E-text prepared by Chris Whitehead, Demian Katz,
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
([http://www.pgdp.net])
from page images generously made available by
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| Note: | Images of the original pages are available through Villanova University Digital Library. See [ https://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:428408#] |
The cover image was restored by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
Copyright Fiction by the Best Authors
NEW EAGLE SERIES
A Big New Book Issued Weekly in this Line.
An Unequaled Collection of Modern Romances.
The books in this line comprise an unrivaled collection of copyrighted novels by authors who have won fame wherever the English language is spoken. Foremost among these is Mrs. Georgie Sheldon, whose works are contained in this line exclusively. Every book in the New Eagle Series is of generous length, of attractive appearance, and of undoubted merit. No better literature can be had at any price. Beware of imitations of the S. & S. novels, which are sold cheap because their publishers were put to no expense in the matter of purchasing manuscripts and making plates.
ALL TITLES ALWAYS IN PRINT
TO THE PUBLIC:—These books are sold by news dealers everywhere. If your dealer does not keep them, and will not get them for you, send direct to the publishers, in which case four cents must be added to the price per copy to cover postage.
| 1—Queen Bess | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 2—Ruby's Reward | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 7—Two Keys | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 12—Edrie's Legacy | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 44—That Dowdy | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 55—Thrice Wedded | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 66—Witch Hazel | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 77—Tina | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 88—Virgie's Inheritance | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 99—Audrey's Recompense | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 111—Faithful Shirley | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 122—Grazia's Mistake | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 133—Max | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 144—Dorothy's Jewels | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 155—Nameless Dell | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 166—The Masked Bridal | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 177—A True Aristocrat | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 188—Dorothy Arnold's Escape | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 199—Geoffrey's Victory | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 210—Wild Oats | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 219—Lost, A Pearle | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 222—The Lily of Mordaunt | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 233—Nora | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 244—A Hoiden's Conquest | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 255—The Little Marplot | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 266—The Welfleet Mystery | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 277—Brownie's Triumph | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 282—The Forsaken Bride | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 288—Sibyl's Influence | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 291—A Mysterious Wedding Ring | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 299—Little Miss Whirlwind | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 311—Wedded by Fate | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 339—His Heart's Queen | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 351—The Churchyard Betrothal | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 362—Stella Rosevelt | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 372—A Girl in a Thousand | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 373—A Thorn Among Roses | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| Sequel to "A Girl in a Thousand" | |
| 382—Mona | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 391—Marguerite's Heritage | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 399—Betsey's Transformation | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 407—Esther, the Fright | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 415—Trixy | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 419—The Other Woman | By Charles Garvice |
| 433—Winifred's Sacrifice | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 440—Edna's Secret Marriage | By Charles Garvice |
| 451—Helen's Victory | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 458—When Love Meets Love | By Charles Garvice |
| 476—Earle Wayne's Nobility | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 511—The Golden Key | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 512—A Heritage of Love | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| Sequel to "The Golden Key" | |
| 519—The Magic Cameo | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 520—The Heatherford Fortune | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| Sequel to "The Magic Cameo" | |
| 531—Better Than Life | By Charles Garvice |
| 537—A Life's Mistake | By Charles Garvice |
| 542—Once in a Life | By Charles Garvice |
| 548—'Twas Love's Fault | By Charles Garvice |
| 553—Queen Kate | By Charles Garvice |
| 554—Step by Step | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 555—Put to the Test | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 556—With Love's Aid | By Wenona Gilman |
| 557—In Cupid's Chains | By Charles Garvice |
| 558—A Plunge Into the Unknown | By Richard Marsh |
| 559—The Love That Was Cursed | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 560—The Thorns of Regret | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 561—The Outcast of the Family | By Charles Garvice |
| 562—A Forced Promise | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 563—The Old Homestead | By Denman Thompson |
| 564—Love's First Kiss | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 565—Just a Girl | By Charles Garvice |
| 566—In Love's Springtime | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 567—Trixie's Honor | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 568—Hearts and Dollars | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 569—By Devious Ways | By Charles Garvice |
| 570—Her Heart's Unbidden Guest | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 571—Two Wild Girls | By Mrs. Charlotte May Kingsley |
| 572—Amid Scarlet Roses | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 573—Heart for Heart | By Charles Garvice |
| 574—The Fugitive Bride | By Mary E. Bryan |
| 575—A Blue Grass Heroine | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 576—The Yellow Face | By Fred M. White |
| 577—The Story of a Passion | By Charles Garvice |
| 579—The Curse of Beauty | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 580—The Great Awakening | By E. Phillips Oppenheim |
| 581—A Modern Juliet | By Charles Garvice |
| 582—Virgie Talcott's Mission | By Lucy M. Russell |
| 583—His Greatest Sacrifice; or, Manch | By Mary E. Bryan |
| 584—Mabel's Fate | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 585—The Ape and the Diamond | By Richard Marsh |
| 586—Nell, of Shorne Mills | By Charles Garvice |
| 587—Katherine's Two Suitors | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 588—The Crime of Love | By Barbara Howard |
| 589—His Father's Crime | By E. Phillips Oppenheim |
| 590—What Was She to Him? | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 591—A Heritage of Hate | By Charles Garvice |
| 592—Ida Chaloner's Heart | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 593—Love Will Find the Way | By Wenona Gilman |
| 594—A Case of Identity | By Richard Marsh |
| 595—The Shadow of Her Life | By Charles Garvice |
| 596—Slighted Love | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 597—Her Fatal Gift | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 598—His Wife's Friend | By Mary E. Bryan |
| 599—At Love's Cost | By Charles Garvice |
| 600—St. Elmo | By Augusta J. Evans |
| 601—The Fate of the Plotter | By Louis Tracy |
| 602—Married in Error | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 603—Love and Jealousy | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 604—Only a Working Girl | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 605—Love, the Tyrant | By Charles Garvice |
| 606—Mabel's Sacrifice | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 607—Sybilla, the Siren | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 608—Love is Love Forevermore | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 609—John Elliott's Flirtation | By Lucy May Russell |
| 610—With All Her Heart | By Charles Garvice |
| 611—Is Love Worth While? | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 612—Her Husband's Other Wife | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 613—Philip Bennion's Death | By Richard Marsh |
| 614—Little Phillis' Lover | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 615—Maida | By Charles Garvice |
| 617—As a Man Lives | By E. Phillips Oppenheim |
| 618—The Tide of Fate | By Wenona Gilman |
| 619—The Cardinal Moth | By Fred M. White |
| 620—Marcia Drayton | By Charles Garvice |
| 621—Lynette's Wedding | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 622—His Madcap Sweetheart | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 623—Love at the Loom | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 624—A Bachelor Girl | By Lucy May Russell |
| 625—Kyra's Fate | By Charles Garvice |
| 626—The Joss | By Richard Marsh |
| 627—My Little Love | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 628—A Daughter of the Marionis | By E. Phillips Oppenheim |
| 629—The Lady of Beaufort Park | By Wenona Gilman |
| 630—The Verdict of the Heart | By Charles Garvice |
| 631—A Love Concealed | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 632—Cruelly Divided | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 633—The Strange Disappearance of Lady Delia | By Louis Tracy |
| 634—Love's Golden Spell | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 635—A Coronet of Shame | By Charles Garvice |
| 636—Sinned Against | By Mary E. Bryan |
| 637—If It Were True! | By Wenona Gilman |
| 638—A Golden Barrier | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 639—A Hateful Bondage | By Barbara Howard |
| 640—A Girl of Spirit | By Charles Garvice |
| 641—Master of Men | By E. Phillips Oppenheim |
| 642—A Fair Enchantress | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 643—The Power of Love | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 644—No Time for Penitence | By Wenona Gilman |
| 645—A Jest of Fate | By Charles Garvice |
| 646—Her Sister's Secret | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 647—Bitterly Atoned | By Mrs. E. Burke Collins |
| 648—Gertrude Elliott's Crucible | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 649—The Corner House | By Fred M. White |
| 650—Diana's Destiny | By Charles Garvice |
| 651—Love's Clouded Dawn | By Wenona Gilman |
| 652—Little Vixen | By Mrs. Alex McVeigh Miller |
| 653—Her Heart's Challenge | By Barbara Howard |
| 654—Vivian's Love Story | By Mrs. E. Burke Collins |
| 655—Linked by Fate | By Charles Garvice |
| 656—Hearts of Stone | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 657—In the Service of Love | By Richard Marsh |
| 658—Love's Devious Course | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 659—Told in the Twilight | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 660—The Mills of the Gods | By Wenona Gilman |
| 661—The Man of the Hour | By Sir William Magnay |
| 662—A Little Barbarian | By Charlotte Kingsley |
| 663—Creatures of Destiny | By Charles Garvice |
| 664—A Southern Princess | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 666—A Fateful Promise | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 667—The Goddess—A Demon | By Richard Marsh |
| 668—From Tears to Smiles | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 669—Tempted by Gold | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 670—Better Than Riches | By Wenona Gilman |
| 671—When Love Is Young | By Charles Garvice |
| 672—Craven Fortune | By Fred M. White |
| 673—Her Life's Burden | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 674—The Heart of Hetta | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 675—The Breath of Slander | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 676—My Lady Beth | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 677—The Wooing of Esther Gray | By Louis Tracy |
| 678—The Shadow Between Them | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 679—Gold in the Gutter | By Charles Garvice |
| 680—Master of Her Fate | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 681—In Full Cry | By Richard Marsh |
| 682—My Pretty Maid | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 683—An Unhappy Bargain | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 684—True Love Endures | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 685—India's Punishment | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 686—The Castle of the Shadows | By Mrs. C. N. Williamson |
| 687—My Own Sweetheart | By Wenona Gilman |
| 688—Only a Kiss | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 689—Lola Dunbar's Crime | By Barbara Howard |
| 690—Ruth, the Outcast | By Mrs. Mary E. Bryan |
| 691—Her Dearest Love | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 692—The Man of Millions | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 693—For Another's Fault | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 694—The Belle of Saratoga | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 695—The Mystery of the Unicorn | By Sir William Magnay |
| 696—The Bride's Opals | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 697—One of Life's Roses | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 698—The Battle of Hearts | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 700—In Wolf's Clothing | By Charles Garvice |
| 701—A Lost Sweetheart | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 702—The Stronger Passion | By Mrs. Lillian R. Drayton |
| 703—Mr. Marx's Secret | By E. Phillips Oppenheim |
| 704—Had She Loved Him Less! | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 705—The Adventure of Princess Sylvia | By Mrs. C. N. Williamson |
| 706—In Love's Paradise | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 707—At Another's Bidding | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 708—Sold for Gold | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 710—Ridgeway of Montana | By William MacLeod Raine |
| 711—Taken by Storm | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 712—Love and a Lie | By Charles Garvice |
| 713—Barriers of Stone | By Wenona Gilman |
| 714—Ethel's Secret | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 715—Amber, the Adopted | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 716—No Man's Wife | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 717—Wild and Willful | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 718—When We Two Parted | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 719—Love's Earnest Prayer | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 720—The Price of a Kiss | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 721—A Girl from the South | By Charles Garvice |
| 722—A Freak of Fate | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 723—A Golden Sorrow | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 724—Norma's Black Fortune | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 725—The Thoroughbred | By Edith MacVane |
| 726—Diana's Peril | By Dorothy Hall |
| 727—His Willing Slave | By Lillian R. Drayton |
| 728—Her Share of Sorrow | By Wenona Gilman |
| 729—Loved at Last | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 730—John Hungerford's Redemption | By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon |
| 731—His Two Loves | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 732—Eric Braddon's Love | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 733—Garrison's Finish | By W. B. M. Ferguson |
| 734—Sylvia, the Forsaken | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 735—Married for Money | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 736—Married in Haste | By Wenona Gilman |
| 737—At Her Father's Bidding | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 738—The Power of Gold | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 739—The Strength of Love | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 740—A Soul Laid Bare | By J. K. Egerton |
| 741—The Fatal Ruby | By Charles Garvice |
| 742—A Strange Wooing | By Richard Marsh |
| 743—A Lost Love | By Wenona Gilman |
| 744—A Useless Sacrifice | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 745—A Will of Her Own | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 746—That Girl Named Hazel | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 747—For a Flirt's Love | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 748—The World's Great Snare | By E. Phillips Oppenheim |
| 749—The Heart of a Maid | By Charles Garvice |
| 750—Driven from Home | By Wenona Gilman |
| 751—The Gypsy's Warning | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 752—Without Name or Wealth | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 753—Loyal Unto Death | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 754—His Lost Heritage | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 755—Her Priceless Love | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 756—Leola's Heart | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 757—Dare-devil Betty | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 758—The Woman in It | By Charles Garvice |
| 759—They Met by Chance | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 760—Love Conquers Pride | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 761—A Reckless Promise | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 762—The Rose of Yesterday | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 763—The Other Girl's Lover | By Lillian R. Drayton |
| 764—His Unbounded Faith | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 765—When Love Speaks | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 766—The Man She Hated | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 767—No One to Help Her | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 768—Claire's Love-Life | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 769—Love's Harvest | By Adelaide Fox Robinson |
| 770—A Queen of Song | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 771—Nan Haggard's Confession | By Mary E. Bryan |
| 772—A Married Flirt | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 773—The Thorns of Love | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 774—Love in a Snare | By Charles Garvice |
| 775—My Love Kitty | By Charles Garvice |
| 776—That Strange Girl | By Charles Garvice |
| 777—Nellie | By Charles Garvice |
| 778—Miss Estcourt; or, Olive | By Charles Garvice |
| 779—A Virginia Goddess | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 780—The Love He Sought | By Lillian R. Drayton |
| 781—Falsely Accused | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 782—His First Sweetheart | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 783—All for Love | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 784—What Love Can Cost | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 785—Lady Gay's Martyrdom | By Charlotte May Kingsley |
| 786—His Good Angel | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 787—A Bartered Soul | By Adelaide Fox Robinson |
| 788—In Love's Shadows | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 789—A Love Worth Winning | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 790—The Fatal Kiss | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 791—A Lover Scorned | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 792—After Many Days | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 793—An Innocent Outlaw | By William Wallace Cook |
| 794—The Arm of the Law | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 795—The Reluctant Queen | By J. Kenilworth Egerton |
| 796—The Cost of Pride | By Lillian R. Drayton |
| 797—What Love Made Her | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 798—Brave Heart | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 799—Between Good and Evil | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 800—Caught in Love's Net | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 801—Love is a Mystery | By Adelaide Fox Robinson |
| 802—The Glitter of Jewels | By J. Kenilworth Egerton |
| 803—The Game of Life | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 804—A Dreadful Legacy | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 805—Rogers, of Butte | By William Wallace Cook |
| 806—The Haunting Past | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 807—The Love That Would Not Die | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 808—The Serpent and the Dove | By Charlotte May Kingsley |
| 809—Through the Shadows | By Adelaide Fox Robinson |
| 810—Her Kingdom | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 811—When Dark Clouds Gather | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 812—Her Fateful Choice | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 813—Sorely Tried | By Emma Garrison Jones |
To be published during January, 1913.
| 814—Far Above Price | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 815—Bitter Sweet | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 816—A Clouded Life | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 817—When Fate Decrees | By Adelaide Fox Robinson |
| 818—The Girl Who Was True | By Charles Garvice |
To be published during February, 1913.
| 819—Where Love is Sent | By Mrs. E. Burke Collins |
| 820—The Pride of My Heart | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 821—The Girl in Red | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 822—Why Did She Shun Him? | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
To be published during March, 1913.
| 823—Between Love and Conscience | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 824—Spectres of the Past | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 825—The Hearts of the Mighty | By Adelaide Fox Robinson |
| 826—The Irony of Love | By Charles Garvice |
To be published during April, 1913.
| 827—At Arms With Fate | By Charlotte May Kingsley |
| 828—Love's Young Dream | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 829—Her Golden Secret | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 830—The Stolen Bride | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 831—Love's Rugged Pathway | By Ida Reade Allen |
To be published during May, 1913.
| 832—A Love Rejected—A Love Won | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 833—Her Life's Dark Cloud | By Lillian R. Drayton |
| 834—A Hero for Love's Sake | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 835—When the Heart Hungers | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
To be published during June, 1913.
| 836—Love Given in Vain | By Adelaide Fox Robinson |
| 837—The Web of Life | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 838—Love Surely Triumphs | By Charlotte May Kingsley |
| 839—The Lovely Constance | By Laura Jean Libbey |
To be published during July, 1913.
| 840—On a Sea of Sorrow | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 841—Her Hated Husband | By Evelyn Malcolm |
| 842—When Hearts Beat True | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 843—Too Quickly Judged | By Ida Reade Allen |
In order that there may be no confusion, we desire to say that the books listed above will be issued, during the respective months, in New York City and vicinity. They may not reach the readers, at a distance, promptly, on account of delays in transportation.
THE EAGLE SERIES
Principally Copyrights Elegant Colored Covers
"THE RIGHT BOOKS AT THE RIGHT PRICE"
While the books in the New Eagle Series are undoubtedly better value, being bigger books, the stories offered to the public in this line must not be underestimated. There are over four hundred copyrighted books by famous authors, which cannot be had in any other line. No other publisher in the world has a line that contains so many different titles, nor can any publisher ever hope to secure books that will match those in the Eagle Series in quality.
This is the pioneer line of copyrighted novels, and that it has struck popular fancy just right is proven by the fact that for fifteen years it has been the first choice of American readers. The only reason that we can afford to give such excellent reading at such a low price is that our unlimited capital and great organization enable us to manufacture books more cheaply and to sell more of them without expensive advertising, than any other publishers.
ALL TITLES ALWAYS IN PRINT
TO THE PUBLIC:—These books are sold by news dealers everywhere. If your dealer does not keep them, and will not get them for you, send direct to the publishers, in which case four cents must be added to the price per copy to cover postage.
| 3—The Love of Violet Lee | By Julia Edwards |
| 4—For a Woman's Honor | By Bertha M. Clay |
| 5—The Senator's Favorite | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 6—The Midnight Marriage | By A. M. Douglas |
| 8—Beautiful But Poor | By Julia Edwards |
| 9—The Virginia Heiress | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 10—Little Sunshine | By Francis S. Smith |
| 11—The Gipsy's Daughter | By Bertha M. Clay |
| 13—The Little Widow | By Julia Edwards |
| 14—Violet Lisle | By Bertha M. Clay |
| 15—Dr. Jack | By St. George Rathborne |
| 16—The Fatal Card | By Haddon Chambers and |
| B. C. Stephenson | |
| 17—Leslie's Loyalty | By Charles Garvice |
| (His Love So True) | |
| 18—Dr. Jack's Wife | By St. George Rathborne |
| 19—Mr. Lake of Chicago | By Harry DuBois Milman |
| 21—A Heart's Idol | By Bertha M. Clay |
| 22—Elaine | By Charles Garvice |
| 23—Miss Pauline of New York | By St. George Rathborne |
| 24—A Wasted Love | By Charles Garvice |
| (On Love's Altar) | |
| 25—Little Southern Beauty | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 26—Captain Tom | By St. George Rathborne |
| 27—Estelle's Millionaire Lover | By Julia Edwards |
| 28—Miss Caprice | By St. George Rathborne |
| 29—Theodora | By Victorien Sardou |
| 30—Baron Sam | By St. George Rathborne |
| 31—A Siren's Love | By Robert Lee Tyler |
| 32—The Blockade Runner | By J. Perkins Tracy |
| 33—Mrs. Bob | By St. George Rathborne |
| 34—Pretty Geraldine | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 35—The Great Mogul | By St. George Rathborne |
| 36—Fedora | By Victorien Sardou |
| 37—The Heart of Virginia | By J. Perkins Tracy |
| 38—The Nabob of Singapore | By St. George Rathborne |
| 39—The Colonel's Wife | By Warren Edwards |
| 40—Monsieur Bob | By St. George Rathborne |
| 41—Her Hearts Desire | By Charles Garvice |
| (An Innocent Girl) | |
| 42—Another Woman's Husband | By Bertha M. Clay |
| 43—Little Coquette Bonnie | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 45—A Yale Man | By Robert Lee Tyler |
| 46—Off with the Old Love | By Mrs. M. V. Victor |
| 47—The Colonel by Brevet | By St. George Rathborne |
| 48—Another Man's Wife | By Bertha M. Clay |
| 49—None But the Brave | By Robert Lee Tyler |
| 50—Her Ransom (Paid For) | By Charles Garvice |
| 51—The Price He Paid | By E. Werner |
| 52—Woman Against Woman | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 54—Cleopatra | By Victorien Sardou |
| 56—The Dispatch Bearer | By Warren Edwards |
| 58—Major Matterson of Kentucky | By St. George Rathborne |
| 59—Gladys Greye | By Bertha M. Clay |
| 61—La Tosca | By Victorien Sardou |
| 62—Stella Stirling | By Julia Edwards |
| 63—Lawyer Bell from Boston | By Robert Lee Tyler |
| 64—Dora Tenney | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 65—Won by the Sword | By J. Perkins Tracy |
| 67—Gismonda | By Victorien Sardou |
| 68—The Little Cuban Rebel | By Edna Winfield |
| 69—His Perfect Trust | By Bertha M. Clay |
| 70—Sydney (A Wilful Young Woman) | By Charles Garvice |
| 71—The Spider's Web | By St. George Rathborne |
| 72—Wilful Winnie | By Harriet Sherburne |
| 73—The Marquis | By Charles Garvice |
| 74—The Cotton King | By Sutton Vane |
| 75—Under Fire | By T. P. James |
| 76—Mavourneen | From the celebrated play |
| 78—The Yankee Champion | By Sylvanus Cobb, Jr. |
| 79—Out of the Past (Marjorie) | By Charles Garvice |
| 80—The Fair Maid of Fez | By St. George Rathborne |
| 81—Wedded for an Hour | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 82—Captain Impudence | By Edwin Milton Royle |
| 83—The Locksmith of Lyons | By Prof. Wm. Henry Peck |
| 84—Imogene | By Charles Garvice |
| (Dumaresq's Temptation) | |
| 85—Lorrie; or, Hollow Gold | By Charles Garvice |
| 86—A Widowed Bride | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 87—Shenandoah | By J. Perkins Tracy |
| 89—A Gentleman from Gascony | By Bicknell Dudley |
| 90—For Fair Virginia | By Russ Whytal |
| 91—Sweet Violet | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 92—Humanity | By Sutton Vane |
| 94—Darkest Russia | By H. Grattan Donnelly |
| 95—A Wilful Maid (Philippa) | By Charles Garvice |
| 96—The Little Minister | By J. M. Barrie |
| 97—The War Reporter | By Warren Edwards |
| 98—Claire | By Charles Garvice |
| (The Mistress of Court Regna) | |
| 100—Alice Blake | By Francis S. Smith |
| 101—A Goddess of Africa | By St. George Rathborne |
| 102—Sweet Cymbeline (Bellmaire) | By Charles Garvice |
| 103—The Span of Life | By Sutton Vane |
| 104—A Proud Dishonor | By Genie Holzmeyer |
| 105—When London Sleeps | By Chas. Darrell |
| 106—Lillian, My Lillian | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 107—Carla; or, Married at Sight | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 108—A Son of Mars | By St. George Rathborne |
| 109—Signa's Sweetheart | By Charles Garvice |
| (Lord Delamere's Bride) | |
| 110—Whose Wife is She? | By Annie Lisle |
| 112—The Cattle King | By A. D. Hall |
| 113—A Crushed Lily | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 114—Half a Truth | By Dora Delmar |
| 115—A Fair Revolutionist | By St. George Rathborne |
| 116—The Daughter of the Regiment | By Mary A. Denison |
| 117—She Loved Him | By Charles Garvice |
| 118—Saved from the Sea | By Richard Duffy |
| 119—'Twixt Smile and Tear (Dulcie) | By Charles Garvice |
| 120—The White Squadron | By T. C. Harbaugh |
| 121—Cecile's Marriage | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 123—Northern Lights | By A. D. Hall |
| 124—Prettiest of All | By Julia Edwards |
| 125—Devil's Island | By A. D. Hall |
| 126—The Girl from Hong Kong | By St. George Rathborne |
| 127—Nobody's Daughter | By Clara Augusta |
| 128—The Scent of the Roses | By Dora Delmar |
| 129—In Sight of St. Paul's | By Sutton Vane |
| 130—A Passion Flower (Madge) | By Charles Garvice |
| 131—Nerine's Second Choice | By Adelaide Stirling |
| 132—Whose Was the Crime? | By Gertrude Warden |
| 134—Squire John | By St. George Rathborne |
| 135—Cast Up by the Tide | By Dora Delmar |
| 136—The Unseen Bridegroom | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 138—A Fatal Wooing | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 139—Little Lady Charles | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 140—That Girl of Johnson's | By Jean Kate Ludlum |
| 141—Lady Evelyn | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 142—Her Rescue from the Turks | By St. George Rathborne |
| 143—A Charity Girl | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 145—Country Lanes and City Pavements | By Maurice M. Minton |
| 146—Magdalen's Vow | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 147—Under Egyptian Skies | By St. George Rathborne |
| 148—Will She Win? | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 149—The Man She Loved | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 150—Sunset Pass | By General Charles King |
| 151—The Heiress of Glen Gower | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 152—A Mute Confessor | By Will M. Harben |
| 153—Her Son's Wife | By Hazel Wood |
| 154—Husband and Foe | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 156—A Soldier Lover | By Edward S. Brooks |
| 157—Who Wins? | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 158—Stella, the Star | By Wenona Gilman |
| 159—Out of Eden | By Dora Russell |
| 160—His Way and Her Will | By Frances Aymar Mathews |
| 161—Miss Fairfax of Virginia | By St. George Rathborne |
| 162—A Man of the Name of John | By Florence King |
| 163—A Splendid Egotist | By Mrs. J. H. Walworth |
| 164—Couldn't Say No | By John Habberton |
| 165—The Road of the Rough | By Maurice M. Minton |
| 167—The Manhattaners | By Edward S. Van Zile |
| 168—Thrice Lost, Thrice Won | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 169—The Trials of an Actress | By Wenona Gilman |
| 170—A Little Radical | By Mrs. J. H. Walworth |
| 171—That Dakota Girl | By Stella Gilman |
| 172—A King and a Coward | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 173—A Bar Sinister | By St. George Rathborne |
| 174—His Guardian Angel | By Charles Garvice |
| 175—For Honor's Sake | By Laura C. Ford |
| 176—Jack Gordon, Knight Errant | By Barclay North |
| 178—A Slave of Circumstances | By Ernest De Lancey Pierson |
| 179—One Man's Evil | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 180—A Lazy Man's Work | By Frances Campbell Sparhawk |
| 181—The Baronet's Bride | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 182—A Legal Wreck | By William Gillette |
| 183—Quo Vadis | By Henryk Sienkiewicz |
| 184—Sunlight and Gloom | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 185—The Adventures of Miss Volney | By Ella Wheeler Wilcox |
| 186—Beneath a Spell | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 187—The Black Ball | By Ernest De Lancey Pierson |
| 189—Berris | By Katharine S. MacQuoid |
| 190—A Captain of the Kaiser | By St. George Rathborne |
| 191—A Harvest of Thorns | By Mrs. H. C. Hoffman |
| 193—A Vagabond's Honor | By Ernest De Lancey Pierson |
| 194—A Sinless Crime | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 195—Her Faithful Knight | By Gertrude Warden |
| 196—A Sailor's Sweetheart | By St. George Rathborne |
| 197—A Woman Scorned | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 200—In God's Country | By D. Higbee |
| 201—Blind Elsie's Crime | By Mary Grace Halpine |
| 202—Marjorie | By Katharine S. MacQuoid |
| 203—Only One Love | By Charles Garvice |
| 204—With Heart So True | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 205—If Love Be Love | By D. Cecil Gibbs |
| 206—A Daughter of Maryland | By G. Waldo Browne |
| 208—A Chase for a Bride | By St. George Rathborne |
| 209—She Loved But Left Him | By Julia Edwards |
| 211—As We Forgive | By Lurana W. Sheldon |
| 212—Doubly Wronged | By Adah M. Howard |
| 213—The Heiress of Egremont | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 214—Olga's Crime | By Frank Barrett |
| 215—Only a Girl's Love | By Charles Garvice |
| 216—The Lost Bride | By Clara Augusta |
| 217—His Noble Wife | By George Manville Fenn |
| 218—A Life for a Love | By Mrs. L. T. Meade |
| 220—A Fatal Past | By Dora Russell |
| 221—The Honorable Jane | By Annie Thomas |
| 223—Leola Dale's Fortune | By Charles Garvice |
| 224—A Sister's Sacrifice | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 225—A Miserable Woman | By Mrs. H. C. Hoffman |
| 226—The Roll of Honor | By Annie Thomas |
| 227—For Love and Honor | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 228—His Brother's Widow | By Mary Grace Halpine |
| 229—For the Sake of the Family | By May Crommelin |
| 230—A Woman's Atonement, and A Mother's Mistake | By Adah M. Howard |
| 231—The Earl's Heir (Lady Norah) | By Charles Garvice |
| 232—A Debt of Honor | By Mabel Collins |
| 234—His Mother's Sin | By Adeline Sergeant |
| 235—Love at Saratoga | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 236—Her Humble Lover | By Charles Garvice |
| (The Usurper; or, The Gipsy Peer) | |
| 237—Woman or Witch? | By Dora Delmar |
| 238—That Other Woman | By Annie Thomas |
| 239—Don Cæsar De Bazan | By Victor Hugo |
| 240—Saved by the Sword | By St. George Rathborne |
| 241—Her Love and Trust | By Adeline Sergeant |
| 242—A Wounded Heart (Sweet as a Rose) | By Charles Garvice |
| 243—His Double Self | By Scott Campbell |
| 245—A Modern Marriage | By Clara Lanza |
| 246—True to Herself | By Mrs. J. H. Walworth |
| 247—Within Love's Portals | By Frank Barrett |
| 248—Jeanne, Countess Du Barry | By H. L. Williams |
| 249—What Love Will Do | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 250—A Woman's Soul | By Charles Garvice |
| (Doris; Behind the Footlights) | |
| 251—When Love is True | By Mabel Collins |
| 252—A Handsome Sinner | By Dora Delmar |
| 253—A Fashionable Marriage | By Mrs. Alex Frazer |
| 254—Little Miss Millions | By St. George Rathborne |
| 256—Thy Name is Woman | By F. H. Howe |
| 257—A Martyred Love | By Charles Garvice |
| (Iris; or, Under the Shadow) | |
| 258—An Amazing Marriage | By Mrs. Sumner Hayden |
| 259—By a Golden Cord | By Dora Delmar |
| 260—At a Girl's Mercy | By Jean Kate Ludlum |
| 261—A Siren's Heart | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 262—A Woman's Faith | By Henry Wallace |
| 263—An American Nabob | By St. George Rathborne |
| 264—For Gold or Soul | By Lurana W. Sheldon |
| 265—First Love is Best | By S. K. Hocking |
| 267—Jeanne (Barriers Between) | By Charles Garvice |
| 268—Olivia; or, It Was for Her Sake | By Charles Garvice |
| 270—Had She Foreseen | By Dora Delmar |
| 271—With Love's Laurel Crowned | By W. C. Stiles |
| 272—So Fair, So False | By Charles Garvice |
| (The Beauty of the Season) | |
| 273—At Swords Points | By St. George Rathborne |
| 274—A Romantic Girl | By Evelyn E. Green |
| 275—Love's Cruel Whim | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 276—So Nearly Lost | By Charles Garvice |
| (The Springtime of Love) | |
| 278—Laura Brayton | By Julia Edwards |
| 279—Nina's Peril | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 280—Love's Dilemma | By Charles Garvice |
| (For an Earldom) | |
| 281—For Love Alone | By Wenona Gilman |
| 283—My Lady Pride (Floris) | By Charles Garvice |
| 284—Dr. Jack's Widow | By St. George Rathborne |
| 285—Born to Betray | By Mrs. M. V. Victor |
| 287—The Lady of Darracourt | By Charles Garvice |
| 289—Married in Mask | By Mansfield T. Walworth |
| 290—A Change of Heart | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 292—For Her Only (Diana) | By Charles Garvice |
| 294—A Warrior Bold | By St. George Rathborne |
| 295—A Terrible Secret and Countess Isabel | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 296—The Heir of Vering | By Charles Garvice |
| 297—That Girl from Texas | By Mrs. J. H. Walworth |
| 298—Should She Have Left Him? | By Barclay North |
| 300—The Spider and the Fly (Violet) | By Charles Garvice |
| 301—The False and the True | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 302—When Man's Love Fades | By Hazel Wood |
| 303—The Queen of the Isle | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 304—Stanch as a Woman | By Charles Garvice |
| (A Maiden's Sacrifice) | |
| 305—Led by Love | By Charles Garvice |
| Sequel to "Stanch as a Woman" | |
| 306—Love's Golden Rule | By Geraldine Fleming |
| 307—The Winning of Isolde | By St. George Rathborne |
| 308—Lady Ryhope's Lover | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 309—The Heiress of Castle Cliffe | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 310—A Late Repentance | By Mary A. Denison |
| 312—Woven on Fate's Loom and The Snowdrift | By Charles Garvice |
| 313—A Kinsman's Sin | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 314—A Maid's Fatal Love | By Helen Corwin Pierce |
| 315—The Dark Secret | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 316—Edith Lyle's Secret | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 317—Ione | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 318—Stanch of Heart (Adrien Le Roy) | By Charles Garvice |
| 319—Millbank | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 320—Mynheer Joe | By St. George Rathborne |
| 321—Neva's Three Lovers | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 322—Mildred | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 323—The Little Countess | By S. E. Boggs |
| 324—A Love Match | By Sylvanus Cobb, Jr. |
| 325—The Leighton Homestead | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 326—Parted by Fate | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 327—Was She Wife or Widow? | By Malcolm Bell |
| 328—He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not (Valeria) | By Charles Garvice |
| 329—My Hildegarde | By St. George Rathborne |
| 330—Aikenside | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 331—Christine | By Adeline Sergeant |
| 332—Darkness and Daylight | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 333—Stella's Fortune (The Sculptor's Wooing) | By Charles Garvice |
| 334—Miss McDonald | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 335—We Parted at the Altar | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 336—Rose Mather | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 337—Dear Elsie | By Mary J. Safford |
| 338—A Daughter of Russia | By St. George Rathborne |
| 340—Bad Hugh. Vol. I | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 341—Bad Hugh. Vol. II | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 342—Her Little Highness | By Nataly Von Eschstruth |
| 343—Little Sunshine | By Adah M. Howard |
| 344—Leah's Mistake | By Mrs. H. C. Hoffman |
| 345—Tresillian Court | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 346—Guy Tresillian's Fate | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| Sequel to "Tresillian Court" | |
| 347—The Eyes of Love | By Charles Garvice |
| 348—My Florida Sweetheart | By St. George Rathborne |
| 349—Marion Grey | By Mary J. Holmes |
| 350—A Wronged Wife | By Mary Grace Halpine |
| 352—Family Pride. Vol. I | By Mary J. Holmes |
| 353—Family Pride. Vol. II | By Mary J. Holmes |
| 354—A Love Comedy | By Charles Garvice |
| 355—Wife and Woman | By Mary J. Safford |
| 356—Little Kit | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 357—Montezuma's Mines | By St. George Rathborne |
| 358—Beryl's Husband | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 359—The Spectre's Secret | By Sylvanus Cobb, Jr. |
| 360—An Only Daughter | By Hazel Wood |
| 361—The Ashes of Love | By Charles Garvice |
| 363—The Opposite House | By Nataly Von Eschstruth |
| 364—A Fool's Paradise | By Mary Grace Halpine |
| 365—Under a Cloud | By Jean Kate Ludlum |
| 366—Comrades in Exile | By St. George Rathborne |
| 367—Hearts and Coronets | By Jane G. Fuller |
| 368—The Pride of Her Life | By Charles Garvice |
| 369—At a Great Cost | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 370—Edith Trevor's Secret | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 371—Cecil Rosse | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| Sequel to "Edith Trevor's Secret" | |
| 374—True Daughter of Hartenstein | By Mary J. Safford |
| 375—Transgressing the Law | By Capt. Fred'k Whittaker |
| 376—The Red Slipper | By St. George Rathborne |
| 377—Forever True | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 378—John Winthrop's Defeat | By Jean Kate Ludlum |
| 379—Blinded by Love | By Nataly Von Eschstruth |
| 380—Her Double Life | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 381—The Sunshine of Love | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| Sequel to "Her Double Life" | |
| 383—A Lover from Across the Sea | By Mary J. Safford |
| 384—Yet She Loved Him | By Mrs. Kate Vaughn |
| 385—A Woman Against Her | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 386—Teddy's Enchantress | By St. George Rathborne |
| 387—A Heroine's Plot | By Katherine S. MacQuoid |
| 388—Two Wives | By Hazel Wood |
| 389—Sundered Hearts | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 390—A Mutual Vow | By Harold Payne |
| 392—A Resurrected Love | By Seward W. Hopkins |
| 393—On the Wings of Fate | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 394—A Drama of a Life | By Jean Kate Ludlum |
| 395—Wooing a Widow | By E. A. King |
| 396—Back to Old Kentucky | By St. George Rathborne |
| 397—A Gilded Promise | By Walter Bloomfield |
| 398—Cupid's Disguise | By Fanny Lewald |
| 400—For Another's Wrong | By W. Heimburg |
| 401—The Woman Who Came Between | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 402—A Silent Heroine | By Mrs. D. M. Lowrey |
| 403—The Rival Suitors | By J. H. Connelly |
| 404—The Captive Bride | By Capt. Fred'k Whittaker |
| 405—The Haunted Husband | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 406—Felipe's Pretty Sister | By St. George Rathborne |
| 408—On a False Charge | By Seward W. Hopkins |
| 409—A Girl's Kingdom | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 410—Miss Mischief | By W. Heimburg |
| 411—Fettered and Freed | By Eugene Charvette |
| 412—The Love that Lives | By Capt. Frederick Whittaker |
| 413—Were They Married? | By Hazel Wood |
| 414—A Girl's First Love | By Elizabeth C. Winter |
| 416—Down in Dixie | By St. George Rathborne |
| 417—Brave Barbara | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 418—An Insignificant Woman | By W. Heimburg |
| 420—A Sweet Little Lady | By Gertrude Warden |
| 421—Her Sweet Reward | By Barbara Kent |
| 422—Lady Kildare | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 423—A Woman's Way | By Capt. Frederick Whittaker |
| 424—A Splendid Man | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 425—A College Widow | By Frank H. Howe |
| 427—A Wizard of the Moors | By St. George Rathborne |
| 428—A Tramp's Daughter | By Hazel Wood |
| 429—A Fair Fraud | By Emily Lovett Cameron |
| 430—The Honor of a Heart | By Mary J. Safford |
| 431—Her Husband and Her Love | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 432—Breta's Double | By Helen V. Greyson |
| 435—Under Oath | By Jean Kate Ludlum |
| 436—The Rival Toreadors | By St. George Rathborne |
| 437—The Breach of Custom | By Mrs. D. M. Lowrey |
| 438—So Like a Man | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 439—Little Nan | By Mary A. Denison |
| 441—A Princess of the Stage | By Nataly Von Eschstruth |
| 442—Love Before Duty | By Mrs. L. T. Meade |
| 443—In Spite of Proof | By Gertrude Warden |
| 444—Love's Trials | By Alfred R. Calhoun |
| 445—An Angel of Evil | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 446—Bound with Love's Fetters | By Mary Grace Halpine |
| 447—A Favorite of Fortune | By St. George Rathborne |
| 448—When Love Dawns | By Adelaide Stirling |
| 449—The Bailiff's Scheme | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 450—Rosamond's Love | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| Sequel to "The Bailiff's Scheme" | |
| 452—The Last of the Van Slacks | By Edward S. Van Zile |
| 453—A Poor Girl's Passion | By Gertrude Warden |
| 454—Love's Probation | By Elizabeth Olmis |
| 455—Love's Greatest Gift | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 456—A Vixen's Treachery | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 457—Adrift in the World | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| Sequel to "A Vixen's Treachery" | |
| 459—A Golden Mask | By Charlotte M. Stanley |
| 460—Dr. Jack's Talisman | By St. George Rathborne |
| 461—Above All Things | By Adelaide Stirling |
| 462—A Stormy Wedding | By Mary E. Bryan |
| 463—A Wife's Triumph | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 464—The Old Life's Shadows | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 465—Outside Her Eden | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| Sequel to "The Old Life's Shadows" | |
| 466—Love, the Victor | By a Popular Southern Author |
| 467—Zina's Awaking | By Mrs. J. K. Spender |
| 468—The Wooing of a Fairy | By Gertrude Warden |
| 469—A Soldier and a Gentleman | By J. M. Cobban |
| 470—A Strange Wedding | By Mary Hartwell Catherwood |
| 471—A Shadowed Happiness | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 472—Dr. Jack and Company | By St. George Rathborne |
| 473—A Sacrifice to Love | By Adelaide Stirling |
| 474—The Belle of the Season | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| 475—Love Before Pride | By Mrs. Harriet Lewis |
| Sequel to "The Belle of the Season" | |
| 477—The Siberian Exiles | By Col. Thomas Knox |
| 478—For Love of Sigrid | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 479—Mysterious Mr. Sabin | By E. Phillips Oppenheim |
| 480—A Perfect Fool | By Florence Warden |
| 481—Wedded, Yet No Wife | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 482—A Little Worldling | By L. C. Ellsworth |
| 483—Miss Marston's Heart | By L. H. Bickford |
| 484—The Whistle of Fate | By Richard Marsh |
| 485—The End Crowns All | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 486—Divided Lives | By Edgar Fawcett |
| 487—A Wonderful Woman | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 488—The French Witch | By Gertrude Warden |
| 489—Lucy Harding | By Mrs. Mary J. Holmes |
| 490—The Price of Jealousy | By Maud Howe |
| 491—My Lady of Dreadwood | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 492—A Speedy Wooing | By the Author of |
| "As Common Mortals" | |
| 493—The Girl He Loved | By Adelaide Stirling |
| 494—Voyagers of Fortune | By St. George Rathborne |
| 495—Norine's Revenge | By May Agnes Fleming |
| 496—The Missing Heiress | By C. H. Montague |
| 497—A Chase for Love | By Seward W. Hopkins |
| 498—Andrew Leicester's Love | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 499—My Lady Cinderella | Mrs. C. N. Williamson |
| 500—Love and Spite | By Adelaide Stirling |
| 501—Her Husband's Secret | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 502—Fair Maid Marian | By Mrs. Emma Garrison Jones |
| 503—A Lady in Black | By Florence Warden |
| 504—Evelyn, the Actress | By Wenona Gilman |
| 505—Selina's Love-story | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 506—A Secret Foe | By Gertrude Warden |
| 507—A Mad Betrothal | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 508—Lottie and Victorine | By Lucy Randall Comfort |
| 509—A Penniless Princess | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 510—Doctor Jack's Paradise Mine | By St. George Rathborne |
| 513—A Sensational Case | By Florence Warden |
| 514—The Temptation of Mary Barr | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 515—Tiny Luttrell | By E. W. Hornung |
| (Author of "Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman") | |
| 516—Florabel's Lover | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 517—They Looked and Loved | By Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller |
| 518—The Secret of a Letter | By Gertrude Warden |
| 521—The Witch from India | By St. George Rathborne |
| 522—A Spurned Proposal | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 523—A Banker of Bankersville | By Maurice Thompson |
| 524—A Sacrifice of Pride | By Mrs. Louisa Parr |
| 525—Sweet Kitty Clover | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 526—Love and Hate | By Morley Roberts |
| 527—For Love and Glory | By St. George Rathborne |
| 528—Adela's Ordeal | By Florence Warden |
| 529—Hearts Aflame | By Louise Winter |
| 530—The Wiles of a Siren | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 532—True to His Bride | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 533—A Forgotten Love | By Adelaide Stirling |
| 534—Lotta, the Cloak Model | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 535—The Trifler | By Archibald Eyre |
| 536—Companions in Arms | By St. George Rathborne |
| 538—The Fighting Chance | By Gertrude Lynch |
| 539—A Heart's Triumph | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 540—A Daughter of Darkness | By Ida Reade Allen |
| 541—Her Evil Genius | By Adelaide Stirling |
| 543—The Veiled Bride | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 544—In Love's Name | By Emma Garrison Jones |
| 545—Well Worth Winning | By St. George Rathborne |
| 546—The Career of Mrs. Osborne | By Helen Milecete |
| 549—Tempted by Love | By Effie Adelaide Rowlands |
| 550—Saved from Herself | By Adelaide Stirling |
| 551—Pity—Not Love | By Laura Jean Libbey |
| 552—At the Court of the Maharaja | By Louis Tracy |
CONTENTS.
| PAGE | |
| [CHAPTER I.] | 1 |
| [CHAPTER II.] | 10 |
| [CHAPTER III.] | 17 |
| [CHAPTER IV.] | 24 |
| [CHAPTER V.] | 30 |
| [CHAPTER VI.] | 39 |
| [CHAPTER VII.] | 44 |
| [CHAPTER VIII.] | 51 |
| [CHAPTER IX.] | 57 |
| [CHAPTER X.] | 65 |
| [CHAPTER XI.] | 71 |
| [CHAPTER XII.] | 87 |
| [CHAPTER XIII.] | 93 |
| [CHAPTER XIV.] | 98 |
| [CHAPTER XV.] | 102 |
| [CHAPTER XVI.] | 112 |
| [CHAPTER XVII.] | 117 |
| [CHAPTER XVIII.] | 125 |
| [CHAPTER XIX.] | 139 |
| [CHAPTER XX.] | 146 |
| [CHAPTER XXI.] | 154 |
| [CHAPTER XXII.] | 160 |
| [CHAPTER XXIII.] | 163 |
| [CHAPTER XXIV.] | 170 |
| [CHAPTER XXV.] | 176 |
| [CHAPTER XXVI.] | 181 |
| [CHAPTER XXVII.] | 186 |
| [CHAPTER XXVIII.] | 192 |
| [CHAPTER XXIX.] | 197 |
| [CHAPTER XXX.] | 204 |
| [CHAPTER XXXI.] | 209 |
| [CHAPTER XXXII.] | 216 |
| [CHAPTER XXXIII.] | 220 |
| [CHAPTER XXXIV.] | 226 |
| [CHAPTER XXXV.] | 232 |
| [CHAPTER XXXVI.] | 239 |
| [CHAPTER XXXVII.] | 245 |
| [CHAPTER XXXVIII.] | 253 |
| [CHAPTER XXXIX.] | 258 |
| [CHAPTER XL.] | 267 |
| [CHAPTER XLI.] | 274 |
| [CHAPTER XLII.] | 282 |
ONLY A GIRL'S LOVE.
It is a warm evening in early Summer; the sun is setting behind a long range of fir and yew-clad hills, at the feet of which twists in and out, as it follows their curves, a placid, peaceful river. Opposite these hills, and running beside the river, are long-stretching meadows, brilliantly green with fresh-springing grass, and gorgeously yellow with newly-opened buttercups. Above, the sunset sky gleams and glows with fiery red and rich deep chromes. And London is almost within sight.
It is a beautiful scene, such as one sees only in this England of ours—a scene that defies poet and painter. At this very moment it is defying one of the latter genus; for in a room of a low-browed, thatched-roofed cottage which stood on the margin of the meadow, James Etheridge sat beside his easel, his eyes fixed on the picture framed in the open window, his brush and mahl-stick drooping in his idle hand.
Unconsciously he, the painter, made a picture worthy of study. Tall, thin, delicately made, with pale face crowned and set in softly-flowing white hair, with gentle, dreamy eyes ever seeking the infinite and unknown, he looked like one of those figures which the old Florentine artists used to love to put upon their canvases, and which when one sees even now makes one strangely sad and thoughtful.
The room was a fitting frame for the human subject; it was a true painter's studio—untidy, disordered, and picturesque. Finished and unfinished pictures hung or leant against the walls, suits of armor, antique weapons, strange costumes littered the floor or hung limply over mediæval chairs; books, some in bindings which would have made the mouth of a connoisseur water, lay open upon the table or were piled in a distant corner. And over all silence—unbroken save by the sound of the water rushing over the weir, or the birds which flitted by the open window—reigned supreme.
The old man sat for some time listening to Nature's music, and lost in dreamy admiration of her loveliness, until the striking of the church clock floated from the village behind the house; then, with a start, he rose, took up his brushes, and turned again to the easel. An hour passed, and still he worked, the picture growing beneath the thin, skillful hand; the birds sank into silence, the red faded slowly from the sky, and night unfolded its dark mantle ready to let it fall upon the workaday world.
Silence so profound took to itself the likeness of loneliness; perhaps the old man felt it so, for as he glanced at the waning light and lay his brush down, he put his hand to his brow and sighed. Then he turned the picture on the easel, made his way with some little difficulty, owing to the litter, across the room, found and lit an old briar-wood pipe, and dropping into the chair again, fixed his eyes upon the scene, and fell into the dreamy state which was habitual with him.
So lost in purposeless memory was he, that the opening of the door failed to rouse him.
It was opened very gently and slowly, and as slowly and noiselessly a young girl, after pausing a moment at the threshold, stepped into the room, and stood looking round her and at the motionless figure in the chair by the window.
She stood for full a minute, her hand still holding the handle of the door, as if she were not certain of her welcome—as if the room were strange to her, then, with a little hurried pressure of her hand to her bosom, she moved toward the window.
As she did so her foot struck against a piece of armor, and the noise aroused the old man and caused him to look round.
With a start he gazed at the girl as if impressed with the idea that she must be something unsubstantial and visionary—some embodiment of his evening dreams, and so he sat looking at her, his artist eye taking in the lithe, graceful figure, the beautiful face, with its dark eyes and long, sweeping lashes, its clearly penciled brows, and soft, mobile lips, in rapt absorption.
It is possible that if she had turned and left him, never to have crossed into his life again, he would have sunk back into dreamland, and to the end of his days have regarded her as unreal and visionary; but, with a subtle, graceful movement, the girl threaded the maze of litter and disorder and stood beside him.
He, still looking up, saw that the beautiful eyes were dim, that the exquisitely curved lips were quivering with some intense emotion, and suddenly there broke upon the silence a low, sweet voice:
"Are you James Etheridge?"
The artist started. It was not the words, but the tone—the voice that startled him, and for a brief second he was still dumb, then he rose, and looking at her with faint, trembling questioning, he answered:
"Yes, that is my name. I am James Etheridge."
Her lips quivered again, but still, quietly and simply, she said:
"You do not know me? I am Stella—your niece, Stella."
The old man threw up his head and stared at her, and she saw that he trembled.
"Stella—my niece—Harold's child!"
"Yes," she said, in a low voice, "I am Stella."
"But, merciful Heaven!" he exclaimed, with agitation, "how did you come here? Why—I thought you were at the school there in Florence—why—have you come here alone?"
Her eyes wandered from his face to the exquisite scene beyond, and at that moment her look was strangely like his own.
"Yes, I came alone, uncle," she said.
"Merciful Heaven!" he murmured again, sinking into his chair. "But why—why?"
The question is not unkindly put, full, rather, of a troubled perplexity and bewilderment.
Stella's eyes returned to his face.
"I was unhappy, uncle," she said, simply.
"Unhappy!" he echoed, gently—"unhappy! My child, you are too young to know what the word means. Tell me"—and he put his long white hand on her arm.
The touch was the one thing needed to draw them together. With a sudden, yet not abrupt movement, she slid down at his side and leant her head on his arm.
"Yes, I was very unhappy, uncle. They were hard and unkind. They meant well perhaps, but it was not to be borne. And then—then, after papa died, it was so lonely, so lonely. There was no one—no one to care for me—to care whether one lived or died. Uncle, I bore it as long as I could, and then I—came."
The old man's eyes grew dim, and his hand rose gently to her head, and smoothed the rich, silky hair.
"Poor child! poor child!" he murmured, dreamily, looking not at her, but at the gloaming outside.
"As long as I could, uncle, until I felt that I must run away, or go mad, or die. Then I remembered you, I had never seen you, but I remembered that you were papa's brother, and that, being of the same blood, you must be good, and kind, and true; and so I resolved to come to you."
His hand trembled on her head, but he was silent for a moment; then he said, in a low voice:
"Why did you not write?"
A smile crossed the girl's face.
"Because they would not permit us to write, excepting under their dictation."
He started, and a fiery light flashed from the gentle, dreamy eyes.
"No letters were allowed to leave the school unless the principals had read them. We were never out alone, or I would have posted a letter unknown to them. No, I could not write, or I would have done so, and—and—waited."
"You would not have waited long, my child," he murmured.
She threw back her head and kissed his hand. It was a strange gesture, more foreign than English, full of the impulsive gracefulness of the passionate South in which she had been born and bred; it moved the old man strangely, and he drew her still closer to him as he whispered—
"Go on!—go on!"
"Well I made up my mind to run away," she continued. "It was a dreadful thing to do, because if I had been caught and brought back, they would have——"
"Stop, stop!" he broke in with passionate dread. "Why did I not know of this? How did Harold come to send you there? Great Heaven! a young tender girl! Can Heaven permit it?"
"Heaven permits strange things, uncle," said the girl, gravely. "Papa did not know, just as you did not know. It was an English school, and all was fair and pleasant outside—outside! Well the night just after I had received the money you used to send me each quarter, I bribed one of the servants to leave the door open and ran away. I knew the road to the coast and knew what day and time the boat started. I caught it and reached London. There was just enough money to pay the fare down here, and I—I—that is all, uncle."
"All?" he murmured. "A young, tender child!"
"And are you not angry?" she asked, looking up into his face. "You will not send me back?"
"Angry! Send you back! My child, do you think if I had known, if I could have imagined that you were not well treated, that you were not happy, that I would have permitted you to remain a day, an hour longer than I could have helped? Your letters always spoke of your contentment and happiness."
She smiled.
"Remember, they were written with someone looking over my shoulder."
Something like an imprecation, surely the first that he had uttered for many a long year, was smothered on the gentle lips.
"I could not know that—I could not know that, Stella! Your father thought it best—I have his last letter. My child, do not cry——"
She raised her face.
"I am not crying; I never cry when I think of papa, uncle, Why should I? I loved him too well to wish him back from Heaven."
The old man looked down at her with a touch of awe in his eyes.
"Yes, yes," he murmured; "it was his wish that you should remain there at school. He knew what I was, an aimless dreamer, a man living out of the world, and no fit guardian for a young girl. Oh, yes, Harold knew. He acted for the best, and I was content. My life was too lonely, and quiet, and lifeless for a young girl, and I thought that all was right, while those fiends——"
She put her hand on his arm.
"Do not let us speak of them, or think of them any more, uncle. You will let me stay with you, will you not? I shall not think your life lonely; it will be a Paradise after that which I have left—Paradise. And, see, I will strive to make it less lonely; but"—and she turned suddenly with a look of troubled fear—"but perhaps I shall be in your way?" and she looked round.
"No, no," he said, and he put his hand to his brow. "It is strange! I never felt my loneliness till now! and I would not have you go for all the world!"
She wound her arms round him, and nestled closer, and there was silence for a space; then he said:
"How old are you, Stella?"
She thought a moment.
"Nineteen, uncle."
"Nineteen—a child!" he murmured; then he looked at her, and his lips moved inaudibly as he thought, "Beautiful as an angel," but she heard him, and her face flushed, but the next moment she looked up frankly and simply.
"You would not say that much if you had seen my mamma. She was beautiful as an angel. Papa used to say that he wished you could have seen her; that you would have liked to paint her. Yes, she was beautiful."
The artist nodded.
"Poor, motherless child!" he murmured.
"Yes, she was beautiful," continued the girl, softly. "I can just remember her, uncle. Papa never recovered from her death. He always said that he counted the days till he should meet her again. He loved her so, you see."
There was silence again; then the artist spoke:
"You speak English with scarcely an accent, Stella."
The girl laughed; it was the first time she had laughed, and it caused the uncle to start. It was not only because it was unexpected, but because of its exquisite music. It was like the trill of a bird. In an instant he felt that her childish sorrow had not imbittered her life or broken her spirit. He found himself almost unconsciously laughing in harmony.
"What a strange observation, uncle!" she said, when the laugh had died away. "Why I am English! right to the backbone, as papa used to say. Often and often he used to look at me and say: 'Italy has no part and parcel in you beyond your birth, Stella; you belong to that little island which floats on the Atlantic and rules the world.' Oh, yes, I am English. I should be sorry to be anything else, notwithstanding mamma was an Italian."
He nodded.
"Yes, I remember Harold—your father—always said you were an English girl. I am glad of that."
"So am I," said the girl, naively.
Then he relapsed into one of his dreamy silences, and she waited silent and motionless. Suddenly he felt her quiver under his arm, and heave a long, deep sigh.
With a start he looked down; her face had gone wofully pale to the very lips.
"Stella!" he cried, "what is it? Are you ill? Great Heaven!"
She smiled up at him.
"No, no, only a little tired; and," with naive simplicity, "I think I am a little hungry. You see, I only had enough for the fare."
"Heaven forgive me!" he cried, starting up so suddenly as almost to upset her. "Here have I been dreaming and mooning while the child was starving. What a brainless idiot I am!"
And in his excitement he hurried up and down the room, knocking over a painting here and a lay figure there, and looking aimlessly about as if he expected to see something in the shape of food floating in the air.
At last with his hand to his brow he bethought him of the bell, and rang it until the little cottage resounded as if it were a fire-engine station. There was a hurried patter of footsteps outside, the door was suddenly opened, and a middle-aged woman ran in, with a cap very much awry and a face startled and flushed.
"Gracious me, sir, what's the matter?" she exclaimed.
Mr. Etheridge dropped the bell, and without a word of explanation, exclaimed—"Bring something to eat at once, Mrs. Penfold, and some wine, at once, please. The poor child is starving."
The woman looked at him with amazement, that increased as glancing round the room she failed to see any poor child, Stella being hidden behind the antique high-backed chair.
"Poor child, what poor child! You've been dreaming, Mr. Etheridge!"
"No, no!" he said, meekly; "it's all true, Mrs. Penfold. She has come all the way from Florence without a morsel to eat."
Stella rose from her ambush.
"Not all the way from Florence, uncle," she said.
Mrs. Penfold started and stared at the visitor.
"Good gracious me!" she exclaimed; "who is it?"
Mr. Etheridge rubbed his brow.
"Did I not tell you? It is my niece—my niece Stella. She has come from Italy, and—I wish you'd bring some food. Bring a bottle of the old wine. Sit down and rest, Stella. This is Mrs. Penfold—she is my housekeeper, and a good woman, but,"—he added, without lowering his tone in the slightest, though he was evidently under the idea that he was inaudible—"but rather slow in comprehension."
Mrs. Penfold came forward, still flushed and excited, and with a smile.
"Your niece, sir! Not Mr. Harold's daughter that you so often have spoken of! Why, how did you come in, miss?"
"I found the door open," said Stella.
"Good gracious me! And dropped from the clouds! And that must have been an hour ago! And you, sir," looking at the bewildered artist reproachfully, "you let the dear young thing sit here with her hat and jacket on all that time, after coming all that way, without sending for me."
"We didn't want you," said the old man, calmly.
"Want me! No! But the dear child wanted something to eat, and to rest, and to take her things off. Oh, come with me, miss! All the way from Florence, and Mr. Harold's daughter!"
"Go with her, Stella," said the old man, "and—and," he added, gently, "don't let her keep you long."
The infinite tenderness of the last words caused Stella to stop on her way to the door; she came back, and, putting her arms around his neck, kissed him.
Then she followed Mrs. Penfold up-stairs to her room, the good woman talking the whole while in exclamatory sentences of astonishment.
"And you are Mr. Harold's daughter. Did you see his portrait over the mantel-shelf, miss? I should have known you by that, now I come to look at you," and she looked with affectionate interest into the beautiful face, as she helped Stella to take off her hat. "Yes, I should have known you, miss, in a moment? And you have come all the way from Italy? Dear me, it is wonderful. And I'm very glad you have, it won't be so lonely for Mr. Etheridge. And is there anything else you want, miss? You must excuse me for bringing you into my own room; I'll have a room ready for you to-night, your own room, and the luggage, miss——"
Stella smiled and blushed faintly.
"I have none, Mrs. Penfold. I ran—I left quite suddenly."
"Dearie me!" murmured Mrs. Penfold, puzzled and sympathetic. "Well, now, it doesn't matter so long as you are here, safe, and sound. And now I'll go and get you something to eat! You can find your way down?"
"Yes," Stella said. She could find her way down. She stood for a moment looking through the window, her long hair falling in a silky stream down her white shoulders, and the soft, dreamy look came into her eyes.
"Is it true?" she murmured. "Am I really here at home with someone to love me—someone whom I can love? Or is it only a dream, and shall I wake in the cold bare room and find that I have still to endure the old life? No! It is no dream, it is true!"
She wound up the long hair and went down to find that Mrs. Penfold had already prepared the table, her uncle standing beside and waiting with gentle impatience for her appearance.
He started as she entered, with a distinct feeling of renewed surprise; the relief from uncertainty as to her welcome, the kindness of her reception had already refreshed her, and her beauty shone out unclouded by doubt or nervousness.
The old man's eyes wandered with artistic approval over the graceful form and lovely face, and he was almost in the land of dreams again when Mrs. Penfold roused him by setting a chair at the table, and handing him a cobwebbed bottle and a corkscrew.
"Miss Stella must be starving, sir!" she said, suggestively.
"Yes, yes," he assented, and both of them set to work exhorting and encouraging her to eat, as if they feared she might drop under the table with exhaustion unless she could be persuaded to eat of everything on the table.
Mr. Etheridge seemed to place great faith in the old port as a restorative, and had some difficulty in concealing his disappointment when Stella, after sipping the first glass, declined any more on the score that it was strong.
At last, but with visible reluctance, he accepted her assertion that she was rescued from any chance of starvation, and Mrs. Penfold cleared the table and left them alone.
A lamp stood on the table, but the moonbeams poured in through the window, and instinctively Stella drew near the window.
"What a lovely place it is, uncle!" she said.
He did not answer, he was watching her musingly, as she leant against the edge of the wall.
"You must be very happy here."
"Yes," he murmured, dreamily. "Yes, and you think you will be, Stella."
"Ah, yes," she answered, in a low voice, and with a low sigh. "Happier than I can say."
"You will not feel it lonely, shut up with an old man, a dreamer, who has parted with the world and almost forgotten it?"
"No, no! a thousand times no!" was the reply.
He wandered to the fireplace and took up his pipe, but with a sudden glance at her laid it down again. Slight as was the action she saw it, and with the graceful, lithe movement which he had noticed, she glided across the room and took up the pipe.
"You were going to smoke, uncle."
"No, no," he said, eagerly. "No, a mere habit——"
She interrupted him with a smile, and filled the pipe for him with her taper little fingers, and gave it to him.
"You do not want me to wish that I had not come to you uncle?"
"Heaven forbid!" he said, simply.
"Then you must not alter anything in your life; you must go on as if I had never dropped from the clouds to be a burden upon you."
"My child!" he murmured, reproachfully.
"Or to make you uncomfortable. I could not bear that, uncle."
"No, no!" he said, "I will alter nothing, Stella; we will be happy, you and I."
"Very happy," she murmured, softly.
He wandered to the window, and stood looking out; and, unseen by him, she drew a chair up and cleared it of the litter, and unconsciously he sat down.
Then she glided to and fro, wandering round the room noiselessly, looking at the curious lumber, and instinctively picking up the books and putting them in something like order on the almost empty shelves.
Every now and then she took up one of the pictures which stood with their faces to the wall, and her gaze would wander from it to the painter sitting in the moonlight, his white hair falling on his shoulders, his thin, nervous hands clasped on his knee.
She, who had spent her life in the most artistic city of the world, knew that he was a great painter, and, child-woman as she was, wondered why the world permitted him to remain unknown and unnoticed. She had yet to learn that he cared as little for fame as he did for wealth, and to be allowed to live for his art and dream in peace was all he asked from the world in which he lived but in which he took no part. Presently she came back to the window, and stood beside him; he started slightly and put out his hand, and she put her thin white one into it. The moon rose higher in the heavens, and the old man raised his other hand and pointed to it in silence.
As he did so, Stella saw glide into the scene—as it was touched by the moonbeams—a large white building rearing above the trees on the hill-top, and she uttered an exclamation of surprise.
"What house is that, uncle? I had no idea one was there until this moment!"
"That is Wyndward Hall, Stella," he replied, dreamily; "it was hidden by the shadow and the clouds."
"What a grand place!" she murmured. "Who lives there uncle?"
"The Wyndwards," he answered, in the same musing tone, "the Wyndwards. They have lived there for hundreds of years, Stella. Yes, it is a grand place."
"We should call it a palace in Italy, uncle."
"It is a palace in England, but we are more modest. They are contented to call it the Hall. An old place and an old race."
"Tell me about them," she said, quietly. "Do you know them—are they friends of yours?"
"I know them. Yes, they are friends, as far as there be any friendship between a poor painter and the Lord of Wyndward. Yes, we are friends; they call them proud, but they are not too proud to ask James Etheridge to dinner occasionally; and they accuse him of pride because he declines to break the stillness of his life by accepting their hospitality. Look to the left there, Stella. As far as you can see stretch the lands of Wyndward—they run for miles between the hills there."
"They have some reason to be proud," she murmured, with a smile. "But I like them because they are kind to you."
He nodded.
"Yes, the earl would be more than kind, I think——"
"The earl?"
"Yes, Lord Wyndward, the head of the family; the Lord of Wyndward they call him. They have all been called Lords of Wyndward by the people here, who look up to them as if they were something more than human."
"And does he live there alone?" she asked, gazing at the gray stone mansion glistening in the moonlight.
"No, there is a Lady Wyndward, and a daughter—poor girl."
"Why do you say poor girl?" asked Stella.
"Because all the wealth of the race would not make her otherwise than an object of tender pity. She is an invalid; you see that window—the one with the light in it?"
"Yes," Stella said.
"That is the window of her room; she lies there on a sofa, looking down the valley all the day!"
[CHAPTER II.]
"Poor girl!" murmured Stella. There was silence for a moment. "And those three live there all alone?" she said.
"Not always," he replied, musingly. "Sometimes, not often, the son Leycester comes down. He is Viscount Trevor."
"The son," said Stella. "And what is he like?"
The question seemed to set some train of thought in action; the old man relapsed into silence for a few minutes. Then suddenly but gently he rose, and going to the other end of the room, fetched a picture from amongst several standing against the wall, and held it toward her.
"That is Lord Leycester," he said.
Stella took the canvas in her hand, and held it to the light, and an exclamation broke involuntarily from her lips.
"How beautiful he is!"
The old man took the picture from her, and resting it on his knees, gazed at it musingly.
"Yes," he said, "it is a grand face; one does not see such a face often."
Stella leant over the chair and looked at it with a strange feeling of interest and curiosity, such as no simply beautiful picture would have aroused.
It was not the regularity of the face, with its clear-cut features and its rippling chestnut hair, that, had it been worn by a Wyndward of a hundred years ago, would have fallen in rich curls upon the square, well-formed shoulders. It was not the beauty of the face, but a something indefinable in the carriage of the head and the expression of the full, dark eyes that attracted, almost fascinated, her.
It was in a voice almost hushed by the indescribable effect produced by the face, that she said:
"And he is like that?"
"It is lifelike," he answered. "I, who painted it, should not say it, but it is like him nevertheless—that is Leycester Wyndward. Why did you ask?"
Stella hesitated.
"Because—I scarcely know. It is such a strange face, uncle. The eyes—what is it in the eyes that makes me almost unable to look away from them?"
"The reflection of a man's soul, Stella," he said.
It was a strange answer, and the girl looked down at the strange face interrogatively.
"The reflection of a man's soul, Stella. The Wyndwards have always been a wild, reckless, passionate race; here, in this village, they have innumerable legends of the daring deeds of the lords of Wyndward. Murder, rapine, and high-handed tyranny in the olden times, wild license and desperate profligacy in these modern ones; but of all the race this Leycester Wyndward is the wildest and most heedless. Look at him, Stella, you see him here in his loose shooting-jacket, built by Poole; with the diamond pin in his irreproachable scarf, with his hair cut to the regulation length: I see him in armor with his sword upraised to watch the passionate fire of his eyes. There is a picture in the great gallery up yonder of one of the Wyndwards clad just so, in armor of glittering steel, with one foot on the body of a prostrate foe, one hand upraised to strike the death-dealing blow of his battle-ax. Yes, Leycester Wyndward should have lived four centuries back."
Stella smiled.
"Has he committed many murders, uncle, burnt down many villages?"
The old man started and looked up at the exquisite face, with its arch smile beaming in the dark eyes and curving the red, ripe lips, and smiled in response.
"I was dreaming, Stella; an odd trick of mine. No, men of his stamp are sadly circumscribed nowadays. We have left them no vent for their natures now, excepting the gambling-table, the turf, and——" he roused suddenly. "Yes, it's a beautiful face, Stella, but it belongs to a man who has done more harm in his day than all his forefathers did before him. It is rather a good thing that Wyndward Hall stands so firmly, or else Leycester would have melted it at ecarte and baccarat long ago."
"Is he so bad then?" murmured Stella.
Her uncle smiled.
"Bad is a mild word, Stella; and yet—look at the face again. I have seen it softened by a smile such as might have been worn by an innocent child; I have heard those lips laugh as—as women are supposed to laugh before this world has driven all laughter out of them; and when those eyes smile there is no resisting them for man or woman."
He stopped suddenly and looked up.
"I am wandering on like an old mill. Put the picture away, Stella."
She took it from him and carried it across the room, but stood for a moment silently regarding it by the lamp light. As she did so, a strange fancy made her start and set the picture on the table suddenly. It seemed to her as if the dark eyes had suddenly softened in their intense fixed gaze and smiled at her.
It was the trick of a warm, imaginative temperament, and it took possession of her so completely that with a swift gesture she laid her hand over the dark eyes and so hid them.
Then, with a laugh at her own folly, she put the picture against the wall and went back to the window and sat beside the old man.
"Tell me about your past life, Stella," he said, in a low voice.
"It seems to me as if you had always been here. You have a quiet way of speaking and moving about, child."
"I learnt that while papa was ill," she said, simply. "Sometimes he would sit for hours playing softly, and I did not wish to disturb him."
"I remember, I remember," he murmured. "Stella, the world should have known something of him; he was a born musician."
"He used to say the same of you, uncle; you should have been a famous artist."
The old man looked up with a smile.
"My child, there are many men whom the world knows nothing of—luckily for them. Your father and I were dreamers, both; the world likes men of action. Can you play?"
She rose and stood for a moment hesitating. In the corner of the room there was a small chamber organ—one of those wonderful instruments which in a small space combine the grand tones of a cathedral organ with the melodious softness of a flute. It was one of the few luxuries which the artist had permitted himself, and he was in the habit of playing snatches of Verdi and Rossini, of Schubert and Mozart, when the fading light compelled him to lay the brush aside.
Stella went up to it softly and seated herself, and presently began to play. She attempted no difficult fugue or brilliant march, but played a simple Florentine vesper hymn, which she had heard floating from the devout lips of the women kneeling before the altar of the great church in Florence, and presently began to sing it.
The old man started as the first clear bird-like notes rose softly upon the evening air, and then covering his face with his hands went straight to dreamland.
The vesper hymn died softly, slowly out, and she rose, but with a gesture of his hand he motioned her to remain at the organ.
"You have your father's voice, Stella; sing again."
She sang a pleasant ditty this time, with a touch of pathos in the refrain, and hearing a slight noise as she finished, looked round, and saw the old man rise, and with quivering lips turn toward the door.
The young girl's sweet voice had brought back the past and its dead too plainly, and he had gone out lest she should see his emotion.
Stella rose and went to the window, and stood looking into the night. The moonlight was glinting the river in the distance, and falling in great masses upon the lawn at her feet. Half unconsciously she opened the window, and stepping out, found herself in a small garden, beautifully kept and fragrant with violets; her love for flowers was a passion, and she stepped on to the path in search of them. The path led in zigzag fashion to a little wooden gate, by which the garden was entered from the lane. Stella found some violets, and looking about in search of further treasure store, saw a bunch of lilac blossom growing in the lane side.
To open the gate and run lightly up the side of the bank was the impulse of the moment, and she obeyed it; there were still deeper masses of flowers a little further down, and she was walking toward them when she heard the sound of a horse galloping toward her.
For a moment she was so startled by the unexpected sound that she stood looking toward the direction whence it came, and in that moment a horse and rider turned the corner and made full pelt for the spot where she was standing. Stella glanced back toward the little white gate to discover that it was not in sight, and that she had gone further than she intended. It was of no use to attempt to get back before the horseman reached her, there was only time to get out of the way. Lightly springing up the bank, she stood under the lilac tree and waited.
As she did so, the horse and man came out of the shadow into the moonlight. To Stella, both looked tremendously big and tall in the deceptive light, but it was not the size, but the attitude of the rider which struck her and chained her attention.
She could not see his face, but the figure was that of a young man, tall and stalwart, and full of a strange, masterful grace which displayed itself in the easy, reckless way in which he sat the great animal, and in the poise of the head which, slightly thrown back, seemed in its very attitude eloquent of pride and defiance. There was something strange and unusual about the whole bearing that struck Stella, unused as she was to meeting horsemen in an English country lane.
As he came a little nearer she noticed that he was dressed in evening dress, excepting his coat, which was of velvet, and sat loosely, yet gracefully, upon the stalwart frame. In simple truth the rider had thrown off his dress coat for a smoking jacket, and still wore his dress boots. Stella saw the moonlight shining upon them and upon a ruby, which blazed sullenly upon the white hand which held the whip.
As if rider and horse were one, they came up the lane, and were abreast of her, the man all unconscious of her presence. But not so the horse; his quick, restless eye had caught sight of the shimmer of Stella's dress, and with a toss of the head he swerved aside and stood still. The rider brought his eyes from the sky, and raising his whip, cut the horse across the flank, with a gesture of impatient anger; but the horse—a splendid, huge-boned Irish mare, as fiery and obstinate as a lion—rose on its hind legs instantly, and the whip came down again.
"Confound you! what is the matter?" exclaimed its master. "Go on, you idiot!"
The horse pricked its ears at the sound of the familiar voice, but stood stock still, quivering in every limb.
Stella saw the whip raised again, and instinctively, before she was aware of it, her womanly protest sprang from her lips.
"No! no!"
At the sound of the eager, imploring voice, the rider kept his whip poised in the air, then let his arm fall, and dragging rather than guiding the horse, forced it near the hedge.
"Who is it? Who are you?" he demanded, angrily. "What the——"
Then he stopped suddenly, and stared speechlessly, motionless, and transfixed—horse and rider, as it were, turned to stone.
Tall and graceful, with that grace which belongs to the girlhood which stands on the threshold of womanhood, with her exquisite face fixed in an expression of mingled fear and pity, and a shyness struggling with maidenly pride, she made a picture which was lovely enough to satisfy the requirements of the most critical and artistic mind—a picture which he who looked upon it carried with him till the day he died.
For a moment he sat motionless, and as he sat the moon fell full upon his face, and Stella saw the face of the portrait whose eyes she had but a few minutes since hidden from her sight.
A lifetime of emotion may pass in a minute; a life's fate hangs upon the balance of a stroke of time. It was only for a moment that they looked into each other's eyes in silence, but that moment meant so much to each of them! It was the horse that broke the spell by attempting to rise again. With a slight movement of the hand Leycester Wyndward forced him down, and then slid from the saddle and stood at Stella's feet, hat in hand.
Even then he paused as if afraid, lest a word should cause the vision to vanish into thin air; but at last he opened his lips.
"I beg your pardon."
That was all. Four words only, and words that one hears daily; words that have almost lost their import from too familiar commonplace, and yet, as he said them, they sounded so entirely, so earnestly, so intensely significant and full of meaning that all the commonplace drifted from them, and they conveyed to the listener's ear a real and eager prayer for forgiveness; so real and earnest that to have passed them by with the conventional smile and bow would have been an insult, and impossible.
But it was not only the words and the tone, but the voice that thrilled through Stella's soul, and seemed to wake an echoing chord. The picture which had so awed her had been dumb and voiceless; but now it seemed as if it had spoken even as it had smiled, and for a moment she felt a woman's desire to shut out the sound, as she had shut out the smiling eyes.
It was the maidenly impulse of self-protection, against what evil she did not know or dream.
"I beg your pardon," he said again, his voice deep and musical, his eyes raised to hers. "I am afraid I frightened you. I thought I was alone here. Will you forgive me?"
Stella looked down at him, and a faint color stole into her cheeks.
"It is I who should beg pardon; I am not frightened, but your horse was—and by me?"
He half glanced at the horse standing quiet enough now, with its bridle over his arm.
"He is an idiot!" he said, quickly; "an obstinate idiot, and incapable of fear. It was mere pretense."
"For which you punished him," said Stella, with a quick smile.
He looked up at her, and slowly there came into his eyes and his lips that smile of which Mr. Etheridge had spoken, and which Stella had foreseen.
"You are afraid I am going to whip him again?"
"Yes," she said, with simple directness.
He looked at her with a curious smile.
"You are right," he said; "I was. There are times when he requires a little correction; to-night is one of them. We have not seen each other for some little time, and he has forgotten who is master. But I shall not forget your 'No,' and will spare the whip; are you satisfied?"
It was a strange speech, closing with a strangely abrupt question. It was characteristic of the speaker, who never in all his life probably had known for a moment what nervousness or embarrassment meant. Judging by his tone, the easy flow of the musical voice, the frank, open manner, one would have imagined that this meeting with a strange and beautiful girl was the most matter-of-fact affair.
"Are you satisfied?" he repeated, as Stella remained silent, trying to fight against the charm of his simple and direct manner. "If not, perhaps that will do it?" and taking the whip, a strong hunter's crop, in both his white hands, he broke it in two as easily as if it were a reed, and flung it over his shoulder.
Stella flushed, but she laughed, and her dark eyes beamed down upon him with serious archness.
"Does not that look as if you were afraid you should not keep your promise?"
He smiled up at her.
"It does," he said—"you are right; I may have been tempted beyond my strength. He is a bad-tempered beast, and I am another. Why do you laugh——?"
He broke off, his voice changing as subtly as some musical instrument.
Stella hesitated a moment.
"I beg you will tell me—I shall not be offended."
She laughed, and clung with one hand to the lilac, looking down on him.
"I was thinking how fortunate it was that he could not whip you. It is not fair, as you are both so bad-tempered, that one only should get punished."
He did not laugh, as another man would have done; but there came into the dark eyes a flash of surprised amusement, such as might have shone in those of the giant Gulliver when some Liliputian struck him with a pin-sized stick; and his lips parted with a smile.
"It was a natural reflection," he said, after a pause. "Will you let me help you down?"
Stella shook her head. Somehow she felt safe up there above him, where but the dark eyes could reach her.
"Thank you, no; I am gathering some lilac. Do not trouble."
And she turned slightly from him, and stretched up her hand for a branch above her head. The next moment he sprang up the bank lightly, and stood beside her.
"Permit me," he said. And with one sweep he drew the fragrant branch within her reach.
"And now will you come down?" he asked, as if she were some willful child. Stella smiled, and he held out his hand. She put hers into it, and his fingers closed over it with a grasp firm as steel, but as smooth as a woman's. As the warm fingers closed over hers, which were cold with her long grasp of the branch above her head, a thrill ran through her and caused her to shudder slightly.
"You are cold," he said, instantly. "The Spring evenings are treacherous. Have you far to go?"
"I am not cold, thanks," she said, with quick alarm, for there was a look in his eyes and a movement of his hand which seemed to give warning that he was about to take his coat off.
"I am not at all cold!"
"Have you far to go?" he repeated, with the air, gentle as it was, of a man who was accustomed to have his questions answered.
"Not far; to the little white gate there," she answered.
"The little white gate—to Etheridge's, the artist's?" he said gently, with a tone of surprise.
Stella bent her head; his eyes scanned her face.
"You live there—are staying there?"
"Yes."
"I never saw you in Wyndward before."
"No, I was never here till to-night."
"Till to-night?" he echoed. "I knew that I had not seen you before."
There was something in the tone, wholly unlike commonplace flattery, that brought the color to Stella's face.
They had reached the gate by this time, he walking by her side, the bridle thrown over his arm, the great horse pacing quiet and lamb-like, and Stella stopped.
"Good-night," she said.
He stopped short and looked at her, his head thrown back, as she had seen it as he rode toward her, his eyes fixed intently on her face, and seeming to sink through her downcast eyes into her soul.
"Good-night," he replied. "Wait."
It was a word of command, for all its musical gentleness, and Stella, woman-like, stopped.
"I am going away," he said, not abruptly, but with calm directness. "If you have only come to-night I shall not be able to learn your name; before I go, will you tell it me?"
Stella smiled.
"Why not?" he said, as she hesitated.
"My name is Stella Etheridge, I am Mr. Etheridge's niece."
"Stella!" he repeated. "Stella! Thank you. I shall not forget. My name," and he raised his hat with a simple gesture of proud humility, "is Wyndward—Leycester Wyndward."
"I know it," said Stella, and the next moment she could have called the impulsive words back again.
"You know it!" he said; "and came here only to-night! How is that?"
Stella's brows contracted, dark and full they met across her brow in true southern fashion, and lent a significant eloquence to her face; she would have given much to avoid answering.
"How is that?" he asked, his eyes fixed on hers.
"It is very simple," she said, as if vexed at her hesitation. "I saw your portrait and—knew you."
He smiled a curious smile.
"Knew me before we met! I wonder——" he paused and his eyes seemed to read her thoughts. "I wonder whether you were prejudiced by what you saw by that forshadowing of me? Is that a fair question?"
"It is a strange one," said Stella.
"Is it? I will not press it. Good-night!" and he raised his hat.
"Good-night, and good-bye," she said, and impulsively again she held out her hand.
His eyes showed no surprise, whatever he may have felt, as he took her hand and held it.
"No," he said, as he let her draw it away. "Not good-bye. I have changed my mind. I shall not go. It is only good-night," and with a smile flashing out of his eyes, he leapt upon his horse and was gone.
[CHAPTER III.]
Stella stood watching until the big chestnut had borne its master out of sight, and down the lane, across the meadow; she caught one more glimpse of them as he rode through the ford, the water dashing up a silver shower of spray as high as the horse's head; then they vanished in the shadow of the woods which engirdled Wyndward Hall.
But she still stood, lost in a dreamy reverie that was not thought, until her uncle's voice came floating down the garden, and with a start she ran up the path and stood breathless before him.
The old man's placid face wore a slight look of anxiety, which faded instantly as he said:
"Where have you been, Stella? I thought you had changed your mind, and flown back to Italy again. Mrs. Penfold is searching the meadows wildly."
Stella laughed, as she put her arm round his neck.
"You will not get rid of me so easily, uncle. No, I have only been down the pretty lane at the end of the garden. See, here are some flowers; are they not sweet? You shall have them for your table, and they shall stand within sight while you are at work." And she filled a vase with water, and arranged them. "But the flowers are not all the fruits of my wandering, uncle," she went on; "I have had an adventure."
He was strolling up and down with his pipe in his mouth, his hands folded behind him.
"An adventure!"
"Yes," she nodded. "I have met—can you guess whom?"
He smiled.
"Mr. Fielding, the clergyman? It is his usual evening stroll."
"No."
"Perhaps an old lady in a lace shawl, with a fat pug by her side. If so, you have made an acquaintance with the great Mrs. Hamilton, the doctor's wife."
"No, it was not anybody's wife, uncle—it was a man. You shan't guess any more; but what do you say to Lord Leycester?"
"Lord Leycester!" said Mr. Etheridge. "I did not even know he was at home. Lord Leycester! And does my picture do him justice?" he asked, turning to her with a smile.
She bent over the flowers, ashamed of the meaningless blush which rose to her face.
"Yes, uncle, it is like him; but I could not see very distinctly you know. It was moonlight. He was riding a great, huge chestnut horse."
"I know," he murmured, "and tearing along like a lost spirit. He flashed past like a meteor, I expect. No, you could not see him, and cannot judge of my portrait."
"But he didn't flash past. He would have done, no doubt, but the chestnut declined. I think it was frightened by me, for I was standing on the bank."
"And he stopped?" asked Mr. Etheridge. "It was a wonder; such a little thing even as the shying of his horse was sufficient to rouse the devil in him! He stopped!"
"Because he was obliged," said Stella, in a low voice, a deep blush of maidenly shame rising to her face, as she remembers that it was she who had really stopped him.
"And was he very furious?"
"No; the proverbial lamb could not have been more quiet," said Stella, with a musical laugh.
Mr. Etheridge laughed.
"He must have been in a good humor. It was strange his being out to-night. The Hall is full of people from town; but it would not matter to him if he wanted to ride, though the prince himself were there; he would go. And my picture?"
"Did him justice, uncle. Yes, he is very handsome; he wore a loose velvet coat to-night of a dark purple; I did not know gentlemen wore such colors now."
"A smoking coat," he explained. "I think I can see him. No doubt he had obeyed the impulse of the moment—had jumped up and left them there at the Hall—saddled his own horse and tore away across the river. Well, you have probably seen the last of him for some time, Stella. He rarely stays at the Hall more than a day or two. Town has too great a charm for him."
Stella's lips opened, and she was about to reply that he had suddenly resolved to stay, but something stopped the words on her lips.
Presently there was a knock at the door, and Mrs. Penfold came in with the candles.
"You have given me quite a turn, Miss Stella," she said, with a smile of reproach; "I thought you were lost. Your room is quite ready now, miss."
Stella went up to the old man and kissed him.
"Good-night, uncle," she murmured.
"Good-night, my child," he said, his eyes dwelling on her tenderly, but with something of the bewildered look clouding them; "Good-night, and happy dreams for this, your first night at home."
"At home!" murmured Stella; "at home! You are very good to me, uncle," and she kissed him again.
Mrs. Penfold had done wonders in so short a time permitted her, and Stella found herself standing alone in a tiny room, modestly but comfortably—oh, so comfortably!—furnished, with its white bed and its old-fashioned dimity curtains framing the lattice window. As her gaze wandered round the room, her glorious eyes grew moist. It was all so sudden, so sweet a contrast to the gaunt, bare room, which, for a weary year she had shared with a score of girls as miserable as herself; so sudden that she could scarcely believe it was real.
But youth is ever ready to accept the surprises of life, and she fell asleep—fell asleep to dream that she was back in the wretched school in Italy, and chained to a stone wall from which all her efforts to free herself were unavailing, but presently she thought that a tall, stalwart figure came riding down on a big chestnut horse, and that with one sweep of his strong hand he broke her chains asunder, and, lifting her into his saddle, bore her away. Then the scene changed; she seemed to be following her rescuer who, with his handsome face turned over his shoulder, drew her on continually with a strange fascinating smile. All through her dreams the smiling eyes haunted her, and once she stretched out her hands to keep it from her, but even in the action the gesture of repulse turned in a strange, subtle manner to one of entreaty and welcome, and she drew the smile, as it were, to her bosom, and folded her hands over it. A girlish fancy, perhaps, but such fancies influence a life for good or ill, for joy or misery.
Lord Leycester Wyndward, of whose smile Stella was dreaming, had ridden up the hills, the great chestnut scarcely breaking his pace, but breathing hard and defiantly from its wide, red nostrils—had ridden up the hills and through the woods, and reached the open plateau lying round the Hall.
A noble park occupied the plateau—a park of chestnuts and oaks, which were the pride of the county. Through the park wound the road, gleaming white in the moonlight, to the front gates of Wyndward. The lodge-keeper heard the beat of the chestnut's feet, for which he had been listening intently, and threw open the gates, and Lord Leycester entered the grounds. They were vast in extent and exquisitely laid out, the road winding between a noble avenue of trees that arched overhead. The present earl's grandfather had gone in for arboriculture, and the way was lined for fifty feet back with rare shrubs and conifers.
So serpentine was the road that the great gray mansion broke upon the gaze suddenly, mentally startling him who approached it for the first time.
To Lord Leycester it was a familiar sight, but familiar as it was he glanced up at it with what was almost a nod of approval. Like most men of his nature, he possessed a passionate love and appreciation for the beautiful, and there was to-night a strange, indefinable fire in his hot blood which made him more than usually susceptible to the influence of the scene. A sweeping curve of the road led to the terrace which stretched along the whole front of the house, and by which the principal entrance was gained.
Lord Leycester struck off to the right, and entered a modern courtyard, three sides of which were occupied by the admirable stables. A couple of grooms had been listening as intently as the lodge-keeper, and as he entered the yard they hurried forward silently and took the chestnut. Lord Leycester dropped to the ground, patted the horse, which made a playfully-affectionate snap at his arm, and, ascending a flight of steps, entered the lower end of the long hall, which stretched through the building.
The hall was softly but sufficiently lighted by shaded lamps, supported by huge figures in bronze, which diffused a charming glow upon the innumerable pictures upon the panels of dark oak. From the vaulted roof hung tattered flags, most of them borne by the earlier Wyndwards, some of them bestowed by the graceful hands of dead and gone princes; the somewhat gloomy aspect of the place was lightened by the gleaming armor of the knightly effigies which stood at regular intervals upon the tesselated floor, and by the deep crimson of the curtains which screened the heavy doors and tall windows. The whole scene, the very atmosphere, as it seemed, was characteristic of an ancient and powerful race. Notwithstanding that the house was full of guests, and that a brilliant party was at that moment in the drawing-room, not a sound penetrated the vast hall. The two or three servants who were standing by the doors or sitting on the benches, talking in hushed voices, were silent the moment he entered, and one came forward to receive any commands.
Notwithstanding the brusqueness which is the salient characteristic of our present life, the old world state and formality still existed at Wyndward. Be as exacting and capricious as you might, you had no fear of meeting with inattention or disrespect from the army of servants, whose one aim and purpose in life seemed to be to minister to the wants and moods of their superiors.
It was a princely house, conducted in stately fashion, without regard to cost or trouble, and the servants, from the pages to the countess's own maid, were as proud of their position, in its degree, as the Lord of Wyndward of his.
"Send Oliver to me," said Lord Wyndward, as he passed the man. "I am going to my room."
He went up the stairs, and passing along the principal corridor, entered a room fronting the park. It was one of a suite which consisted of a sort of sitting-room, a dressing-room, and beyond a bedroom.
The sitting-room gave pretty plain indications of the owner's tastes and dispositions.
It was a medley of objects connected with sport and art. Here a set of boxing-gloves and foils; a gun-rack, well stocked; fishing-rods and whips hung over the antique fireplace with the wide open hearth and dog-irons. On one side of the room hung a collection of etchings, unique and priceless; on another half a dozen gems in oil, while against the third stood a piano, and an easel upon which rested a canvas displaying a half-finished Venus rising from her cradle of sea foam; for upon this, the only son of the house, the partial gods had bestowed many gifts; any one of which, had he been a poor man, would have made the world regard him as one of its masters. But as it was, he painted and played for amusement only, and there were only a few of his friends, and only those who were most intimate, who suspected that the wild, reckless Leycester could do more than ride like a centaur and shoot like a North American Indian. How were they to know, seeing that he rarely spoke of art, and never of his own passionate love of it? Had they known, it would have given them a key to much in his character which puzzled and bewildered them; they would have been nearer understanding how it was that in one man could be combined the soft tenderness of a southern nature with the resolute, defiant recklessness of the northern.
He entered the room and went to the fireplace in which a log was burning brightly, to guard against the too frequent treachery of an early summer evening, and flinging his hat on to a chair, passed his hand through his hair with a thoughtful yet restless smile.
"Stella!" he murmured. "Stella! That was wrong. A star should be fair and golden, all light and sunshine, while she—great Heaven! what eyes! It was surely the sweetest, loveliest face that a man ever looked upon. No wonder that coming upon it so suddenly—with my thoughts a hundred miles away, coming upon it suddenly as it shone up above me—that I should think it only a vision! If that face as I saw it could smile out from the Academy next Spring, what crowds of fools would gather round to gape and stare at it? If—yes, but who could do it? No one! No one! As well try and catch the sunlight on a brush and paint it on the canvas—as well try——" he broke off suddenly, his eye caught by the Venus Aphrodite smiling from the easel, and going across to it, stood and contemplated it.
"Venus with a pale pink face and meaningless blue eyes, with insipid yellow hair and simpering smile! Never more will Venus take that semblance for me. No, she will be as I saw her to-night, with dark silken hair, and sweeping lashes shading the dark brown eyes, in which one sees the soul peering from their depths. That is Venus, not this," and with a smile of derision he took up a brush and drew a dark, broad effacing line across the fair face.
"So departs forever all my former dreams of womanly loveliness. Loveliness! I have never seen it until to-night. Stella! A star! Yes, she is rightly named, after all. She shone down on me like a star, and I—great Heaven!—was like one bewitched! While she—she made a laughing-stock of me. Compared me with the nag, and treated me like a school-boy too big to be whipped but not too large to be laughed at.
"By Jove it is not a thing to be proud of; called to task by a girl—a little slip of a girl not yet a woman! and yet I would not have missed that laugh and the light scorn of those dark eyes, though they lighted up at my expense. Stella——"
There was a knock at the door, and his valet, Oliver, entered.
Lord Leycester stared at him a moment abstractedly, then roused himself from his reverie.
"What is it, Oliver?"
"You sent for me, my lord."
"Oh, yes! I had forgotten. I will wash and get into my other coat."
Oliver passed noiselessly into the other room and assisted his master to change the velvet smoking-jacket for the dress coat, brushed the thick, short-cut chestnut hair into order, and opened the door.
"Where are they all?" he asked. "Are any of them in the smoking-room?"
"Yes, my lord, Lord Barton and Captain Halliday; the Marquis of Sandford and Sir William are in the billiard-room."
Lord Leycester nodded, and went down the stairs across the hall; a servant drew a curtain aside and opened a door, and Lord Leycester entered a small ante-room, one side of which opened into a long-stretching fernery, from which came the soft trip trip of fountains, and the breath which filled the whole atmosphere with a tropical perfume.
A couple of footmen in gorgeous livery were standing beside a double curtain, and at a sign from Lord Leycester they drew it apart. Lord Leycester passed through and down a small corridor lined with statuary, at the end of which was another curtain. No passage, or door, or ante-room but was thus masked, to shut out the two things which the earl held as abominations—draught and noise.
With the opening of these curtains the large saloon was revealed like the scene on the stage of a theater. It was a magnificent room in keeping with the rest of the place, richly but not gorgeously decorated, and lighted by wax candles shining through faintly hued globes. At one end stood a grand piano in white and ormolu, and a lady was playing and singing, while others were standing round with tea-cups in their hands. Near the fireplace was a table, upon which stood a silver tea equipage, with which the countess was busied.
Lady Wyndward was still in her prime, notwithstanding that Lord Leycester was twenty-three; she had been married at eighteen, and was now in the perfection of matronly beauty; one had only to glance at her to learn from whence Leycester had got his strange beauty. Near her stood a tall, thin gentleman with proud, haughty, clean-cut face, and iron gray hair, worn rather long and brushed back from a white, lofty brow. It was the earl. His dark piercing eyes were bent upon the ground as he stood listening to the music, but he saw Leycester enter, and raised his head as a slight frown crossed his face. Lady Wyndward saw the frown and sought the cause, but her face showed no signs of surprise or displeasure. It was calm and impassive at all times, as if its owner disdained the weakness of ordinary mortals. Leycester paused a moment, taking in the scene; then he crossed the room, and went up to the table.
Lady Wyndward looked up with her serene, imperial smile.
"Will you have some tea, Leycester?"
"Thanks," he said.
She gave him his cup, and as he took it a young man left the group at the piano, and came up to him laughing.
"Where have you been, Leycester?" he asked, putting his hand on the broad shoulder. It was Lord Charles Guildford, Leycester's most intimate friend.
Between these two existed an affection which was almost, say rather more than fraternal. They had been together at Eton, where Leycester, the great, stalwart lad, had fought the slight frail boy's battles; they had lived in the same rooms at Oxford, had been comrades in all the wild escapades which made their term at college a notorious one, and they were inseparable. Leycester had grown from a tall lad into a stalwart man; Lord Charles—or Charlie, as he was called—had fulfilled the promise of his frail boyhood, and developed into a slight, thin, fair-haired youth, with the indolent grace which sometimes accompanies weakness, and the gentle nature of a woman.
Leycester turned to him with a smile, and the earl looked up to hear the answer; the countess busied herself with the teapot, as if she were not listening as intently.
"I went for a galop, Charlie," said Leycester. "You fellows were half asleep in the smoking-room, and I had listened to Barton's Indian story for the hundredth time, and it got rather slow; then I remembered that the chestnut had been eating his head off for the last five weeks, and thought I would give him a turn."
The earl frowned and turned away; Lord Charles laughed.
"Pretty behavior!" he exclaimed; "and here were we hunting all over the place for you."
"Why didn't you come into the drawing-room to us, Lord Leycester?" said a beautiful girl who was sitting near; "we should not have bored you with any Indian stories."
"But, you see, I should have bored you, Lady Constance," he said.
The girl smiled up into his face.
"Perhaps you would," she said. "You are more considerate than I thought."
"I never venture into the ladies' sanctum after dinner till the tea is announced," he retorted. "I have an idea, shared by my sex generally, that it is not safe—that, in short, you are too ferocious."
"And you prefer riding about the country till we quiet down. Are we quiet now, or do we look ferocious?"
And she smiled up at him from behind her fan with a plain invitation.
He sat down beside her and began to talk the infinite nothings which came to his lips so easily, the trivial small change which his musical voice and rare smile seemed to transform to true coin; but while he talked his thoughts were wandering to the dark-haired girl who had shone down upon him from her green and fragrant bower in the lane, and he found himself picturing her in the little room at the cottage in the meadows, amongst the curious litter of the old artist's studio; and gradually his answers grew disjointed and inconsequential.
He got up presently, got up abruptly, and wandered across the room stopping to exchange a word or two with one and the other, his tall, graceful figure towering above those of the other men, his handsome head thrown back musingly. Many an admiring and wistful glance followed him from among the women, and not a few would have exerted all their fascinations to keep him by their side, had they not known by experience, that when he was in his present mood he was deaf to the voice and smile of the charmer, charmed she never so wisely.
[CHAPTER IV.]
The countess watched him from her table, and, looking up at the earl, murmured:
"Leycester is in one of his restless moods to-night."
"Yes," he said, with a sigh. "What is it?—do you know?"
"No," she said, calmly. "He was all right at dinner."
"Why can he not behave like other people?" said the earl, sadly. "Can you fancy any other man leaving his father's guests and riding about the country?"
"Leycester never was like any other," she said, not without a touch of pride. "He is as he is, and nothing can alter him."
The earl was silent for a moment, his long white hands folded behind his back, his dark eyes fixed on the floor.
"Has he told you of his last escapade—his last mad freak?" he said, in a low voice.
"Yes," she answered, calmly. "He has never concealed anything from me."
"It is nearly twenty thousand pounds. Even Wyndward must feel such strains as this."
The countess raised her head.
"I know," she said; "he has told me everything. It was a point of honor. I did not quite understand; horse-racing is a pastime with which I have little sympathy, though we have always owned race-horses. It was a point of honor. Some one had been taking advantage of his name to act dishonestly, and he withdrew the horse. He could take no other course," he says.
The earl sighed.
"No doubt. But it is mad folly, and there is no end to it—if he could see some limit! Why does he not marry?"
The countess glanced at the handsome face.
"He will not marry until he meets with some one he can love."
The earl looked round the room at the many beautiful graceful women who adorned it, and sighed impatiently.
"He is hard to please."
"He is," assented the countess, with the same touch of pride.
"It is time he married and settled," continued the earl. "For most men a year or two would not matter, but with him—I do not like to think that the title rests only on our two lives, as mine must be near its close."
"Algernon!"
"And on his, which is risked daily."
He stooped, silenced by the sudden look of pain in the beautiful eyes.
"Why do you not speak to him? He will do anything for you."
The countess smiled.
"Everything but that. No, I cannot speak to him; it would be useless. I do not wish to weaken my influence."
"Get Lilian to speak to him," he said.
The countess sighed.
"Lilian!" she murmured; "she would not do it. She thinks him something more than human, and that no woman in the world can be good enough to—to hold his stirrup or fill his wineglass."
The earl frowned.
"Between you," he said, "you have spoiled him."
The countess shook her head gently.
"No, we have not. He is now as a man what he was as a boy. Do you remember what Nelson said, when Hardy asked him why he did nothing while one of their ships was fighting two of the enemy's? 'I am doing all I can—watching.'"
Before the earl could reply, a cabinet minister came up and engaged him in conversation, and the countess rose and crossed the room to where an elderly lady sat with a portfolio of engravings before her. It was the Dowager Countess of Longford, a tiny little woman with a thin wrinkled face, and keen but kindly gray eyes that lit up her white face and made it remarkable.
She was dressed as simply as a quakeress, excepting for some old and priceless lace which softened the rigor of her plainly made gray satin dress. She looked up as the younger countess approached, and made room for her on the sofa.
Lady Wyndward sat down in silence, which was unbroken for a minute. Then the old countess said without looking at her—
"The boy grows handsomer every day, Ethel!"
Lady Wyndward sighed.
"What is the matter?" asked the other, with a keen smile. "What has he been doing now, burning a church or running off with a Lord Mayor's daughter?"
"He has not been doing anything very much," answered Lady Wyndward. "Except losing some money."
The old countess raised her eyebrows lightly.
"That does not matter."
"Not much. No, he has not been doing anything; I wish he would. That's what is the matter."
"I understand," retorted the other. "He is most dangerous when quiet; you are always afraid he is preparing for some piece of madness beyond the ordinary. Well, my dear, if you will give the world such a creature you must put up with the consequences—be prepared to pay the penalty. I should be quite content to do so."
"Ah, you don't know," said the countess, with a smile that had something pathetic in it.
"Yes, I do," retorted the old lady, curtly. "And I envy you still. I love the boy, Ethel. There is not a woman of us in the room, from the youngest to the oldest, who does not love him. You cannot expect one whom the gods have so favored to behave like an ordinary mortal."
"Why not? It is just what Algernon has said to me."
"I thought as much. I was watching you two. Of all things, beware of this: don't let Algernon interfere with him. It is a strange thing to say, but his father is the worst man in all the world to attempt to put the bridle on Leycester. It is we women who alone have the power to guide him."
"That is where my fear lies," said the countess. "It is the thought of what may happen in that quarter which fills me with daily dread."
"There is only one safeguard—marry him," remarked the old countess, but with a comical smile.
The countess sighed.
"Again, that is what Algernon says. You both say it as calmly as if you told me to give him a cup of tea."
The old countess was silent for a moment, then she said—
"Where is Lenore Beauchamp?"
Lady Wyndward was almost guilty of a start.
"You read my thoughts," she said.
The old lady nodded.
"She is the only woman who can really touch him. Ask her here; let them be together. She will be glad to come."
"I am not sure, Lenore is proud; she might guess why we wanted her."
The old lady drew up her head as haughtily as if she was Leycester's mother.
"And then? Is there any girl among them who would not jump at the chance? I don't mean because he is the heir to Wyndward; he is enough in himself without that."
"It is well you are not his mother; you would have made him what he is not now—vain."
The old lady sighed.
"I know it. But you are wrong about Lenore. If she ever cared for anyone, it is Leycester. She is proud, but love levels pride, and she may put forth her power. If she should, not even Leycester can withstand her. Ask her down, and leave the rest to her—and Providence."
The countess sat for a moment in silence, then she put her hand upon the thin, wrinkled hand, unadorned by a single gem.
"I have always you to come to. I think you understand him better than his own mother."
"No," said the old lady, "but I love him nearly as well."
"I will write at once," said the countess. And she rose and crossed to the ante-room.
There was a writing-table amongst the furniture; the servants saw her go to it, and noiselessly left the room.
She took up the pen and thought a moment, then wrote:
"My Dear Lenore,—Will you come down and spend a week with us? We have a few friends with us, but we are not complete without you. Do not say 'No,' but come. I do not name any day, so that you may be free to fix your own."
"Yours affectionately,
"Ethel Wyndward.""P.S.—Leycester is with us."
As she wrote the signature she heard a step behind her, which she knew was Leycester's.
He stopped short as he saw her, and coming up to her, put his hand on her white shoulder.
"Writing, mother?" he said.
The countess folded her letter.
"Yes. Where are you going?"
He pointed to the Louis Quatorze clock that ticked solemnly on a bracket.
"Ten o'clock, mother," he said, with a smile.
"Oh, yes; I see," she assented.
He stood for a moment looking down at her with all a young man's filial pride in a mother's beauty, and, bending down, touched her cheek with his lips, then passed out.
The countess looked after him with softened eyes.
"Who could help loving him?" she murmured.
Humming an air from the last opera bouffe, he ran lightly up the staircase and passed along the corridor, but as he reached the further end and knocked at a door, the light air died upon his lips.
A low voice murmured, "Come in;" and opening the door gently, he entered.
The room was a small one, and luxuriously furnished in a rather strange style. On the first entrance, a stranger would have been struck by the soft and delicate tints which pervaded throughout. There was not a brilliant color in the apartment; the carpet and hangings, the furniture, the pictures themselves were all of a reposeful tint, which could not tire the eye or weary the sense. The carpet was a thick Persian rug, which deadened the sound of footsteps, costly hangings of a cool and restful gray covered the walls, save at intervals; the fire itself was screened by a semi-transparent screen, and the only light in the room came from a lamp which was suspended by a silver chain from the ceiling, and was covered by a thick shade.
On a couch placed by the window reclined a young girl. As Leycester entered, she half rose and turned a pale, but beautiful face toward him with an expectant smile.
Beautiful is a word that is easily written, and written so often that its significance has got dulled: it fails to convey any idea of the ethereal loveliness of Lilian Wyndward. Had Mr. Etheridge painted a face with Leycester's eyes, and given it the delicately-cut lips and spiritual expression of one of Raphael's angels, it would have been a fair representation of Lilian Wyndward.
"It is you Leycester," she said. "I knew you would come," and she pointed to a small traveling clock that stood on a table near her.
He went up to her and kissed her, and she put her arms round his neck and laid her face against his, her eyes looking into his with rapt devotion.
"How hot you are, dear. Is it hot down there?"
"Awfully," he said, seating himself beside her, and thrusting his hands into his pockets. "There is not a breath of air moving, and if there were the governor would take care to shut it out. This room is deliriously cool, Lil; it is a treat to come into it."
"Is it?" she said, with a glad eagerness. "You really think it is. I like to hear you say that."
"Yes, it's the prettiest room in the house. What is it smells so sweet?"
"Lilac," she said, and she pointed to a bunch on the table.
He started slightly, and, stretching out his hand, took a spray out of the epergne.
"I thought it was lilac," he said, quietly. "I noticed it when I came in."
She took the spray from him and fastened it in his coat, against which her hands looked white as the driven snow.
"You shall take it to your own room, Ley," she said. "You shall take them all."
"Not for worlds, Lil," he said. "This will do."
"And what are they doing?" she asked.
"The usual thing," he replied; "playing, singing, rubber at whist, and boring each other to death generally."
She smiled.
"And what have you been doing?"
"Assisting in the latter amusement," he answered, lightly.
"They told me you had gone out," she said.
He nodded.
"Yes, I took the chestnut for a spin."
She laughed, a soft, hushed laugh.
"And left them the first night! That was like you, Ley!"
"What was the use of staying? It was wrong, I suppose. I am unfortunate! Yes, I went for a ride."
"It was a lovely evening. I watched the sunset," and she looked at the window. "If I had known you were going, I would have looked for you. I like to see you riding that big chestnut. You went across the meadows?"
"Yes," he said, "across the meadows."
He was silent for a minute, then he said, suddenly, "Lil, I have seen a vision to-night."
"A vision, Ley!" she repeated, looking up at him eagerly.
He nodded.
"A vision. The most beautiful girl I have ever seen, excepting you, Lil!"
She made no protest, but smiled.
"Ley! A girl! What was she like?"
"I can't tell you," he said. "I came upon her in a moment. The chestnut saw her first, and was human enough to be struck motionless. I was struck too!"
"And you can't tell me what she was like?"
"No; if I were to describe her with usual phrases you would smile. You women always do. You can't help being a woman, Lil!"
"Was she dark or fair?"
"Dark," he replied. "I did not know it at the time; it was impossible to think whether she was dark or fair while one looked at her, but I remembered afterward. Lil, you remember that picture I sent you from Paris—the picture of the girl with the dark eyes and long, silky hair—not black, but brown in the sunlight, with long lashes shading the eyes, and the lips curved in a half-serious smile as she looks down at the dog fawning at her feet?"
"I remember, Ley. Was she like that?"
"Yes; only alive. Fancy the girl in the picture alive. Fancy yourself the dog she was smiling at! I was the dog!"
"Ley!"
"And she spoke as well as smiled. You can imagine the voice that girl in the picture would have. Soft and musical, but clear as a bell and full of a subtle kind of witchery, half serious, half mockery. It was the voice of the girl I met in the lane this evening."
"Ley! Ley, you have come to make poetry to me to-night. I am very grateful."
"Poetry! It is truth. But you are right; such a face, such a voice would make a poet of the hardest man that lives."
"And you are not hard, Ley! But the girl! Who is she? What is her name?"
"Her name"—he hesitated a moment, and his voice unconsciously grew wonderfully musical—"is Stella—Stella."
"Stella!" she repeated. "It is a beautiful name."
"Is it not? Stella!"
"And she is—who?"
"The niece of old Etheridge, the artist, at the cottage."
Lilian's eyes opened wide.
"Really, Ley, I must see her!"
His face flushed, and he looked at her.
She caught the eager look, and her own paled suddenly.
"No," she said, gravely. "I will not see her. Ley—you will forget her by to-morrow."
He smiled.
"You will forget her by to-morrow. Ley, let me look at you!"
He turned his face to her, and she looked straight into his eyes, then she put her arm round his neck.
"Oh, Ley! has it come at last?"
"What do you mean?" he asked, not angrily, but with a touch of grimness, as if he were afraid of the answer.
"Ley," she said, "you must not see her again. Ley, you will go to-morrow, will you not?"
"Why?" he asked. "It is not like you to send me away, Lil."
"No, but I do. I who look forward to seeing you as the sweetest thing in my life—I who would rather have you near me than be—other than I am—I who lie and wait and listen for your footsteps—I send you, Ley. Think! You must go, Ley. Go at once, for your own sake and for hers."
He rose, and smiled down at her.
"For my sake, perhaps, but not for hers. You foolish girl, do you think all your sex is as partial as you are? You did not see her as I saw her to-night—did not hear her ready wit at my expense. For her sake! You make me smile, Lil."
"I cannot smile, Ley. You will not stay! What good can come of it? I know you so well. You will not be content until you have seen your Venus again, and then—ah, Ley, what can she do but love you, and love you but to lose you? Ley, all that has gone before has made me smile, because with them I knew you were heart-whole; I could look into your eyes and see the light of laughter in their depths; but not this time, Ley—not this time. You must go. Promise me!"
His face went pale under her gaze, and the defiant look, which so rarely shone out in her presence, came into his eyes, and about his lips.
"I cannot promise, Lil," he said.
[CHAPTER V.]
For love lay lurking in the clouds and mist,
I heard him singing sweetly on the mountain side:
"'Tis all in vain you fly, for everywhere am I—
In every quiet valley, on every mountain side!"
In the clear, bird-like tones of Stella's voice the musical words floated from the open window of her room above and through the open French windows of the old man's studio.
With a little start he turned his head away from the easel and looked toward the door.
Stella had only been in the house three days, but he had already learned something of her habits, and knew that when he heard the beautiful voice singing at the window in the early morning, he might expect to see the owner of the voice enter shortly.
His expectation was not doomed to disappointment. The voice sounded on the stairs, in the hall, and a moment afterward the door opened and Stella stood looking smilingly into the room.
If he had thought her beautiful and winsome on that first evening of her coming, when she was weary with anxiety and traveling, and dressed in dust-stained clothes, be sure he thought her more beautiful still, now that the light heart felt free to reveal itself, and the shabby dress had given place to the white and simple but still graceful morning gown.
Mrs. Penfold had worked hard during those three days, and with the aid of the Dulverfield milliner had succeeded in filling a small wardrobe for "her young lady," as she had learned to call her. The old artist, ignorant of the power of women in such direction, had watched the transformation with inward amazement and delight, and was never tired of hearing about dresses, and hats, jackets, and capes, and was rather disappointed than otherwise when he found that the grand transformation had been effected at a very small cost.
Bright and beautiful she stood, like a vision of youth and health in the doorway, her dark eyes laughingly contemplating the old man's gentle stare of wonder,—the look which always came into his eyes when she appeared.
"Did I disturb you by my piping, uncle?" she asked as she kissed him.
"Oh no, my dear," he answered, "I like to hear you,—I like to hear you."
She leant against his shoulder, and looked at his work.
"How beautiful it is!" she murmured. "How quickly it grows. I heard you come down this morning, and I meant to get up, but I was so tired—lazy, wasn't I?"
"No, no!" he said, eagerly. "I am sorry I disturbed you. I came down as quietly as I could. I knew you would be tired after your dissipation. You must tell me all about it."
"Yes, come to breakfast and I will tell you."
"Must I?" he said, glancing at his picture reluctantly.
He had been in the habit of eating his breakfast by installments, painting while he ate a mouthful and drank his cup of coffee, but Stella insisted upon his changing what she called a very wicked habit.
"Yes, of course! See how nice it looks," and she drew him gently to the table and forced him into a chair.
The old man submitted with a sigh that was not altogether one of regret, and still humming she sat opposite the urn and began to fill the cups.
"And did you enjoy yourself?" he asked, gazing at her dreamily.
"Oh, very much; they were so kind. Mrs. Hamilton is the dearest old lady; and the doctor—what makes him smile so much, uncle?"
"I don't know. I think doctors generally do."
"Oh, very well. Well, he was very kind too, and so were the Miss Hamiltons. It was very nice indeed, and they took so much notice of me—asked me all sorts of questions. Sometimes I scarcely knew what to answer. I think they thought because I had been brought up in Italy, I ought to have spoken with a strong accent, and looked utterly different to themselves. I think they were a little disappointed, uncle."
"Oh," he said, "and who else was there?"
"Oh, the clergyman, Mr. Fielding—a very solemn gentleman indeed. He said he didn't see much of you, and hoped he should see me in church."
Mr. Etheridge rubbed his head and looked rather guilty.
"I expect that was a back-handed knock for me, Stella," he said rather ruefully. "You see I don't go to church often. I always mean to go, but I generally forget the time, or I wander into the fields, or up into the woods, and forget all about the church till it's too late."
"But that's very wicked, abominably so," said Stella, gravely, but with a twinkle in her dark eyes. "I must look after your morals as well as your meals, I see, uncle."
"Yes," he assented, meekly—"do, do."
"Well, then there was a Mr. Adelstone, a young gentleman from London. He was quite the lion of the evening. I think he was a nephew of Mr. Fielding's."
The old man nodded.
"Yes; and did you like him?"
Stella thought a moment, holding the cream-jug critically over the coffee-cup.
"Not much, uncle. It was very wrong, and very bad taste, I am afraid, for they all seemed to admire him immensely, and so did he himself."
Mr. Etheridge looked at her rather alarmed.
"I must say, Stella, you get too critical. I don't think we are quite used to it."
She laughed.
"I don't fancy Mr. Adelstone was at all conscious of adverse criticism; he seemed quite satisfied with everybody, himself in particular. He certainly was beautifully dressed, and he had the dearest little hands and feet in the world; and his hair was parted to a hair, and as smooth as a black-and-tan terrier's; so that he had some grounds for satisfaction."
"What did he do to offend you, Stella?" asked the old man, rather shrewdly.
She laughed again, and a little touch of color came into her face, but she answered quite frankly:
"He paid me compliments, uncle."
"That doesn't offend your sex generally, Stella."
"It offends me," said Stella, quickly. "I—I detest them! especially when the man who pays them does it with a self-satisfied smile which shows that he is thinking more of his own eloquence and gallantry than of the person he is flattering."
The old man looked at her.
"Will you oblige me by telling me your age again?" he said.
She laughed.
"Am I too wise, uncle? Well, never mind—I'll promise to be good and stupid, if you like. But you are not eating any breakfast; and you must not keep looking at that odious easel all the time, as if you were longing to get back to it. Did you ever see a jealous woman?"
"No, never."
"Well, if you don't want to, you must not confine all your attention to your work."
"I don't think there is much fear of that when you are near," he said, meekly.
She laughed, and jumped up to kiss him with delight.
"Now that was a splendid compliment, sir! You are improving rapidly—Mr. Adelstone himself couldn't have done it more neatly."
Scarcely had the words left her lips than the door opened.
"Mr. Adelstone," said Mrs. Penfold.
A young man, tall and dark, and faultlessly dressed, stood in the doorway, his hat in one hand, a bouquet of flowers in the other. He was undeniably good-looking, and as he stood with a smile upon his face, looked at his best. A severe critic might have found fault with his eyes, and said that they were a little too small and a little too near together, might also have added that they were rather shifty, and that there was something approaching the sinister in the curves of the thin lips; but he was undeniably good-looking, and notwithstanding his well cut clothes and spotless boots with their gray gaiters, his white hands with the choice selection of rings, there was an indication of power about him; no one could have suspected him of being a fool, or lacking the power of observation; for instance, as he stood now, smiling and waiting for a welcome, his dark eyes took in every detail of the room without appearing to leave Stella's face.
Mr. Etheridge looked up with the usual confused air with which he always received his rare visitors, but Stella held out her hand with a smile calm and self-possessed. There is a great deal of the woman even about a girl of nineteen.
"Good-morning, Mr. Adelstone," she said. "You have come just in time for a cup of coffee."
"I ought to apologize for intruding at such an unseasonable hour," he said, as he bent over her hand, "but your good housekeeper would not hear of my going without paying my respects. I am afraid I'm intruding."
"Not at all, not at all," murmured the artist. "Here's a chair," and he rose and cleared a chair of its litter by the simple process of sweeping it on to the floor.
Mr. Adelstone sat down.
"I hope you are not tired after your mild dissipation last night?" he asked of Stella.
She laughed.
"Not at all. I was telling uncle how nice it was. It was my first party in England, you know."
"Oh, you musn't call it a party," he said. "But I am very glad you enjoyed it."
"What beautiful flowers," said Stella, glancing at the bouquet.
He handed them to her.
"Will you be so kind as to accept them?" he said. "I heard you admire them in the conservatory last night and I brought them for you from the rectory green-house."
"For me?" exclaimed Stella, open-eyed. "Oh, I didn't know! I am so sorry you should have troubled. It was very kind. You must have robbed the poor plants terribly."
"They would be quite consoled if they could know for whom their blossoms were intended," he said, with a low bow.
Stella looked at him with a smile, and glanced half archly at her uncle.
"That was very nice," she said. "Poor flowers! it is a pity they can't know! Can't you tell them? There is a language of flowers, you know!"
Mr. Adelstone smiled. He was not accustomed to have his compliments met with such ready wit, and was nonplussed for a moment, while his eyes dropped from her face with a little shifty look.
Mr. Etheridge broke the rather embarrassing pause.
"Put them in the vase for her, Mr. Adelstone, will you, please, and come and have some breakfast. You can't have had any."
He waited until Stella echoed the invitation, then drew up to the table.
Stella rang for cup and saucer and plates, and poured him out some coffee; and he plunged into small talk with the greatest ease, his keen eyes watching every graceful turn of Stella's arm, and glancing now and again at the beautiful face.
It was very good small talk, and amusing. Mr. Adelstone was one of those men who had seen everything. He talked of the London season that was just coming on, to Stella, who sat and listened, half amused, half puzzled, for London was an unknown land to her, and the string of names, noble and fashionable, which fell from his ready tongue, was entirely strange to her.
Then he talked of the coming Academy to Mr. Etheridge, and seemed to know all about the pictures that were going to be exhibited, and which ones would make a stir, and which would fail. Then he addressed himself to Stella again.
"You must pay London a visit, Miss Etheridge; there is no place like it the whole world through—not even Paris or Rome."
Stella smiled.
"It is not very likely that I shall see London for a long time. My uncle does not often go, although it is so near, do you?"
"No, no," he assented, "not often."
"Perhaps you are to be congratulated," said Mr. Adelstone. "With all its charms, I am glad to get away from it."
"You live there?" said Stella.
"Yes," he said, quietly, welcoming the faint look of interest in her eyes. "Yes; I live in chambers, as it is called, in one of the old law inns. I am a lawyer!"
Stella nodded.
"I know. You wear a long black gown and a wig."
He smiled.
"And address a jury; and do you say 'm'lud' instead of 'my lord,' as people in novels always make barristers say?"
"I don't know; perhaps I do," he answered, with a smile; "but I don't address a jury, or have an opportunity of calling a judge 'my lud,' or 'my lord,' often. Most of my work is done at my chambers. I am very glad to get down into the country for a holiday."
"Are you going to stay long?" asked Mr. Etheridge, with polite interest.
Mr. Adelstone paused a moment, and glanced at Stella before answering.
"I don't know," he said. "I meant going back to-day, but—I think I have changed my mind."
Stella was only half listening, but the words caused her to start. They were the same as those which Lord Leycester had uttered three nights ago.
Mr. Adelstone's keen eyes saw the start, and he made a mental note of it.
"Ah! it is beautiful weather," said Mr. Etheridge. "It would be a pity to leave Wyndward for London now."
"Yes: I shall be more than ever sorry to go now," said Mr. Adelstone, and his glance rested for a moment on Stella's face, but it was quite lost, for Stella's eyes were fixed on the scene beyond the window dreamily.
With almost a start she turned to him.
"Let me give you some more coffee!"
"No, thanks," he said; then, as Stella rose and rang the bell, he walked to the easel. "That will be a beautiful picture, Mr. Etheridge," he said, viewing it with a critical air.
"I don't know," said the artist, simply.
"You will exhibit it?"
"I never exhibit anything," was the quiet reply.
"No! I am surprised!" exclaimed the young man, but there was something in the quiet manner of the old man that stopped any further questions.
"No," said Mr. Etheridge; "why should I? I have"—and he smiled—"no ambition. Besides I am an old man, I have had my chance; let the young ones take theirs, I leave them room. You are fond of art?"
"Very," said Mr. Adelstone. "May I look round?"
The old man waved his hand, and took up his brush.
Jasper Adelstone wandered round the room, taking up the canvases and examining them; Stella stood at the window humming softly.
Suddenly she heard him utter an involuntary exclamation, and turning round saw that he had the portrait of Lord Leycester in his hand.
His face was turned toward her, and as she turned quickly, he was in time to catch a sinister frown of dislike, which rested for a moment on his face, but vanished as he raised his eyes and met hers.
"Lord Leycester," he said, with a smile and an uprising of the eyebrows. "A remarkable instance of an artist's power."
"What do you mean?" asked Stella, quietly, but with lowered eyes.
"I mean that it is a fair example of ideality. Mr. Etheridge has painted a likeness of Lord Leycester, and added an ideal poetry of his own."
"You mean that it is not like him?" she said.
Mr. Etheridge painted on, deaf to both of them.
"No," he said, looking at the picture with a cold smile. "It is like him, but it—honors him. It endows him with a poetry which he does not possess."
"You know him?" said Stella.
"Who does not?" he answered, and his thin lips curled with a smiling sneer.
A faint color came into Stella's face, and she raised her eyes for a moment.
"What do you mean?"
"I mean that Lord Leycester has made himself too famous—I was going to say infamous—"
A vivid crimson rushed to her face, and left it pale again the next instant.
"Do not," she said, then added quickly, "I mean do not forget that he is not here to defend himself."
He looked at her with a sinister scrutiny.
"I beg your pardon. I did not know he was a friend of yours," he said.
She raised her eyes and looked at him steadily.
"Lord Leycester is no friend of mine," she said, quietly.
"I am glad of it," he responded.
Stella's eyes darkened and deepened in a way peculiar to her, and her color came. It was true that Lord Leycester was no friend of hers, she had but seen and spoken with him by chance, and for a few moments; but who was this Mr. Adelstone that he should presume to be glad or sorry on her account?
He was quick to see that he had made a slip, and quick to recover himself.
"Pray forgive me if I have presumed too far upon our slight acquaintance, but I was only thinking at that moment that you had been so short a time in England as to be ignorant of people who are well known to us with whom they have lived, and that you would not know Lord Leycester's real character."
Stella inclined her head gravely. Something within her stirred her to take up arms in the absent man's defense; the one word "infamous," stuck and rankled in her mind.
"You said that Lord Leycester was 'infamous,'" she said, with a grave smile. "Surely that is too strong a word."
He thought a moment, his eyes resting on her face keenly.
"Perhaps, but I am not sure. I certainly used it as a play upon the word 'famous,' but I don't think even then that I did him an injustice. A man whose name is known all over the country—whose name is familiar as a household word—must be notorious either for good or evil, for wisdom or folly. Lord Leycester is not famous for virtue or wisdom. I cannot say any more."
Stella turned aside, a faint crimson dyeing her face, a strange thrill of pity, ay, and of impatience, at her heart. Why should he be so wicked, so mad and reckless—so notorious that even this self-satisfied young gentleman could safely moralize about him and warn her against making his acquaintance! "Oh, the pity of it—the pity of it!" as Shakespeare has it—that one with such a beautiful, god-look face, should be so bad.
There was a few moments' silence. Jasper Adelstone still stood with the picture in his hand, but glancing at Stella's face with covert watchfulness. For all his outward calmness, his heart was beating quickly. Stella's was the sort of beauty to make a man's heart beat quickly, or not at all; those who came to offer at her shrine would offer no half-measured oblations. As he watched her his heart beat wildly, and his small, bright eyes glittered. He had thought her beautiful at the party last night, where she had outshone all the other girls of the village as a star outshines a rushlight; but this morning her loveliness revealed itself in all its fresh purity, and he—Jasper Adelstone, the critical man of the world, the man whose opinion about women was looked upon by his companions in Lincoln's-inn and the bachelors' haunts at the West-end as worth having—felt his heart slipping from him. He put the picture down and approached her.
"You have no idea how beautiful and fresh the meadows are. Will you stroll down to the river with me?" he said, resolving to take her by surprise and capture her.
But he did not know Stella. She was only a school-girl—innocent and ignorant of the ways of men and the world; but, perhaps, because of that—because she had not learnt the usual hackneyed words of evasion—the ordinary elementary tactics of flirtation, she was not to be taken by surprise.
With a smile she turned her eyes upon him and shook her head.
"Thank you; no, that is impossible. I have all my household duties to perform, and that"—pointing to the sun with her white slim hand—"reminds me that it is time I set about them."
He took up his hat instantly, turning to hide the frown that knitted his brow and spoiled his face, and went up to the painter to say "good-morning."
Mr. Etheridge started and stared at him; he had quite forgotten his presence.
"Good-morning, good-morning—going? I beg your pardon. Won't you stop and take some tea with us?"
"Mr. Adelstone would like some dinner first, uncle," said Stella.
Then she gave him her hand.
"Good-morning," she said, "and thank you very much for the flowers."
He held her hand as long as he dared, then passed out.
Stella, perhaps unconsciously, gave a sigh of relief.
"Very nice young fellow, my dear," said Mr. Etheridge, without taking his eyes from the canvas. "Very clever, too. I remember him quite a little boy, and always said he would make his way. They say that he has done so. I am not surprised. Jasper——"
"Jasper!" said Stella. "What a horrible name."
"Eh? Horrible? I don't know—I don't know."
"But I do," said Stella, laughing. "Well, what were you going to say?"
"That Jasper Adelstone is the sort of man to insist upon having anything he sets his heart upon."
"I am glad to hear it," said Stella, as she opened the door, "for his sake; and I hope, also for his sake, that he won't set his mind upon the sun or the moon!" and with a laugh she ran away.
In the kitchen Mrs. Penford was awaiting her with unconcealed impatience. Upon the white scrubbed table stood the preparations for the making of pastry, an art which Stella, who had insisted upon making herself useful, had coaxed Mrs. Penfold into teaching her. At first that good woman had insisted that Stella should do nothing in the little household. She had announced with terrible gravity that such things weren't becoming to a young lady like Miss Stella, and that she had always done for Mr. Etheridge, and she always would; but before the second day had passed Stella had won the battle. As Mrs. Penfold said, there was no resisting the girl, who mingled willfulness with bewitching firmness and persuasion, and Mrs. Penfold had given in. "You'll cover yourself with flour, Miss Stella, and give your uncle the indigestion, miss, that you will," she remonstrated.
"But the flour will brush off, and uncle needn't eat pies and puddings for a little while; I'll eat them, I don't mind indigestion," Stella declared, and she made a delightfully piquant little apron, which completed Mrs. Penfold's conquest.
With a song upon her lips she burst into the kitchen and caught up the rolling pin.
"Am I not awfully late?" she exclaimed. "I was afraid you would have done it all before I came, but you wouldn't be so mean as to take an advantage, would you?"
Mrs. Penfold grunted.
"It's all nonsense, Miss Stella, there's no occasion for it."
Stella, with her hand in the flour, elevated the rolling-pin in heroic style.
"Mrs. Penfold!" she exclaimed, with the air of a princess, "the woman, be her station what it may, who cannot make a jam roley-poley or an apple tart is unworthy the name of an Englishwoman. Give me the jam; stop though, don't you think rhubarb would be very nice for a change?"
"I wish you'd go and play the organ, Miss Stella, and leave the rhubarb alone."
"Man cannot live on music," retorted Stella; "his soul craves for puddings. I wonder whether uncle's soul craves for jam or rhubarb. I think I'll go and ask him," and dropping the rolling-pin—which Mrs. Penfold succeeded in catching before it fell on the floor—she wiped her hand of a fifteenth part of the floor and ran into the studio.
"Uncle! I have come to lay before you the rival claims of rhubarb and strawberry jam. The one is sweet and luscious to the taste, but somewhat cloying; the other is fresh and young, but somewhat sour——"
"Good Heavens! What are you talking about?" exclaimed the bewildered painter, staring at her.
"Rhubarb or jam. Now, noble Roman, speak or die!" she exclaimed with upraised arm, her eyes dancing, her lips apart with rippling laughter.
Mr. Etheridge stared at her with all an artist's admiration in his eyes.
"Oh! the pudding," he said, then he suddenly stopped, and stared beyond her.
[CHAPTER VI.]
Stella heard a step on the threshold of the window, and turning to follow the direction of his eyes, saw the stalwart form of Lord Leycester standing in the window.
He was dressed in a suit of brown velveteen, with tight-fitting breeches and stockings, and carried a whip in his hand with which he barred the entrance against a couple of colleys, a huge mastiff, and a Skye terrier, the last barking with furious indignation at being kept outside.
Even at the moment of surprise, Stella was conscious of a sudden reluctant thrill of admiration for the graceful figure in the close-fitting velvet, and the handsome face with its dark eyes regarding her with a grave, respectful intenseness.
"Back dogs!" he said. "Go back, Vix!" then as they drew back, the big ones throwing themselves down on the path with patient obedience, he came into the room.
"I beg your pardon," he said, standing before Stella, his head bent. "I thought Mr. Etheridge was alone, or I should not have entered in this rough fashion."
As he spoke in the lane, so now it was no meaningless excuse, but with a tone of most reverential respect and proud humility, Stella, girl-like, noticed that he did not even venture to hold out his hand, and certainly Mr. Adelstone's self-satisfied smile and assured manner rose in her mind to contrast with this stately, high-bred humility.
"Do not apologize; it does not matter," she said, conscious that her face had grown crimson and that her eyes were downcast.
"Does it not? I am forgiven," and he held out his hand.
Stella had crossed her hands behind her as he entered with an instinctive desire to hide her bare arms and the flour, now she put out her hand a few inches and held it up with a smile.
"I can't," she said.
He looked at the white hand—at the white arm so beautifully molded that a sculptor would have sighed over it in despair at his inability to imitate it, and he still held out his hand.
"I do not mind the flour," he said, not as Mr. Adelstone would have said it, but simply, naturally.
Stella gave him one small taper finger and he took it and held it for a moment, his eyes smiling into hers; then he relinquished it, with not a word of commonplace compliment, but in silence, and turned to Mr. Etheridge.
"It is quite hopeless to ask you to forgive me for interrupting you I know, so I won't ask," he said, and there was in his voice, Stella noticed, a frank candor that was almost boyish but full of respect. At once it seemed to intimate that he had known and honored the old man since he, Leycester, was a boy.
"How are you, my lord?" said Mr. Etheridge, giving him his long, thin hand, but still keeping a hold, as it were, on his beloved easel. "Taking the dogs for a walk? Are they safe? Take care, Stella!"
For Stella was kneeling down in the midst of them, making friends with the huge mastiff, much to the jealous disgust of the others, who were literally crowding and pushing round her.
Lord Leycester looked round and was silent for a moment; his eyes fixed on the kneeling girl rather than on the dogs. Then he said, suddenly:
"They are quite safe," and then he added, for Stella's behalf, "they are quite safe, Miss Etheridge."
Stella turned her face toward him.
"I am not afraid. I should as soon think of biting them as they would dream of biting me, wouldn't you?" and she drew the mastiffs great head on to her lap, where it lay with his big eyes looking up at her piteously, as he licked her hand.
"Great Heavens, what a herd of them!" said Mr. Etheridge, who loved dogs—on canvas.
"I ought not to have brought them," said Lord Leycester, "but they will be quite quiet, and will do no harm, I assure you."
"I don't care if they don't bite my niece," said Mr. Etheridge.
"There is no fear of that," he said, quietly, "or I should not allow her to go near them. Please go on with your work, or I shall think I am a nuisance."
Mr. Etheridge waved him to a chair.
"Won't you sit down?" he said.
Lord Leycester shook his head.
"I have come to ask you a favor," he said.
Mr. Etheridge nodded.
"What is it?"
Lord Leycester laughed his rare laugh.
"I am trembling in my shoes," he said. "My tongue cleaves to my mouth with nervousness——"
The old painter glanced round at him, and his face relaxed into a smile as his eyes rested on the bold, handsome face and easy grace of the speaker.
"Yes, you look excessively frightened," he said. "What is it?"
It was noticeable that, excepting in his first greeting, the old man had not given him the benefit of his title; he had known him when Leycester had been a boy, running in and out of the cottage, always followed by a pack of dogs, and generally doing some mischief.
"I want you to do a little scene for me."
The old man groaned and looked at his picture firmly.
"You know the glade in the woods opening out opposite the small island. I want you to paint it."
"I am sorry," began the old man.
Lord Leycester went on, interrupting him gently:
"Have you seen it lately?" he said, and as he spoke Stella came into the room enticing the mastiff after her, with a handful of biscuits she had taken from the cheffonier. "It is very beautiful. It is the loveliest bit on the whole river. Right up from the stream it stretches green, with the young Spring leaves, to the sky above the hill. In the open space between the trees the primroses have made a golden carpet. I saw two kingfishers sailing up it as I stood and looked this morning, and as I looked I thought how well, how delightfully you would put it on canvas. Think! The bright green, the golden foreground, the early Summer sky to crown the whole, and reflected in the river running below."
Mr. Etheridge paused in his work and listened, and Stella, kneeling over the dog, listened too, with down-bent face, and wondered how the painter could stand so firm and obstinate.
To her the voice sounded like the sweetest music set to some poem. She saw the picture as he drew it, and in her heart the music of the words and voice found an echoing harmony.
Forgotten was the other man's warning; vain it would have been if he had repeated it at that moment. As well associate the darkness of a Winter's night with the bright gladness of a Summer's morning, as think of evil in connection with that noble face and musical voice.
Mr. Etheridge paused, but he shook his head.
"Very fine, very temptingly put; you are a master of words, Leycester; but I am immovable as a rock. Indeed your eloquence is wasted; it is not an impressionable man whom you address. I, James Etheridge, am on this picture. I am lost in my work, Lord Leycester."
"You will not do it?"
The old man smiled.
"I will not. To another man I should present an excuse, and mask my refusal. With you anything but a simple 'no' is of no avail."
Lord Leycester smiled and turned away.
"I am sorry," he said. "I meant it for a present to my sister Lilian."
Again Stella's eyes turned toward him. This man—infamous!
The old man put down his brush and turned upon him.
"Why didn't you say so at first?" he said.
Lord Leycester smiled.
"I wanted to see if you would do something for me—for myself," he said, with infinite naivete.
"You want it for Lady Lilian," said Mr. Etheridge. "I will do it, of course."
"I shan't say thank you," said Lord Leycester. "I have nothing to thank you for. She shall do that. When will you come——"
"Next week—next month——"
"Now at once," said Lord Leycester, stretching out his hand with a peculiar gesture which struck Stella by its infinite grace.
The old man groaned.
"I thought so! I thought so! It would always be now at once with you."
"The Spring won't wait for you! The green of those leaves is changing now, very slowly, but surely, as we speak; in a week it will be gone, and with it half—all the beauty will go too. You will come now, will you not?"
Mr. Etheridge looked round with comical dismay, then he laughed.
Lord Leycester's laugh chimed in, and he turned to Stella with the air of a man who has conquered and needs no more words.
"You see," said Mr. Etheridge, "that is the way I am led, like a pig to market, will I or will I not! And the sketch will take me, how long?"
"A few hours!"
"And there will be all the things to drag down——"
Lord Leicester strode to an old-fashioned cabinet.
"I will carry them, and yourself into the bargain if you like."
Then, with his hand upon the cabinet, he stopped short and turned to Stella.
"I beg your pardon!—I am always sinning. I forgot that there was now a presiding spirit. I am so used to taking liberties with your uncle's belongings; I know where all his paraphernalia is so well, that——"
Stella rose and smiled at them.
"Your knowledge is deeper than my uncle's, then," she said. "Do not beg pardon of me."
"May I?" he said, and he opened the cabinet and took out the sketching-pad and color-box; then, with some difficulty, he disentangled a folding camp-stool from a mass of artistic litter in a corner, and then prepared to depart.
Mr. Etheridge watched these proceedings with a rueful countenance, but seeing that resistance had long passed out of his power, he said:
"Where is my hat, Stella? I must go, I suppose."
Lord Leycester opened the door for her, and she went out, followed by all the dogs, and fetched the soft felt hat, holding it by the very tips of her fingers.
With a sigh, Mr. Etheridge dropped it on his head.
"Give me some of the things," he said; but Lord Leycester declined.
"Not one," he said, laughing. And Mr. Etheridge, without another word, walked out.
Lord Leycester stood looking at Stella, a wistful eagerness in his eyes.
"I have gone so far," he said, "that I am emboldened to venture still further. Will you come too?"
Stella started, and an eager light flashed for a moment in her eyes; then she held out her hands and laughed.
"I have to make a pudding," she said.
He looked at the white arms, and then at her, with an intensified eagerness.
"If you knew how beautiful the morning is—how grand the river looks—you would let the pudding go."
Stella shook her head.
He inclined his head, too highly bred to persist.
"I am so sorry," he said, simply. "I am sorry now that I have gained my way. I thought that you would have come."
Stella stood silent, and, with something like a sigh, put down the things and held out her hand; but as he took the finger which she gave him, his face brightened, and a light came into his eyes.
"Are you still firm?"
"I would not desert the pudding for anything, my lord," said Stella, naively.
At the "my lord," a slight shade covered his face, but it went again instantly, as he said:
"Well, then, will you come when the inevitable pudding is made? There," he said, eagerly, and still holding her hand he drew her to the window and pointed with his whip, "there's the place! It is not far—just across the meadows, and through the first gate. Do you see it?"
"Yes," said Stella, gently withdrawing her hand.
"And you will come?" he asked, his eyes fixed on hers with their intent earnestness.
At that instant the word—the odious word—"infamous" rang in her ears, and her face paled. He noticed the sudden pallor, and his eyes grew dark with earnest questioning.
"I see," he said, quietly, "you will not come!"
What was it that moved her? With a sudden impulse she raised her eyes and looked at him steadily.
"Yes, I will come!" she said.
He inclined his head without a word, called to the dogs, and passed out.
Stella stood for a moment looking after them; then she went into the kitchen—not laughing nor singing, but with a strange gravity; a strange feeling had got possession of her.
She felt as if she was laboring under some spell. "Charmed" is an often misused word, but it is the right word to describe the sensation. Was it his face or his voice that haunted her? As she stood absently looking down at the table, simple words, short and commonplace, which he had used rang in her ears with a new meaning.
Mrs. Penfold stood and regarded her in curious astonishment. She was getting used to Stella's quickly changing moods, but the sudden change bewildered her.
"Let me do it, Miss Stella," she pleaded, but Stella shook her head firmly; not by one inch would she swerve from her cause for all the beautiful voice and noble face.
In rapt silence she finished her work, then she went up-stairs and put on her hat and came down. As she passed out of the house and down the path, the mastiff leaped the gate and bounded toward her, and the next moment she saw Lord Leycester seated on a stile.
He dropped down and came toward her.
"How quick you have been," he said, "I thought a pudding was a mystery which demanded an immensity of time."
Stella looked up at him, her dark brows drawn to a straight line.
"You waited for me?" she said.
"No," he said, simply, "I came back. I did not like to think that you should come alone."
Stella was silent.
"Are you angry?" he asked, in a low voice.
Stella was silent for a moment, then she looked at him frankly.
"No," she said.
If she had but said "yes," and turned back! But the path, all beautiful with the bright coloring of Spring stretched before her, and she had no thought of turning back, no thought or suspicion of the dark and perilous land toward which she was traveling by his side.
Already the glamour of love was falling upon her like the soft mist of a Summer evening; blindly, passively she was moving toward the fate which the gods had prepared for her.
[CHAPTER VII.]
Side by side they walked across the meadows; the larks rising before them and soaring up to the heavens with a burst of song; the river running in silvery silence to the sea; the green trees waving gently in the Summer breeze; and above them the long stretching gray masonry of Wyndward Hall.
Lord Leycester was strangely silent for some minutes since that "Are you angry?" and Stella, as she walked by his side, stooping now and again to gather a cowslip, glanced up at his face and wondered whether her uncle could be mistaken, whether they were not all deceived in thinking the quiet, graceful creature with the beautiful face and dreamy, almost womanly, soft eyes, wild and reckless, and desperate and altogether bad. She almost forgot how she had seen him on that first night of their meeting, with his whip upraised and the sudden fire of anger in his eyes.
Presently he spoke, so suddenly that Stella, who had been lost in her speculations respecting him, started guiltily:
"I have been wondering," he said, "how Mr. Etheridge takes the change which your presence must make in the cottage."
Stella looked up with surprise, then she smiled.
"He bears it with admirable resignation," she said, with that air of meek archness which her uncle found so amusing.
Lord Leycester looked down at her.
"That is a rebuke for the presumption of my remark?" he said.
"No," said Stella.
"I did not mean to be presumptuous. Think. Your uncle has lived the whole of his life alone, the life of a solitary, a hermit; suddenly there enters into that life a young and beau—a young girl, full of the spirit of youth and its aspirations. It must make a great change."
"As I said," says Stella, "he bears it with pious fortitude." Then she added, in a lower voice, "He is very good to me."
"He could not be otherwise," was the quiet response. "I mean that he could not be anything but good, gentle, and loving with any living thing. I have known him since I was a boy," he added. "He was always the same, always living a life of dreams. I wonder whether he takes you as a dream?"
"A very substantial and responsible one, then," said Stella, with her little laugh. "One that lasts through the daytime."
He looked at her with that strange intent look which she had learned that she could not meet.
"And you?" he said.
"I?" said Stella, though she knew what he meant.
He nodded.
"How do you like the change?—this still, quiet life in the Thames valley. Are you tired of it already? Will you pine for all the gayeties you have left?"
Stella looked up at him—his eyes were still fixed on hers.
"I have left no gayeties," she said. "I left a bare and horrid school that was as unlike home as the desert of Sahara is like this lovely meadow. How do I feel? As if I had been translated to Paradise—as if I, who was beginning to think that I was alone in the world I had no business to be in, had found some one friend to love——"
She paused, and he, glancing at the black waistband to her white dress, said, with the tenderest, most humble voice:
"I beg your pardon. Will you forgive me?—I did not know——"
And his voice broke.
Stella looked up at him with a smile shining through the unshed tears.
"How—why should you know? Yes, I was quite alone in the world. My father died a year ago."
"Forgive me," he murmured; and he laid his hand with a feather's weight on her arm. "I implore you to forgive me. It was cruel and thoughtless."
"No," said Stella. "How should you know?"
"If I had been anything better than an unthinking brute, I might have guessed."
There was a moment's pause, then Stella spoke.
"Yes, it is Paradise. I had no idea England was like this, they called it the land of fogs."
"You have not seen London on a November evening," he said, with a laugh. "Most foreigners come over to England and put up at some hotel at the west-end, and judge the whole land by the London sample—very few come even so far as this. You have not been to London?"
"I passed through it," said Stella, "that is all. But I heard a great deal about it last night," she added, with a smile.
"Yes!" he said, with great interest—"last night?"
"Yes, at Mrs. Hamilton's. She was kind enough to ask me to an evening party, and one of the guests took great pains to impress me with the importance and magnificence of London."
He looked at her.
"May I ask who she was?" he said.
"It was not a she, but a gentleman. It was Mr. Adelstone."
Lord Leycester thought a moment.
"Adelstone. Adelstone. I don't know him."
Before she was quite aware of it the retort slipped from her lips.
"He knows you."
He looked at her with a thoughtful smile.
"Does he? I don't remember him. Stay, yes, isn't he a relation of Mr. Fielding's?"
"His nephew," said Stella, and feeling the dark, penetrating eyes on her she blushed faintly. It annoyed her, and she struggled to suppress it, but the blush came and he saw it.
"I remember him now," he said; "a tall, thin dark man. A lawyer, I believe. Yes, I remember him. And he told you about London?"
"Yes," said Stella, and as she remembered the conversation of a few hours ago, her color deepened. "He is very amusing and well-informed, and he took pity on my ignorance in the kindest way. I was very grateful."
There was something in her tone that made him look at her questioningly.
"I think," he said, "your gratitude is easily earned."
"Oh, no," she retorted; "I am the most ungrateful of beings. Isn't that uncle sitting there?" she added, quickly, to change the subject.
He looked up.
"Yes, he is hard at work. I did not think I should have won him. It was my sister's name that worked the magic charm."
"He is fond of your sister," said Stella, thoughtfully.
His eyes were on her in an instant.
"He has spoken of her?" he said.
Stella could have bitten her tongue out for the slip.
"Yes," she said. "He—he told me about her—I asked him whose house it was upon the hills."
"Meaning the Hall?" he said, pointing with his whip.
"Yes, and he told me. I knew by the way he spoke of your sister that he was fond of her. Her name is Lilian, is it not?"
"Yes," he said, "Lilian," and the name left his lips with soft tenderness. "I think every one who knows her loves her. This picture is for her."
Stella glanced up at his face; anything less imperious at that moment it would be impossible to imagine.
"Lady Lilian is fond of pictures?" she said.
"Yes," he said; "she is devoted to art in all its forms. Yes, that little sketch will give her more pleasure than—than—I scarcely know what to say. What are women most fond of?"
Stella laughed.
"Diamonds, are they not?"
"Are you fond of them?" he said. "I think not."
"Why not?" she retorted. "Why should I not have the attributes of my sex? Yes, I am fond of diamonds. I am fond of everything that is beautiful and costly and rare. I remember once going to a ball at Florence."
He looked at her.
"Only to see it!" she exclaimed. "I was too young to be seen, and they took me in a gallery overlooking the great salon; and I watched the great ladies in their beautiful dresses and shining gems, and I thought that I would give all the world to be like one of them; and the thought spoiled my enjoyment. I remember coming away crying; you see it was so dark and solitary in the great gallery, and I felt so mean and insignificant." And she laughed.
He was listening with earnest interest. Every word she said had a charm for him; he had never met any girl—any woman—like her, so frank and open-minded. Listening to her was like looking into a crystal lake, in which everything is revealed and all is bright and pure.
"And are you wiser now?" he asked.
"Not one whit!" she replied. "I should like now, less than then, to be shut up in a dark gallery and look on at others enjoying themselves. Isn't that a confession of an envious and altogether wicked disposition?"
"Yes," he assented, with a strange smile barely escaping from under his tawny mustache. "I should be right in prophesying all sorts of bad endings to you."
As he spoke he opened the gate for her, driving the dogs back with a crack of his whip so that she might pass first—a small thing, but characteristic of him.
The painter looked up.
"Keep those dogs off my back, Leycester," he said. "Well, Stella, have you concocted your poison?"
Stella went and looked over his shoulder.
"Yes, uncle," she said.
"You have been long enough to make twenty indigestible compounds," he said, gazing at the view he was sketching.
Stella bent her head, to hide the blush which rose as she remembered how slowly they had walked across the meadows.
"How are you getting on?" said Lord Leycester.
The old man grunted.
"Pretty well; better than I shall now you have come to fidget about."
Lord Leycester laughed.
"A pretty plain hint that our room is desired more than our company, Miss Etheridge. Can we not vanish into space?"
Stella laughed and sank down on the grass.
"It is uncle's way of begging us to stay," she said.
Lord Leycester laughed, and sending the dogs off, flung himself down almost at her feet.
"Did I exaggerate?" he said, pointing his whip at the view.
"Not an atom," replied Stella. "It is beautiful—beautiful, and that is all that one can find to say."
"I wish you would be content to say it and not insist upon my painting it," replied Mr. Etheridge.
Lord Leycester sprang to his feet.
"That is the last straw. We will not remain to be abused, Miss Etheridge," he said.
Stella remained immovable. He came and stood over her, looking down at her with wistful eagerness in silence.
"What lovely woods," she said. "You were right; they are carpeted with primroses. We have none in our meadow."