Molly Bawn - BestLightNovel.com
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"Not lower it," says he, quickly, grasping eagerly at what he vainly hopes is a last chance. "Under the circ.u.mstances a divorce could be easily obtained. If you would trust yourself to me there should be no delay. You might easily break this marriage-tie that can scarcely be considered binding."
"And supposing--I do not wish to break it? How then? But enough of this. I cannot listen any longer. I have heard too much already. I must really ask you to leave me. Go."
"Is this how your friends.h.i.+ps end?" asks he, bitterly. "Will you deny I was even so much to you?"
"Certainly not. Though I must add that had I known my friends.h.i.+p with you would have put me in the way of receiving so much insult as I have received to-day, you should never have been placed upon my list. Let me pray you to go away now, to leave Herst entirely for the present, because it would be out of the question my seeing you again,--at least until time has convinced you of your folly. You are an old friend, Talbot, and I would willingly try and forget all that has happened to-day, or at all events to remember it only as a pa.s.sing madness."
"Am I a boy, a fool, that you speak to me like this?" cries he, catching her hand to detain her as she moves away. "And why do you talk of 'insult'? I only urge you to exchange indifference for love,--the indifference of a husband who cares no more for you than for the gravel at your feet."
"And pray, sir, by what rule do you measure the amount of my regard for Lady Stafford?" exclaims Sir Penthony, walking through an open s.p.a.ce in the privet hedge that skirts this corner of the garden, where he has been spell-bound for the last two minutes. A short time, no doubt, though a great deal can be said in it.
He is positively livid, and has his eyes fixed, not on his enemy, but on his wife.
Lowry changes color, but gives way not an inch; he also tightens his grasp on Cecil's unwilling hand, and throws up his head defiantly.
"Let my wife's hand go directly," says Stafford, in a low but furious tone, advancing.
By a quick movement Cecil wrenches herself free and gets between the two men. She does not fling herself, she simply gets there, almost--as it seems--without moving.
"Not another word, Sir Penthony," she says, quietly. "I forbid it. I will have no scene. Mr. Lowry has behaved foolishly, but I desire that nothing more be said about it. Go,"--turning to Lowry, who is frowning ominously, and pointing imperiously to a distant gate,--"and do as I asked you a few moments since,--leave Herst without delay."
So strong is her determination to avoid an _esclandre_, and so masterly is her manner of carrying out her will, that both men instinctively obey her. Sir Penthony lowers his eyes and s.h.i.+fts his aggressive position; Lowry, with bent head, and without another word, walks away from her down the garden-path out of the gate, and disappears--for years.
When he has quite gone, Sir Penthony turns to her.
"Is this the way you amuse yourself?" he asks, in a compressed voice.
"Do not reproach me," murmurs she, hurriedly; "I could not bear it now." She speaks clearly, but her tone has lost its firmness, because of the little tremor that runs through it, while her face is white as one of the pale blossoms she holds within her hand. "Besides, it is not deserved. Were you long here before you spoke?"
"Long enough." With a world of meaning in his tone.
"Then you heard my exculpation. 'Cold as ice,' he called me. And he was right. As I am to you, Sir Penthony, so am I to all men. No one yet has touched my heart."
"For myself I can answer," replies he, bitterly; "but for the others----"
"Not another word," she breaks in, vehemently. "Do not say--do not even hint at--what I might find it impossible to forgive. Not even to you will I seek to justify myself on such a point. And you," she says, tears of agitation arising from all she has undergone, mingled with much pent-up wounded feeling, coming thickly into her eyes, "you should be the last to blame me for what has happened, when you remember who it was placed me in such a false position as makes men think they may say to me what they choose."
"You are unjust," he answers, nearly as white as herself. "I only followed out your wishes. It was your own arrangement; I but acceded to it."
"You should not have done so," cries she, with subdued excitement. "You were a man of the world, capable of judging; I was a foolish girl, ignorant of the consequences that must follow on such an act. Our marriage was a wretched mistake."
"Cecil, you know you can escape from your false position as soon as you choose. No one loves you as I do."
"Impossible." Coldly. "In this world a thing once done can never be undone. Have you lived so long without learning that lesson?"
As she speaks she turns from him, and, walking quickly away, leaves him alone in the garden. Much as he has grown to love her, never until now has the very tenderness of affection touched him,--now, when the laughter-loving Cecil has changed for him into the feeling, accusing woman; although a woman dead to him, with a heart locked carefully, lest he should enter it.
How can he tell, as she goes so proudly along the garden-path, that her bosom is heaving with shame and unconfessed longing, and that down her cheeks--so p.r.o.ne to dimple with joyous laughter--the bitter tears are falling?
Almost as she reaches the house she encounters Tedcastle, and turns hastily aside, lest he should mark the traces of her recent weeping.
But so bent is he on his own dismal thoughts that he heeds her not, but follows aimlessly the path before him that leads to the balcony from, which the smaller drawing-room may be reached.
He is depressed and anxious, the night's vigil having induced him to believe himself somewhat hasty in his condemnation of Molly. As he gains the boudoir he starts, for there in the room, with the light flas.h.i.+ng warmly upon her, stands Molly Bawn alone.
She is dressed in a long trailing gown of black velveteen,--an inexpensive dress, but one that suits her admirably, with its slight adornment of little soft lace frillings at the throat and wrists.
Pausing irresolutely, Luttrell makes as though he would retrace his steps.
"Do not go," says Molly's voice, clear and firm. "As you are here, I wish to speak to you."
She beckons him to come a little nearer to her, and silently he obeys the gesture. There is a small round table between them, upon which Molly is leaning rather heavily. As he approaches, however, and waits, gazing curiously at her for her next word, she straightens herself and compels her eyes to meet his.
"Here is your ring," she says, drawing the glittering treasure from her finger and placing it before him.
There is not the extremest trace of excitement or feeling of any kind in her tone. Luttrell, on the contrary, shrinks as though touched by fire.
"Keep it," he says, involuntarily, coloring darkly.
"No--no."
"Why?" he urges. "It will not hurt you, and"--with a quickly-suppressed sigh--"it may perhaps compel you to think of me now and then."
"I have neither wish nor desire ever to think of you again," returns she, still in the same cold, even tone, pus.h.i.+ng the ring still closer to him with her first finger. There is something of contempt in the action. A ray from the dancing sun outside falls through the gla.s.s on to the diamonds, making them flash and sparkle in their gold setting.
"That admits of no answer," says Luttrell, with low but pa.s.sionate bitterness; and, taking up the ring, he flings it lightly into the very heart of the glowing fire.
With a sudden loss of self-restraint Molly makes a movement forward as though to prevent him; but too late,--already the greedy flames have closed upon it.
Not all the agitation, not all his angry words of the night before, have affected her so keenly as this last act. She bursts into a very storm of tears.
"Oh! what have you done?" cries she. "You have destroyed it; you have burned it,--my pretty ring!"
She clasps her hands together, and gazes with straining eyes into the cruel fire. Something within her heart feels broken. Surely some string has snapped. The ring, in spite of all, was a last link between them; and now, too, it has gone.
"Molly!" says he, taking a step toward her, and holding out his hands, softened, vanquished by her tears, ready to throw himself once more an abject slave at her feet.
"Do not speak to me," returns she, still sobbing bitterly. "Have you not done enough? I wish you would leave me to myself. Go away. There is nothing more that you _can_ do."
Feeling abashed, he scarcely knows why, he silently quits the room.
Then down upon her knees before the fire falls Molly, and with the poker strives with all her might to discover some traces of her lost treasure. So diligent is her search that after a little while the ring, blackened, disfigured, altered almost beyond recognition, lies within her hand. Still it is her ring, however changed, and some small ray of comfort gladdens her heart.
She is still, however, weeping bitterly, and examining sadly the precious relic she has rescued from utter oblivion, and from which the diamond, soiled, but still brilliant, has fallen into her palm, when Philip enters.
"Molly, what has happened?" he asks, advancing toward her, shocked at her appearance, which evinces all the deepest signs of woe. "What has distressed you?"
"You have," cries she, with sudden vehement pa.s.sion, all her sorrow and anger growing into quick life as she sees him. "You are the cause of all my misery. Why do you come near me? You might, at least, have grace enough to spare me the pain of seeing you."
"I do not understand," he says, his face very pale. "In how have I offended,--I, who would rather be dead than cause you any unhappiness?