The Project Gutenberg eBook of Molly's treachery This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: Molly's treachery Author: Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller Release date: June 17, 2024 [eBook #73856] Language: English Original publication: Cleveland: The Arthur Westbrook Company, 1886 Credits: Demian Katz and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (Images courtesy of the Digital Library@Villanova University.) *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLY'S TREACHERY *** Molly’s Treachery _By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller_ HART SERIES NO. 62 COPYRIGHT 1886 BY GEO. MUNRO PUBLISHED BY THE ARTHUR WESTBROOK COMPANY CLEVELAND, O., U. S. A. Printed in the United States of America MOLLY’S TREACHERY CONTENTS CHAPTER I. CHAPTER II. CHAPTER III. CHAPTER IV. CHAPTER V. CHAPTER VI. CHAPTER VII. CHAPTER VIII. CHAPTER IX. CHAPTER X. CHAPTER XI. CHAPTER XII. CHAPTER XIII. CHAPTER XIV. CHAPTER XV. CHAPTER XVI. CHAPTER XVII. CHAPTER XVIII. CHAPTER XIX. CHAPTER XX. CHAPTER XXI. CHAPTER XXII. CHAPTER XXIII. CHAPTER XXIV. CHAPTER XXV. CHAPTER XXVI. CHAPTER XXVII. CHAPTER XXVIII. CHAPTER XXIX. CHAPTER XXX. CHAPTER XXXI. CHAPTER XXXII. CHAPTER XXXIII. CHAPTER XXXIV. CHAPTER XXXV. CHAPTER XXXVI. CHAPTER XXXVII. CHAPTER XXXVIII. CHAPTER XXXIX. CHAPTER XL. CHAPTER XLI. CHAPTER XLII. CHAPTER XLIII. CHAPTER XLIV. CHAPTER XLV. CHAPTER XLVI. CHAPTER I. “FERNDALE, GREENBRIER CO., WEST VA. June 20, 1878. “Dear sister and Aunt Lucy, oh, please do let me come home! Ferndale is horrid, the lonesomest old hole I ever saw in my life, and Aunt Thalia is a real old dragoness! And I’m tired of behaving like a grown-up lady, and just dying for some sort of a lark. And although I don’t like her much, I hate to fool her as I’m doing. It makes me feel mean as if I were a regular little fraud. I try to keep it up for your sake, Lou, but it goes hard. Bother the money! It isn’t worth the deceit, or, as our old French governess used to say, ‘_Le jeu ne vaut pas la chandelle!_’ Can’t you let me off now? I’ve been here two weeks, and I don’t think I can stand it any longer! It’s like a catacomb, so deadly lonesome! Not a caller since I came, and I haven’t seen a man for two weeks except the gardener and the old black coach driver! But that’s all the better, since my clothes are shabby anyhow! I think Aunt Thalia must have noticed that my red cashmere is out at elbows, for this morning she actually gave me forty dollars, and told me to go into town and buy myself a summer silk and her maid would make it for me this week. But I’m going to post this letter to you instead with the money registered to you (as you told me to do). I expect she will be fearfully angry when she finds it out. No doubt she will want to drive me away, so you had better send a telegram right off for me to come home. Say that Aunt Lucy’s sick, or somebody’s dying--anything--so that you get me away at once and forever from Ferndale! I shall die of the blues if I stay any longer! With love to you both, “MOLLY E. TRUEHEART.” “TO MISS LOUISE BARRY, “Staunton, Va.” The Ferndale estate did not deserve the title “horrid old hole,” as applied to it in that gushing, school-girlish letter. On the contrary it was a magnificent place of about a hundred acres--a valley farm, situated a few miles distant from the historic old town of Lewisburg, and less than six miles distant from the Greenbrier White Sulphur Springs. The large, old-fashioned red brick mansion was almost hidden by a far-spreading grove of gigantic old forest trees, beneath whose shade, dark and damp and heavy, flourished the splendid ferns that gave the place its distinctive name. But after all, perhaps the dense shade and unavoidable dampness made the old house unwholesome, for old Mrs. Barry, its mistress, was an aged, withered crone, little more than skin and bones, with a temper none of the sweetest, and her servants as a whole were sour-tempered too, as if they did not get enough sunshine on their faces and into their souls. It was this subtle influence perhaps that made Mrs. Barry’s young guest vow to herself that she should go melancholy mad if she stayed much longer at Ferndale. So with a heart beating high with hope she entered the old-fashioned family carriage and was driven into Lewisburg ostensibly to purchase the silk dress, but in reality to secretly register and post the letter of entreaty that was to wring her release from her probation at Ferndale and insure her speedy return to her own home. She rather enjoyed the ride that sunny June afternoon, up hill and down dale in the jolting carriage over the rough, mountainous road, and her depressed spirits rose until she began to feel mildly jolly and hummed a little tune softly to herself that ended suddenly in an undeniable whistle of surprise as they came around a bend of the road and in sight of a picturesque plateau on which stood a beautiful country residence built of rough gray stone. There were two towers over which the pretty American ivy was picturesquely creeping, and the oriel windows here and there, and jutting verandas, were in a style of architecture quite unusual to the country, and betokening both wealth and taste. Our heroine thought she had never seen anything prettier than the great gray stone house with its creeping ivy, and its windows glistening in the sunlight, which had free play here, for there was a sloping lawn in front of the house with just enough trees grouped here and there to add beauty to the scene without at all obstructing the view. The girl put her pretty, dark head out of the window and said, eagerly, “Who lives there, Uncle Abe?” The old family servant who had spent all his life in West Virginia, and knew every place for many miles around, answered promptly: “Dat’s de ole Laurens place, honey. Fambly’s all in Yurrup now eddicating de darters and de sons. Mighty rich and proud, all dem Laurenses, missie. Come uv old English stock and ebry now an’ den some o’ dere kin dies ober de sea and leabes dem anoder fortin.” “Oh,” said Molly, drawing a long breath, her piquant face glowing with eager interest. She looked in something like awe at the beautiful home of these favorites of fortune. “I wish I was one of ‘de darters’!” she said, quaintly. “Hi, honey!” exclaimed old Uncle Abe, quite reproachfully. “Ole Mis’ Barry’s niece just as good as dem proud Laurenses.” “Yes, Uncle Abe,” answered Molly, demurely, the mischievous golden brown lights dancing in her big, dark eyes, and her red lips dimpling with mirth at the old negro’s family pride. Then she said, half-questioningly: “But of course the Laurens family are too proud to notice any of their neighbors?” Uncle Abe was too busy with his horses to reply for a moment or two, but presently he looked around quite crossly at his interlocutor, and said, severely: “Miss Looisy Barry, I t’ink you mus’ be c’azy. Don’t you know dere ain’t nobody better den de Barrys? I been livin’ long o’ dem as slave and freedman all my life, me an’ my ole ’oman, and de Barrys is always de top o’ de pot, or, as ole missus say, _cweam delly cweam_. Dat’s F’ench for top o’ de pot, you mus’ know, chile. As fo’ de Laurenses, dey hab always been hand and glove wif de Barrys! Umph, chile, you don’t seem to know nuffin’ ’tall ’bout de ’portance of your own fambly,” concluded old Abe, shaking his gray head disgustedly, and turning his attention wholly to his horses for they had left the gray stone house out of sight, and were descending a steep hill now. Molly Trueheart sat quite still with a distinctly wistful expression on her lovely girlish face. “What do I care about the importance of the Barrys? I know that one of them at least can stoop to selfish scheming!” she muttered, impatiently. “Oh, I wish I was well out of this scrape. It is not so funny masquerading as I thought it would be! I nearly exploded into a confession when the poor old soul gave me that money, little fraud that I am!” CHAPTER II. If she was a little fraud, as she declared herself to be, she had the frankest, honestest, prettiest face in the world, and many curious and admiring eyes turned on her as she alighted from the carriage on reaching Lewisburg and tripped lightly across the narrow pavement into the post-office. After she had duly registered the letter containing the forty dollars she went into a few stores, where she looked at summer silks; shook her dark, curly head in pretended disapproval of the prices, bought a paper of pins and a neck ribbon, then returned to the carriage before Uncle Abe, who was exchanging the compliments of the day with some gossips of his own color, was half ready to leave. “Lor’, Miss Looisy, you aine a-gwine yit?” “Yes, Uncle Abe.” “Dem hosses aine got rested yit, dat’s a fac’. Doane you want stay awhile, honey, and call on sum o’ de fust famblies o’ de town?” wheedlingly. The girl laughed merrily. “I don’t know a person in Lewisburg from Adam,” she said. “Come on, Uncle Abe; you’ve gossiped enough this time,” and with a resigned sigh the old darky climbed to his seat again, whipped up the horses, and set off on the return journey to Ferndale. Molly Trueheart leaned back in the carriage and gave herself up to the enjoyment of her own thoughts until they again came in sight of the Laurens estate when she called out to the old driver: “Uncle Abe, who stays over there when the family goes abroad?” Uncle Abe, out of humor at being separated so soon from his gossip, grunted out crossly: “Nobody but dem sassy Laurens niggers.” Molly felt herself snubbed and drew back her curly head, relapsing into a silence that lasted until she again crossed the threshold of Ferndale. Mrs. Thalia Barry was sitting in the wide hall taking snuff out of a golden snuff-box. She was a tall, spare woman with a frame that had originally been strong and stout, although now dwindled by the encroachments of age and the horrors of a chronic dyspepsia. She had thin, masculine-looking features, a false front of waved, white hair, false teeth, and her small, twinkling, greenish-gray eyes were partially hidden by gold-rimmed spectacles. She dressed habitually in soft, thick, gray silk, and pinned her collar of the yellowest old real lace with a magnificent diamond brooch. Ill-health had magnified an already imperious temper; and Molly was not far wrong when she complained that the aristocratic old lady was a perfect old dragoness, for she was the terror of her servants when in one of her “spells,” as they called them, and even her young visitor had more than once smarted under the lash of her displeasure. But she looked up now with some eagerness, and said in her shrill, curt tone: “Back so soon? I hope that old rascal, Abe, did not drive my horses too fast! Well, Louise, come and show me your silk.” The pretty, dark eyed girl, in her cheap white dress and rustic straw hat, halted in the door-way with a frightened expression and gazed half appealingly into Mrs. Barry’s stern, ugly face. “Well?” said the lady, impatiently. “Do you want some one to bring your bundle in from the carriage? Here, Ginny Ann,” to an old negro woman hovering about the back door, “go out to the carriage and get Miss Barry’s bundle!” Molly sprang forward, her frightened expression changing to one of defiant bravery. “Oh, aunt, she needn’t go! There’s--there’s no bundle there! I didn’t buy the dress!” she cried out, desperately. “But why?” cried Mrs. Barry in amazement. And the girl faltered, with hot blushes. “I didn’t need it, you know.” Mrs. Barry flew suddenly into a fury. “Not need the dress, you silly girl, when you have not a decent rag to your back! What do you mean?” she stormed, in loud, angry tones. Molly’s blushes grew hotter still, but they were those of anger now, and her black eyes blazed as she retorted: “Well, if I have nothing but rags, what more do I need in this old tomb of a place where no one ever comes from week’s end to week’s end? I know you’ll be mad, Aunt Thalia, but if you kill me for it, I’ll tell the truth at once! I sent that money to my sister!” Mrs. Barry’s face grew purple with wrath. She stamped furiously upon the carpeted floor. “Never say that word again!” she burst out fiercely. “You have no sister.” “My step-sister, then, Aunt Thalia,” amended Molly. A glance of concentrated scorn and anger shone on her through the glasses of Mrs. Barry. “Louise Barry, I thought you had more pride than to claim that girl--the daughter of the low-lived actress, who wheedled your father into marrying her, his second wife--your sister! The connection is a disgrace to you.” “Hush, Aunt Thalia. You must not talk so to me!” said the girl, sharply. She had grown quite pale, and her slender little hands were clinched tightly together. She bit her red lips fiercely, to keep back burning words that had rushed to their portals. Mrs. Barry snorted scornfully. “You take her part, eh? that low-born brat that her dying mother saddled on your aunt Lucy. Louise Barry, I’m ashamed of you, disappointed in you. I wish now that I had taken you here to live when your father died, then Lucy Everett would have had to send Molly Trueheart to the poor-house instead of supporting her on the money I have sent every year to you.” The girl stood looking at her with a heaving breast and eyes dilated with anger. When her aunt paused the girlish head was lifted proudly, and the young voice trembling with passion, answered sharply: “Molly Trueheart’s mother, the low-lived actress, as you call her, left her daughter a legacy, small, but sufficient to pay for her board and clothing. She would not have to go to the poor-house, even if Aunt Lucy turned her out-of-doors.” “Oh, indeed; I did not know she was an heiress. I thought she was a pauper. Why did you send her the money then, since she did not need it?” sharply. “I--I owed it to her, Aunt Thalia,” said the girl with a defiant air. “So then the allowance I have made you every year was not sufficient, and you had to borrow from that creature?” “Ye-es, madame,” in a stifled tone. “Very well, you shall never have that humiliation henceforth. It is not for Philip Barry’s daughter and my heiress to undergo such straits. Henceforth your home will be at Ferndale, and I’ll try to cure you of all fancy for your low-born connection. I’ll write to your aunt Lucy tonight and tell her so.” “I--I won’t stay!” stormed the girl, in sudden passionate defiance and terror commingled. Her black eyes blazed as she fixed them on Mrs. Barry’s face. The old lady gazed at her silently a moment as if almost paralyzed by astonishment. “Why, you pert little baggage!” she muttered, then she made a dart toward the girl and clutched her arm with fingers that seemed strong as iron. Molly struggled wildly to get away, but Mrs. Barry held her tightly. “Come here, Ginny Ann, and help me!” she called to the gaping old negress, and between them they dragged the girl upstairs, where Mrs. Barry deliberately pushed her into the big garret and locked the door. “Stay there, miss, until you come to your senses and ask my pardon for your impertinence!” she screamed through the key-hole. Then Molly heard the departing footsteps of the grim old lady and her satellite, and realized that she was locked up like a naughty child in punishment for her misdemeanor. She was in doubt whether to laugh or cry at the preposterousness of the whole thing. At first she indulged in a burst of defiant laughter which soon changed to hysterical sobbing. Sinking down on an old moth-eaten sofa she covered her face with her hands, and tears rained through her fingers. “Oh, mamma, my true, gifted, beautiful mamma, it was bitter to hear you maligned so, and you in your tragic grave!” she murmured sadly. “And I, your own daughter, I could not take your part because of the promise that bound me to keep Louise’s secret. How can I ever like that proud old woman again?” Like a grieved child she sobbed herself to sleep in the musty, close-smelling garret, where quiet reigned supreme save for the patter of startled mice across the bare, dusty floor. Two hours passed, and Ginny Ann, the black woman, was sent up to inquire regarding the state of mind of the imprisoned culprit. “Ole missis wants to know is you sorry fo’ youse sassiness yet?” she bawled through the key-hole. There was no reply, and she went down and reported that Miss Louise was sulking yet, and wouldn’t answer a word. “Let her stay until night, then. I guess the darkness will cure her of her stubbornness,” chuckled Mrs. Barry, evilly. But all the same she had sent Agnes Walker, her maid, back to Lewisburg with old Abe, with instructions to buy the summer silk and a white muslin besides. The old lady had very particular reasons for wanting her niece to have this finery. And while the prisoner sobbed herself to sleep in the garret, and Agnes Walker tumbled over silks and muslins in Lewisburg, Mrs. Barry had Ginny Ann unpacking trunks in the dressing-room and hauling out finery that had not seen the light for years, but which in the revolutions of fashion’s wheel was as fashionable now as in the long ago years when Mrs. Barry had bedecked her form in the costliest fabrics and richest laces to grace the grand society in which she moved before she had settled down, a childless widow, at lonely Ferndale, her dower house, to nurse her grief for her lost partner and her chronic dyspepsia together and to make herself a terror to any one who dared dispute her despotic will. “Lor’, ole mis, dere’s dat white satting dress you wore when you went to see de queen ober de water,” exclaimed old Ginny Ann, as she lifted out a tray and disclosed beneath a lustrous heap of yellow satin and flounces of fine point lace. “But, Lor’ A’mighty, it’s all yallered er layin’. I ’speck I kin bleach de lace all right by layin’ it out in de dew at night, but dat satting won’t wash, and it’s jes’ ruinated,” sighing heavily and rolling up the whites of her eyes. “There, don’t touch it, you old simpleton!” cried Mrs. Barry, hastily. “That dress has sacred memories. I wore it at a Drawing-room in London when I was presented to Queen Victoria on my wedding-tour, and on my return home at an Inauguration Ball in Washington, when our good President, Mr. Fillmore, took his seat. Shut up the trunk, Ginny Ann. I cannot cut up that dress even for my niece.” “Dat’s so, dat’s so, ole mis. De impertent chile don’t deserbe it!” mumbled Ginny Ann. “Hold your tongue, sauce-box!” cried her mistress, irately. CHAPTER III. But Molly Trueheart was not sulking in the garret as Ginny Ann had reported to her “ole miss.” She had slept but a little while when she was awakened by a sound that made her spring to her feet with a shriek of alarm--the hurrying and scurrying of immense rats across the attic floor. Her black eyes opened wide in terror, and she sprang upon the sofa, and stood watching the loathsome animals as, startled by her scream, they scampered to their holes. “Good gracious! There must have been a hundred of the nasty little vermin!” ejaculated Molly. In reality there had not been more than a dozen, but her terrors had magnified their numbers. “Ugh! ugh! ugh! how they make my flesh creep!” she continued, shuddering nervously and drawing her skirts close around her dainty little feet. “And to think that they might have bitten me in my sleep, the monsters! I wonder, I _do_ wonder if Aunt Thalia intends for me to stay here all night! I sha’n’t do it! so there, no, not if Louise loses every cent of the fortune,” her eyes sparkling resentfully. “I don’t want my hair to turn white in one night from terror.” Stillness reigned again, for the rodents, as much alarmed by her presence as she was by theirs, were trembling in their hiding-places. Molly sprang down and ran over to the window, which, without much difficulty, she flung open, letting in a flood of fresh air. At the same moment she clapped her pretty dimpled hands together and uttered a cry of mischievous pleasure. “Molly Trueheart, you limb of mischief, I knew you would be sure to have a lark if you stayed any longer at Ferndale!” Close to that side of the house grew a stately oak tree that flung out its long, strong arms close to the window-sill. The large, laughing dark eyes were fixed on the tree while she spoke, and in another moment she climbed up into the window, twined her round white arms about a stout branch, and swung herself forward with kitten-like agility into the big tree, sliding from limb to limb until she was securely seated on a stout branch with her back against the body of the oak. “Farewell, my late companions!” she cried gayly, waving her hand at the window, and thoroughly enjoying her escapade. “Oh, how delicious this is after Aunt Thalia’s musty old garret! I think I shall sleep in this tree all night. The big limbs and thick green leaves will make me a splendid bed, and--ouch, oh, Lord have mercy! oh! oh! oh!” and as the last exclamation left her lips, Molly’s hold on the tree relaxed, and she went crashing down, with a rustle of breaking twigs and scattering leaves, through the branches to the ground, where she lay groaning on the grass amid the _debris_ collected during her fall. For, lifting her bright eyes to the higher branches of the tree, she had suddenly beheld an immense black snake hanging downward with his tail curled around a stout twig, and his head thrust forward toward her, while his keen little eyes glowed in the green obscurity of the thick leafage like baleful jewels. Molly had given such a start and scream of terror that she had tumbled headlong through the tree at least twenty feet from the ground, but the soft, thick grass and the leaves that had fallen with her, had so broken the severity of the fall that after the first groan she was able to rise slowly to her feet and exclaim between laughter and tears: “‘Och, I’m kilt intirely,’ as Paddy would say. Now I wonder if I can be having the delirium tremens, seeing rats and snakes like this! It can’t be, for I’ve never been addicted to the intoxicating glass! I believe I’ve broken my arm, it hurts so bad. Good heavens, it’s coming down the tree! It must be a racer. I’ll have to cut and run!” This she did with surprising agility, only pausing to look behind her once when she saw his snakeship, which did indeed belong to the racer species, trailing his shining length rapidly after. With a half sob in her throat, Molly flew on and on over hay-fields and hills, fences and brooks, until she had left Ferndale a mile behind her, and came up with a jerk against some tall, white palings that inclosed the beautiful lawn she had admired while riding that day--the Laurens place, as old Abe had called it in answer to her curious questions. CHAPTER IV. She paused and looked behind her to see if the black snake still pursued her, but she had left it far behind in her headlong race, and to her dismay she perceived by the brilliant hues of the western sky that the sun had almost set. Badly frightened as she had been at first, the sudden feeling of safety roused in her the sense of the ludicrous, and Molly laughed aloud at her forlorn plight. Her white dress was in rags and soiled with the mud of the little brooks through which she had splashed headlong, she was bare-headed, her hair all loose and disordered, and the perspiration ran in streams down her flushed face. “What a beauty I must look!” she ejaculated, merrily. “And I wonder what disaster will befall me next. I shall have to go and ask one of those ‘sassy Laurens niggers,’ as Abe calls them, to go home with me, for I daren’t go alone. I might meet that old snake again. But they will be frightened, I am such a sight, and perhaps they will set the dogs on me.” She sat down on the grass to rest herself before going in at the gate and to think over the sudden _contretemps_ that had befallen her after her two weeks of irreproachable good behavior. A feeling of remorse came to her at the thought of her step-sister who might lose so much by the misdemeanor of the girl she had trusted. “Oh, why didn’t I bear all and hold my tongue, little virago that I am?” she exclaimed. “I knew when I came that I must take a great deal. Aunt Lucy cautioned me carefully. Suppose--suppose--old Mrs. Barry should disinherit Louise for this. _She_ wouldn’t forgive me as long as she lived, I know, and I couldn’t forgive myself, either.” The beautiful young face wore an expression of dismay and the young heart throbbed with pain. “Oh, how wicked I have been! How cruel to poor Louise,” she continued, springing excitedly to her feet. “My bad temper and love of fun are always leading me into mischief. But I’ll make it up, yes, I will. I’ll go and beg the old dragoness’ pardon. Not that she didn’t deserve all I said, but for Louise’s sake.” With rapid footsteps she made her way to the servants’ quarters, which she saw some distance in the rear of the grand mansion. With some trepidation through fear of dogs, Molly approached the commodious white-washed kitchen in the door of which sat an old negress in a homely blue linsey dress with a red handkerchief twisted turban-wise about her head and a little black pipe in her mouth. “Lor’ A’mighty, who dat?” she sputtered, as Molly came up in her ragged dress, and minus one slipper which she had dropped in her flight. “Good-evening, auntie,” said Molly, putting on a smile like sunshine. “Don’t mind my looks, please. I fell from a tree and tore my dress, and ran from a snake and lost my slipper, and I’m so tired and hot and thirsty, please give me a drink.” “Sartinly, chile, but did de snake bite ye? ’Cause, ef he bit you, honey, I better give you some reverend whisky to cure snake bite!” “No, I was not bitten, auntie,” said Molly; then with a quizzical glance: “Isn’t it odd, auntie, that whisky will make men see snakes but it will cure snake bites?” “Go ’long wid yer foolishness, chile,” said old Betsy, chuckling. She hobbled slowly to a little stone spring house near by and brought Molly a clean gourd full of cool, sparkling water. “Whut’s yer name, honey?” she continued, as Molly drank thirstily of the delicious draught. “Will-o’-the-wisp!” said the girl, whimsically. “Willy Whisk! Soun’s more like a boy’s den a geerl’s name. But won’t you take a cheer, honey, and tell me all about you-self?” wheedlingly. “No, I thank you, aunt--what’s your name?” “Aunt Betsy Bell, chile--named arter de big mountain, Betsy Bell,” said the old negress with pride. “Well, Aunt Betsy, I’m in a great hurry. Won’t you send somebody with me to Ferndale? I’m afraid to go alone, it’s getting so dark, and that old snake is somewhere on the road waiting for me to come, I know,” with a shudder. To her dismay the old woman shook her turbaned head and answered: “Dere ain’t a soul on de place but me, honey. De men aine come f’om de corn-fiel’ yet, and my ole man tuck de ole mare dis morn’ and car’e’ some spring chickings down to de White Sulphur Springs, and he won’t git back till de cool o’ de night!” “My gracious, this is awful,” said Molly, in dismay. Then she brightened and beamed on the old woman. “Won’t you go with me, Aunt Betsy?” she exclaimed. “Lor’ me, chile, I got rheumatiz too bad! I aine walk as far ez Ferndale in two years. My laig all drawed wid rheumatiz. Set down an’ wait till de men come from de fiel’s, den you hab company to take you home.” “How long until they come?” “Two, free hours, I ’spect. Dey’s gwine work late, dey said, tryin’ to git all de corn plantin’ done tonight.” Molly flung herself down tempestuously on the kitchen door-step, leaned her dark, curly head against Aunt Betsy’s linsey knee, and dissolved into stormy sobs and tears. Aunt Betsy’s tender heart was touched to its center. “Lor’ honey, you make me t’ink o’ my little white chillern I used to nurse, a-comin’ and layin’ deir curly heads ’g’in deir black mammy’s knee, and cryin’ and sobbin’! Hush, honey; I’ll fix a way fur ye--on’y don’t cry so, fur it makes my heart ache, t’inkin’ o’ my little white nurslin’s ober in dat furrin’ kentry. Now tell me, honey, Miss Willie Whisk, kin you ride hossback?” “Yes, indeed,” said Molly, unblushingly; for although she had never ridden horseback in her life, she said to herself undauntedly: “I can do it if I try.” “All right; den I’ll lend you my ole misses’ ridin’ hoss, Miss Willie Whisk, and you kin turn him loose soon’s you git to ole Miss Barry’s gate, and dat hoss will come straight home to his stable.” “Oh, thank you, Aunt Betsy. God bless you, you kind soul. I’ll try to pay you for this some day!” gushed Molly, gratefully, little dreaming how the keeping of that promise would come to pass. She went with Betsy to the stable, where the old woman brought out and saddled a fine bay horse on which she mounted Molly. Then she hobbled to a gate which she threw open, saying kindly: “Dar’s your road straight to Ferndale. Good-night, Miss Willie Whisk. Gib my ’spects to ole Miss Barry, and my lub to Ginny Ann and old Unc’ Abe, her husband, and to Nancy Jane, and all de res’, and tell ’em all to come ober.” “I will, Aunt Betsy. Good-night to you,” Molly called back cheerily, as the bay horse pranced down the road in the deepening twilight and starlight. CHAPTER V. “How easy it is to ride horseback! This is perfectly delicious!” cried Molly, exultantly, as she gripped the reins in her little white hands, and gave herself up to the enjoyment of her novel adventure. A feeling of buoyant delight came to her as she felt herself borne easily and swiftly along on the back of the gently pacing and splendid animal. “Oh, I did not know what I missed in never learning to ride! I shall get Aunt Thalia to let me have a horse to go out every day now until Louise sends for me,” she resolved, gayly. Alas! she felicitated herself too soon. They had not made half the distance to Ferndale, when at a sudden turn of the road some distance ahead, Molly saw a tall, manly figure coming toward her with the inevitable fiery tip of a cigar gleaming through the semi-darkness. At sight of this pedestrian the bay horse, which had been pacing easily and beautifully, uttered a loud whinny of delight, and changed his easy gait for a sudden gallop that took Molly by surprise, and, losing her balance in the saddle, the reins slipped from her hands. Another moment and our luckless heroine went flying over the head of her noble steed and landed ignobly on her face in the dust of the road. The bay horse stopped perfectly still with wonderful equine intelligence and the pedestrian dropped his cigar and rushed to the rescue. As he came upon the scene the animal again uttered a whinny of delight and poked his cold nose into the new-comer’s hand. “What, Hero, old fellow, glad to see me back?” the gentleman said, with a hasty caress on the graceful head. Then he stooped over the heap of huddled-up humanity in the road. “What mischief have you done in your haste to bid me welcome?” he continued, lifting Molly’s dark head out of the dust. A moment’s examination assured him that the fall had either stunned or killed her outright. “This is dreadful; and whom can it be, anyhow, riding my mother’s favorite bay?” While he spoke he was carrying her across the road to a little spring bubbling between the rocks and ferns. He laid her down then on the grass and bathed her face and hands with water. But Molly lay for many minutes still and speechless, and he began to grow very anxious as well as curious over the girl whose face as seen by the light of the rising moon looked very lovely with its clear-cut, piquant features, round, dimpled chin, and slender black brows and thick, fringed lashes. The man leaning over her was as handsome in his way as she in hers was lovely. He was tall and stately looking, with a splendid physique, and a noble, high-bred face, large eyes that looked black by night, but by day were blue as the violets of his native hills. His hair was of a chestnut tinge, and lay in luxuriant masses about his temples. It was the face of a man about thirty years old, and the golden brown mustache shaded lips that were strong, and grave, and proud, and perhaps a little stern. In dress and manner he was the perfect gentleman. “Whom _can_ she be? I am quite certain that she belongs to no one in the neighborhood,” he was thinking for at least the twentieth time, when suddenly a sigh heaved Molly’s breast, and the dark eyes opened wide on the face of the stranger. At first she regarded him in dreamy surprise. Her head lay on his arm, but she did not seem to notice it, only murmured, quaintly, and with an air of relief: “I thought I was dead!” “I thought so, too, but I am very happy to find that you are not,” said the stranger in a pleasantly musical voice. “Tell me, do you feel any pain?” Molly groaned as she half lifted her form from where it rested against him. “I feel as if all my bones were broken. I fell out of a tree, you know,” she said. An expression of uneasiness crossed his face. “It was a horse you fell from--don’t you remember?” he asked. “It was not a horse, it was a tree. I think I ought to know!” returned belligerent Molly. CHAPTER VI. The stranger regarded Molly’s saucy rejoinder as the effect of an injury done to her brain by her fall from the horse, and said to himself, pityingly: “She evidently struck upon her head and the shock has disordered her brain, but I trust the affliction will prove but momentary.” She was sitting upright now regarding him with vexed, dark eyes when he said, smilingly: “Since you dispute my assertion permit me to prove it. Look yonder!” Molly turned her head and saw the handsome bay horse standing still in the road as if conscious of his misdemeanor. Her memory came quickly back. “Oh!” she exclaimed. “You remember?” he rejoined. “Yes.” Her face and eyes looked very arch and saucy as she continued: “I suppose you take me for an escaped lunatic?” “Oh, no,” with a provoking smile on the handsome lips, “only a very giddy girl whose memory was temporarily obscured by her fall.” “And you don’t like giddy girls?” Molly interrogated, with a decisive pout. “Not--usually,” he returned with a sparkle of mischief in his eyes. Molly sprang to her feet with considerable agility, considering that she had declared she felt as if all her bones were broken. “Neither do I like hateful prigs!” she returned, with asperity. “So I will bid you good-evening, sir.” Dropping him a pert little courtesy, she ran toward the horse, but as she lifted her little foot to the stirrup she found him at her elbow. “Permit me,” he said, and lifted the light figure quickly to the saddle. Then he detained the reins in his hands a moment. “Do you know I was very much surprised to see a strange young lady riding this horse?” he said. “I know the horse and its owner--but--” “Not the rider,” she finished his hesitating sentence. “Well, my name is Molly Trueheart, and I borrowed the horse from old Betsy Bell over there at the Laurens place. I will send him home in an hour. So, you see, I’m not a horse thief, although I may look like a lunatic. To tell the truth I’ve had quite a lark this evening, and I’m very anxious to get home.” “A lark!” he repeated, with an expressive shrug, and Molly Trueheart uttered a merry, rollicking peal of laughter. “Yes, a lark!” she said. “Oh, how horrified you look! Good-night, Mr. Prig!” and like a flash she caught the reins from his hands, touched Hero lightly with the whip, and he bounded gracefully away as if anxious to atone for the mishap of awhile ago. The stranger stood looking after her with a smile in his violet eyes. “What a merry little hoiden!” he uttered aloud, “and what a mercy she escaped unhurt. It was rather ludicrous to see her come flying over Hero’s head in that fashion, and landing in the dust at one’s feet!” Still smiling, he resumed his walk toward Maple Shade, as the Laurens place was called, but before he reached the wide entrance gate of the park he was overtaken by Hero, who, on being liberated at Ferndale, had galloped rapidly back to overtake his friend. “Good fellow!” said the gentleman, springing to the back of the delighted creature, and continuing his journey. “I hope, Hero, you have delivered our little madcap safe at home, and not flung her precipitately at the head of some other astonished pedestrian!” Hero gave a delighted whinny which his rider interpreted as the former, which was indeed the case, for Molly Trueheart was at that moment running across the lawn at Ferndale, anxious to make her peace with old Mrs. Barry. “I shall have to humble myself down to the ground, I know, but I’ll do it for Louise’s sake,” she muttered then. “Oh, dear, how my bones do ache! I know I’m all over black and blue from the tumbles I’ve had! I know very well I shall be as sore as a boil tomorrow, and have to stay in bed all day. Oh, what made Lou so determined on sending me here? She might have known,” dismally, “that I could not behave myself. Oh, Lordy, I do hope she’ll let me off from doing any more penance as soon as she gets my letter!” A sudden thought of the dignified stranger she had encountered made her laugh aloud in spite of her sorry plight. “My! what a prig he was! Handsome though, _very_!” she said. “I wonder who he was, the wretch? He frightened the horse, of course, or I shouldn’t have got that fall. I hope he doesn’t live in this neighborhood, for it wouldn’t do for Aunt Thalia to find out that I ran away. I must hold my peace on that point. And now to face the music!” The hall-doors stood wide open, the light of the swinging-lamp shining on the tired, pretty face of the girl as she crept in and went softly to the door of her aunt’s sitting-room. At the same moment the tall Dutch clock in the hall loudly boomed out the hour of ten. “Oh, I did not dream it was so late!” she muttered, and peeped around the door. There lay her Aunt Thalia on the sofa with Ginny Ann mopping her face with camphor, and old Nancy Jane, the cook, swinging a huge turkey-wing up and down. Molly forgot her selfish terrors in anxiety for the old lady, and rushed precipitately into the room. “What’s the matter?” she exclaimed. Nancy Jane and Ginny Ann squealed simultaneously: “Lordy, Miss Lou, dat you?” “Yes, or what’s left of me after tumbling out of the tree.” Walking up to her aunt’s side, then bending over her: “Aunt Thalia, are you sick?” Mrs. Barry opened her eyes with a look of relief, but before she could speak Ginny Ann broke in: “Missis almost c’azy, finkin’ you done runned away. You sartinly did gib us a skeer, chile! Ole mis’, she say jes’ now, ‘Run upsta’rs, Ginny Ann, and let dat chile out o’ dat garret. Guess she sorry for her sass now.’ And I went and foun’ dat windy wide open, and you gone. And ole mis’ flew in _sech_ a rage, umph me, as you nebber saw, and mos’ went inter de highstrikes.” “Ginny Ann, hold your tongue, you old fool!” cried Mrs. Barry, sitting upright, with a suddenness that made her domestics reel backward in dismay. “Is that you, Louise? Where have you been, child, giving us such a scare about you?” Something like tenderness quivered through her voice despite its acerbity, and cunning Molly took instant advantage of the situation. She dropped theatrically upon her knees. “Oh, Aunt Thalia, the big rats in the garret frightened me almost to death!” she sobbed. “I climbed out of the window into the tree, and then a big snake scared me, and I fell out of the tree down to the ground, and--and--oh--most killed myself! And--and--it just served me right, too! I ought to have been killed for my meanness to you, Aunt Thalia! I was just as naughty as I could be, but I’m downright sorry, and I’ll try never--or, ‘hardly ever’--to do it again. Won’t you please forgive me?” Mrs. Barry looked down keenly into the lifted face. It did look pale and pathetic, and the big eyes were positively dewy. She put out her long, withered hand, on which a priceless diamond sparkled, and gently stroked the dark head. “Louise, I don’t know but that I ought to beg _your_ pardon,” she said, with a gentleness that was so rare in her it made the gaping negroes stare. “I--I don’t exactly think I did right putting you in the old garret. You--you might have been killed falling out of that tree! I think we must forgive each other and do better in future.” “Oh, thank you so much, Aunt Thalia!” Molly cried, jubilantly. She even dared press a timid kiss on Mrs. Barry’s wrinkled cheek, she felt so glad that, by eating humble pie, she had saved Louise. “Are you bruised very much, my dear?” the old lady inquired, sympathetically, and Molly responded lugubriously: “Black and blue all over!” Both the negro women groaned in concert at this statement, and Mrs. Barry exclaimed: “Oh, how dreadful to think of such a fall! It’s a mercy you were not killed outright. I forgot about the rats in the garret, or I never would have shut you up there. Ginny Ann, you go upstairs with the child, and let her have a warm bath, then rub her from head to foot in arnica--from _head_ to _foot_; do you hear?” “Yes, ole mis’, sartinly. Come on, Miss Lou, honey.” “Yes, Ginny Ann. Good-night, Aunt Thalia. I’m sorry I gave you such a scare; and I’m so glad that you were good enough to forgive me,” Molly said, as she followed Ginny Ann from the room to the bath-room upstairs, where the old lady’s instructions were carried out to the letter. “Oh, I feel so much better! Thank you, Ginny Ann,” she exclaimed, as the latter tucked her into her cool, white bed. “But I’m sorry to be so much trouble.” “No trouble at tall, Miss Lou. I’se always been use to waiting on de Barrys. It’s my pleasure and my dooty,” Ginny Ann replied, with the elaborate politeness of the well-raised Virginia negro. Then she paused, and said, mysteriously: “Honey, doane you mine ole missis’ capers; her bark worser ’n her bite. She gwine make it up to you fo’ treatin’ you so bad.” “Make it up to me?” said tired and sleepy Molly, drowsily; and then Ginny Ann got down on her knees by the bed and whispered the secret of the evening’s work among the trunks of finery, and of the maid’s trip into town for the summer silk. “Lay low, honey, and doane say a word to ole missis, but sho’ as you born, she’s gwine take you off on a trip whar you’ll hab a fine time dancin’ and eberyt’ing; and I shouldn’t wonder, no, I shouldn’t, ef she marries you off to some nice young gemplum,” she concluded, exuberantly. Molly’s head popped up from the pillow like a cork. “Indeed she won’t then! Marry me off, indeed! I should like to see any one try it!” she blazed, indignantly. “Hi, honey, doane you want get married?” Ginny Ann inquired, in amazement. “No, I don’t! I hate men, every one of them--deceitful _prigs_!” cried Molly, violently, adding to herself that the man she had seen tonight she hated worst of all. Wanting to get rid of Ginny Ann, she put down her head again, pretending to snore audibly, and the woman retired, muttering to herself: “Dat’s de strangest young gal I eber did see! Doane wanter git married, she say! Well, Lordy! she sartinly is diff’runt from any oder young gal in de worl’!” CHAPTER VII. Molly did not have any “larks” the next day, for she was so stiff and sore she had to remain in bed all day, and submit to the fussy attendance of Ginny Ann, and the kindness of her remorseful aunt who, blaming herself for the girl’s accident, did all in her power to atone for it, even to promising her a month at the White Sulphur Springs, and freely pardoning her for sending her money to Molly Trueheart, the actress’ daughter. “And I sent Agnes Walker back to town yesterday and bought two new dresses for you,” she said. “And I’ve trunks full of things as good as new that she’s going to make over for you to wear.” “Oh, Aunt Thalia, I don’t deserve ’em, I can’t take ’em,” Molly said, conscience-stricken at all this kindness. She said to herself reproachfully, “And I wrote to Lou that she was an old dragoness! What a shame! She has turned real good, and it makes me feel meaner than ever. Oh, I can’t take her presents and go to the Springs with her, and I mustn’t say a word, I must wait for Lou’s letter. She will certainly let me come home at once!” But several days passed and no reply came from the absent step-sister. Meanwhile the work of dress-making went briskly on, to the secret distress of the little fraud, as she called herself when alone. “Oh, it’s too bad, ruining all these fine things cutting them up for me! I shall never wear them, and they will not do for Louise, she is so much bigger than I am! Oh, why don’t she write and put a stop to it all?” she thought impatiently, and in her trouble she wrote another letter, telling Louise of the sacrifice of the finery, and begging her incoherently to “do something.” By the time that she could reasonably expect a reply to this second appeal several very pretty dresses were completed, and one evening soon after tea when she had hurried upstairs to have a real good cry over Louise’s unaccountable silence, she was startled by the abrupt entrance of Mrs. Barry’s maid with the muslin dress thrown over her arm. “Mrs. Barry wants you to dress and come down to the parlor,” she said. Molly stared. “What for?” she inquired ungrammatically. Agnes Walker shook her head laconically and answered: “I can’t tell. She wants to see how your new dresses fit, perhaps, or to give you some lessons in managing your train. Anyway, she told me to dress you and send you down.” “Here’s a lark,” said the merry girl to herself, forgetting all about her tears of a minute before. She submitted coolly to Agnes Walker’s help, exclaiming gayly: “I should like to see how I look in a fine dress. I never had one in my life.” “Fy, Miss Barry,” cried the maid; but Molly persisted in her assertion. “Well, it’s very becoming to you, anyway,” said Agnes, carefully adjusting the graceful demi-train with its embroidered flounces. She had tied Mollie’s refractory dark curls back from her peach-bloom cheeks with a new rose-pink ribbon, and fastened a bunch of pink roses in with the lace of her square corsage. The round dimpled arms, bare to the elbows, were faultless in shape and contour as they escaped from their soft ruffles. “You look very nice,” continued Agnes, critically. “Thank you; but I feel like a peacock,” said the girl, with such ludicrous strut across the floor that the maid burst out laughing. “Miss Barry, you haven’t got a bit of dignity. You’re just like a child!” she exclaimed. “But go, now, to your aunt. You know how impatient she is.” Molly laughed; but she went along the hall quite sedately and down the stairs, pausing only once to take a gratified peep at herself in the mirror of the tall hatrack opposite the parlor door. “I do look _nice_,” she said, nodding at the radiant reflection, and a sudden thought came to her. She muttered: “I wish _he_ could see me now, the hateful _prig_! I know I _did_ look like a tramp that night.” With that she crossed the hall, turned the handle of the parlor door and entered. A blaze of light greeted her and made her pause in surprise. The big chandeliers in the double parlors were both lighted and Mrs. Barry was entertaining a guest. She rose with suave dignity. “Cecil, this is my niece, Louise--Miss Barry, Mr. Laurens.” Taken by surprise, Molly made a bashful constrained little courtesy without looking up, but as she was about to sink into a seat by her aunt a manly hand grasped hers and a familiar voice said kindly: “I am glad to meet you, Miss Barry. I hope we shall be as good friends as the Barrys and Laurens have been before us!” Molly looked at him with dilated eyes. It was the stranger she had met a few nights before! Her lips parted and closed again without a sound. In pitiable agitation she dropped into a large arm-chair behind Mrs. Barry, telling herself that he had betrayed the whole escapade, and that now the old lady’s wrath would be poured out upon her head in fullest measure. She waited in sheer desperation for the blow to fall on her pretty luckless head. Not a word was addressed to her by either her aunt or the visitor. Mrs. Barry took up the thread of a momentarily dropped discourse about London. They discussed that famous city at some length while the culprit trembled in her chair. Then Mrs. Barry’s gray silk rustled as she rose from her sofa. “Cecil, you will kindly excuse me for ten minutes,” she said, suavely; and, like a wise old lady, left them alone to get acquainted with each other. Molly drew a long, deep breath that was almost a sob, and looked up, thinking that she had escaped a threatening danger. She thought, happily: “He does not recognize me!” But she was mistaken. Cecil Laurens was looking at her with a quizzical smile. He drew his chair nearer--beside her, in fact--and said, reproachfully: “You said your name was Molly Trueheart--” “Oh, hush!” cried Molly. She almost jumped out of her seat in her terror lest Mrs. Barry should have heard his words. “I----I--told you--a--a story, Mr. Laurens,” she said, tremulously. “But please, _please_ don’t tell Aunt Thalia!” The violet eyes under the dark brows and high, white forehead regarded the pleading face rather sternly. He said: “Then your aunt did not know of your--your--” hesitating, then half smiling, “your ‘lark’ that night?” Molly grew hot and angry under that peculiar smile. “I don’t see what you’re smiling at,” she said, crossly. “No, she doesn’t know; and--if--you--are--a gentleman--you will not betray me!” He flushed as the slow, emphatically uttered words fell from the girl’s lips, and answered, curtly: “I claim to be a gentleman, Miss Barry, but I can not comprehend the motives of a _lady_ who goes on such a madcap race by night unknown to her guardians, and under a fictitious name!” The sarcasm in his voice stung deeply. Molly turned crimson and exclaimed, resentfully: “It is _not_ a fictitious name--it is my own--my step-sister’s name, and I have a right to use it if I choose!” Cecil Laurens queried, gravely: “Do you think your step-sister would be willing to allow such an escapade to go under her name?” Tears of shame and anger flashed into Molly’s dark eyes. “Molly Trueheart would not care--not a bit!” she declared, with a half sob. “And--and it’s none of your business, any way, Mr. Cecil Laurens, and I think you’re old enough to know better than to meddle with--anybody--like this. I would have told you all about it if you hadn’t been so smart, but now I won’t, so there! And you may go and tell Aunt Thalia all you know, if you’re mean enough, and of course you _are_!” With that she bounced out of her chair and flew to the bay-window, where she stood with her back to him, her cheeks hot with anger, and her eyes so dim with tears that she could not see how brightly the stars were sparkling in the sky. Cecil Laurens remained perfectly silent, and there was a glitter of anger in his violet eyes. “What a little fury!” he was thinking. “I have always heard that the Barrys were high-spirited, but I never had an exhibition of their temper before. Pity to spoil such a pretty face flying into such a rage.” Mrs. Barry’s ten minutes passed without bringing her back, and Mr. Laurens grew tired of watching Molly’s obdurate back. He opened the grand organ and sat down before it, pressing his fingers softly on the keys. Music was his one passion, and he had devoted years to its study. He played now a low _andante_ movement, full of grace and sweetness and tenderness that soothed his own perturbed spirit, and made him momentarily forget the audacious girl who had disturbed him. Gliding from one melody into another, he paused, at last, with a sudden remembrance, and, turning his head, saw Molly close beside him. The music had drawn her against her will by a strange, magnetic power. All the anger had died from her face and eyes, leaving a dreamy softness in its place. “So I have soothed your savage spirit?” he exclaimed, with a smile, and Molly started and blushed. “I--I--am fond of music,” she stammered. “Perhaps you will play for me now?” he said, rising. “Oh, no!” starting back, and just then Mrs. Barry came in. “I have been playing to your little girl,” Cecil Laurens said to her, with a smile. “She may look like a little girl, but she is a grown-up young lady, Cecil,” Mrs. Barry answered, quickly, and Molly cried out, vexedly: “I am not! I won’t be seventeen till August.” Mrs. Barry glared at her displeasedly. “Only hear her, Cecil! pretending to be a school-girl still! I never _could_ understand why girls try to make themselves out younger than they really are. I am sure there is not such a charm in callow youth as they think,” she said, tartly. Molly was already biting her lips in dismay. “Aunt Thalia, I was jesting,” she said, soberly, without glancing at Cecil Laurens. She was asking herself if he would betray her to her aunt, if he would accuse her then and there of that “lark” which she shuddered to remember now; but apparently he meant to put it off to some more convenient season, for presently he said good-night and went away without alluding to the subject. Molly drew a sigh of relief as he left, but his blue eyes and his wondrous music haunted her perturbed dreams that night. CHAPTER VIII. Next morning she said to Mrs. Barry: “Aunt Thalia, I think I should enjoy my visit much more if I might ride horseback.” “Can you ride?” looking up from her breakfast of fried chicken and hot rolls. “I have been on a horse’s back only once, but I can easily learn if you will let me have a horse,” Molly answered, confidently, and a sudden light broke over Mrs. Barry’s face. “The very thing,” she exclaimed. “I’m glad you thought of it. Cecil Laurens shall teach you.” “Oh, no, no,” Molly cried, in consternation. “I won’t ride with him. I’ll go alone.” “But Cecil will be perfectly willing, child, and he is a splendid equestrian.” “But I hate him--I mean I don’t like men,” exclaimed the girl, flushing under Mrs. Barry’s gorgon stare. “Louise Barry, you are a goose! I shall never cease to regret that Lucy Everett had the training of you. Any other girl would be glad of the chance of Cecil Lauren’s company. He is the richest and finest young man in the state.” “I--don’t--like--young men, auntie.” Mrs. Barry glowered at her angrily over her glasses. “Do you like woolly headed, stupid old negro men?” she snapped. “Ye-es, aunt,” demurely. “Very well, then, you shall have the finest horse in the stable, and old Abe shall teach you to ride--but I wonder at your taste,” sneering. Molly flushed, but finished her breakfast in silence, and then ran upstairs to arrange an impromptu riding-habit. By letting out the tucks in her red cashmere dress she made a very presentable habit, combined with the velvet-trimmed jacket, and setting a little red-plumed turban on her mop of curls she ran down-stairs in the gayest spirits. “I’m ready, Aunt Thalia.” “Whew! You’re like a whirlwind, Louise,” exclaimed Mrs. Barry; but she summoned old Abe at once, and said: “Miss Barry wants a ride, Abe, and you must go with her as she is not accustomed to riding. Saddle the young gray mare and take her at once.” “Um-hum, gwine broke her neck now, fo’ sartain sure,” grumbled the old man, who did not like to be called from his pipe in the kitchen. But he set off obediently for the stable, while Molly danced with impatience awaiting his return. “May I go into Lewisburg for letters? I am sure there must be one from my sister,” she said, and the brow of the old aristocrat gloomed over. “You may go to the post-office, but--I told you, Louise, never to call that girl your sister again!” “I beg your pardon, Aunt Thalia, my step-sister,” amended Molly, but she bit her red lips sharply to keep back indignant words. “How she despises my mother’s memory and my mother’s daughter,” she thought bitterly, and it was well that Uncle Abe came up just then, mounted on a sturdy old bay horse and leading a handsome gray filly by the bridle, or her indignation might have over-flowed into words. As it was she turned off sharply, ran down the steps and sprang into the saddle, cantering off at a pace that startled Uncle Abe. “Lor’-A’mighty! De gal gwine broke her neck in ten minutes!” he growled, as he galloped briskly after her, while Mrs. Barry looking on, thoroughly enjoyed the girl’s fearless riding. “She will make a good rider. It is the first thing in which she has shown herself a Barry,” she muttered, for this gay little humming-bird of a creature had rather startled the old lady by her unlikeness to the Barrys, who as a rule were homely rather than handsome, and dignified rather than merry. But on the whole, Mrs. Barry was proud of this lovely niece. She had all the fondness for beauty that is inherent in homely people, and it pleased her to gaze on that beautiful, spirited face, although very girlish-looking for the twenty-five years with which she was accredited. She gazed after the girl with actual pride, and muttered: “Cecil admired her, I am sure, although he left so soon! I hope from my heart that it will be a match. It would please me better than anything else in the world! How fortunate that he returned just now when he was least expected. It must have been fate!” Unconscious of Mrs. Barry’s designs against her single blessedness, Molly jogged along soberly toward Lewisburg, having been scolded into sedateness by lazy old Uncle Abe. There must have been a fate in it as the old lady said, for just as their horses came opposite the park gates at Maple Shade, Cecil Laurens rode out on a magnificent black horse, bowed and smiled, and cantered to Molly’s side. “Good morning, Miss Barry, good morning, Uncle Abe. A bright day,” he said. Molly bowed with a half defiant air. What evil sprite had sent this man again across her path? Yet she gazed as if fascinated in unwilling admiration at his handsome face which in the clear open light of day showed at its best. What dark, tender depths there were to his violet eyes, how regularly handsome his features, how the sun brought out the rare shade of his thick mustache and clustering masses of gold-brown hair. Then his figure, how tall and manly it was as it sat with martial grace in the saddle. “I hate him, but--he is rather good-looking,” she admitted to herself, with reluctant justice. “Marse Cece,” burst in Uncle Abe, with startling abruptness, “aine you gwine to de pos’-office, too?” “Yes, Uncle Abe.” The artful old negro chuckled audibly: “How fort’nit, how werry fort’nit,” he observed. “Now you kin take keer o’ Miss Looisy on her ride, ef you please, sah, fo’ my hoss done cast his shoe, and I got to turn off dis road and take him to de black-smiff!” “Uncle Abe, you are an old story-teller. There is nothing the matter with the horse. I’ll tell Aunt Thalia if you don’t come straight along with me!” threatened Molly in comical distress and anger combined; but the cunning old fellow was already galloping off, leaving her to the tender mercies of Cecil Laurens. “Do not mind him, Miss Barry,” said the young man. “I will take as good care of you as Uncle Abe.” She pouted and turned her horse’s head. “I am going back to Ferndale!” He caught her reins and held them as he had done before. “You are not!” he said, vexedly. “Why, what a baby you are! Why should you go back and get that old darky a scolding from Mrs. Barry? The old soul is only going into Maple Shade to chat with my servants. He has known me ever since I was a baby, and feels safe in trusting you to my care. Mrs. Barry is my godmother, too, so how can you be so unreasonable? _Come._” “I _am_ acting foolishly,” she thought, and yielded to that one word of commingled command and entreaty, telling herself that she was too anxious for a letter to turn back now. Cecil Laurens knew well the magnetic power of that low, winning voice of his. He smiled slightly as she turned and rode on by his side up the mountain. “You and I almost had a battle last night,” he went on. “After I went away I thought it over, and decided that you--we--had been very silly. It seemed so strange for a Barry and a Laurens to quarrel. Why, our families have been neighbors and friends almost a century,” proudly. “That is no reason why you should have been so--so domineering and overbearing to me,” she broke out, with defiant eyes. He looked intently at the tall green ferns growing in the masses of mossy stone by the road-side several minutes before he replied, quietly: “I am sorry. Will you forgive me?” “If--you--won’t--_tell_ Aunt Thalia,” she replied, half entreatingly. The violet orbs turned from contemplating the ferns to her face. The two pairs of eyes met. “Did you really think I could tell tales?” he queried, gravely, and something in those eyes impelled her to answer: “No.” “Ah, I thought you would learn to trust me,” he said, with that wonderful smile whose sweetness dazzled Molly’s eyes. “Now let us pledge friendship, for the sake of--our families.” She began to smile, her anger melting under his kindliness. “I--I--won’t claim your friendship on the score of our families. If you promise me your friendship, it must be for what I am worth myself--and if I like you, it must be for yourself, not because you are a Laurens,” she replied, with such seriousness and earnestness that he laughed, and quoted: “‘Kind hearts are more than coronets,’ you think, Miss Barry. Well, I own I am proud of my family, but I am willing to take your good-will on your own terms.” He held his hand out, and she laid her little gloved one in it. He pressed her shabby little gauntlet a moment, gently, and a thrill of pleasure ran along the girl’s nerves. “He is so nice--and only last night I hated him!” she said, naïvely, to herself. What a ride it was, and how charming she found her late foe! He praised her riding, and declared that it was splendid, considering this was only her second attempt. “You must let me ride with you every morning. You will find me more trustworthy than Uncle Abe,” he said, and Molly, who had vowed only that morning that she would have nothing to do with him, agreed to his wish with frank pleasure. But the violet eyes and the low, winning voice had disarmed her resentment. Molly was pleased to find a friend where she had dreaded an enemy. “He will not tell Aunt Thalia, and if Louise will only let me come home before I do any other mischief, everything will go right,” she thought; then, looking up, suddenly: “If I get a letter from my sister this morning, I shall have to go home soon,” she said. She saw a dark frown come over his face. He exclaimed, brusquely: “I hate to hear you call that actress’ daughter sister!” “Why?” sharply. “Oh, it was a terrible _mésalliance_. Your father ought never to have married that woman, and your friends should never have allowed you to be raised as the companion of her child. The gulf between you is wide, and there is really no relationship, you know,” he said, proudly. Molly looked at him strangely without reply. He was puzzled by her eyes--there was in them such a sudden look of anguish and pride, with something like reproach. He could not understand it, and asked himself if she meant to uphold the cause of that odious woman. But here they were at the post-office, and there was a letter for Miss Louise Barry. She caught it eagerly from his hand. “It is from my sis--my step-sister, and I know she has written for me to come home!” Molly cried, excitedly. CHAPTER IX. Molly rode very fast on returning, and she was so quiet that Cecil Laurens regarded her knit brows and pursed-up lips in surprise. “You are leading me a sort of John Gilpin race, Miss Barry. What is the matter with you?” he said. “I am impatient to read my letter,” she replied in a curt voice. They were outside the limits of the town now, and riding up the mountain road beneath tall overarching trees that lined the road on either side. He said, kindly: “We can stop long enough to read your letter, since you are so impatient.” Molly let the speed of her gray filly slacken a little, and looked round at him with candid eyes. “I would rather not,” she said. “But there would be nothing improper in doing so, and I am not in a hurry,” he urged. “Yes, I know; but I’m afraid. If I read the letter, and sis--I mean, Aunt Lucy--did not say _yes_, I should fly into a tantrum and alarm you,” with a sparkle of malice in the black eyes. “I think I _have_ seen you in a tantrum,” he replied, with equal malice. “But of course Aunt Lucy will say yes to any request of yours.” She shook her curly head despondingly, but the filly had fallen unchecked into a slower pace. “Ah, you don’t _know_, Mr. Laurens,” she said, dolorously. “You see, I wrote to Aunt Lucy that I was tired of Ferndale, and wanted to come home, but--but--I’m afraid she won’t let me go yet.” “Tired of Ferndale?” he repeated. “Yes, sick and tired,” she replied, emphatically. “I thought it would be jolly fun to come, at first, but I’ve been here three weeks now, and it’s the pokiest old hole I ever saw! I’d give anything to be back in Staunton.” “She has left a lover behind her, of course,” the young man thought to himself, and he said, in rather a cross tone: “Your aunt would be angry if she heard you abusing Ferndale like that. Do you know that it is considered a fine place?” “Yes, and I wouldn’t have Aunt Thalia know my private opinion of it. You won’t betray me, will you?” smiling. “No, but I’m sorry you want to get away from Ferndale,” with unaccountable inward irritation. “Why don’t you tell your Aunt Thalia so?” “Oh,” with a horrified gesture, “not for worlds. You know--I’m to be her heiress. I must not offend her, or she may disinherit me.” “So you are mercenary?” lifting his graceful brows into distinctive arches. “It runs in the Barry blood, does it not?” she retorted. And he answered gravely: “I never knew it before!” Molly laughed merrily. “Now, you make me think you a hateful prig again. But there, we needn’t quarrel, only I must say again, I don’t want to stay at Ferndale, and I pray Heaven this letter may send me permission to go home.” He would have joined her in that fervent prayer if he had known what that letter was to bring forth, but in his ignorance and blindness he began to say to himself that it was a pity old Mrs. Barry was going to lose her bright young companion so soon. “But, it _is_ lonely for such a little butterfly,” he thought. “I must try to brighten up her life at Ferndale for my old friend’s sake.” Full of this generous impulse, he said: “It shall not be dull any more at Ferndale. I know many of the pretty, lively young girls at Lewisburg, and I shall bring some of them to call on you. Then we will devise some parties and picnics to amuse you. I only wish my mother and sisters were at home so that you could come and make a visit at Maple Shade.” “They would not care about _me_!” she replied with an odd touch of bitterness. “Miss Barry, you ought to know better than that. Did I not tell you that our families are intimate friends? My mother and my sisters would take the greatest interest in you. I wish that Mrs. Barry had sent you abroad with my sisters to be educated.” “Thank you,” with sarcasm. He paid no attention to her outburst, but continued, as if struck by a sudden thought: “I have an idea.” “Really?” exclaimed Molly, with deeper sarcasm than before. “Yes, impossible as it may appear to you,” he replied, flushing slightly under the fire of her large, magnetic dark eyes. “Miss Barry, you know that I have but lately left London and that I shall return in a few weeks?” “Yes,” carelessly. “Here is my plan, I shall ask Mrs. Barry to let me take charge of you and place you at school with my sisters to finish your education.” Molly caught her breath quickly, and something like a sharp regret pierced her heart. To herself she said: “Ah, if I were not a little fraud what a future would lie before me!” But looking up into his face with eyes that gave no sign of the pang she was enduring, she said: “Mr. Laurens, you must have taken leave of your senses to talk about a girl of five-and-twenty finishing her education.” “I beg your pardon, Miss Barry, you look much younger than that, and you certainly do need a little more polish. The Barrys were always noted for their polished manners,” he replied, frankly, but the frankness on the whole was rather engaging. Molly did not resent the imputation of brusquerie. She had heard it so often before that it was nothing new, and besides she was quivering all over with a tempest of excitement and regret, evoked by his words of a moment ago. To go abroad, to cross that big, blue sparkling ocean had been the passionate desire of her life; oh, what would she not give to realize that dream! She had never envied the Barrys before; indeed, she had openly cherished an amused contempt for their family pride, and had never sighed for their broad acres or the blue blood that flowed in their veins. In this moment of sore temptation, however, all was reversed. “I wish--I wish--I were really Louise Barry instead of a contemptible little fraud!” she sighed. “But then how much better is _she_? It is all a muddle, and I can’t go, that’s all. And I hope and pray that Lou has fixed up some plan for me to come home, for everything is getting tangled up dreadfully!” Poor child, she thought so truly, for at every step she was floundering deeper into “the tangled web of fate.” They rode in presently across the lawn at Ferndale, and Mrs. Barry, from her seat in the wide hall, gave a smirk of satisfaction at sight of Cecil Laurens. Molly sprang down from her horse without waiting for assistance, flew up the steps, across the porch and hall, and upstairs like a little tornado, wild to possess herself of the contents of that fateful letter. Cecil Laurens, half-vexed at her unceremonious exit from the scene, dismounted more leisurely, and, handing his reins to a negro lad, went in to pay his respects to his old friend, Mrs. Barry. “Now, this is kind of you, Cecil; but where did you pick up Louise?” beaming. He explained, taking special care not to expose old Abe’s little artifice, by which he had gained a morning’s gossip with his darky friends. “You must spend the day with us,” said the old lady. “Louise will be down in a minute. She has only run upstairs to change her dress.” “And to read her letter,” he added. “Her letter?” “She had a letter from home,” he explained, and Mrs. Barry’s brow gloomed over. “A letter from that odious relative, the daughter of the actress! Oh, how I wish I could break her off from those pernicious influences!” she sighed. “Let me suggest a way,” cried Cecil Laurens, with sparkling eyes. “So soon?” she thought, triumphantly; but her ardor was a little dampened when he continued: “You know I return to Europe in a few weeks. Let me take your niece with me and place her at school with my sisters.” She uttered a little gasp of dismay, and presently cried out: “At school--Louise at school! What nonsense, Cecil! Why, she finished lessons long ago. She is plenty old enough to be married.” And a minute’s silence ensued. There was a lurking smile on Cecil’s faultless face, and he thought within himself: “She may be old enough, but she is certainly not wise enough. I would as soon think of marrying a baby.” But feeling himself snubbed, he did not voice these sentiments aloud. He said, simply: “I forgot her age. She seems so very young--as young as my school-girl sisters.” “She lacks training. Her aunt Lucy has spoiled her, that is why she seems so childish,” she replied, apologetically. “So I thought. That is why I suggested a little more polish, such as can only be acquired in a first-class school,” he replied. “But, dear Mrs. Barry, please do not think me meddlesome. It was a hasty thought spoken out too freely.” “My dear Cecil! I am sure I thank you for expressing such an interest in Louise. It is very flattering to her, coming from _you_,” Mrs. Barry said, pointedly, and then she took the young man into her confidence and told him of her wish to keep her niece at Ferndale, and so separate her from her objectionable step-sister, “that theater child.” Cecil Laurens applauded her resolve warmly, although he felt somewhat like a traitor to the girl who had so frankly confided to him her honest dislike of Ferndale. “Next week I shall take her to the White Sulphur Springs,” she said. “I mean to give her such a round of gayety that she will not longer regret her humdrum home in Staunton.” And again Cecil Laurens applauded this resolve. He had as deeply grained a prejudice against “that theater child” as had old Mrs. Barry herself, and desired just as ardently to keep Louise at Ferndale. “I shall go to the White for a week myself just as soon as I get my business here over,” he said, and Mrs. Barry replied that she was very glad. It would be pleasanter for her and Louise having an old friend there. But when this confidential conversation was over, Mrs. Barry began to think that her niece stayed upstairs a long time. She sent Ginny Ann to call her down. Ten, then fifteen minutes elapsed before Ginny Ann reappeared with the announcement: “I done argyfied my breff mos’ away, mistis, but I carn’t budge dat chile! She done laid herseff down on dat flure, a-cryin’ and a-cryin’ her bressid eyes out!” CHAPTER X. Mrs. Barry rose with as much haste as her age and infirmities would permit, and excusing herself to Cecil Laurens, went upstairs after her obdurate niece. The young man, left alone, said to himself: “Mrs. Everett has proved herself a wise woman and refused to let her niece leave Ferndale. I applaud her good sense.” And he did not alter his opinion even when Molly came down presently with red-rimmed eyes and a doleful expression that proved how deeply she had taken her disappointment to heart. Mrs. Barry did not come down with her, and she went out on the wide porch and sat down sulkily in a big rustic chair. Cecil Laurens followed her, and leaning his arms on the top of her chair, looked down into the pretty clouded face. “What did Aunt Lucy say?” he asked. Molly snapped out a vicious little “No!” “A wise woman,” said Cecil Laurens. Molly looked up at him with an angry gleam in the dark eyes. “Do you think so?” she asked in an odd tone, adding sharply: “Time will tell.” Then the bright eyes turned from him and wandered toward the grove of trees that inclosed the house. He saw her breast rise and fall quickly, and her little hands clinched themselves in silent anger. Plainly, Molly was in a passion. “Miss Barry, you puzzle me!” said Cecil Laurens. “Why are you so anxious to return to Staunton? Have you a lover there?” Molly glanced up, and a saucy smile broke through the gloom of her face. “Pray, is that any of your business, sir?” she demanded, pertly, and was amazed when he answered, promptly: “Yes.” “But how?” curiously. “Forewarned is forearmed. I did not want to fall in love with you myself if there were any prior claim on you,” he replied, coolly and teasingly. “I am not the least afraid you will commit such a folly,” she replied, carelessly. “If it were my step-sister, now--but it could never be _me_!” “Your step-sister!” with a frown. “That would be impossible, you know. But tell me why you think so.” “Oh, she is dignified like the Barrys, and has such an odd, charming style of beauty--yellow hair and yellow eyes.” “Like a tigress,” said Cecil Laurens, and Molly started. “I never thought of it before, but she is like _that_,” she exclaimed. “She can be so sweet and purring, yet all the time you seem to feel that she has cruel claws hidden under her furred paws. She can be so hard, too--oh, you should see the letter she wrote me!” “And you think I could fall in love with such a tiger-cat as you describe. Thank you,” he said, with frank pique. “But perhaps you would not _feel_ that the claws were there as I _do_,” her large eyes dilating with earnestness. “You would see only that odd beauty and that grand air.” “Copied from the theater,” he said, and Molly flushed hotly. “Well, copied from the stage if you will,” she replied, curtly. “But all the same you would admire her, I am sure.” “I should not,” he replied with decision, and Molly half laughed, then relapsed into seriousness and wrath again. “Oh, how mean she was in that letter today! What a dig she gave me with her vicious claws! She ought to have known me better--ought to have been afraid--” she paused and bit her lips. “What do you mean?” he asked, curiously, and a light of anger and resentment flashed all over the girlish face. “Never mind,” she said. “Never mind, but I mean to _pay her back_, that is all, and--no one can blame me now!” He was gratified at seeing her mind set against that odious step-sister. “Miss Barry, I am glad you have had your eyes opened to the worthlessness of that girl,” he said, earnestly. “Her mother was an adventuress who inveigled your father into a low marriage that alienated from him all his friends and relatives. It is most fortunate for you that Mrs. Barry relented after his death and decided to make you her heiress.” “Oh, yes, very fortunate,” said Molly, but it distressed him to notice that her tone was distinctly sarcastic, and that she clinched her little fists again as if in a secret fury. “I suppose,” he went on, excitedly, “that the girl is envious of your good fortune, hence her disagreeable letter to you.” “Of course,” agreed Molly. “Do not let her rancor trouble you. She is beneath the notice of a Barry. Her spleen is not worth paying back,” Cecil said. “Oh, yes, it is, and I propose to pay her interest on the debt,” she replied, angrily, and for the present he saw that it would be useless to oppose her will. He decided to humor her whim. “By all means pay her back then, and perhaps I can help you with the interest,” he said, lightly. “Thank you; I was counting on your assistance,” she replied, with a strange smile, and in a tone of decided earnest. The dark eyes met his with a look of triumph he could not understand. “What can I do to help you to your vengeance?” he asked, but she shook her head and made no reply. CHAPTER XI. Days came and went, and Cecil Laurens was a daily visitor at Ferndale, filled with the laudable desire to please his old friend, Mrs. Barry, by making time pass pleasantly for her niece. At least, that was the reason he assigned to himself when he set out every morning for a canter with Molly over the rough mountain roads, in the golden June weather. If any one had told him that he was taking an unusual interest in the madcap girl whose acquaintance he had made in such a ludicrous manner, he would have been indignant at the imputation. He would have told you, as his family and friends said of him, that he was not susceptible, not a marrying man. In his thirty years of life he had met many beautiful and charming women, had “Knelt at many a shrine, Yet laid the heart on none.” So little had he cared for women that he had not, as many men have done, created an ideal woman in his mind; but if he had done so, she would not have resembled Molly Trueheart in the least; she would have been full of gracious ease and dignity: “A perfect creature, nobly planned, To warn, to comfort, and command, And yet a spirit still and bright, With something of an angel’s light.” Molly Trueheart did not come up to this ideal at all. She was a merry, willful little maid, reminding one of April weather with her alternations from frowns to smiles, and from laughter to tears. Cecil Laurens never suspected her of a bit of sentiment until one day when he came upon her unexpectedly, and found her reading Mrs. Browning with the page open at “Lady Geraldine’s Courtship.” “You read poetry, then? I am surprised,” he said. Molly left her finger between the pages and looked up at him without a trace of surprise at his sudden coming. Perhaps she had seen or heard him. “You are surprised--why? Did you think I could not read?” she inquired flippantly. “Certainly not--but poetry! I thought you had no romance about you--only fun,” he rejoined. “You were mistaken. I am romantic. If I had not been I should never have come to Ferndale.” “I fail to see the romance of your coming here, Miss Barry.” “It is not necessary that you should see it,” with a twinkle of mirth in her eyes. “No,” he returned, piqued at the brusquerie of the retort. In a minute he added: “Since you confess to being romantic, perhaps you will read ‘Lady Geraldine’s Courtship’ aloud for me. It is just the scene for reading poetry--this grassy seat, these nodding ferns, overarching trees, sunshine, and all the rest of it.” “Yes, I will read it for you. That will be better than hearing you sneer at me,” said Molly. She let her stony, dark eyes meet his violet ones for a moment coolly, then dropped her gaze to the book. In a minute she began to read with a clear, pure enunciation and a faultless accuracy that amazed him. Throwing himself down on the velvety greensward by her side, he listened like one fascinated to the poet’s flowing numbers rendered with faultless accuracy by Molly’s fresh, young voice. Who does not know the story of “Lady Geraldine’s Courtship”?--the story of the poor poet’s love for a lovely, noble lady who trampled under her dainty feet the prejudices of pride and rank and wedded the young genius, her lover? Molly’s eloquent voice gave full value to the story, rose in passion, sank in pathos, thrilled and trembled alternately, while her eyes sparkled or melted to tears in sympathy. Cecil Laurens, the handsome, gifted man of the world, indolent, self-conceited, proud, gazed and listened in unfeigned astonishment. “The little witch has been teasing me all this while. She is not the little ignoramus and madcap I believed her at first. She has been well-educated, her voice is thoroughly trained. No wonder she laughed when I wanted her to go to school again,” he said to himself, but instead of being angry with her, he experienced pleasure in finding out that she had culture he had not dreamed she possessed. The long poem came to an end at last and Molly folded her small hands together over the page. Her listener started up to a sitting posture. “Thank you, for the pleasure you have given me,” he said, earnestly. “It is indeed a grand poem.” “I scarcely expected you to say so,” she retorted, meaningly. “I thought you were too proud. How can you reconcile yourself to the idea of the Lady Geraldine marrying so far beneath her in station--you who are always taking for a text my poor father’s _mésalliance_?” “This case was different--the poet’s genius leveled the barrier between him and the earl’s daughter--raised him to her rank,” he replied. “My--step-mother--had genius. She was a star of the dramatic stage. She gave up a brilliant career to marry the man she loved, yet you condemn her as unworthy,” Molly said, excitedly, with flashing eyes. He frowned. “Why will you always drag _that_ into the conversation? You have owned of your own accord that that woman’s daughter was sly and disagreeable--a real tiger-cat!” he exclaimed. “Ah, I see that poetic license is not to be carried into real life,” she replied, falling from seriousness into levity. Then, gayly: “And are you sure, quite sure, that you should not fall in love with golden hair and golden eyes, and _l’air noble_?” “Quite sure,” he replied, with disdain. She laughed, and there was something hidden in the laugh that vexed him; but she said, politely enough, the next moment: “Now you will read to me, will you not?” “Pardon me; I would rather talk to you. When are you going to the White?” But he had taken the book from her hands, and was turning the leaves while he spoke. Molly answered, reluctantly: “I--don’t know. Aunt Thalia said something about--about waiting until you got ready.” “How kind! I shall be delighted. I can go in about three days, I should say. But you don’t look very glad at the thought of my company.” “I would as soon excuse you,” she replied, with her usual frankness. He frowned, but would not answer, and in a minute began to read aloud, as it seemed, at random: “‘She was not as pretty as women I know, And yet all your best made of sunshine and snow Drop to shade, melt to naught in the long-trodden ways, While she’s still remembered on warm and cold days, My Kate.’ “There,” he said, looking down at her with a half smile, “those words seem to have been written of you, you provoking child! Do you know that when I’m away from you my thoughts always return to you, and that the hard things you say to me hurt me worse than when first uttered? I resolve firmly not to go near you again, but ‘a spirit in my feet’ brings me back to Ferndale the next day. What have you done to me, Miss Willy Whisk, as old Betsy calls you, to make me your abject slave? I certainly,” laughing, “do not approve of you, so I can not have lost my heart to you.” “Heaven forbid!” Molly Trueheart exclaimed, starting to her feet in such dismay that he said, hastily: “Pray do not be alarmed. You could not suppose I really meant it!” “Of course not. It would be the worst possible taste,” she returned sarcastically, and Cecil Laurens, angered out of his usual good breeding, cried out, sharply: “I agree with you, Miss Barry!” That was enough. Molly’s eyes blazed upon him in such wrath that they almost withered him. She snatched her book rudely from his hand, and stalked away with the pace of a tragedy queen. Left alone thus suddenly under the big tree, Mr. Laurens watched Molly’s white garments flutter into the big porch, then he muttered something under his breath not very complimentary to his tormentor, remounted his horse, which was waiting under a tree, and rode home. The next day he stayed away from Ferndale, and the next day he sent his old friend a short note saying that he had been so busy he had no time to call, and found that unexpected business would take him into Lewisburg for several days. He hoped she would not wait for him any longer, as it might not be possible for him to go to the White at all. With a very sober face Mrs. Barry read this aloud to her niece, watching the guilty young face with covert eyes. “Louise Barry, you have done something to Cecil,” she said, with conviction. But Molly protested loudly that she hadn’t said a word to Mr. Laurens. Then she went off to one of her wildest haunts by a secluded little mountain stream and flung herself down on the green bank to rest and think. She caught a glimpse of her pale face and heavy eyes in the clear stream, and started in surprise. “Molly Trueheart, is that you looking so pale and big-eyed? What is the matter with you, silly? It is the best thing that ever happened. You ought to thank your lucky stars that you got rid of him so soon, the hateful wretch!” And then very inconsistently she burst into a storm of angry tears. CHAPTER XII. Mrs. Barry and her niece had been at the White two weeks, when Cecil Laurens made his appearance quite unexpectedly one evening, and explained to Mrs. Barry that as he was going away soon he had come over to bid her good-bye. To Molly he was very stiff and formal indeed, although he could almost have sworn that a sudden light of joy leaped into her eyes at his abrupt approach--a light instantly veiled beneath the fringe of her dark lashes, and her voice was distinctly careless as she gave him a brief greeting and went away from her aunt’s side with her partner in the dance. For Molly had become in the weeks of her sojourn here one of the belles of the place, and was enjoying her prestige with all the ardor of youth and a light heart. No one was more sought in the dance than she, no one had more bouquets and invitations, and she would not have owned to herself that pique lay at the bottom of her gayety. Her girlish pride had been cruelly wounded by Cecil Laurens’ sarcastic words, and a strange longing came over her to know if they were really true. “Would it indeed be such poor taste for any one to love _me_?” she asked herself, soberly; and the gravity of the thought turned the child into a woman. She threw aside the carelessness that had distinguished her, and put on what she called grown-up ways. As she had a good education, and a high order of intellect, she succeeded in making the change very striking and charming, and in less than two weeks disproved the truth of the ungallant Cecil’s assertion. On his part, he was astonished when, after two weeks of sulky exile, he saw her again, the cynosure of all eyes at this famous resort of fashion, bright, beautiful, and admired, as he had not believed it possible for any one to admire the will-o’-the-wisp creature, as she had always seemed to him, even while she drew him to her side by a charm which he would not understand. “But she is beautiful, certainly, and very brilliant here--most unlike the forlorn creature that Hero threw over his head that night at my feet,” he said to himself with a smile, followed by a frown--the smile for the ludicrousness of the adventure, and the frown for the secret that lay behind that night’s “lark,” as she called it--the escapade so carefully hidden from her aunt. “I had no right to keep it hidden from my old friend. I wish I had not promised to do so,” he thought, vexed at the sight of Molly gliding like a fairy down the long ball-room in the arms of as handsome a partner as ever made maiden’s heart throb faster in the gay waltz. Mrs. Barry saw his eyes following the light form, and said with a touch of pride: “Louise is a graceful waltzer?” “Yes,” he answered, then a little testily: “But I do not approve of indiscriminate waltzing for young ladies.” “No?” said Mrs. Barry, turning her inquisitive glasses on his rather moody face. After a minute’s study of its grave lines, she added: “I can not say that I think it matters except in the case of engaged girls. Of course a betrothed lover would have a right to object, but then you know Louise is free.” Did he fancy it, or was there really a pointed significance in her tone? He rejoined half-resentfully: “Are you sure she is free, and that she did not leave a lover behind her in Staunton?” She started, and looked at him keenly, then she laughed: “Cecil, you actually frightened me for a moment; but now you make me laugh,” she said, gayly, with a laugh that would have been merry, only that it was so cracked with age. “My dear boy, there is no lover in Staunton in the case. The child never thought of a lover until she saw you. But she has offended you. I believed it all the while, now I am sure of it. You are jealous.” “You are mistaken,” Cecil cried, furiously. Then he shut his lips tightly. He did not like to contradict his old friend, but it was ridiculous, this fancy she entertained. Jealous! He would have to be in love first, and the idea of loving Louise Barry was--absurd. “Yes, it is absurd! A spoiled baby in spite of her twenty-five years, with the audacious frankness of youth so freely indulged that it degenerates into lack of manners. Mrs. Barry must be losing her mind, indeed!” he exclaimed to himself, deciding that he would certainly go in the morning. But he did not do so. Something held him back, something kept him always in the vicinity of the girl he fancied he disliked more than ever now, for she seemed bent on keeping up their feud. She was so cool, so reserved, so dignified, taking as she said to herself grimly “a leaf out of his own book.” So apparently indifferent was she that many times when he lingered near her she remained in ignorance of his proximity, so that day when she thought herself alone for a minute with a charming novel, Cecil was quite close to her swinging in a luxurious hammock hung between two trees, his lazy, sleepy glance resting on the lovely, spirited face as it bent over the book. “Poor Madelon!” she sighed, referring to the heroine, and then there came a sudden interruption. A man had come straight across the greensward toward her--a young man with a grave, sad face, handsome but rather weak, while his attire, partaking wholly of the shabby genteel, proclaimed that he was certainly not a favorite of fortune. Cecil Laurens saw this man going toward Molly with a bright, eager light in his eyes, and he was filled with indignant wonder. “Does Miss Barry know that shabby man? Surely not,” he thought, and leaned forward to watch with jealous eyes. Molly was so intent on her reading that she heard and saw nothing until a shadow fell on her book as the man stopped by her side. She glanced up, and the face that Cecil was watching grew radiant with surprise and pleasure. “Johnny!” she exclaimed, and held out her little hand. He took it, clasped it tightly a moment, and Cecil heard him murmur, hoarsely: “How good you are! You never fail one! But I had no right to expect a welcome. It is the old story--no work yet, and no money to make a home for my darling! But I heard you all were here, and I could not keep from coming for just one sight of my cruel darling’s face, although I feared her reproaches. Where is--” “Hush-h-h!” Molly whispered, pinching his arm severely; “some one may hear us from the cottage yonder. Come this way, Johnny, toward the trees.” They moved away, and Cecil Laurens’ face grew dark and gloomy. “The impecunious lover has come upon the scene!” he muttered, with angry sarcasm. CHAPTER XIII. Molly Trueheart walked under the trees with that mysterious “Johnny” for a long half hour. While Cecil Laurens in the hammock raved and fretted against the little fraud, as he began to call her in his thoughts. “Suppose I go and bring her aunt upon the scene?” he thought, with grim resentment. Then he mentally shook himself. “Cecil Laurens, you ought to be ashamed of yourself! Where is your honor that you can be led away like this by petty spite? Let the girl alone. This is no business of yours!” A few minutes later Molly and her good-looking, shabby companion came back to the rustic seat, still unobservant of the hammock and its occupant. By leaning forward a little he could look into both faces, and he noticed that Molly’s was pale and annoyed, the man’s eager and excited. “You must not come here again,” he heard her say. “It would not be safe. And you must not go after _her_. She would be furious if you interfered with her plans. Better keep quiet for awhile. I will help you all I can, Johnny,” with a sob, “but you know how little I can do.” “You are an angel,” said the man, tenderly. “If she were only you, there would be no trouble. My dear, you’ll write to me?” “Yes, yes, only do keep quiet and not go after _her_, or you’ll spoil everything! I’ll write to you at the old address! Johnny, I’m sorry for you from my heart, but I’m under her thumb as well as you. We must both have patience. Good-bye, now, some one will be coming.” “Good-bye, dear,” said the man, sadly, and Cecil saw him clasp her little rosy fingers tightly in his broad palm. “God bless you, little one. I shall look for a letter soon. Write me everything about _her_, and I’ll _try_ to stay away, hard as it seems!” He sighed and turned away, going straight across the lawn to the broad gates that led to the railroad. There was something pathetic in his worn, shabby garments and slow, dejected pace in that scene of wealth and gayety, and Cecil would have been touched only for that fierce pain tugging at his heart. But he turned his eyes away from the man back to Molly, who had dropped down on her seat and was gazing after him with sad, wet eyes. He heard her murmur passionately, “It is a shame!” then she dropped her face in her hands and sobs shook her slender form. Cecil had seen Molly in many moods, but here was a new one, and it excited in him a strange feeling, that of pity mixed with a bitter resentment, as if he had suffered some personal wrong at her hands. After a minute, and still watching the sobbing girl, he began to analyze his emotions, and as a result the color flew hotly to his face and he muttered: “I have actually taken an undue and sentimental interest in this girl--pshaw, why mince matters? Through some unexplainable madness I have lost my heart to a madcap, and am suffering all the torments of jealousy because another man has a claim on her. Mrs. Barry was wiser than I thought, and is no doubt laughing in her sleeve this moment at my folly.” The flush deepened on his face, and he remained for some moments watching Molly in moody silence. It was a dangerous occupation for a man who had just found out that she was fatally fair, for Molly, as she crouched in a forlorn and drooping position on the hard bench, was a very tempting little specimen of femininity. The day was warm and she wore a dress of thin white mull, through whose transparent texture her plump arms and shoulders gleamed rosy-white. Her hat had fallen off, and the loose dark curls half confined by a scarlet ribbon, drooped against the graceful neck, and contrasted with the warm pink of a round cheek nestled in a dainty hand. On this picture of beauty in distress fell pretty flecks of sunlight from between the green boughs overhead, bringing out glints of brightness from the wavy curls, that in the shade always looked so dark and rich, and Cecil remembered that there were golden lights in her eyes, too, when she was pleased and happy. Then he caught himself up again with a jerk. “Happy! How can she ever be happy again with that tramp of a lover on her mind?” angrily. Something--he scarce knew what, but most probably that sullen misery that was so new, so bitter, and so humiliating--drove him to her side. Slipping noiselessly from the luxurious hammock he stole around the tree and sat down by her side, touching the bowed head lightly with his hand, and murmuring with uncontrollable fondness: “Louise!” Molly gave a great, frightened start and whirled around. “Oh, it’s you, Cecil Laurens, is it? Well, then, what do you want?” she demanded, wrathfully, angered because he had caught her in distress. For once he was not angered at her sharp retort. He comprehended now something of what she was enduring, and made patient allowance for her pain. “Do not be angry, Louise. I want nothing only to tell you how sorry I am for you, and how gladly I would help you in your trouble,” he said so gently that she stared at him in amazement, although she said brusquely: “Trouble! I have no trouble!” “Ah, Louise, you can not deceive me any longer. Look yonder! I was in that hammock just now and saw your companion, also heard some of his words!” “Spy!” she exclaimed indignantly, although she grew pale and trembled like the leaves on the tree above her head. Again he put a stern guard on himself, and would not resent her rudeness. “It is despair that makes her hard!” he thought, and answered gently: “I did not mean to be a spy, Louise, I was in the hammock when you came here, and presently _he_ came and spoke to you. I could not help hearing what was said until you walked away with him. But--do not look so frightened--I did not follow you!” He saw a gleam of palpable relief flash into the white face, and comprehended that she was glad he had not heard what was spoken in that walk under the trees. “But _I had heard enough_!” he said slowly, after a pause. “Ah, Louise, I was right when I told you that it was a lover who was drawing your heart back to your old home.” She looked at him pale and startled, but with mute defiance. “A--a--lover!” she echoed, wildly. “Now I suppose you will go and tell Aunt Thalia of your wonderful discovery!” in a tone of terrified entreaty. “Why will you wrong me so?” he cried, smarting under the lash of her injustice. “You know I did not betray you before?” “But--but--why do you meddle with me so?” she cried, with a bewildered air. “You are always finding out things--and--and always blaming me!” “No, no, child, I do not always blame you, I do not want to meddle--yet I--yet you--seem so ignorant, I ought to--to advise you. Will you listen to me kindly, Louise?” “Go on,” she answered, folding her hands in her lap and looking so like a martyr that he cried out hastily: “Do not look as if a big bear was going to eat you, Louise. I only want to tell you that it is not right to have secrets from your good aunt--to have a shabby lover whom you write to and meet by stealth. No good will come of such a clandestine affair.” “Heaven give me patience!” cried Molly indignantly. “Poor Johnny, to think of this rich man calling you shabby! But, Mr. Laurens, that was no meeting by stealth just now. If you heard his first words you must know that it was not an appointment.” “No, he came because he had heard you were here--that was the difference,” dryly. “But the first time I met you, you know--when Hero flung you over his head at my feet--perhaps you met him that night, perhaps--” “Perhaps you are a great simpleton, Cecil Laurens!” Molly cried, indignantly. “I did not meet him that night, nor any night. Morover, he is no lover of mine. I never had a lover in my life!” “You have one now!” Cecil Laurens said softly, but Molly did not comprehend. “I have not!” she declared angrily. “Poor Johnny came here because he thought that my step-sister was here. They have been engaged two years, and he can not get a salary large enough to support them, and Lou--I mean my sister Molly,” crimsoning, “is angry and wants to break it off. And I promised to beg her to make it up with the poor fellow, and to write to him, so there!” “That step-sister again! It is the first time I ever was glad to hear her name!” exclaimed Cecil, radiant. “Oh, Louise, how glad I am that he was her lover and not yours!” “What have you got to do with it any way?” she demanded pettishly. “I love you!” he replied, audaciously. CHAPTER XIV. The black eyes and the blue ones met for an instant, Cecil’s full of passion, Molly’s full of incredulous amazement, but her lover did not wait for her to utter a protest, he caught her little hands in both his own--and said eagerly: “Louise, darling, I owe you an apology for the unjust words I said to you that day at Ferndale. They were not true, for I love you as I hinted to you then, and it was pique at your rejoinder that made me blurt out those untruthful words. Will you forgive me, and let me love you?” He had never spoken such words to any woman before, but carried away by the strength of his newly discovered passion, they rushed from his lips eloquent with the heart’s emotion. He had a right to expect a serious reply, but to his horror, mortification, and distress, Molly blurted out a curt: “Nonsense!” Her elegant lover gave a gasp as if some one had thrown cold water over him, and a momentary anger struggled with the delicious emotion of love. He lifted his violet eyes to her face full of reproachful tenderness. “Louise!” he exclaimed. She hung her pretty head in bashful confusion. “You did not mean it!” she muttered, deprecatingly. “I did mean it. I do mean it. Do not coquette with me, Louise, when I am so much in earnest. You said just now you never had a lover. You have one now--will you reject him, or will you accept the heart he offers? Will you be my wife, little one?” He felt her trembling as he held her hands tightly in his, and dropping one, he placed his hand beneath her chin and lifted her face so that he might look into her eyes. To his surprise and joy they drooped bashfully, and the warm color rose over her face. “Louise, what are you going to say to me in return for my confession? Won’t you love me a little in return? Won’t you give me some hope?” Was this Cecil Laurens, the cold, the proud, the dignified, pleading to the girl he had disapproved of, the girl he had called such a baby? She looked at him in wonder and consternation. “Oh, what have I done?” she cried out in dismay. “You have bewitched me, I think,” her lover replied with his rarely beautiful smile. “Mr. Laurens, do you really mean it? I--I believed you disliked me, hated me,” she breathed in a low, half-tender tone, very different from her usual mocking one. “I mean it all, Louise. I love you passionately, and I have suffered torments in the last three weeks from pique and jealousy that I mistook for anger. Now, my dear, I have been very frank with you. Will you be as candid in return?” asked Cecil Laurens in a low, winning tone, and with a glorious smile. Certainly although he had learned his love so suddenly, he knew how to play the lover well. She trembled and drew back from him as he leaned toward her. All the sweet vivid color faded from her face, and her dark eyes sought the ground. “I believe you now, Mr. Laurens, although at first I thought you were jesting,” she said, and her voice was distinctly tremulous. “I--I--yes, I will be candid with you. I am--am--sorry--you--care for me--for--it--is--useless, hopeless!” “Hopeless, Louise? Are you sure?” he asked. “If you have no other lover, let me try to win you. Your heart is free?” “No, no, for I love some one else,” she said, desperately. He was very clever, this Cecil Laurens, and at that moment he read the heart of the simple girl as he had read his own as by a flash of light. Smilingly, and with a man’s masterful air, he returned: “It is my turn now to cry out nonsense, my darling, for I do not believe that my love is hopeless. I saw in your sweet, shy eyes just now a tenderness that belonged not to ‘some one else,’ but to me. Look up, Louise, and own that in these weeks while we seemed to be playing at cross purposes we were falling headlong into love!” She tried to deny it, but the usually pert little tongue faltered under his quizzical and tender gaze. “Let me alone!” she began frantically, but Cecil Laurens’ arms had slipped around her waist and he smothered the remonstrating words on her lips with a long, sweet, lingering, lover’s kiss--one that seemed to draw the girl’s pure soul from her body and merge it into his. Faint with the sweetness of this exquisite emotion, Molly rested passive in his clasp for a moment, then drawing back from him, sighed bitterly. “Oh, this is dreadful! Why did I ever come to Ferndale?” she exclaimed to herself, while Cecil Laurens’ eyes glowed upon her full of passionate love. Under their warmth, the girl hung her head bashfully, all her usual effrontery conquered by the thrilling consciousness of her love and the bitter pain she suffered in her secret knowledge of its folly. “Ah, if he but _knew_!” she thought with an inward shudder, and looking up at him with eyes full of pain, she said: “I did not try to make you love me, you must always remember that!” He laughed as he answered: “No, you did not court my love, dear, certainly. I never saw a rose so full of thorns as this one that I have won.” “You have not won me!” she cried with a frightened start, but the triumphant lover, sure of his prize, replied: “I do not think you will deny that your heart is mine, Louise, although I no more tried to win your love than you did mine. But this being so, the fact remains we were mutually strongly attracted to each other, so we must charge our union to the score of fate.” “A strange fate!” Molly muttered, but her lover, who saw nothing but perfection now, where a short while ago he found so much fault, answered fondly: “A very beneficent fate. Only think, we shall not only make ourselves happy by our marriage, but we shall please our families, who have been neighbors and intimates almost a century.” “I have not said I would marry you, Mr. Laurens!” she cried out, quickly, more and more frightened, but he only smiled at what seemed to him maidenly bashfulness. “Marriage naturally follows love like ours, dear,” he said, tenderly. “And, Louise, darling, I shall make you a very good husband. You will not find me such a bear as I have been these past weeks, when your coldness hurt my unconscious love and stung me to anger. You will be different, too, my pet, for our love will change our thoughts and our lives.” “Yes,” she murmured, faintly, for she knew far better than he the extent of that change, but just now she did not contradict him again. “What is the use? He will not listen,” she thought, feverishly. “I will let him love me while he is here and when he is gone I will write him very positively that I can not marry him.” Her love and his happy masterful air made a coward of her, and she was willing to put off the fatal declaration, feeling a guilty pleasure in basking in this sunshine to which she had no right, and from which she must soon steal away into the gloom of a life made sad by an unhappy love. For deep down in her heart Molly Trueheart knew already that this mutual love between her and Cecil Laurens was a catastrophe, not a blessing, as he believed it. She knew that she could never marry him, but her feeble declarations to that effect had been silenced by his objections, so she decided to filch from fate a few bitter-sweet hours before she parted forever from this splendid yet forbidden love. Afterward, when the storm-rains of despair beat on her defenseless head, and her heart ached on amid fiercest tortures, Molly looked back on this hour, the beginning of it all, with a great wonder at her weakness and cowardice. Why had she yielded even for an hour to this madness? Why had she let her love make her a craven and a coward? She laid all the blame upon herself in wonder and sorrow and repentance, too ignorant and unversed in the mysteries of life and nature to comprehend that it was not so much her honesty that had been at fault as that through her love her will-power had been dominated by the magnetic force of her lover. For grand, handsome, noble Cecil Laurens, although unconscious of his power, was possessed of a strong magnetism that subtly influenced all with whom he came in contact, and doubly attracted the susceptible girl whom he loved. She did not realize the power of this magnetic will any more than Cecil himself did, yet certainly it was more than half to blame for poor Molly Trueheart’s treachery. CHAPTER XV. All in a minute, as it seemed, he was putting on her first finger the splendid solitaire diamond from his own hand. “Will you wear this for an engagement ring, or shall I buy you a new one?” he asked. “I prefer this because you have worn it,” she answered, frankly, and blushing very much, at which Cecil was delighted. To herself she said, sadly: “That is the truth, but there is another reason still for my preference. I must not put him to the expense of a new ring, for this will do for the few days that I shall be able to keep up the farce of an engagement.” She sat silent, twisting the costly gem uneasily about her finger, when suddenly she saw coming toward her across the lawn Mrs. Barry, attended by Agnes Walker, her maid. The sight roused Molly from the dream of bliss into which she was falling. She pulled the ring from her finger. “Here, take it back; I--I can’t marry you. Don’t tell Aunt Thalia, please,” she faltered, desperately. Cecil took the ring and her hand with it, and pushed the jewel back on the slim, rosy finger. “My darling, what a bashful little goose you are!” he returned, laughingly; and just then Mrs. Barry came up and found him holding the little hand tightly in his own. “Louise, I was so uneasy about your long absence, I took Agnes and came to hunt you; but if I had known that Cecil was with you, I should not have been alarmed,” she said. Molly muttered something incoherently, and tried to wrest her hand from its captor, but Cecil held it up triumphantly before Mrs. Barry, who laughed in glee as she caught the glitter of the diamond. “Engaged!” she exclaimed, gladly. “Yes,” he replied, jubilantly. “Will you give us your blessing, Aunt Thalia?” “With all my heart,” replied the old woman. “Louise, do not look so bashful and frightened, my dear, for I am very much pleased at your choice;” and she actually kissed the little bit of white forehead that was visible above the arm with which Molly had hidden her face. Agnes Walker, too, looked very proud and pleased, and uttered a few words of congratulation that would have delighted Molly if this had not been, as she said to herself, “all a dreadful sham.” She sat like one in a dream, listening to Mrs. Barry’s cracked voice in its complacent chatter. “Of course you will not go abroad so soon now, Cecil?” “I am afraid I ought to go. Mother and father will expect me, and I promised to go as soon as I had attended to that business. But--it will be hard to go now. I have a bright idea. Can not you and Louise go with me?” Molly’s heart leaped wildly, then calmed again as Mrs. Barry shook her head. “I am too old to cross the sea again. I want to die in my native land,” she said. “Louise, then--with a maid, of course?” he said, but again the old woman shook her head. “I’m afraid it would not be exactly proper then,” she replied. “Then I shall write to my folks that I shall delay my return until my bride is ready to accompany me,” he replied, with a tender smile at Molly, who replied, in a fright: “No, no, I’m too young yet.” “Nonsense!” said Mrs. Barry, sharply. “Why, Louise Barry, in _my_ young days a girl of five-and-twenty was considered an old maid, and here you are talking of being too young. Don’t mind her, Cecil. I’ll order her wedding things at once, and she shall be ready as soon as you wish.” “Thank you, Mrs. Barry!” exclaimed the prospective bridegroom, radiant. But Molly muttered, frantically: “I know Aunt Lucy will not be willing!” “Lucy Everett has nothing to do with it. I shall not ask her advice, nor Cecil her consent. If you love Cecil, there is no more to do but to marry him and settle down,” proclaimed Mrs. Barry with the air of an autocrat, and she added, after a minute, sharply: “I don’t think I shall even invite Lucy Everett to the wedding, for she would want to bring that Trueheart girl, and _she_ shall never with _my_ consent cross the threshold of a Barry!” “As for the wedding things, don’t they order them always from Paris? Then, what more will Louise need but a traveling-dress, since we will go straight to Europe on our wedding-tour. She can get all the dresses she wants, then,” said Cecil Laurens, eagerly. “That is true,” said the old lady, adding slyly: “What a hurry you are in all at once, Cecil!” He flushed and laughed, then said, with a fond glance at Molly: “I am in a hurry for my happiness; but then you know, Mrs. Barry, I have been a spoiled boy always, and never had patience enough to wait for anything I wanted!” “You never _had_ to wait, being one of Fortune’s favorites, always!” she replied, indulgently. And Molly thought, with a hushed sigh: “He will hate me one day, because he will meet his first disappointment through me!” Mrs. Barry believed in taking time by the forelock, and, unknown to the young _fiancé_, she sent an order that very day to New York--an order for a _recherché_ wedding-dress, a traveling costume in all its details, several dresses besides, comprising walking, dinner, and ball dresses, hats and bonnets _ad. lib._, and a dozen outfits of embroidered lawn and linen underwear. These articles were to be furnished within three weeks. “They will be as much as she will need until she gets to Paris. I will give her a large check to take with her for a _trousseau_ there. I can afford to be generous as all my money will go to her some day, and as she is marrying so well,” said the old lady to Agnes Walker, feeling very complacent over the happy turn events had taken. She was very fond of the bride-elect from that time forward, and often thought remorsefully of the time when she had locked the girl into the garret. Cecil Laurens was greatly altered, too, for the better, by his love. He ceased to see a single fault in the gay, young girl whom he had at first condemned. He lavished the whole wealth of his heart upon her, and he could not fail to see through all her shyness that his love was fully returned. Molly had not known herself capable of such depths of passion as her lover’s devotion roused in her breast. She gave herself up with feverish delight to the happiness of the flying weeks, salving her conscience with the thought that her deception would soon be over--that at the very last she would break off with him even though he would go away from her hating her memory forever. But day by day the bonds of love grew stronger. That which she thought but a garland of roses strengthened into a chain that held her fast. A mad love made the brave, honest little girl a traitor. The day that had been set for her marriage dawned, yet she had never spoken the words that were to save Cecil Laurens from wedding a deceiver. “For I could not break it off without telling him the truth, and _that_ would ruin Louise. And how could I part with _him_ now?” she would sigh to herself when alone, and gradually her love and his made a bond that she could not break through. “I should die if I were parted from him now,” she sighed. “Of course I know that he would find me out some day, and then I should lose him forever. But I should have a little happiness first. It would not be so terrible to die of grief, having had my day first.” Then Molly would sob bitterly until she fell asleep upon her tearwet pillow. Truly the love to which she clung so desperately was not all unalloyed pleasure, but perhaps its element of uncertainty made it all the more precious. They went back to Ferndale, and Mrs. Barry, in the seventh heaven of delight, made preparations on a grand scale for a real old-fashioned country wedding. Invitations were sent out far and near to the friends of the family. A dozen cooks took possession of the kitchen and dining-room. Flowers were ordered from a New York florist. The old lady declared that her niece’s wedding should be the grandest that ever took place in Greenbrier County. * * * * * It was. A hundred guests danced at Molly Trueheart’s wedding with Cecil Laurens. Ferndale did not look like the “poky old hole” she had called it two months ago. By the aid of lights and flowers and music it was temporarily transformed into fairy-land. The trees were illuminated by picturesque Chinese lanterns. The old house in every corner was as bright as day, and the light glowed resplendently on the trailing lengths of Molly’s white satin bridal-dress as she came down the wide stairway almost an hour later than the time appointed, for at the very last her conscience had stung her so cruelly that she had hidden herself in a closet, from which she was dragged forth after vigilant search by her almost distracted aunt. “Louise Barry, what do you mean by such a caper? You’ve given me such a fright as I never had in my life! I’ve a mind to give you a good shaking!” she vociferated, excitedly, and Molly whimpered, faintly: “Please forgive me, Aunt Thalia. I--I was so frightened, I thought I’d rather not--” “Rather not _what_?” sharply. “Not--get--married,” sighed the delinquent, and Mrs. Barry burst out laughing. “What under the heavens makes girls so silly when they are going to be married?” she cried, and just then one of the bridesmaids tapped at the door. “Is the bride ready yet? It’s almost an hour past the time, and Mr. Laurens sent me to ask--” she began, but Mrs. Barry cut the sentence short by opening wide the door. “She’s ready. Tell the bridesmaids to come in,” she said; and then she whispered in Molly’s ear: “Behave yourself like a little lady now, and I’ll never tell Cecil that you were such a baby as to hide in the closet because you were afraid to have a husband.” “I’ll behave,” Molly answered, desperately; and so well did she keep her promise that Mrs. Barry had no occasion to tell her husband of that hour in which Molly’s good angel had been pleading for the right. CHAPTER XVI. Cecil was waiting at the foot of the stairs, so eager, so happy, so grand looking in his wedding garments, that all her regrets vanished in passionate love and admiration. She clung to his arm, sighing to herself: “Oh, Heaven grant that he may never, never find me out!” Five minutes more and the ring was on her finger, the marriage vows had passed her lips, and Cecil Laurens’ lips had called her wife. She stood in the middle of the room, pale, but with a quiet dignity, receiving the congratulations of the guests. Suddenly there was a stir and bustle at the door where the servants were congregated, looking on at the brilliant scene. A shabby young man, ghastly pale, with eyes of fire blazing out of his weak, good-looking face, pushed through the crowd of guests, crying out, fiercely: “The bride--let me see the bride!” A wild hubbub arose as he advanced, for in the hand that hung down at his side a score of eyes had caught the gleam of a knife. Insane fury flashed from his eyes as he advanced upon the beautiful bride. Her eyes dilated with terror, her face waxed ghastly as she faced him, but not a sound came from her pallid, parted lips. “Ha! ha!” the intruder cried with a horrible laugh as he stopped so close to her that his hot breath fanned her brow, while his eyes fairly devoured her terrified face. Then-- All in an instant, and as suddenly as he had rushed upon her, the infuriated man fell back a pace and his hand dropped to his side, while the glare of his eyes changed to a stupid stare. “You!” he muttered, “_you!_” and the murderous knife fell from his hand upon the floor. Some one shrieked aloud: “A madman! Take him away!” The men rushed upon him and dragged him from the room. Molly clung sobbing to her new-made husband. “Oh, Cecil,” she whispered, “he is not mad. It is John Keith, my sister’s lover. He has made some strange mistake, I am sure! He must have thought it was his own sweetheart being married instead of me! Oh, let me go and speak to him, poor tortured Johnny!” A shout came back from the hall. The captive had broken loose and escaped into the darkness of the night. “I am so glad!” sighed Molly, with infinite relief. And Cecil Laurens looked down at her with grave eyes. “Louise, are you sure the man is not an old lover of yours?” he asked in a tone divided between jest and earnest. “I have never had a lover but you!” she replied, fondly, and lifting her dark eyes to his face that he might read the love written there. “Darling!” he whispered, rapturously, as he led her to a seat. Every one had run out into the hall to look after the maniac, and they were for a moment alone. Molly whispered, anxiously: “Dear Cecil, don’t you pity that poor fellow? He is not rich like you, and he can not find work enough to support a wife! She is growing tired of waiting, and he will lose her, unless something happens in his favor. You will help him, Cecil? You’ll find him some work?” So earnest was the plaint that tears rushed into the dark eyes, and Cecil, moved to sympathy, answered ardently: “I believe you are an angel, Louise, as I once heard that unlucky fellow call you. Certainly, I’ll try to find him some work; but I doubt if I’ll be doing him a good turn helping him to marry selfish Molly Trueheart. And then, you know, we leave tomorrow on our wedding-tour, and shall not know where to find him, as he has run away.” “I know where to write to him. I have his address; and, oh, Cecil, I shall love you more than ever for _this_!” Molly cried, impetuously. “Thanks, my little love. With that reward in view, I shall strive earnestly to set your forlorn friend up in business before we leave tomorrow,” Cecil Laurens replied, gayly, but tenderly and earnestly. CHAPTER XVII. Molly crossed with her noble, handsome husband the beautiful ocean of which she had dreamed, and the skies seemed to smile on the fair young bride, for the weather was beautiful throughout, and the water so smooth and calm that many of the passengers escaped even a touch of seasickness. In ten days they were in London, where the bride met her new relatives, Cecil’s parents, and two school-girl sisters. When she went to Paris she met there Doctor Charlie Laurens, Cecil’s younger brother, who was studying at the medical school in that gay city. All of these new friends Molly found very agreeable people, who were disposed to make a special pet of Cecil’s wife, and who were pleased and happy as he knew they would be because he had married a Barry. They dwelt on this latter fact so much that it was actual torture to Molly’s guilty soul. “Oh, what will they say if they ever find me out?” she sighed often to herself, and her sin weighed upon her soul so heavily that even Cecil’s devotion fell short of making her happy. There kept whispering in her ear the still, small voice of conscience, and sometimes she would sob bitterly when alone in blind terror of the future, when she should be found out in her sin. But life went on very brightly for many months in a whirl of gayety and pleasure. Mrs. Laurens, who was fond of society, managed to have her beautiful daughter-in-law presented at court, and after that invitations rained upon the beautiful couple. London lavished admiration on the lovely American bride, and Molly enjoyed it all with a feverish, fearful pleasure, knowing that at any moment her house of cards might tumble to pieces. Mrs. Barry wrote her occasional letters from Ferndale, and in one of them she said that she had written to Lucy Everett all about her niece’s grand marriage and tour to Europe. She added that they had never answered the letter, by which she guessed that she and that Trueheart girl were too angry and envious to reply. “They know it all now--oh, what will they do?” the little fraud gasped in a fright, but months went on and there came no signs from the real Louise Barry. “They do not care about it, or they are afraid to speak as long as old Mrs. Barry lives,” the girl concluded at last, gladly, and many were the prayers she sent up to Heaven for the old lady’s long life. “But will Heaven listen to such a sinner?” she would often gravely exclaim at the close of these petitions. In the spring following her marriage she met, during the London season, Sir Edward Trueheart, with his wife and daughter, some country people who had come up to the city to enjoy the pleasures of the gay season, and were residing at their town house in Park Lane. It was their name that attracted Molly at first, and then they began to win upon her by a subtle charm that she could not explain. The cross old baronet and his faded, sad old wife, with their handsome, rather elderly daughter, all took to the young American bride with pleased interest, as she did to them. It was a mutual attraction. Miss Trueheart, the daughter, was a tall, handsome brunette, several years past thirty; but she had many admirers, and among them one whom it was believed she favored; but he knew, as did all the rest, that Madelon Trueheart had declared she would never marry as long as her mother lived. Molly felt sorry for that pale, sad Lady Trueheart, but sorrier still for Lord Westerly, Madelon’s faithful lover, who had loved her so long and vainly. She wanted these two to be happy, as she was with her adored Cecil. “Only, she would be happier still with her husband, for no hidden barrier would lie between them,” she sighed to herself. It was odd what a close intimacy grew up between the bride of seventeen and the woman of thirty-three. They managed to be together very often, and Molly went several times a week to the house in Park Lane, and had the _entrée_ of Miss Trueheart’s _boudoir_, and even her dressing-room; so at last she felt bold enough to keep a promise she had made Lord Westerly, to plead his cause with his obdurate fair one. “We have been lovers for ten years, Mrs. Laurens, and my patience is almost exhausted,” he said. “I have told Madelon that she might be with her mother most of the time, but she seems to think nothing but the sacrifice of her whole life will satisfy her parents.” “It looks hard,” said cordial Molly, with misty eyes. “I’ll speak to her for you, Lord Westerly.” “Heaven bless you, you good little soul!” exclaimed his lordship, to whose forty years Molly seemed nothing but a child. So Cecil’s carriage rolled down Park Lane one day and a vision of beauty stepped therefrom, and held up her rosy lips for Cecil’s parting kiss, careless of the coachman’s stare and the footman’s grin. “Bye-bye, Cecil; call for me in an hour,” she said, smiling, and after waiting until she had entered the house, he went away. The baronet was out, and Lady Trueheart was shut up with her maid and a headache. Molly went at once to Miss Trueheart’s _boudoir_ and happily found her alone. “Now is my chance!” thought the lovely young matron. She brought the conversation cleverly around to Lord Westerly, talked of his manly worth, his good looks, his ample fortune: then she startled her friend by crying out, abruptly: “Oh, Miss Trueheart, why don’t you marry this good man and put him out of his pain?” No one had ever arraigned Madelon Trueheart like this before, and at first she was a little constrained and stately in her answers. “I have told Lord Westerly long ago that it was useless waiting for me, and that he would do better to love some woman who was free to leave her mother and marry.” “But, dear Miss Trueheart, daughters do leave their mothers and marry,” remonstrated Molly. “I shall never leave mine!” said Miss Trueheart, firmly. “She has her husband, even if you should leave her, and he ought to be sufficient comfort if she lost all else!” “But he is not, Mrs. Laurens, for he needs me almost as much as she does. My father, although he seems so cold and cross and sarcastic is in reality almost near being broken-hearted as my mother. But, dear Mrs. Laurens, how much surprised you look. Has no one told you of our trouble?” “Trouble?” Molly stammered. “I should have said bereavement,” said Madelon Trueheart, tears softening the glitter of her cold, dark eyes, and Molly exclaimed, tenderly: “Forgive me, I have heard nothing.” “Then I must tell you, for I do not like for you to think that my parents are selfish, and that I am cruel to the man I love.” “Forgive me for interfering. I did not know there was anything serious behind your refusal to marry.” “Listen,” said Madelon, gently, “I am not angry with you for interfering. You did not know what others do. Dear Mrs. Laurens, my parents had two children once, a son and daughter. Their son, my senior by several years, died in the prime of youth, and it almost broke their hearts.” “Died in his youth--oh, how sad!” Tears that had been gathering on Molly’s lashes rolled down her cheeks. “That was not the saddest part of it,” said Madelon Trueheart. “My dear, he was dead to us long before the coffin lid covered his handsome face from the sight of men. He offended my father and was disinherited and driven from home because he contracted a _mésalliance_.” “A _mésalliance_,” Molly faltered, with a half sob that this time was for herself, not Madelon Trueheart’s dead brother. “Yes,” answered Madelon, sadly. “He was traveling in America and in New York he fell in love with a pretty actress. He married her and sent a letter to tell us what he had done. Father cursed his only son and forbade him to ever return to the home he had disgraced.” “An actress. It is always an actress that must break hearts. What a cruel, wretched, proud world it is,” Molly cried, with startling vehemence. Madelon Trueheart looked at her in sad surprise. “It is very kind of you to feel for us like that,” she said. “It _was_ bitter, was it not! We are such an old family and so proud! But we loved Ernest so--dear mother and I--that we would have forgiven him, and made the best of his low-born bride. But, alas, father would not have it so. He forbade us sternly ever to think of the erring one again. Then in just a little while--two years, no more--came the message that he was dead.” Molly lay back among the silken cushions of her easy chair pale, but with burning eyes. She moved her lips slightly in an almost inaudible whisper: “Ernest--Ernest Trueheart.” “Was it not dreadful?” sighed Madelon. “I think father must have been gradually growing more tender, for he almost went mad with remorse at the news of Ernest’s early death. And mother, poor soul, you can easily see that her heart is broken, and her health fading. She has never held up her head since he died, though it is nearly fifteen years ago. Can you blame me now, dear, that I feel it my first duty to stay with my afflicted parents?” Molly did not answer. She was sobbing softly in her handkerchief, and Madelon went on: “If Ernest’s wife would have come to us when he died we would have received her, and loved her for the sake of the dead. But she was proud as we had been, and refused our proffers with scorn. Mother wrote to her that if she had a child we wanted her to give it to us. But she did not even reply. None could blame her, could they since father had been so hard at first?” “What was her name?” asked Molly, almost in a whisper. “It was Molly Glenn--so plain and common, father said, but Ernest wrote that she was good and beautiful and a clever actress. I have no doubt she was all three, for my brother was very fastidious. But my story has been too sad for you, dear Mrs. Laurens. It has grieved your gentle heart!” CHAPTER XVIII. Molly was saved from replying, for Miss Trueheart’s maid knocked softly to say that Mr. Laurens had called for his wife, and was waiting. Hurriedly kissing her friend, the young wife ran down to join her husband. “Louise, my darling, your eyes are red. You have been crying,” he said to her, full of solicitude. “Miss Trueheart was telling me a sad story about one of her friends,” she replied, evasively, and he rejoined: “I am sorry for that, for I, too, have a sad story to relate--one that will distress you, I am sure.” Molly gave a guilty start, and looked anxiously at her husband. He was looking pale and grave. “Some one has betrayed me,” she thought, with her heart leaping into her throat, and his next words confirmed her terror. “Child, you have deceived me,” he said, with portentous sternness. The clear blue sky, the streets and houses, all whirled up in a wild confusion before Molly’s blurred sight. She fell heavily back against the carriage cushions, and it seemed to her as if the hand of death gripped her heart. “Oh,” she moaned, in a faint, almost dying voice. “I knew you would find me out some day, Cecil; for the Lord’s sake forgive me!” Cecil Laurens looked at his beautiful young wife in amazement. She had grown ghastly pale, even to the lips, and her pallor was startling by contrast with her dark hair and brows, and wild, dilated eyes. He put his hand on hers and found that it was icy cold. “My darling, my darling; do not look so frightened. I am not an ogre. I am not going to kill you for one little deception!” he exclaimed. He was afraid she was going to faint, but at those kindly uttered words, the warm color rushed suddenly into her face, and she turned her eyes on him, with an expression little less than adoring. “Cecil,” she murmured, in an indescribable tone, leaning close to his shoulder, so close that he could feel the convulsive trembling that shook her form. He was alarmed, and exclaimed, reassuringly: “Darling, your little deception did not matter much. You kept the secret for your sister’s sake. Remember, I am not blaming you much.” “Yes, oh, yes, for _her_ sake!” faltered the girl, humbly. “I promised her never to betray it, but I thought--thought you would be ready to _kill_ me when you found me out! And you take it easily as this? Oh, my darling husband, you are an angel!” “No, my dear, only a very faulty man, but passionately in love with my charming wife,” returned Cecil Laurens, with a wonderful sweetness in his violet eyes. Then drawing a letter from his breast, he added: “But you will want to read John Keith’s letter?” “John Keith!--was it he who betrayed me?” Molly exclaimed, with sudden anger blazing from her dark eyes. “Darling, what does it matter now? The truth could no longer be hidden. And your poor friend in writing to tell me that he was about to throw up his situation and go south, gave as a reason for it that dastardly divorce!” “Divorce!” “Yes, dear, but read it and see for yourself!” “I--I can’t. The carriage goes too fast, and it makes my head dizzy. Tell me, please,” Molly said, with white lips and startled eyes. Cecil replaced the letter in his pocket, and said, excitedly: “John Keith told me what you knew already--that your sister Molly Trueheart had been his wife by a secret marriage almost two years, and he added what I suspected, that she was a mercenary, calculating woman. She refused to live with him even after I had placed him in a situation where he could support her in comfort. Do not look so shocked, Louise, darling, for I have more to tell you. She, his unworthy wife, went away secretly from her old home, and while in close hiding, secured a divorce from her unlucky husband on a plausible plea of desertion and non-support. Louise, _Louise_!” The last words were uttered in a tone of alarm, for his wife had quietly fainted away. Fortunately, they were almost home, for they were staying just then at The Acacias, a pretty, villa-like residence occupied by Cecil’s parents. “Drive faster!” Cecil thundered to the coachman, and held Molly’s limp form tightly against his heart, little dreaming that this was a parting embrace. In a minute they paused in front of The Acacias, and Cecil got out of the carriage and went through the gate with his wife in his arms. “Poor little one, I did not know she was so nervous and weak. She has had too much excitement lately, too much gayety. I must be more careful with my tender-hearted little wife. I will take her away from London for a time to some quiet retreat where she can get her strength back,” he was thinking as he went up the steps, and as he rang the bell he pressed an adoring kiss on the pale face lying on his breast. The door was opened at once, and seeing the drawing-room open and hearing his mother’s voice, Cecil went in hastily with his burden. CHAPTER XIX. He had not expected to find any one in the room except his father and mother, but the first person his eyes encountered was a stranger--a tall, handsome woman with abundant hair of the color of dead-gold, and eyes that matched the hair in hue with just a little more of brightness caught from a yellowish gleam in the dilated orbs. Brows and lashes of the same peculiar color as her hair went with a clear-white complexion brightened with a tint of rouge upon the cheeks. Her tall, symmetrical figure was draped in rich black silk and jet and a bonnet of the same crowned her small head, the dark costume intensifying her peculiar beauty. Cecil Laurens’ gaze took in this stranger for just an instant before he saw behind her a tall, gaunt figure in gray silk that took him back with a rush to Ferndale. It was old Mrs. Barry herself, grimmer and grayer than ever, and with a stern aspect that was enough to daunt the bravest soul. Cecil laid his unconscious wife hurriedly down upon a sofa and exclaimed: “Dear Mrs. Barry, this is very sudden and pleasant--but see, my wife has fainted. Mother!” Stately, aristocratic Mrs. Laurens trailed her silken robes slowly across the room, her husband following, until both stood in front of the sofa where Molly lay in her unconscious beauty like one dead. “She fainted in the carriage,” Cecil said, anxiously. “What must I do for her? Shall I summon a physician?” “No!” said a sharp, sibilant voice before Mrs. Laurens could speak, and old Mrs. Barry crossed the room stiffly and stood before Cecil. In her feeble, cracked voice, sharpened by anger, and with features distorted by fury, she exclaimed: “Call nobody, do nothing, Cecil Laurens! Let the impostor who tricked an old woman and fooled a young man lie there and die! It is the best thing that could happen to you both!” “Mrs. Barry, you are certainly out of your mind!” exclaimed the young man, indignantly. He had already fallen down on his knees and was chafing Molly’s cold, limp hands in both his own. “Louise, Louise!” he called, anxiously, and the lady in black silk rustled forward. “That is _my_ name, sir,” she said, coolly. “I am Louise Barry, and that girl there,” contemptuously, “is only Molly Trueheart, my step-sister, who became your wife by one of the most stupendous frauds ever perpetrated on a confiding man!” He stared at her as he had done at Mrs. Barry, and answered, angrily: “You must be mad, woman! How dare you make such an assertion?” Mrs. Laurens burst into bitter tears and laid her hand on his head. “Oh, my son, it is the fatal truth!” she sighed. “That girl there, your wife, whom we loved and respected as one of the Barrys, is only the daughter of the actress that Philip Barry married, and this lady is indeed Miss Louise Barry.” “Mother, how can you say such false things? Father, can you stand there silent and let them traduce my pure and honorable wife?” Mr. Laurens, who had a good, kind face, and looked distressed beyond measure, replied, sadly: “My poor Cecil, I fear it is the bitter truth. Mrs. Barry has every proof that she was imposed on by that poor girl there, who took advantage of her credulity to make herself your wife.” “I will not believe it!” thundered Cecil Laurens, fiercely. He caught his mother’s vinaigrette from the chain that secured it to her belt, and held it to Molly’s nostrils. “My darling, my darling!” he cried, frantically: “arise and face your accusers!” But Molly never stirred from her death-like swoon, and the golden-haired stranger cried out, imploringly: “Oh, sir, listen to me, and I will convince you of my truth! Aunt Thalia, after long years of estrangement because of my father’s second marriage, wrote to me that she had relented, and would make me her heiress if I were still unmarried, but would have nothing to do with me in case I were. She also invited me to make her a visit, that we might become acquainted with each other, as we had not met since my early childhood.” “Yes, yes; that was what I wrote to Louise,” muttered old Mrs. Barry, nodding her head till her cap-strings fluttered as if in a breeze; and still Molly lay there unconscious. The new claimant resumed: “That letter fell into the hands of my madcap step-sister, Molly, instead of mine, and she instantly formed a clever plan of personating me, and becoming my aunt’s heiress. She was a wild girl, and fond of what she called ‘larks,’ and I suppose she thought this would be a capital one. So she hid the letter and ran away to Ferndale, arranging everything so cleverly that we thought she had run away to marry an objectionable lover whom she favored, one John Keith.” At that name a stifled groan escaped Cecil Laurens, and Louise Barry said, quickly: “Ah! you have heard of him, perhaps?” “Yes,” he muttered; and the scene of his wedding night rushed freshly over Cecil, and a red-hot shaft of jealous doubt tore through his heart. “Then,” said Louise Barry, significantly. “I shall say no more about John Keith as _she_ is your _wife_. What is the use,” pointedly, “of making bad matters worse?” “Hush!” he said, sternly, pointing to Molly, whose breast began to heave with signs of returning life. “She will have to know it all, so as well hear it now as any other time,” said Louise Barry, and she went on relentlessly, “About a month ago by an accident I became possessed of the letter Aunt Thalia had written to me, and I instantly suspected that I had been deceived. My aunt, Mrs. Everett, wrote to Mrs. Barry asking for information, and received all the details of the impostor’s career up to the time of her marriage with you. Then we went to Ferndale and Aunt Thalia insisted that we should cross the ocean and free you from the toils of an adventuress!” “I will not believe this horrible story of my dear young wife. It is you who are the impostor, the adventuress!” muttered Cecil, angrily. “Aunt Thalia, will you show him the proofs?” asked Louise Barry calmly, and with a cold, triumphant gleam in her golden colored eyes. Mrs. Barry eagerly produced them, and in the midst of the heated argument Molly’s dark eyes opened suddenly upon the scene with an incredulous stare, falling first on Mrs. Barry’s ugly, angry face. “Aunt Thalia--or, do I dream?” she exclaimed weakly, and the old lady answered tartly: “You’re waking up now from a very fine dream that you’ve been dreaming almost a year, Molly Trueheart!” Molly gave a gasp of terror. Her eyes had taken in everything. Cecil’s stern white face, Louise Barry’s triumphant one, and these coupled with Mrs. Barry’s words, assured her that all was discovered, that her dream of happiness was ended, her life with Cecil over and done. CHAPTER XX. Cecil was standing close to his wife with his arms folded across his breast, his grave, troubled blue eyes fixed anxiously on her face. She met that expressive glance, cowered, shivered, and flung up her hands to hide her guilty face. At that expressive action in which Molly mutely acknowledged her sin, a moment of intense silence fell. Cecil Laurens himself broke it in a voice of poignant anguish. “It is true then, child? You have deceived Mrs. Barry, deceived me, and become my wife under a borrowed name!” Molly drew one hand from before her face and pointed at the real Louise Barry. “It was _her_ fault,” she said, passionately, and Louise Barry answered, coldly: “Do not add any more falsehoods to what you have already done, Molly, for no one will believe you _now_!” There was a veiled significance in the tone that the poor, cowering girl understood but too well. Shudderingly she lifted her dark eyes to the face of Cecil Laurens which had suddenly grown ashy pale and stern. She half extended her trembling hand to him. “Cecil, you will believe me when I explain _all_?” she said, beseechingly. But he replied with unmoved sternness: “First tell me, is it really true that that lady is the real Louise Barry?” “It is true!” she replied, faintly, and shrinking from the fierce anger that leaped into those blue eyes as she acknowledged the truth. “And you,” he exclaimed, in a low, deep voice of angry bitterness and scorn, “you are the daughter of the actress--you are Molly Trueheart!” The ineffable scorn with which he named that name fired her soul as it always did with sharp resentment, and her eyes flashed with proud fire as she exclaimed: “I am no longer Molly Trueheart, I am your wife, Mrs. Laurens.” Louise Barry’s voice, sharp and clear and cruel, broke in maliciously: “You are mistaken. Your marriage with Mr. Laurens being contracted under a false name and personality was illegal. You are therefore still Molly Trueheart, and he--is free--free as air!” Cecil Laurens gave a quick start, and looked at Molly. Her face was white and wild with agony as she sprang from the sofa and fell down at his feet. “It is not--it is _not true_!” she gasped, in an agonized voice. “Cecil, Cecil, I _am_ your wife, you _are_ my husband! Speak, tell her she speaks falsely!” He was blindly, madly angry at the deception that had been practiced on him. In his bitter wrath and outraged pride he caught quickly at Louise Barry’s cue. “Get up, Molly Trueheart, do not kneel at my feet, for she speaks the truth!” he exclaimed, hoarsely. “Such a marriage would not stand in law. I am therefore free of you, as Miss Barry has just told you.” A shriek of mortal agony rang through the house; as Molly sprang upward and stood before the handsome, angry man she loved, with an awful corpse-like anguish on her girlish face. Her dark eyes clung to his face despairingly, and she trembled like a wind-blown leaf. No one spoke or moved, so intensely was the interest of all concentrated on those two central figures--the outraged husband and the agonized young wife. Ere her cry of anguish had ceased to re-echo through the room, she wailed out, sharply, supplicatingly: “You will forgive me, Cecil, you will make me your wife, in truth, as I--thought I was. Oh, I can not bear this shame! I sinned through my love of you, and my remorse has been so great that I have never known one happy hour. But you loved me, Cecil, and you can not unlearn your love so soon. You will make me your wife?” Such tears as fell from her eyes were hot enough to blister the fair face, such pain as racked her heart was enough to atone for her sin, but the outraged husband was wild with wrath, and he answered in that voice of smoldering fury and indignant pride: “Why, you are John Keith’s divorced wife. You were bound to him when you went through that farce of a marriage with me. Ah, I see through it all now, but I can not understand how you duped him, so as to get away with me, and then secure your divorce from him. I--” “Hush, you shall not accuse me of _that_,” she interrupted, wildly. “There stands the heartless woman who broke poor John Keith’s heart. She is his divorced wife,” pointing an accusing finger at handsome Louise Barry. The magnificent-looking beauty lifted her hands and eyes to heaven with an expressive shrug of her graceful shoulders. “Heavens, what a false and wicked creature!” she exclaimed. “Aunt Thalia, you have Aunt Lucy’s letter telling you of Molly Trueheart’s entanglement with John Keith although we did not know it had gone as far as a secret marriage.” “Yes, I have the letter. Here, Cecil, read it,” exclaimed Mrs. Barry, thrusting it into his hand. Mechanically he ran his eyes over the open page, but presently a little hand plucked timidly at his sleeve. “I do not believe Aunt Lucy Everett wrote those falsehoods about me,” cried Molly, dauntlessly, “she was a good woman and as kind to me as cruel Louise would allow her to be. You see she has not followed me to persecute me like these others.” “She was sick and could not come,” Louise Barry said, with scornful composure, and again a silence fell that was broken by Cecil’s voice, low and stern: “This letter has the stamp of truth upon it. I have indeed been cruelly, shamelessly imposed on by an adventuress.” “No, no!” in a voice of agonized remonstrance. “Hush!” he said, looking at her sternly, rebukingly. “I know you now for the false, treacherous creature you are, and your denials will not be heeded. I have loved you, but I will tear you out of my heart and life. After this hour I will never willingly see your face again.” She cried out, desperately: “Oh, for sweet pity’s sake take back your words. I am not the vile creature you believe me. The only wrong I have done was in wedding you under a false name. But you will be merciful, you will repair that ignorant deed, you will make me your real wife for the sake of--” the beseeching prayer was never ended, for exhausted nature gave way and the girl fell gasping, and in a moment lay still as death upon the floor. * * * * * She came to herself after what seemed a long, long time, and found that she was alone in the room but for her maid, who was bathing her face and hands in _eau de Cologne_. “Oh, Mrs. Laurens, I was afraid you were dead!” she exclaimed. “I wish I were!” sighed the poor girl, bitterly, realizing all her desolation, and the maid, who had cleverly found out all that had passed, thought that it would indeed be better for the deserted wife. She saw the dark eyes wandering wistfully around the room, and said, compassionately: “All the family are gone away, ma’am, and Mr. Laurens gave me this note for you.” Molly took it with trembling fingers and read the angry words: “The same roof could not shelter you and those whom you deceived, traitress! so we have all gone away and left you. Pray accept the use of the house as long as you wish. It was taken for the season, and no one will molest you in its occupancy. The servants also you may command, but for myself and my family we are from henceforth strangers to one so false and wicked. Still, for the sake of the love I had for you _once_, I will arrange with my lawyers for a sum to be paid you yearly, that you may be kept from want or further sin. You may call on them and get all particulars. Farewell forever. “CECIL LAURENS.” The sheet of paper dropped from Molly’s fingers and unconsciousness again stole over her--unconsciousness so deep that she did not rouse at the furious ringing of the door-bell that announced an impatient visitor who a minute later was admitted into the room. It was Cecil Laurens’ brother, Dr. Charley, who had run over from Paris for a little visit with his home folks, and who now cried out in amazement as he stumbled and nearly fell over the form of his beautiful sister-in-law. CHAPTER XXI. Doctor Laurens had a profound admiration and regard for his brother’s wife, and declared that Cecil, who had always been a lucky fellow, had capped the climax of his good fortune in securing such a beautiful and charming bride. It was therefore with the greatest consternation and distress that he beheld Molly’s condition, and heard from the indignant maid the cause of it--a cause which lost nothing in the telling, for Phebe had warmly espoused the side of her helpless young mistress. Doctor Laurens ran his eyes hastily over his brother’s letter that lay where it had fallen by Molly’s side, and then he bent his attention to restoring her to life from the deep swoon that had enchained her consciousness. “Poor little girl, poor little girl!” he sighed over and over as he lifted her in his strong young arms and bore her to her chamber preceded by the attentive maid, who turned down the covers of the white bed and deftly disrobed Molly’s slight form, while Doctor Laurens waited patiently outside. “Now then, you may come in, sir,” she said, opening the door; and entering quickly the young physician exerted himself to the utmost limit of his skill in restoring Molly to consciousness. Phebe, who was an intelligent, middle-aged woman, aided him all she could; but success came slowly, and the woman cried out in alarm that she feared her young mistress was dead. “No, she is not dead. Her heart beats faintly. She will revive presently,” said Doctor Laurens, and he added something in an undertone at which the woman exclaimed, excitedly: “I thought so myself, and I hinted it to the dear child sometime ago, but she was so bashful she would not believe me. Oh, this makes it all the worse for the poor creature, and Mr. Laurens was cruel to leave her, no matter what she had done.” Doctor Laurens answered, gravely: “I am sure my brother did not know this important fact or he would have acted differently, Phebe.” “Yes, sir,” said the woman, dropping him a profound courtesy. “Are any of the servants beside yourself aware of what has happened?” The woman answered promptly in the negative. “I saw Mr. Laurens bringing my mistress into the house in his arms and ran into the room to assist her--that is how I overheard all,” she said, with such a frank, truthful air that Doctor Laurens immediately enjoined: “You seem to be a good, intelligent woman, Phebe, and I want you to keep this secret locked in your own breast. Will you do so?” “It shall never pass my lips, sir; for I’m sure my poor young lady never did all them dreadful things that lady said.” “Thank you, Phebe, for your confidence in my sister-in-law. She does not look like an arrant sinner, does she, with that sweet, innocent face? Any way, no matter how she has sinned, her condition gives her a claim on my brother that he can not in honor disregard. So we will try to patch up a reconciliation between them, and a remarriage may be necessary. I speak frankly to you, Phebe, seeing what a good woman you are, and devoted to that poor girl,” said the young man. “Devoted--yes indeed, sir, for no servant ever had a sweeter, kinder mistress,” said the woman, in tears. “Then you understand the vital necessity of saving her name from scandal, and I need caution you no more about the strict keeping of her secret,” said the young physician as he again bent over his patient, in whom he detected signs of returning life. In fact Molly’s eyes opened languidly a few minutes later with a puzzled air at finding herself in bed with the gas lighted in the room, whereas her last recollection had been of the sunset hour. “Cecil,” she murmured, with a restless movement, and Phebe said, soothingly: “He is not here just this moment, Mrs. Laurens. You have been sick, and here is your brother-in-law, the doctor, who has been attending to you.” She met Charley Laurens’ compassionate blue eyes fixed on her, and instant consciousness returned to her mind. Burying her face in the pillow her slight form shook heavily with anguished sobs. “Let her alone, Phebe. Let nature have its way, and she will feel better after weeping,” said the sympathetic young doctor. He was right, for when the tempest of sobs and tears had exhausted itself Molly began to grow quiet, and at last turned her pathetic, wet eyes on his face, and said, with a sort of wistful anger: “Why are you here when all the rest have turned against me and gone away?” He answered, gently: “I came and found you sick and alone save for your faithful maid. I stayed then to help to make you well.” With a restless movement she rejoined: “I do not want to get well! You ought to know that. I want to die!” “That is nonsense, my dear little sister, and I do not want to hear any more of it,” was the cheerful response. “Do you know all?” she asked, looking fixedly at him. “Phebe has told me as well as she could, so I don’t want you to talk about it tonight, as you are in too excited a state to do so. I have a little powder here which I want you to take so that you may sleep well tonight, for I must go away in a little while and leave you in your good Phebe’s care,” he said, gently, like one speaking to a sick child. “Then I shall be quite deserted,” she murmured, plaintively. “No, for I shall come again.” “When?” pleadingly. “Tomorrow.” She caught his arm as he bent down to hold the medicine glass to her lips. “You do not look scornful like the rest,” she panted. “Ah, won’t you--won’t you--beg _him_ to forgive me? I was wicked, I know, but I have suffered so much since that it almost seems as if my remorse and sorrow had washed out my sin. And--I loved him so! How could I help it when we loved each other so, and that secret would have parted us forever? Tell him, tell him--” her voice broke in hysterical sobs, and he pushed her gently back among the pillows as he said: “I’ll see him. Only be quiet, dear, and I’ll tell him all you said and more, for he shall know the sweet secret you have been hiding from him--the secret that will surely bring him back to you.” “No, no, he will not return; he has left me forever,” she sobbed, and turned her face from him so that it was hidden from sight. He sat down patiently until the heaving breast grew quiet in the stillness of a drugged sleep, then leaving her in Phebe’s watchful care, went in search of his brother. It was only as he went down the steps of The Acacias and out into the gas-lighted street that he remembered that he had not the address to which his relatives had gone. “But it is to the Langham, of course. They always go there when they have not taken a house in town,” he said to himself, and turned his steps thitherward. “It is early, thank Heaven, so they will not have retired or gone out,” he thought, as he walked slowly along, pondering over the painful affair, and feeling profoundly sad at the thought of Molly’s treachery. “Her youth is her only excuse, and yet it seems strange that one so young and seemingly guileless could have conceived and carried out such a clever, wicked plan,” he thought, in wonder, and knowing Cecil’s proud, honest nature as he did he could not feel surprised at the latter’s indignant action in deserting the girl who had thus deceived him. “But according to Phebe’s description the real Louise Barry can not be one-half as charming as the pretended one,” he said to himself, recalling with some amusement the maid’s spiteful description of the latter as a “yellow-headed, yellow-eyed, deceitful cat.” His musings brought him at last to the Langham, where he found as he had hoped and expected, his father, mother and brother registered. He sent up his card, and his father sent down to him to come upstairs to their private parlor, where he found his parents looking pale and dejected as they sat together alone. CHAPTER XXII. Molly slept quietly the long night through, under the influence of the doctor’s soothing medicine, and it was far into the morning when she awakened and found her faithful Phebe sitting by her side. “Well, I thought you were going to sleep all day, Mrs. Laurens,” she exclaimed. Molly started and rolled her heavy dark eyes around the room. “Has--has--any one been here to see me?” she queried, faintly, an instant remembrance of her woes rushing over her mind. “Yes, madame,” Phebe answered, and a wild light of hope flashed into the big, pathetic eyes of her mistress. “Not--not,” she exclaimed, and choked with painful emotion, unable to utter another word. “No, not your husband, my dear, but his brother, Doctor Charley,” said Phebe, gently stroking the little hand that lay outside the cover, nervously beating the silken counterpane. “He came and found you sleeping so sweetly that he said he would not wait, as he was in a hurry to catch a train for Paris.” “He has gone! My last friend has deserted me,” Molly exclaimed in sudden, keen disappointment and despair. “Not so bad as that, Mrs. Laurens, for he left a note that he said would explain all.” “Give it to me, Phebe,” cried the poor child, sitting upright in bed and holding out her eager little hands. She tore off the envelope in hot haste and read the hurriedly penciled lines with that morning’s date. “My poor little sister, I failed to find Cecil last night. Like a coward he has run away from his misery, and I have just found out that he has gone to Paris. I must follow him at once, for I mean to bring him back to you. Take heart, be of good cheer, little one, and remain where you are until I come back with Cecil. I have talked to mother and father; but in the first keenness of their trouble they are obdurate. But be patient. They will all come round in time and forgive you for the sake of what is coming, and because you were so young and ignorant. Adieu. “CHARLEY.” “God bless him! God bless him for his noble heart!” Molly cried, with streaming eyes. “Oh, Phebe, is it not noble in him to befriend me when they have all forsaken me?” “I have stood by you, too, Mrs. Laurens. Do not forget my love although it is so humble,” cried the faithful maid. Molly flung herself gratefully into her arms, and sobbed out her passionate thanks with raining tears. “Yesterday I was rich in friends, but today I have no one but you, dear Phebe, and Doctor Charley,” she sighed. “Oh, my dear, do not take it so hard. All will come right again. There now, lie down on your pillow, and let me bring you some breakfast,” she said, abruptly, to hide her emotion. Molly lay there still and pale upon the pillow with quick tears raining from her forlorn eyes and drenching her cheeks. “It will never come right again--how should it?” she moaned. “I am found out at last in my sin and punishment has fallen on me. Alas, the way of the transgressor is indeed hard.” She had always known that discovery would come some time, that punishment would overtake her, that she would have to repent in dust and ashes for her strange sin; but that it would come like this, with this horrible disgrace upon its track she had no more dreamed than she had dreamed of being Queen of England, or any other impossible thing. “I have been loved by him. I have lived with him, believed myself his wife. I am soon to bear a child to him, yet I am not his wife, never have been, and now he scorns and deserts me. Yet I brought it all upon myself by my ignorance and madness,” she sighed to herself, and so agonizing was this knowledge to the young, devoted heart that it was a wonder that it did not kill her outright. She would have been glad if it had done so, for death would have been a welcome relief from the anguish of soul and body that she was enduring. “God pardon my sin, and take me out of the world!” she prayed, despairingly, and there came over her a great wonder at herself that she had come to such a terrible pass. “Am I dreaming? Is this indeed Molly Trueheart who a year ago was a child with no higher aim than fun and frolic, with a heart as light as thistledown? Great Heaven, why did I ever let them send me to Ferndale? Nothing but despair and disgrace has come of it, and I have ruined my life forever for a few months of bitter-sweet bliss,” she moaned, flinging up her hands and beating the air impatiently in impotent despair. The door opened and Phebe entered with a tempting breakfast arranged on a silver service. But Molly pushed the dainty viands loathingly away. “As if I could eat while my poor heart is breaking,” she said, with pathetic eyes, and just then there came a light tap at the door. Phebe sat down the tray and found one of the servants waiting. “A lady to see Mrs. Laurens,” he said. “I told her she was sick, but she insisted, and--” he broke off with a start, for the visitor was just behind him. “I knew Mrs. Laurens would not mind, because I am such an old friend,” she twittered, insolently, and pushed past Phebe into the room. It was Louise Barry, handsome and smiling, in a rich costume of dark silk and velvet. “Oh, Molly, in bed yet? Luxury has taught you bad habits,” she exclaimed with a light laugh. “My mistress is sick, madame,” exclaimed Phebe, banging the door shut, and turning on the visitor with sharp displeasure. “Go away, Louise! I can’t bear the sight of you!” Molly cried, fretfully; but Miss Barry sank coolly into the easiest chair in the luxurious room. “Your manners are as bad as of old, Molly,” she retorted, insolently. “But send your maid away, please; I want to talk to you privately.” “I don’t want you to talk to me. I won’t send Phebe away!” Molly cried out, defiantly, with flashing eyes. CHAPTER XXIII. Phebe planted herself aggressively in front of Miss Barry. “You must please go out and not disturb my sick mistress any longer, ma’am,” she said politely, but firmly. Louise measured her from head to foot with an insolent glance of the handsome yellow-brown eyes. “Nonsense, woman,” she replied curtly. “I came here to have a private conversation with my step-sister, and I intend to do so. Therefore, the longer you remain and hinder my desire, the longer I shall stay here and annoy you.” Phebe looked decidedly belligerent, as she exclaimed: “Shall I put her out of the room and lock the door, Mrs. Laurens? I’ll do it if you say the word.” Molly looked sorely tempted to say yes, but she turned again to Louise. “_Will_ you go away and leave me in peace? I do not want to have any trouble with you, Louise,” she said, pleadingly. “I will not go until I get ready. You ought to know me better, Molly, than to oppose me like this. You know, of old, that I always have my own way.” “Yes, you have always done so--to my despair and destruction,” Molly groaned, bitterly, but Louise gave an incredulous laugh. “I had nothing to do with your marrying Cecil Laurens,” she observed, dryly. “You made it impossible for me to decline doing so without putting your interest in jeopardy,” Molly retorted. “I think I told you I would not discuss private matters before your maid, Molly. Are you ready to send her away?” “Since I can not get rid of you without--yes,” cried Molly, petulantly, overruled as she had always been by the other’s despotic will. “You may retire a few moments, Phebe; but remain within call,” she said to the maid, who went out reluctantly, and with a resentful toss of her head toward Miss Barry. Then they looked fixedly at each other, the handsome, insolent woman and the pale, wretched girl. “Oh, Louise, how did you have the heart to do all that you have done?” Molly cried out, passionately. “You can ask me that? After your treachery to Cecil Laurens?” scornfully. “You were to blame. Why did you make me stay there when I begged to come away? I shall tell Cecil everything, and then he can not in justice be so hard on me,” Molly exclaimed, passionately; but she shrank from the cold, cruel smile that curled the red lips of her handsome step-sister. “You will tell him nothing. He would not believe you if you went down on your knees to him. Besides, I wonder how you can think of telling him anything, of ever seeing him again even, when he has deserted you and gone away rejoicing that you were not his wife, and refusing to repair your disgrace.” A low, anguished moan was the only reply of the girl whose face was buried in the bed-clothes, for those low, stinging words had maddened her with shame. Louise went on, icily: “I came here this morning to offer to help you in your arrangements for going away. I expected to find you gone already indeed, for how can you have the hardihood to stay here in Cecil Laurens’ house after what has happened? He is nothing to you, less than nothing!” “Hush, Louise! I am his wife in the sight of Heaven!” the wretched wife cried out in passionate denial, and the utter agony of her face might have moved a heart of stone, but Louise Barry was pitiless. “Nonsense!” she said, curtly. “Your marriage under a false name and identity is utterly void in law, and Cecil Laurens was quick to take advantage of the fact. You are a disgraced creature, and nothing remains to you but flight to some far secluded spot, where none who know you now can ever hear of you again.” Molly sat upright among her pillows, and her eyes flashed resentfully. “Oh, yes, that is what you would like!” she exclaimed. “You want to hustle me out of sight somewhere, thinking that I shall never have the opportunity of telling Cecil the part you took in sending me to Ferndale under a borrowed identity; but I shall tell him _all_ when I see him again, and then he shall judge between us.” CHAPTER XXIV. Suddenly Miss Barry arose from her seat, stepped quickly to the bed, and caught Molly’s hot, writhing hands in both her strong, cool, white ones. It was a fierce, vindictive grasp that pained Molly’s tender wrists, and, looking up with frightened eyes, she saw that Louise’s face was working with fury. “Look at me, Molly Trueheart!” she hissed, savagely, and Molly’s dark, piteous, tearful orbs lifted reluctantly to meet that gaze filled with tigress fury. Louise continued, fiercely: “Since you came to live with us as a child, Molly, have you ever known me to give up anything on which I had set my heart?” “No,” sighed the trembling girl. “Have I not forced you in every instance where our wills clashed to yield to me?” “Ye-es,” half sobbed the agonized victim, with a shudder. “Very well, then, since you own this, Molly, you ought not to be surprised that I intend to adhere to my purpose. So I say now, briefly, and for all, that you shall never betray my part in your going to my aunt at Ferndale. I have told Cecil Laurens that it was all your treachery, and you shall not betray me!” “But I will! I must! Oh, Louise, you must be mad to think I could let him go on thinking so hardly of me! I shall tell him, or Doctor Charley, or--or--any one who will listen to me,” piteously. “No one will listen to you, you little fool!” Louise hissed, angrily. She pinched the little wrists tighter in her fierce grasp, and gave Molly such a vicious shake that she cried out in pain and terror. Bending lower, she went on, cruelly: “Do you know what I would do to you, Molly, if you attempted to betray me?” “No-o, Louise! Oh, let go my hands, you hurt me!” “Never mind your hands; I’ll pinch them as long as I choose! I ought to beat you for your ill-behavior, but I won’t. You’re getting too big to be punished that way now. But, Molly, if you ever come between me and my plans, if you ever tell what you know of me, _I’ll kill you_!” “I--I’m not afraid!” muttered Molly, but her teeth chattered, and her slight form shook as if with an ague chill. “You _are_ afraid! You are almost dead with terror this minute, for you know _me_, Molly Trueheart! and you know I’ll keep my word as sure as there’s a God in heaven, or a devil in hell!” menacingly exclaimed her persecutor. Molly’s head drooped wearily a moment, and heavy, labored sighs rose from her tortured breast. “I wish I were dead!” she sighed, bitterly, to herself; then she looked up with sudden defiance at Louise, and said, with passionate emphasis: “Very well, then, Louise, I’ll dare all for the sake of having Cecil know the truth, for he could not think quite so badly of me then, and perhaps he would pity me a little in my early grave after I had been murdered for telling him the truth!” Louise dropped the little hands, and stepping back a pace, regarded Molly in silent, vengeful fury. There was so deadly a wrath in the look that the sick girl cowered and shivered, and fell to rubbing the soft wrists and hands that were black and blue from the cruel grasp of Louise’s hands. “You defy me, you weak, puny thing!” the latter hissed, fiercely. “Molly Trueheart, you must be mad, indeed. Do you think I will leave you here now to betray me?” Molly looked at her in sudden apprehension. “What do you mean?” she faltered. “I’m going to take you away from this house and hide you where you can never find any one to listen to your story,” her tormentor answered, audaciously. She sat down again in the great purple velvet chair, and looking insolently at her victim, observed coolly: “I’m going to sit here until you faint, and then I shall carry you out to my carriage and drive off with you.” “I’m--not--going--to faint!” Molly muttered, but her lips were purple already, and her eyes dim, while a horrible sinking feeling stole over her form. She struggled desperately against it, and Louise Barry laughed, mockingly. “You will be unconscious in five minutes,” she said. “I see it stealing over you, now. You are worn out by all that you have suffered, and you can not bear up against your terror of me!” CHAPTER XXV. Molly knew that her enemy’s words were true. Already a subtle weakness was stealing over her, and she saw Louise’s handsome, mocking, cruel face dimly, as through a blood-red mist. She felt as if a deadly vampire were feasting on her life-blood and struggled wildly to cry out, to call assistance in her terrible need. But her lips seemed parched and dry, her tongue clung to the roof of her mouth, feeling stiff and swollen and almost paralyzed. Life seemed swiftly ebbing, and her foe sat there watching her gloatingly. A moment of sharp, cruel, agonized struggling against the awful sensation, and Molly swooned as her enemy had predicted. It was the hour of Louise’s triumph. She ran into the dressing-room and quickly possessed herself of a long cloth cloak with a hood. Running back, she threw aside the bed-covers and flung the cloak around Molly’s form. Then she attempted to lift the girl in her strong arms and bear her away as she had threatened. To her surprise she found that the burden was too heavy for her strength and dropped it back on the bed with a muttered exclamation of dismay. “Why, I have lifted her up and shaken her a hundred times. What does this mean?” she exclaimed, and flung back the cloak from the silent form. A cry of rage escaped her lips, and her eyes flashed with fury. She had found out Molly’s shyly guarded secret at a glance. Louise Barry almost went wild with rage at this discovery. She pushed Molly’s silent form rudely from her, and exclaimed, angrily: “I hate her more than ever now, for if he knows this he will return to her for his own honor’s sake. What shall I do, what shall I do to keep them apart, for my secret will be betrayed it she meets him again.” The door opened and Phebe stalked in, grim and anxious. When she saw Molly lying pallid and unconscious on the bed, she uttered a cry of alarm and pushed Louise roughly away. “What have you done to my poor young mistress?” she exclaimed. “I have done nothing. It is a faint, simply,” Louise answered, carelessly. “It looks like death,” Phebe muttered, bringing _eau-de-Cologne_ to lave the girl’s face and hands. Her eyes at that moment fell on the thick cloak. “Who put this cloak here?” she exclaimed, suspiciously. “I did. She seemed so chilly that I laid it over her to keep her warm,” the wily woman answered, coolly. Phebe turned upon her, her rough, homely face pale with anger. “I don’t believe you,” she said, bluntly. “I believe you’ve tried to spirit Mrs. Laurens away, and I came in here just in time to prevent you!” “How dare you talk to me so, woman? I have a right to take her away if I choose. She is my step-sister, and I am the guardian of her honor.” “You’re her tormentor, and you’ve made all this mischief between her and her husband, and if you don’t get out of here pretty quick I’ll put you out by force!” stormed Phebe, losing her temper, in her resentment against the audacious intruder. “I shall stay here as long as I please, and I dare you to interfere with me!” Louise answered, insolently, but she had miscalculated the will and the strength of Molly’s defender, for the next instant she felt herself lifted off her feet and carried out of the room, along the hall and down the stairs like a whirlwind in the arms of angry Phebe, who never stopped until she opened the front door, pushed her victim out on the steps, and slammed and locked the door in her startled face. CHAPTER XXVI. Then Phebe turned to two astonished footmen who stood grinning and wondering in the hall. “If any of you men ever let that woman into this house again it will cost you both your situations!” she said, sharply, and flew upstairs again to her mistress. Meanwhile, Louise Barry, chagrined and foiled, and silently vowing revenge, went down the steps to her carriage, and to her dismay encountered Mrs. Laurens the elder, who had also alighted from her carriage, and just at the foot of the steps witnessed with dismay Louise’s summary ejectment from the house. “My dear Miss Barry, what does this mean?” she ejaculated, without waiting for the preliminaries of a formal greeting. Louise put on her most injured air. “You saw that woman put me out of the house by force?” she inquired. “Yes.” “That was some more of Molly Trueheart’s work,” Louise exclaimed, seeing here another opportunity to injure her victim. “Impossible! She could not be so mean!” “Ah, Mrs. Laurens, you can not gauge the depths of Molly Trueheart’s wickedness. I went to her on a mission of sisterly kindness and she repulsed me, insulted me, and with the help of that great amazon, her maid, forcibly ejected me from the house.” “After all I had heard I would not have believed she could be guilty of this!” Mrs. Laurens exclaimed in horror. “She is incorrigible,” Louise said, with a heavy sigh. “I went to her and offered to take her away and provide for her, knowing that your son’s house could no longer be a home for her, and pitying her in spite of the injury she had done me. But--well, you saw, Mrs. Laurens, what reception I met from that erring girl!” “Dreadful!” sighed Mrs. Laurens in profound distress. “Is it not?” exclaimed Louise, adding, eagerly, “Will you not aid and abet me, dear madame, in removing her, by force if necessary, from this house that is no longer a proper shelter for her head?” “Ah, that I only might. The task would be most grateful,” Mrs. Laurens answered. “But a far different purpose is mine now.” “Different?” “Yes, Miss Barry, different and most unwelcome. Instead of banishing that wretched girl from this roof forever, I am here to protect her from the consequences of her sin, to shield her by my presence from the faintest breath of scandal. In short, to keep the world from ever knowing the story of her folly and sin.” Louise paled and trembled. “Dear madame, what can you mean?” huskily. “I mean that since yesterday embarrassing exigencies have arisen that make it impossible for us to desert Molly Trueheart, great as her treachery has been;” and in a few words she told Louise what she already knew--the condition of Molly--that made it imperative on Cecil, for his own honor’s sake, to give her once more the shelter of his name. “You will not have him marry her over again! Good heavens, that will be putting a premium on her treachery, and--and--he hates her now. She could never be his beloved again!” Louise cried, in wild alarm and secret rage. “No he can never tolerate her again, she will never be aught but his wife in name only. He will spend his time apart from her, of course; but to the world she must still appear an honored and beloved wife for the sake of the child that is coming to Cecil. We are all coming back here to stay in order to keep up appearances before prying eyes; but, of course, our intercourse with her will be of the barest sort. She will be despised among us, and it will be a mercy to us all if Providence should remove her from Cecil’s way when the hour of her trial comes,” cried Mrs. Laurens, resentfully. CHAPTER XXVII. Louise Barry went away from that meeting with Mrs. Laurens with a heart burning with secret wrath and jealousy. “Am I going to be foiled like this, betrayed like this by that chit of a girl?” she muttered gloomily. Her prospects did indeed look dark, for if Molly should tell what she knew and get any one to believe her, Louise’s fortune for which she had schemed and plotted would be ruined. “Aunt Thalia would certainly drive me away from her forever if she found out about John Keith and the deception I practiced to gain her fortune,” she thought, fearfully, and her wrath against Molly grew and strengthened with every hour. “I could kill her--the little mar-plot! Why did she marry Cecil Laurens? All would have gone well but for that!” she muttered, clinching her hands angrily again as she had done when Molly’s helpless fingers lay between them. When she reached the Langham where she and old Mrs. Barry had luxurious apartments, she went at once and told her aunt the same garbled story she had told Mrs. Laurens about her summary ejectment from The Acacias. The old lady was furious. “She ought to be hung--that Molly Trueheart!” she exclaimed, viciously, and Louise answered, with equal venom: “Yes, but instead of being punished for her sin they are going to shield her from disgrace and drive poor Cecil Laurens into a new entanglement with her for the sake of a scruple of honor.” “It shall not be. It is the wish of my heart that Cecil should marry you. We _must_ prevent this sacrifice!” Mrs. Barry stormed. “But how, Aunt Thalia?” “Send for that John Keith wherever he is, Louise. I’ll bribe him to take her away before they push Cecil into a second marriage!” Louise grew pale as ashes, and clinched her hands tightly together in her lap. “Well, what do you say to my plan, eh, why don’t you speak?” demanded the grim old lady, sharply. “It--will--not--answer. He is at the other side of the world. I should not know where to send for him, and I am quite sure he would refuse to have any more to do with his faithless wife,” Louise answered, slowly, with averted face. “The little baggage! I should not blame him!” snapped Mrs. Barry, her seamed and wrinkled face working with anger. She went on, impatiently: “Well, then we must think of some other plan. That marriage must never take place.” “No, they must be kept apart. We must think of something else,” Louise answered, but it was easier proposing plans than carrying them out. Fate, that had played poor Molly so many ill turns in her brief life, seemed relenting a little now. None of the plans which the plotters proposed to each other could be carried out, for Cecil Laurens did not come home with Doctor Charley, although he was daily and hourly expected, and Louise was unable to gain an entrance into The Acacias, although she called daily and tried to send in her card to Cecil’s mother. The servants, mindful of Phebe’s threat, always shut the door in her face and refused to take cards or messages. “Young Mrs. Laurens is lying ill, and the family receive no visitors,” was what she heard daily, and old Mrs. Barry, when she called one day, fared no better. “She must really be sick,” Louise said, when her aunt returned from the fruitless attempt, and she added to herself with a guilty blush: “I hope she will die!” To the faithful Phebe, who hung anxiously over the sick-bed, it seemed as if this wish would come true, for Molly was very ill after she recovered from the swoon into which she had fallen from sheer terror of her foe. A physician had to be summoned at once, and he pronounced the patient in a dangerous condition, and charged Phebe to be very careful lest by the slightest neglect that young life should be lost. Phebe carried out his orders with patient, unswerving devotion, knowing well that in this dark hour she was the sufferer’s only friend. And indeed she had to fight for this position, and hold it in the teeth of the elder Mrs. Laurens’ grim displeasure, for Louise’s artful tale had so wrought upon that lady’s feelings that she immediately sought out Phebe and told her to take her discharge with a mouth’s wages instead of the customary warning. “Indeed, then, mem, with all due respect to your gray hair, I can’t take my discharge from anybody but Mr. Cecil himself. He it was that engaged me, mem, and I promised him I’d be a faithful servant to my young mistress, so how could I desert her now in her trouble, when every one has gone against her and she hasn’t a friend but me?” expostulated Phebe. “You are impertinent, woman!” Mrs. Laurens exclaimed, with a frown. “I’m sorry you think so, mem; I don’t mean to be so, but I can’t desert my mistress now.” “I shall engage a sick-nurse,” Mrs. Laurens said loftily. “I beg your pardon, mem, but you couldn’t find a better sick-nurse than me anywhere, if I _do_ say it myself,” said Molly’s stanch friend sturdily; and so she held her situation in the teeth of all opposition. It was not an enviable task she had either, for all the care of the invalid devolved upon her and the physician; Mrs. Laurens only making two short calls daily, morning and evening--calls that never exceeded five minutes in duration, and which did the sick girl more harm than good, for she was so frightened by the lady’s cold words and frigid looks, that they sent her into shivering fits that lasted long after the ceremonious calls were over. “She is a cold-hearted, cruel woman, and makes you worse whenever she comes. I’ll never let her in again if you’ll give me leave to keep her out, my dear!” exclaimed the indignant maid. But Molly cried out in terror that not for worlds would she treat Cecil’s mother with such indignity. “I can not blame her for being angry with me. I deserve it all for my treachery and it is very good of her to stay here, as you say she does, to keep my secret from the world,” she sighed, in sad humility and remorse. “So let her come when she will, Phebe, and never tell her how her cold looks frighten me and make me worse.” CHAPTER XXVIII. Mrs. Laurens was not a hard woman, but she could not help being very angry with the girl who had deceived her son, and she felt, although she would not have openly admitted it, that she would not be sorry if the accident that the physician was trying to prevent should happen. “Cecil would not have to take her back to spoil his life further,” she said to herself, and no pity came to her for the girl whose young life was spoiled also by the sin into which her love had led her. Anger and resentment were too strong to admit sweet pity into her breast. “I must not wish that she should die, yet that would be the best thing that could happen for her and for us all,” she thought more than once. So it happened that she took no part in nursing the invalid beyond the mere cold duty calls she made morning and night for the sake of appearances. But the accident for which she could not help hoping did not occur, owing to the care of the physician, and the good nursing of Phebe. Molly began to get gradually better and to look with hollow, restless orbs for the return of the proud, angry husband who had repudiated and forsaken her when he discovered her treachery. “Will he never come again, Phebe?” she would moan restlessly when two weeks had passed and neither Doctor Charley nor his brother had returned to London. “Doctor Laurens will be sure to bring him as soon as he finds him. Try to be patient, dearie,” Phebe would reply, tenderly, but Molly would sob hopelessly, believing that fate had done its worst for her, and that Cecil would never return. “I can never tell Lady Madelon and her parents the truth now. They would be ashamed of me, they would not acknowledge me,” she thought, with bitter pain, and when Lady Trueheart and her daughter who in common with the rest of the world were ignorant of the tragedy at The Acacias, called to see their young favorite, Molly was so silent and _distrait_ that they thought her even sicker than she was, and went away with the gravest apprehension for her life. Three weeks passed, and Molly was well enough to sit up in her easy-chair, well enough to walk from her bed to the window, but no tidings came from Cecil, nothing but the invariable note that Charley sent every few days, saying simply: “_I am following on his trail, but I have not found him yet!_” Oh, that cruel suspense; how it fretted Molly’s heart and nerves; how it maddened her with misery! “Gracious Heaven! am I not atoning tenfold for my folly?” she sighed over and over in those weary weeks, each one of which seemed longer than a year. In those days of suspense, illness, and despair, the girl became only a wan shadow of the lovely madcap who had won Cecil Laurens in spite of himself, and made him for almost a year the happiest of men. The soft hue of happiness faded from her face that had lost all its pretty dimples and childish plumpness; the sweet lips took on an anguished droop, and the plaintive sorrow in the hollow dark eyes was enough to move the hardest heart. Every day she had a long, hard, hysterical spell of weeping in Phebe’s arms, and the maid declared afterward that these bitter sobs and tears had saved her young mistress from madness or death from a broken heart. “They kind of relieve her feelings, those tears,” she said, knowingly. And if she had been as cultured as she was wise, she would have exclaimed with the poet: “Benign restorer of the soul! Whoever fliest to bring relief, When first we feel the rude control Of love or pity, joy or grief!” Molly did not know that those tears were saving her, for it seemed as if her heart would burst when she shed them on Phebe’s motherly breast. But they relieved her pent-up agony all the same, and made her calmer and more patient for the rest of each long weary day as it glided slowly into the irrevocable past. CHAPTER XXIX. It seemed to Molly as if she should never see Cecil again, as if in spite of all Doctor Charley’s hopes he would never return to her who had deceived him. A bitter pride began to stir in her heart. “I have no right here. I ought to have gone with Louise when she told me,” she said to herself, sadly, for her sensitive pride would not permit her to discuss her situation with Phebe, although she felt certain that the maid knew all. But one day she became aware that there was a sudden stir and confusion in the house as of a sudden arrival. Her heart leaped wildly. “It is Cecil!” she exclaimed, gladly, and her first impulse was to leave the room in search of him; but the thought of Mrs. Laurens’ cold eyes and scornful lips drove her back with her feet upon the threshold. “I must wait. He will come to me here,” she murmured, sinking back into her chair and trembling with joyful agitation. Phebe hurried in presently with a beaming face. “Oh, my dear, your husband is come!” she exclaimed, joyfully. “Yes, I know--my heart told me,” said the eager girl. “Oh, Phebe, how soon shall I see him? Will he come to me here?” “Of course, my pet. But try to be patient, Mrs. Laurens. He is with his father and mother now.” “I ought to be first!” Molly cried, with kindling cheeks, then the flush faded quickly as it had come, and she murmured, plaintively: “but I can not expect that now. I must be content with the slightest favors. I shall be thankful only to see him once again.” She looked wistfully at Phebe. “Am I very thin? Do I look very ill?” she asked, anxiously. “Do not bother about your looks, my dear. No one could expect you to look well in your condition and after such an illness,” the maid cried, soothingly. “But I must not look ugly in Cecil’s eyes. He used to think me so pretty. Oh, Phebe, can’t you fix me a little so that I shall not look so ill? And draw the curtains, and soften the light. It shines too brightly on my faded face.” Phebe humored her as if she had been a sick child. She dropped the heavy curtains of silk and lace between the girl’s face and the too garish light of day. Then she brought from the dressing-room a rose-pink wrapper trimmed with soft swan’s-down and pink satin ribbons. When Molly was dressed in this, and her curly hair arranged in a pretty, careless, fluffy fashion, she looked lovely in spite of her illness and delicate pallor. “You are pretty enough now to win his love over again,” declared Phebe, fondly. “Now sit here quietly in this chair, and wait for him patiently until he comes.” “Did he say he would come soon, Phebe?” “He did not speak to me, my dear. I only saw him come in at the door with his brother, and they went into the parlor with their parents. But of course, when they tell him how sick you have been, he will hasten to you.” Molly did not answer, only sat with wide-open dark eyes fixed on the closed door. An excited color glowed on her cheeks, and her parted lips emitted quick, almost sobbing, breaths. To herself she was saying, feverishly: “I will throw myself at his feet and tell him everything. He will see that Louise was as much to blame as I was, and he can not refuse to forgive me. If he does, I shall die!” She looked around with her wistful, fever-bright eyes at Phebe. “I’m not impatient,” she said, plaintively; “but he is so long in coming! It is more than an hour.” “Only fifteen minutes by the clock since he entered the house, dear Mrs. Laurens,” answered Phebe, glancing at the pretty little Swiss affair on the mantel that told off the fleeting hours. A muffled step sounded on the thick hall carpet outside. It paused, and a gentle hand rapped on the door. Molly’s mobile face grew radiant with love, hope, and joy. “Cecil!” she murmured, in a thrilling voice, and Phebe moved to the door and threw it wide open. “Come in,” she said, and there entered Doctor Laurens! There was no one behind him, for he closed the door and crossed over to the side of the waiting girl. CHAPTER XXX. “Sister,” he said, gently, bending down and lifting her wasted little hand to his lips. She let him kiss it in dead silence. Her face had grown ashy white, the light had faded from her eyes, the color from her lips. “Sister,” he repeated again, holding her hand and looking anxiously into her changed face; but Molly’s lips moved nervously without giving forth a sound. “Doctor Laurens, she’s disappointed. She thought you would bring her husband,” Phebe said, bluntly. “I did. I thought she _knew_,” he replied, in surprise; and he continued, tenderly; “Yes, I have brought him back to you, little girl, after a hard chase, and may the Lord deliver me from ever again having to follow a man who has run away from his own misery. Jove! but he gave me a run, although I captured him at last, on one of the coldest peaks of Switzerland.” Phebe rejoined, impatiently: “I have told her he was in the house, Doctor Laurens, but she was waiting for him to come to her here--in this room, you understand.” He understood, for his face changed and clouded. He said, in an embarrassed tone: “Ah!” Molly seemed to recover speech. She faltered, anxiously: “I long to see him.” “Poor child!” exclaimed Doctor Charley, with ready sympathy. He hesitated a moment, then said, gently: “Try to be patient a little longer, my dear. He is apt to be a little hard when he is vexed and hurt; but--” She interrupted him with a piercing cry. “Do you mean that he will not forgive me--that he has no pity for me?” “Gently, sister!” said Doctor Charley, full of sympathy for the forlorn young creature. “Listen, now, and do not interrupt me. Cecil is angry still, but he has come back to repair the wrong caused by your ignorance in wedding him under a false name. He will make you his wife again by a private ceremony here in this room tomorrow.” “Oh, may Heaven bless him for that noble deed! I knew he could not desert me like that, when he learned all. Oh, Doctor Charley, bring him to me; I have so much to say to him!” Molly exclaimed, full of eager joy and hope. He shook his head, and said, sadly enough: “It is quite useless, my dear little sister, to ask me to bring him, for he has refused to come. He is angry still, as I told you, and he will not see you until the hour of the ceremony that makes you again his wife!” She stared at him aghast, the momentary hopefulness fading from her face. “Do not look at me like that--I could not move him!” he said, imploringly. “Come, be reasonable, my child. You did not expect him to forgive you all at once, did you?” “No,” she faltered. “And you were right,” he answered, reluctant to pain her, but knowing that her heart must be probed still further ere it might be healed. “Cecil is very proud, you know, and he finds it hard to forgive your deceit. He thinks he is only to marry you again for the sake of the child that is coming to bear his name, but I am sure that underneath the crust of his anger and resentment his love for you lives yet.” Her head drooped sadly to her breast, and she sighed heavily while he continued: “It must be your task, my sister, to win this wounded heart back to you. Cecil is hard and proud, but he is just. When he sees your remorse and repentance he will be sorry for you, he will pity you, and with the coming of your child the cloud will pass from your lives, and you will be happy again.” He spoke more sanguinely than he had cause to speak, but he believed that unless he could whisper some hope and comfort to that crushed heart, it must break beneath the weight of its shame and sorrow. And he was right, for as he ceased speaking she lifted her bowed head, and said, with a faint, wavering smile: “God bless you for your prophecy, my noble brother! Ah, if the deepest devotion woman ever felt can melt his proud heart, I will lay that devotion at his feet and plead with him for pardon and love.” CHAPTER XXXI. If Cecil had been angry with his wife when he first entered the house, his interview with his mother did not tend to lessen his resentment. She told him at once the story she had heard from Louise Barry relative to her summary ejectment from the house. “Did you hear of anything so low, so ill-bred?” she exclaimed. And the fastidious Cecil shuddered. “And to think that this ill-natured, treacherous creature was your wife--will be your wife again! Oh, Cecil, is it necessary, do you think, this sacrifice of yourself?” “Mother!” That word and the stern glance of his proud blue eyes made her quail. He looked wan, wasted, wretched. She had never seen her handsome Cecil look so ill, and it made her wrath all the more bitter against her who had caused it, but she dared say no more, for he went on, rebukingly: “I hardly expected this from you, my mother. Say that she deserves no mercy for her treachery to poor John Keith and to me, and I will agree with you; but you must be aware--Charley says he told you--that there is another question involved now--a point of honor.” “Unfortunately, yes,” she answered, sighing. He went on, with grave seriousness: “The little one that is coming to me had no part in the sin of its ignorant young mother, and should not bear the consequences of her treachery. Neither would it be right that a shadow should rest on the mother that the world might visit on the child. Therefore, it is best that I should go through another ceremony with her, to make all things secure for honor’s sake.” “You will live with her again?” With a slight flush he answered: “Nominally, yes. That is to say, she will be an inmate of my home, and I shall treat her with respect before my household and before the world. But, beyond that, we shall be as utter strangers.” “She ought to be thankful for even that grace. Few would have granted so much, but the honor of the Laurens is above everything else. Still, it will be a hard life for you, my son.” “If I can not endure it, I will travel,” he replied. “You will be an exile for the sake of that girl, your life spoiled, your heart empty--oh, it is cruel!” she exclaimed. “Do not pity me, mother, I can not bear it!” he said, hastily, then rising: “I think I must get Charley and go out as we have to make arrangements for that private ceremony in the morning. Of course you know it must be managed so that it may never come to the world’s ears?” “I know. I will see to all that, but I think you had better ask the Barrys to be present,” she said. “I will ask them,” he replied. The door opened, admitting Doctor Charley. “I am ready to go with you, Cecil, to see about the license and the minister.” “Thank you,” then with inexpressible bitterness: “Let us be quite sure to have the right name this time.” “All right. I asked her and she wrote it down for me here,” handing Cecil a card on which he read in a familiar chirography that made his heart throb fiercely, the simple name: “Mary Ernestine Trueheart.” Charley continued, kindly: “Her age is about eighteen. She could not have been much more than a child when you first saw her, Cecil?” “Mrs. Barry said she was five-and-twenty,” he replied, and there flashed over him a remembrance of the times when Molly had declared she was not yet seventeen. “She almost betrayed herself, then,” he thought, but he said nothing more to his brother, only when they were leaving the house. “We will call on the Barrys,” he said. “Mother thinks they should be present at the ceremony tomorrow.” “I do not think Lou--I mean Molly--would like it, Cecil,” Doctor Charley said, quickly, but his brother answered, morosely: “It does not matter. We are not arranging the ceremony to please _her_, Charley.” “But why humiliate her further? She is wretched enough already.” “Not half so wretched as I am,” Cecil answered, with sudden sharp anger. Doctor Charley could be obstinate, too, although he was so much sweeter-tempered than his brother. “Very well, ask the Barrys if you like, but I am not going with you to call on them,” he replied quietly. Cecil resented the refusal. “By Jove, Charley, you go too far in taking her part,” he said sharply. “You seem to forget that Mrs. Barry and the niece are the wronged ones.” “I forget nothing,” said Doctor Charley sturdily. “But I think that if the Barrys had been good, true-hearted women, they would not have crossed the seas to hunt down a poor girl who had committed a fault through love, that no intermeddling of theirs could set straight. Much better have let it all alone.” Cecil stared at him in surprise and displeasure. “I must have found it out sometime--when I went home if not sooner,” he said. “Poor Molly would never have let you find it out--women are so clever--but they took her by surprise,” Doctor Charley returned. “I wanted to know if there was anything wrong! I do not fancy being deceived,” sternly. Doctor Charley looked almost contemptuously. “So you thank the Barrys for your misery,” he said dryly. “Very well, call on them by all means then, and thank them for their friendship, in having put asunder what God had joined together. Perhaps things will come out so that you will get the real Louise Barry for your wife at last. I have no doubt that old woman and her niece will help you to torture poor Molly into an early grave.” “Charley?” rebukingly. “Well?” “What have I done that you should be so hard on me in my trouble?” “You have turned against the woman you swore to love, honor and protect, and you have earned my contempt by your weakness,” fearlessly. “What is there in a name that you should hate her so? She is the same girl you loved and married, call her by what name you will!” CHAPTER XXXII. It was a strange bridal there in that quiet room where Molly had lain so many weary days and nights ill and suffering--a strange bridal, compared with the one in which the same two had been the principal actors less than a year before. Then the man had been proud, smiling, happy, looking forward to a bright future; the bride had been lovely and radiant outwardly, whatever might have been her secret terrors at her hidden treachery. But now all was changed. When the bridegroom entered with cold, averted eyes and a pale, stern, haughty countenance, following his brother, parents, the Barrys, and the minister, there rose to join him before the holy man of God a slight, drooping figure that had been crouching forlornly all the morning in an easy-chair, with the pale face bowed in its hands. Cecil gave her a cold, slight, disdainful bow that chilled her to the heart, and made her shrink back sensitively against Doctor Charley, who had assisted her to rise from her chair. The young doctor whispered, hurriedly: “Never mind his coldness now. You can soon win him back.” He drew her forward and placed her trembling hand on Cecil’s arm. She stood there quivering with emotion, not daring to look up, afraid of the cold, angry faces around. The good minister had been told a simple, plausible tale; some slight illegality had been detected in the marriage, and the principals had determined to have another ceremony to make all secure. There was nothing strange in it at all, and he did not wonder that the parties were sensitive over the matter, and desired to keep it secret. What he did wonder at was the cold, stern face of the handsome groom, and the ill and frightened looks of the pallid bride. But he did not possess the clew to these strange looks, and he was ushered out so quickly after he read the ceremony and pronounced the prayers, that he could not see whether any good wishes were offered or not. Cecil and Charley went out with him, and all the rest followed, except the bride and the alert Phebe, and Louise Barry, who had stayed behind to whisper, vindictively: “So you have got him again by your cunning! Well, remember what I told you. If you betray _me_, if you breathe one word to defend yourself I swear I will compass your _death_!” Phebe pushed in between them. “Go away, Miss Barry, and leave her alone, or I shall tell her husband how you have treated her,” she threatened. Louise gave her a wicked glance. “Tell him--but it will be at _her_ peril,” she said, menacingly, as she trailed her rich garments through the door-way. Phebe slammed the door and turned to her mistress, who had fallen down wearily on a sofa. “I shall tell Mr. Cecil of this woman’s wicked treatment of you,” she exclaimed; but Molly held up a warning hand. “No, no, you will not tell him,” she said. “I--I am not afraid of Louise. Oh, Phebe!” with sudden, irrepressible anguish, “is he not going to speak to me, is he going away from me like this?” Phebe thought she had never seen such a terrible fear and dread as looked at her from Molly’s large, lustrous eyes that looked so big and bright in her small, pale face. Tears came into her own. “He will come back directly, dear, I’m sure,” she said; but not being so sure as she pretended, she whisked out of the room in a hurry. She saw Doctor Charley going away with the minister, and poking her head audaciously into the parlor, beheld Cecil Laurens the center of a condoling group, Miss Barry being close at his elbow. “Mr. Laurens, your wife wants to see you,” she said, abruptly. He started and frowned; but with the perfect courtesy of which he was master, disengaged himself from the group and came toward her, saying in a low voice: “Can you not bring me her message, Phebe?” “No, sir!” in such a curt, dry tone that he flushed to his temples, pushed angrily past her, and returned to the room where he had left his sad little bride without a word or look. He had to look at her now, and angry as he was he started in surprise at the change her weeks of illness and grief had wrought. There was in her dress and air no attempt at wedding bravery. She wore a quiet, silver-gray silk, with ribbons of the same sober hue that gave her a demure, Quaker-like appearance. He had seen her in the same dress before when her vivid face had lighted it up into beauty, but now her thinness, her pallor, her expression of humility and misery combined, was actually painful to behold. He stopped in front of her, and her haggard face lighted up with something like hope. “You sent for me?” he said, icily. And she faltered, humbly: “I wanted to--to--thank you, Cecil, for--for--your--kindness to me in--in repairing the--the--” The faltering voice broke down entirely, choked by sobs. Molly’s face dropped into her hands, and tears fell through her fingers. Cecil Laurens stood regarding her in silence, apparently unmoved by her passionate emotion. He thought, angrily: “She is trying to move me by the arts of the actress inherited from her low mother, but she will not succeed.” But it was not comfortable to watch those tears, even while he believed them feigned. He moved restlessly, and spoke: “It was not worth your while to thank me, for you must be aware that it was not for your own sake that I made the sacrifice of an hour ago, but only that the honor of the Laurens family might remain untarnished.” She murmured, brokenly, through her tears: “Yes, I know. Your brother told me. But--since you disdain thanks from me--let me thank you in the name of my unborn child for the mercy you have had on us both! Oh, Cecil, husband,” rising in a gust of passion and falling down humbly at his feet, “will you not let me tell you all my story; how I was tempted, how I fell into error? I am not so wicked as you think me. I--I--oh, Heaven! he has gone without a glance or a single kind word!” for he had turned deliberately and left the room. CHAPTER XXXIII. Blinded by passion, indignant that Molly should have the hardihood to attempt any defense of her treachery, Cecil Laurens had turned a deaf ear to her pleadings and hurried from the room. But he did not go back to the conclave in the parlor. He hurried along the hall to the room he had occupied in solitude last night, entered and locked the door. Moved and agitated in spite of his strong self-will, he walked restlessly up and down the floor. “The girl must be mad to think I could pardon her sin,” he exclaimed. “Great heavens, when I think that she belonged to John Keith when she went through that farce of a marriage with me, I go mad with rage! But for that--but for the deep treachery of that falsehood to him and to me, I believe I could have forgiven all the rest, for I am sure she loved me! But, oh, God, to think of one so young, so lovely, so apparently innocent, yet steeped to the lips in duplicity! How did she have the heart to abandon him and to deceive me as she did? I can not forgive her, even though she pleads that it was love for me that tempted her! And after all was it love? I must remember that John Keith was very poor and I was very rich. She may have deserted him for the sake of gold.” The suspicion maddened him. He flung himself down before his writing-desk, caught up the pen and wrote recklessly: “MADAME,--I neither desire nor will accept any explanation or excuse for your treachery. The reasons, alas, are all too plain. I was rich, John Keith was poor, so you threw him over for me! You see I understand it all, and nothing you can say or do can palliate your horrible treachery! I despise you, and although I have today for honor’s sake given you the shelter of my name, we shall never more be husband and wife save in name. Even in the same house I shall live apart from you, never seeing you when I can avoid it, never speaking to you unless it is forced upon me, although the world outside must never dream of our secret alienations. The money you sinned for you still shall have, but my respect and love never again! You understand that this is final. I will listen to no appeals. If you speak to me I will turn from you, if you write to me I will return your letters unread. I will not even listen to any one who speaks to me in your behalf. I hold your sin and folly as past all forgiveness. “CECIL LAURENS.” He did not even read it over, so fierce was his anger, so impatient his mood. Thrusting it hastily into an envelope he wrote upon the back her name, “Mrs. Cecil Laurens.” Taking the unsealed letter in his hand he went along the hall and tapped at the door of her room. Phebe responded to his light knock. As the door flew open he saw Molly lying on her bed with her delicate hands before her face. “This is for your mistress,” he said, thrusting the letter into the hand of the maid, and turning away hastily, but not so fast that he saw his wife spring upright, eagerly, to receive the missive. The door closed quickly on him and he went back to the parlor with a strangely heavy heart. The little group of women started guiltily at his entrance, and he knew by their looks that they had been discussing him and his troubles; but no one said a word, only Louise Barry gave him a look of silent sympathy from her golden eyes that spoke volumes. “What a stately beauty she is,” he thought, and suddenly remembered all that Molly had told him of her step-sister’s strange beauty. “She _is_ handsome; but her eyes with their strange yellow gleams make one think of a tigress,” he mused, and then he asked himself, soberly: “If this one had come to Ferndale instead of that misguided girl could I have loved her as I loved that little enchantress?” It almost seemed to him like a wrong to that handsome, high-born beauty when his heart impetuously answered no. There came to him a memory of what his brother had said yesterday: “What is there in a name that you should hate her so? She is the same girl you loved and married, call her by what name you will.” CHAPTER XXXIV. Miss Barry’s voice recalled him to the present. She was persuading his mother to share their opera-box that night. “I should not like to leave Cecil. He will like for me to be at home with him perhaps,” Mrs. Laurens replied. “Oh, he will come, too--will you not, Mr. Laurens?” turning the radiant eyes persuasively on his face. “Do, Cecil, you will enjoy the music,” said his mother. “And I want you to come, Cecil, very much,” added old Mrs. Barry. “Very well, I will,” he replied, carelessly, thinking that it mattered little where he went since the door of love and happiness was shut upon him forever by his wife’s treachery. Doctor Charley came in presently and found them all discussing the opera with great animation. He was disgusted when he heard that Cecil was going and refused Louise’s invitation to himself point-blank. “I am obliged to return to Paris tonight,” he said, curtly, “and if I were not I am too tired. Besides, I should not think it in good taste to go.” Cecil colored and looked at him keenly. “Why not?” he asked, brusquely, and Doctor Charley answered, reproachfully: “I should not forget as you and my mother seem to do, that your young wife is ill and lonely. I should stay here if I had time and amuse the unhappy little creature.” Cecil’s eyes flashed angrily, and Mrs. Laurens tossed her head in displeasure. “She is well enough, only sulky,” she exclaimed. Miss Barry laughed, easily. “Ah, I see that you understand Molly thoroughly,” she said. “Her sulky fits used to be the bane of her mother as long as she lived, and of Aunt Lucy and myself after my step-mother’s death. She will do worse if you notice them, but if left to herself will become sensible after awhile.” Doctor Charley gave her a keen look of displeasure which she pretended not to observe. “I do not like you, Miss Cat-eyes,” he said to himself. “For all poor Molly’s treachery she is more lovable than you, and perhaps you have made the case worse than it really is. Some day when Molly gets well she shall tell me the whole story, but not now, for it would agitate her too much and that would be dangerous in her condition.” He rose impatiently and left the room. Cecil looked after him angrily, knowing well that he was going straight to Molly. “Confound the fellow! What has come over him to meddle like this in my affairs?” he thought. Phebe opened the door gladly enough at his knock. She was getting worried over Molly, who had refused to speak one word since she had read that letter written in the height of Cecil’s resentful passion. She was sitting, or rather, crouched, in a forlorn attitude upon the bed, her arms clasped around her knees, her curly hair falling in disheveled masses round her face and neck, her eyes staring gloomily into vacancy, her face pale and drawn with despair. Doctor Charley went up and spoke to her, but she did not answer nor look at him any more than if she had been a statue. “What is it, Phebe?” he asked, distressedly, and the maid answered: “Mr. Cecil handed me a letter to give her, and she’s been like that ever since she read it.” He saw then that her hands were shut tight over a crushed letter, and tried gently to take it away, but she clung to it with convulsive strength. Charley did not relish deceit and duplicity any better than Cecil did, and in his heart he knew that the girl had done wrong; but her trouble, her grief, her sad situation had aroused all the chivalry in his nature, and, profoundly moved, he exclaimed: “Do not look so wretched, little sister. You are not quite friendless while Phebe and I are left to you. Come turn your eyes on mine, dear, and tell me what they have done to grieve you so.” As if touched to the heart by his loving tone, Molly flashed her eyes upon his with a world of passion in them, and, opening wide her little hand, flung the letter at his feet. “There, take it--your brother’s wedding gift to me;” she cried in concentrated scorn, bitterness, and anguish. He knew that she meant him to read it, and after he had done so he stood silent before her dumbly questioning eyes knowing not what to say. “Well,” she said, at last, and laughed low and strangely--so strangely that it chilled his blood, “well, Doctor Charley, what do you say about winning him back now?” The words roused him into action. He shook himself free from the indignant silence in which he had been contemplating his brother’s cruelty, and coming close to her took both her hands in his. He knew that he must put some hope into that agonized young heart or she would die or go mad of this awful shock. In that low, strange laugh had sounded the echo of incipient madness. “My brother was cruel, very cruel, I can not deny that, dear Molly,” he said, sadly, feeling ashamed of Cecil for his hardness when the girl was so low and ill. She clung to him like a child, and said, in a strained whisper: “You see I sent Phebe to bring him to me. I wanted to explain--all. He would not listen--he went away--and sent me _that_!” her eye indicating the letter with a glance of infinite loathing. “I shall burn this, and you must forget it,” he said, decisively; but she answered: “Burn it if you will. The words are engraven on my heart!” Very gravely and tenderly he said: “Try to forget it, Molly, for Cecil will be ashamed soon that he wrote such cruel words to you. Do as I told you, dear. Try to win him back in spite of coldness, in spite of neglect. These will not last, for Cecil can not succeed in putting you from his heart, and in a few short months you will have a claim on him that he can not deny and that _must_ break down every barrier of his pride.” She hid her face against his sleeve, and whispered: “I shall pray Heaven to let me die when my hour of trial comes, for if I lived he would hate my child for its mother’s sake.” Wisely and gravely he tried to dissuade her from such wild prayers, preached love and patience to the sore heart until he won her promise that she would still try in spite of scorn and rebuffs to win Cecil back. Then he left her calmed and quieted, and went out to make preparations for his return that night to Paris. CHAPTER XXXV. When he came back several hours later to bid her farewell she was lying quiet with her eyes shut. Phebe whispered cautiously: “She is asleep!” The dark eyes opened quickly. “I am not asleep. I was only thinking,” she said. Then she met her brother-in-law’s kind eyes fixed on her full of pity. She drew him down to her and whispered: “I have been thinking of what I promised you, but I’m afraid it will be useless to try, for how can I win him back if I never see him?” “You must see him,” Doctor Charley replied firmly. “But how? I can not send for him again, and he will not come of his own will.” “That is true. But, Molly--how strange it sounds to call you Molly! You must get strong enough to go out of this room, to meet your husband at the table, and in the parlor daily. You must accept invitations to places where he will be compelled to attend you. Gradually you will win him back to his old attendance on you, his old loving care. Then the rest will be easy.” “I will try, oh, so hard,” she said, and deeply moved, he pressed the little nervous hand. “When you get stronger you will write to me and tell me how you get on with your labor of love,” he said. “And now, little sister, I must bid you adieu, I must return to Paris tonight, having missed all the lectures during the weeks I have been chasing that runaway Cecil.” “God bless you for all your goodness to me,” she whispered, and he went away with those grateful words ringing like music in his ears. She turned wistfully to Phebe. “Do you not think I am strong enough to go into the parlor tonight?” “No, indeed, that you are not!” replied the maid decidedly, and after a minute she added with a snort of displeasure, “besides there would be no use. I heard Mrs. Laurens’ maid saying just now that her mistress and Mr. Cecil were going to the opera with the Barrys. I’ll tell you one thing, Mrs. Laurens. That yellow-eyed deceitful woman is going to take your husband from you if she can!” “She can not do that, for he is bound to me,” Molly exclaimed, but the warning never left her thoughts, for she knew that Louise would try to widen the gulf between her and Cecil until it should become impassable. “It will be so easy to do that,” she thought, bitterly. “Ah, Doctor Charley’s words were but sophistry. He will not let me win him back. Perhaps already his thoughts have gone after beautiful Louise.” Tortured by such thoughts as these it was no wonder that her strength came back so slowly that Phebe would not consent to her leaving the room for more than a week. Indeed the maid would have liked to keep her mistress from mingling at all with the rest of the family, for she knew that her orders to the footman had been countermanded by Cecil, and that the Barrys were frequent and honored guests at The Acacias. Phebe knew another thing that made her uneasy for the sake of her forlorn young mistress. There was a conspiracy afoot to discharge her by way of punishment for what was deemed her impertinence to Miss Barry. Phebe had heard the rumor, but she kept silence, hoping that her young mistress would insist on retaining her for her own sake. About ten days after that marriage ceremony in the invalid’s chamber Molly declared that she was well enough to go out of her room and that she should breakfast with the family that morning. Phebe gave a ready assent to the plan and dressed her very tastefully, taking pains to bring out every one of her young mistress’ beauties by her well-chosen morning dress. Then she led her herself to the dining-room, fearful that her agitation might make her faint by the way. Mr. Laurens, his wife and son were already in the room. They looked up in surprise at Molly’s entrance. Poor Molly, poor trembling little culprit! She would have given worlds for one kind look from her husband’s eyes. She turned an imploring glance on his cold face, but he met it with one of surprise and displeasure, supplemented by a slight bow, then let her take her seat at the table without further notice. Her mother-in-law made a curt inquiry after her health, and her father-in-law supplemented it by a careless “Good-morning.” Evidently her presence was unexpected and undesired by the small family. The meal proceeded in embarrassing silence. Molly tried to eat, but it was a melancholy and mechanical proceeding. She burned her tongue with hot coffee, but she was afraid to cry out at the pain; she nearly choked herself trying to swallow things that she put into her mouth in the pretense of eating; and at last she gave it up and sat quiet, with her eyes on her plate, until the ordeal was over. How she groped her way to the morning-room she scarcely knew. Cecil had left the dining-room before her, and she followed slowly in his train. He was cutting the leaves of a book for his mother. At Molly’s entrance he rose and placed a chair for her with distant courtesy. She thanked him and sat down, and for some moments an embarrassing silence reigned. Cecil broke it with a curt sentence that made Molly start. “You are better?” he said. “Thank you, oh, yes, much better,” she faltered, grateful for even this notice. A glance at the pale, wan face did not assure him of the fact, but he went on, pitilessly: “You no longer need the care of a sick-nurse?” “Oh, no,” she faltered again, miserably, feeling as if he desired the negative; but she started when he exclaimed, with curt emphasis: “I am very glad to hear it.” “Why?” she faltered, looking up at him, but the handsome face was averted. But he had heard the timid question, for presently he answered, coldly: “I have been trying to be patient and wait until you were able to dispense with your maid. That impertinent woman has to go!” “My good Phebe to leave me? Oh, I can not let her go!” Molly cried, wildly; but Cecil answered, relentlessly: “I expected this. It does not matter to you that the woman has been grossly impertinent to my mother and to our friend, Miss Barry. Perhaps,” scornfully, “you tutored her to that end.” “I cannot let her go!” Molly cried, her head dropping forlornly on her breast. “She shall go! She has been rude to my mother, and my wife, as her guest, has no right to retain a servant distasteful to her hostess,” Cecil said, loftily. She hesitated a moment, then said, desperately: “Take me away, then, to a home of my own, where none can interfere with my choice of a servant.” He answered instantly, with offensive _hauteur_: “Under the present circumstances, such a course would not be agreeable!” He turned away and stood at the window, with his back to her, determined not to be moved by the sight of the little hands writhing in and out of each other in her lap, and the face with its expression of dumb, patient agony, while hot tears stole from under her lashes and dripped down her cheeks. The door opened, and his proud, stately mother entered with her graceful, gliding motion. She frowned when she saw poor Molly sitting there with the tears stealing down her cheeks. “If you are ill, Mrs. Laurens, perhaps I had better assist you to your room,” she said, with pointed courtesy. Molly shook her head without reply, and Cecil turned around. “She is not ill, mother; she is angry,” he said, sharply. “Angry?” “Yes. I have been telling her that Phebe must go, and she objects.” “Objects, Cecil?” loftily. “Surely she would not wish to retain a servant who had been rude to _me_?” “She is my only friend,” Molly muttered, in a despairing tone, and the mother-in-law rejoined, testily: “I might say that you do not deserve any friends, if I chose to speak plainly, but I do not wish to wound you. You can not expect me to retain that woman at The Acacias. I have secured another maid for you--a splendid woman with a good recommendation--and she will take Phebe’s place tomorrow.” From the pale lips of the despised young wife came a moan of remonstrance; but no one heeded it, for Cecil had gone abruptly out of the room, and Mrs. Laurens, after her final sentence, sat down coolly to her book. Phebe had been on the alert and knew that Cecil had taken his hat and left the house. She peered into the morning-room and saw her young mistress in tears and her mother-in-law absorbed in her novel. Stalking boldly across the room, she said: “You are tired out with coming down to breakfast, Mrs. Laurens. Hadn’t you better come back to your room and rest?” Molly put her hand on the strong arm and went away sobbing unheeded by the reader, who did not turn her head to notice the departure. “Now then, who has hurt you, my pet?” Phebe demanded when she had laid Molly down on her soft sofa, and with bitter sobs the whole story was blurted out, for Molly’s heart was too full to hold it. “Phebe, if they send you away I shall go with you. I will not be parted from the only friend that is left to me,” she exclaimed. Phebe stroked the pretty, dark head in silence some minutes before she replied, gravely: “No, my dear young mistress, you must not defy your husband like that or you will never win him back. You must give me up as he wishes you to do, and perhaps when he sees how you obey his wishes even against your own desire he will send for me to come back to you soon, for I don’t think his anger can hold out long, seeing how sweet and humble and good you are.” After a few moments she continued, sadly: “I have known this for some time, Mrs. Laurens, but I would not distress you with it. But now I will give you one warning. Mrs. Laurens has hired a maid for you who was selected and recommended by Miss Louise Barry. Hush, my dear! Do not say you will not have her, for that would anger your husband. Let her come, but be wary and watchful. She may be a tool in Miss Barry’s hands and may mean to do you harm at her instigation.” CHAPTER XXXVI. The new maid arrived the next morning and Phebe, who had duly received her discharge from Cecil, came in to bid her mistress good-bye. She was calm and quiet, resolutely keeping back her tears for fear that she might make the parting too painful. “You’ll keep my secret, Phebe? You will not tell any one?” Molly implored, clinging to her in pathetic despair. “Oh, Mrs. Laurens, what do you take me for? Wild horses should not drag a word from me without your consent. You hurt me almost as bad as your husband did this morning,” she said. “Cecil?” Molly queried, in surprise, and Phebe answered: “He asked me how much money it would take to pay me to keep silent over all the secrets I had found out here. It was hard to bear, Mrs. Laurens, but I was patient. I would not anger him, for I wanted to come back to you some time. So I told him I needed no bribe to keep the secrets of my unhappy young mistress--that my love for her was enough.” “Dear, good Phebe!” cried Molly, lovingly, and then she made the woman promise not to go too far away, and to send her an address to which to write when she should have coaxed Cecil to let her come back. Phebe promised to give her address to Miss Madelon Trueheart. “That will be best, dear, for if I sent it to The Acacias who knows but that the new maid might keep it from you?” she said. * * * * * Molly did not like the crafty-looking Frenchwoman who took the place of her good Phebe, whom Cecil had hired for her in New York, when they were starting on their wedding-trip. But Florine, as she called herself, gave her new mistress no cause for offense. She was quiet, polite, attentive to Molly’s lightest wants, and the most tasteful and skillful of maids. Her intense sympathy was irksome for she persisted in declaring that madame looked too ill to leave her room. In fact Molly made no effort at mingling with the family for several days after that first time. The cruel rebuff she had received chilled and disheartened her. She shrank sensitively from another one, and so assented passively to Florine’s advice to keep to her room. During those days of tiresome seclusion she busied herself at intervals as her strength would permit in writing a long letter to Doctor Charley--a letter that required many postage stamps for mailing, for Molly wrote down the whole story of her going to Ferndale, and all that had followed upon that visit. She wrote eagerly, hopefully, for she believed that her brother-in-law would force Cecil to read this explanation from his unhappy girl-wife. “He can not think so hardly of me then, when he finds that my only sin was committed through love of him,” she thought, hopefully, and she stole out one night when she thought Florine was busy in the dressing-room, and herself placed the important letter in the box that stood ready in the hall for the family’s mail. But lynx eyes watched the furtive act, and before Molly’s excited eyes closed that night Florine had secured the letter, and very soon it was in the hands of Louise Barry. Ah, how hopefully Molly waited for an answer--an answer that never came, for the young doctor’s letters to her were always intercepted as were hers to him. But she was too loyal-hearted to believe that he had forgotten her, or that he neglected to write. She said to herself that he had never received her letter. “It is some more of Louise’s treachery,” she thought. For two weeks she had not ventured out of her room, but one evening she was so restless she felt that she could bear it no longer. “Florine, you may bring out a dinner dress for me, I shall dine with the family,” she said. “Madame does not mean it--ill as she looks!” disapprovingly. “I am strong enough. It is for you to obey my commands, Florine, not to dictate to me,” Molly answered, with sudden dignity that silenced all remonstrance. Florine brought a pretty white dress and some pearls and dressed her mistress exquisitely. Then she said, apologetically: “It was not that I did not want you to go out, madame, but I feared it would exhaust you, dining with company.” “Is there company?” Molly asked disappointedly. “The Barrys, madame.” “Do they come here often, Florine?” “Do you mean the Barrys, madame?” “Yes.” “They are here every day, or nearly so; and when they fail to come here, Madame Laurens, your mamma, and Monsieur Cecil, your husband, go to them. It is fortunate for monsieur, your husband, that he has such a dear friend as Miss Barry to amuse him while you, madame, are sick,” smoothly. Molly’s heart began to beat loudly, the angry color to flood her cheeks. “She does _not_ amuse him,” she said hotly, and Florine arched her brows in surprise. “As madame wills, but I thought she would be pleased,” she said, apologetically. Molly flung herself down sighing on the sofa. “I will not go down,” she said, sadly, and she owned to herself that she was afraid of Louise. She took a book and read until she was quite sure that the late dinner was over. She, in her character of invalid, had had her own simple meal an hour ago. She called Florine from the dressing-room. “Go and ask Mr. Laurens to give me some piano music. Tell him I will not come out of my room. I can hear quite plainly here.” Florine went out and Molly sank back, sobbing softly. “He will think I am very bold, but, oh, I could not help it. It will take him away from her side at least, and it will make him think of me. But will he grant my request, or treat it with disdain?” Florine came back, smirking. “He will do as you wish, madame.” And almost immediately the soft, full strains of music arose upon the air. Molly lay back upon her sofa listening with blended pleasure and pain. It took her back to that first night at Ferndale when Cecil’s wonderful music had charmed the anger and resentment away from her heart. Perhaps some such thought came to the offended husband too. He played one after another the old melodies he had played that night, then some later ones that she had loved. His touch was very soft and sweet. Perhaps the plaintive request from his neglected wife combined with the subtle influence of the music softened and thrilled his proud heart. “This is better than going down. Oh, how kind he was to grant my request!” the young creature sighed, her heart swelling with passionate love and sorrow. Cecil played for more than an hour, then there came a pause. “It is over. He is weary, or perhaps already repenting of his kindness to me,” she murmured, but the sense of his indulgence and the influence of the music caused a new hope to spring in her heart. But it was of short duration, for in a moment the music began again, and voices rose on the air in a duet, the tenderest of love-songs--voices that it was not hard to distinguish as those of her husband and Louise Barry. “Oh, cruel, cruel; they have done this to wound me!” she cried, and sobbed herself to sleep. Yet she might have known that the artful Louise was at the bottom of it all. She had begged so that he would accompany her in that duet that he could not in courtesy refuse. Molly’s pathetic request for the music had made Cecil think of her, as she had hoped; and it had done more--it had softened his hard heart to some degree. That night, alone in his chamber, his thoughts turned to her with more kindness than he had dreamed he could ever feel for her again. Her meek acquiescence in his hard decree of separation, her humility, her illness, her patience rose before him in so touching and pathetic a light, that a moisture dimmed his eyes. “Poor girl! she is crushed to earth by the exposure of her treachery,” he thought, and a great wonder at her humility came over him. “Such a spirited little creature, such a mad-cap, as she used to be! What has subdued her so? Can it be the work of love--love for me?” These softened thoughts followed him until the next morning, and something like pity began to blend with his anger toward his unhappy wife. “She is ill and lonely, and perhaps I ought to show her some little courtesy. I will send her some new books; she can beguile her lonely hours with them,” he told himself, and spent an hour selecting a dozen books on poetry, romance, travel, and kindred subjects. His heart, that had been so heavy through all its pride and resentment, felt lighter as he retraced his steps to The Acacias. He deemed himself quite fortunate in meeting Florine in the hall. He called to her hastily, and gave her the large package of books. “Take these to my wife, from me,” he said, in a softened voice. “Tell her I selected them especially for her reading, and hope she will find them interesting.” Florine took the books with a courtesy. She went slowly along the hall--very slowly. She did not mean to deliver the books, if she could help it. But, glancing in a furtive way over her shoulder, she saw Cecil Laurens leaning against the newel, and intently watching her progress. “_Diable!_ he distrusts me,” she muttered, and a clever thought came to her. She opened the door and went in with the books. Molly looked up at her with those dark, wistful orbs that ought to have moved even the Frenchwoman’s wicked heart, but their plaintive sorrow did not touch the creature that Louise had bribed with gold. “Madame,” she said, smoothly, “Miss Barry has sent you some good, Christian books to read, and hopes they will do you good. She called to take your husband to a morning concert, and left the books and the message.” The sorrow in the dark eyes changed to jealous anger. “Has he gone with that woman?” Molly asked. “_Oui_, madame,” said Florine, with a profound courtesy; then, smiling, “Ah, madame, what a glorious beauty is that queenly Miss Barry! No wonder--” She pauses. CHAPTER XXXVII. Molly looked keenly at the hesitating maid. “‘It is no wonder’--well, go on,” she said, sharply. “I beg madame’s pardon, I meant no harm, but I was about to say it was no wonder that Monsieur Cecil admires Miss Barry so much,” answered Florine, deprecatingly. Molly looked straight into the shifting treacherous black eyes. “Does my husband admire _her_?” she asked, in a strange voice. “La, madame, how should I know? It was but a slip of the tongue. I only judged by appearances,” Florine said, tossing her smart head with its cap and ribbons. Molly pointed at the package of books. “Take them away and put them into the fire,” she said, furiously, her heart swelling with jealousy. “I will have nothing to do with the books or the sender!” “_Oui, madame_,” said Florine, courtesying. She took up the books and went out quickly. Cecil was still lingering in the hall, perhaps awaiting some message from his wife after his overture of kindness. Florine went up to him with a hypocritically sorry face. “Monsieur, I do not think Madame Laurens is herself quite this morning. She told me to put the books into the fire.” Cecil stared in incredulous amazement. “Nonsense, she could not have said that,” he exclaimed. “_Mais, oui, monsieur_, I speak her very words. ‘Take them away and put them into the fire, I will have nothing to do with them or the sender,’ she said.” “_Really_, Florine?” “Monsieur, I swear by the saints those were madame’s words. Ask her if you doubt me.” She had such an air of truth and injured innocence that he believed her, and his face grew so stern and pale that she was frightened. But he took the package from her hands without a word, and carried it to his room. “I will keep them here always to remind me of this rebuff when I feel tempted again to show her any kindness,” he said, sternly. And when Molly made her appearance at dinner that evening he was as cold as ice, merely noticing her presence by a slight sarcastic bow. The two school girls dined at home that evening by permission of their teacher, and their eager chatter and merry laughter filled up the pauses that would otherwise have been so embarrassing. One of the girls, Nina by name, was of the same age as Molly, the other one was sixteen, and her sweet name, Dora, had been shortened to Dot. Nina and Dot were pretty, impulsive girls, warm-hearted to a fault, and although they had been told Molly’s story they did not resent it as did the older members of the family. They thought and declared that it was too “romantic for anything.” When they left their father and brother over the wine and walnuts they each slipped an arm in Molly’s and led her to the parlor and to a sofa, where they placed her between them. “Now, let us have a real good chat,” said Dot. “School closes next month, you know, and then we are all going back to the United States. Dear old Maple Shade and black mammy, I do really long to see them again, don’t you, Nina?” “Yes, indeed.” “Are you glad we are going home, Lou--oh, I beg pardon, I forgot,” Dot cried, tenderly, as the hot flush mounted to Molly’s cheek. “It does not matter,” the latter said, sadly, and Nina exclaimed: “Do you know I think that your middle name--Ernestine--is beautiful? May we not call you by that? It is softer, I think, than the other.” “As you please,” Molly answered, and Mrs. Laurens said, coldly: “I think it will be a good idea, Nina. Ernestine is a more aristocratic name. I’m glad you suggested it.” Then Dot began again: “Are you glad, Ernestine, that we are going home so soon?” “I did not know we were going,” she replied, faintly, wondering if Cecil was going to send her home alone. Mrs. Laurens moved a little nearer, and said, in her usual cold tones: “It is principally on your account we are going, that your child may be born at Maple Shade, where all the Laurens family have been born for almost a century.” Cecil in entering noiselessly that moment caught the words clearly. He could not repress a quick glance at his wife. He saw the pale face flush to hot, burning crimson one moment, then grow pale and sorrowful again as she put up one hand to shield its emotion from Mrs. Laurens’ cold eyes. She was about to speak, but at that moment she caught the inquisitive glance of his eyes and the words died unuttered on her lips. At that moment the loud ringing of the door-bell announced visitors. In a minute more the Barrys were announced. Louise all in opera dress with diamonds on her neck and in her hair looked radiant. Mrs. Barry in gray satin and ostrich plumes was sulky. “I shall be glad to get Louise married off my hands,” she exclaimed, tartly. “Here I am dragged out of the house every evening to balls and operas at my time of life until I am nearly dead. Mrs. Laurens, I think I shall have to ask you to chaperone my giddy niece!” “Cruel Aunt Thalia!” cried Louise, affecting to take it all as a joke. Then she caught sight of Molly, and after a moment’s hesitation sailed forward. “My dear girl, and so you are well enough to be out at last,” she exclaimed, sweetly, holding out her jeweled hand. Molly did not look at the offered hand, did not open her lips, did not even bend her head. She was looking at old Mrs. Barry who did indeed appear older and grayer than ever with new lines of care and age on her homely face. The old shame and pain at deceiving the aged gentlewoman swelled again at Molly’s heart as it had done a year ago at Ferndale. She rose impetuously, pushed aside Louise with a touch of her slender hand, and went quickly over to Mrs. Barry’s side. The old lady looked up angrily, but Molly did not shrink as she would have done at Cecil’s frown. She stood before the grim old dame like a child that has done wrong, and exclaimed impetuously like a child: “I am sorry I deceived you, Mrs. Barry, I was sorry all the time. Sometimes I could hardly go on with the deceit. Won’t you please forgive me?” Louise had followed her across the room. She saw Mrs. Barry’s hard face change and soften, and gave a gasp of terror. Then, affecting not to have noticed Molly’s words, she exclaimed: “Come, Aunt Thalia; we shall be late for the opera. Excuse us, Molly, but we only came by to see how you were, and as you are so much better, we must hurry. Good-bye all;” and without ceremony she hustled Mrs. Barry past Molly, and out of the room. Molly stood gazing after them like one dazed, until she felt a hand touch her shoulder. It was Cecil’s father, who said, low but firmly: “Sit down, child, and do not look so frightened.” He pushed her gently into a chair, the same chair that Mrs. Barry had sat in, and she remained there quietly a moment; then, feeling their wondering, disapproving glances burning her sensitive face, she rose to go. She had an impression that Cecil opened the door for her, that he stood gazing after her as she moved down the hall. She felt the scorn of his glance keenly. “Surely I did not do wrong,” she thought. “I had acted badly to that poor old lady, and I thought I must ask her forgiveness; but Louise hustled her out before she could answer me. She does not want her to forgive me; she does not want me to have a single friend.” She opened her door and went in, thinking sadly that, only for her promise to Doctor Charley, she would not try to mingle with the family again. “They hate me--all of them; they will never forgive me for being the daughter of an actress, instead of a Barry. Perhaps if they knew that my father was Sir Edward Trueheart’s son, they would respect me more. But I shall not tell them. I can be proud, too; and if they can not love me and forgive me for myself, I will keep my pleasant secret.” Florine looked at her narrowly. “Madame, I can not help thinking you look worse every time you leave your room. I am sure you are not strong enough to bear company,” she said, with pretended solicitude. “I believe you are right, Florine,” Molly answered, with sudden bitterness, and she resolved that she would not go among them again as long as she could help it. Florine fostered the resolve. She made Molly believe she was sicker than she was. She excluded every one from the room, declaring that her mistress was nervous and could not bear company. Even the Truehearts were, without Molly’s knowledge, denied admittance. Her craft had a different effect from what she intended. The report of Molly’s illness began to soften Cecil’s obdurate heart. His love, which had been smothered but not destroyed by the discovery of her falsity, began to burn again with its pristine warmth and ardor, augmented by sympathy with her illness, loneliness, and her delicate condition of health. He tried at first to beat down this reviving tenderness, this exquisite pity, and to keep up the old feud; but the memory of the past, when they had loved each other so well, pleaded now for the lonely, humbled, neglected wife. “How happy we were, and how quickly the time passed. I shall never be so happy again,” he said to himself, sadly, and there came over him, in the words of the poet, a yearning “To be friends; to be reconciled.” “I am foolish even to think of her,” he muttered, impatiently. “But she looks so sad, so ill--what if she should die?” That thought frightened him, and showed him first with what a passion he loved the frail creature who had deceived him. He went to his mother and asked her advice. “Is it not time for me to forgive that poor girl? What if she should die, mother?” he said. “She will not die. There is no such good luck,” Mrs. Laurens said, bitterly. “For shame, mother! I did not know you could be cruel enough to wish for any one’s death,” he exclaimed, and flung out of the room hurt and indignant. CHAPTER XXXVIII. He began to repent of that cruel letter he had written to Molly, and to think that it would not be impossible to forgive her for her treachery. He formed a wistful habit of watching the door behind which she had hidden herself from angry scrutiny, but it never opened save for the egress or ingress of Florine who regarded in such surprise the apparition of Monsieur Cecil in the hall, that he would color up to his temples and turn away. Yet the longing to see his wife, to hear her voice, grew upon Cecil daily, and much of his resentment died. Once or twice he was tempted to knock boldly at her door, to enter and take her in his arms, and tell her he forgave everything, because he loved her so well he could not live away from her presence. There was but one thing that deterred him; it was the sight every day in his room of the books Molly had sent back with that maddening message. The remembrance of that episode kept alive in his breast a tiny spark of resentment. “She should not have been so resentful, after all that she had done. She should have accepted the first overture I made toward peace,” he thought. But Louise Barry was not idle. She foresaw all too plainly that the time was not far distant when Cecil Laurens’ love would break down his pride, and force him to seek reconciliation with his lovely young wife. “And when that hour comes I shall be lost, for Molly will betray me as soon as she can find any one to listen,” she said to herself. The yellow eyes gleamed with fear and anger. “It must not be!” she exclaimed, and a cruel purpose entered her mind. She sent for Florine Dabol that evening, and the maid came to her in disguise, as she always did. “Florine, you promised to rid me of that woman!” she exclaimed, reproachfully. The maid tossed her head. “_Ma foi_, what can I do? I have tried to make her desperate, so that she would run away or kill herself, but she will do neither. Had any one told me the half I have told her, I should have gone mad with jealousy. But this girl--I never saw such sadness, such dumb humility. She means to win him back by sheer humility and patience.” Louise shrugged her shoulders impatiently. “I never should have believed it of Molly Trueheart, she was always so fiery, yet she was good-natured, too, at her best. I could wind her around my little finger by cajolery.” “And now, Mademoiselle?” “I can not move her. She has grown stubborn through her love for him,” Louise answered, frowning. In a minute more she asked: “And the husband, Florine? Has he made any more overtures toward reconciliation?” Florine answered with what seemed almost malicious candor: “It is only by constant strategy I keep them apart. He is dying for her; one can see that plainly.” “He is a fool. He does not seem to know that there is another woman in the world!” exclaimed the heiress, whose clever plans for monopolizing Cecil had all failed. Molly might be lost to him through her treachery, but he never thought of Louise or any other. Florine stayed an hour and they revolved many plans before they decided on one. Then the maid hurried home, always fearful that Cecil should catch her off guard and make his way to Molly. But she found her young mistress alone as usual, for the other members of the family seldom entered the sick-room. Molly had fallen asleep on her sofa in her pretty white _négligé_, and her maid, who had an eye for beauty, gazed at her admiringly for some moments, noticing that a tear had fallen and was only half dried upon her cheek. “How pretty she is! No wonder monsieur is so ready to forgive her and love her again,” she thought. “I wonder that Miss Barry can have the heart--I shouldn’t, I know, but for the five hundred dollars. But I need that so bad, or I wouldn’t, no, I wouldn’t have been tempted to do such a deed. Whatever happens, I’ll bet all my money he’ll never marry that wicked Louise!” CHAPTER XXXIX. Florine Dabol had promised heartless Louise Barry that she would poison the hapless creature before her; but, as she gazed at the lovely sleeping face, so like that of a grieved child that has sobbed itself to sleep, a twinge of keen remorse tore her heart. She was crafty and deceitful and fond of intrigues, like all French maids; but she had never committed a crime in her life, and she began to tremble now at the enormity of what she had promised to do. Vain and pretty, fond of finery, ease, and pleasure, Florine’s god was money; and upon her avarice Louise had cleverly worked, dazzling her with the promise of five hundred dollars in gold when she should come and tell her that deed of crime was accomplished and Cecil Laurens’ young wife dead. In Florine’s pocket was the tiny powder that, placed in Molly’s glass, was to accomplish the deed; and Louise, with the powder, had given the maid a note that was such a perfect copy of Molly’s writing that, when found in her room next morning, it would be enough to convince every one that Molly had committed suicide. It was a clever plan, and there was nothing to prevent its being carried out successfully. Molly lay there, weak and helpless, in her enemy’s power. Yet in that very helplessness lay her defense against the powers of evil. For Florine Dabol, as she stood there fingering the poison in her pocket and gazing at the lovely, sorrowful face, felt moved and troubled, and her feeling of her mistress’ helplessness found expression in an exclamation of profound remorse and pity: “Poor baby!” For Molly, in her youth, innocence, and grief, seemed like an infant, in the eyes of the maturer maid, and an intense repugnance to her contemplated horrible deed rushed over her soul. She turned away and went into the dressing-room, dropping softly into a chair, that she might not awake the sleeper. “I can’t--I can’t do it! I must find some other way to earn the money. I can’t have that poor thing’s blood on my soul! She would haunt me, and I should get no rest from those hollow black eyes!” she muttered, fearfully. Evidently Florine’s good angel was pleading with her, for she sat there wrapped in thought while in the next room Molly slept sweetly, unconscious of the danger hovering near her in such deadly form. An hour passed and Florine still sat in her chair, and now and then muttered words escaped her lips. “She is so good and sweet and patient. She has never given me a cross word for all the dreadful lies I’ve told her about her splendid husband. How can I kill the gentle creature?” She thought, suddenly: “If I could only tell her something very dreadful, that would make her go away from The Acacias forever, it would be the same as killing her.” Poor Molly! Yes, it would be the same, for to that devoted heart life without her husband would be death far worse than death. Florine rose up and went noisily into the next room. Molly started, broad awake, and sat up looking in alarm at the maid. “I beg your pardon, Mrs. Laurens. I’m afraid I disturbed you talking to myself in such a loud voice. I was so angry I couldn’t help it, madame,” said Florine. “What has made you angry, Florine?” asked the sad, gentle voice. “Oh, madame, I oughtn’t to tell you on no account; but it’s a shame their goings-on, and you sick and not able to help yourself.” “Florine, I don’t understand you,” wistfully. “Maybe it’s best you don’t, madame, for if you did you wouldn’t stay with such a shameless man, planning a second marriage while you’re alive, and likely to be for many years, not but that _her_ will’s good to poison you if she had a fair chance.” Molly sat upright with frightened eyes. “Yes, Florine, I know Miss Barry hates me,” she shuddered. “But--but--you _are_ my friend, aren’t you? Don’t, oh, don’t let her kill me, please!” “Not if I can help it, madame, never!” cried the maid. “But what can I do? When she bribes me to poison you and I refuse she’s going to manage it some other way, certainly. You’re in _her_ way and _his_--don’t you know that, my poor young lady?--and,” dropping her voice to a warning whisper, “your life is more and more in danger every hour you stay in this house.” She watched the beautiful face closely. It could scarcely grow more pale, but it was wild and startled. “Florine, don’t let her kill me. I--I--will win my husband’s love back some day,” she moaned, holding out her trembling little hands. Florine tossed her head. “Never, never!” she exclaimed. “Hush, Florine!” sternly. “Very well, madame,” resignedly. She sat quiet a few moments until Molly’s jealous love conquered her pride. “Florine Dabol, why do you say such things to me? Do you believe that Louise has won my husband’s love from me?” she demanded. “It is plain to be seen, madame. Such goings-on!” Florine tossed her head and shrugged her shoulders in a way that expressed volumes. Molly gazed at her with eyes full of pain, and Florine said to herself that she was making good progress indeed. “Madame, you are too good, you are indeed. I would not live with a man that hated me openly, and spent all his time with another woman. It is cruel, it is shameful!” warmly. Not a word came from Molly’s blanched, writhing lips, but she watched Florine’s face with burning eyes. The maid continued: “Madame, where are all your friends and relations? Why do you not write to them to come to your aid, and make your husband treat you with common respect. If he will not do that let them take you away from him, for this life of loneliness and neglect is killing you by inches.” “That is true,” Molly gasped with white lips. “I would bear it no longer, madame. I would go away out of his life forever since they both wish for it and pray for it.” “Oh, Florine, you are mistaken. He is angry with me, but if I am only patient he will pity and forgive me soon, I hope. And--and--he is going to take me home next week that--our child may be born at his old ancestral home,” Molly cried, piteously. Florine gazed at her in expressive silence a moment. “You see he does not hate me as bad as you think,” Molly cried eagerly, and Florine sighed aloud. Then she asked gravely: “My poor young lady, who told you he was going to take you home?” Molly answered: “Mrs. Laurens, his mother.” “Oh, how cruel!” the maid cried warmly. “They have deceived you, madame. I have taken pains to find out their plans and now I will give them to you. It is not Mr. Cecil who will take you home. You are to go with the old folks and the daughters. He--your husband--remains behind with the Barrys, and they all three go immediately to Paris. Ah, madame, Paris is so wicked! And the aunt, the chaperone, she is so old, blind, deaf, she will see but little of the goings-on!” Florine’s shrugs and glances conveyed even more evil than her words. “Florine, are you sure, quite sure, of all you have told me?” Molly asked in a dejected voice. “Madame, I am willing to take an oath,” Florine replied glibly, and for a moment there was a deep silence. The maid was afraid that her mistress was going to faint, but Molly sat upright as a statue. Presently she spoke. “No one could blame me if I went away to my own friends and left him forever, could they, Florine?” “No one, madame, for you have had provocation enough to drive you desperate; but your friends, where are they?” curiously. “No matter. I am not utterly friendless, Florine, and since they are trying to drive me desperate, why should I go back to America to please them?” angrily. “Why not stay here with my kindred and spare myself the torture of trying to win back a heart that has passed from my keeping forever?” She spoke rather to herself than to the maid, but Florine said eagerly: “Ah, madame, you begin to talk sensibly now, for I tell you plainly that if you stay here much longer, Miss Barry will find means to remove you from her path. Oh, I am so sorry for you, my sweet young mistress, or I would not tell you this. But I am frightened for you, madame, and I know when you go back to America, where I can not go with you, you will have no one to watch over you like your poor Florine!” It was all very genuine, all very eloquent, as Florine poured it out, and Molly’s heart warmed to the maid whom she had once distrusted. “Florine, you are very good to me,” she exclaimed, gratefully. She pulled a pretty ruby ring from her finger, and holding it out to her, said, in a voice choked with misery: “Take this to remember me when I am gone.” The treacherous woman took the gift with profuse thanks and inward joy, for Molly’s last words had assured her that her scheme had succeeded. She would go away--poor, desolate Molly--and she, Florine would be spared the taking of human life. “Madame, let me go with you and care for you,” she said, curious to know where she would go. But Molly shook her head. “No, no, Florine; I shall go alone,” she said, hopelessly; but the maid said to herself: “I shall be sure to find you out, any way, for I want to keep track of you.” She saw Molly looking at the pretty clock on the mantel, and thought, exultantly: “She will go tonight, and tomorrow Miss Barry shall pay me the money, for this is just as good as if I had killed her,” she decided. “You may go now, Florine; it is past my usual bed-time, but I shall sit up awhile,” said Molly. The maid withdrew with a respectful good-night. She knew well that she had been dismissed because her young mistress desired to make secret preparations for flight. She was right in her conjecture, for in less than half an hour the despairing wife stole away from The Acacias and took her solitary way through the London streets in the moonless darkness of the summer night. CHAPTER XL. Molly had determined to go to the Truehearts, tell them her whole sad history, and ask them to love her for her father’s sake. “They can not turn me away, they are too fond of me already,” she said, hopefully to herself. “If they will only hide me from my enemies I shall love them and be grateful to them forever.” She had begun to look on Cecil as her enemy now, as one who wished for her death that he might marry his new love. “But they shall not kill me. I shall die soon enough of my broken heart anyhow,” she said sadly. She would not take a cab, weak as she was, for she wanted to make it impossible for any one to trace her, so she walked wearily and slowly along over the full mile that intervened between The Acacias and the elegant mansion of the Truehearts. For a wonder no rough or rowdy molested the small, veiled female figure as it plodded along. Perhaps it was because every one but Molly herself saw that she was guarded by another woman who kept just a little behind the other and always in the shadow. It was Florine Dabol, bent on finding out all about the mysterious friends at whom Molly had vaguely hinted. “It may be worth my while to know where she is all the time when they are hunting her high and low!” she cleverly thought. She was amazed and confounded when she saw her mistress ascend the stone steps of a splendid mansion, more and more amazed when she saw her after ringing the bell and waiting but a few moments, disappear within the stately door. “Well, she’s got fine friends anyhow,” said Florine. She ascended the steps and read the name upon the door-plate. “Sir Edward Trueheart, upon my word,” she ejaculated. She waited a while in the shadow of the steps to see if her mistress would come forth again, but seeing that she did not, took her way hastily back to The Acacias and went in by the servants’ entrance, the key of which she had carried when she went out. As she did so the clock in the hall chimed the midnight hour. “I will run up to her room and see if she has left him a note,” she said. To her amazement, as she entered the dimly lighted upper hall, she encountered Cecil Laurens, who had just let himself in with his latch-key. He looked haggard and wretched in the dim light. “Florine!” he exclaimed, in surprise, at sight of the cloaked and bonneted figure. “Yes, sir. I have been to the theater. My mistress gave me this evening out,” answered the artful maid, thinking that she could turn this seemingly awkward _contretemps_ to good account. He hesitated a moment, then asked, eagerly: “Do you think that Mrs. Laurens is awake yet, Florine?” “I expect so, sir. She does not sleep well at night for fretting and crying.” The words struck his heart with pain and reproach. “‘Fretting and crying,’ and no one to comfort her, poor child!” he thought, and held up his hand. “Wait,” he said. He drew pencil and paper from his pocket, and wrote rapidly some words that had been burning his heart all day: “My darling wife, forgive me for that cruel letter. My love has conquered pride, anger and resentment. Let us throw the past behind us, and begin life anew. May I come to you and hear the story I once refused to listen to from you? YOUR OWN CECIL.” He folded the note hurriedly across and put it into Florine’s hand with a gold piece. “That’s for your kindness to my wife, my good girl,” he said. “Now, if she is awake, give her the note at once. If she is asleep, let her have it as soon as she awakens. I shall wait here a few minutes to hear from you.” Florine courtesied low, took the note and disappeared in a moment inside that door on which Cecil’s wistful eyes were eagerly fastened. Then she thrust the note into her pocket and looked eagerly around the room. “Ah!” she exclaimed. There was a note, as she had expected--a note not even sealed. It lay upon a little table at the head of the bed where Florine usually placed the glass of water Molly drank at night. Florine read the brief note hastily and without compunction. Then she put it back upon the table and opened the door, beckoning excitedly to Cecil, who was waiting at the stair-way. He came hurriedly, believing that Molly had summoned him, eager, like himself, for a reconciliation. He stepped quickly across the threshold, and Florine panted, wildly: “Ah, monsieur! what does it mean? She--my mistress--is not here!” She ran into the dressing-room and bath-room and back again, followed by Cecil, startled and anxious. “_Ma foi_, I have feared this--that she would run away!” Florine muttered, just loud enough for him to overhear. He turned on her fiercely. “Woman, you must be mad! She can not have left the house. Go and seek her at once.” But at that moment his eyes fell on the note. He snatched it up hurriedly and read: “MR. LAURENS,--You have said that you would read nothing from me, but doubtless you will make an exception of this welcome note that tells you that I have gone away out of your path forever. “I have learned that I am to be sent to your home in America next week, while you remain behind to enjoy the companionship of the wicked woman you love. The ostensible reason is that my child may be born at Maple Shade. I prefer to go to my own friends, where the blessing that is coming into my blighted life may come into the world under the same English skies where my forefathers first saw the light. If I stayed with you, you would hate both me and the little one, so we will go where we shall be sure of a little love and kindness. “Farewell--a long farewell. MOLLY.” CHAPTER XLI. Cecil Laurens turned sternly upon the deceitful maid. “You say that you expected, feared this. Why did you not warn me?” He exclaimed in a voice whose stern impatience did not hide its key-note of agony. “_Ma foi_, monsieur, I thought you did not care,” Florine replied insolently. “What do you mean?” he stormed; and she answered with pretending humility: “Monsieur neglected his wife and she was wretched. She cried out often that there was one in her own land who loved her, and that she repented now that she had left him for Monsieur Laurens! If only she could find him again--” “Stop!” Cecil thundered angrily. She paused obediently. “Who has tutored you to this falsehood?” he exclaimed. Florine muttered cringingly: “I am sorry monsieur is angry, but it is the truth I speak. Madame was lonely and dissatisfied. What more natural than that she should fly from a cold husband to a devoted lover in her own land?” An impulse came over him to strike down the impudent woman at his feet for those maddening words. He restrained himself with difficulty. “She is foolish and ignorant,” he said to himself, and flung the letter toward her. “Read that and see how you have misjudged your mistress!” he exclaimed. He watched her closely, and he saw the plainest incredulity upon her face. “What do you think now?” he asked. “Monsieur does not wish my real opinion?” reluctantly. “Yes.” “Very well. I should believe this letter only that Madame Laurens made me bring her the daily paper today and read aloud the shipping news. There was one steamer that sailed tonight just before midnight.” “That proves nothing,” he said curtly. “No, nothing,” agreed Florine. Then with a deep-drawn sigh: “Only madame wept so bitterly, and exclaimed, ‘No one could blame me if I left my unloving husband and went back to my friend!’” He looked at her sternly, as if trying to pierce the secrets of her false breast, but she continued unfalteringly: “Ah, I have lived with so many fine ladies, I know their ways. It might be only a coincidence, but why did she send me away tonight? Why was she so anxious I should go to the theater?” “Hush! No more!” he said, hoarsely, and Florine bowed mockingly. “You believe, then, Florine, that her note was a blind, and that she sailed tonight for America?” “Undoubtedly, monsieur.” “Great heavens! I wish you had warned me!” he exclaimed. “I thought you would be glad to be rid of an unloved wife,” low and tauntingly. “Go!” he said, threateningly; then as suddenly recalled her. “This scandal must be kept a secret,” he said. “The servants even must not know. The price of your silence?” sternly. “I am incapable of telling; but if fifty pounds--” she began. “My check shall be yours tomorrow, so that you may be sure to hold your tongue,” he said, taking Molly’s note, and turning away to seek counsel with his parents. They had just come in from some fashionable revel, and recoiled in alarm at his haggard, agitated looks. When he had told them all, they declared that Florine was doubtless in the right. The letter had been a blind to keep him in London while Molly fled to America to join John Keith. “She has loved him all the time, and she has found out that your wealth will not console her for his loss,” Mrs. Laurens said, bitterly. “As to her having English relations, that is all bosh, of course,” said Cecil’s father. “If she had had them, we should have heard of them before.” No one had ever thought of Sir Edward Trueheart in connection with poor Molly. No one had ever credited her with having respectable relations. “I shall follow her by the next steamer, and let John Keith beware if I find him in company with my faithless wife!” Cecil Laurens exclaimed, furiously. He kept his word; but, as no steamer sailed for a week, he was detained in London six days longer. So that, when he went, at last, his parents and sisters went with him, as had already been arranged. Doctor Laurens alone of the family remained behind. A bitter note from Cecil and a letter from his mother had duly informed him of Molly’s flight. The noble, honest young physician was amazed, dumfounded. “How could she do it? I thought she loved him,” he said, but then remembering all Molly’s treachery in the past he was fain to believe what they said of her now. “I was deceived in her. Her beauty and her apparent guilelessness led my judgment astray,” he decided, and a great indignation took possession of his mind against the girl whose part he had taken so nobly. He wrote to his brother that she had not been worthy of his love, and that the only thing he could do now was to cast her from his heart. Louise Barry said the same thing when they confided to her the secret of Molly’s flight. “It is what I have expected all the time,” she said. “Molly never cared for Mr. Laurens. It was his money that tempted her, and she has found out now that John Keith’s love was more to her than gold. Mr. Laurens ought to cast her from his heart forever.” “I have told him I should be glad if he would divorce her, but he will not agree to do so,” said Cecil’s mother. “I wish he would,” said Louise, and the aspiration came from her heart. She was secretly enraged and frightened at the failure of the scheme she had intrusted to Florine Dabol. “As long as Molly Trueheart lives the sword of Damocles will be suspended by a single hair over my head,” she thought, angrily, and in her disappointment she had at first refused to pay the promised bribe to the Frenchwoman. But Florine was insolent. “Very well,” she said, “break your promise if you will, and I know where to find Madame Laurens at any moment. And upon my soul I believe I should feel happier in reconciling that deceived husband and wife than in taking the gold you promised me for keeping them apart.” That threat frightened Louise and she paid Florine, after binding her solemnly to keep Molly still apart from her husband. “That will be easy to do if you will only make your arrangements to return to America with the Laurens family. It will lend color to the stories I have told her of her husband’s love for you,” said the maid. “But if she should follow us, if she should relent and come back to her husband?” “She will not do it. She is too proud. But even if she should attempt such a thing I will prevent it,” declared Florine. So Louise and her Aunt Thalia returned to America on the same steamer with the Laurens family. Mrs. Barry had been longing for Ferndale for weeks, and so Louise found it easy to throw the blame of her return upon the old lady. “I have not the heart to keep her away from home any longer, however reluctant I may be to leave London before the gay season is over,” she said, with an affectation of dutifulness that did not deceive the keen-sighted old lady, who knew already that her niece was selfish and cold-hearted, and cared for nothing but money. But she was glad to go home again on any terms, so she did not even suffer herself to look sarcastic at Louise’s hypocrisy. She knew she had to make the best of the heiress for whom poor Molly had been discarded. They went home, and Cecil set out to trace Molly and her lover, vowing to himself a dark revenge upon the man for whom his wife had deserted and disgraced him. The Barry and Laurens families became more intimate than ever. There was an unspoken desire on each side that Cecil would procure a divorce from his faithless wife and marry the real Louise Barry. There seemed small prospect of their hopes being gratified, for the angry husband did not give up the quest for John Keith for two years, and during those two years he never once came home. Letters came from him but seldom. He was always on the wing--always following some new clue, spending money like water in the effort to trace the fugitives. Mrs. Laurens complained that he was spending all his income in that wild and foolish pursuit, but to her entreaties that he would come home he paid not the slightest heed. She had not given him much sympathy in his sorrow and his heart had grown cold to her. He felt vaguely that her _hauteur_ had helped to drive his wife to despair and flight. “If we had not neglected her so much, if we had pitied and forgiven her a little sooner, her heart would not have turned against me,” he thought often; and remembering how his mother had tried to keep up the feud, he found it hard to forgive her interference. But the sudden death of his father nearly three years after his wife’s flight brought the wanderer home again. Nina had married a year ago, and gone to a home in Richmond, of which she was the light and life. Only the mother and Dot remained at Maple Shade, where the family of six had once made everything bright and cheerful. “You must never leave us again, Cecil,” they said, piteously, and he stayed with them in their loneliness and sorrow until another year had rolled by. Then Doctor Charley Laurens came home, and brought a lovely English bride, for whom the family threw off its somber mourning and made merry. Nina and her husband came from Richmond, Louise Barry from Ferndale, other guests from Lewisburg, until the large house was full of friends who came to join in the festivities over the marriage and return of the favorite son. Then the bride was lovely, rich, and of gentle birth. She was a cousin of Lord Westerley. “He knows you all, both he and his wife,” she said. “We knew Lord Westerley, but he was not married,” Mrs. Laurens answered. “He must have married soon after you left, for Madelon Trueheart has been his wife four years,” answered the vivacious bride. “Then he married Madelon Trueheart?” Cecil exclaimed, rousing from his usual apathetic manner. He remembered that beautiful Madelon Trueheart had been his wife’s friend. Molly had told him that Madelon would not leave her parents to marry her lover. He said carelessly that he had heard this, without adding that his lost wife told him. Pretty, young Mrs. Laurens answered, eagerly: “How noble that was in beautiful Madelon, or Lady Westerley as she is now. Happily a missing relative turned up and took her place in the heart of Sir Edward and his wife, and left Madelon free to marry.” “A missing relative?” Cecil repeated, with a start; then, eagerly: “But I thought she was the last of the race.” “Then you have never heard of Sir Edward’s disinherited son? He made a low marriage, and his people would not forgive him. But he died soon after, and they repented and sent for his wife and child, who came and stayed with them, and made happiness possible for Madelon and Lord Westerley.” “Ah!” said Cecil, his momentary flash of interest dying out. A moment’s eager suspicion had awakened in him, then died out again. He had no interest in the widow and child of Sir Edward’s son, as the bride, who was a little awry in her facts, called them. “Poor Sir Edward! They say he tried to make up in kindness to them for his cruelty to his son,” continued the pretty English girl. “He died last year; and after what came by law of entail to his wife and grandson, he gave all the rest of his money to the beautiful Mrs. Trueheart.” “Was she beautiful?” asked Dot, who adored beauty. “As a dream!” replied her sister-in-law, enthusiastically. “I have heard her called the most beautiful lady in England, and no one speaks of her low birth now, since Sir Edward took her up and left her so much money. Lord and Lady Westerley adore her and her child.” “They ought to do so, since she brought them their happiness,” said some one; and then the conversation languished, as no one took any interest in Sir Edward Trueheart’s relative except Mrs. Doctor Charley. Charley himself, who had never met any of the Truehearts for years, had no suspicion of the truth that the Mrs. Trueheart of his wife’s story was his brother’s missing wife and Sir Edward Trueheart’s granddaughter--not his daughter-in-law, as the bungling story ran. He did not even connect the name with Molly Trueheart, whose mother had been an actress and her father, no doubt, an actor. CHAPTER XLII. “Cecil,” his mother said one week later, “do you never intend to marry again?” “You forget that I have a wife already,” with a frown. “Do not speak of her!” impatiently. “No doubt she is dead, but you ought to have got a divorce from her long ago. Do you not see that Louise Barry is dying for you?” “Nonsense,” he replied curtly. “I see nothing of the kind.” “You must certainly have observed a change in her,” persisted Mrs. Laurens. “Yes, her beauty is fading as might be expected. She must be almost thirty,” he replied cynically. “She is five years younger than you, at least,” reprovingly. “And she might have been married long ago. She has had suitors enough. But I believe she has loved you all the time.” “Nonsense!” he said again. “But, Cecil, you would be so much happier if you married again, and you would please us all if you took Louise.” “I would do much to please you, mother, but not this. I shall never love again. My heart’s wealth was poured out on my false young wife, and all its powers were wasted. If you wish me to stay with you, leave me at peace on this subject. I never expect to marry again,” he answered, sadly but decisively. Mrs. Laurens sighed deeply, and looked out of the window of the library where they were sitting together. To change the conversation she said carelessly: “There is a strange man and a pretty little girl coming up the maple avenue.” Cecil made no answer. He was pretending to be absorbed in a book. His mother relapsed into silence, watching curiously the man and child coming up the maple avenue, over the drifts of autumn leaves that strewed the ground with a gold and crimson carpet. He was a good-looking man well dressed in a black suit, with the air and manner of a gentleman. The child he led by the hand was about five years old, daintily dressed in crimson cashmere and a broad white Leghorn hat, beneath which fell soft golden curls, framing a pretty, tear-stained little face. Mrs. Laurens saw the man and child going up the steps, and a sudden vague suspicion darted into her mind. “That strange child, good Heaven, what if Molly Trueheart has sent Cecil’s child home at last!” she muttered. The door-bell clanged loudly, making her start with excitement. The next moment the library door opened and a servant handed in a card. Mrs. Laurens glanced at Cecil. He was paying no attention to the little by-play. She glanced down again at the card, and read: “_John Keith to see Mrs. Laurens._” “Gemmon in de parlor, mistis,” said the old colored man, and Mrs. Laurens followed him without a word. She went along the wide hall, shaking with emotion. “Oh, heavenly powers, the man must be mad to come here. Cecil will murder him,” she muttered, in terror. “But I was right. It is the child, as my heart foreboded. That woman must be dead, or she would not have been brought here.” She opened the door and went in, a pale, handsome, haughty old lady in black silk, before whose severe aspect John Keith, sensitive as ever, recoiled in dismay. “You wished to see me, sir?” frigidly. “I beg your pardon. There is some mistake,” he faltered. “There is no mistake, I am Mrs. Laurens,” impatiently. “Then you are Cecil Laurens’ mother?” “Yes.” “I wished to see Mrs. Cecil Laurens!” She recoiled from him in anger and reproach. “How can you speak that name here?” she exclaimed. “You of all men ought to know that there is no longer a Mrs. Cecil Laurens! Or, perhaps, you think my son has married again?” The handsome man before her sank back into his seat like one stunned. His face paled, his voice trembled as he said: “Madame, I do not understand. Do you mean to tell me that your son’s wife is dead! poor, pretty Molly--dead?” mournfully. “I thought you came here to tell us _that_?” pointedly. “Whose child is that?” with a loathing gesture. “Mine, madame,” proudly. “And hers, Molly Trueheart’s!” exclaimed Mrs. Laurens scornfully. He looked at her, wondering if she could be mad. “Mrs. Laurens, answer me one question if you can,” he said impatiently. “Where is Mrs. Cecil Laurens if she is not dead?” “I do not know. Cecil--we all thought she was with you,” hopelessly. “My God, Mrs. Laurens, I have never seen sweet little Molly since her wedding night! Why should she come to me?” “She ran away from Cecil four years ago. Every one thought she went to you,” Mrs. Laurens faltered, her heart beating fast with excitement. He sprang up again, startled, incredulous. “Why should she leave her husband; why should she come to me, madame?” he demanded. Mrs. Laurens looked at him in a dazed way and muttered, “Was she not your divorced wife?” “No, a thousand times, no! She was my sweet little friend--no more. My God, what subtle treachery am I about to unearth?” exclaimed John Keith wildly. Mrs. Laurens sat down and put her hand to her head. “You are deceiving me,” she muttered. “Madame, I am not,” he answered coldly. “But I begin to scent treachery. Look at this child. She is mine by a heartless wife who divorced herself from me that she might inherit an old woman’s money. The child, deserted by her heartless mother, was left with an aunt, who, in dying, left the child to me. I came here to ask my kind friend, Molly, to keep the child for me until I could make some arrangements. Go, madame, bring Cecil Laurens here! Let me hear his story!” She rose up from her chair, white and trembling. “Wait then,” she said in broken tones. “I must tell him first all that you have told me, or else he would murder you at sight!” CHAPTER XLIII. She went with uncertain footsteps along the hall to the library, and left him alone. The little child, seeing him fall into a dejected attitude, slipped away and entered the back parlor, which was curtained from the front one by falling velvet curtains. She found a picture-book and sat down upon the floor to turn the leaves, without noting the presence of an old lady in gray silk, sitting quietly with folded hands in a large arm-chair. The old lady was Mrs. Barry, who was spending the day at Maple Shade. She had been sitting in the front parlor with Mrs. Laurens, and they had been talking of the subject that was nearest to both their hearts, the desired union between Cecil and Louise. When Mrs. Laurens left her to go and sound Cecil on that important theme she slipped into the back parlor, and sat down to doze a little in the large arm-chair. The sound of voices in the next room roused her, and sitting there quietly, she heard every word that passed. When the pretty child came in, Mrs. Barry stared at her in angry amaze. The little beauty, with her yellowish hazel eyes and falling yellow curls, was a miniature edition of Louise Barry. “What does it mean?” the old lady asked herself, nervously. She sat still, watching the little one with fascinated eyes, unheeding the lapse of time, until she was roused again by voices in the next room. Mrs. Laurens had brought Cecil in, after first telling him all that John Keith had explained to her; and after the lapse of five years, the two men were face to face again. Mutual explanations ensued, and the treachery of Louise Barry was fully unveiled at last. “She and I were lovers before she had any expectations of a fortune from her aunt,” he said. “Mrs. Everett objected to me because I was a traveling salesman, and Louise and I were married secretly, taking no one but Molly into our confidence. Very soon afterward I lost my situation, and was away for months seeking work in vain. My wife found herself in a delicate situation, and became enraged because I was not in a position to declare our marriage and support her properly. Then came that fatal letter from Mrs. Barry that ruined all my life.” Sighing heavily, he continued: “That rich, heartless old woman wrote to Louise that she should be her heiress in case she were unmarried and would accept the man she had in view for her; but if she were a married woman, the matter ended there, and she should leave her property to build an orphan asylum.” No one saw the heavy velvet curtains part and an old woman’s face peer cautiously through the aperture. All were too much absorbed in that story of duplicity and deceit on the part of a beautiful, ambitious woman. John Keith went on, bitterly: “That letter transformed Louise into a demon, it seemed. She was determined to secure the fortune she had forfeited by her secret marriage. She took her aunt into her confidence, and they formed a clever, dastardly scheme.” “Ah!” exclaimed Cecil Laurens, with a start. “You may well start in horror, since you, as well as myself, were a victim of that plot,” said John Keith. “But to return to my story: Louise was not in a condition to make the visit that Mrs. Barry demanded rather than requested. The pretty little madcap, Molly Trueheart, Louise’s step-sister, was tutored to act a part and sent to Ferndale as a substitute.” “Poor child!” exclaimed Cecil Laurens, beginning to understand it all. “It was a bold game, for Molly was expected to keep it up as long as the old lady lived; but there seemed no other way possible. Louise was determined that the will should be made in her favor, and sweet little Molly, who had something of the actress in her veins by inheritance, declared that it would be jolly fun to play the heiress,” John Keith said, sadly, adding, soberly: “There was no fault in Molly Trueheart, except that in one thing she disobeyed her instructions.” “And that?” Cecil Laurens asked, breathlessly. “Was in her marriage to you,” replied the other. “In the fact that Mrs. Barry had in view a possible husband for Louise lay the greatest danger of the whole scheme. Louise bade Molly repel the chosen man by every scheme in her power, so that he should of his own choice reject an alliance with her, thereby breaking off the match without offending Mrs. Barry.” Cecil Laurens cried out, remorsefully: “She did, poor girl, she did use every means to disenchant me. I remember it all now, her frowns, her pretty petulance, her terror at the thought of becoming my wife. But when I found she loved me, I would brook no refusals. Between Mrs. Barry and myself she was almost forced into that marriage.” “She was a pitiable victim of circumstances,” said John Keith. “She had promised Louise to act a part, and could not get released from her promise. If she had refused the marriage, Mrs. Barry would have disinherited her niece.” “But she loved me,” Cecil Laurens said, quickly. “She adored you,” answered John Keith; “she told me so. She revealed to me the whole plot, and begged me to keep the secret. I must beg your pardon for this, Mr. Laurens, but how could I betray my noble friend Molly, and my heartless but idolized wife?” “She, your wife, deserved no kindness at your hands,” said Cecil, angrily. “She did not, that is true; but I was weak enough to love her still, and I went from your marriage to Staunton to see her. I found only her aunt, who told me that Louise’s child had died, and that she had gone away as a traveling governess with a rich lady. You know all the rest, Mr. Laurens--how she divorced herself from me so heartlessly and broke my heart. I went South and engaged in the business of orange growing several years, until a restless yearning drove me back here, or rather to Staunton, where I found Mrs. Everett on her death-bed.” “She confessed all, then?” said Cecil. “Yes, and produced my little daughter whom she had falsely said was dead. She told me that everything was right between my former wife and Mrs. Barry, that she had found out and forgiven the deception about Molly, but that Louise dared not confess to her marriage and the child.” “The wicked woman!” Mrs. Laurens exclaimed, finding voice at last. Apparently John Keith’s heart still held some lingering tenderness for the woman who had deceived him, for his brow clouded, and he said quickly: “I do not think she was altogether wicked, Mrs. Laurens. Her Aunt Lucy told me that she had a passionate love for our child, which she visited secretly several times every year, and that much of the income Mrs. Barry allowed her for pin-money was expended for the child, that it might be reared in luxury.” They told him of all her falsehood and treachery by which poor Molly’s life had been wrecked and ruined, and the strong man shed tears of bitter sorrow and regret. “I will search the world over that I may find your wife and bring her back to you, if you will say that you forgive her the one deceitful act of wedding you under a false identity!” he exclaimed. “I would have forgiven her that at first. It was the thought of what she had been to you, and of her treachery to all that rankled most bitterly in my heart,” answered Cecil, agitatedly. “Mrs. Barry is here. Shall we not tell her of her niece’s treachery?” exclaimed Mrs. Laurens, indignant at the fraud that had been practiced on them all, and remorseful and ashamed at the part she had taken in persecuting Cecil’s wife. “Can we not spare poor, ambitious Louise?” exclaimed John Keith, almost pleadingly. The velvet curtains parted, and Mrs. Barry, sterner and grimmer and uglier than ever, stepped inside the room. “No, you can not spare your wicked wife, John Keith! Mrs. Barry has heard all!” she exclaimed, angrily. At that moment the parlor door opened quickly, and Louise Barry, Dot, Doctor Laurens and his wife, Nina and her husband, Mr. Wentworth, came trooping gayly into the room from some out-door expedition that had flushed their faces, tossed their hair, and made them all very bright and happy. Mrs. Barry raised her long, bony forefinger and pointed angrily at Louise. “There, John Keith, is your false wife,” she said grimly. “But she is no longer niece or heiress of mine!” CHAPTER XLIV. Perhaps Louise had dreaded this scene for years; perhaps she had tutored herself to meet it with calmness. She paused in the center of the room and contemplated the striking scene like one thunderstruck, for a moment, then she crossed gracefully to her aunt’s side and grasped her arm. “Dear Aunt Thalia, what does this mean? Why is Molly Trueheart’s husband here? How _dare_ he come here?” looking expressively at Cecil. He returned her glance with scorn. “Spare yourself the trouble of prevarication, Miss Barry; your treachery is fully known. Four years ago you made my wife the heroine of a parlor scene. Now, the tables are turned, and you find yourself in the same position.” She stared with apparent innocence at his angry face, carefully avoiding John Keith’s eyes. “I deny that I have been guilty of any treachery,” she said defiantly. Mrs. Barry caught her roughly by the shoulder and whirled her around to face her accuser. “Look at that man! Do you deny that you are his divorced wife?” she asked scathingly. Louise scanned his face with sullen fury. “I deny it, yes!” she exclaimed loudly, emphatically. “That man was once married to my step-sister, Molly Trueheart. I have never been married at all!” The loud, angry voice penetrated the back parlor, and the child upon the floor with the book sprang up with a low murmur of delight. She ran to the curtains, swept them aside with a touch of her little hand, and bounded into the room. For a moment she was disconcerted at the sight of all those strange and wondering faces. She exclaimed eagerly: “I thought I heard mamma’s voice!” The next moment she caught sight of Louise glowering at her father, and rushed precipitately forward. “Mamma! mamma!” she exclaimed joyously, and flung her little arms fondly around the tall, stately woman. There was a minute’s intense silence as Louise’s glaring falsehood was thus set at naught by the sweet lips of her child. Mrs. Barry, furious that she had been so deceived, broke the hush with a sarcastic laugh. “Ha, ha, not married, eh?” she cackled. “Well, I should think you would be ashamed to own it as you have a child to call you mother!” Louise repulsed the child’s caress, and it began to sob. “Dear mamma, why are you angry, why have you stayed so long away from your Lucy?” she cried, tearfully, and the sight of the grieved baby face, the sound of reproach in the child’s voice went to Louise’s heart. The motherhood in her was touched irresistibly, and after a brief struggle with herself she held out her arms, and little Lucy sprang joyously into them, and the mother hid her shamed face against the little, sunny head. At that sight John Keith went slowly forward and touched her hand. “Louise, be honest,” he said, huskily. “Acknowledge now that you were once my wife, that this is our child!” Realizing that nothing else remained to her now, she looked up and answered, sullenly: “I am your wife still, John Keith, I lied to you about the divorce. My application failed, although I sent you a fraudulent notice that the divorce was granted.” “You had better go away with him then, for you will never be admitted into Ferndale again. You are the first Barry that ever disgraced the family and I wash my hands of you forever!” piped up Mrs. Barry’s shrill treble. Louise gave her an angry scowl, but John Keith again touched her hand. “Take her advice, Louise,” he said, not unkindly. “Come away with me. Your fine friends will all desert you now as you deserve, but I will forgive you for our child’s sake. I can give you a home of comfort now in the far South, and you will at least be hidden from the sight of all those who know the history of your wicked ambitions.” She caught eagerly at the offered refuge. “I will go with you,” she answered, with a shamed and sullen air. CHAPTER XLV. A thrill of admiration for John Keith’s magnanimity ran along the nerves of every one, and Cecil Laurens felt shamed and remorseful. “He carries out to the letter his promise to love and cherish her for better or worse,” he thought. “Alas, that I did not do so with my poor little girl-bride, whose youth might have been some excuse for her faults. Shall I ever find her again, and, if so, will she forgive me for my coldness and distrust?” He looked fixedly at Louise, who nestled close to her husband’s side, as if finding in his fidelity some comfort under the storm of indignation that had burst on her head. “Madame,” he said, coldly, “perhaps you carried your treachery so far that you were the cause of my young wife’s flight from The Acacias. Perhaps you could tell me, if you would, where to find her now?” She started and flushed crimson, flashing him a sullen, angry glance. “I can not,” she answered, bitterly. “You mean that you will not,” he said, and she nodded defiantly. “Come, Louise,” interposed her husband, “if you know anything that will help to condone the wrong you have done, do not withhold it. You must remember that you are amenable to the law for your sin, although Mr. Laurens will not prosecute you, perhaps, if you will help him find his wronged wife.” That hint was timely. It frightened the wicked woman, and opened her lips, despite the malice that would have sealed them to the truth. She grew pale and looked at Cecil Laurens, half pleadingly. “If I tell you all I know, will you spare me?” she asked. “Yes.” “Very well. Your wife is in England. She had relatives there, and when she left you she went to them. She is living with them still, and your son, born a few weeks after she left you, is a handsome little fellow of four years.” Cecil Laurens grew pale with emotion, and his mother whispered to Doctor Laurens: “So, I am a grandmother. I think I shall begin to wear caps.” Cecil spoke abruptly: “And these relatives of my wife--humble people, of course, but dear to me for the care they have given my darling--their names, Mrs. Keith?” She started and flushed. It was the first time since her secret marriage, six years ago, that any one had ever called her by her husband’s name. Conquering the strange emotion it awoke in her breast, she answered: “I do not know, but I will give you the London address of Florine Dabol, who used to be her maid. Florine was in my service, and helped to alienate your wife from you and drive her away. She knew where she went, but she kept it a secret in order to extort money from me. I hope you will punish _her_ for her wickedness, for she has been bleeding me all these years, until between the support of my child and paying her hush-money over and over, the allowance I had from my aunt was spent, until I could barely dress myself decently.” She drew a pencil from her pocket, and rapidly, though with a shaking hand, wrote on a slip of paper Florine Dabol’s address. “That is where I send her money,” she said, handing it to Cecil Laurens. He took it with a courteous bow and a word of thanks. “Now you have done all that you can to make amends, Louise, we will go. Of course Mr. Laurens will be anxious to see you gone,” said John Keith, sadly. “On the contrary, Mr. Keith, I beg that you, with your wife and child, will accept the hospitality of Maple Shade for tonight at least,” answered Cecil Laurens, gravely; for he said to himself that he had no quarrel with John Keith, who had himself endured such bitter suffering through a woman’s ambition. John Keith declined gratefully, but decisively, the offered hospitality. “We will go now,” he added. Old Mrs. Barry--perhaps taking a lesson in politeness from Cecil--said, carelessly: “You may go to Ferndale, Louise, and get your clothes and everything that belongs to you personally, for you will never see a penny of my money.” “I do not want it, for it has been the curse of my life! It tempted me, and made me the sinner that I am!” Louise answered, bitterly, as she turned away, and without a word of farewell to any one, left the house which she had entered so proudly but a little while ago. Perhaps the hard old aunt remembered those words and reflected on them; for when she died, several years later, it was found that, after a legacy of twenty thousand dollars to Cecil Laurens’ wife, she had given twenty thousand to John Keith, and Ferndale and all her other estates to her grandniece, little Lucy Keith. “It will keep the money in the family; and John Keith is a good man, and deserves something for taking Louise back after all her wickedness, and trying to make a good woman out of such poor material,” she wrote. To her servants each she left a small legacy of five hundred dollars, which made them very grateful and happy; and they forgot all her faults, and lauded “Ole Mistis” to the skies. Ferndale was shut up for a long time, and then sold, for John Keith could never bring his family back to the county where the story of his wife’s wicked schemes was for years a subject of gossip. * * * * * “I shall leave here as soon as I can make some arrangements for mother and Dot,” Cecil said, when he had bidden John Keith farewell and God-speed. “I must lose no time in seeking my wife, and revealing to her my knowledge of the treachery that parted us.” It touched him to see his stately mother sobbing forlornly in Dot’s sympathizing arms. He knew it was sorrow and remorse for her hardness to his wife. “Do not fret, mother. She was such a loving little soul, I am sure she will forgive you when she finds that you are sorry,” he said, gently. “I will write to her, Cecil, as soon as you find her. I will humble myself as I deserve to do until I win her pardon,” she sobbed. “And I, too!” Mrs. Barry exclaimed, dashing a suspicious moisture from her eyes. “Dear girl! I always loved her until Louise set me against her. I would have pardoned her that night when she asked me so sweetly, only my wicked niece hustled me out of the room before I could answer the poor child!” CHAPTER XLVI. A few days after, Cecil was _en route_ for England. Doctor Laurens and his wife bore him company, for the young doctor was anxious to aid in the search for his sister-in-law, in whom he had had such loyal faith so long. Arrived in London, they put up as usual at their favorite Langham, and the gentlemen sallied forth in search of Florine Dabol. At the address Louise had given them they found her parents--a decrepit pair of old French people. Florine was down in the country they said. She was lady’s maid to a great, rich lady, but she had never told them her name. Their daughter came to see them about twice a year, and gave them money to live on, but they never wrote letters to her nor received any communication from her in the interim. Cecil went away in despair. What should he do now? He had given an address to the old couple, and told them to send word when their daughter came, but how could he wait so long in the fever of remorse, unrest and longing that possessed him? Surely it was his good angel that made him meet Lord Westerley coming out of a fashionable club. The urbane nobleman was delighted at the _rencontre_ with Doctor Charley, but he was decidedly stiff with Cecil, who in his preoccupation did not observe the coolness. “Everybody is out of town,” he said, shrugging his shoulders in the chill November air. “I brought Madelon up from the country this morning for a few days’ shopping. You will come and dine with us this evening?” Cecil was about to decline, but his brother hastily accepted. When they had parted from Lord Westerley he said: “Perhaps Lady Westerley can find out where Florine is staying.” * * * * * Somehow Cecil got a good chance to confide all his painful story to the beautiful lady who had been his wife’s dearest friend. She listened to him with emotion. The tears even fell from her beautiful eyes. “But these are tears of joy,” she said, pensively. “I am so glad that the martyrdom of that dear girl is over, and that you had some cause for your apparent heartlessness. Florine Dabol, yes, I can tell you where she is!” “Oh, Lady Westerley.” She smiled at the interruption, but continued: “She is down in the country at The Oaks, our ancestral home. You are aware, Mr. Laurens, that my father and mother both are dead, and that Sir Edward’s grandson has come into the title and estates. Well, Florine is maid to the heir’s mother, my beautiful niece, Ernestine Trueheart.” She glanced at him sharply as she pronounced the name, but it did not seem to strike his attention. “I shall go down there tonight,” he said, eagerly. “Nonsense!” she replied, with a merry laugh. “You would arrive there in the middle of the night. Wait until the morning train. When you get to The Oaks ask for Mrs. Trueheart. When she comes to you tell her what you want of the maid and you will get your wish.” He obeyed Lady Westerley’s instructions to the letter. He waited till the morning train. When they reached the station where his journey ended he took a shabby fly to The Oaks. “The lady of The Oaks must excuse the dust of travel. I am too impatient to linger a moment,” he thought. They drove several miles through one of the most beautiful estates in the country, and at length drew up before a magnificent abode, one of “The stately homes of England.” He paid the driver and dismissed him. The sun shone brightly on the terraced walks as he proceeded on his way, but suddenly he came to a dead stop and cried out in surprise. He had come face to face with a woman and a little boy--a lad with a handsome, spirited face, blue eyes, and chestnut curls. It struck him as strangely familiar. “Phebe, what are you doing here?” he exclaimed in wonder. It was the maid whom he had discharged at Louise Barry’s instigation. She had not forgotten her wrongs, for she answered, sullenly, as soon as she recognized him: “I’m nurse to the heir, Mr. Laurens--little Sir Cecil Trueheart!” He brushed past her, with a smothered sigh to the memory of his wife, and went up the broad stone steps. Presently he found himself waiting in a stately reception-room for the coming of the mistress of The Oaks. While he waited, he stood at the window watching Phebe and her little charge as they strolled upon the terrace. He murmured to himself, with a thrill of pride: “Somewhere in England, I have a little son as beautiful and noble, doubtless, as this little heir of a noble line.” The door opened. A graceful lady in lustrous blue velvet came slowly toward him over the velvet carpet. At first sight of her there flashed over him the words of the young English girl, his brother’s wife: “The most beautiful lady in England!” Dark, curling hair, dark, dreamy eyes, and a face the saddest his eyes had ever seen. She came slowly on until they were face to face, then a cry of passionate joy came from the lips of each: “My wife!” “My husband!” The hour for which she had hoped and longed had come at last. She knew that the truth had come to him somehow, and that the long, sad parting was over for aye. Holding her close in his arms, he told her all. She rang the bell for Florine Dabol, but, seeing Cecil Laurens coming into the house, the wily maid had guessed all. She had instantly fled; and she was clever enough to remain hidden forever from those she had helped Louise to separate. “My darling, you will forgive me all, even the cruel sneers at your mother, so bitterly repented now?” he said, humbly. Tears sprang to her eyes. “Cecil, my mother was an angel,” she said, tenderly. “Although she was an actress, she was not of low birth as Mrs. Barry told you. She was an earnest Christian, too, and I am sure that when she was instantly killed by a railroad collision her pure soul went straight to Heaven. But this is too sad to dwell upon. Come and let me show you our beautiful little son, Sir Cecil.” THE END. THE HART SERIES Laura Jean Libbey Miss Caroline Hart Mrs. E. Burke Collins Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller Charlotte M. Braeme Barbara Howard Lucy Randall Comfort Mary E. Bryan Marie Corelli Was there ever a galaxy of names representing such authors offered to the public before? Masters all of writing stories that arouse the emotions, in sentiment, passion and love, their books excel any that have ever been written. NOW READY 1--Kidnapped at the Altar, Laura Jean Libbey. 2--Gladiola’s Two Lovers, Laura Jean Libbey. 3--Lil, the Dancing Girl, Caroline Hart. 5--The Woman Who Came Between, Caroline Hart. 6--Aleta’s Terrible Secret, Laura Jean Libbey. 7--For Love or Honor, Caroline Hart. 8--The Romance of Enola, Laura Jean Libbey. 9--A Handsome Engineer’s Flirtation, Laura J. Libbey. 10--A Little Princess, Caroline Hart. 11--Was She Sweetheart or Wife, Laura Jean Libbey. 12--Nameless Bess, Caroline Hart. 13--Della’s Handsome Lover, Laura Jean Libbey. 14--That Awful Scar, Caroline Hart. 15--Flora Garland’s Courtship, Laura Jean Libbey. 16--Love’s Rugged Path, Caroline Hart. 17--My Sweetheart Idabell, Laura Jean Libbey. 18--Married at Sight, Caroline Hart. 19--Pretty Madcap Dorothy, Laura Jean Libbey. 20--Her Right to Love, Caroline Hart. 21--The Loan of a Lover, Laura Jean Libbey. 22--The Game of Love, Caroline Hart. 23--A Fatal Elopement, Laura Jean Libbey. 24--Vendetta, Marie Corelli. 25--The Girl He Forsook, Laura Jean Libbey. 26--Redeemed by Love, Caroline Hart. 28--A Wasted Love, Caroline Hart. 29--A Dangerous Flirtation, Laura Jean Libbey. 30--A Haunted Life, Caroline Hart. 31--Garnetta, the Silver King’s Daughter, L. J. Libbey. 32--A Romance of Two Worlds, Marie Corelli. 34--Her Ransom, Charles Garvice. 36--A Hidden Terror, Caroline Hart. 37--Flora Temple, Laura Jean Libbey. 38--Claribel’s Love Story, Charlotte M. Braeme. 39--Pretty Rose Hall, Laura Jean Libbey. 40--The Mystery of Suicide Place, Mrs. Alex. Miller. 41--Cora, the Pet of the Regiment, Laura Jean Libbey. 42--The Vengeance of Love, Caroline Hart. 43--Jolly Sally Pendleton, Laura Jean Libbey. 44--A Bitter Reckoning, Mrs. E. Burke Collins. 45--Kathleen’s Diamond, Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller. 46--Angela’s Lover, Caroline Hart. 47--Lancaster’s Choice, Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller. 48--The Madness of Love, Caroline Hart. 49--Little Sweetheart, Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller. 50--A Working Girl’s Honor, Caroline Hart. 51--The Mystery of Colde Fell, Charlotte M. Braeme. 52--The Rival Heiresses, Caroline Hart. 53--Little Nobody, Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller. 54--Her Husband’s Ghost, Mary E. Bryan. 55--Sold for Gold, Mrs. E. Burke Collins. 56--Her Husband’s Secret, Lucy Randall Comfort. 57--A Passionate Love, Barbara Howard. 58--From Want to Wealth, Caroline Hart. 59--Loved You Better Than You Knew, Mrs. A. Miller. 60--Irene’s Vow, Charlotte M. Braeme. 61--She Loved Not Wisely, Caroline Hart. 62--Molly’s Treachery, Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller. 63--Was It Wrong? Barbara Howard. 64--The Midnight Marriage, Mrs. Sumner Hayden. 65--Ailsa, Wenona Gilman. 66--Her Dark Inheritance, Mrs. E. Burke Collins. 67--Viola’s Vanity, Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller. 68--The Ghost of the Hurricane Hills, Mary E. Bryan. 69--A Woman Wronged, Caroline Hart. 70--Was She His Lawful Wife? Barbara Howard. 71--Val, the Tomboy, Wenona Gilman. 72--The Richmond Secret, Mrs. E. Burke Collins. 73--Edna’s Vow, Charlotte M. Stanley. 74--Hearts of Fire, Caroline Hart. 75--St. Elmo, Augusta J. Evans. 76--Nobody’s Wife, Caroline Hart. 77--Ishmael, Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth. 78--Self-Raised, Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth. 79--Pretty Little Rosebud, Barbara Howard. 80--Inez, Augusta J. Evans. 81--The Girl Wife, Mrs. Sumner Hayden. 82--Dora Thorne, Charlotte M. Braeme. 83--Followed By Fate, Lucy Randall Comfort. 84--India, or the Pearl of Pearl River, Southworth. 85--Mad Kingsley’s Heir, Mrs. E. Burke Collins. 86--The Missing Bride, Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth. 87--Wicked Sir Dare, Charles Garvice. 88--Dainty’s Cruel Rivals, Mrs. Alex. McV. Miller. 89--Lillian’s Vow, Caroline Hart. 90--Miss Estcourt, Charles Garvice. 91--Beulah, Augusta J. Evans. 92--Daphane’s Fate, Mrs. E. Burke Collins. 93--Wormwood, Marie Corelli. 94--Nellie, Charles Garvice. 95--His Legal Wife, Mary E. Bryan. 96--Macaria, Augusta J. Evans. 97--Lost and Found, Charlotte M. Stanley. 98--The Curse of Clifton, Mrs. Southworth. 99--That Strange Girl, Charles Garvice. 100--The Lovers at Storm Castle, Mrs. M. A. Collins. 101--Margerie’s Mistake, Lucy Randall Comfort. 102--The Curse of Pocahontas, Wenona Gilman. 103--My Love Kitty, Charles Garvice. 104--His Fairy Queen, Elizabeth Stiles. 105--From Worse than Death, Caroline Hart. 106--Audrey Fane’s Love, Mrs. E. Burke Collins. 107--Thorns and Orange Blossoms, Charlotte Braeme. 108--Ethel Dreeme, Frank Corey. 109--Three Girls, Mary E. Bryan. 110--A Strange Marriage, Caroline Hart. 111--Violet, Charles Garvice. 112--The Ghost of the Power, Mrs. Sumner Hayden. 113--Baptised with a Curse, Edith Stewart Drewry. 114--A Tragic Blunder, Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron. 115--The Secret of Her Life, Edward Jenkins. 116--My Guardian, Ada Cambridge. 117--A Last Love, Georges Ohnet. 118--His Angel, Henry Herman. 119--Pretty Miss Bellew, Theo. Gift. 120--Blind Love, Wilkie Collins. 121--A Life’s Mistake, Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron. 122--Won By Waiting, Edna Lyall. 123--Passion’s Slave, King. 124--Under Currents, Duchess. 125--False Vow, Braeme. 126--The Belle of Lynne, Braeme. 127--Lord Lynne’s Choice, Braeme. 128--Blossom and Fruit, Braeme. 129--Weaker Than a Woman, Braeme. 130--Tempest and Sunshine, Mary J. Holmes. 131--Lady Muriel’s Secret, Braeme. 132--A Mad Love, Braeme. The Hart Series books are for sale everywhere, or they will be sent by mail, postage paid, for 30 cents a copy, by the publisher; 4 copies for $1.00. Postage stamps taken the same as money. THE ARTHUR WESTBROOK COMPANY Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.A. Transcriber’s Notes A table of contents has been added by the transcriber and placed in the public domain. Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Some inconsistent hyphenation has been retained from the original. *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLY'S TREACHERY *** Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will be renamed. 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