But the very idea of the theft sent a thrill of horror through her heart. She must discourage her son"s love for the girl, for she would rather see him dead and buried than wedded to one upon whose fair name ever so slight a stain rested. She said to herself that the girl"s stay beneath their cottage roof must be cut as short as possible.
It was decided that Jessie Bain should remain at the cottage of the Morays until she had ample time to write to her uncle and receive his reply.
Jessie mailed her letter before she went to sleep that night. Annabel easily dropped off to slumber, but it was not so with Jessie; for had not this been the most eventful day of her life?
How she wished Mrs. Varrick had not exacted a promise from her that she would never again hold any communication with her son Hubert! Would he believe her guilty when he returned home and his mother told him all that had transpired?
She could imagine the horror on his face as he listened; and this thought was so bitter to Jessie that she cried herself to sleep over it.
The third day of her stay a letter from her uncle came to her. Her cousin was married and gone away, he wrote, and he would be only too glad to forget and forgive by-gones.
Two days later, Frank Moray saw her safely on the train which would take her as far as Clayton, where her uncle promised to meet her.
"If I write to you sometimes, will you answer my letters, little Jessie?" asked Frank Moray, as he found her a seat in a well-crowded car, and bent over her for the last glance into the girl"s beautiful, wistful face.
"Yes," she answered, absently.
For a moment his hand closed over hers; he looked at her with his whole soul in his honest eyes, then he turned and quickly left her.
He stood on the platform and watched her sweet face at the window until the train was out of sight, then he moved slowly away.
Jessie stared hard through the window, but she never saw any of the scenes through which she was whirling so rapidly. Her thoughts were with Hubert Varrick.
It was dusk when she reached her destination, and according to his promise her uncle was at the depot to meet her.
It was with genuine joy that he hurried forward to greet the girl, though they had parted but a few short months ago in such bitter anger.
"I am glad to get you back again, little Jessie," he declared, eagerly; "and, as I wrote to you, we will let by-gones be by-gones, little girl, and forget the past unpleasantness between us by wiping it out of our minds as though it had never been. I missed you awfully, little one, and I"ve had a lonesome time of it since your cousin went away. Home isn"t home to a man without a neat little woman about to tidy things up a bit and make it cheerful."
How good it seemed to Jessie to have some one speak so kindly to her! He was plain and homely, and coa.r.s.e of speech, but he was the only being in the whole wide world who really cared for her and offered her a shelter in this her hour of need. But how desolate the place was, with its little old-fashioned, low-ceiling kitchen, the huge fire-place on one side, the cupboard on the other, whose chintz curtains were drawn back, revealing the rows of cups and saucers and pile of plates of blue china, more cracked and nicked than ever, and the pine table, with its oil-cloth cover, and the old rag mat in the center of the floor!
The girl"s heart sank as she looked around.
Could she make this place her home again? Its very atmosphere, redolent with tobacco smoke and the strong odor of vegetables, took her breath away.
Ah! it was very hard for this girl, whose only fortune was a dower of poverty, and who had had a slight taste of wealth and refinement, to come back to the old life again and fall into the drudgery of other days.
She could not refuse her uncle when he pleaded to know where she went and where she had been since the night he had driven her, in his mad frenzy, out into the world.
He listened in wonder. The girl"s story almost seemed like a fairy tale to him. But as he listened to the ending of it--surely the saddest story that ever was told by girlish lips--of how she had left the Varrick mansion, and of what Mrs. Varrick had accused her of doing, his rage knew no bounds.
"You might have known how it would all turn out!" he cried. "A poor little field wren has no business in the gilded nest of the golden eagle! You are at home again, little one. Think no more of those people!"
How little he realized that this was easier said than done. Where one"s heart is, there one"s thoughts are also.
The neighbors flocked in to see her. Every one was glad to have pretty, saucy Jessie Bain back once more. But there was much mystery and silent speculation as to where she had been.
The girls of the neighborhood seemed to act shy of her. Even her old companions nodded very stiffly when they met her, and walked on the other side of the street when they saw her coming.
The antagonism of the village girls was never so apparent until the usual festivities of the autumn evenings approached.
It was the custom of the village maidens of Alexandria Bay to inaugurate the winter sports by giving a Halloween party, and every one looked forward to this with the wildest antic.i.p.ation.
Jessie Bain had always been the moving spirit at these affairs, despite the fact that they were generally held in the homes of some of the wealthier girls, their houses being larger and more commodious.
The party, which was to be on a fine scale this year, was now the talk of the little town.
But much to the sorrow and the amazement of Jessie Bain, day by day rolled by without bringing her the usual invitation.
It wanted but two days now to the all-important party. Jessie had gotten her dress ready for the occasion, thinking that at the last moment some of the girls would come in person and invite her. Not that she cared so much for the fun, after all, but her uncle was anxious that she should go more among the young folks, as she used to do. It was simply to please him that she would mingle among the crowd of youths and maidens.
At last the day of the Halloween party rolled round.
"Well," said her uncle, as he sat down to the breakfast table and waited for her to set on the morning meal, "I suppose you"re getting all your fixings ready to have a big time with the young folks to-night?"
Before she could answer, there was the postman"s whistle at the door. He handed in a large, thick letter, and it was addressed to Jessie Bain.
Jessie turned the letter over and over, looking in wonder at the superscription. The envelope contained something else besides the letter--a newspaper clipping. This Jessie put on the table to look over after she had finished the letter. It was a bright, newsy epistle, br.i.m.m.i.n.g over with kindly wishes for her happiness, and ending with a hope that the writer might see her soon.
"Who is it from?" asked her uncle.
The girl dutifully read it out for him.
"He seems to be a right nice young man, and quite taken up with you, little Jess," he said, laughingly.
He saw by the distressed look on her face that this idea did not please her.
"He would have to be a mighty nice fellow to get my consent to marry you, my la.s.s."
"Do not fear, uncle," she said; "you will never be called upon to give your consent to that. He is very nice indeed, but not such a one as I could give my heart to, I a.s.sure you."
"Then let me give you a word of advice; don"t encourage him by writing letters to him. But isn"t there another part of the letter on the table yonder you haven"t read yet?"
"I had almost forgotten it," returned Jessie.
One glance as she spread it out at full length, then her face grew white as death.
"Bless me! I shall be late!" declared her uncle, putting on his hat and hurrying from the room.
She never remembered what he said as he pa.s.sed out of the room. Her heart, ay, her very soul, was engrossed in the printed lines before her.
In startling headlines she read the words:
"A NOTABLE MARRIAGE IN HIGH LIFE--MR. HUBERT VARRICK AND MISS NORTHRUP WEDDED AT LAST."
Then followed an account of the grand ceremony; of a mansion decorated with roses; a description of the marriage; the elaborate wedding-breakfast served in a perfect bower of orchids and ferns; and then the names of the guests, who numbered nearly a thousand.
Jessie Bain never finished the article. With a bitter cry she fell face downward on the floor in a deep swoon.