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"Is that your advice?" says she, still with the thin white hands clasped over the knee, and the earnest gaze on him. "Well, well, well!"
Her eyes droop. She seems to be thinking, and he, gazing at her, refrains from speech with his heart sad with pity. Presently she lifts her head and looks at him.
"There! Go back to your love," she says with a glance that thrills him.
"Tell her from me that if you had the whole world to choose from, I should still select her as your wife. I like her; I love her! There, go!" She seems to grow all at once very tired. Are those tears that are rising in her eyes? She holds out to him her hand.
Felix, taking it, holds it closely for a moment, and presently, as if moved to do it, he stoops and presses a warm kiss upon it.
She is so unhappy, and so kind, and so true. G.o.d deliver her out of her sorrow!
CHAPTER LVI.
"I would that I were low laid in my grave."
She is still sitting silent, lost in thought, after Felix's departure, when the door opens once again to admit her husband. His hands are full of papers.
"Are you at liberty?" says he. "Have you a moment? These," pointing to the papers, "want signing. Can you give your attention to them now?"
"What are they?" asks she, rising.
"Mere law papers. You need not look so terrified." His tone is bitter.
"There are certain matters that must be arranged before my departure--matters that concern your welfare and the boy's. Here,"
laying the papers upon the davenport and spreading them out. "You sign your name here."
"But," recoiling, "what is it? What does it all mean?"
"It is not your death warrant, I a.s.sure you," says he, with a sneer.
"Come, sign!" Seeing her still hesitate, he turns upon her savagely. Who shall say what hidden storms of grief and regret lie within that burst of anger?
"Do you want your son to live and die a poor man?" says he. "Come! there is yourself to be considered, too! Once I am out of your way, you will be able to begin life again with a light heart; and this," tapping the paper heavily, "will enable you to do it. I make over to you and the boy everything--at least, as nearly everything as will enable me to live."
"It should be the other way," says she. "Take everything, and leave us enough on which to live."
"Why?" says he, facing round, something in her voice that resembles remorse striking him.
"We--shall have each other," says she, faintly.
"Having happily got rid of such useless lumber as the father and husband. Well, you will be the happier so," rejoins he with a laugh that hurts him more than it hurts her, though she cannot know that. "'Two is company,' you know, according to the good old proverb, 'three trumpery.'
You and he will get on very well without me, no doubt."
"It is your arrangement," says she.
"If that thought is a salve to your conscience, pray think so," rejoins he. "It isn't worth an argument. We are only wasting time." He hands her the pen; she takes it mechanically, but makes no use of it.
"You will at least tell me where you are going?" says she.
"Certainly I should, if I only knew myself. To America first, but that is a big direction, and I am afraid the tenderest love letter would not reach me through it. When your friends ask you, say I have gone to the North Pole; it is as likely a destination as another."
"But not to know!" says she, lifting her dark eyes to his--dark eyes that seem to glow like fire in her white face. "That would be terrible.
It is unfair. You should think--think--" Her voice grows husky and uncertain. She stops abruptly.
"Don't be uneasy about that," says he. "I shall take care that my death, when it occurs, is made known to you as soon as possible. Your mind shall be relieved on that score with as little delay as I can manage.
The welcome news shall be conveyed to you by a swift messenger."
She flings the pen upon the writing table, and turns away.
"Insult me to the last if you will!" she says; "but consider your son.
He loves you. He will desire news of you from time to time. It is impossible that you can put him out of your life as you have put me."
"It appears you can be unjust to the last," says he, flinging her own accusation back at her. "Have I put you out of my life?"
"Ah! was I ever in it?" says she. "But--you will write?"
"No. Not a line. Once for all I break with you. Should my death occur you will hear of it. And I have arranged so, that now and after that event you and the boy will have your positions clearly defined. That is all you can possibly require of me. Even if you marry again your jointure will be secured to you."
"Baltimore!" exclaims she, turning upon him pa.s.sionately. She seems to struggle with herself for words. "Has marriage proved so sweet a thing?"
cries she presently, "that I should care to try it again? There! Go! I shall sign none of these things." She makes a disdainful gesture towards the loose papers lying on the table, and moves angrily away.
"You have your son to consider."
"Your son will inherit the t.i.tle and the property without those papers."
"There are complications, however, that perhaps you do not understand."
"Let them lie there. I shall sign nothing."
"In that case you will probably find yourself immersed in troubles of the meaner kinds after my departure. The child cannot inherit until after my death and----"
"I don't care," says she, sullenly. "Go, if you will. I refuse to benefit by it."
"What a stubborn woman you are," cries he, in great wrath. "You have for years declined to acknowledge me as your husband. You have by your manner almost commanded my absence from your side; yet now when I bring you the joyful news that in a short time you will actually be rid of me, you throw a thousand difficulties in my path. Is it that you desire to keep me near you for the purposes of torture? It is too late for that.
You have gone a trifle too far. The hope you have so clearly expressed in many ways that time would take me out of your path is at last about to be fulfilled."
"I have had no such hope."
"No! You can look me in the face and say that! Saintly lips never lie, however, do they? Well, I'm sick of this life; you are not. I have borne a good deal from you, as I told you before. I'll bear no more. I give in. Fate has been too strong for me."
"You have created your own fate."
"You are my fate! You are inexorable! There is no reason why I should stay."
Here the sound of running, childish, pattering footsteps can be heard outside the door, and a merry little shout of laughter. The door is suddenly burst open in rather unconventional style, and Bertie rushes into the room, a fox terrier at his heels. The dog is evidently quite as much up to the game as the boy, and both race tempestuously up the room and precipitate themselves against Lady Baltimore's skirts. Round and round her the chase continues, until the boy, bursting away from his mother, dashes toward his father, the terrier after him.
There isn't so much scope for talent in a pair of trousers as in a ma.s.s of dainty petticoats, and presently Bertie grows tired, flings himself down upon the ground, and lets the dog tumble over him there. The joust is virtually at an end.