ma'am," the man stammers, "to see you, if you
please. A young man by the name of Sleaford."

"Sleaford!" she repeats the name, almost startled herself; it has been
in her thoughts all the morning so persistently, and is so associated
with tragedy now.

"Yes, ma'am, he wishes to see you most particular, he says. It's a
matter of life or death."

"To see _me?_" more and more surprised. "Are you sure you have not made
a mistake? Are you sure it is not _Mr_. Abbott?"

"He said most particular my missus. I put the question to him wasn't it
master, and he said _no_, Mrs. Abbott, and a matter of life and death."

"Show him in."

She moves back to her chair before the fire, and the young man by the
name of Sleaford is shown in. He casts one careless glance around the
beautiful white and gold boudoir, and stands, hat in hand, dripping,
dark, strong, weather-beaten, a handsome, gypsy sort of young fellow, my
lady thinks, not without a sort of admiration, as if he were a fine or a
well-painted picturesque brigand in a Salvator Rosa picture.

"You wished to see me?" her slow, sweet, _legato_ tones break the
silence. "Will you sit down?"

He looks at the frail, pretty, white and amber chair, and shakes his
black head.

"No, lady, I will stay but a minute. My name is Judson Sleaford, my
father was stabbed last night. He is dying to-day, and he has sent me to
you."

He addresses her with perfect ease of manner, entirely unembarrassed by
his errand, her stately presence, or the splendors around him.

"Yes," she says, wondering more and more, "to me?"

"To you, lady--most particular to you. He didn't say so, but I think he
would rather Mr. Abbott knew nothing about it. He says it is a matter in
which you are concerned, and he wants to make a dying confession to your
son."

"To my son?"

"To young Mr. Lamar. Mr. Lamar can tell you later. Is he at home?"

"My son is in New York," Mrs. Abbott replies, turning very pale; "he is
in search of Joanna."

"_That's_ unlucky," says Jud, with perfect coolness, "because dad--I
mean father--can't hold out much longer, and he says it's important. As
well look for last year's partridges as our Joanna--he won't find her.
Couldn't you send for him, lady? He could get a dispatch and be here in
five hours."

"Certainly," Mrs. Abbott says, "if it is necessary. But----"

"Dad wouldn't take all this trouble if it wasn't. It's of importance,
you'd better believe, lady, and worth hearing, whatever it is. You'd
best send for him, and tell him to look sharp, if he wants to see the
old man alive. He's sinking fast. The doctor says he would be dead now
from loss of blood if he wasn't as strong as five ordinary men."

"I will send for him at once--at once," the lady says, rising; "but I
cannot imagine----"

She stops, looking pale and puzzled.

"No more can I," says Jud. "All the same, dad can't die easy with it on
his mind--so he says. I'll tell him, then, the young gentleman will be
telegraphed for, and will come? Put it strong, please, lady, so that
there may be no mistake."

"He will come the instant he gets the dispatch," Mrs. Abbott says, and
Jud Sleaford, with a bow, departs.

"Come down at once. Go straight to Sleaford's."

These are the words she writes and sends to the village by a mounted
messenger, which flash over the wires to New York, and find Geoffrey
rising from a midday luncheon.

He knits his brows perplexedly as he reads--an odd message, signed by
his mother. A moment later his face clears. It concerns Joanna--she has
returned, or there is news of her. He looks at his watch--it wants an
hour of train-time. He will get to Brightbrook at 4.30, to Sleaford's at
5. If Joanna is back, by fair means or foul, he will compel Giles
Sleaford to give her up. His interest in the girl he has befriended is
deep and strong--he can hardly understand its depth and strength
himself.

The dim afternoon is fast darkening into night, as, by the swiftest
conveyance he can find at the depot, he drives through the rainy woods
to the Red Farm. All the rest of his life the memory of that drive never
leaves him--it is like no other that has gone before, or that comes
after. His whole life is changed from that hour. The picture of the
desolate scene will never leave him; in after years he starts from his
sleep often, in disturbed dreams living it over again. It is always
dark, that picture, with the melancholy drip, drip, of the rain, the
forlorn trees, the desolate flats and marshes. It has been said that we
die many times before we are laid in our coffin. Looking back, it always
seems to Geoffrey Lamar that on that evening he died first.

He reaches the farmstead--a strange stillness and gloom rest upon that
noisy household. He has crossed its threshold but twice before; this is
the third and last time. The thought of that somber red house can never
return to him again without a thrill of the pain, and shame, and horror
of this night.

In the kitchen he finds the girls and their youthful handmaid, huddled
together, a shrinking group.

They have feared their harsh father in life, they fear him more in his
grisly death. They will not go near his room: a superstitious dread
holds them back; death, and such dark death as this, appals them. Jud is
nurse and companion. Dan has deserted the house, and hangs moodily about
the premises. A chill strikes Geoffrey--something more than news of
Joanna is here.

"What has happened?" he asks. "Why have I been sent for, and told to
come here?"

"Don't you know?" Lora asks, in wonder. To her it seems as if all the
world must know, as if it had happened months ago, instead of but a few
hours. "Father's been murdered, and has sent for you."

"Your father--murdered!"

He stares as he pronounces the horrible word, quite aghast.

"Murdered! and sent for him!"

"Oh! he ain't dead yet," the girl says, beginning to sob hysterically.
"He can't die, he says, until he sees you. But he is dying, and there is
not a moment to lose. Jud said to call him as soon as ever you came.
Liz, go and call him."

"Go yourself!" is Liz's whimpering retort. "I--I'm afraid."

"You go, Beck," Lora says to the girl; and Beck, possessing plenty of
stolid stupidity, which stands in good stead of moral courage sometimes,
goes.

Jud appears directly.

"It's lucky you've come," he says. "He won't hold out till morning. He's
awake and ready to see you. Come up. Look out for the stairs. It's dark,
but dad, poor old chap, don't want a light. Here! come in."

The chamber of the tragedy is but dimly lit by two pale gray squares of
twilight, but it is sufficient to show the grayer face of the dying man.
Geoffrey is a physician; at a glance he sees that death is there. It is
a question of very few hours. He is a ghastly sight, black-bearded,
bloodless, with staring eyes, and gasping breath. Some of the old fierce
light lingers in these glazing eyes; they kindle at sight of his
visitor.

"You go, Jud," he says. "I'll speak to this young gent alone."

The wonderful strength of the man is in his voice yet--the old imperious
ring in his tone.

Jud obeys.

"If you want anything," he says to Geoffrey, "knock with your heel on
the floor. I'll go down and take a smoke, and I'll hear you. There's the
stuff he takes, on the table. Don't let him talk too much; the doctor
says 'tain't good for him."

"Will you go and hold your jaw?" interrupts the dying man with a glare.

Jud shrugs his shoulders and goes, and Geoffrey is alone with Giles
Sleaford.

       *       *       *       *       *

Nearly an hour passes.

Down stairs the group sit and wait. They wonder what their father can
have to say--something about Joanna, they infer. Dan slouches uneasily
in and out of the house, the girls cling together in silence. Outside
the night and rain fall, the wind sobs feebly.

"Show a light, can't ye?" Dan growls, stumbling in, and Beck obeys.

But even the bright lamp cannot dispel the gloom, the awe. In that upper
chamber there is silence--no telegraphic boot-heel has summoned aid. Can
they be talking all this time?

"It must be awful dark up there," Lora whispers. "Jud ought to go with a
light."

But Jud will not go until summoned, "if he knows himself," he
asseverates. And he is not summoned for still another half hour.

It is nearly seven when the bedroom door opens, and a footstep slowly
descends the stair. Very slowly, unsteadily, it seems, and then the door
opens, and Geoffrey Lamar comes in.

They start to their feet, one and all, at sight of him. What has
happened? Is father--dead? For death only should change any face as
Geoffrey Lamar's is changed. So white, so haggard, the eyes so wild, so
vacant, like the eyes of a sleep-walker, fixed in a blank, sightless
stare.

"Oh! what is it?" they all cry out. "Is father dead? Is father dead?"

His dry lips part, he makes an effort to speak, shakes his head, points
upwards, and turns and goes. Still in that same blank way, as if dazed
or stunned by a blow. The conveyance in which he came is waiting, but he
never thinks of it; he plunges on through the rain, across the sloppy
fields and marsh land, under the dripping trees--straight on, with the
blind, unerring instinct still of the sleep-walker.

And, strangest of all, he does not go home. He goes on to the village,
to the hotel, asks for a room, and locks himself in.

And then he falls, rather than sits, in a chair, covers his face with
his hands, and so remains motionless a long time. He is trying to think,
but his brain is spinning like a top--heart, soul, mind are in
confusion. His thoughts are chaos--no order comes. A great, nameless
horror, of sin, and shame, and darkness, and ruin has fallen upon him.
Past and future are blotted out--the present is only a hopeless whirl of
sudden despair. He sits for a long time; then he starts up, and begins
pacing the room, as a madman might; his teeth are set, his face
blanched, his eyes full of infinite misery, his hands locked. Walking or
sitting, he still cannot think. The blow has been too sudden, the agony
too great. Later, he will think, until thought becomes almost insanity;
to-night he is wild, distraught, master of himself no more.

He sits again, starts up again, and walks until exhausted. Then he
flings himself down, his folded arms on the table, his face resting on
them, with one great heart-wrung sob, and so lies, mute and prone. And
when morning dully and heavily breaks, it so finds him. He has not slept
for a moment the whole night through.




CHAPTER IX.

A LONG JOURNEY.


That night Giles Sleaford dies.

A little group surrounds his bed--the doctor, the clergyman, a
magistrate, his son Jud, and Dan just within the door. And the last
words of the dying man are these:

"Nobody done it. It was--a accident. He's acted--all square with
me--and--it sha'n't be said--Giles Sleaford--played it--low down--on
him. I've told the truth--to the young gent---- Nobody done it. I
fell--on the knife. You--gents all--remember that when I'm--toes up."

With many gasps he says this--the gray shade of death on his face, its
clammy moisture on his brow. There is a prolonged death-struggle, the
strong life within him fights hard, but the rattle sounds, he stiffens
out with a shiver through all his limbs, and lies before them--dead.

And John Abbott is vindicated! It is the doctor who brings the news to
the master of Abbott Wood--the doctor, who is also the family physician
of the Abbotts. He rides with a very grave face, yet curious to see how
the man will take it. Yes, the servant said, dubiously, his master is
in, but he doesn't know whether he will see anyone. Dr. Gillson
scribbles a line or two, folds it up, sends it, and the result is he is
shown at once to Mr. Abbott's study. There, Mr. Abbott, unshorn and
haggard, with blood-shot eyes and disordered dress, sits and looks at
him with sullen suspicion as he comes in.

"What is this message of yours?" he demands, surlily. "I am not well
to-day. I did not wish to see any one. I----"

"I came from Sleaford's," interrupts the doctor, regarding him covertly.
"The man Giles is dead."

"Dead!" John Abbott says. "Dead!" The last trace of florid color leaves
his face, and leaves it perfectly livid. "Dead!" he repeats, with a
dull, vacant stare.

"Dead!" reiterates Dr. Gillson. "I have just left his death-bed. Mr.
Abbott," he says, his hand on the millionaire's arm, "it is known
throughout the place that _you_ were the man who visited him at midnight
on the night before last!"

John Abbott turns his inflamed eyes upon the physician's face, still in
that dazed, vacant way. "Well?" he says, moistening his dry lips.

"It is known you had a struggle with him, that violent words passed. It
is known that for years he has held some secret power over you. Pardon
me for repeating all this, but it is public talk now in Brightbrook. You
have been suspected of--killing Giles Sleaford."

"It--it isn't true," Mr. Abbott answers, still in that dull, slow way,
so unlike his usual furious manner over even trifles. "I didn't kill
him."

"No," the doctor says; "although your own assertion would not vindicate
you. But he has."

"What?"

"On his death-bed just now, his last words were a vindication of you."

John Abbott gives a great gasp--whether of amaze or relief the doctor
cannot tell--stares at him a moment, grasps the arms of his chair, sits
erect, and waits.

"His last words vindicate you," repeats the medical man, emphatically.
"'Nobody did it'--I repeat what he said--'it was an accident. I fell on
the knife.' Mr. Powers and the Rev. Cyrus Brown were both listening, as
were also his sons. My dear sir, I congratulate myself on being the
first to bring you this good news."

Dr. Gillson feels no particular regard for the man before him, beyond
the regard that all well-constituted minds must feel for a man who can
sign a big check with the easy grace of John Abbott. He has signed more
than one for the doctor.

There is a moment's deep silence--the blood comes back with a red rush
to Mr. Abbott's face. A carafe of water stands on the table; he fills
himself a full glass and drinks it off. Then he rises, thrusts his hands
in his trousers pockets, and begins walking excitedly up and down.

"Have you told my wife this?" are his first words, and the surly tone of
his previous greeting has returned.

"Certainly not, Mr. Abbott. I should think Mrs. Abbott would be the very
last to hear anything of this disagreeable nature. It is hardly a topic
fitted for a delicate lady's ears."

Mr. Abbott resumes his quick march, his forehead frowning, his glance
sullen.

"Look here!" he says; "this must seem a fishy sort of business to you,
and I know there has been a deuced deal of talk about it. Brightbrook is
such a beastly talkative little hole, and every man makes his neighbor's
business his own. I knew Giles Sleaford years ago--ay, a round score of
them, and in the past he did me some--well--services, that I haven't
forgot. No, it ain't my way to use a dirty tool, and then fling it
aside. I've befriended him, poor beggar, since he came here. And I _was_
with him that night, by his own request, and we _did_ have a dispute. He
had something belonging to me--I wanted it, and he drew a knife. There
was a brief struggle for the possession of the property--mine, mind you,
by every right--and in that struggle his foot slipped, and he fell
forward on the weapon. There is the whole story, so help me. I don't
mind owning I've been uneasy about it, for if he hadn't spoken before he
died, things looked ugly for me. But he _has_ spoken, you tell me, like
a trump, and told the truth, by Heaven! Well!--and so poor Giles, poor
beggar, is gone! Well, we must all go when our time comes. Will you have
a glass of wine, doctor? It's rawish sort of weather, and the roads are
beastly."

Dr. Gillson knows what the Abbott vintages are like, and accepts. Mr.
Abbott rings, issues orders, and resumes his march.

"I'm glad you haven't told my missis. She's nervous, and, as you say, it
ain't quite the topic for a lady. I hope she won't hear anything of it.
A man don't want his family to know everything. And so poor Giles is
gone! Well, well! he was a desperate fellow in his time, and strong as
an ox. It's a little hole lets a man's life out, ain't it, doctor?
Here's the wine, doctor. Help yourself."

"I saw young Lamar last evening," the doctor remarks; "fine young fellow
that, and an honor to a noble profession. Capital port this, Mr.
Abbott--will you try it yourself?"

"Saw Lamar? Saw Geoff? No, did you though? Didn't know he was down. Yes,
I'll take a thimbleful, my mouth feels parched to-day. Yes, a fine young
fellow, as you say, doctor--no call to learn your business. _I_ provide
for him as if he was my son. No need for _him_ ever to look at tongues,
or feel pulses. But he would do it, sir. Amuses him, I suppose. This
house will be his when I pass in my checks. I love that boy, sir, as if
he was my own."

From this moment Mr. Abbott's spirits rise, until they are at fever
heat. He drinks his own wine, he snaps his fingers at imaginary foes, he
clears the Red Farm from the rabble who infest it, he holds up his head,
and feels he is a man again. He has never breathed quite freely in the
lifetime of Giles Sleaford. It was like standing on a volcano, that
might split open and vomit fire at any moment. And now Sleaford has
gone, and cleared his character. "Bully for old Giles!" is Mr. Abbott's
somewhat inelegant inward exclamation, his eyes sparkling, the fluid
color deep in his vinous cheeks. Joanna, too, is gone--it is a blessed
relief to be rid of both. He has nothing to fear now.

"Even if they find them--them things," Mr. Abbott muses, "those
loggerheads of boys won't be able to make top or tail of 'em, and there
were things no living soul knew but Black Giles himself. Tisn't likely
he told those louts of his. He bled me pretty freely in his lifetime,
and he wasn't the sort to be overburdened with family affection, or to
care too much for them he left behind him. But I wish I had--I had those
things."

He ponders over it a good deal, and the result is, he takes his courage
in his two hands later in the day, and rides over to the house of death.
A large and motley assemblage are there, indoors and out. There is to be
a sort of "wake," of a somewhat festive character too, for copious
refreshments for the watchers are in course of preparation. But the
great man of Brightbrook is met on all hands by such dark looks, and
sullen and sinister glances, such angry, ominous silence, that he
prudently does not press the matter that has brought him, but rides away
again as he came. Dan Sleaford, in particular, eyes him with so much
latent malevolence, that he breathes more freely, although no coward,
when half a mile of marsh land lies between them. It only confirms him
in his resolution, however, to sweep, without loss of time, all this
evil-disposed vermin off his land.

Mrs. Abbott is reading a note when he enters his own drawing-room, with
a surprised and perplexed face. It runs:


"BRIGHTBROOK HOUSE, Jan. 29, 18--.

     "MY DEAR MOTHER: I am pressed for time, and so shall not visit the
     house before returning to the city. An important matter calls me
     away for a few weeks, so do not be anxious if I am not with you for
     some little time. Most affectionately,

"GEOFFREY LAMAR."



Such a strange note--so short, so curt, so incomprehensible. To go
without calling to see her, to be absent for some weeks, to say not one
word about his summons to Sleaford's, or what passed there. Mrs. Abbott
sits fairly puzzled, and a trifle displeased. It is not in the least
like Geoffrey, this brusqueness, this mystery.

"Has Geoff come?" Mr. Abbott asks, entering in high good spirits, red,
bluff, breezy.

She glances at him in surprise, folds her note, and puts it in her
pocket.

"Geoffrey is not here. How did you know he was down?"

"Oh! old Gillson told me--met him last night at the station. You don't
mean to say, Leonora, he hasn't been here at all?"

It is a token that Mr. Abbott's spirits are at their highest, when he
calls his wife by her name, or gives her the loving glance he does at
this moment. And both name and glance from him are particularly odious
to Mrs. Abbott. She rises coldly as he approaches.

"My son has not been here, Mr. Abbott. He did come down, but he has
again gone."

She turns to leave the room, but the seigneur of Abbott Wood, in his
new-born happiness, interposes.

"Oh! hang it all, Nora, don't run away, as if I was the plague! Sit down
and let us have a cozy talk. A man might as well be married to an
iceberg, blessed if he mightn't. I don't see you hardly from one week's
end to t'other. No man likes to be kept off at arm's length that way,
blessed if he does. It ain't nature. I don't complain, mind you--I'm
proud of you. You're the handsomest woman, the best-dressed woman, the
highest-stepping woman _I_ ever see--dashed if you ain't! And all the
men say so. And I love the ground you walk on. I wouldn't have you
different if I could. You suit me to a T! Only don't be so stiff and
stand-offish _all_ the time. Do sit down, Nora, and let us have a cozy
chat."

"You have been drinking, Mr. Abbott," his wife says, in cold disgust:
"keep off! Do not come near me! I cannot talk to an intoxicated man."

"No, I ain't drunk--had a glass or two, but bless you, I ain't drunk. I
tell you, you're a stunner, Nora, and I love you, by George I do, and I
love your son, and half I have shall be his. There! I can't say no
fairer than that. It was the best day of my life, the day I married you;
only you _are_ so high and mighty, and won't sit down as a wife should,
and have a cozy----"

But Mrs. Abbott waits to hear no more of this tipsy, uxorious
maundering. As he comes toward her, she swiftly leaves the room,
retreats to her own, and locks the door. Leo is there drawing, and she
looks up in alarm to see her mother's white face, and burning dark eyes.

She starts up.

"Mamma! what is it?"

Some vague resemblance to the man below looks at her out of Leo's eyes,
and she puts out her hands to keep her off.

"No!" she cries, "do not! It is nothing." She sinks down and covers her
face. "Oh!" she thinks, with a bitterness that is greater than the
bitterness of death, "what a wretch I am! How richly I deserve my fate!
For his money I sold myself, degraded myself! Shall I never get used to
my foul bondage? I try, I pray, I strive, but in spite of myself I am
growing to loathe that man."

       *       *       *       *       *

Little more than a week later, and Geoffrey Lamar is in San Francisco.
Jaded, travel-worn, pale, he goes about the business that has brought
him there, giving no time to sight-seeing, or study of life occidental.
That business takes him to a church in the suburbs, to the search of a
certain register, where he finds what he fears to find, what he has
hoped he will not find. It takes him to still another and similar
errand, and with similar result. He has been fatally successful in both
quests. One more visit remains to be made, then he returns, with every
hope of his life crushed out, it seems to him, forever. It is to a
public building, a dingy brick edifice, with barred and grated windows,
high spiked walls, and watchful sentinels, but, saddest of all prisons,
a lunatic asylum. He sees the resident physician and states his errand,
and the name of the person he has come to see. The doctor eyes him
curiously.

"It is an odd thing," he says, smiling, "but you are the first visitor
in thirteen years who has asked to see that patient. Yes, she is here,
and she is well, that is, physically. Mentally, of course----"

The doctor taps his frontal development, and shakes his head.

"Is she a violent case?" Geoffrey asks.

"Oh, dear, no; quite the reverse. Gentle as a child, and, seemingly, as
sane as you or I, except at intervals. But, of course, it is all
seeming. It is a hopeless case. She will never be any better."

"What do you know of her history?"

"What do _you_ know of it?" the doctor retorts. "Pardon me, but I never
betray trust."

"I know everything. She has been here for fifteen years; she has lost a
child; her brother placed her under your care for temporary aberration,
thinking she would recover. She has not recovered. She grieves for her
child, and it is part of her lunacy that she must wait here until that
child--now grown up--comes for her. Her husband is a rich man. Your
orders are, every care and comfort compatible with close confinement.
Her name is Mrs. Bennett."

"All correct," the doctor answers. "I see you know. But her child is
dead. You are a relative, I presume?"

"I am not a relative. I have been sent here by one. But you mistake in
one point. Her daughter is not dead."

"No? You surprise me. I certainly was so informed. Mr. Bennett's
remittances from New York are regular as clock-work. She has every care
and attention, as you will see. If you are ready, I will accompany you
now."

They ascend some flights of stairs, traverse sundry corridors, and enter
at last a pleasant, sunny little room. There a woman sits sewing. A
carpet is on the floor, a canary is in a cage, some pots of roses and
geraniums are in the windows, but the windows themselves are grated
like the rest.

"A visitor for you, Mrs. Bennett," the doctor says, cheerily, "a young
gentleman from the States."

Mrs. Bennett rises, and makes an old-fashioned little courtesy. She is a
thin-faced looking woman, with dark, wistful eyes, and black hair,
thickly threaded with gray. Once she must have been rather pretty, but
that once was long ago.

"I do not know you, sir," she says, slowly scanning his features.
"Perhaps you bring me news of my child?"

It is difficult to imagine her insane--so gentle, so collected are look
and tone.

"I do," Geoffrey answers, with emotion, and he takes the poor creature's
hand. "Your daughter is alive and well, and I believe will come for you
before long."

"I have been waiting a long time, a very long time," the poor soul says,
wiping her eyes. "I get so tired sometimes, so tired, and then I think
perhaps she will never come at all. And it is a little lonely here,"
glancing deprecatingly at the doctor, "although everybody is very kind
to me, very kind indeed. But, oh, I want my little Joan--my little
Joan!"

The pathos of her tone touches his heart.

"Your little Joan will come, I promise you that, and very soon," he
answers.

"And will she take me away?" with a wistful, tearful glance, "for I want
to go away. I have been here so long--so many, many years. I would like
a change now. I never make a noise, do I, doctor? nor make trouble, like
the other people here. I am very quiet. And I will do everything she
tells me if she will only take me away."

"She will take you away, I am sure of that."

"I get so tired, you know," she goes on, piteously. "No one ever comes
to see me. My husband is busy working, and sends money to pay for me,
and, of course, he cannot leave his business to come. And Giles has gone
away. Giles is my brother, but I am afraid of him; he is cross, and he
curses. So did my husband, but he was good to me. I have been here a
long time, and I have been very patient, and now I want to go away, for
I am tired of this house, and so many noisy people."

Geoffrey reassures her, and makes a sign to the doctor to go. Her
plaintive voice, her sad, weary eyes, pierce his heart. They bid her
farewell, and leave her wiping her poor dim eyes, and murmuring softly
that she will be very good if Joan will only come and take her away.

Three days later Geoffrey Lamar starts on his return journey to New
York. A great change has come over him. That old look of invincible
resolution has deepened to gloomy sternness; he has aged in three
days--he looks ten years older than on the night he sat by Giles
Sleaford's death-bed. All the youthful brightness has gone--care-worn,
haggard, silent, he sits the long days through, while the land whirls by
him, seeing nothing of all that passes, hearing nothing of all that goes
on. Wrapped in himself and his somber thoughts, thinking, thinking
always--so the time wears, and at last the long overland journey is at
an end, and he treads the familiar New York streets once more.

He makes no delay in the city. What _must_ be done is best done
quickly. All his plans are formed beyond possibility of change--new
plans for a new life. The past is dead and done with, a wholly new
existence must begin for him at once.

He goes down to Brightbrook, and reaches the village late in the
afternoon. The sunset of a sparkling winter day is paling its crimson
fires, and tinging with its ruby glow the trees, the urns, the western
windows of the great house. He enters the avenue on foot, and walks up
under those noble trees with a quick, firm step. "For the last time," he
thinks, as he looks around. And it was to have been his--his home--this
fair domain, this goodly inheritance. For _its_ loss he feels no pang--a
far heavier blow has fallen upon him. The loss of fortune can be
borne--the loss of honor is all. And all is lost--even honor.

He asks for Mr. Abbott, and is shown into the library where that
gentleman sits, perusing the evening paper and smoking a cigar. He
smokes and drinks a great deal. At sight of his step-son he starts up,
throws down the paper, turns with radiant face, and holds out both
hands.

"What--Geoff! Back? Dear old boy, how we have missed you. And where have
you been all this little forever?"

He stands with those welcoming hands outstretched, a glow deeper than
the glow of the sunset, streaming through the painted oriel, deeper than
the port wine he drinks, on his rubicund face--the glad glow of welcome.
But Geoffrey Lamar, pale, stern, avenging, draws back from those eager
hands.

"No," he says, "we have shaken hands for the last time. I stand in this
house, and speak to you for the last time. It is the bitter blight and
disgrace of my life, that I have ever spoken to you at all!"

The man falls back from him, his hands drop, his eyes start, he stands
staring stupidly at his step-son.

"What--what--what d'ye mean?" he stammers at last.

"What I say. On his death-bed Giles Sleaford sent for me, and told me
his story--and yours. I know the black secret that has bound you two
guilty men together. I hold the papers that cost him his life. I have
been to San Francisco, and have verified the proofs of your guilt. And
John Abbott, scoundrel and BIGAMIST, I have returned to denounce _you!_"




CHAPTER X.

LEO'S BALL.


The last light of the fair, frosty day, gleaming in myriad hues through
the stained glass, falls on the picture within the library--the
darkly-polished floor, with its great rose-red square of carpet, its
pictures, bronzes, books, and on the figures of the two men. On John
Abbott, millionaire and magnate, sitting huddled together in his
arm-chair, his face covered with his hands, his guilt brought home to
him, unable to look for one second into the fiery eyes of Geoffrey
Lamar. On Geoffrey Lamar, standing haughty and wrathful, with gleaming
eyes, compressed lips, and knotted forehead. On that high, pale brow the
veins stand out, swollen and purple, with the suppressed passion within
him. And yet, little has been said, and that little in a tense,
repressed tone, lower even than usual.

It is only on the stage, perhaps, that people in these supreme moments
of death and despair make long speeches, only in fiction that the dying
lie among their downy pillows and make exhaustive confessions of
romantic lives. In real life, in the hours of our utmost need, we are
apt to find ourselves mute.

John Abbott has not spoken one word. He has attempted no denial, no
vindication; he has fallen into his chair, and crouches there, crushed
by the tremendous blow that has fallen upon him. Geoffrey speaks at
intervals, in a harsh, unsteady voice, very unlike his own, but the
fiery wrath that consumes him is so deep, so deadly, his hatred and
abhorrence of this man so utter, that all words fail and seem poor and
weak.

"I have little to say," he says, in that low, concentrated voice of
passion. "I was a child when the wrong was done. I am a man now, and I
do not strike you dead before me, and nothing less can atone. This is
the last time I will see you or speak to you while I live; the last time
I will ever set foot in this accursed house. I go from you to my mother,
to tell her the truth--the horrible, shameful truth, that may strike her
dead while she listens. But if I knew it would, I would still tell her."

He breaks off; all this he has said in pauses and gasps. He puts up his
hand to his throat; he feels as though he were strangling. For the
cowering wretch before him, he neither moves nor speaks.

"If she survives the blow, she will go with me. If I know my mother, you
have seen her, too, for the last time in your life. For your wealth,
your doubly-accursed wealth, she married you! She has paid the penalty
of that crime. She will renounce you and it within this hour. If she
should not----"

He stops, that strangling feeling of fury that he is repressing chokes
the words he would utter.

"If she should not," he resumes, "she shall see me no more. But I know
her. She will go with me. Leo, too--she is yours no longer. I will make
a home for them, far from here, where _your_ vile name will never be
heard. I will search for Joanna--she, too, shall know the truth--shall
know your crime--shall know her rights and her mother's wrongs, and to
her and God I leave vengeance. Do you think she will spare you, John
Abbott? Do you know the penalty of the crime you have done? Six months
hence, in a felon's cell, condemned to years of labor, I fancy your
millions will avail you little. I am willing that my name, stainless
hitherto, should be dragged through the mire, so that you are punished.
To your daughter, and to heaven, I leave our wrongs. I go now to find my
mother."

"Stay!" John Abbott says. He lifts his head, and even Geoffrey, in his
whirl of rage and shame, is struck by the ghastliness of that face. His
voice, too, is hoarse and guttural. "Stay! I have no right to ask
favors--I don't ask any. But--don't tell to-night."

Geoffrey stares scornfully a moment, then turns to go.

"I don't ask it for myself--to be spared. I don't want to be spared. But
there is a party to-night--Leo's." All his words come thickly and with a
slow effort. "The house is full of people down from New York--her
friends and your mother's. All is ready. Spare the little one for one
more night--only one. Let her be happy with her friends until to-morrow.
Come to-morrow--come as early as you like. It is all true, I deny
nothing. Take them away. Only not to-night--for little Leo's sake!"

He says it all in brief, broken sentences; then his head droops, and he
is silent again.

Geoffrey stands a moment. For Leo's sake! That is a powerful appeal. And
only until to-morrow. The house full of guests too; the exposure would
be horrible. And for Leo's sake. Yes, he will wait.

"For Leo's sake," he says frigidly, "I will wait until to-morrow.
To-morrow at noon I will send for my mother to the hotel. I enter this
house no more."

He goes with the words, and the master of Abbott Wood is alone. Alone!
with hell in his heart, with despair, and remorse, and agony, and loss,
and love, and fear, all tugging at his heart-strings together. It has
come--the crash he has always feared. The thunderbolt has fallen and
riven his hearth. Giles Sleaford, in his grave, has risen to revenge his
sister's wrongs.

The last yellow glimmer of the wintry twilight fades out in gray;
darkness falls on the world. Many feet pass his door; a servant enters
to light the gas--the library will be needed to-night. John Abbott
stumbles past him in the dark, and goes to the room that is sacred to
himself alone--the room called his study, where he sees his tenants,
transacts business, signs checks, pays help, and smokes pipes. Here he
will be undisturbed by his servants, his wife, his daughter, or their
butterfly friends.

This party of Leo's is in honor of a young Southern beauty, a friend of
Olga Ventnor's, on the eve of her departure for Europe. It is called
Leo's ball, but in reality it is not merely a young girl's party; many
distinguished people are present--her mother's friends, besides the
great folks of Brightbrook. The Ventnors, of course, are down--Olga from
her finishing school, tall and imposing, even at sixteen, with
proudly-poised head, delicate, lovely face, perfect repose of
manner--more beautiful than her most sanguine friends ever predicted. A
trifle imperious, certainly, as though she were indeed a Princess Olga,
looking with blue, disdainful eyes on the slim-waisted,
slightly-mustached young dandies who adore her. They write sonnets to
her eyes and eyebrows, her smile, her form; they paint her picture; they
toast her at clubs; they dream of her o' nights; they grow delirious
with the promise of a waltz; they kiss her gloves, her finger-tips; they
are ready to shoot each other for a flower from her bouquet--and she
laughs at them all, with girlish, joyous indifference, and tyrannizes
over them with right royal grace. That compact in which Frank Livingston
is concerned has not been mooted to her yet, and the family conclave
begin to have their doubts as to how it will be received.

A young lady who has such pronounced opinions of her own at sixteen, as
to the color and make of her dresses, and hats, and gloves, will be apt
to have pronounced opinions, also, on the more important subject of a
husband. Frank at present is abroad on a sketching tour, it is
understood, through Italy and Switzerland, and sends her long, racy
letters by every mail. But she laughs at the letters, as she does at
the adorers, and flings them aside as indifferently. Whether she walks
in "maiden meditation" or not, she is certainly "fancy free." To-night,
in white silk embroidered with pink rosebuds, with real pink rosebuds
and lilies of the valley in her hair and corsage, it is needless to say
she is a vision of beauty. That goes without saying at all times.

Leo, too, in rose silk and illusion, looks like a rose herself, her
bright black eyes shining after their old joyous fashion with the
delight of the hour.

The rooms are flooded with light, flowers are in profusion everywhere,
the guests are numerous, the supper and band down from the city, and
Mrs. Abbott in pearl moire and those fabulous diamonds that might rival
Lady Dudley's own--quite an ideal hostess for high-bred beauty and
grace. Outwardly, that perfect repose seems above being ruffled by any
earthly _contretemps_, but inwardly she is ruffled nevertheless. For Leo
has just told her, with wide-open, wondering eyes, that Geoffrey has
been and is gone.

"Impossible!" Mrs. Abbott says, incredulously. "Why on earth should he
do that? There must be some mistake."

"No mistake, mamma; Davis let him in. He went to papa in the library,
stayed half an hour, and went away."

"Without word or message to me! And after six weeks of absence! Oh, this
is intolerable! Geoffrey never used to act so. What can it mean?"

"_I_ don't know, mamma," Leo says; "it is very odd, certainly. Perhaps,
hearing there was to be a party, he did not wish to stay. But it is not
a bit like Geoff."

"Here is your father now."

A slight frown contracts Mrs. Abbott's smooth forehead--her husband has
given her to understand he will not put in an appearance at this party,
and now---- She misses Joanna as much, perhaps, for this reason as any
other--she was a most useful sheep-dog to keep this wolf at bay. These
people are nearly all strangers to him--why should he want to join them?
It is his own house certainly, but----

"I wanted to see you a moment, Nora," he says, approaching, and even she
notes with surprise the livid, leaden pallor of his face, the trembling
of his hands, the husky break of his voice, "a moment alone."

"There is nothing the matter?" she demands, in sudden alarm. "Geoffrey,
it is nothing about _him?_"

"It is nothing about him."

"But he has been here, and is gone. What does it mean? _You_ saw
him--why did he not come to me?"

"On account of this party. He's coming to-morrow--at least he intends to
see you. I--I don't feel well, Nora; I am going to my room--the study. I
shall stay there all night."

"Yes," she says, indifferently, "you had better. You do not look well.
Excuse me--I see a new arrival."

"Shake hands, Nora, and say good-night."

She draws back from him, intensely annoyed. Has he been drinking more
than usual? Shake hands with him before all these people! What a
preposterous idea! She draws decidedly back.

"There is no need of hand-shaking, Mr. Abbott. I have no wish to excite
my friends to laughter--nor make a scene. You had better go to bed, as
you say, and as quickly as possible. You really look extremely ill, and
are attracting the attention of the guests."

His hand drops; he takes one last, long, look as she moves away to meet
the new arrival. She is like a queen, he thinks--so stately, so
graceful, so fair. Among all the women present, there is not another so
regal. Then he turns away, and at a little distance encounters his
daughter.

"Why, papa," she exclaims, quickly, "what is the matter? You are looking
awfully pale--for _you_. Are you sick?"

"I ain't well, Leo. I'm going to my room, the study, you know. I came to
say good-night. That's a pretty dress, my girl, and you look as fresh
and pink as a rose. I'm glad to see you so handsome and happy. You--you
are a little fond of your poor old dad, ain't you, Leo?"

"Why, papa----"

"Oh! yes, I know. I ain't like your mother, or those heavy swells
around, but I've been a good father to you, now, haven't I? I don't
think I ever refused you anything in my life, now did I? And
you'd--you'd be sorry if anything happened me, now wouldn't you?"

Leo looks at him anxiously. The same thought, alas! crosses her mind as
her mother's--has he been drinking? Mr. Abbott is apt to be maudlin in
his cups, so his pathos is always open to doubt.

"You had better go to bed, papa," says Leo, as her mother has done. "You
look very badly. And perhaps you had better send for Dr. Gillson."

"I don't want Dr. Gillson, my girl. I know what you're thinking of, but
it ain't that. I'm not drunk. Good-night, little one--kiss your old
dad."

Miss Leo's pink lips touch daintily the cold cheek of her father. Then
she, too, flits away to meet her partner for the first dance. Mr. Abbott
is not a subject to be sentimentalized over, even if he is a little
pale. Much drinking has alienated from him even the respect and
affection of his daughter, although she is fairly fond of papa, too. But
it is not in the same way or degree in which she is fond of mamma and
Geoff.

Mr. Abbott goes to his study, followed by the crashing, brilliant music
of the band. Ladies and gentlemen glance at him, and wonder who he is.
His face strikes them all with a sense of tragedy and discord, that jars
upon the scene. But he disappears and is forgotten. He shuts himself in,
but he does not shut out the triumphal swell of the music, nor the sound
of the dancers' feet. The joyous tumult of the ball mocks him in his
seclusion. He has shut out the world with its brightness, its gladness,
its joyous life, and the world goes on just as merrily without him. It
comes well home to him in this hour. He has been something--he is
nothing--he will never be anything in this world again.

He sits down and has it out. It does not require long thinking. To-night
ends everything. To-morrow he will stand alone, wife, son, daughter,
home, friends--gone. And he has loved them all. After to-morrow all who
have known him will fall off from him, his name will be a by-word and a
reproach, his memory a thing to be execrated. He will be denounced--is
the girl Joanna likely to spare him? There will be a trial through which
his wife, his daughter will be dragged, and their name defiled. There
will be the sentence--the prison walls, the prison dress, the prison
labor, the prison fare, the prison life, the chain, the lash, the
prison death--that will be the story. All his wealth is powerless here.

He goes to a drawer in a desk, unlocks it with slow deliberation, and
takes out one of the articles it contains. It is a revolver, a handsome
weapon, silver-mounted, perfect of its kind. He examines the chambers,
reloads carefully, and with a face that seems cut in gray stone. And
still, as he labors at his ghastly task, the dance music swells and
sinks joyously, the sound of the dancers' flying feet, the echo of their
laughter reach him, and he listens as he works. Then he goes to the
window, opens the closed shutter, and looks out.

It is a lovely night, following a lovely day. The deep blue sky
a-sparkle with frosty stars, the moon flooding lawn, and terrace, and
copse with crystal light. Never has Abbott Wood looked more beautiful,
never has he loved it so well. He is taking his last look at it, at the
cold, far-off, shining sky, at the fair white earth, at his home that
has been his pride and boast so long. He is hearkening to the sweet
crash of the band--the wild music of a waltz will be the last sound of
time he will take into eternity.

For the end has come. The wages of sin--death--is here; the coward's
cure for all ills of earth--suicide--is at hand. He will never see the
scorn, the hatred in his wife's eyes, the shrinking horror of his
daughter's face, the abhorrent gaze of all men. For him there will be no
felon's cell, or lash. His sin has found him out, and the retribution is
now.

He lifts the pistol. A gay burst of laughter just outside his door
greets him on the moment. Over that merry peal, over the last soft
strain of the waltzers, another sound breaks--a dreadful sound. But it
reaches no ear, and only the solemn eyes of the stars look into that
silent room.




CHAPTER XI.

AFTER THAT NIGHT.


It is close upon noon of the next day. Sunshine floods the charming
breakfast-room of Abbott Wood, glints on crystal, on silver, on
egg-shell china, and on a group of gay guests, on the lady of the house
in exquisite morning-robe and cap, on her pretty daughter in amber
cashmere, rich with golden floss embroideries. The guests have had a
brief nap, a cozy cup of tea, and now "booted and spurred," are saying
farewell to their gracious hostess and her bright little daughter. The
party last night was delightful. All are departing in fine spirits,
making appointments for the coming summer and country meetings. They go
at last, and with a tired sigh Mrs. Abbott sinks into her chair. She is
not very strong, and last night's fatigue tells upon her after her quiet
life. Besides, she is worried about her son. Here it is high noon, and
he has not put in an appearance to explain his singular conduct. As she
sits musing about it her maid approaches with a note. It is from the
culprit, and is very brief.


"BRIGHTBROOK HOUSE, Thursday Morning.

     "MY DEAR MOTHER:--I am especially anxious to see you, but I cannot
     go to Abbott Wood, so, I suppose, I must ask you to meet me here at
     your earliest convenience. I will remain in all day expecting you.
     Love to Leo. Ever affectionately,

"G. V. LAMAR."


Mrs. Abbott knits her brows in direst perplexity over this enigmatical
note. "Cannot go to Abbott Wood!" But he was here last night. "Must ask
you to meet me here!" How very odd; how extremely unpleasant. What can
it mean? Is Geoffrey losing his senses? She will go at once and find
out. Her hand is on the bell, when her maid again hurries in, pale,
scared, horror-stricken.

"Oh! Mrs. Abbott! Oh! madam! something awful has happened!" The girl
drops into a chair panting with sheer affright. "Oh! ma'am, I don't know
how to tell you."

Mrs. Abbott looks at her a moment and grows white.

"Is it--anything about my son?" she asks, almost in a whisper.

"Mr. Geoffrey? Oh! no, ma'am, nothing about him. It's master, please.
Oh! how shall I tell you! It's dreadful--dreadful!"

Mrs. Abbott draws a long breath, and stands erect again, pale, composed,
a trifle haughty. There is nothing about Mr. Abbott that can very
greatly surprise or shock Mr. Abbott's wife.

"Do not be an idiot!" she says, sharply. "What is it? Say what you have
come to say, and go. I am going out."

"Oh! no, ma'am, you can't go out to-day. Oh! I beg pardon, but you
don't know. Prepare yourself--oh! please do--for--for the worst. Mr.
Abbott is very--very ill."

Mrs. Abbott recalls his looks, his incoherent speech last night, and
slightly shrugs her graceful shoulders. It has happened to Mr. Abbott to
be very--very ill before, of--delirium tremens!

"Have you sent for Dr. Gillson?" she says, coldly, and moving away as if
to go.

"Oh! my dear lady, wait! It--it isn't what you think. Dr. Gillson was
here hours and hours ago, but he can do nothing. Nobody can. Oh! ma'am,"
with a burst, "master's dead!"

"Dead!" Mrs. Abbott repeats the solemn word, awe-stricken, and gazes
incredulously at the girl. "Dead!" that strong, burly, red-faced man.
The thought of death in connection with her husband has never come near
her--he and the idea have been so entirely antagonistic. "Dead!" she
repeats for the third time, mechanically, in slow, wondering tones.

"Davis, his man, found him early this morning, ma'am," the girl says,
with a hysterical, feminine sob, "and sent for the doctor at once. But
it was too late. He had been dead many hours then. The doctor knew the
house was full of people, and would not let Davis tell until they were
gone. He is in his study still, ma'am, where they found him, a-lying on
the sofa, dressed. And, oh! if you please, there's to be an inquest."

Mrs. Abbott sits down, feeling suddenly sick and faint. A passion of
remorse sweeps over her; she covers her face with her hands, and her
tears flow. Idle tears, no doubt--not tears of sorrow certainly. She
has never cared for this dead man--she committed a sin against herself
and her womanhood by marrying him. Life by his side has been but
"dragging a lengthening chain." She has held him in utter contempt, and
has let him see it. But "he who dies pays all debts;" and now, for all
this, a very passion of pain, of remorse, of humiliation, fills her.
And, last night, he came to her in some great need, and she rebuffed
him! Now he is dead! But moments of weakness are _but_ moments with this
woman, whose life for many years has been one long, bitter
self-repression. She lifts her head and looks at the girl again.

"It is very sudden--it is dreadfully sudden. Was it--apoplexy?"

The maid resumes her weeping as her mistress leaves off. It is not
sorrow on her part either--simply, the shock has unnerved her.

"Oh! ma'am--Mrs. Abbott--that is the worst! No, it isn't apoplexy--is
isn't anything natural. It was suicide!"

"Suicide!" The lady recoils a step in pale horror, and puts out her
hands.

"Oh! dear lady, yes. That is the awful part. It was suicide. He shot
himself. While everybody was dancing and enjoying themselves last night,
he went into his study and done it. Davis found him all cold and stiff
this morning--shot through the head. Oh, dear! oh, dear! Oh! Mrs.
Abbott, don't faint! Oh! here is Mr. Geoffrey. Oh! thank the Lord! Mr.
Geoffrey, sir, come and say something to your ma!"

For it is Geoffrey who hurries in, pale, excited, with startled face,
and hastens to his mother's side.

"My dearest mother, the news has but just reached me. Dr. Gillson
brought it, and I have hastened here at once. It is very shocking.
Mother, do not give way so! Mother, mother, what is this?"

"I have killed him," she whispers, and her head falls on his shoulder,
her arms encircle his neck, and she lies white and speechless with
horror and remorse.

"Nothing of the sort!" her son says, energetically. "Mother, listen to
me--I know what I am saying--you had nothing to do with this tragic
death. It was I. I saw him last night--a terrible secret of his past
life has been made known to me, and I came and accused him of his crime.
I threatened him with public exposure. This is the result. I do not
regret my part in it; I simply did my duty; I would do it again. I
repeat--with this ghastly ending you had nothing to do. And, mother, he
deserved his fate; he merits no pity--from you. He was a villain--dead
as he is--I say it! Look up, shed no tears for him, except in
thanksgiving that you are free."

All this the maid hears as she hurries from the room. She sees the
stern, white face of the pitiless young Rhadamanthus, and wonders what
nameless crime it can be poor master can ever have done.

       *       *       *       *       *

Four days later they bury the master of Abbott Wood in that vast gray
stone vault over in Brightbrook Cemetery--that gray mausoleum bearing
the name ABBOTT over its gloomy front, and which, until time ends, John
Abbott will occupy alone.

It is a very large and imposing funeral, and Mrs. Abbott, in trailing
crapes and sables, looks pale but composed, and handsomer than ever.
Leo's tears, people note, are the only tears that fall. There has been
an inquest, but no cause, except that useful and well-worn
one--temporary aberration of mind--can be assigned for the rash deed.

Business has summoned Geoffrey Lamar to the city on the day before, and
among the melancholy cortege he is conspicuous by his absence. All the
Ventnors are down to console the widow and orphan. But Mrs. Abbott's
high-bred calm stands her in as good stead now, as in all the other
emergencies of life--consolatory platitudes would simply be
impertinences here. As yet she knows nothing, only--that she is free!
After a very dreadful and disgraceful manner truly, but still--free.

They bury the dead man, and his will is read. The widow is superbly
dowered, her son inherits Abbott Wood and half the great fortune the
millionaire has left. Servants and friends are handsomely remembered. No
fairer or more generous will was ever made.

People begin to find out his good points; he was rough-and-ready,
certainly, says Brightbrook, but an off-hand, whole-souled fellow, free
with his money always, and if he swore at a "help" this moment, he was
just as ready to tip him a dollar the next. He wasn't such a bad sort of
man. Brightbrook owes him everything--he has made the place, built
churches, schools, town halls, jails, almshouses, laid out the park,
donated the fountain, erected model cottages for his tenants, was a
capital landlord, if he _was_ a little strict. So, in spite of the
suicide, he is after a manner canonized in the village.

As to the death itself--people rather shirk that--he did not live
happily with his wife--she and her son looked down upon him from first
to last. And he drank to excess. And he had had D. T., and in one of
these fits the deed was done, and that was all about it.

The day after the funeral Geoffrey Lamar returns. He wears no mourning,
and settled sternness and gloom rest on his face. The first inquiries he
makes are for the Sleafords, and he learns the Sleafords are gone,
driven away, the farm deserted, the house empty. Lora has married a
love-stricken butcher, and gone to live in the next town; Liz has
drifted away to the city, the boys have disappeared, loneliness reigns
at Sleaford's.

The Red Farm is for rent, Geoffrey rides over and looks at it--already
it has the air of a deserted house, already desolation has settled upon
it, already the timid avoid it after nightfall, already it is hinted
Sleaford "walks."

It is very strange that these two men, connected in some way in their
lifetime, should so quickly and awfully follow each other to a violent
death.

"They were ugly in their lives," says a ghastly wit of the village, "and
in death they are not divided."

No news of Joanna as yet, and of late the search has rather been given
up. George Blake, poor faithful, foolish fellow, still mourns and
searches, Geoffrey proposes soon to recommence, but he has another and
sadder duty first to fulfill. He has yet to tell his mother the
frightful truth, that she has never for one hour been John Abbott's
wife--that Leo is "nobody's child," that neither he nor one of them have
any shadow of rightful claim on all this boundless wealth the dead man
has left.

As the night falls of that day, that day never to be forgotten in their
lives, he tells her. They sit alone in her darkening sitting-room, with
closed doors, looking out at the falling winter night, the red gleam of
the fire flickering in the snow, and gold, and amber of the bijou room.

Infinitely gentle, infinitely tender are his words; he holds her hands,
he breaks it to her, this revelation that is to drag her pride in the
very dust. For a long time it is impossible to make her comprehend, the
horror is too utter--she cannot, she will not take it in.

Then suddenly a shriek rings through the house, another and another, and
she starts up like a woman gone mad--she breaks from him, she beats the
air with her hands, her frenzied cries resound. For the moment she _is_
mad. What was John Abbott's suicide, a hecatomb of suicides, to such
horror as this! Then she sways and falls--almost for the first time in
her son's knowledge of her--headlong in a dead faint.

After that, there are weeks, that in all the future time are blank.

She lies very ill, ill unto death, frantic, delirious, burning with
fever, talking rapidly, wildly, incoherently; shrieking out at times
that she will not believe it, that she cannot believe it, that John
Abbott, with that pistol hole in his head, is pursuing her, and that
Geoffrey is holding her until he comes up.

Her ravings are continuous, are frightful. Night and day her son is
beside her; Leo is kept out of the room by force--it is too shocking for
her to see or hear. Everyone, doctors included, think she will die; but
her superb, unbroken health hitherto saves her life now.

Slowly the fever subsides, slowly life and reason come back, and pale,
spent, weak as a babe, white as a snow spirit, she looks out one May
day, and sees the green young world, the jubilant sunshine, the sweet
spring flowers once more.

In two or three weeks she is to be taken away--for her health. Abbott
Wood is to be left in charge of Mrs. Hill and one or two of the
servants. Mrs. Abbott, her son, and daughter may be absent for years.
After all, says Brightbrook, that cold, proud woman must have cared a
little for her plebeian husband to be stricken with fever in this way by
the shock of his death. And Brightbrook has thought her especially cold
and heartless at the funeral. So easy it is to be mistaken.

Early in June they depart. Nothing is said to Leo--time enough to tell
her later, and then only part of the miserable whole. She must learn
that they are poor, of course, that another claimant with a better right
exists for Abbott Wood, that they must look to Geoffrey and his
profession now for their support.

For it is needless to say that neither mother nor son can touch one
penny of that man's money--the money that is rightfully Joanna's. They
are not going abroad to travel, as all the world thinks; they are going
to a little house in one of the suburbs of New York for the present,
while Geoffrey begins his new life of hard labor, heavily handicapped in
the race.

For obvious reasons his mother retains the name of Abbott, loathsome to
her ears, but Leo must be considered first now. No one--not even the
Ventnors--are to know of them or their plans; _that_ world and all in it
has gone forever; nothing but poverty, seclusion, anguish, shame
remains.

For the Ventnors--Olga finds it very lonely, that vacation at the pretty
rose-draped villa, and mourns disconsolately for her friends. She is
nearly seventeen now--"a fair girl graduate, with golden hair," glad
that the thralldom of her fashionable school is over. But this fall and
winter she is to go on, under the best masters, with music, painting,
and languages; live very quietly at Brightbrook, and early in April
start with papa and mamma for that two years' European trip.

Some American heiresses have lately been marrying brilliantly
abroad--marrying both fortune and title--and every day Frank
Livingston's chances grow fewer and farther between. His mamma's anguish
breaks out whenever she thinks of it. She writes him agonized appeals to
meet the Ventnors, and try, try, try with Olga, before one of those
all-fascinating British officers and nobles carry off the prize. But
Frank, smoking, sight-seeing, church-visiting in Rome, seeing statuary,
and paintings, and frescoes, a great deal, going to cozy little artist
reunions, sketching and painting after a desultory fashion, and having a
good time, does not concern himself very greatly about his fair, far-off
cousin. Art is his mistress at present, storied Rome the idol of his
heart, his big brown meerschaum rather more to him than all the
heiresses and beauties in wide America. If Olga has a mind, and is
pleased to approve of him when next they meet, _he_ has no objection. If
not--he shrugs his shoulders, and hums that couplet that has consoled so
many when the grapes were sour and hung beyond reach,

    "If she be not fair to me,
     What care I how fair she be!"

       *       *       *       *       *

And now this record has come back to the beginning--to that wet October
evening when Miss Ventnor drove past the Red Farm in the pony carriage,
and pointed it out to her friend. Giles Sleaford is dead, Lora is
married, Liz has gone cityward, the "boys" have disappeared, Joanna has
run away with George Blake, and is not to be found. Sleaford's is a
"haunted house." At Abbott Wood silence and loneliness reign. It, too,
is a deserted mansion. Its master has died a tragic death, Mrs. Abbott,
Leo, Geoffrey, are abroad, traveling for health and forgetfulness. At
Ventnor Villa Olga practices, sings, paints, reads French, German,
Italian, rides, drives, blooms a rose of the world,

    "Fair as a star, when only one
     Is shining in the sky."

And so, with sweet, slow voice, she tells her friend, in brief, this wet
October night, the story of the Sleafords.




PART THIRD.




CHAPTER I.

AFTER THE STORY ENDED.


"And now, my dearest Hilda, having narrated all the incidents of the
voyage, I propose to answer your very artful question about a _certain
person_. Well, yes, _le beau cousin_, as you term poor Frank, is still
here, still hovering as the moth around the flame, to quote your rather
hackneyed simile. He followed us down here from New York, a week ago,
and is poor mamma's _cavalier servant_, and to me, the most devoted of
friends and cousins. Friends and cousins, I repeat. You need not
smile--he will never be more. All that you say of his good looks, and
charming manners, and sunny temper, I admit. Still looks, and manners
and temper, are not _all_ that one requires in a husband. You perceive I
put your delicately-vailed hints into plain English. I am not a
sentimental person. I read my Tennyson, and my novels, and dimly, and as
in a dream, I realize what it is all about--this grand passion writers
make the burden of their song. But I have never felt it, and for Frank
Livingston I never will. I like him too well ever to love him. And yet,
my Hilda, I have my ideal----"

The pencil--she had written this with a slender golden trinket,
suspended from her chatelaine--pauses here, and the writer looks out
before her with dreamy azure, half-smiling eyes. She sits on the low sea
wall of Abbott Wood, her sketch-book on her lap, and scribbles, on thin
foreign paper, this letter. The sea lies below her, dimpling and
sparkling in the lovely light of a June afternoon. A great willow
bending over the wall droops its feathery plumes nearly to her fair
head. Her hat is on the grass beside her, she has been sketching, but
nothing in the view is lovelier than herself. She sits here, a tall,
slender, most graceful figure, dressed in light muslin, her pale golden
hair plaited about her head. There is not a touch of brown in the
perfect tinting of that pale gold, and her eyebrows and lashes are
fairer than her hair. Her eyes are really wonderful in their limpid
sapphire blue. Her complexion is colorless, but has the vivid warmth of
first youth and perfect health. A little gold cross clasps some creamy
white lace at the throat, a white cashmere wrap, embroidered in gold,
lies with her hat. As she sits there, she is a vision of radiant youth
and dazzling blonde beauty.

She sits for a little, watching with that misty, far-off look the tiny
waves, slipping up and down the white sands, then she takes up her
pencil and resumes.

"I have my ideal, and he is not in the least like Frank. Beauty shall by
no means be an essential, nor a perfectly cloudless temper either--we
might weary of perpetual sweetness and sunshine. But, oh! my Hilda, he
shall be noble, he shall be capable of self-sacrifice, he shall be a
king among men to _me_. He shall be above me in all ways----"

A second time she breaks off, this time she crumples up the flimsy sheet
of perfumed French paper, and thrusts it into her pocket. For a step
comes quickly down the path behind her, and a man's voice sings, as he
comes, with mellow sweetness, "La Donna e mobile." She glances round,
half petulantly, as he draws near.

"You are like a shadow," she says, in a tone that suits the glance;
"like a detective on the trail. How did you know I was here?"

"Don't be cross, Olga," says Frank Livingston, throwing himself on the
grass beside her. "How can I tell? Some spirit in my feet--how is it
Shelley goes?--led me to the charmed spot. What are you
doing--sketching?"

"I came with that design, but I believe, unlikely as it may sound--I
have been thinking."

"Ah! dare I hope----"

"No, Frank, it was not of you, so do not put on that complacent look.
Did mamma tell you to bring me home?"

"Your mamma is asleep, my dearest Olga, and does not need you in the
least. Do you know, I find it difficult to realize after all our
wanderings that we are home once more. And here! This place seems
haunted. The last time I was here was with Geoffrey Lamar."

He takes off his hat, and the soft sea wind stirs his dark curly hair.
It is a new Frank Livingston, bronzed, bearded, mustached, muscular,
improved almost out of knowledge by years, and travel and cultured
association. He looks handsome as a latter-day Adonis, in his gray tweed
suit, and with a dash of his old Bohemian _insouciance_ upon him still.
Lying here, with the flickering sunshine sifting through willow plumes
on his upturned face and uncovered head, he is wonderfully good to look
at, and the half smile comes back into Olga Ventnor's eyes as they rest
on him.

"You look like a picture as you lie there, Frank," she says, in an
amused tone. "Do not stir, please--I want to sketch you. You are a thing
of beauty and a joy forever, when you fall into picturesque attitudes,
and hold your tongue. You spoil everything when you open your mouth. You
ought to go through life posing, and never destroy the illusion by
speaking a word. I shall send this to Hilda Stafford in my next letter.
Do you know, Frank, she admires you immensely?"

"Lady Hilda does me much honor," says Livingston, composedly. "You,
too, my dear cousin, with your more than doubtful compliments. The role
of barber's block which you so kindly assign me----"

"Turn a hair-breadth this way," interrupts Miss Ventnor, "and please be
silent. I never can sketch and talk. I will have you in black and white
in a second, and I know Lady Hilda will wear you next her heart."

Livingston laughs, but with a vexed look, and obeys. His blue eyes, very
like Olga's own, rest on the lovely face above him, with a look Olga
Ventnor has seen in the eyes of many men before to-day, and which
certainly, in the present case, stirs her pulses no more than if Frank
were her pet Spitz dog. It is a face that can be very mutinous and
imperious, as he knows to his cost, a face that can be as exasperating
as it is alluring, and _that_ is saying much. Something akin to
irritated impatience and pain stirs within him as he looks.

    "As you sit where lusters strike you,
          Sure to please,
     Do we love you most, or like you,
          Belle Marquise?"

he quotes, under his breath.

"I told you not to talk!" says Olga, austerely; "but a talker you are or
nothing, my poor Frank. There! I think that will do. How Hilda will
thank me in her secret soul for this treasure!"

A saucy smile dimples the perfect mouth, the sapphire eyes glance down
laughingly at the figure on the grass. But Frank, still gazing, is
absorbed in his poem.

    "You had every grace in heaven,
        In your most angelic face,
     With the nameless finer leaven,
        Lent of blood and courtly race;
     And was added too, in duty,
     Ninon's wit, and Bouffler's beauty,
     And La Valliere's '_Yeux Caloutes_'
          Followed these.
     And you liked it when they said it
          On their knees,
     And you kept it, and you read it,
          Belle Marquise!"

"The words must have been written for you, I think--you fit the
portrait--fair, heartless, icy--admirably well. I wonder if you _have_ a
heart, like other people, most beautiful Olga, or if, as in the case of
the Marquise, that inconvenient essential was left out?"

"I think I have got your exact expression, or, rather, lack of it," goes
on Miss Ventnor, very busy with her work, and evidently quite deaf.
"This sketch is worthy of being immortalized in oils and forwarded to
the autumn Exhibition. What were you saying a moment ago? Something
uncivil, I think, from the sound. But you generally _are_ uncivil, and
unpleasantly personal in your remarks, I grieve to observe, when you do
me the honor to address me. Nothing in the world, my dear Frank, is in
worse form than vituperation, and it pains me to observe that you are
falling sadly into the habit. And poetical vituperation is worst of all.
You will excuse my mentioning this. The cousinly--I may almost say the
maternal--interest I take in you must plead the pardon of rebuke."

Livingston laughs again, and takes up the sketch-book, but the sting of
her indifference rankles. It is so real, the pang is in that. She is
indifferent to all men, she is more than indifferent to him.

In her beauty, her pride, her grace, and her power, she is like some
young queen, looking with blue, scornful eyes upon her adorers and
slaves.

As he turns the leaves of the sketch-book he suddenly stops, a look of
surprise, of pleasure, of recognition flashes from his eyes. A touch of
eager color comes into his face; he takes out a little time-yellowed,
faded, pencil-drawing from between the leaves.

"You remember it?" Olga says, calmly. "You did that. What centuries ago
it seems, and I have kept it all this time. I wonder why? It has no
intrinsic value, and certainly it could not have been for sake of the
artist. No, Frank, you need not put on that pathetic look--I assure you
it was not for the sake of the artist. What a dowdy little thing I look,
and what a wistful expression you have given me. Did I really look like
that, at ten years old?"

For faded, yellowed, dim, it is the pencil-sketch made by Frank fully
eleven years ago.

"'Princess Olga, with the love of the most loyal of her lieges,'" he
reads at the bottom, "even then, eleven years ago, I was in love with
you, Princess Olga."

"You were in love with Lora Sleaford," returns Miss Ventnor, composedly,
"with her flame-red cheeks and tar-black hair. You always were a person
of atrocious taste, I regret to remember. You were a shocking boy in
those days. You used to stay out until the small hours, playing cards,
singing songs, and making love at Sleaford's."

"And you used to lie awake and watch for me--I remember _that_. The
Princess Olga of those days must have been rather fond of me, I think."

"Very likely. I used to be a dreadful little idiot, if I recall myself
rightly. That picture is associated in my mind with my getting lost in
the woods, and that wild creature Joanna going to tear out my hair, and
all the misery and illness that followed. I wanted you to take me to
play croquet with Leo Abbott that afternoon, I remember distinctly. I
also remember distinctly you would not."

His eyes are upon her--trouble, longing, imploring in their pleading.
But she is not inclined to spare him.

"You would not," she repeats, a somewhat hard inflection in her voice.
"You were Lora Sleaford's lover in those days. You wanted to go to her,
no doubt. You broke your promise to me. You left me, whistling a tune,
that sketch of myself to comfort me, and a childish ache and loneliness
that I do not forget to this day. You are right, Cousin Frank, I must
have been fond of you then. I wonder what absence of yours could give me
a heart-ache now?"

A triumphant smile lights her face, an exultant sense that it is in no
man's power to touch, or move, or hurt her.

"None, I am quite sure, though it were the absence from which there is
no return," he answers, coldly.

"I wandered away," she goes on, retrospectively, "and lost myself in the
woods, and you--how little you cared! Ah! well--all that is a decade of
years ago, and Lora Sleaford is the butcher's lady over there, with a
waist two yards round, and no end of little butchers growing up about
her. I saw her yesterday, Frank, in the midst of her jewels, and
thought of your first love, and the banjo business, and laughed to
myself. No peony, no pickled cabbage was ever so glaringly purple as her
cheeks. What a mistake first love is, to be sure!"

"Or last love, or any love, in your eyes."

"Or any love--we are so fatally in the power of those we love. They can
so wring our hearts; their going is such misery, their loss such
despair. You see, heartless as I am, I can imagine all that."

"Having seen a great deal of it, having caused wholesale slaughter
wherever you went. Only you took care your knowledge should be from
observation--never from experience."

"Never from experience. You sound sarcastic, Frank, but it is very true,
nevertheless. As to causing it--your great gallantry compels you to say
so, no doubt. Poor little yellow pencil sketch! Put it back. It is the
only souvenir of my childhood, and of--you--I possess. Let me cherish it
still."

He does as he is told--people do obey her as a general thing--she is
more than a trifle imperious even in trifles, this queenly Olga, and
Livingston is not inclined to rebel. He is conscious of irritating pique
always, when with her; her words wound and vex him.

She is a merciless mistress--it is questionable if any lover of hers has
ever been a happy man, even in the first fleeting hour of his fool's
paradise--most certain is he to be supremely miserable a little farther
on.

He turns the leaves of the book mechanically, but he hardly sees the
sketches, full of vigorous life as they are. Olga is almost as skilled
an artist as himself.

"Look there!" she says, laying her finger on a page, "does that resemble
anyone you know?"

It is a young man in the dress of a monk, standing in a striking
attitude, his handsome head thrown back, one hand shading his eyes. His
cowl has fallen on his shoulders, his left hand rests on the head of a
huge dog.

Both stand listening intently. It is in water-colors--a steel gray sky
is above; around, nothing but snow--a white, frozen world.

Livingston looks, and is conscious, in some queer way, that the face of
the monk is like his own.

"It is a monk and a dog of the Hospice of the Great St. Bernard," says
Olga. "I saw him one evening from my bedroom window, listening and
looking like that. Do you not see the likeness, Frank? He is your image,
height, features, complexion, only he was more distinguished than you,
and had much more courtly manners. He looked as if he might have been a
young Austrian prince, come there to renounce the world, and live for
God and his fellow-men. I was very much impressed--I _know_ he must have
been of noble blood--he had the manners and bow of a court chamberlain.
And sitting there, that cold, bleak, gray evening, I sketched my
handsome young monk and his dog. How grave he looks--as if the old life
of courts and kings were a dream--the shadow of a dream with a touch of
loneliness in the profound peace. And I thought of _you_, Frank, and
imagined you in cowl and robe, and with that look in your eyes----" she
breaks off with a laugh, this malicious coquette, as Livingston looks
up, certainly with a very different expression from that in the
peaceful, pictured face.

    "'I envy them, these monks of old.
      Their books they read, their beads they told,
      To human weakness dead and cold,
        And all life's vanity.'

There is something grand in the idea, is there not? to renounce all that
life holds of brightest and sweetest, at that age, and for that reason?
Turn another leaf."

"I am tired of sketches," he says, impatiently, but turns as he says it.
"This is Geoffrey Lamar!" he exclaims.

"Drawn from memory--yes," she answers. "Frank, where _is_ Geoffrey
Lamar?"

"Heaven knows! slaving at his profession, poor fellow, I suppose, to
support his mother and sister."

"I never understood that matter rightly," Olga says, "except that
Geoffrey made some great sacrifice for honor's sake, and renounced for
himself and Leo all Mr. Abbott's wealth. What was it about?"

"Heaven knows again. I suppose Geoffrey does; he is the sort of fellow
to know his own mind pretty thoroughly. I fancy the money was illy come
by, some one had a better claim than even Leo, and so Geoffrey gave it
up. Noble, as you say, but a trifle Quixotic, for the missing heir,
whoever he may be, it seems cannot be found. But if the heir is never
found it will make no difference to Lamar. He will work like a
galley-slave until the day of his death, for his mother and sister, but
he will never permit them to touch a penny of dishonorably-gotten gain.
There are not many like that."

Olga says nothing, but a sort of glow comes into her face--a look that
is never there except when she listens to some deed heroic.

"He is of the stuff that made paladins of old," goes on Livingston,
"with uplifted notions on every subject under the sun--a sort of Sir
Galahad, you know, to ride to the aid of damsels in distress. Witness
his adoption of Sleaford's Joanna. By-the-bye, I wonder whatever has
become of Wild Joanna. I must step in and inquire of Mistress Lora one
of these days. Not that she is likely to know."

"When did you see Geoff--the Abbotts, last?" Olga inquires.

"I saw Geoff in New York, but 'we met by chance the usual way.' He does
not live there, but somewhere out of the world, where he is working
himself to skin and bone, judging by his look. They have sunk the
Abbott, and call themselves Lamar now--the old pride, you know. I do not
see much sense in it myself. They might at least use the property until
the missing heir turns up. I would have liked to go and see Leo, but
Geoffrey's manner was cold and discouraging. And one cannot force one's
self whether or no, you know."

"I do not know. _My_ experience--of you--is particularly the reverse,
but I suppose cousins are always an exception. As you are here, Frank,
you may as well make yourself useful, and carry my sketch-book home. I
am going."

She rises--a lofty, slender, white figure--picks up her cashmere and
gold wrap, puts on her pretty hat, and turns to go.

"Come, Frank!" she says, and glances back, with one of those brilliantly
sweet smiles that are as fatal to men as the siren song of the fabled
Lurley. What is Frank that he should resist? He is but mortal, and the
spell of the enchantress is upon him. Is he in love with her? really in
love? He asks himself that question sometimes, but never when by her
side. Then the glamour of the white witchery is upon him, and he lives
but to do her bidding. Coldness, coquetry, are forgotten now; he picks
up the big flat book, throws on his hat, and is by her side. And he
thinks of a fitting couplet--though remembering recent rebuke he does
not quote it:

    "You throw off your friends, like a huntsman his pack,
    For you know when you will you can whistle them back."

All the way to Ventnor Villa Olga is very silent and thoughtful. The sun
is setting as they reach it, and she lingers a moment to look at its
rose and gold beauty. But she is not thinking much of the sunset--not at
all of the young cavalier by her side.

"Like a paladin of old," she muses, dreamily. "Yes, it is true. He is
noble, great, good, self-sacrificing. I wish--I wish I could see--Leo
Abbott--again."




CHAPTER II.

AFTER THE CONCERT.


The lamps are lit in the pretty drawing-room of the villa. Dinner is
over, and the one guest, the Reverend Ignatius Lamb, sits near Mrs.
Ventnor's sofa, talking earnestly. The ex-rector of St. Walburga's is
the incumbent of a beautiful little church in the village now, not so
rich or rare a gem certainly as St. Walburga's in the days of Mrs.
Abbott--still, an extremely pretty structure. Gothic as to style,
medival as to painted saints on golden backgrounds, aristocratic as to
congregation, and all that there is of the most ritualistic, as to
doctrine.

Mrs. Ventnor, pallid, languid, graceful, reclining on her couch, listens
with weary interest. She has a pew at St. Chad's, and is especially
anxious about the success of Mr. Lamb's latest project--that of founding
a convent and an orphan asylum, on a grant of land recently presented to
the church by Colonel Ventnor. The order is quite a new one, the Sisters
of the Suffering--Mr. Lamb himself the founder, and to establish the
Mother House in Brightbrook, with an asylum and a day-school, is a
project very near to the reverend gentleman's heart.

"I saw the Reverend Mother last week," he is saying to Mrs. Ventnor,
"and it was she who proposed this concert. For obvious reasons, it is
more convenient at present than either a picnic or fair. Mother
Bonaventure knows this singer--this Miss Jenny Wild--knew her before she
entered religion--you understand, and speaks of her in the very highest
terms. Her moral character--Miss Wild's, of course--is perfectly
unexceptionable. And she is more than willing to assist us by giving a
concert and donating the proceeds. She is said to excel in charities
indeed, and is especially interested in orphan children. In addition to
her concert she promises two hundred dollars. All this, with the noble
donation of your excellent husband, my dear madam, will enable us to
start work at once, without incurring pecuniary liabilities. Everything
is arranged, and the concert takes place on Monday evening. Miss Wild
is at present in New York, but will reach Brightbrook on that day. May I
hope, my dear Mrs. Ventnor, that you will endeavor to be present?"

"I go nowhere of late," Mrs. Ventnor responds, languidly, "as you are
aware. My wretched health, you know--but assuredly, if possible, I will
be present at the concert."

"And Miss Olga--we may, I presume, count upon her without fail."

The door opens as he speaks, and the Reverend Ignatius pauses, and is
conscious of a shock--not an unpleasant one. He holds distinct views
upon the celibacy of the clergy, and has always advocated them, but at
this moment he feels that under certain influences a man and an Anglican
priest may be untrue to the convictions of his life, and yet be
excusable.

She comes in, tall, slender, white-robed, her lovely hair falling like a
bath of sunshine over her shoulders, her gold and snow drapery trailing
about her, a faint flush on her cheeks, a starry light in the blue, blue
eyes. Behind her comes her faithful shadow, Frank, and the Reverend
Ignatius frowns slightly, and realizes that handsome distant cousins are
a most dangerous and objectionable class of men.

"My dear, how late you are," mamma murmurs, as Olga stoops and kisses
her, "we have dined without you. Dr. Gillson, you know, is most
peremptory on the point of my always dining at the same hour."

"Pray make no excuses, mamma--it does not matter in the least," Olga
says, gayly. "Frank and I will dine _tete-a-tete_. We have been
quarreling all the afternoon, and can recommence over our soup.
Anything new in Brightbrook, Mr. Lamb? What of the new convent?"

"Olga thinks of renouncing this wicked world, and going in for Mother
Abbess. The role would suit her, I think. She has rather the look at
this moment of a vestal virgin--a Norma--a Priestess of the Sun. That
sort of people never cared for anybody but themselves, and were made of
ice-water more or less, I believe."

"My dear Frank, how often have I told you sarcasm is not your strong
point? You mean to be cynical, but in reality I am almost sure I should
like it. The habit of the Sisters of the Suffering is in admirable
taste--a trained black robe, a white coif, and long black vail are
always picturesque and becoming. What of our fair, Mr. Lamb--or is it to
be a picnic?"

Mr. Lamb explains. It is to be neither. It is to be a concert--a ballad
concert, with Miss Jenny Wild as prima-donna, and Monday next is the
appointed night.

"Miss Jenny Wild? Jenny Wild? I do not know that name. Who is she? Do
you know her, Frank?"

"Never heard her--heard of her though. Sings in character--ballads
chiefly, and is very popular. Good contralto they say, but seldom comes
to New York. It is not to be supposed you would know her, Miss
Ventnor--scampering over the face of the earth as you have been for the
past five years. Come to dinner. I do not know how it may be with you,
but I am consumedly hungry."

They go. Frank may be in love with the exquisite face across the table,
but that fact does not impair his appetite to any serious extent. If it
exists, it is perhaps a love of the eyes, not of the heart, for he is
distinctly conscious of being much more comfortable away from his adored
one than with her.

Her presence, her triumphant beauty, have upon him the effect of a
fever. He seeks to woo and win her, and he feels that if he succeeds he
will be in a state of unrest and discomfort all the rest of his life.
She exacts too much, her ideal is too high; he can never reach it; it is
always uncomfortable to dwell on the heights. Still, the family expect
it of him, and to show the white feather in love or in war is not the
nature of a Livingston. In an off-hand sort of way he has been making
love to his pretty cousin ever since he can remember, but to distinct
proposal he has never yet come. In his pocket, to-night, a letter lies
from his mother, urging, entreating, commanding him to speak before he
leaves Brightbrook. Business calls him away on Tuesday next, and the
Rubicon must be crossed between then and now. He is not a nervous young
man as a rule; but, truth to tell, the thought makes his heart beat a
little quickly. Perhaps it is not to his discredit that he is a trifle
afraid of this regal Olga. He is not the first man who has feared this
chill, white goddess. This is Thursday evening. He has still one, two,
three, four days and nights to screw his courage to the sticking-place,
and put his fate to the touch, to "win or lose it all."

"I will speak to-morrow," he thinks, looking at her across the cut
flowers and crystal. "Hang it all! why should I be afraid?

    "'Praise as you may, when the tale is done,
      She is but a maid to be wooed and won.'"

But to-morrow comes and he does not speak. He does not feel
sentimental, as it chances, and no fellow can propose in cold blood. And
Saturday, and Sunday, and Monday come, and still golden silence reigns,
and his fate hangs in the balance. And Monday evening is the evening of
the concert, and there is no longer chance or time.

The whole Ventnor family go. Olga, in India muslin, with touches of
crimson here and there in her pale, crisp draperies and laces, is, as
ever, bewildering. A fairly fashionable assembly fills the hall, and
Miss Ventnor finds an acquaintance who seems to know all about the
musical star of the night.

"A very charming songstress, I assure you," the lady says. "She travels
with her guardian and his wife--Germans, I believe--and has a very sweet
and powerful contralto, with an odd sort of pathos in it that most
people are captivated by who hear her sing. I have seen her give nearly
a whole evening's entertainment herself, singing song after song, in
character, with a rapidity and power quite amazing. It is very good of
her to proffer her services in this way; but then she _is_ good; it is
quite like her. She is the most generous and large-hearted creature in
the world--and beyond reproach, I assure you. In all quarters Miss Wild
is most highly spoken of."

"Yes?" Olga says, indifferently. She is not much interested, naturally,
in Miss Wild or her character. Her glass sweeps the hall, and she is
busy acknowledging bows. It is something of a bore to be here at all,
after seasons of Patti and Nilsson abroad. Still, it is for Mr. Lamb,
and she is Olga Ventnor--and _noblesse oblige_.

The curtain rises; the stage is handsomely decorated. A slim, dark
young man, with great Italian eyes and accent, appears, and sings, "Let
Me Like a Soldier Fall," in a very fine baritone voice. Then there is a
piano solo--Liszt's "Rhapsodie" No. 2, performed in a masterly manner by
Herr Ericson, and then Miss Jenny Wild is before them, and "Love My
Love" is ringing through the concert-room, in a voice that makes even
Olga Ventnor, difficult as she is, look up in pleased surprise. And
looking once, she looks again. The singer, a tall, finely-formed young
woman, dressed simply enough, in dark silk, is a person to command from
most people a second glance. It is hardly a handsome face, but it is a
striking one; the features are good, the eyes dark and brilliant, and
with an intensity of expression not often seen. There is vivid dramatic
power in her rendering of the song--the voice has that sweet, touching,
minor tone Olga has heard of. But something beyond all this strikes and
holds Miss Ventnor. "As in a glass darkly" she seems to recognize that
face, that voice. She knits her brows, and tries to recall. In
vain--Miss Jenny Wild refuses to be placed. She concludes her song, and
disappears in the midst of a tumult of applause.

"She is really a very fine singer," Olga says to the lady by her side,
"but it is the oddest thing--I seem to have seen and heard her somewhere
before."

"You have attended some of her concerts, perhaps?" the lady suggests.

"No, it cannot be that--this is the first concert I have attended since
my return to America. Frank!" imperiously, "are you asleep? What are you
thinking of, sitting there, with that dazed look?"

"Of Miss Jenny Wild. Somewhere--in some other planet, perhaps--I must
have met that young lady before. Ah! she is good-natured; she responds
to the encore. Here she is again."

Miss Wild reappears, bowing graciously to the hearty call she has
received. Her fine dark eyes calmly survey the house, and lift and rest
for the first time on the Ventnor party. They fall on Frank Livingston,
and meet his puzzled glance full.

A slight flush rises to her face, a slight smile dawns about the lips,
then her graceful figure is drawn up, and she is singing "Within a Mile
of Edinboro' Town." The old, ever-welcome favorite is listened to with
delight, and a great basket of flowers is presented to the singer. Olga
hands Frank her bouquet.

"Throw it," she says; "she deserves it. She sang that delightfully. Miss
Jenny Wild is worth coming to hear. But, oh! _where_ have I seen and
heard her before?"

Frank throws the cluster of white roses with unerring aim--it lights at
the feet of the songstress. She stoops and picks it up, and again that
slight glance, and flush, and smile rest on Livingston, as she bows and
quits the stage.

The Italian sings again. Herr Ericson performs a ringing Rondo, and Miss
Wild sings the grand aria, "Nabuco" from Verdi, quite magnificently, and
again is rapturously encored. Once more she responds with another Scotch
song, "Sleeping Maggie," and once more her eyes look and linger with
evident amusement on the profoundly puzzled face of Frank Livingston.
Then the concert is over, and they are out in the sweet darkness of the
June night.

"_Who_ is Miss Jenny Wild?" cries Olga, impatiently; "I hate to be
puzzled, and she puzzles me. Frank, I command you! find out all about
her, and tell me why her face and voice are so ridiculously familiar.
And she has, evidently, seen _you_ before--she did you the honor to look
at you more than once in the most marked manner."

"I go to-morrow," is Frank's answer, "and whether I shall ever return to
discover Miss Jenny Wild's antecedents, or for any other reason, depends
entirely on you, Olga, and what you will say to me to-night!"

The hour has come--the two are alone, lingering for a moment before
saying good-night and going in. They stand on the piazza; the June stars
shine above them; the silence of midnight is around them.

She glances at him in surprise; she is humming "Within a Mile of
Edinboro' Town."

"'For I cannot--wunnot--wunnot--wunnot buckle to!'" she sings, and then
breaks off to laugh.

"What a tragical face! What a desperate tone! What a dramatic speech!
You go to-morrow, and whether you will ever return depends on what I
will say to-night! Really, Frank, the concert, and the impassioned
singing of Miss Wild have been too much for you. Must you really go
to-morrow? I am sorry. Hurry back."

"_Are_ you sorry, Olga? Shall you miss me? Do you care for me, I wonder,
the very least in the world? Oh, you know what I mean! Do not laugh at
me, for God's sake!" with almost angry impatience. "You have laughed at
me long enough! I love you, Olga!--I want you to be my wife!"

The words, thought of so long, come abruptly enough--roughly, indeed. He
sees in her face the familiar, mocking look he knows so well--a look
nothing seems to have power to soften or change. But at the irritated
passion of his voice and face it dies out, and she looks at him with
smiling, gentle, half amused eyes.

"I like you so much, Frank, that I am sorry you have said this. You do
not mean it, do you? We have been playing at flirtation all our lives,
and, by mistake, you have fancied the play earnest to-night. You are not
in love with me--you do not want me to be your wife. You would be
miserable if I said yes, and you know it. But fear not. I am not going
to say yes."

"Say it and try! I will risk the misery. All my life will be devoted to
you, every thought of my heart, if you will marry me, Olga."

"Marry you!" she repeats; "marry _you_, Frank!" There is that in her
tone makes Livingston redden angrily and throw back his head. She laughs
a little in spite of herself. "I never thought of such a thing in my
life," she says, with cruel coolness.

"Do you mean to tell me," the young man demands, in no very tender tone,
"that you did not know it was a compact made and agreed to years and
years ago?"

"Never!" she answers, with energy, "never! In such compact I had no
share--of such compact I never heard. Oh, yes!" contemptuously, in reply
to his indignant glance; "I have heard hints, innuendoes, seen smiles
and wise glances; but do you think I heeded them? They are the
impertinences relatives seem to think they have a right to. There is but
one person on earth who has a right to speak to me of such a thing--my
dear father--and he has been silent. And I do not care for you,
Frank--in that way. I am very fond of you--there never was a time when I
was not, I think," she says, and holds out her hand with the sweet,
alluring smile that makes men her slaves, "there never will come a time
when I shall not be. But not like that. There is not a friend I have in
the world I would not sooner lose than you; so shake hands and forget
and forgive all this. Let us say good-night and good-by, and when you
return--say in three or four weeks--you will have forgotten the fancy of
to-night. Do not look cross, Frank, it does not become you--and come
in."

She slips her hand through his arm, and, half laughing at his moody
face, draws him into the house. The gas burns low in the drawing-room,
the piano stands open; she strikes the keys as she stands, smiling over
her shoulder, and sings:

    "The fairest rose blooms but a day--Good-by!
     The fairest spring must end with May,
     And you and I can only say:
     Good-by, good-by, good-by!"




CHAPTER III.

AFTER LONG YEARS.


The morning that follows this night of the concert is bleak and raw for
June. A drab sky frowns on a sunless world; the wind is as much like
November as the month of roses, and the weather-wise predict rain. But
in this threatening state of the weather Miss Jenny Wild hires a pony
carriage, and starts all by herself for a drive. Not for an aimless
drive--she seems to know very well where she wants to go. She is very
plainly dressed, in black, a straight dark figure sitting upright in the
little carriage, a black straw hat, with a blue vail twisted round it,
on her head. She pulls this vail over her face as she drives through the
village, and, glancing hardly to the right or left, takes the woodland
road, and pulls up at the Red Farm, erstwhile Sleaford's.

Here she sits and gazes for a long, long time, with darkly-thoughtful
face and brooding eyes, at the dreary and deserted house. There her most
miserable childhood was spent; working in that kitchen her most
miserable girlhood wore on; in that attic room how many supremely
wretched nights of cold, and pain, and isolation, and heart-break the
child Joanna struggled through! In that adjoining chamber her merciless
task-master had met his fate, and passed to his death. In that parlor,
with its shattered panes, how many a jolly revel had been held, in which
_her_ part was only additional drudgery. And yet she had liked them,
too; there were light and music, and laughter and dancing, and youth,
and at one of them she had first seen Frank Livingston's gay, handsome
face--the same face, older, manlier, she had looked upon again last
night. Out of yonder broken gate she had watched him come one
never-to-be-forgotten morning, with his fair little cousin in his arms.
Last night he had sat by that fair young cousin's side, and listened to
her singing. Always these two are associated in her mind, and always
with a sense of dull, morbid pain. In that gloomy kitchen she first saw
Geoffrey Lamar, the true, noble-hearted friend who had done all in his
power to lift her out of her misery and out of herself. Here wild
Joanna suffered and slaved, was beaten and girded at; from here she
fled, out into the world, with George Blake! And to-day she might have
been George Blake's wife, if chance--or Providence--had not thrown in
her way Frank Livingston, and so in a moment changed her whole life.

She turns from the eerie spot at last, and goes on to Black's Dam. Here,
too, time and decay have lain their ruinous finger. The old mill, her
shelter and solace so often, has fallen to utter decay, the pond is
almost dry--silent desolation reigns. She turns from it with a shudder,
and drives away. Great drops of rain are beginning to patter, but she
cares almost as little for a wetting now as in the old days. She drives
to Abbott Wood--the old gate-keeper lives still in the vine-wreathed
Gothic lodge, but he can give her no news of his missing mistress.

A lawyer from the city does everything that is to be done in these
latter days. Of Mrs. Abbott or Mr. Geoffrey no one seems to know
anything. The rain falls heavily as she drives through the lovely, leafy
avenues, up to the grand, silent, somber house. The blinds are down, the
shutters closed; it looks as if it were mourning for those it has lost.
She does not go in, though she is invited to do so by Mrs. Hill. She
feels she cannot look at those fair, empty apartments, filled by the
haunting faces of half a dozen years ago. Her own is among them--the
restless, unhappy, aimless Joanna of seventeen. She is neither aimless
nor restless now. She has found her niche and work in life, and they
suit her well. But happy? Well, she is hardly that, and yet a very
different, a much wiser, gentler, nobler Joanna, than the dark,
discontented _protege_ of Geoffrey Lamar. Softened and good she has
grown, through years of kindness and affection given to her lavishly and
loyally by the Herr Professor and Madame Ericson. All that is best in
her has its day at last. Of friends she has many; of lovers she has had
her share; of admirers more than she cares to remember. And love has
redeemed her, and "Miss Jenny Wild" is all that they say of her, and
more, giving of her abundance to all who ask and need.

That afternoon Professor Ericson and his family, as he calls them, leave
Brightbrook. By the morning train Mr. Frank Livingston has gone up to
New York, and while Miss Wild is recalling the days of her youth, he is
spinning along, a cigar between his lips, the morning paper in his hand,
far from the scene of his despair. Truth to tell, he looks anything but
despairing this morning, in a most becoming English suit of the very
roughest gray tweed, fresh, vigorous, good-looking, alert.
Broken-hearted at his rejection he has a right to be, and may be; but a
broken heart is becoming to some people, and Livingston is apparently
one of them. In his secret soul there is rather a sensation of relief,
that as the train bowls along it bears him in its throbbing bosom a free
man! He has done what destiny and his Maker, and the united houses of
Ventnor and Livingston expected of him, and she has said No, and there
is no appeal. And when Mr. Livingston dies, and worms eat him, whatever
the immediate cause may be, he is comfortably convinced it will not be
love. So, in a fairly cheerful mood, he surveys his fellow-passengers,
unfolds his Brightbrook paper, and reads what the musical critic of
that sheet has to say about last night's concert. Miss Wild is lauded,
and Livingston is disposed to laud also. She sang remarkably well, and
looked very imposing. That grand aria from "Nabuco" is still ringing in
his ears, and it occurs to him once more to wonder why her face should
be so oddly familiar. Not a pretty face, he decides, but a good one, a
striking one, and once seen not easily forgotten. And then he turns to
another column and subject, and forgets all about it.

He spends three or four days in New York, among old friends and old
haunts. His principal object in coming to town is to tell his mother the
result of his proposal, and so make an end of that business at once and
forever; but his mother has gone on a visit. He proposes to follow her,
for he knows it is a subject on which she is more than anxious; but it
is news that will keep, and he does not hurry himself. On the evening of
the third day he sees by the bills that Miss Jenny Wild is to give one
of her character concerts, and makes up his mind to go.

"Perhaps I shall be able to place her this time," he thinks, "and so get
rid of her altogether. I believe I was dreaming of her half the night
last night."

So, a little after the commencement of the concert, Mr. Livingston
saunters in, and finds a large and fashionable gathering. Many of the
faces present are familiar; one lady in a private box bows, and smiles,
and beckons, and in a few moments he is shaking hands with Mrs. Van
Rensselaer and her daughters.

"So glad to meet you once more, my dear boy," that great and gracious
lady exclaims, "and looking so extremely sunburned and well. We heard
you had returned with the Ventnors, and were staying with them at that
charming villa. And how is dear Mrs. Ventnor, and the lovely Olga, after
their prolonged European tour?"

"Mrs. Ventnor is much as usual, and Olga is rather lovelier than usual,"
says Frank.

"And when are we to congratulate you, Mr. Livingston?" says the elder
Miss Van Rensselaer, a dashing and daring brunette, but not quite so
young as she used to be. "Ah! we hear more than you think, we
stay-at-homes. We expected Olga would have captured a duke at least, so
many rich American girls are making brilliant matches this year. And yet
there she is, _la belle des belles_, back again and--as we
understand--unattached! But you can open the mysteries, no doubt."

"I only know Olga refused half the peerage!" says Livingston, with calm
mendacity. "As for your very flattering hints, Miss Van Rensselaer, you
do me too much honor in inferring _I_ have anything to do with it. I
might as well love some bright particular star, and so on, as my
beautiful Cousin Olga. Such daughters of the gods are not for
impecunious artists like myself. Ah! here is Miss Wild, and as
Marguerite, singing the famous 'Jewel Song.' How well she is looking,
and in what capital voice she is to-night."

"You have seen her before?" Miss Brenda Van Rensselaer inquires.

"Once before, at a concert last Monday night. Her voice has the ringing
of mountain bells, and what pathos and dramatic force she has. She would
make a fine actress. It strikes me Miss Wild grows on one. I like her
better now than I did even then."

"Oh! she is lovely," cries Miss Brenda, gushingly. "We are the greatest
friends. She is received by the very best people. She is perfectly
charming in private life, and, unlike most artists, always so willing to
sing. She comes to us to-night after the concert; mamma has a reception.
I think her drawing-room songs are even more beautiful than her stage
singing."

"Come and make her acquaintance," says Mrs. Van Rensselaer, graciously.

"Thanks--I will," Livingston responds.

He is exceedingly taken by Miss Wild, he loves music almost more than he
does art, and her voice, her look are so sympathetic that they draw him
irresistibly. Besides, he wants to discover what is that familiar look
about her that so perplexes him now.

"_Who_ is Miss Wild?" he asks, as, in the midst of hearty applause, she
quits the stage.

"Ah! who, indeed?" returns the elder Miss Van Rensselaer. "Find somebody
to answer that if you can! No one knows; she arose first a little pale
star out West, and went on shining and enlarging until she is the star
of first magnitude. You see her now. Hark to the clapping--she will
return in a moment--they always encore her songs. Flattering, but rather
a bore, I should think. Here she is; what will she give us now, I
wonder?"

An hour later he stands in the Van Rensselaer drawing-rooms, and awaits
his introduction to the cantatrice. He cannot tell why he is so vividly
interested in her, unless it is caused by that puzzling familiarity. But
interested and impatient he is, and as he has never been to meet any
artist of the kind before.

"Mr. Livingston, Miss Wild," says, simply, his hostess, and he looks
down into two dark, jewel-like eyes, into a smiling face. He is
conscious of bowing and murmuring his pleasure--another moment and some
one else has claimed her, and she turns--is gone.

He looks after her with knitted brows, and ever deepening perplexities.
That tall figure, that gentle, earnest face, those great gem-like
eyes--they are in some mysterious way as well-known to him as his own
face in the glass. He tries to approach her more than once as the
evening wears on, but she is always surrounded. The charm of her manner
evidently carries all before it, as well as the charm of her voice.

Presently, when he is about to give up in despair, he hears her singing,
and makes his way to the piano. The words she sings he has never heard
before--the air is tender and very sweet.

    "My darling! my darling! my darling!
       Do you know how I want you to-night?
     The wind passes, moaning and snarling,
       Like some evil ghost on its flight.
     On the wet street your lamp's gleam shines redly;
       You are sitting alone--did you start
     As I spoke? Did you guess at this deadly
       Chill pain in my heart?

    "Out here where the dull rain is falling,
       Just once--just a moment--I wait;
     Did you hear the sad voice that was calling
       Your name, as I paused by the gate?
     It was just a mere breath, ah, I know, dear,
       Not even Love's ears could have heard;
     But, oh, I was hungering so, dear,
       For one little word.

    "Ah, me! for a word that could move you,
       Like a whisper of magical art!
     I love you! I love you! I love you!
       There is no other word in my heart----"

She looks up; her eyes meet his. Has she been conscious of his presence
there all along? Her hands strike the wrong chords; there is a jar and
discord; a flush rises over her face; she laughs, and suddenly breaks
off.

"Oh, go on!" half a dozen voices cry; "that is lovely."

"I sing it from memory," Miss Wild says. "It is a little poem I lit upon
the other day in a magazine, and it seemed to fit some music I had. I
will sing you something better instead."

She sings "Kathleen Mavourneen," and looks no more at Frank Livingston.
He stands wondering, and of his wonder finding no end. He turns over
absently some sheets of music bearing her name, and as he does so, from
one of them a written page falls. It is the song she has broken off.
Instantly he commits petty larceny, and puts it in his pocket.

"It will serve as an excuse to call upon her and restore her property,"
thinks this "artful dodger." "Find out who she is I must, or I shall
perish miserably of curiosity."

"Kathleen Mavourneen" is finished, and she makes a motion to rise; but
her listeners seem insatiable.

"Only one more--one little, _little_ one, dear Miss Wild," a young lady
says.

She pauses, glances at Livingston's absorbed face, smiles, and begins,
"My Ain Ingleside." And then, in one second, like a lash, a shock, the
truth bursts upon him. He has heard that song before! In the
drawing-room of Abbott Wood he has heard the same voice sing it! He
stands petrified, spell-bound, breathless, his eyes on her face.
Sleaford's Joanna! Yes, yes, yes! the reddish, unkempt hair shining,
dark, becomingly dressed, the sweet voice perfected, womanly, and sweet,
but still--Sleaford's Joanna!

How it comes about he does not know, but five minutes later he is
standing with her alone, both her hands clasped close in his.

"It is!" he exclaims; "I cannot be mistaken. It _is_ Joanna!"

"Sleaford's Joanna," she answers, and tears slowly fill her eyes, though
her lips are smiling. "I saw you knew me, puzzled as you looked, and
thought the old song would put an end to your evident misery. Yes, Mr.
Livingston, after all these years, it is Joanna."

"And I am the first to find you," he says, triumphantly, "that is a good
omen. Tell me where you live. I _must_ come to see you, and talk over
the old days. You shall not make a stranger of so old a friend, Joanna."

"So old a friend!" she draws away her hands and laughs. "Were you and I
ever friends? Ah, yes, come and see me. It does me good to look at a
Brightbrook face. And I am glad--yes, glad, that yours is the first."

"And that is Sleaford's Joanna," Livingston thinks, going home through
the city streets, feeling dazed and in a dream; "fair, stately, famous!
What will Olga say when I tell her this?"




CHAPTER IV.

"CARRIED BY STORM."


When Mr. Frank Livingston carries his blighted affections away with him
from Brightbrook and his fair, cold cousin Olga, it is, as has been
said, with the intention of seeing his mother and making an end of that,
and then starting off for a summer sketching tour, through Canada and
British Columbia.

That was his intention. The last week of June is here, and so is Mr.
Livingston. Canada and British Columbia--places misty, afar-off, unseen
and undesired. Three weeks have come and gone, warm, dusty weeks, and
every day of these twenty-one days has seen him by the side of Miss
Jenny Wild, and for more hours a day than he cares to count.

Miss Wild is still singing--not every night, but one or two evenings a
week. She is a favorite with the musical public, and her concerts are
always well attended. On the nights she sings, a slender and exceedingly
handsome young man may be observed in one of the front seats, drinking
in with entranced looks every note of that sweet, bell-like voice. Miss
Wild on the stage, in trailing silks and stage adjuncts, is a very
imposing and graceful person.

She has a face that lights up well, dark, pale, and clear; great
star-like eyes, and the most beautiful smile and teeth--the young
gentleman in the front seat thinks--in all the world. She is hardly
handsome--at times she is positively plain; but yet there are others,
when, flushed and sparkling with excitement and applause, her dark eyes
shining, she is brilliantly attractive. She possesses, in an eminent
degree, that magnetic unknown grace, quite apart from beauty, and called
fascination. Her smile enchants; her eyes hold you; her voice haunts
you; her tricks and graces of manner captivate before you know it. Where
the charm exactly lies no one can tell, not her most bewitched admirer,
but it is there, subtile and irresistible. The tones of her voice, the
words she says and sings, the light of her eyes and her smile linger in
the memory of men after lovelier women are forgotten. Perhaps it is a
little in her abounding vitality, her joyous life, her lavish largeness
of heart, that has room and to spare for all who come. Friends,
admirers, lovers, if you will, she has many, and foremost among them
Frank Livingston. For Frank Livingston to be in love, or what he calls
such, is no new experience. He has loved many women, and been cared for,
more or less, a good deal, in turn. Handsome, _insouciant_, inconstant,
he is yet a gallant and gracious young fellow, for whose faults fair
flirts are quite as much to blame as his own intrinsic infidelity. Three
weeks ago a young lady refused him--at present he is the ardent admirer
of another. In any case he would have taken his rejection with
philosophy, and consoled himself promptly--possibly with some
good-looking young squaw, if he had gone to British Columbia. He has not
gone to that chilly land, and Miss Jenny Wild, the songstress, has found
favor in my lord's sight. She bewitches him--her force of character, her
great popularity, the number of his rivals, the evident preference she
shows him, turn his head. He ignores past and future, he lives in the
present--in the sunlight of those dark, entrancing eyes. He spends every
afternoon by her side, in the park, in the streets, in her parlor. He
sketches her in half a hundred attitudes--he is painting her
portrait--he is perfectly happy!

For Miss Wild--well, Livingston cannot quite make her out. Her eyes and
smile welcome him always; she takes his bouquets, she sings him the
songs he likes. Her doors are open to him when closed to all the rest of
the world. And something in all this puzzles him. If it were any one
else, it would be most encouraging preference; but this is Joanna, and
Joanna is different. He does not understand her. He is by no means sure
of what her answer would be, if he were inclined to speak to-morrow. She
likes him--yes, of that there can be no doubt; but if he were to say,
"Joanna, will you be my wife?" he has very strong doubts of what her
answer would be. But he really has no intention of asking any such
thing. The present is delightful; it is charming to be with her--that
suffices. To-day is good--why lift the vail that hides to-morrow? To be
_epris_ is one thing, to ask the lady to marry one is another.

       *       *       *       *       *

"And so to-night is your last appearance for the summer?" he says, "and
you all go to your Newport cottage to-morrow? Well, New York is no
longer habitable, of course; but what an elysium I have found it for the
past month! I, too, shall go to Newport, Joanna!"

"And that sketching and hunting tour in British Columbia? And that
visit to your anxious mamma? What of them?" she asks, laughing.

They sit alone in the cool, green-shaded parlor, Joanna doing lace work,
Frank on an ottoman more or less at her feet, with the Browning he has
been reading aloud tellingly, on his knee.

"I _must_ see my mother," he answers, frowning impatiently, "but it will
be a flying visit. As for British Columbia--well, British Columbia will
always be there, and other summers will come. But the chance of going to
Newport--in this way--may not occur again."

"I think it had better not occur now. Start on that visit to Mrs.
Livingston to-morrow, and take train from there to Montreal. It will be
best, believe me. You have had a surfeit of Newport and surf bathing, I
should think, before now."

"Neither Newport nor surf bathing will be novelties, certainly. But I do
not go for them, you know that. Do you forbid me to follow, Joanna?"

"Why should I?" she says, and her dark eyes rest on him a moment. "I
like you to be with me. No, do not say anything complimentary, please--I
was not angling for that; I mean what I say. It brings back the old
times and the faces I seem to have lost out of my life. That past is a
dark memory enough, and yet it holds good things--Mrs. Abbott, Geoffrey,
and dear little Leo. I can never regret its pain when I think of them."

"And does it hold no one else?" he asks, jealously.

"Ah, you were no friend of mine in those days. Do not deny it--I have an
excellent memory for the few who cared for me in that desolate time. And
you were not among them. Why should you have been? I was only an ugly
and uncouth creature, rude in manner, and look, and speech. I was not of
your world then. I am not now. No, the gap is not bridged over yet. Do
you think I do not know it?--do you think I do not know it never can be?
I am a singer, I am popular, I make money, if that is all--fashionable
people like Mrs. Van Rensselaer ask me to their parties because I sing
and amuse their guests. But I am nameless, homeless, a vagabond, and a
wanderer. And to know _who_ I am is the one unsatisfied desire, the one
ceaseless longing of my heart. Surely I must have a name--surely in some
veins the same blood must flow. There were the Sleafords--I do not know
to this day whether they were related to me or not."

"'A little more than kin, and less than kind,'" Livingston quotes. "What
does it matter, Joanna? You have hosts of friends who love you for
yourself. You have made a name the world honors. Why regret what you may
be better without knowing?"

Her work has dropped, her hands clasp her knees as she leans forward, in
the old fashion he remembers; her great eyes look dreamy, and wistful,
and far off.

"I would give half my life to know. I will never rest until I know. The
Sleafords I have lost sight of; even Lora had left, and gone West before
I had reached Brightbrook. For the boys--it is doubtful if they could
tell me anything, even if I found them. The secret of my life Giles
Sleaford alone held, and he carried it with him into the grave. I would
give all I possess to know. You cannot understand this--you who have
always had name, and home, and relations, and love--this ceaseless
heart-hunger for some one to whom we _belong_. Ah, well! it is folly to
sigh over the inevitable. But all the same, it leaves me to-day what I
was six years ago, and you--you had much better be wise, and go to
Canada, and shoot moose! The past weeks have been pleasant--yes--but
they are over. Say good-by to-morrow, and do _not_ come to Newport."

"I shall never be wise if that is wisdom," he says, coolly. "I am always
happiest when with you. Let me be happy in my own way. I shall make that
filial visit, of course--that cannot be postponed--but I shall return
and spend my summer at Newport."

She smiles and says no more. She resumes her work, and he his Browning.
If Livingston cannot understand her, neither can she understand herself.
All her life he has been in her eyes something different from other men.
In her ignorant youth he was the "Prince Charming" of her fairy tales.
In her dreary girlhood a slight, a word from him could stab her as no
other had power to stab. She does not understand why this should be--she
only knows it is so. There is no reason why she should care for him.
There are a hundred good and sound ones why she should not. The fact
remains--she _does_ care for him; she will care for him possibly to her
life's end!

That night is Miss Wild's last appearance for the season, and that night
the house is thronged with her admirers and friends. That night she is
brilliant as she has never been brilliant before, as she never will be
again, for it is the very last time she will ever face an audience! But
though she does not know it, some thrilled, excited feeling sends a
streaming light into her eyes, a deep flush into her too-pale cheeks, a
ringing sweetness and power into her voice.

She sings as she has never sung before. She bears her audience away--she
is recalled again and again, flowers are flung to her, the theater rings
with excited applause. Foremost--wholly carried away, is Frank
Livingston. Always excitable, the success of to-night turns his head.
She is bewitching--she is a very queen of song--she is radiant in her
triumph--she is irresistible! Head and heart are in a tumult--this is
love, and he will win her--this bewildering woman, who turns the brains
of all men!

It is all over--it has been an ovation--and they are in her rooms--Herr
Ericson and madame his wife, the Italian baritone, and Frank. In her
trailing silks and laces, with sapphire ornaments, she looks absolutely
handsome--she looks like a goddess in Livingston's dazzled eyes. They
are alone in one of the softly lit rooms--her piano stands open, but it
is he who strikes the silvery chords, looking up with eyes that flash in
her smiling face. It is he who sings, in an excited, exultant voice, the
little song he purloined, the song he first heard her sing at Mrs. Van
Rensselaer's party:

    "Do you think I am ever without you?
       Ever lose for an instant your face,
     Or the spell that breathes alway about you,
       Of your subtile, ineffable grace?
     Why, even to-night, put away, dear,
       From the light of your eyes though I stand,
     I feel as I linger and pray, dear,
       The touch of your hand.

    "Ah, me! for a word that could move you
       Like a whisper of magical art!
     I love you! I love you! I love you!
       There is no other word in my heart.
     Will your eyes, that are loving, still love me?
       Will your heart, once so tender, forgive?
     Ah! darling, stoop down from above me
       And tell me to live."

"I love you! I love you! I love you!" he cries, and rising, takes both
her hands in his feverish clasp. "Joanna, I love you! I always have from
the first, I think, but to-night you have carried my heart by storm!"

She does not speak. His flushed face, glowing eyes, and ringing voice,
hardly lowered as he speaks the passionate words, tell her of the wild
excitement within.

"My darling, stoop down from above me and tell me to live!" he repeats;
"do you hear, Joanna?--I love you! I tell you, you have carried my heart
as you do your audience, by storm!"

She stands silent. But the hands he clasps are not withdrawn; the sweet,
dark, tender eyes do not droop--they are fixed on his face.

"Silence is consent!" he gayly cries. He draws a ring off his little
finger, and slips it on one of hers. "I bind you with this," he says,
"for to-night, to-morrow I will bring you a better."

He tries to clasp her, but she draws suddenly back.

"Oh, do not!" she exclaims, almost in a voice of pain.

They are the first words she has spoken, and there is a tone akin to
terror in them. But she smiles a moment after, and looks down at the
ring.

"You are all my own," he says; "I love you and I claim you. Wear that
until to-morrow. My darling, you sang and looked like an angel
to-night."

"Supper ish waiting," says the stolid German voice of stout Madame
Ericson; "you had better come."

They go, and Livingston quenches his fever and excitement in iced
champagne.

Somewhere in the small hours the little party breaks up, and he goes
home through the summer moonlight full of triumph and exultation, still
humming softly to himself the haunting words of the song.

But long after he is asleep, long after she is forgotten, even in his
dreams, Joanna sits in her room, and watches the slender yellow July
morn lift itself over the black, silent streets, full of troubled pain
and unrest.

"Carried by storm," she repeats to herself; "carried his heart by storm!
Ah! Frank Livingston, _is_ it your heart, your fancy, your excitable
imagination--what? But whatever it is, my love--my love, I love you!"




CHAPTER V.

"LITTLE LEO."


"Night brings counsel," says the adage, and "colors seen by candle-light
do not look the same by day," says the poet. Both are exceedingly true.
Livingston rises next morning, and his first thought, as he recalls all
that passed last night, is one of simple, utter, intense consternation.
Carried away by the excitement of the moment, by the charm of her eyes,
her voice, the appearance of the crowd, he has asked Sleaford's Joanna
to be his wife. The memory absolutely stuns him. All the fever of his
throbbing pulses is allayed now, and he knows he no more is in love with
her than he was with his cousin, Olga. Once again, as often before, his
heated, hot-headed recklessness has played him false, his fickle fancy
led him astray. He has asked the last woman in the world he should have
asked to be his wife, and she has not said no. She has said nothing, he
remembers that now; but in these cases saying nothing is equivalent to
saying yes.

Well, his fate is fixed--he must be true to her he has asked; she must
never know of this revulsion of feeling--Sleaford's Joanna must be his
wife. It is thus she forces herself on his imagination--no longer as
Jenny Wild, the singer, fair and stately, but wild, ragged,
devil-may-care--she rises persistently before him. He does all he can to
banish the memory--in vain. The image of the little barefoot
tatterdemalion, the drudge of Sleaford's, is the only image rebellious
recollection will bring up. And last night he told her he loved her.

It is with a very gloomy face, a very impaired appetite, Mr. Livingston
sits down to his breakfast. He is not much of a hero, this fickle
Frank--less of a hero than usual, even at this crisis of his life. But
unhappily--or the reverse--the world is not made up of heroes, and
Livingston goes with the majority. What will his mother say, his
fretful, ambitious, fastidious mother? What will the Ventnors say? What
will Olga?--Olga, who has always especially disliked and distrusted
Joanna--Olga, who has pride of birth enough for a royal princess. He can
see the wonder, the incredulity, the scorn of the blue, chill eyes.

But it is too late for all such thoughts, what is done cannot be undone,
he has chosen and must abide by his choice. He must keep faith with her,
and she deserves a much better man. She shall never suspect that he
regrets. He will inform his mother--the sooner the better; he will
accept her wrath and her reproaches, he will marry Joanna out of hand,
and hurry her away with him to Italy. That will look like flight, and
flight will look like cowardice, but he has not much trust in his own
moral courage. In Italy they can live as artists live--he certainly has
nothing very brilliant to offer his bride--he will cast off the idleness
of a lifetime, and go to work with a will. Of course, Joanna must go on
the stage no more; poor he may be, but not so poor as to compel his wife
to work for her living.

"In Rome I can keep her on black bread and melon rinds!" he says, with a
rather grim laugh, "until fame and fortune find me out. She is the sort
of woman, I think, to whom love will sweeten even black bread and
melons. Though why she should care for me Heaven knows! She is worth a
million such weak-minded, vacillating fools as I am!"

He takes his hat, and tries to clear the cloud from his brow, and to
look like his natural self, as he hurries through the sunlit, hot, hot,
streets, to Joanna's cool, green-shaded, up-town bower. He is not very
successful perhaps, or her eyes are not easily baffled, for in one long,
grave, steadfast glance she reads all his trouble in his tell-tale
face, then turns slowly away. The rooms are littered with trunks, bags,
boxes, and all the paraphernalia of a flitting.

"You find me in the midst of my exodus," she says, dropping his hand,
and going on with her work. "I always oversee my packing myself. So many
things are sure to be left behind. Find a seat if you can, although it
is hardly worth while to ask you. In ten minutes we start."

She is putting on her hat, and twisting a gray tissue vail around it,
before the glass, as she speaks. Except that first earnest, searching
look, she has not turned to him once, although there is no slightest
change in her pleasant friendly manner.

"Joanna!" he begins, impetuously, a touch of remorse stinging him, "you
must still wear the ring I gave you last night. I protest, I forgot
until this moment all about the other."

He does not think of all that his words imply. It is early hours for a
lover to forget. She says nothing--her white slender hands are uplifted,
arranging the hat. He glances at them, and sees no ring.

"What!" he says, "you have taken it off already?"

"Your ring?" she says, quietly. "Oh, yes, it was too large. Take it
back, wear it again--pray do; it is of no use to me. I may lose it,
carrying it about, and indeed I cannot wear it. It is greatly too large
for anything but my thumb."

She laughs, and holds it out to him. He can do nothing but take it.

"Very well, as you say, it must be too large; I will send you a more
suitable one before the week is out. I, too, am off this morning,
Joanna, to hunt up my missing _mother_, and tell her all!"

She turns a little pale, but her eyes are fixed on the glove she is
buttoning.

"Pray do not," she says, earnestly. "Oh, pray do not--just yet. Give me
time, give yourself time. You are not sure of yourself--wait, wait!
There is no hurry. Truly, truly Frank, I would much rather you did not.
Promise me you will not speak to your mother."

"Carriage is waiting, Jenny, my dear," says Professor Ericson, popping
in his bald head, "and not a second to lose. Good-morning, Mr.
Livingston. Time and trains, you know, wait not for any man."

"Promise," she exclaims, looking at him with those dark, intense,
serious eyes.

But he only smiles and clasps her gloved hands.

"I will write to you," he says, "and send you that ring. You will wear
it, will you not? I promise you it shall be pretty, and not too large.
And do not let your countless admirers nor the dissipations of Newport
make you forget during my enforced absence. I shall not be a day longer
than I can help, and I shall have much to say to you of my--of our
future plans, when next we meet."

Nothing more is said. He places her in the carriage beside Madame
Ericson, and leans forward to talk until it starts. It has not been a
very lover-like meeting or parting, and he notices that Joanna is very
pale as she leans out with a smile to wave her hand in adieu. Then they
were out of sight, and he is thoughtfully stalking along to the depot to
take the train to his penitential destination.

It is a long, hot, dusty, disagreeable ride. Livingston sits in the
smoking-car, and plays euchre, and gets through unlimited cigars and
newspapers, and the grimy hours as best he may.

Twilight is falling, misty and blue, as he reaches his journey's end,
and, glad to stretch his legs a bit, he starts off briskly to walk to a
hotel. The streets are crowded; the lamps are lit, and, twinkle through
the summery gloaming. Suddenly there is a commotion, a shouting, a
scattering and screaming of the crowd. A pair of horses have taken
fright at something, and started at a furious pace along the streets.
There is a rushing and shrieking of women--the runaways dash across the
sidewalk, upsetting everything and everybody, and lashing out at all
obstacles. Stop them! stop them! shout a score of hoarse voices. They
flash past Livingston like a black whirlwind, and he leaps aside barely
in time. A young girl beside him is less fortunate. The carriage-pole
strikes her, and she is flung heavily to the ground, directly at his
feet. The excited crowd dash by, heedless of the prostrate figure, and
Livingston, stooping down, lifts her in his arms, and finds her
insensible, and bleeding freely from a cut in the head.

This is a situation! He glances about in consternation, and sees near
the glowing globes of a druggist's. To hurry thither, to summon
assistance, to place her in a chair, and support her there while the man
of drugs examines her wounds, is but the work of a moment.

"A very nasty little cut," the druggist says, "and unpleasantly close to
the temple. Still, she is not killed, and this wound will not amount to
much if she has received no other hurt. Knocked down by the
carriage-pole, you say? Poor young lady! Hold up her head, sir, if you
please; I will stop the bleeding, and bind up the cut with a strip of
plaster."

Livingston obeys. He looks for the first time closely at the drooping
face before him, and finds his interest and sympathy considerably
heightened by the fact that it is an exceedingly pretty face, despite
blood-stains and pallor. She is a very young creature, not more than
sixteen to look at, with a dusk, sweet face, and quantities of wavy dark
hair. The long lashes rest on ivory-pale cheeks. With gentle touch the
druggist puts aside the loosened braids of hair, to bind up the wound.
Two lines he has read somewhere occur to Frank's memory:

    "Love, if thy tresses be so dark,
     How dark those hidden eyes must be!"

"A pretty little soul," he thinks. "I wonder who she is, and what we are
to do with her next?"

Even as he thinks it, there is a flutter of the drooping lids, a quiver
through all the slight frame, and then slowly two dark, deep eyes
unclose and look up in bewilderment into the strange faces bending over
her--the faces of men.

"Oh! what is it?" she says, shrinkingly. "Where am I? What has happened?
My head----" She puts up her hand in a frightened sort of way, and her
lips begin to quiver like a child's. "Oh! _what_ is it?" she says again.

"You were knocked down by a runaway horse--do you not remember?"
Livingston says, gently. "Your head is hurt a little, but not much, I
hope. Do you feel hurt anywhere else?"

She looks at him--dark, solemn, childish eyes they are--and her lips
quiver still.

"I--I don't know. Oh! let me go home, please! I must go home!" She
essays to rise, then falls back, with a little sob of pain. "My foot
hurts me," she says, sobbing outright; "but, oh, please, I want to go
home!"

She is indeed like a child. Livingston takes her hand in both his, and
tries to soothe her as he might a child.

"You shall go home; do not be distressed, do not be afraid. I am sure
you are not much hurt. I will take you home. Stay here, while I go and
get a carriage. I will not be a moment."

She looks up at him again, and to his utter amaze says this:

"I know you. You are Frank Livingston!"

"Good Heaven!" the young man exclaims, stunned by this unexpected
speech, "and who are you?"

Instead of answering, she droops back in her chair, so white, so
death-like, that the druggist springs over his counter for a
restorative.

"Never mind asking her questions now," he says. "Do you not see she is
fainting? Go for the carriage, and get her home as quick as you can. She
ought to be put to bed, and attended to at once. She has had a severe
shock."

Livingston obeys. In a moment he is out of the store--almost in another
he is back with a cab.

"She is better again," the shopman says. "Take her home at once. It is
at 37 Pine street, she says--a mile off or more. Tell the man to drive
very slowly, and as easy as he can. Her ankle is hurt, I think. You will
have to carry her to the carriage."

This is neither difficult nor unpleasant. He lifts the light, youthful
figure in his arms, and carries her with infinite gentleness and care,
and deposits her on the back seat. Then he gets in opposite her, gives
the cabman the address, and they are driven slowly through the lamp-lit
city streets. He looks at her in intense curiosity, as she sits before
him, her head drooping against the back, her eyes closed, her face drawn
into an expression of silent pain. He can ask her nothing now. She looks
almost ready to faint away for a third time.

"Poor little soul!" he thinks, exceedingly sorry for her--"poor little
pretty child. I wonder who she is, and how she comes to know me?"

But conjecture is useless; he cannot place her. Long before they reach
37 Pine street, what he has feared comes to pass. She droops forward,
and faints dead away from sheer exhaustion and pain.

Livingston will never forget that drive; it is always twilight, lit with
yellow stars of light, and the slender figure lying inert and senseless
in his arms.

They reach their destination at last--a cottage set in a pretty garden.
A lady comes hurriedly out of the door as they draw up. There is still
light enough to see her face plainly--a pale, handsome face--and Frank
Livingston utters a cry.

"Good Heaven!" he exclaims, for the second time, "Mrs. Abbott, is it
really you?"

His cry is echoed, and it is her only reply, for she catches sight of
the drooping figure in the carriage.

"My Leo! my Leo!" she cries out, "oh, what is this? What has happened?
Oh, great Heaven, is she dead?"

"My dear Mrs. Abbott, no, only hurt a little, and unconscious just at
present from the shock. Do not alarm yourself--indeed there is no need.
Let me carry her in and send for a doctor at once. I am sure she is not
seriously hurt. I will tell you all about it in a moment."

He carries her into the parlor, and lays her on a sofa. In a moment Mrs.
Abbott has recovered the self-repressed calm habitual to her. She give a
few hurried directions to the driver, and then bends over her pale
little daughter.

"I have sent for my son," she says. "I chance to know where he is. Frank
Livingston, is this really you?" She holds out one slim, transparent
hand, and looks wonderingly in his face. "Tell me all about it, and how
you come to be with my little Leo like this."

"And it is Leo--little Leo?" he says, gazing down at the still white
face, "dear little Leo, and I did not know her. What a stupid dolt I
grow. She recognized me at once. Accident has been good to me to-day,
since it has thrown me in the way of the friends I have been longing for
the past five years to meet."

He tells her what has happened in rapid words, and as he ends, a
latch-key opens the hall-door, and a young man hurriedly enters.

"An accident?" he says, in alarm. "Leo hurt? Mother, what is this?"

It is Geoffrey Lamar. He kneels beside his still insensible sister,
without a glance at the stranger, pale with alarm, and takes her wrist.

"Geoffrey, look here," his mother says, "do you not recognize your
friend?"

"Frank!"

He springs to his feet and holds out both hands.

"Dear old Geoff!"

And then there is a long, strong, silent clasp, a long, glad,
affectionate gaze. Then Geoffrey returns to Leo.

"What is this?" he asks again. "What has happened to Leo?"

Livingston repeats his story, and in a moment Dr. Lamar is in action. He
carries his sister up to her room, followed by his mother, while Frank
sits below and anxiously waits. He looks out across the darkening
flower-beds to the starry sky and thinks how strangely, after all these
years, he has found his friends. Half an hour passes before Geoffrey
returns.

"Well?" Frank anxiously says.

"It is not particularly well, still, it might have been worse. The shock
is more to be apprehended than the hurts--she is a tender little
blossom, our poor Leo. She has injured her ankle, in addition to the cut
in her head. How fortunate you chanced to be on the spot. Thank you,
Frank, for helping my little sister."

He holds out his hand, all the love his heart holds for that little
sister shining in his eyes. Livingston takes it, and gazes at him. What
a distinguished-looking fellow he is, he thinks, how gallant a gentleman
he looks, how thoroughbred, how like his mother in that erect and
stately poise of the head, that clear, steady glance of the eye.

"You have not changed in the least, Frank," Geoffrey says. "I would have
known you anywhere."

"_You_ have changed, old fellow," Frank returns, "but not for the worse.
And so you have been here all the time, our next-door neighbor almost,
while I have been looking for you high and low. What paper walls hold us
asunder! What are you about? Practicing your profession?"

"As you see, and after an up-hill struggle enough, conquering fate at
last, I am happy to say. And now that you have found us, we mean to keep
you for a while," Dr. Lamar says, gayly. "So make up your mind to stay
until further notice. Our mansion is not particularly commodious, as you
may see, but we always manage to have a spare room for a friend. And of
all the friends of the old time, my dear fellow, you know not one can be
more heartily welcome than yourself."

There is little pressing needed. Frank does object, but those objections
are easily overruled. It puts off the evil hour of maternal tears and
reproaches, and that is something. So he stays, and his secret will be
his secret for a few days longer, at least.




CHAPTER VI.

"JOAN BENNETT."


Joanna sits in almost total silence during the short drive to the depot.
The look in Livingston's eyes haunts her, the forced gayety of his tone
has struck on her heart like a blow. She has known it will be there
sometime, but not so soon, not the very morning after his impulsive
declaration.

"Carried by storm." Ah, but not held long. More than he has yet felt
himself she has read in his face--pain, regret, the resolution to make
the best at all cost of the most fatal words of his life.

Professor Ericson chatters like a German magpie; luckily, like the
magpie, he waits for no answer. They reach the station barely in time to
get tickets, checks, and seats, and then are off through the jubilant
sunshine of the brilliant summer morning. Madame Ericson composes
herself by a shady window with a German novel; the professor goes off to
the smoking car, and Joanna is left undisturbed to gaze at the flying
landscape, and muse over lovers who propose in haste and repent just as
hastily. As it chances--if things ever chance--her seat is near and
facing the car door. As it opens to admit the conductor on his rounds,
her glance alights for a second on the figure of a brakeman standing on
the platform.

She leans forward, with a sudden eager interest that drives even her
lover from her mind, to look again. Surely, that strong, tall figure,
and all that blue-black curly hair, are familiar. He turns for a moment,
sending a careless glance backward to where she sits, and Joanna sinks
back in her seat with a gasp.

For years she has been seeking him vainly, and he stands before her now,
when no one could be farther from her thoughts.

They are near New York before Herr Ericson returns. Joanna seizes upon
him at once.

"There is a brakeman on board this train that I know," she says,
eagerly. "I want to see him--I must see him, and you will please hunt
him up for me, and tell him so. Perhaps you have seen him--a tall, dark,
good-looking young man. He was out there not half an hour ago."

The professor stares a moment, then laughs.

"Mein Gott! She wants to see the handsome young brakeman! Shall I tell
him to call on Miss Jenny Wild, the celebrated vocalist, or----"

"Look! look! There he is," Miss Wild exclaims, unheeding, "standing on
the platform. No, do not speak to him until Madame and I are in the
carriage; then give him my card and tell him to appoint an hour, and I
will be at home to receive him. Say no more than that; he will not
refuse, I am sure; he will be too curious. It is the most fortunate
thing in the world; he is a person I have been wishing to see for years
and years."

They rise and leave the train, find a hack, and take their seats, always
with an eye on the tall, dark young brakeman. He _is_ a handsome fellow,
as he leans in an attitude of careless strength against the car, his
straw hat pushed back off his sunburned, gypsy face, a red handkerchief
knotted loosely about his throat.

"He might stand as a model for a Roman bandit, at this moment," Joanna
thinks, with a smile; "the dark and dashing brigand of romance. There!
the professor has accosted him, and now--see the profound astonishment
depicted on his face!" she laughs softly, as she watches the puzzled
amaze of the young man, and that laugh clears away the last of the
vapors. After all, Frank Livingston has not hurt her very badly, judging
by that clear laugh.

"He will come," says the professor, returning, and wiping his warm face,
"but he is a greatly bewildered young man. He denies knowing any Miss
Jenny Wild--thinks she must be mistaken in supposing she knows him, but
will be at her service, if she likes, in an hour. I told him that would
do--will it?"

"Admirably," Joanna says, still laughing. "I saw his incredulity in his
face; he is watching us distrustfully at this moment. An hour is short
notice; but short or long, I shall be most exceedingly glad to see him."

Promptly at the hour's end, the young brakeman, in much the same costume
as on the car, with the addition of a linen coat, presents himself at
the cottage and inquires for Miss Jenny Wild. He is ushered into a
pretty parlor, and in the subdued light, sees advancing a tall and
elegant-looking young lady in navy-blue silk, with a creamy white rose
in her hair, a smile of welcome on her lips, and one hand extended. She
stands without a word before him. The young man stands in turn, and
gazes, more puzzled perhaps than he has ever been before in his life.
She is the first to speak.

"Well," she says, laughing outright, "will you not shake hands?"

"_I_ don't mind," the young fellow answers, and takes in his great brown
paw the slim, cool member she extends, "but I'll be blessed if I know
you! And yet it does seem to me I've seen you before, too."

"I should think so--seen me, felt me, boxed my ears many a time and
oft!"

"What!"

"Ah! you would not do it now, I dare say. You are much too gallant, no
doubt, but such is the fact. Look very hard, Judson. Surely five years
cannot have changed me so _very_ much."

"By Jupiter!" Judson Sleaford shouts, "it is--it is--our Joanna!"

"Your Joanna--Sleaford's Joanna--Wild Joanna! Yes--Miss Jenny Wild now,
though, to all the rest of the world. Dear old Jud! how glad I am to see
you at last!"

He holds her hands and stands gazing at her, eyes and mouth wide with
wonder.

"Joanna! Our Joanna! got up like this--a swell--a high-toned young
lady--dressed in silk and roses! Well, by George! And here I've been
looking for you high and low for the past five years! Upon my soul, Jo,
I can hardly believe my eyes? _Is_ it you? Why, you used to be ugly, and
now I swear you are----"

"Ugly still, Jud--fine feathers make fine birds, that is all. But sit
down, I am dying for a long, long chat with you. Dear old fellow, how
nice, and brown, and well you are looking!"

She draws forward a puffy chair of satin and springs, and Judson
Sleaford sinks down on it. But his black eyes are still riveted on
Joanna's face; he cannot believe them. He is trying to recall the
barefooted, red-haired, fiercely-scowling child he remembers so well,
and place her side by side with this smiling, charming, "high-toned"
lady, so good to look at, and make one of the two. And he cannot. No man
could. Every trace of _that_ Joanna is gone!

"I can't believe it," he cries out. "It is all a fraud! It isn't Joanna
at all. You can't be. Why, _she_ had red hair, and you----"

"Have red hair still--not so rosy though as in those days. Don't stare
so, Jud. Your eyes will drop on the carpet! It is I, myself--I,
Joanna--no other. I wish it were."

"Why?" bluntly--"why should you wish it? _I_ think you are one of the
luckiest girls that ever was born."

"Do you?" she says, a tinge of bitterness in her tone. "Because I wear
silk dresses and live in a Newport cottage? Well, it is better certainly
than life at the Red Farm, but as for being the luckiest girl ever
born----"

"What do you call it then?" he demands--"having the fortune of a
princess left you in this way? By Jove! I call it the greatest stroke of
luck that ever was heard of, out of the Arabian Nights."

Joanna stares in turn.

"The fortune of a princess? What do you mean? _I_ have had no fortune
left me. I sing for my living, and make a very good one, but as for
fortune---- Well, pay for my dresses, and so on, and have some
pocket-money left, if you call that the fortune of a princess."

It has seemed that by no possibility can Judson Sleaford stare harder
than he has been doing, but at these words he absolutely gasps.

"Do--do you mean to say," he demands, as soon as he can speak, "that you
don't know?"

"Don't know what?"

"Good Lord above! Do you mean to tell me Geoffrey Lamar never hunted you
up after all?"

"Geoffrey Lamar? I have not seen or heard of Geoffrey Lamar since I left
Brightbrook nearly six years ago."

Judson Sleaford falls back in his chair, and looks helplessly at her.

"And all this--this cottage and furniture, and that dress, and--and
everything--do you mean to say you work for and earn all that?"

"I work for and earn all that. I have never had a penny I did not work
for and earn. I do not know what you are talking about. I wish you would
cease staring and explain," cries Joanna, almost losing patience.

Jud takes out his red handkerchief and wipes his heated face. His
amazement at finding Wild Joanna in this stately young lady, walking in
silk attire, is not for a moment to be equaled by the amazement he feels
at finding her ignorant of who she is. Mingled with the amaze is delight
that it has been reserved for him to tell her.

"Then, by thunder, this is the luckiest day's work, Joanna, you have
done in a long time! Just let me catch my breath, will you, and don't
hurry me. I'll tell you everything directly, everything you've been
wanting to know all your life. First of all let me ask you some
questions. You know rich John Abbott shot himself?"

"Yes, I know that. Poor Mrs. Abbott."

"Ah! poor _Mr._ Abbott, I should say. You don't happen to know _why_ he
did it?"

"Certainly not. I only saw it in the papers, and the reason assigned was
temporary aberration of intellect."

"Yes, jest so. Temporary fiddlestick! He knew what he was about--he was
going to be found out, and was afraid of the law and his high and
mighty missis. So he put a bullet through his brain, and got out of it
that way. Then--do you know what Mrs. Abbott and young Lamar did then?"

"Shut up Abbott Wood and left the place. Yes, but even that I only
discovered a few weeks ago. One can hardly wonder--so sensitive as Mrs.
Abbott was, and after so shocking a tragedy. I am not surprised she has
never returned. But where are they, Judson?"

"You would like to see them?" he asks, looking at her curiously. "You
are as fond of them as ever?"

"Can you ask? They were my friends when I had not a friend in the world.
They did all they could to lift me out of the misery and degradation
they found me in. As fond of them as ever! I tell you, Judson Sleaford,
I would lay down my life for Mrs. Abbott."

"Ah!" Jud says, in a peculiar tone, "and for Geoffrey Lamar?"

"And for Geoffrey Lamar. What I am to-day I owe to them. All I have, or
ever may have, I owe to them. Why do you look like that, and speak like
that? What do you know of them? Tell me where they are, if you know
that."

"I don't know that. And you need not be in a rush to find them as far as
they are concerned. I dare say, if the truth was known, you're about the
last person in this world they want to see. Why, I heard Geoffrey Lamar
as good as swear to find you, if you were above ground, and restore you
to your rights, and _this_ is the way he keeps his word!"

"Heard him swear! Swear to whom?"

"To dad--poor old chap--the night he died."

"And restore me to my rights? What _are_ you talking of, Jud?" she asks,
in a maze of wonder.

"I'm talking of what I heard with my own ears, though nobody knows to
this day I heard it. I'm talking of what I heard dad tell young Lamar on
his death-bed, and young Lamar swore to tell you. He hasn't done it, it
seems. Dad sent for him to do justice to you at last, and tell him what
hold he had over his step-father, who you were, and let him right you,
seeing he was your friend."

"Who you were!" She bears those words and starts to her feet. She stands
before him, her hands clasped, her eyes wild and wide, her lips
breathless and apart.

"Who I am! Judson--at last!"

"Ah! don't be in a hurry, Joanna. I don't know whether you will like it
or not when you know--so fond as you are of Mrs. Abbott, too. I tell you
it knocked Lamar over like a bullet. If ever you saw a corpse take a
walk--I don't suppose you did--he looked like that when he left the
house. But he believed what he was told, and dad gave him the paper that
proved your father and mother's marriage, and your baptism, out in San
Francisco. He needn't deny it, for I saw it all, if you ever have to go
to law about it--and I would, by Jupiter! Fortunes like that don't go
begging every day, and you're the rightful heiress of every stick, and
stone, and penny. Fight it out, Joanna, and I'll stand to you through
thick and thin."

"But who--who--_who_ am I?" Joanna cries out. "Tell me that--never mind
the rest. _Who_ am I?"

"Oh, I forgot," Jud says, coolly and slowly. "Your name is Joan
Bennett, and you're the eldest daughter, and sole heiress, of the late
John Abbott, Esq., millionaire!"




CHAPTER VII.

THE STORY.


"You see, it was the night dad died," says Jud Sleaford. "You know about
that, don't you? It all began about you. You had run away with Blake
while dad was away attending a prize-fight. When he came home, and heard
of it--it was the very dickens of a day, I remember, in the way of wind
and rain--he just mounted, and rode straight as a die for Abbott Wood. I
reckon he thought Mr. Abbott had made off with you, or had some hand in
it. He was stone white with rage. What would have happened there and
then, if Abbott had been at home, the Lord only knows. He was not, and
dad came back, in one of his black rages. But it seems he had left word
for Abbott to follow; and Abbott _did_ follow that very same night."

Jud is rapidly telling his story, and a very vivid narrator he is. The
first overwhelming shock of surprise is over, and Joanna sits listening,
pale, breathless, absorbed.

"We were all off to a dance, I remember," goes on Judson, "only the girl
was at home. Early in the morning, as we were driving back, we were met
by old Hunt--you know, next place to ours--with the word that there had
been a row at our house, and that dad was done for. We hurried on, and
there we found him, poor old fellow, 'weltering in his gore,' as the
stories put it, and almost at the last gasp. Almost, but not quite. Dad
was so uncommon strong, that he gave death a tough tussle for it before
he would go. We got him to bed, sent for the doctor, and from first to
last I was his nurse. The girls were afraid of him, he was as savage
sick as well, poor old dad, and Dan--but you know what Dan was--he
wouldn't be paid to enter the room.

"Well--I took care of dad. I gave him his medicines and his drinks, and
that, and did the best I knew for him. By and by he got back his voice,
and the first thing he says was: 'Send for the young swell--young
Lamar.'

"'Abbott's step-son?' I says, for, of course, we all knew from the girl
that Abbott had been there, and that it was in a fracas with him he had
got his death-blow. And dad's eyes shot out sparks of fire after their
old fashion.

"'Can't you hear, you fool?' he says, in a fierce whisper. 'Abbott's
step-son, young Lamar. Go for him, bring him here at once. I have
something he ought to know to tell him. He must come.'

"Of course, I went. It was another pelting storm, and when I got to the
house I saw the missis. I gave her the message. Young Lamar was in New
York, but she telegraphed for him at once, and that same afternoon, just
before dark, he came, and I took him up-stairs to dad's room.

"Now dad, although he was dying as fast as he could, kept up a wonderful
deal of strength to the very last. His voice sounded much as ever, a
little weaker, but to hear him you would never know he was so near his
end. And he had worked himself up into a fever, waiting for Lamar. He
could not die, he said, until he had seen him. I brought the young
fellow in, and offered to fetch a light, but dad wouldn't have none. He
ordered me out of the room, and I went, but only as far as the closet
where we hang clothes. You remember how thin the partitions were, and
the holes in the lath and plastering? I was curious to know what he had
to say so particular. I was sure it was some revenge he was going to
take on John Abbott. I sat there and listened, Joanna, and found out all
about it and _you_ at last."

There is a brief, breathless pause. Jud draws a long breath. Joanna
hardly seems to breathe or stir.

"Oh, go on!" she says, in a whisper, and young Sleaford resumes.

"I'll tell it in my own way--not in dad's--he cursed a good deal, you
know, and abused Abbott. You won't care for that. It seems that long
before, when Abbott was quite a young man, and just beginning to get on
in California, dad came there, a widower, with all of us, from
Liverpool, and a sister of his with him, who took care of us. This
sister, it appears, was a good-looking young woman, and John
Bennett--that was Abbott's name then, and his right name--took a fancy
to her, and her to him, and he made her his wife. His wife, mind you,
all right, and tight, and legal. Well--he lived with her for a while,
and was good enough to her and that, and gave dad a helping-hand as
well, and then all of a sudden he started off somewhere up country to
the mines, on a spec, intending to come back all fair and square when
his business was settled, and not meaning desertion, or anything like
that. But that's what it proved to be--he did not come back--dad never
set eyes on him again till he set eyes on him as the rich John Abbott,
of Brightbrook, and his wife never saw him in this world more. Whether
they have met in the next is more than I know; she was alive and well on
the night dad told the story.

"Well, Bennett--or Abbott, whichever you like--had struck a vein of luck
up there in the hill country, among the mines, and wasn't coming back.
It was a wild region, no women there, and he didn't want to fetch his
wife. So he wrote; all honest and square, you see, at first, and sent
money. Then the wife had a baby--_you_--and got a fever of some sort
after, and went straight stark out of her mind. At first her husband was
anxious about her, got nurses and so on, but after a time, as that
seemed to do no good, he sent word to dad to put her in an insane
asylum, and he would pay the damage. The young one--you again--was to be
put out to nurse, and be took proper care of. It--you again--was
christened Joan, after its mother, Joan Bennett. Bennett didn't come
himself, you understand--was too busy making money, but he sent the
needful to dad, and dad obeyed so far as to put his sister in the
asylum, and pocket the money sent for you. Things went on like that for
a couple of years, then all at once Bennett disappears, and from that
day not a trace of him was to be found. After that dad went to the bad.
While Bennett sent money it was well enough, but dad always hated work,
and shirked it, so poverty came, and he dodged about with us 'uns from
pillar to post, until at last, after some nine years of it, he settled
us in a wild part of Pennsylvania to shift for ourselves, and started
off himself on the tramp. There's a fate in these things, maybe. He
tramped along until he came to Brightbrook, and there, of course, one of
the first people pointed out to him was the rich man of the place, Mr.
John Abbott. Of course dad knew his man at a look. There he was, as
large as life, as rich as Rothschild, with a new wife, a new daughter, a
new name, and a step-son. The other wife, the lawful wife, was alive and
well, out in San Francisco, as dad knew, and here he was, a blooming
bigamist, with proudest, piousest lady in the land, for number two.

"Well, dad was tickled, you may believe. All this time he had kept you,
not because he wanted you, or cared about you, but because he didn't
know what to do with you. You were a trump-card in his hand now.

"He took a night, and thought it all over, before he showed himself.
Abbott was in his power, he knew, but he did not dislike Abbott, and he
made up his mind not to be too hard on him, to get a good living out of
him, and let him off at that. He didn't bear no malice, he didn't want
to show Abbott up, there was nothing to be gained by that, there was
everything to be gained by holding his tongue. Dad didn't want to be a
gentleman, and rob Abbott outright, he only wanted to be flush in his
own way. As to deserting his crazy wife, and taking up with this
handsome lady, dad didn't blame him for that either, it was only what he
would have done himself. As to you, he made up his mind to say you were
dead. He didn't quite know why, but he thought that if Abbott guessed
who you were he might try to spirit you away. Then, when he had thought
it well out, and settled his plans, he waylaid Abbott, in company with
Colonel Ventnor, and I heard him laugh as he told Lamar that night--ay,
dying as he was, he laughed, when he thought how struck of a heap John
Abbott was when he first saw his face. After that I needn't tell you
what followed. He got the Red Farm give to him, sent for us 'uns, and
settled us all there. You know the life we led, jolly for us, but deuced
hard for you, I must say. Dad owned he fairly hated you after that, why
he didn't know, but he did. All the hate he might have bestowed on your
father, he gave to you; so you were ill-treated morning, noon, and
night. And I'm ashamed to say by me as well as the rest. I ask your
pardon now, Joanna."

The young fellow says it with real feeling; he is honestly sorry, and
she sees it. She gives him her hand, and he starts to find how cold it
is.

"You need not," she says. "You alone never were cruel to me, Judson!
But, oh, my childhood! my youth! What a childhood, what a youth has been
mine!"

"Ah!" Jud says, with a hard breath of sympathy. "Well then, the next
was the coming of Geoffrey Lamar, and the sudden interest he took in
you. Perhaps John Abbott suspected--nobody knows--he refused to let you
come to Abbott Wood. You remember the evening Lamar came and told you
so? Dad took the matter in hand, through pure contrariness and
cussedness, as he owned; he went to the big house, and he _made_ Abbott
let you come. His wife should look after you, and nobody else; his
daughter should be your companion; his high-toned step-son your friend.
And he had his way. And now, whether Mrs. Abbott suspected or not, I
don't know--that's what I've puzzled over many a time since. Did she
suspect, and did she do all that kindness to you to quiet her
conscience, knowing she was wronging you all the time? I can't make it
out. Them fine ladies will do a great deal sooner than lose their money
and position. Was she one of them, or not? As to Lamar, I do believe it
was all news to him. I tell you he looked like a corpse. And no wonder.
There it was! his mother was not that man's wife--a fellow like that,
that at his best was like the dirt under her feet; his little sister was
a--illegitimate; and they were prouder than Lucifer! You can guess how
Geoffrey Lamar felt as he sat and listened to the story of his mother's
disgrace, told by the lips of a dying man."

Joanna has covered her face with her hands. Oh! she can guess it--the
shame, the horror, the appalling force of that most horrible blow! Oh,
Geoffrey! truest friend! noblest heart that ever beat! and _this_ was
his reward for saving her!

"When you ran away with Blake," goes on Jud, "dad suspected foul play on
the part of Abbott, thought he had a hand in the business, and went
there at once. That night they had it out. Dad had the certificates of
your mother's marriage and your baptism, and swore to expose Abbott.
There was a struggle. Abbott strove to master dad, and get them. Dad
pulled out a knife, and would have stabbed Abbott without doubt, but
that he slipped forward, fell on his own weapon, and stabbed himself.
Then Abbott fled. At first dad did not realize how badly he was hurt,
and had strength enough left to replace the papers in their hiding-place
before he called for help. But the girl was frightened and wouldn't
come. He tried to crawl from the room, but fainted, it seems, from loss
of blood. There he lay, wounded and bleeding, until morning--if he had
been cared for in time he could have lived, not a doubt about it. And
that was the story he had to tell Geoffrey Lamar. He gave him the
papers, told him where to find your mother, and so sent him away. I saw
young Lamar as he left the house--I never want to see a face look like
that again.

"That night dad died, but first of all he cleared John Abbott of any
share in his death. I suppose he thought he had had revenge enough. And
so he had.

"Well, we buried poor old dad. I never said a word to anybody--it was no
good, I had no proofs; Lamar had them, and you were gone. Abbott carried
things with a high hand with Dan, turned us out as fast as we could
bundle. And I don't wonder. For my part, I was ready to go. I was tired
of life on the farm. Lora married, Liz came to town, Dan went to sea,
and I drifted up to the city. Then, one morning, about six weeks after,
I picked up a paper, and the first thing I saw was the suicide of the
rich man of Brightbrook--nobody knew why. But I knew. I wrote to Lora,
and heard how Mrs. Abbott and her son and daughter had left the place,
and that Abbott Wood was shut up. It has been shut up ever since. It
stands there to-day, and you are its mistress, and heiress by right of
every penny John Abbott--or Bennett--has left."

Her hands drop, she is deadly pale, her eyes burn in the fixed pallor of
her face.

"As for Lamar, it is strange," Jud continues, slowly, "and yet, perhaps
it is _not_ strange either. He promised dad, on his word of honor, he
would hunt you up, and see you restored to your rights, and he has not
done it. You see, to do it, all the world would have to know of his
disgrace, and his mother's and Leo's, and they all are so infernally
proud. Still, Lamar seemed the sort of fellow to do right at any price,
and not stop to count the cost. He hasn't this time, it seems. It must
have been a tremendous blow to Mrs. Abbott. I wonder where they are? In
Europe somewhere, I suppose, flourishing on your money. It ain't fair,
by Jove, and I'd hunt them up if I was you, and have my rights. Your
mother's living, or was then--you can find and bring her forward, and
I'll swear to all I've told you. Possession is nine points of the law,
they say, and they have that and the money, still----"

"I must find them!" Joanna cries; "but oh! not for that--not for that! I
must find my mother--my mother! _mine!_ that I--I, Sleaford's Joanna,
should have a mother! Oh, Judson, help me--I must find my mother at
once, at once, at once!"

"And the fortune?" says Judson, looking at her curiously.

"The fortune! Ah, dear Heaven, what is fortune, a thousand fortunes, to
that? To find my mother! my poor, lonely, imprisoned mother! And I must
find Mrs. Abbott and Geoffrey Lamar. What they must have suffered! Ah,
_what_ they must have suffered!"

"And what they have kept--don't forget that. They have the fortune all
this time. And they never looked for you."

"They have--they must; I will not believe it. Oh! if they were not good,
not noble, not unselfish, then there is no goodness, no nobility, no
unselfishness on earth. I will not believe it. Mrs. Abbott never knew. I
would stake my life on that. Geoffrey has looked for me--I believe it as
I believe in heaven. To doubt them would be for me ruin. I could no more
have faith in honesty or truth on earth. Oh! I shall find them; I shall
know no rest until I have found and comforted them, as much as I can
comfort--until in ever so little I have returned to them what they so
freely, so generously gave to me. The bread they cast upon the waters
shall return to them; the waif they tried to rescue shall prove her
gratitude and love. And Leo is my sister--dear, dear, dearest little
Leo! Oh, my God! what a grateful heart I ought to have this day--what a
happy girl I ought to be! And I am. I will find them--I will comfort
them. I will find my mother--I will devote my life to her. Help me,
Jud--help me in this, and thank you, thank you a hundred times for what
you have told me to-day!"

Her face is transfigured; it is, young Sleaford thinks in wonder and
awe, like the face of an angel--lit with love, wet with tears, more than
beautiful, with the beauty of a noble, a true, a grand, unselfish soul.

"I will do all I can," he says, rising. "I didn't think you would take
it like this. I will hunt the world over if you say so. Joanna, you're a
trump, and no mistake!"

"Come this evening," she says; "give me until then to think."

She sinks down, and once more covers her face. And so Judson leaves her,
with bated breath, and hushed footfall, and solemn--feeling a sensation
upon him as though he were going out of church.

But in the garish sunshine, in the bustling, busy, outer world, his old
self returns as he sets his hat rakishly on his mop of blue-black hair.

"I'm blessed if I ever see anyone so changed," he thinks in wonder;
"she's no more like _that_ Joanna than--than I'm like an archbishop. We
did our best to spoil her, and a little more might a' done it, only
there's some sort _can't_ be out and out spoiled, do what you will, and
she's one. She's a stunner--she's a brick--she's fit to be an angel, and
with the angels stand. But for all that, Lamar and his mother will wish
her at the dickens the day she hunts 'em up. It's nature--I would
myself, in their place."




CHAPTER VIII.

HOW JOANNA CAME BACK.


"Geoff," Leo says, with some hesitation, "what is the matter with
Frank?"

"Matter with Frank?" repeats Geoffrey, looking up from the evening
paper, abstractedly, "there is nothing the matter with Frank. He looks
in very good health."

"I don't mean his health," returns little Leo, pouting, "I mean--I mean
his looks. A person may have something the matter with him, and still
his liver and lungs be all right."

"Oh, you mean the secret sorrow sort of thing, do you?" with an amused
look. "Well--yes--come to think of it, Livingston does look a trifle
hipped--as if he had gotten a facer, somehow, in the set-to with life.
But it is only what he must expect, as well as the rest of us," says Dr.
Lamar, philosophically, going back to his paper. "As we ride onward in
life, care mounts the crupper with most of us."

"It seems odd it should with him," Leo says, half to herself, and with a
touch of regret. "Whenever I wished to recall the happiest, brightest
face of old times, his was the one that always started up. It never used
to wear a cloud. And now----"

"I see typhoid is spreading," remarks Dr. Lamar, glancing up from his
sheet, "and two or three cases of malignant typhus have appeared. This
looks badly and the sanitary state of this city is a disgrace to----"

But Leo does not wait for the conclusion of this uninteresting speech.
She has caught a glimpse of some one coming up the road, and starts to
her feet; she knows that tall, graceful figure, that negligent walk.

Brother and sister have been for some time out here in the scented
summer dusk. Mamma is reading one of her pious little books in her room,
and their guest went to the city in the afternoon. It is their guest who
approaches, with a certain air of weariness and boredom, now. In his
hand he carries a large bouquet, whose fragrance heralds his approach.

"Ah, Livingston," Geoffrey says, genially, "back? Good evening. Were you
successful? Did you find your mother?"

"No," Frank says, moodily, "I did not. There is a fatality in it, I
think. It has been a regular game of hide and seek. She left yesterday
for Saratoga. Where is Leo?"

The sound of the piano in the dusk of the parlor answers. Leo is well
enough to limp about all day, and sing in the twilight. Hers is a voice
like herself, low, and soothing, and sweet, suited to nothing more
pretentious than little home songs and tender love ditties. It is one of
these she sings now, "Take Back the Heart thou Gavest."

It is too dark to read. Dr. Lamar lays down his paper, and essays
conversation on the cheerful subjects of typhoid and typhus. But Frank's
replies are monosyllabic; he is listening to that gentle little plaint
with a savage sort of soreness at his heart. Even here his infidelity
faces him, in the innocent voice of the singer, in the mournful words of
the song.

Geoffrey sees he is not in the mood for talk, and resigns himself to
listen also. Little Leo's singing is always pleasant to the fraternal
ear. Certainly, Livingston is very much changed, he thinks, he used to
be rather a rattle-pate; melancholy and Frank never used to be on
speaking terms. Can it be connected with Olga? the young doctor wonders.
He sighs as he wonders; she rises before him, a vision of pure, pale
loveliness, a daughter of the gods, divinely tall and most divinely
fair--no other he sees equals her. Happy Frank, if he is to win her. But
is he worthy? He is the sort of a fellow to fancy himself in love many
times, but Olga Ventnor has a deep nature, a strong, steadfast heart;
the man she gives herself to should be brave, and loyal, and true.

A good fellow enough, Frank--a fellow to make a different sort of girl
happy, but never Olga Ventnor.

The song ends; silence falls; Frank rises and approaches the piano.

"A melancholy ditty," he says, half-smiling. "Will you have some white
roses, Leo? They used to be your favorite flowers--used they not? You
see I remember old times and tastes. And as a reward of merit, sing for
me again--something not quite so heart-broken this time."

A flush rises to Leo's dusk, mignonne face. She does not thank him for
his floral offering other than by that fleeting blush, but she buries
her pretty little nose in their sweetness, and gives them a
surreptitious kiss, a little for themselves, a great deal for their
giver.

"I will sing whatever you like," she says, in that shy, sweet way of
hers. "I sing all Claribel's songs, and like them best--they are so
simple, you know, and so, just suited to me."

"So sweet, you know, and so suited to you," amends Livingston, rallying,
and dropping into this sort of thing from sheer force of habit.

"Shall we have lights?" Leo asks.

The half-light is charming; his presence sets every little youthful
nerve thrilling as he leans, tall and dark, against the piano.

"Not unless you wish it. I like this hour ''twixt the gloaming and the
mirk,' as the Scotch say. Can you not sing from memory?"

"Oh, yes," Leo answers, and sings. It is another of Claribel's; not sad
this time, but with a gay, lilting refrain:

    "And I will marry my ain love,
     For true of heart am I."

"True of heart!" Livingston thinks; "true of heart!" Is it in him to be
that to any one? he wonders. It is a noble quality, truth of heart; but
noble qualities seem to have shaken hands and parted from him of late.

It is precisely five days since he first came to the Lamar cottage, days
that have flown so pleasantly that their flight has been unfelt. All his
life is about to be changed; on the brink of that supreme change he may
surely linger for a moment, Sybarite that he is, looking neither
backward nor forward. But the brief respite is at an end; this is the
close of the last day.

"Sing 'Robin Adair,'" he says, in the pause that follows; "you used to
sing it long ago; and I will return to Geoff and smoke while I listen.
It will be my parting remembrance of you--this twilit room, and the
words of the old Scotch song."

"Your parting!" she exclaims. The little brown hands on the keys falter
and fall, in the dusk; the small face whitens. "What do you mean?"

"That I tear myself away from this enchanted spot, this 'Island of
Tranquil Delights,' to-morrow morning by the 9.50 train; and 'Robin
Adair' shall speed the parting guest. Ah, little Leo, it is five long
summer days since I came, and the good days of this life are not
long-lived. My pleasant visit is ended; to-morrow I go back to grim
reality, to grim duty, to grim New York. I will carry this picture with
me, and paint it some day--this half-lit interior, this open piano,
and--you. Ah, little Leo! little Leo! believe me, I am sorry to go."

And then he stops suddenly, and goes off to Geoffrey and his cigar; and
little Leo is left to realize the swift, startling truth that her heart
will go with him to New York or wherever he chooses to take it, and that
she will follow her heart, oh, so gladly! so lovingly! if that blissful
day ever comes when he will ask her. But just at present she is a maiden
unasked, and her duty is to be "plucky," and sing "Robin Adair," while
he smokes over there in the garden chair.

And she does it bravely, too, to the end. If the sweet voice is low, it
is always low; if it falters, it is a pathetic little ballad; if it
closes with something like a sob, the last chord of the accompaniment
drowns that.

The summer darkness is friendly and hides much. But she sings no more.
She comes close to her brother and, sitting on a low stool, nestles her
head against his knee. He lays his hand lightly on that dark, drooping
head.

"Tired, little Leo?" he says, gently. "Does the ankle hurt?"

"A little," she answers, in a stifled voice.

Opposite, Livingston sits smoking, silent, dark, in deepest shadow.
Overhead there is a primrose, star-lit sky, around them sleeping flowers
and fragrant shrubs, summer stillness, a faint breeze, and the noise and
lights of the great city afar off.

As they sit there, a silent trio, Mrs. Abbott--Lamar she calls herself
now--descends and joins them. She looks very frail and white, but the
rare beauty and stately grace remain.

"In the dark?" she says, smiling. "Why do you not light the parlor, Leo,
and go in?"

"It is pleasanter here, mother," says her son, bringing forward a chair.
"Have you a wrap? Yes, I see. Well, sit down; it is a lovely night--let
us enjoy it."

"'Let us crown ourselves with roses before they fade,'" quotes
Livingston out of the dusk. "My roses fade with this evening. To-morrow
I go, and I shall bear with me the memory of one of the pleasantest
visits of my life."

There are exclamations from Mrs. Lamar and Geoffrey. Leo says not a
word.

"So soon?" Mrs. Lamar says. "Oh! I am sorry."

She is sorry. It has seemed wonderfully good to see a face out of the
old life--the old life that has had its pleasures and its friendships,
as well as its bitter pain.

"Thank you for saying that," Frank returns; "thank you still more for
the tone of sincerity in which it is said. Mrs. Lamar, I wish you would
do me a favor; I wish you would let Olga Ventnor come and see Leo."

There is a movement in the quiet figure leaning against Geoffrey's knee,
but she does not speak.

"Olga!" the lady says, startled. "Oh! indeed I do not know. All that is
at an end----"

"You have chosen that it shall be," says Frank; "there is no other
reason why. And it is a little unjust to Leo, I think. She has no friend
of her own age, and--pardon me--it must be a little lonely for her
sometimes."

"No, no--oh, no!" from Leo; "no, no, indeed, mamma. Do not think that."

"And Olga is dying to see her," pursues Livingston, unheeding; "and
Olga is a charming girl, I assure you. Quite all she promised to be, and
more. How often have I heard her long to see you all again! Come, Mrs.
Abbott--come, Lamar, be generous to old friends--say she may come."

"I see no reason why she may not," Geoffrey answers, slowly; "but it is
a matter of feeling with my mother, and one for her decision alone.
Would Miss Ventnor care to come?"

"Do you ask that, Lamar? If I tell her, she most assuredly will not come
to see _you_. Does your remembrance of Olga lead you to think she is one
of the 'out of sight, out of mind' friends? You hardly do her justice."

"You are her loyal knight, at least," Dr. Lamar says, and laughs a
little constrainedly, "and plead her cause well. Will congratulations be
premature, or are they an old story by this time? We are such ancient
friends and cronies all, you know, that it is not impertinent to ask."

There is a tremor in the figure leaning against his knee, then a
strained, painful hush, in which she can count her own heart-beats. A
brief pause follows; Livingston removes his cigar to knock off the ash
with care, and speaks:

"If you mean an engagement between me and my cousin Olga, there is
certainly no need of congratulation. We are not engaged, and we never
will be. But we are excellent friends and cousins all the same."

"But I thought--we all thought," says Mrs. Abbott, surprised, "that it
was an understood thing you and Olga were to marry. We thought the
families----"

"So did I," says Livingston, with a half laugh, "and on that hint I
spake. We were all mistaken, it seems. Olga thought differently, and has
reserved herself for a better man."

"Ah! and that better man----"

"Is mythical at present--has not yet put in an appearance. But no doubt
he will, and Olga will wait serenely, although it should be a score of
years hence. She will certainly never make a mistake matrimonially. What
principally concerns _me_ is, that I was not the man."

There is a pause. Frank resumes his cigar, Leo's heart its wonted
beating, but with a sudden contraction of pain that she cannot define.
He has asked then, and been refused.

"Refused!" thinks little Leo, looking shyly over at him in the dark:
"how very strange!"

"She has had many offers, no doubt?" says Mrs. Abbott, at last. "Olga
must be very lovely."

"She has the loveliest face ever seen out of a picture or a dream,"
Frank says, but he says it without one faintest touch of enthusiasm.
"Men raved about her abroad. She has been painted again and again--her
beauty is almost without a flaw. But you will see her for yourself. Only
say the word--she will be but too glad to come."

"Could we be churlish enough to refuse? Yes, bring her, Frank, dear,
fair, little Princess Olga! It is good of her to remember us all so
long."

"Five years is not an eternity, Mrs. Abbott. And I doubt if fifty would
enable those who ever knew to forget _you_."

Mrs. Abbott smiles.

"My dear Frank, you are as charming as ever. You always had a faculty
for saying nice things. I am afraid you are a flirt--I think, indeed, I
have heard it whispered that you always were. Leo, do you not hear? Have
you nothing to say? Olga will come."

"I am glad, mamma."

"Only that, and you are generally so enthusiastic! You are strangely
quiet to-night. Are you in pain? Your ankle----"

"Oh, it is all right, mamma," poor little Leo cries out.

In pain--yes--but the pain is not in anything so unromantic as an ankle.
If he is not engaged to Olga, what then is the matter? Is it that her
refusal has hurt him so deeply, in spite of his forced lightness of
manner?

"There is another friend of the past," Dr. Lamar says slowly, after a
silence, "whom I suppose you have never met in all your wanderings up
and down the world. I mean Joanna!"

The name falls so unexpectedly, that all start at its sound. Livingston
in the darkness turns quite white.

"Why do you suppose so?" he answers, and his voice is not quite steady.
"I _have_ met Joanna!"

There is a universal exclamation.

Dr. Lamar starts to his feet, his mother clasps her hands, Leo sits
erect, and looks eagerly.

"You have met her!" Geoffrey cries, excitedly. "You know where she is!
Mother, you hear this? At last!"

"I have met her--I know where she is," Livingston answers, surprised at
the amount of excitement they showed; "is there anything extraordinary
in that?"

"There is this--that I have searched, and caused search to be made
everywhere all these years in vain. I had almost made up my mind she was
dead--so impossible has she been to discover. And all this time you have
known where she was----"

"Not all this time, if you mean these six past years--only within the
past two months," says Frank, feeling oddly cold and conscious, and
wondering what they would say if they knew.

"And where is she? In New York?"

"At Newport, I think, just now. How exercised you are over the matter,
Lamar. I always knew, of course----"

"My dear fellow, you know nothing, absolutely nothing, of the truth. It
is the most important concern of my life to find Joanna. She is safe and
well, and married to Blake?"

"Safe and well, but not married to Blake, or anybody else."

"What! She ran away with him, you know----"

"I know," Frank says, wincing; "but she ran away from him, as you must
recall, after."

"It was true, then? Odd girl--strange, wild Joanna! And what became of
her--what did she do? No harm befell her, I trust?"

"None whatever, but much good. She found friends, honest and real
friends, and she has worked her way to comparative fame and fortune. She
is _wild_ Joanna no longer. She is a refined and thoroughly well-bred
young lady, with gracious manners, and all womanly sweetness, and
goodness, and grace."

He speaks warmly, his handsome face flushes in the dark.

"Thank Heaven!" he hears Mrs. Abbott murmur, and Geoffrey, too, seems
deeply moved.

"I am more thankful than I can say," he says, after a little. "I always
knew the elements of a noble character were there, crushed, warped, as
they had been. Thank Heaven, indeed! But tell us about her, Frank. You
can form no idea of how deeply we are all interested in the well-being
and history of Joanna."

So Frank tells it. Out there, in the sweet summer dark, he tells the
story of provocation, and reprisal, and flight, and pain, and struggle,
and hardly-won victory. Joanna has told it to him--simply, unconscious
of its real pathos--and he repeats it tenderly, dwelling on all her
goodness, her free generosity, her brave great-heartedness, her bounty
to all weak, oppressed, and suffering things.

"She gives like a princess, freely, with both hands, to all who need,"
he says. "I know that the dearest desire of her heart is to see you all
again. She speaks very little of herself, but that much I know."

"Will you bring her to us?" Mrs. Abbott says, with repressed eagerness,
great tears in her eyes. "Oh, my poor Joanna! my poor, wronged,
ill-treated child! Bring her to us, Frank, at once, at once! Geoffrey,
you cannot go for her, I know--if you could----"

"Quite impossible, mother, quite unnecessary also. Livingston will tell
her and she will come. I will write to-night and say--well, something of
what there is to be said--and she will come. The rest she can learn
here. Frank, you have done us to-night a service for which I thank you
with all my heart. You do not understand now, but you will later. Get in
lights, Leo. I will write my letter at once, before I am called away."

So they leave the sweet-smelling garden, and the starry sky, and go in.
Lights are brought. Geoffrey sits down to write, Mrs. Abbott goes to the
piano and plays dreamy sonatas, Leo gets some needlework, Frank sits
near, with the paper Geoffrey has thrown down, and says little.
Presently it is eleven, and the letter is finished--a very long one, and
it is bedtime, and they all stand up to say good-night and good-by.

"But you will soon return with Olga?" Mrs. Abbott says.

"Olga will soon be here," he answers, with a smile, but Leo notices he
says nothing about accompanying her. Then it is her turn, and those two
hard words, "good-by," are spoken, and his visit has come to an end.

       *       *       *       *       *

"A gentleman for you, Miss Jenny." Her maid hands her a card. Joanna
looks at it, and her face flushes. Frank returned.

She is alone in her room. A week has passed since Jud Sleaford told her
his story, and no action has been taken yet. She hardly knows why she
waits, but it is for Livingston's return, and now the week is up, and he
is here. She goes swiftly to where he waits, and he comes forward, both
hands outstretched.

"You did not expect me so soon?" he says, the first salutation over.
"No, I know. But the oddest thing has happened. Whom do you think I have
met?"

She has no idea, she says, and smiles at the bright eagerness of his
face.

"Leo Abbott--Geoff--their mother--and I have been stopping with them
ever since."

"Frank!"

"I thought you would be astounded. You cannot be more delighted than
they were, when they found out I knew you, and where you were. They have
been looking for you, it appears, all this time. You know they have
given up everything--the Abbott property, I mean--and Geoffrey supports
them by his profession. They are living in comparative poverty and
obscurity, but are one and all as delightful people as ever. Here is an
epistle for you, from Geoff, long enough to make one jealous, and,
Joanna, they count upon your going to them at once."

She takes the large letter, and looks at the clear, bold, familiar
writing.

"I thank God," she says, softly, "I have got the desire of my heart. And
I thank you, Frank, for being the bearer of good news. And you have been
there ever since?"

"My mother had gone," he says, hastily. "She had left for Saratoga
before I left New York. I mean to go after her there at once. It reminds
one of 'Japhet in Search of a Father,' and seems almost as fruitless a
search," he laughs.

"Do not," she interposes, and lays her hand on his arm, "as a favor to
me--at least not yet. Wait. Tell me about them. Is Leo pretty?"

"Very pretty."

She glances at him a moment.

"And Mrs. Abbott?" she says, then.

"As beautiful as ever, but less proud, less cold. You know what I mean.
As for Geoff--dear old fellow, he is looking splendidly. Shall you go at
once, Joanna? They will literally be in a fever, I think, until you are
with them."

"I will go to-morrow."

"And I may accompany you, of course? Then I must inform Olga, who wishes
to visit them too. They will owe me a vote of thanks, I fancy, for
restoring them to their friends."

"Go for your cousin at once, for I intend to go alone. Yes; I will have
it so. I prefer it. Do you think I cannot travel alone?" laughing, and
lifting her brave, bright face. "Have you yet to learn I am
strong-minded, and amply sufficient unto myself? And, Frank, do not tell
your cousin any more than your mother. Tell no one until I give you
leave."

"But, Joanna----" he is beginning, impetuously, when Professor Ericson
enters, and cuts him short. Joanna informs him of to-morrow's journey,
and that Mr. Livingston will dine with him, and so his opportunity is
gone.

He dines and spends the evening, but he does not see Joanna for a moment
alone. And next day she departs, holding to her resolution to go
unescorted. He sees her off, and takes the train for Brightbrook and his
cousin Olga. Will they meet, he wonders, these two, at the Lamar
cottage, and if so, how? Will Olga be simply, chillingly civil? And how
is it that Lamar and his mother take the finding of Joanna so greatly to
heart?

In the late afternoon of that day a cab sets Joanna down in front of the
Lamar cottage. They have not expected her so soon, and Mrs. Abbott
alone is in the house. As she sits the door opens, a tall young lady
enters hurriedly, and falls on her knees beside her, and clasps her in
her arms.

"Mrs. Abbott," the familiar voice cries, "it is I. Oh! my friend,
kindest, truest, dearest, best, look at me--bid me welcome--say you
forgive me--say you are glad to see me. It is I--Joanna--come back."




CHAPTER IX.

HOW JOANNA PAID HER DEBT.


They sit in the half-lit parlor, the lights turned low under shades, and
Joanna listens once more to the story Jud Sleaford has told. Her hand is
clasped in Mrs. Abbott's, Leo nestles beside her after her usual
clinging, childish fashion, and Geoffrey is the narrator. No sound
disturbs him, there are tears in his mother's dark eyes, otherwise she
is calm. In the startled eyes of little Leo there are wonder and fear,
but she says nothing, although what she hears now she hears for the
first time. For Joanna, she sits quite still, quite calm, and listens to
the end. Even then there is not much said--there is not much that it is
easy to say. Leo buries her face in Joanna's lap, and is sobbing softly.

"Oh, how could papa--how could he--how could he?"

It is not in that tender little heart to blame any one too hardly. She
is afraid to look at her mother, at Joanna, her sister, both so deeply
wronged. Her sister, how strange that thought. A thrill of gladness
goes through her as she clasps her closer in her arms. She has grown so
famous, she bears herself so nobly--it almost compensates. And she will
be a great heiress--Joanna--it is her birthright, all that splendor and
luxury--beautiful, lost Abbott Wood.

Ah, her heart aches for Abbott Wood often and often, her fair, stately
home, down by the sea. All is Joanna's now. Not one spark of envy or
jealous grudging is in her--all good fortune that can befall her Joanna
deserves, has bravely earned. _They_ were the usurpers, and held from
her for years what should have been hers. Her own sister! How good, how
comforting is that thought. She has never felt the need of a sister,
mamma and Geoffrey have always sufficed, but it is a rare and sweet
delight to find one at this late day. And this is why everything had to
be given up, why mamma took her former name, why papa shot himself.

"Poor papa! he used to be so fond of his little Leo."

She sobs on, her face hidden, the sobs stifled in Joanna's lap. No one
has a tear for the dead sinner but tender-hearted little Leo.

All this time they have been talking, brokenly, disconnectedly, but Leo
has not been listening. She has only been hearkening to her own
thoughts. Now Joanna gently lifts the bowed dark head.

"Crying, little Leo? Why, I wonder? Surely not because poor Joanna is
your sister? Ah, my darling, it is the one bright, bright spot in all
this darkness, and sorrow, and sin."

"Oh, my dear! my dear!" Leo says, flinging her arms about her, "do you
not know I feel that? I thank the good God for giving me so great a
gift. I love you, Joanna--no sister was ever more dear, but I cannot
help thinking of--of _him_. He was fond of me, you know."

She droops her face again, crying with all her heart.

"Fond of you, my little one?" Joanna says, her own eyes moist. "I wonder
who would not be fond of you? And we all love you the better for those
tears. But you"--Joanna lays her hand on Mrs. Abbott's, and looks up
with wondering eyes into her calm face--"how you bear it. I wonder as I
look at you. And you used to be so----"

"So proud, so imperious, so exacting, so haughty. Ah, say it, Joanna! Do
I not know it well? I needed the lesson I have received--the only blow,
I believe, that could have humbled me. All other things--sickness,
poverty, death itself--I could have borne and kept my pride; this I
could not. Pride had to fall. I bore it badly enough at first--in agony,
in rebellion, in despair. I _would not_ believe such shame, such
disgrace, could touch me. I lay for weeks at death's door. I was wicked
enough to wish to die. But all that is a memory of the past now; I am
happy--yes, quite happy, Joanna, with a deeper, and a truer, and more
lasting happiness. Do you remember the ninth Beatitude of St. Francis de
Sales--'Blessed are the hearts that bend, for they shall never break.' I
have no fear of a broken heart, now."

Joanna stoops and touches, with loving lips, the worn, white, thin hand.

"And now," Geoffrey says, briskly, coming back to the practical, "there
is nothing for you to do but to step into the property, and take the
reins of government out of the hands of Blaksley & Bird. They have
managed the estate very well in all these years, and your income must
have accumulated like a rolling golden river. What a rich young person
you are, Joanna--quite a modern Mademoiselle Fifty Millions! And yet how
quietly you sit there and take it all."

Dr. Lamar says this in rather an injured tone. Joanna laughs.

"What would you have?" she says; "that I should throw up my hat and
hurrah? We don't do that when we come into a fortune--the luck is
something too solid and substantial. Besides, it comes to me so--well,
not pleasantly. It is not a comfortable reflection, that the best, the
dearest friends ever forlorn waif found in her need, are thrust out to
make room for--I had almost said, the viper they had nourished. It takes
all heart out of your millions, Geoffrey."

"Oh! if you look at it in that light," says Geoffrey, coolly; "being a
woman, of course you will take the romantic and unpractical side of it
first. But having taken it, look at the other--at the birthright usurped
for years. And as our going out was inevitable, you must know what a
delight it will be to us all to see you step in and reign at Abbott Wood
instead of a stranger. You have grown such a regal-looking young woman,
Joanna, that you will grace the position and the house. I know of no
one," says Dr. Lamar, making a courtly bow, which includes the two
ladies, "so fitted, in mind and person, to succeed its late illustrious
chatelaine!"

They laugh, and all restraint and embarrassment fly. Time has so
softened the past, so blunted the pain, that they can bear to talk of
it all with hardly a pang.

"We have kept it a secret hitherto, even from Leo," says Geoffrey,
"because, until you were found, nothing could be gained by telling. Now,
everything had better be told, and the sooner you are installed at
Abbott Wood the better. What are your plans, Joanna? Whatever they are,
for the future remember you are to command me. I consider myself quite
as much your brother as Leo is your sister."

She stretches out her hand.

"More than brother always, Geoffrey--best and stanchest of friends. And
so I may command you in all things? You promise this?"

"Undoubtedly--in all things."

"Very well--the first command I issue is, that you will not say one word
of this to any one. To the lawyers, if you like, but make them the only
exceptions. Not one word, remember, to any living soul."

"But, my dear Joanna----"

"But, my dear Geoffrey, you have pledged yourself blindly to obey, and
must abide that rash promise. I will it so."

"And Joanna is queen regnant now, it must be 'as the queen wills!'"
cries Leo, gayly.

"Well--if I must, I must, but I see no sense in it. And your plans? for
that is not one. But perhaps it is too early for you to have formed
any."

"No--my plans, such as they are, are formed, and are few, and simple
enough. In the first place, I leave the stage."

"Of course!" promptly--"_that_ goes without saying."

"In the second," smiling, "I stay here a week or two, with you all, if
you will have me."

"If we will have her--oh!" says Leo, opening wide her velvety eyes.

"Then I start for San Francisco, escorted by my dear old professor, who
would escort me to the world's end, at an hour's notice, and take my
mother, my poor mother, out of her prison of years."

"Good child," says Mrs. Abbott. "You will find her well, too. Geoffrey
had a letter from the doctor, only a fortnight ago, saying so, and
saying she still keeps calling for you. Ah! Joanna, that fatal fortune
will do some good after all--it will rescue her."

"In Joanna's hands it will do much good," says Geoffrey, with decision.
"Well, and after that?"

"After that--after that the deluge! I hardly know. Thus far I have
planned, and no farther. I do not quite realize it all yet. My plans and
wants will increase, I suppose, as I do. But oh! through it all, this
fairy fortune--this strange, tragical story, there is one thing I _do_
realize to my heart's core--how glad I am to be with you all again. What
would it all avail but for your goodness in the past. Geoffrey, my first
friend, I cannot thank you--indeed, I will not try--but you know, you
_know_ what I feel! And Leo is my sister--my very, very own sister. It
is better than a score of fortunes. And you!" she puts her arms suddenly
about Mrs. Abbott, "my dearest! my dearest, my more than mother, how
good you were to me, in those long gone days. Your lessons of love, of
patience, of gentleness, seemed to be thrown away then, but I hope--oh!
I hope, they have come back, and borne fruit. Nothing good is ever lost,
it all returns sooner or later. I have found my own mother, but I can
never love her better than I love you."

It is a scene, and these women weep together, and when, an hour later,
good-nights are said, it is a very happy little household that retires
to sleep.

But Joanna does not sleep--at least for hours. She is excited, she wants
to be alone, to think. She has the room lately vacated by Livingston.
Some relics of him yet remain--a glove on the table, a flower given him
by Leo, dead and dry on the window-sill. It is of him she is
thinking--he is rarely absent long from her thoughts. He is coming
to-morrow with his cousin Olga. He must not know, not yet, not yet. In
these dim plans of hers for the future, his figure does not appear; she
tries to place him there, but she cannot. A week with Leo, and already
the abrupt mention of his name sends a flush into the dark, mignonne
face. Is it so, then? And he? She is the sweetest little blossom
possible, a tender, gentle, adoring little heart, the sort to sit at her
husband's feet, and worship, and see no faults. No, in the picture of
her future, Joanna cannot fancy him, try as she may.

Next day he comes, and with him Olga Ventnor.

Dr. Lamar is very busy in those days, and disease and death are very
busy, too, in the city.

He and they do battle by day and by night; he has very little time to
give them at home. Fever is spreading and will not be stamped out; the
weather is hot, damp, murky, oppressive--real fever weather, and in the
pestilential purlieus many lie ill unto death these July days. He is
indefatigable in his profession, he seems to live in his carriage, he
begins to look fagged and worn, strong and robust as he is, splendid in
his flawless vitality. His mother grows anxious, and begs him to spare
himself, but in vain.

Coming home on this sultry evening, tired, depressed, hungry, out of
sorts, his mind filled with grim sick-rooms, and the grim faces of
poverty and disease, he sees a vision! Standing in the parlor, alone,
the last light full upon her, dressed in some gauzy, silky robe, that
floats like a cloud softly over the carpet, her golden braids twisted
coronet-fashion around her head, a diamond star flashing at her throat,
he sees--Olga.

It comes upon him like a shock, a shock of rapture. He has not been
thinking of her at all, and she is before him, a dream of light, of
loveliness. He stands quite still, quite pale, unable for a moment to
advance or speak, looking at her. It is she who comes forward, blushing
slightly, smiling and holding out her hand.

"Are you going to swoon at my feet, Dr. Lamar? Do not, I beg--I would
not know in the least how to bring you to. Yes, it is I in the
flesh--Olga--shake hands and see. How unflatteringly amazed you look, to
be sure! And yet," with the prettiest of pouts, "you must have known I
was coming."

"I had forgotten," says Dr. Lamar.

The words are not flattering, but he still holds her hand, and gazes at
her as though he could never gaze enough.

"Complimentary, upon my word! But it is just like you all--out of sight,
out of mind. Leo and your mother had not forgotten, sir! Men have no
memories. Will you not come in? The house is thine own--or do you mean
to stand staring indefinitely. You remind me of the country swain, who
sighed and looked, sighed and looked, sighed and looked, and looked
again. If you sigh and look into the dining-room it will be more to the
purpose. Your dinner is waiting there, and your mother has been left
lamenting over your prolonged absence, and the fowl that is spoiling
while it waits."

She runs on gayly--she sees all the surprise, the admiration in his
face, and she likes it. She is a hero-worshiper, this fair, white Olga,
and Geoffrey Lamar is her latest hero. She does not understand very
clearly, but for honor's sake he has given up a fortune, and gone out
single-handed to fight with fate. He is a hero in that to this romantic
young lady; he is working himself to death among the poor and suffering,
heedless of rest, or food, or comfort, he is a hero in that also. And it
is a grand thing to be like that. She adores strength, bravery,
unselfish deeds. And--what a distinguished-looking man he has become,
but then he always had that _air noble_ even as a boy, which she admires
so much, and sees so seldom.

Dr. Lamar is off duty that evening, really off duty, and enjoys his home
circle with a zest, a delight that is not untinged with pain. To sit and
look at that lovely face is a pleasure so intense that he is almost
afraid of it. Frank is there, near Leo; Mrs. Ventnor, too, is present,
talking earnestly to Mrs. Abbott.

They have much to say and hear, of the past five years, and once mutual
friends. She and her daughter, with Frank, are stopping at the hotel
near by--the bandbox cottage accommodates but one guest at a time. That
one, Joanna, is at the piano, playing softly--so softly that she
disturbs the talk of no one. Livingston tries to be devoted, and turns
the music, but she sends him away.

"I play from memory," she says, "or I improvise. It is my way of
thinking aloud; and I like to be alone when I think. Go and talk--go and
amuse little Leo," smilingly; "she hates to be alone."

So he goes, and thus paired off, the evening passes delightfully. It is
an evening Geoffrey, for one, never forgets. Olga is by his side; Joanna
is playing softly, softly, and a little sadly. Is _she_ happy? Her face
tells nothing. The others are--he is, supremely so. Outside there is the
summer darkness, the stars, the whispering wind. Yes, it is a picture he
will recall to his dying day.

Miss Ventnor has met Miss Wild, the vocalist, with some surprise, and
extreme curiosity. And so she is Joanna?--really? How stupid of her and
Frank not to have recognized her at once. But she has so changed--so
improved. Miss Wild will pardon her, she trusts, for saying as much.
After all, she is privileged, being such a very old--acquaintance. May
she congratulate her?--her voice is enchanting, she envies her whenever
she hears it. How charming that they should all meet again like this.
And so on--more than civil--gracious, indeed--quite the manner of some
fair young grand duchess, so uplifted that she can afford to stoop and
be sweet.

Joanna smiles at it all, not embarrassed, not overwhelmed, and responds
very quietly. Olga does not dream--none of them do--the double secret
she holds, her manner to Livingston is so simply that of a friend.
Still, he feels uncomfortable, and urges her to let him tell. "Wait,
wait," is all she will say. It is her answer to Geoffrey, too, when he
reiterates his wish to make known her real position to the Ventnors.
"Oh, wait," she says; "time enough for all that." And they obey her. She
has a strong will, this gentle Joanna, and it makes itself felt. She
knows her own mind, and adheres to it. She forms her own plans, and
abides by them. She has great faith in time, and waiting, and patience,
to set the most crooked things straight. A little, indeed, is
revealed--she has discovered her mother, out in San Francisco, and
Joanna is going there to join her next week. It is her intention to
return with her and make another brief visit to the Lamars.

After that--Livingston glances at her with a somewhat anxious face, but
she smiles back at him with a brightness all her own. She has the
brightest smile, the frankest laugh, in the world--in her presence there
is a sense of comfort, of peace, of rest. That subtile fascination of
manner has its effect on them all, and her singing charms care from
every heart. Mrs. Ventnor is bewitched--Olga says so laughingly; she is
ready to listen for hours, rapt, if Joanna will only sing.

"I repeat it," Miss Ventnor says, "you have bewitched mamma, Miss Wild.
She is under the spell of a musical enchantress. What sorcery is in that
voice of yours that you steal our hearts through our ears?"

This is very gracious. Olga goes with the majority, and does real homage
to her old foe. The clear, noble face, the quiet, well-bred manner, the
siren charm of voice, win golden opinions from her, fastidious as she
is.

"I never saw any one so changed as that--that Joanna," she says, half
laughingly, half petulantly, to Frank; "she is a witch, I think. Even
_I_ cannot resist. There is a sort of charm about her--I cannot define
it, but perhaps you can see--that compels one's liking in spite of one's
self."

"And why in spite of one's self, Mlle. Olga? Why should one try to
resist?"

"Ah! why? We were always antagonistic, you know. And so you _can_ see
it? Now, really you are sharper-sighted than I took you to be. I thought
_you_ saw nothing but little Leo's _riante_ face!"

"What?" Livingston cries, conscience-stricken; "do you know what you are
saying? Leo! What is Leo to me?"

"I do not know what Leo may be to you at this present moment," says
Olga, coolly, "but if things go on, she will be Mrs. Livingston to you
before long. _Deja!_ we go fast, my friend. _Your_ heart goes out
through your eyes, it seems. And only two months ago he proposed to me!
What a crushing blow to my vanity! As for little Leo----"

But the door opens, and little Leo comes in with Joanna, and the cousins
part--Livingston covered with confusion as with a garment, and Olga's
sapphire eyes laughing with malice.

The days go by; Joanna's week has nearly merged into two. They hold her
by force, it seems; Mrs. Abbott's pleading eyes, Leo's pleading lips,
Geoffrey's pleasure in her prolonged stay. The Ventnors are still here;
Livingston is every day, and all day every day, almost, at the cottage.

Dr. Lamar works as hard as ever, spares himself as little as ever, and
begins to really look haggard and ill. His mother and Joanna watch him
with anxious eyes, and what they fear comes to pass. Olga's hero goes
down on his battle-field, but facing and fighting the foe until he
falls, prostrate and conquered.

And then there are tears, and panic, and terror in the bright little
household, and a sudden scattering of the happy circle. And in this
hour, Joanna comes forward to pay her debt, to pay it, if need be, even
with her life. She is calm and self-possessed, where all is dismay. She
takes Livingston aside, and speaks to him as one having authority.

"Last night I spoke to Geoffrey," she quietly says: "he felt this coming
on, and knew he could rely upon me. He wished to be taken to the
hospital, but that I would not hear of. He wished me to go, but that was
still more impossible. Then we decided what to do, and you must obey.
You must leave at once, and take Miss Ventnor, and her mother, and Leo
with you, to Brightbrook, if you are wise; this city is not safe. I
remain with Mrs. Abbott. A professional nurse is coming, and his friend,
Dr. Morgan, will attend. To obey is the only way in which you can help
us, and with the help of Heaven, Geoffrey will be restored to us soon."

"But, oh, Joanna," the young man cries out, "it may be death to you!"

She smiles; it is a smile that goes to his heart.

"If Heaven pleases, but I think not. I am so strong, so well, I have
never been ill in my life, and I am not in the least afraid. I do not
think that for me there is the slightest danger. But for your cousin and
Leo, there may be much. Take them away, Frank, and do not come here any
more."

"I will take them away," he answers, "but as for not coming here any
more----"

He does not finish the sentence; he turns to go. Then suddenly he comes
back, and clasps her closely in his arms, and kisses her again and
again.

"God bless you, my own darling--my brave, noble, great-hearted Joanna,
and make me worthy of you in the time that is to come."

       *       *       *       *       *

Olga Ventnor, and her mother, and Leo are taken away. Not willingly,
rebelling, and under loud protests and tears on Leo's part, white, mute
grief on Olga's. Her heart burns as she thinks of Joanna there in the
post of danger, by his side, and she here, selfishly safe and free.

But she says little. What is there for her to say? and maiden pride is
very strong in Olga Ventnor. They see that she is pale, that as the days
go on she grows thin as a shadow, that she wanders about like a restless
spirit, that she listens breathlessly to the report Livingston brings
daily, and many times a day. For they have not gone, that would have
been too cruel, and Frank hovers constantly about the cottage,
intercepts the doctor, waylays the nurse, and tries to catch glimpses of
Joanna. There are not many glimpses of Joanna to be had; she literally
lives in the sick-room, she shares the nightly vigils, she snatches
brief naps in her clothes, while she insists upon his mother taking her
proper rest. No Sister of Mercy, no adoring wife, could have watched,
nursed, cared for him more devotedly than does she. And the days
pass--the long, sunny, summer days. Everything that medical skill can
do, that tireless nursing can do, are done. And they triumph. There
comes a day and a night of agonized suspense, and waiting, and
heart-break--a night in which Olga Ventnor knows in her agony that if
Geoffrey Lamar dies, all that life holds of joy for her will die too--a
night in which Leo weeps, and Livingston roams restlessly, and Joanna
watches, and waits, and prays. And as day dawns, and the first lances of
sunshine pierce the darkened sick-room, she comes out, white as a
spirit, wasted, wan, but oh! so thankful--Oh! so glad--Oh! so
unspeakably blessed. Frank Livingston starts up and comes forward, pale
too, and worn, and thin. He does not speak--his eyes speak for him.

"Do not come near," Joanna says, remembering, even in that supreme hour,
prudence. "Go home and tell them all to bless God for us. Geoffrey will
live."

He goes and tells his glad news. Mrs. Ventnor and Leo cry with joy, and
are full of outspoken thanksgiving, but Olga is silent. And presently
she rises, feeling giddy and faint, and goes to her room, and falls on
her knees by the bed, and there remains, bowed, speechless, motionless,
a long, long time. And whether it is for Geoffrey she is praying,
or--Joanna--she can never tell.




CHAPTER X.

"THE TIME OF ROSES."


"I never thought to see it again, the dear old place. Nowhere in the
world can ever seem so much like home to me as Brightbrook. It is good,
good, good to be back!"

So says little Leo, drawing a long, contented breath. She stands leaning
against a brown tree trunk, her hat in her hand, the sunshine sifting
down upon her like a rain of gold, flecking her pink cambric dress, her
braided dark hair, her sweet, soft-cut face, the great black velvety
eyes.

Those dark eyes gaze with a wistful light in the direction of Abbott
Wood, whither she has not yet been. Sitting in a rustic chair, near,
Frank Livingston looks at her, thinking, artist-like, what an
unconscious picture she makes of herself, and with something deeper,
perhaps, than mere artist admiration in his eyes.

They are all here, the Lamar family, and have been for two days. To Leo
it is as though they had never quitted it. The villa, the village, the
faces of Frank and Olga, everything seems as if she had only left
yesterday. The gap of years is bridged over; she is rich and prosperous
Leo Abbott once more. Only her old home she has not seen; she longs to
go, but dreads to ask.

In an invalid chair, close by, sits her brother, very much of an invalid
still, pallid and thin to a most interesting degree, and petted by all
the womankind until Livingston declares in disgust the after coddling
must be ten times harder for Lamar to bear up against than the fever
bout. Olga is an exception. Olga, now that she has gotten him safely
here, feels a limitless content, but she does not "coddle." She watches
the returning appetite, the growing strength, the gradual return to life
and health, with a gladness, a thankfulness words are weak to tell, but
she pets not at all. She treats him a trifle more tenderly, perhaps,
than the Geoffrey Lamar, vigorous of strength and life, of some weeks
back; but feel as she may, Olga Ventnor is not one to wear her heart on
her sleeve for any man, sick or well. She is a fair, a gracious, a
lovely young hostess, full of all gentle care for the comfort of her
guests; but Geoffrey is her mother's especial province, and to her
mother she quietly leaves him.

It is rather against his will, truth to tell, that Dr. Lamar is here at
all; but very little voice was given him in the matter--his faint
objections were overruled by a vast majority, and he was en route hither
almost before he knew it.

Colonel Ventnor had come for his wife and daughter, alarmed for their
safety, and, finding the patient convalescent, had waited a few days,
and abducted him, willy nilly. The cottage had been shut up, and the
family are safely here, recuperating in the fresh, sea-scented breezes
of Brightbrook, and Olga and Leo at least, in their hidden hearts,
supremely happy.

For Frank and Geoffrey--well, their roses are certainly not thornless.
For Geoffrey, he finds himself yielding irresistibly to the spell of
other days, and it threatens to be a fatal spell. In those other days
it was different--he might have hoped then--now hope would only be
another name for presumption. He has loved Olga ever since he can
remember, it seems to him, and even when he thought her assigned to
Livingston, had hoped, feeling confident of being able to hold his own
with that careless wooer. But all that has been changed; in those days
he was the heir presumptive of a very rich man; in these days he is a
penniless doctor, able to earn his daily bread, and little more. And for
all the best years of his life it seems likely to be so. For himself, he
has quite made up his mind to it, has not been unhappy, but now--now,
after this inopportune visit, after long days spent in her society, it
will be different. He can hardly love her better, and yet he dreads to
stay. He will spoil his life for nothing; a hopeless passion will mar
all that is best in him, a love she must never know of will consume his
life, eat out his heart with useless longings and regrets.

Meantime Joanna speeds on by day and by night, on her long journey to
her mother. Her prediction has proven true--she does not take the fever.
And the doctor tells them all that to her indefatigable nursing more
than anything else do they owe Geoffrey's life.

"Thank her if you can, young man," Dr. Morgan says; "she never spared
herself by night or day. But for her you would be a dead man this
morning."

But Geoffrey does not even try to thank her--there are things for which
mere words, be they never so eloquent, are a poor return. Others
overwhelm her with tears and gratitude--his mother, his sister, Mrs.
Ventnor. Olga says little, but it is at her Joanna looks. She is very
pale in these first days, with a tense sort of look in her blue eyes;
but she holds herself well in hand, and even Joanna turns away
disappointed, from that still, proudly calm face. Only when they say
good-by does a glimpse of Olga's heart appear. She is the last to say
it, and they are alone. She has held out her hand at first with a smile,
and the conventional good wishes for a pleasant journey. Suddenly she
flings her arms around Joanna's neck and holds her almost wildly to her.

"You have saved his life," she whispers, kissing her again and again. "I
will love you while I live for that."

And then she is gone.

Joanna looks after her, a glad, relieved, triumphant smile on her face.

"It is so, then," she says, softly, "in spite of all--in spite of pride.
I am so glad--so very, very glad."

And now they are all here, and the five last miserable years seem to
drift away, and the old time--"the time of roses"--comes back. Leo
visits Abbott Wood to her heart's content--no one objects--and wanders
sadly under the trees, and down by the blue summer sea, through the
glowing rooms, speaking of her mother's refined taste, her father's
boundless wealth.

Poor papa! Leo's tender little heart is sad for him yet. Here is the
chapel, beautiful St. Walburga's, with its radiant saints on golden
backgrounds, the crimson and purple and golden glass casting rays of
rainbow light on the colored marbles of the floor, the carven pulpit
with its angel faces, from which Mr. Lamb's meek countenance used to
beam down on them all. Up yonder is the organ where mamma used to sit
and play Mozart and Haydn on Sunday afternoons. How silent, how sad, how
changed, it all is now. Here is her own white and blue chamber, with its
lovely picture of Christ blessing little children, its guardian angels
on brackets, her books, and toilet things, all as they used to be.

Here is Geoffrey's room, bare enough and without carpet, for his tastes
were preternaturally austere in those days, with lots of space, and
little else, except an iron bedstead, and tables, and chairs. And books,
of course--everywhere books. And a horrid skeleton in a closet, on
wires, and a dismal skull grinning at her under glass.

Leo gets out again as quickly as may be, with a shudder at Geoff's
dreadful tastes. Her first visit leaves her very sad and thoughtful; she
loves every tree in the old place, every room in the stately house, and
it is never to be home to her any more! It is Joanna's, and, of course,
she is glad of that. No good too good can come to Joanna; but for all
that, it makes her heart ache. She may come to it as a visitor, but
dear, dear Abbott Wood will never be home any more.

No one else goes, not her mother, not her brother; they drive in every
other direction, never in that. Leo goes often, and frequent going
blunts the first sharp feeling of loss and pain. Another sense of loss
and pain, keener yet, follows this. What has she done to Frank? He is
her friend no more; he avoids her, indeed; he is never her escort if he
can help it. Sometimes he cannot help it. Olga, in her imperious
fashion, orders him to go and take care of Leo, and not let the child
come to harm moving about alone. Leo tries to assert herself, and summon
pride to her aid; but Leo in the role of a haughty maiden is a failure.
The sensitive lips quiver, like the lips of a grieved child; the velvet
black eyes grow dewy and deep, with tears hardly held back. What has she
done to make Frank dislike her? He used not be like this; he used to be
nice, and attentive, and polite. But it is so no more. He goes with her
when he must, and talks to her after a constrained fashion, and looks at
her furtively, and seems guilty, when caught in the act. Why should he
look guilty, and glance hastily away? There is no harm in looking at
her--Leo has a secret consciousness that she is not bad to look at. She
cannot be entirely miserable over the loss of her old home, while she
every day grows more and more miserable over the loss of her friend.

And the days go on, and the weeks pass, and the end of September is
here. They have heard from Joanna. Mrs. Abbott has had a brief letter,
very brief. She has reached her journey's end in safety; she has found
her mother, has taken her from the asylum, and, after a week or two of
rest, will return. She sends her love to all. There is no more. It is
singularly short, and business-like, and to the point. She writes to no
one else. Livingston hardly knows whether he is sorry or relieved. He
has asked her to write, but she has made no promise. In a fortnight she
will be back, and then---- They will bear the announcement of his
engagement better now than they would have done a month ago. After all,
it is as well he waited. All sing pans in Joanna's praise now. He grows
a trifle weary, sometimes, listening. It is all true, no doubt; she is
a noble woman; he will never be half worthy of her, at his best, but----
He looks across at Leo, sitting, listlessly enough, in a garden-chair,
her hands lying idly on her lap, her mignonne face pale and spiritless;
the soft, black eyes heavy-lidded and tired-looking. The sweet, childish
mouth has a pathetic little droop; she looks sorry, or lonely, or
something. He starts up impatiently, and goes off, angry with
himself--his fate--all the world.

And now the Lamars begin to talk of going--Geoffrey, indeed, has been
impatiently talking of it, and thinking of it, for some time, but has
been met by such a storm of reproach for his unseemly haste, that he has
been forced to desist. But against his better judgment always, and now
he _will_ go. His work awaits him. Dr. Morgan writes sarcastically to
inquire if he has fallen into a Rip Van Winkle slumber up there in his
sylvan Sleepy Hollow. He is perfectly well again, no plea of invalidism
can be put forth to detain him, and his resolution is taken. To-morrow
he goes. His mother and sister can remain another week, if they choose,
while he has the cottage put in order. They do choose, overwhelmed by
the hospitable pressing of the Ventnors, and so it is decided.

The last evening has come. Leo is away on one of her long rambles, and,
for a wonder, Livingston is with her. It is the hour of sunset. Colonel
Ventnor, his daughter, and Dr. Lamar linger on the lawn. The lovely
after-glow, the exquisite rose-light of a perfect September day yet
lingers in the sky; a faintly salt breeze comes fresh from the ocean,
and stirs the sleeping flowers. On the piazza, at the other side of the
house, the elder ladies sit, and after a little the colonel feels
called upon to join them. Then Geoffrey throws himself on the dry, crisp
grass, rather tired after a long day's rambling, and Olga, with a smile,
seats herself on a grassy knoll close by.

"I know you are used up, if you would but own it," she is saying. "_I_
am, and do not mind confessing it in the least. Ten miles is as much as
I ever want to do at once. I fear it was hardly wise of you, not yet
fully strong, to go as far as you did."

"You will insist on keeping me on the sick list," he answers. "I believe
I am as strong as I ever was in my life. I might have gone a week ago,
with perfect safety. My walk will do me no harm. And it is for the last
time."

There is a pause. His voice is regretful--it is hard to go. A little
frown deepens between Miss Ventnor's eyebrows.

"I hate last time," she says, petulantly, "I hate saying good-by. Every
year I live, every friend I part with, I hate it more and more. They are
the two hardest, hatefulest words in the language. _You_ must like it,
though, you appear so desperately anxious to say it, and get rid of us."

He looks up at her. She is very lovely, but she is always that. Her hat
lies on her lap, her delicate face is ever so little flushed, ever so
little petulant, her blue eyes have an almost irate sparkle. She is
dressed in pale blue, crisp, silky, cool, a cluster of pink roses in her
breast, another in her hair. She looks all azure and roses, golden hair,
and flower face. He turns away his eyes, slightly dazzled.

"Do you believe that," he asks, quietly, "that I am glad to go?"

"It looks like it, I confess. You have talked of nothing else but going
ever since you came. And now you will leave us to-morrow, though the
heavens fall."

"It would have been wiser if I had never come," he says, still very
quietly; "it would have been wiser for me if I had gone the moment I was
able. I did not mean to say this, but, Olga, cannot you see--do you not
know the reason?"

"No, I do not," she answers, still petulant, although the deepening
flush on her cheek tells another story. "I only know you are very
perverse, and are longing to be off among your fever patients, and to
catch it if possible over again yourself."

"Would you care if I did--would you care if I did?" he says, then
quickly checks himself. "No," he says, "do not answer that question. I
had no right to ask it--I recall it, and beg your pardon. I did not mean
to say this much, Olga, to say anything, but having said it in spite of
myself, let me say yet more. I love you, Olga, I love you with my whole
heart."

There is a startling pause. Miss Ventnor catches her breath, but makes
no other sign.

"Once I might have said this with something of a good grace," Geoffrey
goes on; "that day has gone by. I loved you even then, Olga. I can
recall no time when I did not. But the deluge came--the whole world
changed for me; we parted, and I never thought to see you again. I did
not forget you; I never could. You were the one fair woman in all the
world for me, but I never wished to meet you more. That way madness lay.
But who is stronger than his fate? You came--we _have_ met, I am here,
I am at your feet, I am saying this. My whole heart is yours--perhaps it
is written in the book of fate that I am to tell you this. It is
presumption, I know, but I know, too, you will not look on it in that
light. We have been such old friends, Olga, that you will listen, and
pity, and forgive."

Pity and forgive! And he asks nothing but that.

"I meant to go and say nothing,"--all this time he has hardly stirred
from his recumbent position, hardly let a touch of the excitement that
thrills him creep into his voice--it is the most passive-looking of
love-making, and yet is full of repressed passion and fire. "I meant to
depart and make no sign. But my love is stronger than my judgment. And
after all it can do no harm. You will forget, and I will take my dreams
with me, and be the less miserable for knowing that you have heard and
understood. If I were a richer man I would plead very differently. It is
that I am so absolutely poor that gives me courage to speak at all.
Despair, you know, is a free man--Hope is a coward. When we have nothing
to hope for, we have nothing to fear. Say you forgive me, Olga, and are
still my friend in spite of this."

"I will say it," she answers, with a great effort, "and if you
wish--more."

He turns and looks at her, surprise in his face, little else. Certainly
there is no gleam of hope. He has settled it so completely with himself
that it is impossible she can care for him, that it is not for one
faltering reply to upset his theory.

"Olga!" he says.

Her head is averted, her cheek is crimson, her eyes are downcast, her
fingers pluck nervously at the tufts of grass and wild flowers.

"Olga," he says again, and this time there _is_ a wild, incredulous
flash of delight in his eyes. "Olga!"

"Oh," she breaks out, brokenly, "cannot _you_ see! Why will you force me
to speak? I will _not_ speak!" with a flash from the great blue eyes.

She rises suddenly to her feet, and scatters a shower of pink petals
over her lover, and over the grass.

"Olga," is all he can say, in his whirl of amazement, incredulity, of
mad, new joy.

There is a struggle. Then all at once she stoops, and, lightly as the
touch of thistle-down, her lips rest on his forehead.

"If you can leave me--now," she says, flushed, frightened at her own
temerity, breathless, laughingly, "go!"

And, as she speaks, she turns, and swiftly as a fawn flies, is gone.




CHAPTER XI.

HOW JOANNA SAID GOOD-BY.


"I think it is odd," says Mrs. Abbott, languidly, "and unlike Joanna.
She never has whims. Why should she wish us to remain here, instead of
going home, as we ought, to receive her?"

Another week has gone by--nine days, indeed--and Leo and her mother are
still the guests of the Ventnors. Geoffrey has gone back to his cottage
home, as per previous arrangement, to have it set in order for them,
and resume his labors. One day longer than he had intended he has
stayed, and both families have been electrified by the wonderful news.
And yet not, perhaps, so very greatly. Colonel Ventnor glances at his
daughter, and slowly smiles. In all his life he has never contradicted
his darling--he is hardly likely to begin now. And he is not ambitious
of adding wealth to wealth--she is, and will be always, sufficiently
rich. As the heir of John Abbott, he certainly never would have dreamed
of objecting to young Lamar, with the best blood of the South in his
veins. As a struggling young doctor he is not less worthy of her. He is
no fortune-hunter, of that the colonel is well assured. And Olga loves
him; his proud and delicate darling, whose heart hitherto no man has
been able to touch. He grasps Geoffrey's hand with frank, soldierly
warmth.

"There is no man living to whom I would sooner give her," he says,
cordially. "Fortune? Ah, well, fortune is not everything, and fortune is
to be won by the willing. You are of that number, I am sure. If I
fancied _her_ fortune had to do with it, do you think I would listen
like this? It is because I could stake my life on the truth of the lad I
have known all his life, that I say yes so readily. Make her happy,
Geoffrey--all is said in that."

Could anything be more delightful? Geoffrey finds the whole English
language inadequate to his wants, in the way of thanks. Mrs. Ventnor is
charmed--the son of her dearest friend is the one, above all others, she
would have chosen for her son as well.

One thing only is a drawback--the story that must be told, the one bar
sinister on the spotless Lamar shield. But that cannot be told now; not
until Joanna returns and gives permission. Some hint of it he drops,
necessarily obscure, before he goes. No plans are formed for the
present--it is understood that Colonel and Mrs. Ventnor will not agree
to any long engagement.

"If you and Olga make up your mind to wait while you win your way," he
says, decisively, "it must be without an engagement. I will not have her
fettered while you plod slowly upward."

It is not likely, under these circumstances, they _will_ make up their
minds to wait. Geoffrey goes, and Olga is petted to her heart's content.
For Leo, she is in a seventh heaven of rapture, and for a day or two
positively forgets Frank. Another sister, and that one her darling Olga!
Surely, she is the most fortunate girl in the world.

And now here is Joanna coming back, has come indeed, and is with
Geoffrey already. "Wait until I join you," is what she writes. "I have
something to say to you, my Leo, that I prefer to say there." It is now
late on Monday evening--to-morrow morning will bring her.

To-morrow comes. Frank is at the station to meet her, looking worn and
anxious, as he has grown of late. Latterly his misanthropy, as far as
Leo is concerned, has grown upon him; he distinctly avoids her. He is
trying to be true, with all his might. If he could fly from danger, he
would fly, but that is impossible. So he stays on, and does the best he
can, trying to think a great deal of Joanna and her perfections. Whether
she agrees or not, he means to end this as soon as she returns, and let
the world know of their relations to each other. He will not ask her
leave, he will assert himself, he will simply tell. Then Leo will
understand. They will be quietly married, and go away at once. And
little Leo will forget--she is such a child--and be happy with some
happier man.

The train stops, and a tall young lady, in a gray traveling suit, and
pretty gray hat, alights. It is Joanna, looking well and bright, and
almost handsome. She smiles and holds out her hand frankly at sight of
him, but her manner is more that of a cordial friend than of the woman
he is going to marry.

"How well you are looking," he says. "Your long journey seems to have
given you added bloom, Joanna. You are as fresh as any rose."

"It must be a yellow rose, then," says Joanna, laughing, "and pale
saffron bloom. I am sorry I cannot return the compliment. _You_ are
looking anything but well, Frank. You have not had a sun-stroke, I hope,
this summer?"

She speaks lightly, but her glance is keen, and there is an
under-current of meaning in her tone. He flushes slightly, and flecks
the wheeler lightly with his whip.

"Something rather like it, I believe. But I shall rapidly grow
convalescent now that you are back. I have--we all have--missed you,
Joanna."

"Thank you," she says, gently. "That is a good hearing. I like my
friends to miss me. How are they all?--well?"

"Quite well. No doubt you have heard the wonderful news. You saw
Geoffrey?"

"Yes, I saw him," smiling, "and really it was not such wonderful news. I
did not faint with surprise when I heard it. But of course I am
delighted, more than delighted. She will have the noblest husband in the
world, and she is worthy of him. You are sure you feel no jealous pang,
Frank?" laughing.

"Not one. I shall give my fair cousin my blessing on her wedding-day,
with the soundest of hearts--where she is concerned. And your mother?"
he says, shifting skillfully from what he feels to be dangerous ground.
"You have brought her back safe and well?"

"Safe and well, thank Heaven--almost as well in mind as in body. She
might have left years ago, poor darling, if there had been any one to
take her. Ah! Frank, I feel that my whole life will not suffice to repay
her for what she has suffered. And do you know, she accepted me in a
moment as her child, seemed to know me, if such a thing could be
possible, and came with me so gladly. She can hardly bear me a moment
out of her sight."

"You should have brought her down with you. It is unfair to leave her
even for a few days now."

"A few days! My dear Frank, I return by to-night's train. Meantime she
is with the Professor and Madame Ericson. I have not come to stay. I
have come"--her face grows grave--"on very important business, and part
of it is with you. I must see Leo first."

He is stricken dumb. Their names in this conjunction! He grows quite
white as he leans forward to look at her.

"Joanna, what do you mean?"

She lays her hand on his, kindly, gently, but very firmly.

"Not now, Frank--later. I must first see Leo. I want her to go with me
to Abbott Wood this morning. I have a fancy for saying what I have to
say in the dear, beautiful old house that she loves so well, and where
she--they all--were so good to Joanna. Mrs. Hill will give us lunch
there. I shall not return to Ventnor Villa; and if, when Leo goes back,
_you_ will come in her stead, I will say good-by to you as well."

She is smiling, but her eyes look dark and sad. He sets his lips--even
they are pale.

"Good-by! Joanna, what are you saying? There is to be no good-by between
us any more. You are mine; I claim you. I am going to announce our
engagement. It is useless for you to object. I _am_."

"Ah, well!" she says, wearily, "wait--wait until this afternoon, at
least. I am a little tired now, and--and dispirited, I think. I do not
want to talk of it. Do you know," brightening suddenly, and smiling, "I
met an old friend, by purest chance, in the streets of San Francisco. It
was so good to see him, although I had every reason to be ashamed. I
_was_ ashamed too," she laughs, and colors a little.

"Who?" Frank asks.

"George Blake--poor George! So improved, so brown, so manly-looking, and
so prosperous. He is editor and proprietor of a daily out there, and
doing well. I recognized him in a moment, but he did not know me. I
stopped him, however, and made myself known--made my peace with him too,
I am happy to say. What a wretch I was in those days! I look back now
and wonder if 'I be I?' You never saw any one so glad as he was to meet
me, and as for all the good-natured things he said about my changed
appearance, and so on--but you would think me frightfully conceited if I
repeated the half. What is to the point is, that he has forgiven me, and
forgotten me, so far as his old fancy is concerned. He is engaged to be
married, and to quite a rich young lady. Is not all that pleasant news?"

But Livingston is not very deeply interested in George Blake, or his
successes, editorial or matrimonial. He is filled with disquiet by
Joanna's manner; he fears he knows not what. She laughs and talks
lightly enough, but underneath it all he sees a resolute purpose, and he
has learned to fear her inflexible resolutions. Why should she so
connect his name with Leo's? what does she suspect? He has striven hard
to be loyal and true, but those deep dark eyes are eyes not easily
deceived. The drive is not a long one, but silence has fallen long
before they reach the house.

Joanna is met, is welcomed by the Ventnors with flattering warmth, is
embraced by Leo and her mother with effusion, and finally has a private
interview with the latter lady. It is not a long one, but Mrs. Abbott is
very pale and grave when it is over, and there are traces of recent
tears.

"It is like you, Joanna!" is what she says; "I can say nothing more than
that. You are generosity itself. I can only echo Geoffrey's words, and
leave the decision to Leo, unbiased. She is a child in most things, but
in this she must judge for herself. You are her sister, and your wishes
should have weight. Tell her, and it shall be as she says."

"I have no fear then," Joanna says, gayly. "Leo has common sense, if she
is a child, and is free from fine-drawn notions and wicked pride. Leo,
dear, run and put on your hat. I will drive you over to Abbott Wood, if
Miss Ventnor will trust her ponies to my care. I am quite a skilled
charioteer, I assure you."

"To Abbott Wood?" Leo says, opening wide the velvet black eyes.

"Yes, dear; and we will lunch there together. Quite like old times--will
it not be? Do not be a minute. I will say good-by to the others while
you are gone."

"Good-by?" cries Leo, with dismay; but Joanna has left her, and is
already explaining the necessity for her return that very night. She
cannot leave her mother, who pines and frets in her absence. So she says
farewell there and then, to Mrs. Abbott as well as the rest.

"We go south very shortly," Joanna says, "and will pass the winter in
Florida. Next spring, when we return, of course my first visit will be
here."

Frank is there as well as the rest, but to him she does not hold out her
hand.

"Come and fetch Leo back this afternoon," she says. "I can make my
adieux to you then."

She and Leo depart, and Livingston quits the family group, and is seen
no more by any member of the household. It is a day he will not easily
forget; the suspense, the dread, the pain he feels, grave themselves on
his memory, making this a day apart from all other days in his life.

Meantime the ponies prance along and speedily do the five miles between
Ventnor Villa and Abbott Wood. It is a perfect day--sunny, cloudless,
breezy, with the odor of the sea in the crisp air, and Abbott Wood
looking more like an ancestral park and baronial hall than ever. They
sweep up the noble drive and alight in front of the house. Great urns
glow, filled with tropical plants; the flower-beds blaze in their autumn
glory; the deer look at them with wild, shy eyes; fountains tinkle and
plash--all is in perfect order. So is the house in as exquisite keeping
as when its mistress reigned there. Leo's eyes light as they drink in
all this beauty. She laughs a little, then sighs.

"It is so lovely," she says--"the dear, dear old home! Go where I will I
see nothing like it!"

"You love it, then?" Joanna quietly asks.

"Love it!" Leo repeats. Her eyes flash, her lips part, then she stops.
She must not seem too fond of it now, she remembers, lest Joanna thinks
her envious. "Of course I am fond of it," she says. "I was born here,
and every tree, and every flower, and bird seem like old friends. But it
will always seem like home to me, now that it is yours. If it had gone
to a stranger, I think it would almost have broken my heart."

"Dear little loving heart!" Joanna interposes with a smile.

"But it is yours, and you are my own precious sister," goes on Leo,
gayly, "and I shall expect you to invite me here often. You are not to
forget your poor relations, you know, Mlle. Fifty Millions!"

Joanna pauses, and looks down upon her. She lays both hands on her
shoulders and smiles down into her eyes. Very sweet, and youthful, and
fair is little Leo, with her pretty upturned face, and large luminous
Southern eyes.

"It must be the other way," she says. "You must invite _me_ here,
little Leo--for Abbott Wood is yours."

"Mine!" The dark eyes open wide, and stare.

"Yes, my darling--yours and yours only. From this day you are the little
_chatelaine_ of Abbott Wood. Do you think I would keep your
birthright--the house where you were born? the place you love so dearly,
where you were so good--so good--to me? Ah, no! I never thought of that.
I meant to restore it to you from the first. You are my sister, my
father's daughter. It was for you he intended it, and yours it shall be.
Do not look at me with such wonder-stricken eyes. Could you think so
badly of me as to dream I would keep it? I would not live here if I
could. There are reasons----" she stops for a moment. "No, little Leo,
it is yours, all the processes of law have been duly fulfilled. It is
yours by free deed of gift, and with it half the fortune our father
left. What should I do with so much money? Even half is the
embarrassment of riches. I can never spend my income. It was for this I
stopped on my way here, to speak to Geoffrey. I knew you would do
nothing without his consent. He would have no voice in the matter, he
left it entirely to you. It was to tell your mother, I saw her alone
this morning--she, too, leaves it altogether to you. But _I_ do not--you
must accept. There is no compulsion, you know, Leo, dear," says Joanna,
laughing and kissing her, "only you _must!_ And although you cannot live
here alone, and though neither your mother nor brother will ever live
here with you, I foresee Abbott Wood will not be long without a
mistress. I foresee," goes on Joanna, her hands still on Leo's
shoulders, her smiling eyes still on Leo's face, "that you will soon
reign here, and not alone, and I hope--oh, my little Leo, with all my
heart I hope you may be very, very happy!"

Her voice breaks. Leo flings her arms about her and hides her face on
her breast. She is sobbing, whether with joy, with love, with gratitude,
or with pain, she hardly knows.

Happy! Ah, if Joanna only knew how unhappy she is!

"I--I don't know what to say," she sobs, wildly. "I never thought of
this. It is like robbing you, Joanna. Oh, I don't know what to do. I
ought not to take this--it is your house--I cannot bear to take it from
you."

"Luckily you have no choice. It is yours in spite of you! If you refused
it would only be left to the rats and Mrs. Hill for the term of their
natural lives. But you will not refuse, and one day all my predictions
will come true. Oh, never look so despondent--trust me, Joanna is among
the prophets. And now, wipe those pretty eyes, and let us consider the
matter settled, and at an end forever. No more thanks, or tears, or
scenes--they make me almost as uncomfortable as if I were a man. It is
luncheon hour, and here I protest is Frank Livingston coming up the
avenue. Leo, before he comes, I want you to tell him all about this
to-morrow--I mean my story, relationship to you, and so on. Geoffrey has
to tell Colonel Ventnor, of course; I have given him permission. And
with that we will let it drop, the world will never know. I shall take
my rightful name--Bennett--and you will keep yours until you exchange it
for----"

"Mr. Livingston," says Mrs. Hill, suddenly ushering him in.

Joanna looks at Leo and laughs, and Leo blushes to the temples, as both
go forward to greet him.

They take their midday refection together, and try to talk easily, but
both appetite and conversation are failures. Everything Mrs. Hill can do
to tempt them she has done, but no one is at ease. Joanna _looks_ calm,
and in spite of everything, is perhaps a trifle amused by the marked
avoidance of her two guests. She reads it all so plainly, and if there
is any pain at her own heart, she resolutely puts it away. She has made
up her mind to the inevitable, and to look back and weep for what is
forever gone is not her way.

After luncheon they wander about the grounds for awhile; then Leo is
summoned away by Mrs. Hill to see some of her former pets, and Joanna
and Frank stroll back to the house. The afternoon has worn on--the sun
is declining; Joanna looks at her watch as they stand side by side at
one of the windows commanding a wide view of the sparkling sunset sea.

"Five," she says; "my train goes at seven. Two good hours yet. We will
have time for some tea presently--a sort of stirrup-cup to speed my
departure."

"Joanna!" Livingston breaks out, "this must end. You torture me--cannot
you see that? You are like ice--like stone--you care nothing for me at
all. How coolly you talk of going--of leaving me for an indefinite
period. Do you forget you are my promised wife?"

"I have a good memory," Joanna says, "but I assuredly do _not_ remember
that. I have never promised you anything in my life."

"Have you not?" he demands. "What is it, then? Have I not asked you to
marry me? Do you not wear my ring----"

She holds out both hands--ringless.

"As my hands, so my heart--free. Yes, you have asked me, and I--I have
said nothing, only this one word from first to last--wait. You have
waited--well, your waiting is at an end. That is why I wished to see you
here--to say that. If you ever asked me to marry you, ever made me any
promise, ever held yourself bound to me, I give it all back. You too are
free."

He cannot speak. He stands looking at her, so pale, so
conscience-stricken, that she lays her hand lightly for a moment on his.

"Do not blame yourself too much," she says, kindly; "do not blame
yourself at all. Indeed, you deserve none. You have tried--do you think
I have not seen?--and failed. That has been no fault of yours. You never
loved me, Frank--no, not for one poor moment. You thought so that night
you were '_Carried by Storm_'--do you recall your own words? They
expressed it exactly; but love me--never! Trust a woman to know when she
is beloved. Excitement, a moment's impulse, carried you away--when you
had time to think, you repented. You would not own it even to
yourself--all the same it was there. You did your best, your very best,
to be faithful, but there are things that are spoiled by trying. Love is
one of them. And you know I never could accept _that_. In the common
acceptation of the term I am not proud, but I am far too proud to accept
a husband after such fashion as that. If I cannot be beloved, I will go
to my grave unmarried. And I am quite sure that so I will go. And now,
Frank, you are free--free as the wind that blows, and we are friends,
good friends, once again and forever."

She holds out her hand, but he does not see it. He has turned from her,
and is pacing to and fro, bitterness on his face, in his heart.
Inconsistently enough, the keenest sense of loss he has ever felt is
upon him in this hour.

"You never cared for me--it is easy for you to say all this," he says,
bitterness in his tone as well.

She smiles slightly, and turns away, and looks far off at the golden
afternoon haze over the sea. Weak and unstable he is, and she knows him
to be, but he has power to bring a sharp contraction to her heart still.

"Never cared for you?" she repeats, dreamily. "Frank, come here--do not
be angry; let us talk as friends. Yes, I cared for you. When I was a
little child, a little, beaten, barefoot child, I cared for you. When
you used to come to Sleaford's, you were in my eyes as some beautiful
and glorified young prince." She laughs as she says it, but with a
tremor in the clear voice. "I fell in love with you even then. You never
saw me, you know, in those days, and what wonder? I thought Lora
Sleaford the most enviable creature in the world, because you seemed to
like her; I hated your cousin because you seemed so fond of her. In
after years, when we used to meet here, I believe, without knowing it, I
was wildly jealous of Olga, of Leo, of every pretty girl who came near
you. And when I ran away with George Blake, do you know what kept me
from marrying him? Simply because I saw you--you passed through the
hotel hall, and out into the street, and I _could not_. I ran away. I
cared for you then, did I not? And since, when we met, and you knew me,
I was glad--ah, glad, glad; and when I thought you were beginning to
care for me, I seemed not to have a wish left in all the world. I wonder
why I tell you all this? I ought not, I know, but it hurts me when you
say it is easy for me to give you up. It is not easy--it is only right.
And when that night you asked me, I was glad--ah, gladder than you will
ever know. Only for a little; before an hour was over I feared--when
to-morrow came I _knew_. And from that time I never meant to hold you to
your word. I care for you so much, Frank, my friend, my brother, that I
give you up. We would never be happy. You would repent, and I would see
it, and it would break my heart. Indeed it would, if I were your wife,
and I prefer an unbroken heart. I feel this farewell now--so, perhaps,
do you, in a different way, but it will not hurt either of us, I hope,
very badly. But you believe me, Frank, that it is because I have cared
for you, and do, that I give you up?"

She holds out her hand again. This time he takes it in both his. He
cannot speak; what is there to say? It is the saddest, gentlest,
humblest moment of his life. Her face, too, is sad; her eyes wistful,
her gaze still lingers on that fading light upon the sea.

"And when we have parted," Joanna goes on, after that pause, "and you
meet some one you really love, and whom you know loves you, remember you
are to let no foolish scruple about all this hold you back, or mar the
happiness of that other. And if," slowly, "it is any one for whom I
care, the obligations will be more binding still. If you feel you owe me
anything, repay it in that way. I will understand and rejoice.
To-morrow there are things Leo will tell you. Why do you start? Leo is
not an alarming personage--things you ought to know, and which I prefer
you should hear first from her. And now I am tired talking, and here
come Leo and Mrs. Hill. Perhaps we can have that tea. It is time, for I
am thirsty, and must soon be off. Can we not have tea out under the
trees, Mrs. Hill? It is so delicious here in sight of the sea."

So they have tea, and the repast is even more silent than the luncheon.
The two young ladies do their best, but Livingston simply cannot talk.
His heart is full, and in it there is little room for any but Joanna
just now. Then it is over. Joanna looks at her watch again.

"Half-past six. I want to say good-by here, and see you two off before I
depart myself. Mrs. Hill, please have them bring the buggy round to take
me to the station. Leo--Frank!"

And then the supreme moment has come, and Leo's arms are around her, and
Leo is sobbing on her breast. She holds out both hands to Livingston,
with tears in the brave, bright eyes.

"Take her away," she says, in a stifled voice; "I cannot bear it. Be
good to her, Frank. God bless you both!"

And then, somehow, she is alone, and they are gone, and a last burst of
yellow sunshine takes them, and they are lost to view.

She sits down and covers her face, with a long, hard breath. Some
oft-quoted lines come into her head, and keep echoing there, and will
not be exorcised, after the fashion of such things. "So tired, so
tired, my heart and I!" She is conscious of feeling tired, old, cold,
worn-out. She sits, a long time, it seems to her--ten minutes by Mrs.
Hill's count--and then that portly matron returns, and says the carriage
is waiting.

Joanna rises at once. She is pale, and her eyes are wet, but that is
natural enough. She says good-by to Mrs. Hill, and slips largesse into
her palm, and goes. And all the way to the station, and all the way back
to New York, as the train thunders over the iron road, it keeps
monotonously beating out the refrain, "So tired, so tired, my heart and
I."




CHAPTER XII.

WEDDING BELLS.


Early that autumn there is a fashionable wedding in New York, and the
beautiful heiress, Miss Olga Ventnor, is the bride. The bridegroom,
personally, is unknown to fame; but the dear "five hundred" can see for
themselves that he is a very stately and distinguished-looking
gentleman, and this goes far to condone his obscurity. His name, too,
tells for him, one of the fine old names of the South--"fine old family,
my dear, impoverished as so many fine old families have been, by the
recent war," etc. That the bride, in white satin and point lace, and
orange blossoms, and diamond stars, looks lovely, you know before I tell
you. That the wedding presents are numerous and splendid, the wedding
breakfast a triumph of culinary art; that the speech of the bridegroom
is notable among stammering bridal speeches--are not these things
written in the chronicles of the books of Jenkins--have you not read it
all in the daily papers, and shall I bore you with a twice-told tale?
"Immediately after the breakfast the happy pair departed for Europe,"
etc., etc.

Thus far Olga and Geoffrey. Mrs. Abbott and Leo go back to their
suburban retreat, their birds, their books, their piano, their quiet
life. Abbott Wood knows no change--Mrs. Hill still reigns supreme.
Joanna is right in her prediction that Leo's mother will never again
dwell within its walls.

    "All houses wherein men have lived and died are haunted houses."

Abbott Wood is to her a haunted house, haunted by terrible memories and
a dreadful death.

For Frank Livingston, he goes to New York, sets up his easel and
atelier, and goes to work with an energy and will that astonish his
friends. His lazy insouciance is gone--he is a holiday artist, playing
at picture-making, no more. What is given him to do, he does with all
his might. It is no great things, perhaps--he is no embryo Raphael or
Dor--but his best he does. And he has a fair success. He paints a
picture that winter that is exhibited, and criticised, and a good deal
talked about. Belter, a very rich man, and a patron of native talent,
buys it at a fancy price. It is a twilight scene--some bare brown
fields, a dreary expanse of arid marsh, a gray frowning sky, a chill
wind. You can _feel_ the chill rustling of the reeds and sedge grass, a
broken rail fence, and a barefoot girl leaning upon it. Her wild hair
blows in the wind, her face is wan and unchildlike; her eyes, fixed on
the far-off sky line, have a mournful, appealing, dog-like look. It is
called "Heart Hungry."

It is Joanna, of course, as he has often seen her, in the days when he
thought of her so little. He thinks of her now, almost more than of any
one else, with mingled affection, admiration, and remorse. How noble she
is, how generous, how great of heart! He feels that he could never have
made her happy; her nature is too noble for his. As man and wife they
would have jarred. It is better as it is. All he can do is to try by
constant hard work to approach ever so little nearer her level. He
paints other pictures, and they sell. He is fairly successful, and each
new success spurs him on to still further endeavors.

Of Leo he sees nothing; in those busy days he has little time for
visits, and besides--well, besides there is a long future for all that.

Spring comes--May, June.

With the end of June returns the wedded pair, looking happy and
handsome, and absorbed in each other, of course. Almost immediately they
go to Brightbrook. The Ventnors are to follow in a couple of weeks, and
Mrs. Abbott and Leo have promised to spend the holidays with them. Mrs.
Abbott is dying for her son, Mrs. Ventnor for her daughter. So once more
they are all to be reunited, the happiest household in the world.

It is Frank Livingston who drives Olga down to the station to meet the
expected guests. The color flushes into little Leo's face at sight of
him--it is a surprise--nothing has been said of his coming.

"And indeed he did not want to come," says, severely, Mrs. Dr. Lamar.
She makes the most charming and radiant of young matrons. "We had
almost to tear him by force from his beloved studio. You may see for
yourself how badly he is looking--quite old and ugly. And he used to be
fairly good-looking--now, used he not, little Leo?"

And of course at this malicious home-thrust poor little Leo is
overwhelmed with confusion, and wishes the carriage would open and
swallow her. Frank laughs lazily. He _is_ looking rather thin, but
perfectly well in all other respects. And there is an expression of
manliness, of gravity, of determination on his handsome face, which is
new and extremely becoming.

"His latest work of art," says Olga Lamar, on the back seat, to Leo,
"is--guess what? A picture of _you_. It is painted from memory, and the
commission is mine--as you looked in your bridemaid dress, dear--I never
saw you look so pretty as you did that day. What a trick the child has
of blushing! He has brought it down with him, and will finish it here.
It is for my particular sitting-room. Do you know, we are going to live
in Brightbrook, and Geoffrey will actually practice in the village. They
want a doctor, and he wants work. Of course we will go to New York in
winter, but to all intents and purposes the villa will be home. Home! Is
it not a sweet word? We are enlarging and improving it, in a number of
ways. And we are going to settle down into the most humdrum Darby and
Joan life you can imagine. And speaking of Joan, reminds me of
Joanna--dear Joanna! Geoffrey had a letter from her last night, and oh,
Leo! she will not come. Says she is going to England for the summer; her
mother wishes to visit her native land once more. Is it not too bad? And
I counted so confidently on her spending July and August with us. But
so it ever is. I would have my life-pictures like Queen Elizabeth's
portrait, without shadow, and it cannot be. Joanna is the gray
background this time, and yes--the fact that Abbott Wood is still
without a mistress. But yet--I live in hope!"

She runs on gayly, and laughs down in Leo's somber soft eyes. She is so
radiantly happy--this fair Princess Olga, in her new life, that she
seems to have received a fresh baptism of brightness and beauty.

Next morning the famous picture is displayed--a soft-eyed, sweet-faced
girl in white silk and laces, with white flowers in her dusky hair. In
the shy, wide-open, wondering-looking eyes, there is an unconscious
touch of pathos.

"Is it not charming?" Olga cries; "and do you not fall in love with
yourself, little Leo, only to look at it? _I_ do. And what have you got
that pleading look in your eyes for, and why do you seem as if you were
waiting for something or--somebody? Perhaps the artist knows. Did she
look like that on my wedding-day, Frank? As groomsman, you ought to
know. How do you like yourself, Leo?"

"It is much too pretty," Leo answers, blushing, of course; "it is
dreadfully flattered. But I like to be flattered--in that way, I think."

"You do not really think it is flattered?" Livingston says, a few
minutes later.

He is adding some finishing touches to the likeness, and has asked her
to remain. The others have moved away--they are alone, with only the
summer wind swinging the roses outside the window, the bees booming, and
the birds chirping in the trees.

"Indeed I do--grossly. And that expression--I am sure I never looked
like that," with a little pout, "so sentimental, and lackadaisical, and
all that."

"Is it lackadaisical?" says the artist, laughing. "Then I think I like
lackadaisical looks. But you really did wear just that pathetic
expression. It was a sentimental occasion, you know--and, for the matter
of that, you often have that waiting, wistful look. It becomes great,
dark, Syrian eyes, I think. Do you know you, have real Oriental eyes,
Leo--long, almond-shaped, velvet-black."

"I think I must look like a Chinese," remarks Leo, resignedly. "They
have almond eyes, have they not?" But while she laughs she tingles to
her finger-ends with delight.

"You look like what you are, the fairest, dearest darling in all the
world! Leo!"--he throws down brush and maul-stick, and takes both her
hands, with a sudden impulse that flushes his blond face and fires his
blue eyes--"don't you know--I love you!"

"Oh!" says Leo, with a sort of gasp, and tries to draw her hands away.
She turns pale now, instead of red, it is so sudden, and--somehow he
looks so overwhelming.

"Have I startled you? Dear little Leo! You were always easily startled,
I remember. I do not know that I meant to speak this morning, but the
love we hide so long all in a moment breaks its bounds and overflows. I
love you! You are not angry that I say this?"

"No," Leo says, and laughs nervously; "only curious. To how many more
have you said it, I wonder?"

She hits the truth so nearly that he winces; then he, too, laughs a
little.

"Yes, I have said it to others, but I do not think I ever meant it until
to-day. I have deceived myself before, and taken passing fancies for
love; that is one reason why I have waited so long before speaking to
you. It no passing fancy now--I love you! I have little to offer, but at
least I have enough to put me beyond the suspicion of fortune-hunting.
What I have I lay at your feet, with my heart, my life. Will you take
them, Leo?"

And Leo's answer? Well, it is not in very coherent words, but it is very
intelligible. One look of the soft, shy eyes, one droop of the blushing
face, and then that face is hidden on Mr. Livingston's velvet
painting-blouse, and broken murmurs issue from Mr. Livingston's
mustached lips, of which "My darling! my love! my Leo!" are the only
distinct articulations the listening robins and bluebirds can catch.

And there is another wedding in September, another fair bride is given
away, another young man looks nonsensically happy, another bridal
breakfast is eaten, another wedding trip is taken. And Abbott Wood,
under the superintendence of Dr. Lamar exteriorly, and Mrs. Dr. Lamar
interiorly, is to be put in apple-pie order for the home-coming and
house-warming that are to follow, and the stately mansion is to have its
mistress at last. Joanna's prediction is verified--Leo will live there,
and not alone.

For Joanna--well, letters come from England with cheerful regularity,
and they breathe all good wishes for the happiness of the newly-wedded
pair. She is well, and her mother improves quite wonderfully in body
and mind. She expresses no regrets at not being able to be present at
the marriage, but she promises to come and spend Christmas with them at
Brightbrook. Her plans for her own future are formed and settled; her
mother wishes to reside permanently in England, and Joanna lives but to
accede to her wishes. She has bought a pretty place there, she writes,
and calls it Brightbrook, and so, after all, an English Brightbrook will
be her future home.

       *       *       *       *       *

So writes Joanna. But, as it chances, Joanna is not Madame Olga's only
English correspondent, and it is about this time that the following
letter arrives from the Lady Hilda Stafford:

     "MY DEAREST OLGA:--Your last was charming. How vividly you picture
     your fair Brightbrook home! How I long to see it, and Dr. Lamar,
     and you! But, delightful as _your_ Brightbrook may be, it can
     hardly equal _ours_, I fancy, and even you do not know how to be
     more bewitching than Miss Bennett. We owe you a debt of gratitude
     for your letters of introduction to us, more particularly as she
     has made up her mind to settle among us 'for good.' She has
     purchased an exquisite place here, and named it Brightbrook, as you
     know, and the neighborhood is enchanted with its American
     acquisition. What a voice she has! and what a pair of eyes! I fell
     in love with her at sight, and, I fancy, I am not the only one who
     has done so. You met Sir Roland Hardwicke, you know, while here.
     You have not forgotten him, I hope; for if the fair, stately,
     siren-voiced Joanna does not end by becoming Lady Hardwicke, the
     fault will not be his. His case was hopeless from the first, and
     he is a splendid fellow, and quite worthy even of so noble a heart
     as hers. He is every inch a soldier and a gentleman, owning a
     handsome face, a gallant figure, a long pedigree, and a longer
     rent-roll. Send your blessing and approval, for I really think both
     will speedily be required."

Olga is delighted--Geoffrey smiles, and approves. Both remember Sir
Roland Hardwicke very distinctly, a man whose favor any woman might be
proud to win. But Joanna is not one to be easily won, too readily
pleased, and the pedigree and rent-roll, of which Lady Hilda speaks,
will not count for much with her.

"I hope--oh, I _do_ hope he may please her!" Olga cries, "dear, generous
Joanna! If ever any one deserves love and happiness, it is she. And, as
his wife, I am sure she will have both. Lady Hardwicke! to think of
Joanna--Sleaford's Joanna," laughing, but with tears in the sapphire
eyes, "wearing a title at last!"

After that the letters from Lady Hilda are waited for with feverish
impatience. They come often, are long and satisfactory. Everything
progresses well so far as _she_ can see. She is not in Miss Bennett's
confidence, of course, but Sir Roland is a frequent--a _very_ frequent
visitor at Brightbrook, and people talk of it already as a settled
thing. Every one loves her, she is the Lady Bountiful of the parish, and
Lady Hardwicke (Sir Roland's mother) has graciously offered to present
her at Court next season, which shows _she_ approves, etc., etc.

Early in December Mr. and Mrs. Livingston return, and parties are given,
far and wide, in honor of the bride. And Frank has but one secret in
the world from his little wife, and that one is the fact of his brief
engagement to Joanna. Somehow he shrinks from telling that--it is the
one memory sacred to himself and his friend, that even his wife may not
know. He feels instinctively that it would give her pain, that Joanna
would not wish it, and so he hides it in his heart, as in a grave.

Two days before Christmas Joanna comes. She finds a rare household
assembled at Abbott Wood to meet and greet, and do her honor. Mrs.
Abbott, Olga, and Geoffrey, Frank and Leo, of course. But there are
others, whose presence is a cheering surprise--a surprise over which she
laughs and cries together. The Professor and Madame Ericson are there;
there, too, is portly Mrs. Gibbs, rich and rare in black silk. There is
Thad, quite a slim and "genteel" young man, a little conceited and
over-dressed, but what will you at nineteen? There are the twins, Lonzo
and Lizzy. There is Mrs. Hill; and the Reverend Ignatius Lamb; and
little Miss Rice. There, in short, is every one Joanna cares for most in
the world. Her mother is not with her, the wintry voyage was too much
for her, but she is so thoroughly restored she can bear cheerfully to
part with her treasure for two or three months.

Olga looks at her keenly. Yes, Joanna is changed--the change that love,
happy love, alone works, is in her radiant face. Looking down into
Olga's beautiful, questioning eyes, the quick blush and smile tell their
tale. And the sapphire eyes flash with glad joy, and Olga's arms clasp
her close.

"Oh, Joanna! dearest Joanna, is it indeed so? as Lady Hilda says. And
you love him, and are happy," she whispers, in a fervent kiss.

"Happy! happy! happy!" is Joanna's reply, "and I love him with all my
heart."

"Such a great, brave, generous heart. Oh, my darling! this only was
needed to complete our bliss. And when is it to be?"

"Next June, they tell me," Joanna laughs. "In May, you know, I am to be
presented at court, by--by his mother. And you and Geoffrey, and Frank
and Leo are to come over for the wedding, which is to be a very grand
affair indeed. Olga, I think I am the very happiest and most fortunate
woman in all the universe!"

There are tears in the dark earnest eyes. Olga gives her a last
rapturous kiss.

"Not one whit happier than you deserve--you could not be!" is her
ultimatum, and like all imperial Olga's decisions, it stands
uncontradicted.

       *       *       *       *       *

It is New Year's Eve. Christmas, with its joy bells, its good wishes,
its good cheer, its happy faces, has come and gone, and the old year is
dying to-night.

"It brought me a friend, and a true, true love," sings happy Leo, as she
flits about the house. Fires burn, lights flash, warmth, music, feasting
are within; darkness, wind, cold, snow are without. The long
drawing-rooms are fragrant with flowers, brilliant with lamps, gay with
happy faces. There are only the family to-night, no outsiders, but they
form a sufficiently large assembly.

Near one of the windows Joanna stands, looking out at the fast-falling
snow, listening to the wind "wuthering" among the trees. She looks a
fair and stately woman in her rich black velvet dress--tall, imposing,
gracious. Her velvet robe suits the grand curves of her figure--it
sweeps in soft, dark folds behind her on the carpet. The fine lace at
her throat is caught by one large, gleaming diamond; a knot of
forget-me-nots is beneath it, another in her hair.

"You look a queen of 'noble Nature's crowning,' Joanna," says
Livingston, approaching. "I must paint you in that velvet dress, and
these forget-me-nots. Do you know, you have been making a picture of
yourself for the past ten minutes, and that I have been lost in artistic
admiration."

"And that if it had lasted one millionth part of a second longer I
should have been jealous," laughs Leo, coming up; and then there is a
momentary pause. Livingston looks conscious. Joanna smiles down at the
dark-eyed fairy in creamy silk and white roses.

"And do you know, what is more to the purpose than empty compliments,"
says Mrs. Geoffrey Lamar, sailing forward in a cloud of rose pink, silky
sheen, "that you never sing for us now, Lady Hardwicke--that is to be.
You have grown very stingy about that lovely voice of yours since you
have been in foreign parts. Come and chant us a New Year's anthem, or an
old year's dirge, for it is almost on the witching stroke of twelve."

Joanna goes, and presently her full rich tones ring through the room,
but the wind of the winter night itself is hardly sadder, wilder, than
the strain she sings:

    "Toll, bells, within your airy heights!
       Wail, wind, o'er moor and mere!
     On this, the saddest of all nights,
       The last night of the year--
     The last long night, when lamps are lit,
       Like tapers round a bier;
     When quiet folk at still hearths sit,
       And God seems very near.

    "The old clock strikes upon the stair,
       Time's tide is at its turn;
     And here, and there, and everywhere
       The New Year tapers burn.
     Strange, dreamy anthems fill the street,
       The mists hang o'er the river,
     The organ groans, the drums are beat,
       The Old Year's gone forever!"

"Oh! Joanna, what a melancholy song!" cries little Leo, reproachfully;
"and to-night of all nights! You give me the heart-ache. Do sing
something less dreary."

"Hark!" says Geoffrey, raising his hand. All the clocks in the house
chime out one after another--_twelve_. The bells in Brightbrook burst
forth a joyous peal--the New Year has begun. Good wishes go round, they
touch glasses in the German fashion, and drink to each other, and "eyes
look love to eyes that speak again." And once more Joanna touches the
keys. This time it is like a jubilant burst of joy:

    "Swing, bells, a hundred happy ways!
       Laugh, wind, o'er moor and mere!
     On this, the gladdest of all days,
       The first day of the year!
     The first sweet day, when every one
       Is cheerful at his hearth;
     The first pure day, when merry sun
       Lights up a merry earth.

    "Swing, bells, a hundred happy ways!
       Laugh, wind, o'er moor and mere!
     On this the gladdest of all days,
       The first day of the year!
     The first sweet day, when well content
       We gather round the hearth;
     O God, we thank Thee, who has sent
       This New Year to our earth!"

"What a grand creature she is!" Frank Livingston thinks, standing a
little apart, looking and listening; "the noblest woman that walks the
earth!"

His little bride, never content for many minutes together to be away
from him, comes up, and slips her hand through his arm with the old
wistful, upward look.

"Thinking of Joanna?" she says. "Does she not sing deliciously, and does
she not look lovely to-night? Frank, I wonder, rich, accomplished,
handsome as she is, that _you_ never fell in love with her in the old
days. I believe she never had even a passing fancy in all her life until
she met this Sir Roland Hardwicke. Joanna--Lady Hardwicke! Can you
realize it?"

But Frank does not say a word.


THE END.




1879.

G. W. CARLETON & CO.

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Was He Successful?           Do.    1 75
Undercurrents of Wall St.    Do.    1 75
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Henry Powers. Banker.        Do.    1 75
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Johnny Ludlow. From London ed.      1 50
Shiftless Folks--Fannie Smith       1 75
A Woman in Armor--Hartwell          1 50
Phemie Frost--Ann S. Stephens       1 50
Marguerite's Journal. For girls     1 50
Romance of Railroad--Smith          1 50
Charette--An American novel         1 50
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Hilt to Hilt.        Do.            1 50
Out of the Foam.     Do.            1 50
Hammer and Rapier.   Do.            1 50
Warwick--By M. T. Walworth          1 75
Lulu.          Do.                  1 75
Hotspur.       Do.                  1 75
Stormcliff.    Do.                  1 75
Delaplaine.    Do.                  1 75
Beverly.       Do.                  1 75
Beldazzle's Bachelor Studies        1 00
Northern Ballads--E. L. Anderson    1 00
O. C. Kerr Papers. 4 vols. in one   2 00
Victor Hugo--His autobiography      2 00
Sandwiches--By Artemus Ward           25
Widow Spriggins--Widow Bedott       1 75
Wood's Guide to N. Y. City          1 00
Loyal unto Death                    1 75
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Thrown on the World.--A Novel by BERTHA M. CLAY.
Peerless Cathleen.--A Novel by CORA AGNEW.
Faithful Margaret.--A Novel by ANNIE ASHMORE.
Nick Whiffles.--A Novel by Dr. J. H. ROBINSON.
Lady Leonora.--A Novel by CARRIE CONKLIN.
Charity Grinder Papers.--A Humorous Work.
A Bitter Atonement.--A Novel by BERTHA M. CLAY.
Curse of Everleigh.--A Novel by ELLEN CORWIN PIERCE.
Love Works Wonders.--A Novel by BERTHA M. CLAY.
Evelyn's Folly.--A Novel by BERTHA M. CLAY.


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1.--PICKWICK PAPERS AND CATALOGUE.
2.--OLIVER TWIST.--UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER.
3.--DAVID COPPERFIELD.
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11.--MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT.
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13.--CHRISTMAS BOOKS.--TALE OF TWO CITIES.
14.--SKETCHES BY BOZ AND HARD TIMES.
15.--CHILD'S ENGLAND AND MISCELLANEOUS.

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$1.50, by

G. W. CARLETON & CO., Publishers,
Madison Square, New York.


Transcriber's note:

Obvious puctuation errors were corrected.

The following printers errors were addressed.

Page 50 'staid' to 'stayed'
(she has stayed there for days)

Page 173 'see' to 'sees'
(He sees that she cannot)

Page 342 'tell' to 'tells'
(So Frank tells it)

Page 355 'embarassed' to 'embarrassed'
(not embarrassed, not overwhelmed)

Page 368 'see' to 'she'
(she is dressed in pale blue)

Page 369 duplicate 'but' removed
(but having said it in spite)

Page 372 'staid' to 'stayed'
(longer than he had intended he has stayed)




[End of _Carried by Storm_ by May Agnes Fleming]
