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With a low cry she rose from her seat and stood with blanched lips; a great dark mist came before her eyes; for one terrible moment it seemed to her that the waters and the sky had met. Then she steadied herself and looked into the face of the man who had uttered her name.
She recognized him; it was Gustave, the favorite valet and confidential servant of Lord Chandon. She clasped her hands with a low moan, while he cried again, in a wondering, frightened voice--"Miss Vaughan!" He looked at her, a strange fear dilating his eyes.
"I am Hyacinth Vaughan," she said, in a low hoa.r.s.e voice.
The next moment he had taken off his hat, and stood bareheaded before her. "Miss Vaughan," he stammered, "we--we thought you dead."
"So I am," she cried pa.s.sionately--"I am dead in life! You must not betray me, Gustave. For Heaven's sake, promise not to tell that you have seen me!"
The man looked anxious and agitated.
"I cannot, miss," he replied--"I dare not keep such a secret from my lord."
She stepped back with a moaning cry and white lips. She wrung her hands like one who has no hope, no help.
"What shall I do?" she cried. "Oh, Heaven take pity upon me, and tell me what to do!"
"If you knew, miss," said the man, "what my lord has suffered you would not ask me to keep such a secret from him. I do not think he has ever smiled since you went away. He is worn to a shadow--he has spent a fortune in trying to find you. I know that night and day he knows no peace, no hope, no comfort, no happiness, because he has lost you. I love my lord--I would lay down my life to serve him."
"You do not know all," she cried.
"I beg your pardon, miss," he returned, st.u.r.dily. "I do know all; and I know that my lord would give all he has on earth to find you--he would give the last drop of blood in his heart, the last s.h.i.+lling in his purse. How could I be a faithful servant to him, and see him worn, wretched, and miserable under my very eyes, while I kept from him that which would make him happy?"
"You are wrong," she said, with dignity. "It would not add to your master's happiness to know that I am living; rather the contrary.
Believing me dead, he will in time recover his spirits; he will forget me and marry some one who will be far better suited to him than I could ever be. Oh, believe me--believe I know best! You will only add to his distress, not relieve it."
But the man shook his head doubtfully.
"You are mistaken, Miss Vaughan," he said. "If you had seen my master's distress, you would know that life is no life to him without you."
A sudden pa.s.sion of despair seemed to seize her.
"I have asked you not to betray me," she said. "Now I warn you that if you do, I will never forgive you; and I tell you that you will cause even greater misery than now exists. I am dead to Lord Chandon and to all my past life. I tell you plainly that if you say one word to your master, I will go away to the uttermost ends of the earth, where no one shall recognize me. Be persuaded--do not--as you are a man yourself--do not drive a helpless, suffering woman to despair. My fate is hard enough--do not render it any harder. I have enough to bear--do not add to my burden."
"Upon my word, Miss Vaughan," returned the man irresolutely, "I do not know what to do."
"You can think the matter over," she said. "Meanwhile, Gustave, grant me one favor--promise me that you will not tell Lord Chandon without first warning me."
"I will promise that," he agreed.
"Thanks," said Hyacinth, gratefully, to whom even this concession was a great deal. "I shall not, perhaps, be able to see you again, Gustave; but you can write to me and tell me what you have decided on doing."
"I will, Miss Vaughan," he a.s.sented.
"And pray be careful that my name does not pa.s.s your lips. I am known as Miss Holte here."
With a low bow the man walked away; and they were both unconscious that the angry eyes of a jealous woman had been upon them.
CHAPTER x.x.xV.
Kate Mansfield, Miss Dartelle's maid, had taken, as she expressed it, "a great fancy" to Gustave. She was a pretty, quick, bright-eyed girl, not at all accustomed to giving her smiles in vain. Gustave--who had been with Lord Chandon for many years--was handsome too in his way. He had an intelligent face, eyes that were bright and full of expression, and a somewhat mocking smile, which added, in Kate's mind, considerable to his charms. He had certainly appeared very attentive to her; and up to the present Kate had felt pretty sure of her conquest. She heard Gustave say, as his master was out for the day, he should have a long ramble on the seash.o.r.e; and the pretty maid, having put on her most becoming bonnet, made some pretext for going to the sh.o.r.e at the same time. She quite expected to meet him, "And then," as she said to herself, with a smile, "the seaside is a romantic place. And who knows what may happen?"
But when Kate had reached the sh.o.r.e, and her bright eyes had wandered over the sands she saw no Gustave. "He has altered his mind," she thought, "and has gone elsewhere."
She walked on, somewhat disappointed, but feeling sure that she should meet him before she returned home. Presently her attention was attracted by the sound of a man's voice, and, looking round a bowlder, she saw Gustave in deep conversation with the governess, Miss Holte.
Kate was already jealous of Miss Holte--jealous of her beauty and of the favor with which Lady Dartelle regarded her.
"I do hate governesses!" Kate was wont to observe to her friends in the kitchen. "I can do with the airs and graces of real ladies--they seem natural--but I cannot endure governesses; they always seem to me neither the one thing nor the other."
Then a sharp battle of words would ensue with Mary King, who was devoted to the young governess.
"You may say what you like, Kate, but I tell you Miss Holte is a lady. I know one when I see one."
And now the jealous eyes of Kate Mansfield dwelt with fierce anger on Hyacinth.
"Call her a lady!" she said to herself sneeringly. "Ladies do not talk to servants in that fas.h.i.+on. Why, she clasps hands as though she were begging and praying him about something! I will say nothing now, but I will tell Miss Dartelle; she will see about it." And Kate went home in what she called a "temper."
Gustave walked away full of thought. He would certainly act honorably toward Miss Vaughan--would give her fair warning before he said anything to Lord Chandon. Perhaps, after all, she knew best. It might be better that his master should know nothing of her being there; it was just possible that there were circ.u.mstances in the case of which he knew nothing, and there was some rumor in the servant's hall about his master and Miss Dartelle. Doubtless it would be wise to accede to Miss Vaughan's request and say nothing.
But during the remainder of that day Gustave was so silent, so preoccupied, that his fellow-servants were puzzled to discover the reason. He did not even take notice of Kate's anger. He spoke to her, and did not observe that she was disinclined to answer; nor did he seem to understand her numerous allusions to "underhand people" and "cunning ways."
"I almost think," said Gustave to himself, "that I will send Miss Vaughan three lines to say that I have decided not to mention anything about her; she looked so imploringly at me, I had better not interfere."
Of all the blows that could have fallen on the hapless girl, she least expected this. She had feared to meet Lord Chandon, and had most carefully kept out of his way; she had avoided Sir Aubrey lest any chance word of his should awaken Adrian's curiosity. She had taken every possible precaution, but she had never given one thought to Gustave. She remembered now having heard Lady Vaughan say how faithful he was, and how highly Adrian valued his services--how Gustave had never had any other master, and how he spared no pains to please him.
And now suddenly he had become the chief person in her world. Her fate--nay, her life--lay in his hands--honest hands they were, she knew, and could rely implicitly on his word.
He would give her fair warning. "And when I get the warning," she said to herself, "I shall go far away from England. No place is safe here.
For I would not drag him down--my n.o.ble, princely Adrian, who has searched for me, sorrowed for me, and who loves me still. I would not let him link his n.o.ble life with mine; the name that he bears must not be sullied by me. It shall not be said of the n.o.blest of his race that he married a girl who had compromised herself. People shall not point to his wife and say, 'She was the girl who was talked about in the murder case.' Ah, no, my darling, I will save you from yourself--I will save you from the degradation of marrying me!"
She spent the remainder of the day--her holiday--in forming plans for going abroad. It was not safe for her to remain in England; at some time or other she must be inevitably discovered. It would be far better to go abroad--to leave England and go to some distant land--where no one would know her. She had one friend who could help her in her new decision. Her heart turned gratefully to Dr. Chalmers. Heaven bless him--he would not fail her.
She must tell him that she was not happy--that a great danger threatened her; and she must ask him to help her to procure some situation abroad.
Nor would she delay--she would write that very day, and ask him to begin to make inquiries at once. Soon all danger would be over, and she would be in peace. The long day pa.s.sed all too quickly, she was so busy with her plans. It was late in the evening when she heard the carriage return, and soon afterward she knew that Adrian was once more under the same roof.
Veronica Dartelle was not in the most sunny of tempers. She had spent a long day with Lord Chandon, yet during the whole of it he had not said a word that gave her the least hope of his ultimately caring for her, while she liked him better and better every day. She wondered if that "tiresome girl" was really the cause of his indifference, or if there was any one else he liked better.
"Perhaps," she thought to herself, "I have not beauty enough to please him. I hear that this girl he loved was very lovely."
An aversion to all beautiful girls and fair women entered her mind and remained there. She was tired--and that did not make her more amiable; so, when Kate Mansfield came in with her story, Veronica was in the worst possible mood to hear it.
"What are you saying, Kate?" she cried, angrily. "It cannot be possible--Miss Holte would never go to meet a servant. You must be mistaken."
"I am not, indeed, Miss Dartelle. I thought it my duty to mention it to you. They were talking for more than half an hour, and Miss Holte had her hands clasped, as though she were begging and praying him about something."