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"Who and what are you," he cried, "who talk to me in this way? You act more like a vengeful spirit than a woman unconcerned in my affairs. Who and what are you, anyhow?"
"I tell you only what I see," was the muttered response.
"See where?" demanded Kendal in agitation.
"That is not for you to know."
"But I shall--I will know!" he cried, furiously. "There is something underneath all this trumpery. I am not a man to be trifled with in this fas.h.i.+on, I can tell you, with your fortune-telling nonsense--humb.u.g.g.e.ry!"
"Then, pray, what brings you here? what is your object in coming?" asked the other, with a covert sneer.
"To hear what lies you could trump up," replied Kendal boldly.
"Our interview is ended," said the veiled figure, rising and pointing her long arm toward the door.
He knew that he must temporize with her if he would find out Dorothy's whereabouts, which he was beginning to believe she might find out for him.
"Will you pardon me?" he asked, humbling himself. "I--I must know more."
"You have heard all that I have to say, Harry Kendal!" she cried.
Who was this creature who knew him--aye, knew his name, his most secret affairs? He must--he would know.
With a quick bound he cleared the s.p.a.ce which divided them, and in a trice he had grasped her wrists firmly and torn the veil from her face.
This was followed by a mighty cry.
CHAPTER XXV.
The instant Harry Kendal sprang toward the veiled woman she sprang backward, as though antic.i.p.ating the movement, and quick as a flash she overturned the candle, just as he tore the veil from her face.
A low, taunting laugh broke from her lips through the inky darkness of the room. In a trice she had torn herself free from his grasp, and like a flash she had sped from the room and down the narrow hall and stairway, like a storm-driven swallow, leaving her companion stumbling about the place, and giving vent to curses loud and deep as he fumbled about his vest pocket for matches.
The veiled woman never stopped until she reached the street, then paused for a moment and looked back as she reached the nearest gas lamp.
As the flickering rays of the street lamp fell athwart her face, the features of Nadine Holt were clearly revealed, her black eyes blazing, and her jet black hair streaming wildly about her face.
"How strange!" she panted, "that this idea of fortune telling should have come to me as a means of gaining my living! I was driven to do something. And that he should have been the very first patron to come to me--he, of all others! He is tracking me down because I maimed the girl whom he is so soon to wed--yes, tracking me down to throw me into prison--and yet he was once my lover! It is always the way. When a man's heart grows cold to one love, and another's face has charmed him, it seems to me as though men have a cruel, feverish desire to thrust the first love from them at whatever cost. But I will be revenged upon him!
I will live to make his very life a torture; but I shall do it through Dorothy Glenn. I will go to Dorothy Glenn at once, and we shall see what will happen then."
Meanwhile, after much fumbling and imprecations loud and deep, Kendal succeeded in striking a match and finding the overturned bit of wax taper, which he hastily lighted, peering cautiously into the inky darkness which surrounded him.
He was tired and exhausted, and he told himself that he would turn in at the nearest hotel, take a good night's rest, and mature his plans on the morrow for finding Dorothy.
Meanwhile, let us go back, dear reader, to the hour in which our heroine, little Dorothy, decided to leave Gray Gables.
For some moments after Harry Kendal had left her in anger in the corridor she stood quite still--stood there long after the sound of his footsteps had died away, trying to realize the full purport of his words--that their engagement was at an end, and that they had parted forever.
The whole world seemed to stand still about her. Then, like one suddenly dazed, she turned and crept into her own room. Katy was there awaiting her.
She suffered the girl to place her in a chair, to take the faded blossoms from her hand and from her corsage, to unfasten the strings of pearls, and to remove her ball dress.
By degrees she had informed Katy of her regaining her sight, and the poor girl's joy knew no bounds.
She wondered greatly how Dorothy could feel so downcast in such an hour, and she never once heeded Dorothy's sad words--that she was going to leave Gray Gables before the dawn, as there was no one there who loved her.
It was so late when Katy sought her own couch that she soon dropped into a deep sleep. This Dorothy had watched for with the greatest impatience.
She soon rose, robed herself in a dark dress and Katy's long cloak, and was soon ready for the great undertaking which she had mapped out for herself.
Hastily writing a note, she placed it where Katy's eyes would be sure to fall upon it early the next morning; then she stole quietly from the room. The great clock in the corridor below struck three as she pa.s.sed it with bated breath and trembling in every limb.
She opened the door softly and stole out into the chill, raw night.
There was no one in this wide world to miss her, no one to care what became of her! She was in every one's way. Only one thought suggested itself to her--to end it all. Perhaps Harry Kendal would feel very sorry when the news came to him on the morrow that she was dead--she whom he had spurned so cruelly only the night before. And perhaps he would throw himself beside her cold, dead body and wish that he had been less cruel to her, and cry out:
"Oh, if G.o.d would but roll back His universe and give me yesterday!"
She had no fixed destination, but walked on and on, until she suddenly found herself down by the Yonkers Boat Club House, that stretched its dark shadow afar out into the river. It was connected with the sh.o.r.e by a long, narrow plank walk.
Mechanically Dorothy crept down the narrow, winding stairway that led to it. Midway on the plank walk she paused, clung desperately to the rail and looked fearfully down into the dark, flowing river that rushed on so madly but a few feet below her.
Only a few flickering stars would see and know all, she told herself.
There would be but a plunge, a deathly s.h.i.+ver as her warm body came in contact with the icy waves, a moment of choking, a terrible sensation, then all would be over--her troubles would be at an end!
What cared she for the wealth of a hundred Gray Gables and princely estates when love's boon was denied her?
Even in that hour and in that weird place she thought of the words another heart-broken girl had uttered long years before:
"You have learned to love another, You have broken every vow; We have parted from each other, And my heart is lonely now.
"Oh! was it well to sever This fond heart from thine forever?
Can I forget thee? Never!
Farewell, lost love, forever!
"We have met, and we have parted, But I uttered scarce a word; But, G.o.d! how my poor heart started When thy well-known voice I heard!
"Oh! woman's love will grieve her, And woman's pride will leave her; Life has fled when love deceives her, Farewell--farewell forever!"
"I am so young to die!" sobbed Dorothy. "I haven't done very much good in the world, but surely I have done no wrong."
Then it occurred to her suddenly--a little trifle which she had quite forgotten:
She had taken Nadine Holt's lover from her, and the girl was broken-hearted over his loss; and now Heaven had, in turn, taken him from her. This was G.o.d's vengeance upon her.
Could even Nadine Holt see her now she would feel sorry and find pity for her.