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"I have told you all now, and you will know why I have not come to you."
"No, Harry; you have not told me all. Have you told that--woman that she should be your wife?" To this question he made no immediate answer, and she repeated it. "Tell me: have you told her you would marry her?"
"I did tell her so."
"And you will keep your word to her?" Harry, as he heard the words, was struck with awe that there should be such vehemence, such anger, in the voice of so gentle a woman as Cecilia Burton. "Answer me, sir, do you mean to marry this--countess?" But still he made no answer. "I do not wonder that you cannot speak," she said. "Oh, Florence--oh, my darling; my lost, broken-hearten angel!" Then she turned away her face and wept.
"Cecilia," he said, attempting to approach her with his hand, without rising from his chair.
"No, sir; when I desired you to call me so, it was because I thought you were to be a brother. I did not think that there could be a thing so weak as you. Perhaps you had better go now, lest you should meet my husband in his wrath, and he should spurn you."
But Harry Clavering still sat in his chair, motionless--motionless, and without a word. After a while he turned his face toward her, and even in her own misery she was striken by the wretchedness of his countenance.
Suddenly she rose quickly from her chair, and coming close to him, threw herself on her knees before him. "Harry," she said, "Harry; it is not yet too late. Be our own Harry again; our dearest Harry. Say that it shall be so. What is this woman to you? What has she done for you, that for her you should throw aside such a one as our Florence? Is she n.o.ble, and good, and pure and spotless as Florence is? Will she love you with such love as Florence's? Will she believe in you as Florence believes?
Yes, Harry, she believes yet. She knows nothing of this, and shall know nothing, if you will only say that you will be true. No one shall know, and I will remember it only to remember your goodness afterward. Think of it, Harry; there can be no falseness to one who has been so false to you. Harry, you will not destroy us all at one blow?"
Never before was man so supplicated to take into his arms youth and beauty and feminine purity! And in truth he would have yielded, as indeed, what man would not have yielded--had not Mrs. Burton been interrupted in her prayers. The step of her husband was heard upon the stairs, and she, rising from her knees, whispered quickly, "Do not tell him that it is settled. Let me tell him when you are gone."
"You two have been a long time together," said Theodore, as he came in.
"Why did you leave us, then, so long?" said Mrs. Burton, trying to smile, though the signs of tears were, as she well knew, plain enough.
"I thought you would have sent for me."
"Burton," said Harry, "I take it kindly of you that you allowed me to see your wife alone."
"Women always understand these things best," said he.
"And you will come again to-morrow, Harry, and answer me my question?"
"Not to--morrow."
"Florence will be here on Monday."
"And why should he not come when Florence is here?" asked Theodore in an angry tone.
"Of course he will come, but I want to see him again first. Do I not, Harry?"
"I hate mysteries," said Burton.
"There shall be no mystery," said his wife. "Why did you send him to me, but that there are some things difficult to discuss among three? Will you come to-morrow, Harry?"
"Not to-morrow; but I will write to-morrow--early to-morrow. I will go now, and, of course, you will tell Burton everything that I have said.
Goodnight." They both took his hand, and Cecilia pressed it as she looked with beseeching eyes into his face. What would she not have done to secure the happiness of the sister whom she loved? On this occasion she had descended low that she might do much.
Chapter x.x.xIII
How Damon Parted From Pythias
Lady Ongar, when she left Count Pateroff at the little fort on the cliff and entered by herself the gardens belonging to the hotel, had long since made up her mind that there should at last be a positive severance between herself and her devoted Sophie. For half an hour she had been walking in silence by the count's side; and though, of course, she had heard all that he had spoken, she had been able in that time to consider much. It must have been through Sophie that the count had heard of her journey to the Isle of Wight; and, worse than that, Sophie must, as she thought, have instigated this pursuit. In that she wronged her poor friend. Sophie had been simply paid by her brother for giving such information as enabled him to arrange this meeting. She had not even counselled him to follow Lady Ongar. But now Lady Ongar, in blind wrath, determined that Sophie should be expelled from her bosom. Lady Ongar would find this task of expulsion the less difficult in that she had come to loathe her devoted friend, and to feel it to be inc.u.mbent on her to rid herself of such devotion. Now had arrived the moment in which it might be done.
And yet there were difficulties. Two ladies living together in an inn cannot, without much that is disagreeable, send down to the landlord saying that they want separate rooms, because they have taken it into their minds to hate each other. And there would, moreover, be something awkward in saying to Sophie that, though she was discarded, her bill should be paid--for this last and only time. No; Lady Ongar had already perceived that would not do. She would not quarrel with Sophie after that fas.h.i.+on. She would leave the Isle of Wight on the following morning early, informing Sophie why she did so, and would offer money to the little Franco-Pole, presuming that it might not be agreeable to the Franco-Pole to be hurried away from her marine or rural happiness so quickly. But in doing this she would be careful to make Sophie understand that Bolton Street was to be closed against her for ever afterward. With neither Count Pateroff nor his sister would she ever again willingly place herself in contact.
It was dark as she entered the house--the walk out, her delay there, and her return having together occupied her three hours. She had hardly felt the dusk growing on her as she progressed steadily on her way, with that odious man beside her. She had been thinking of other things, and her eyes had accustomed themselves gradually to the fading twilight, But now, when she saw the glimmer of the lamps from the inn-windows, she knew that the night had come upon her, and she began to fear that she had been imprudent in allowing herself to be out so late--imprudent, even had she succeeded in being alone. She went direct to her own room, that, woman-like, she might consult her own face as to the effects of the insult she had received, and then having, as it were, steadied herself, and prepared herself for the scene that was to follow, she descended to the sitting-room and encountered her friend. The friend was the first to speak; and the reader will kindly remember that the friend had ample reason for knowing what companion Lady Ongar had been likely to meet upon the downs.
"Julie, dear, how late you are," said Sophie, as though she were rather irritated in having been kept so long waiting for her tea.
"I am late," said Lady Ongar.
"And don't you think you are imprudent--all alone, you know, dear; just a leetle imprudent."
"Very imprudent, indeed. I have been thinking of that now as I crossed the lawn, and found how dark it was. I have been very imprudent; but I have escaped without much injury."
"Escaped! escaped what? Have you escaped a cold, or a drunken man?"
"Both, as I think." Then she sat down, and, having rung the bell, she ordered tea.
"There seems to be something very odd with you," said Sophie. "I do not quite understand you."
"When did you see your brother last?" Lady Ongar asked.
"My brother?"
"Yes, Count Pateroff. When did you see him last?"
"Why do you want to know?"
"Well, it does not signify, as of course you will not tell me. But will you say when you will see him next?"
"How can I tell?"
"Will it be to-night?"
"Julia, what do you mean?"
"Only this, that I wish you would make him understand that if he has anything to do concerning me, he might as well do it out of hand. For the last hour--"
"Then you have seen him?"
"Yes; is not that wonderful? I have seen him."
"And why could you not tell him yourself what you had to say? He and I do not agree about certain things, and I do not like to carry messages to him. And you have seen him here on this sacre sea-coast?"
"Exactly so; on this sacre sea-coast. Is it not odd that he should have known that I was here--know the very inn we were at-and know, too, whither I was going to-night?"