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She had but just greeted them when the call came, and all moved toward the breakfast room.
Just as the three had seated themselves at the table, and while Rose was pouring out the coffee, the sound of carriage wheels was heard approaching the house, and a few minutes later Mr. Clarence and Sylvan entered the breakfast room with joyous bustle.
"What--what--what does this unseemly excitement mean?" sternly demanded the Iron King, while Cora arose to shake hands with her uncle and brother; and while Rose, fearful of doing wrong, did nothing at all.
"What is the matter? What has happened? Why have you left the works at this hour of the morning, Clarence?" he requested of his son.
"I came with Sylvan, sir, for the last time before he leaves us for distant and dangerous service, and for an unlimited period."
"Ah! you have your orders, then?" said Mr. Rockharrt, in a somewhat mollified tone.
"Yes, sir," said the young lieutenant. "I received my commission by the earliest mail this morning, with orders to report for duty to Colonel Glennin, of the Third Regiment of Infantry, now at Governor's Island, New York harbor, and under orders to start for Fort Farthermost, on the Mexican frontier. I must leave to-night in order to report in time."
Cora looked at him with the deepest interest.
Rose thought now she might venture on a little civility without giving offense to her despotic lord.
"Have you had breakfast, you two?" she inquired.
"No, indeed. We started immediately after receiving the orders," said Sylvan. "And we are as hungry as two bears."
"Bring chairs to the table, Mark, for the gentlemen," said young Mrs.
Rockharrt, who then rang for two more covers and hot coffee.
"Cora," whispered Sylvan, as soon as he got a chance to speak to his sister, "you can never get ready to go with me on so short a notice.
Women have so much to do."
"Sylvan," she replied, "I have been ready for a month."
CHAPTER XXIV.
SOMETHING UNEXPECTED.
The day succeeding that on which Sylva.n.u.s Haught had received his commission as second lieutenant in the 3d Regiment of Infantry, then on Governor's Island, New York harbor, and under orders for Fort Farthermost, on the southwestern frontier, was a very busy one for Cora Rothsay; for, however well she had been prepared for a sudden journey, there were many little final details to be attended to which would require all the time she had left at her disposal.
A farewell visit must be paid to Violet Rockharrt, and--worse than all--an explanatory interview must be held with her grandfather in relation to her departure with Sylva.n.u.s Haught, and that interview must be held before the Iron King should leave Rockhold that morning for his daily visit to the works.
Cora had often, during the last year, and oftener since her grandfather's second marriage, taken occasion to allude to her intention of accompanying her brother to his post of duty, however distant and dangerous that post might be. She had done this with the fixed purpose of preparing this autocratic old gentleman's mind for the event.
Now, the day of her intended departure had arrived; she was to leave Rockhold with her brother that afternoon to take the evening express to New York. And as she could not go without taking leave of her grandfather, it was necessary that she should announce her intention to him before he should start on his daily visit to North End.
Therefore Cora had risen very early that morning and had gone down into the little office or library of the Iron King, that was situated at the rear of the middle hall, there to wait for him, as it was his custom to rise early and go into his study, to look over the papers before breakfast. These papers were brought by a special messenger from North End, who started from the depot as soon as the earliest train arrived with the morning's mail and reached Rockhold by seven o'clock.
She had not sat there many minutes before Mr. Rockharrt entered the study.
"I am going away with my brother," Cora said, without any preface whatever, "to Fort Farthermost, on the southwestern Indian frontier."
"I think you must be crazy."
"Dear grandpa, this is no impulsive purpose of mine. I have thought of it ever since--ever since--the death of my dear husband," said Cora, in a broken voice.
"Oh! the death of your dear husband!" he exclaimed, rudely interrupting her. "Much you cared for the death of your dear husband! If you had, you would never have driven him forth to his death!--for that is what you did! You cannot deceive me now. As long as the fate of Rule Rothsay was a mystery, I was myself at somewhat of a loss to account for his disappearance--though I suspected you even then--but when the news came that he had been killed by the Comanches near the boundaries of Mexico, and I had time to reflect on it all, I knew that he had been driven away by you--you! And all for the sake of a t.i.tled English dandy! You need not deny it, Cora Rothsay!"
"It would be quite useless to deny anything that you choose to a.s.sert, sir," replied the young lady, coldly but respectfully. "Yet I must say this, that I loved and honored my husband more than I ever did or ever can love and honor any other human being. His departure broke my spirit, and his death has nearly broken my heart--certainly it has blasted my future. My life is worth nothing, nothing to me, except as I make it useful to those who need my help."
"Rubbis.h.!.+" exclaimed old Aaron Rockharrt, turning over the leaves of his paper and looking for the financial column.
"Grandfather, please hear me patiently for a few minutes, for after to-day I do not know that we may ever meet again," pleaded Cora.
The old man laid his open paper on his knees, set his spectacles up on his head, and looked at her.
"What the devil do you mean?" he slowly inquired.
"Sir, I am to leave Rockhold with my brother this afternoon, to go with him, first to Governor's Island, and within a few days start with him for the distant frontier fort which may be his post of duty for many years to come. We may not be able to return within your lifetime, grandfather," said Cora, gravely and tenderly.
"And what in Satan's name, unless you are stark mad, should take you out to the Indian frontier?" he demanded.
"I might answer, to be with my only brother, I being his only sister."
"Bos.h.!.+ Men's wives very seldom accompany them to these savage posts, much less their sisters! What does a young officer want his sister tagging after him for?"
"It is not that Sylvan especially wants me, nor for his sake alone that I go."
"Well, then, what in the name of lunacy do you go for?"
"That I may devote my time and fortune to a good cause--to the education of Indian girls and boys. I mean to build--"
"That, or something like that, was what Rothsay tried to do when you drove him away, as if he had been a leper, to the desert. Well, go on!
What next? Let us hear the whole of the mad scheme!"
"I mean to build a capacious school house, in which I will receive, board, lodge, and teach as many Indian children as may be intrusted to me, until the house shall be full."
"Moonstruck mania! That is what your mad husband driven mad by you--attempted on a smaller scale, and failed."
"That is why I wish to do this. I wish to follow in his footsteps It is the best thing I can do to honor his memory."
"But he was murdered for his pains."
Cora shuddered and covered her face with her hands for a s.p.a.ce; then she answered, slowly:
"There may be many failures; but there will never be any success unless the failures are made stepping stones to final victory."
"Fudge! See here, mistress! No doubt you suffer a good many stings of conscience for having driven the best man that ever lived--except, hem!
well--to his death! But you need not on that account expatriate yourself from civilization, to go out to try to teach those red devils who murdered your husband and burned his hut, and who will probably murder you and burn your school house! You have been a false woman and a miserable sinner, Cora Rothsay! And you have deserved to suffer and you have suffered, there is no doubt about that! But you have repented, and may be pardoned. You need not immolate yourself at your age. You are a mere girl. You will get over your morbid grief. You may marry again."