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"I do not wish to go."
Mrs. Mencke flushed. She did not like that quiet tone.
"I am sorry," she returned, "for we have decided to shut up the house during our absence, and I could not think of leaving you behind."
"Nevertheless, Belle, I shall not go with you to Montreal," Violet answered, steadily.
"Who said anything about Montreal?" quickly demanded Mrs. Mencke, and regarding her sharply.
"I may as well be straightforward with you, Belle," Violet continued, "and tell that I know just what you have planned to do, and I am not going to Montreal to be placed in a convent!"
"Violet!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the startled woman, with a crimson face.
"You need not attempt to deny anything," the young girl continued, calmly, "for I overheard you and Will planning it last night. I came down to get something that I had left in the library, and as I was pa.s.sing through the hall I heard you say you would send me to a convent.
Of course, having learned that much, I was bound to hear all I could of the plan."
Mrs. Mencke looked blank over this information for a moment; then her temper getting the better of her, she burst forth into a torrent of reproaches and abuse.
Violet sat with quietly folded hands and did not attempt to interrupt her; but finally the woman grew ashamed of the sound of her angry voice and words and ceased.
"Are you through, Belle?" Violet then inquired, in a cold, strangely calm tone.
"Well, you have driven me nearly to distraction by the way you have carried on of late," Mrs. Mencke said, apologetically.
"I think I have had something to bear as well from you," the young girl returned; "but I am no longer a child to be taken hither and thither against my will. If you and Will wish to take a trip to Canada you can do so by yourselves. I shall not accompany you."
"What will you do--remain in Cincinnati and meet that vulgar carpenter on the sly, I suppose," retorted her sister, angrily.
"I can go to Mrs. Bailey's. Nellie has long been wis.h.i.+ng me to spend a few weeks with her."
"And she will aid and abet you in your love-making, perhaps you imagine," sneered Mrs. Mencke. "No, miss; you will go with us, whether you want to or not, and you will also go into a convent, where you will remain until you give me your solemn promise to relinquish all thoughts of ever marrying that low-born Yankee."
Violet arose at this point and stood pale and erect before her sister.
"Belle, I shall not go to Montreal. I will not be forced to go anywhere against my inclination," she said, with a resoluteness that betrayed an unalterable purpose. "I know that you and Will were appointed my guardians, and that I shall not reach my majority for three years yet; but I know, too, that there is some redress for such abuse of authority as you are attempting to exercise, and if you persist in this course--much as I shall dislike the notoriety of such a proceeding--I shall appeal to the courts to set you aside and appoint some one in your place. You said last night that it would be 'Roman against Roman' in this matter. You said truly; and hereafter, Belle, you will have to meet me in an entirely different spirit before you and I can ever be upon the old footing again. I hope, at least, that you now understand, once for all, that I shall not accompany you and Wilhelm upon any trip."
She turned and walked with quiet dignity from the room as she ceased speaking, leaving Mrs. Mencke looking both startled and confounded by the resolute and unexpected stand that she had taken regarding her guardians.h.i.+p.
"Where on earth can she have found out about that point of law?" she muttered, angrily. "Some more of that carpenter's doings, I suppose."
She sat for some time absorbed in thought; but finally her face cleared, and rising she rang the bell.
The housemaid answered it almost immediately.
"Tell James to put the horses back into the carriage as quickly as possible, as I have forgotten something and must go immediately to the city again," she commanded, as she rearranged her wrap.
In less than ten minutes she was on her way, not back to the city, but to call upon an intimate friend in Eden Park.
CHAPTER IX.
VIOLET BECOMES A PRISONER.
Mrs. Alexander Hartley Hawley, as she was always particular to write her name, was much the same type of a woman as Mrs. Mencke, but with the advantage of not possessing such an exceedingly high temper.
She was more suave and insinuating in her manner, and where she had a difficult object to attain she always strove to win by strategy rather than to antagonize her opponents by attempting to drive.
She also was intensely proud and tenacious of caste--a leader in society and a great stickler regarding outward appearance.
In the old days, when Mrs. Mencke had so offended against upper-tendom by eloping with the poor clerk in her father's employ, Mrs. Hawley had dropped her from her extensive list of acquaintances; but after Mr.
Huntington's death, when the young couple came into possession of a handsome inheritance, the former friends.h.i.+p was renewed and their intimacy, if anything, had been closer than during their youthful days.
To this friend and ally, who resided among the glories of Eden Park, Mrs. Mencke now repaired to ask her advice regarding what course to pursue with Violet in her present unmanageable mood.
She frankly confided everything to her, and concluded her revelation by remarking, with an anxious brow:
"I am at my wits' end, Althea, and have come to ask your help in this emergency."
"Certainly, Belle, I will do all in my power to help you," Mrs. Hawley replied, eagerly, for she dearly loved to exercise her diplomatic talents, "but I fear that will not be much, for we have decided, quite suddenly, to sail for Europe the tenth of next month."
"Yes, I learned of your plans to-day through Mrs. Rider, and when Violet got upon her stilts, on my return from my calls, it suddenly occurred to me that perhaps if the matter was rightly managed and you would not mind the care for a while, she would accept an invitation from you to travel in Europe for a time. I would appear to oppose it at first, but gradually yield to your persuasions, and, later, I would myself join you abroad and relieve you of your charge. Once get her across the Atlantic, and it will be an easy matter to keep her there until she comes to our terms."
Mrs. Hawley readily lent herself to this scheme.
"It would be a great pity," she said, with a little intentional venom pointing her words, "to have Violet sacrifice herself and compromise her position by rashly marrying this low carpenter; and," she added, eagerly, "I should be delighted to have her with me--she is excellent company, while, as you know, I am quite fond of her, and it will be the easiest thing in the world to persuade her to go with us."
"Do you think so?" Mrs. Mencke asked, somewhat doubtfully, for she began to stand a little in awe of her young sister's rapidly developing decision of character.
"Yes; Violet and Nellie Bailey are quite intimate, are they not?" Mrs.
Hawley asked.
"Yes; they were firm friends all through their high-school course, and have visited each other a good deal since," returned Mrs. Mencke.
"Well, then, Mrs. Bailey came to me yesterday, asking if I would act as chaperon to Nellie, who has long wanted to spend a year in Milan to study music, and, as I readily granted her request, Miss Nellie will be my companion during at least a portion of my tour."
"I do not believe Violet knows anything about it," Mrs. Mencke replied.
"Very likely not; for her mother told me she had said nothing to Nellie--that she did not wish to arouse hopes to disappoint them, until she could arrange for a proper escort for her," Mrs. Hawley explained.
"But," she added, "she probably knows it by this time. However, I am going to call there this evening, to arrange our plans a little, and will come around to your house later. I will try to bring Nellie with me. She will be full of the trip, and doubtless express a wish that Violet could go with her; and I will second her wishes by at once inviting her to make one of our party. In this way we can bring it about without appearing to have thought of such a thing before."
Mrs. Mencke was greatly pleased with this plan, and after discussing it a while longer, she took leave of her friend, and returned home with a lightened heart.
She met Violet at dinner-time, as if nothing unpleasant had occurred, and did not once refer to the Canada expedition, or any other disagreeable subject.
About seven o'clock Mrs. Hawley made her appearance, and, greatly to Mrs. Mencke's delight, she was accompanied by Nellie Bailey.