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Mrs. Mencke regarded her doubtfully.
"And it will be----" she began.
"No!" replied Violet, emphatically, as she paused.
"Oh, Violet, I beg of you to be reasonable," pleaded the woman, almost in tears. "Just think what your life must be! One of the highest positions in England is offered you by a young man of irreproachable character; he loves you devotedly, and there is nothing he would not do for you if you consent to become his wife. Besides a large income which he will settle upon you, you will have an elegant home in Ess.e.x County, a town house in London, and a villa on the Isle of Wight. There is no earthly reason now, whatever there may have been two months ago, why you should not listen to his suit."
Violet s.h.i.+vered with sudden pain as her sister thus referred to the death of her lover, and the fact that no plighted troth now stood in the way of her accepting Lord Cameron's proposal of marriage.
"No," she wailed, "I suppose there is no reason, save that I do not love him--that my heart is dead, and I have no interest in life, no desire to live."
"You may imagine now that you can never love him, but time heals all wounds," her sister returned; "and since you can now feel that you will wrong no one else by marrying him, you might at least devote yourself to him and secure his happiness by accepting him."
"Do you imagine that he would be willing to marry a loveless woman--one who had no heart to give him?" Violet questioned, with curling lips.
"He only can answer that question himself," responded Mrs. Mencke, with a sudden heart-bound, as she thought she saw signs of yielding in her sister. "Oh, Violet, do not throw away such a chance. What are you going to do in the future? How do you expect to spend the rest of your life if you refuse to marry at all?"
A thrill of intense agony ran through the young girl's frame at these probing questions.
How indeed was she to spend her life? How could she live without Wallace?
She had not thought of this before, and she was startled and appalled by the apparent blackness of the future.
"Oh, I don't know--I don't know!" she burst forth, in a voice of despair.
"As the wife of Lord Cameron you would at least have it in your power to do a great deal of good, to say nothing of the happiness you would confer upon him," suggested Mrs. Mencke, craftily.
It impressed Violet, however, and she sat in thoughtful silence for some time.
One thing had forced itself upon her during this conversation, and that was that she could not spend her life with her sister and her husband.
Every day she became more and more conscious that there could never be any real congeniality and sympathy between them, and that it would be better if they should separate. But what was to become of her if she separated from them? Could she live alone--take her destiny in her own hands, and cut herself free from them? It would certainly be very lonely, very forlorn, to have no one in the world to care for her.
She knew that Vane Cameron was a man in a thousand. He was n.o.ble and amiable; whatever he did, he was actuated by pure motives, and she felt that any woman who could love him would have cause to be proud in becoming his wife.
She knew that he loved her devotedly, as her sister had said; but would he be willing to marry one who did not love him? Would it be right for her to accept all and be able to give nothing in return?
No, she did not believe he would be satisfied to live out his future in any such way.
Still she conceived a sudden resolution. She would see him; she would tell him the truth, and she believed he would sympathize with her and at once withdraw his suit, while her sister would have to accept his decision as final, and cease to importune her further upon the subject.
Having arrived at this conclusion, she leaned back in her chair, with a deep sigh, as if relieved of a heavy burden.
"Well?" said Mrs. Mencke, inquiringly.
She had been watching her closely, and surmised something of what was being revolved in her mind.
"I will see Lord Cameron," Violet quietly replied.
"And you will promise to marry him?" cried her companion, eagerly.
Violet sighed again. She was so weary of it all.
"No, I will not promise anything now; but I will see him--I will tell him the whole truth, and then----"
"Well?" was the almost breathless query, as Violet faltered and her lips grew white.
"Then he shall decide for me," she said, in a low tone.
Mrs. Mencke arose delighted, for she felt that her point was gained. She would encourage Vane Cameron to take Violet, in spite of everything, and try to make him feel that once she was his wife he would have little difficulty in eventually winning her love.
She bent over Violet, in the excess of her joy, to kiss her, but the young girl drew back from her.
"No, Belle," she said, quietly but sadly, "do not make any pretense of affection for me; you have not shown yourself a good sister; I believe you have intercepted my letters, and you have tried to ruin my life, and I do not want your kisses. I hope I shall not always feel thus," she added, regretfully, as she saw the guilty flush which mounted to the woman's forehead, "but, just now, I am afraid I do not love you very much, and I will not be hypocritical enough to pretend that I do."
Mrs. Mencke had nothing to say to this, for she well knew that she richly deserved it; but she pa.s.sed quickly from the room, and at once sought an interview with Lord Cameron.
An hour later he was sitting beside Violet, with a grave and pitiful face, but with a look of eager hope in his fine eyes, which told that he had no thought of leaving her presence a rejected lover.
"Your illness has changed you greatly, Miss Huntington," he remarked, regarding her thin, white face sorrowfully, "but I hope that you will soon be yourself again, and--and now may I at once speak of what is nearest my heart? I believe in a frank course at all times, and of course you cannot be ignorant of my object in coming to you. I am sure you must realize, by this time, something of the depth of my love for you. Indeed my one hope, ever since our pleasant voyage across the water, has been to win you. Darling, words cannot express one-half that I feel; I have lived almost thirty years without ever meeting any one with whom I could be willing to spend my life until now, and all the long-pent-up pa.s.sion of my nature goes forth to you. Violet, will you be my wife? will you come to me and let me shelter you in the arms of my love--let me try to make your future the brightest one that woman has ever known? My love! my love! put your little hands in mine and say that you will give yourself to me."
Violet made such a gesture of pain at these words, while her face was convulsed with such anguish, that Vane Cameron caught his breath and regarded her with astonishment.
When Mrs. Mencke had told him that Violet had consented to see him, she hinted at some childish attachment, but encouraged him to hope for a favorable issue of the interview.
He realized now, however, that this "childish attachment" had left a far deeper wound in Violet's heart than he had been allowed to suspect.
"Is my confession distasteful to you, Violet?" he gravely asked, when he could command himself to speak. "I was led to believe--I hoped that it would meet with a ready response from you."
"Oh, Lord Cameron! I do not know what to say to you," Violet began, in a trembling voice. Then resolutely repressing her emotion, she continued: "I have known, of course, that you regarded me in a very friendly way; but it almost frightens me to have you express yourself so strongly as you have just done."
"Frightens you to learn of the depth of my affection," he said, with some surprise.
"Yes--to know that it has taken such a hold upon your life and that such a responsibility has fallen upon me. I know that you are good, and true, and n.o.ble, and you have my deepest esteem; but--but oh----"
"Violet, what does this mean? I do not understand your distress at all,"
Lord Cameron said, looking deeply pained.
"Did not my sister tell you that I had a confession to make to you?" the young girl asked, with burning cheeks.
"No," the young man returned, very gravely; "she told me that you would receive me--that I might hope for a favorable answer to my suit. She did hint, however, that there had once been a childish attachment, as she expressed it; but I hardly gave the matter a thought since she made so light of it."
"Belle has done wrong, then, to let you hope for so much; and now, Lord Cameron, may I tell you all there is in my heart? May I make a full confession to you? and then you shall judge me as you will."
"Certainly, you may tell me anything you wish," he replied, wondering more and more at her excessive emotion. "Do not be so distressed, dear child," he added, as she covered her face with her thin hands, and he saw the tears trickling between her fingers. "I should blame myself more than I can tell you, for seeking this interview, if by so doing I cause you so much unhappiness. I will even go away and never renew this subject--though that would darken all my future life--rather than agitate you thus."
"Forgive me," Violet said, wiping her tears. "I will try not to break down like this again, and I will deal with you with perfect frankness; I know I do not need to ask you to respect my confidence."
"Thank you," he simply answered.