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Half an hour later, Marcia, sweeping into her room in a torrent of pa.s.sion impossible to quell, summons her maid by a violent attack on her bell.
"Take off this detested mourning," she says to the astonished girl.
"Remove it from my sight. And get me a colored gown and a Bradshaw."
The maid, half frightened, obeys, and that night Marcia Amherst quits her English home forever.
CHAPTER x.x.xVII.
"Fare thee well! and if forever, Still forever, fare thee well!"
--Byron.
"Oh, Cecil! now I can marry Tedcastle," says Molly, at the end of a long and exhaustive conversation that has taken place in her own room.
She blushes a little as she says it; but it is honestly her first thought, and she gives utterance to it. "Let.i.tia, too, and the children,--I can provide for them. I shall buy back dear old Brooklyn, and give it to them, and they shall be happy once more."
"I agree with Lord Byron," says Cecil, laughing. "'Money makes the man; the want of it, his fellow.' You ought to feel like some princess out of the Arabian Nights' Entertainments."
"I feel much more like an intruder. What right have I to Herst? What shall I do with so much money?"
"Spend it. There is nothing simpler. Believe me, no one was ever in reality embarra.s.sed by her riches, notwithstanding all they say. The whole thing is marvelous. Who could have antic.i.p.ated such an event? I am sorry I ever said anything disparaging of that dear, delightful, genial, kind-hearted, sociable, generous old gentleman, your grandfather."
"Don't jest," says Molly, who is almost hysterical. "I feel more like crying yet. But I am glad at least to know he forgave me before he died. Poor grandpapa! Cecil, I want so much to see Let.i.tia."
"Of course, dear. Well,"--consulting her watch,--"I believe we may as well be getting ready if we mean to catch the next train. Will not it be a charming surprise for Let.i.tia? I quite envy you the telling of it."
"I want you to tell it. I am so nervous I know I shall never get through it without frightening her out of her wits. Do come with me, Cecil, and break the news yourself."
"Nothing I should like better," says Cecil. "Put on your bonnet and let us be off."
Ringing the bell, she orders round the carriage, and presently she and Molly are wending their way down the stairs.
At the very end of the long, beautiful old hall, stands Philip Shadwell, taking, it may be, a last look from the window, of the place so long regarded as his own.
As they see him, both girls pause, and Molly's lips lose something of their fresh, warm color.
"Go and speak to him now," says Cecil, and, considerately remembering a hypothetical handkerchief, retraces her steps to the room she had just quitted.
"Philip!" says Molly, timidly, going up to him.
He turns with a start, and colors a dark red on seeing her, but neither moves nor offers greeting.
"Oh, Philip! let me do something for you," says Molly impulsively, without preparation, and with tears in her eyes. "I have robbed you, though unwittingly. Let me make amends. Out of all I have let me give you----"
"The only thing I would take from you it is out of your power to give,"
he interrupts her, gently.
"Do not say so," she pleads, in trembling tones. "I do not want all the money. I cannot spend it. I do not care for it. _Do_ take some of it, Philip. Let me share----"
"Impossible, child!" with a faint smile. "You don't know what you are saying." Then, with an effort, "You are going to marry Luttrell?"
"Yes,"--blus.h.i.+ng, until she looks like a pale, sweet rose with a drooping head.
"How rich to overflowing are some, whilst others starve!" he says, bitterly, gazing at her miserably, filling his heart, his senses, for the last time, with a view of her soft and perfect loveliness. Then, in a kinder tone, "I hope you will be happy, and"--slowly--"he too, though that is a foregone conclusion." He pales a little here, and stops as though half choking. "Yes, he has my best wishes,--for your sake," he goes on, unsteadily. "Tell him so from me, though we have not been good friends of late."
"I will surely tell him."
"Good-bye!" he says, taking her hand. Something in his expression makes her exclaim, anxiously:
"For the present?"
"No; forever. Herst and England have grown hateful to me. I leave them as soon as possible. Good-bye, my beloved!" he whispers, in deep agitation. "I only ask you not to quite forget me, though I hope--_I hope_--I shall never look upon your sweet face again."
So he goes, leaving his heart behind him, carrying with him evermore, by land and sea, this only,--the vision of her he loves as last he sees her, weeping sad and bitter tears for him.
A quarter of an hour later, as Molly and Cecil are stepping into the carriage meant to convey them to the station, one of the servants, running up hurriedly, hands Miss Ma.s.sereene a letter.
"Another?" says Cecil, jestingly, as the carriage starts. "Sealed envelopes, like private bomb-sh.e.l.ls, seem to be the order of the day. I do hope this one does not emanate from your grandfather, desiring you to refund everything."
"It is from Tedcastle," says Molly, surprised. Then she opens it, and reads as follows:
"Taking into consideration the enormous change that has occurred in your fortunes since this morning, I feel it only just to you and myself to write and absolve you from all ties by which you may fancy yourself still connected with me. You will remember that in our last conversation together in London you yourself voluntarily decided on severing our engagement. Let your decision now stand. Begin your new life without hampering regrets, without remorseful thoughts of me.
To you I hope this money may bring happiness; to me, through you, it has brought lasting pain; and when, a few minutes ago, I said I congratulated you from my heart, I spoke falsely. I say this only to justify my last act in your eyes. I will not tell you what it costs me to write you this; you know me well enough to understand. I shall exchange with a friend of mine, and sail for India in a week or two, or at least as soon as I can; but wherever I am, or whatever further misfortunes may be in store for me, be a.s.sured your memory will always be my greatest--possibly my only--treasure."
"What can he mean?" says Molly, looking up. She does not appear grieved; she is simply indignant. An angry crimson flames on her fair cheeks.
"Quixotism!" says Cecil, when she, too, has read the letter. "Was there ever such a silly boy?"
"Oh! it is worse than anything,--so cold, so terse, so stupid. And not an affectionate word all through, or a single regret."
"My dear child, that is its only redeeming point. He is evidently sincere in his desire for martyrdom. Had he gone into heroics I should myself have gone to Ireland (where I suppose he soon must be) to chastise him. But as it is---- Poor Tedcastle! He looks upon it as a point of honor."
"It is unbearable," says Molly, angrily. "Does he think such a paltry thing as money could interfere with my affection for him?"
"Molly, beware! You are bordering on the heroics now. Money is not a paltry thing; it is about the best thing going. _I_ can sympathize with Tedcastle if you cannot. He felt he had no right to claim the promise of such a transcendently beautiful being as you, now you have added to your other charms twenty thousand a year. He thinks of your future; he acknowledges you a bride worthy any duke in the land (men in love"--maliciously--"_will_ dote, you know); he thinks of the world and its opinion, and how fond they are of applying the word 'fortune-hunter' when they get the chance, and it is not a pretty sobriquet."
"He should have thought of nothing but me. Had he come into a fortune,"
says Molly, severely, "I should have been delighted, and I should have married him instantly."
"Quite so. But who ever heard the opprobrious term 'fortune-hunter'
given to a woman? It is the legitimate thing for us to sell ourselves as dearly as we can."
"But, Cecil,"--forlornly,--"what am I to do now?"