It was all the poor girl could say, this awful threat came on her so suddenly.
"You believe me. You would give the world not to believe me, but you do. Well, instead of the world you shall give me yourself. I want you enough to give up revenge for your sake. Isn"t that love? I want you because of your obstinacy, which I mean to break down, day by day, till you are humble enough."
Ruth smiled scornfully. She had been so often terrified by such language that it had lost its force.
"I do not believe you," she said. "Would not believe an angel, if he dared to say so much."
"Will you believe your father"s own handwriting?"
Storms took from an inner pocket of his vest a folded letter. Ruth knew it in an instant. It was the letter she had placed in her husband"s hand that day when she saw him for one moment asleep in his chamber at "The Rest."
"Ha! ha! You turn white without reading it! You guess what it is. The handwriting is large enough to read at a safe distance. Make it out for yourself."
Ruth fastened her burning eyes on the paper, which he unfolded and held between his two hands, so near that she could make out the great crude letters; but it was beyond her reach had she attempted to possess herself of it, which he seemed to fear.
"Does that mean anything? Is that a confession?"
Ruth did not answer, but dropped into a chair, faint and white, still gazing on the paper.
"Do you want more proof? Well, I can give it you, for I saw the thing done. Do you want the particulars?"
"No! no! Spare me!" cried the poor girl, lifting both hands.
"Of course, I mean to spare you. One doesn"t torment his wife till he gets her!"
"Spare him!" pleaded the poor girl. "Never mind me, but spare him. He has never harmed you."
"Never harmed me! Who was it that he hurled, like a dog, from that very door? Whose sweetheart was it that he stole? Never harmed me!
Spare him! That is for you to do. No one else on this earth can spare him!"
"But how?"
The words trembled, coldly, from her white lips.
"How? By marrying the man you were promised to."
A faint moan was her only answer.
"By carrying out your murdered father"s bargain. That is the only way.
Shudder down, twist and wind as you will, that is the only way."
Ruth shook her head. She could not speak.
"I have got some matter to settle with Sir Noel, for you are only half my price. There must be land and gold thrown in on his part, a wedding on yours, before I promise to hold my tongue, or give up this paper.
Love, money, or vengeance. These are my terms. He takes it hard--so do you, quaking like a wounded hare in its form. The sight of it does me good. Gold, land, the prettiest wife on this side of England, who shall give me a taste of vengeance, too, before I have done with her.
All these things I mean to enjoy to the full."
Still Ruth did not utter a word. The horror in her position struck the power of speech from her.
"I see. Nothing but love for this murderer could make your face so white. Nothing but hate of me could fill your eyes with such frightened loathing. But I mean to change all that, before you have been my wife a twelvemonth. Only remember this: you must never see Walton Hurst again--never. I shall keep watch. If you look at him, if you speak to him before we are wedded, I will give him up to the law that hour. If he ever crosses my path after that, I shall know how to make my wife suffer."
Still Ruth did not speak.
"You know my terms, now. The moment Sir Noel signs the deeds I"m getting ready, he seals my lips. When our marriage certificate is signed, I give up this paper. Then there is nothing for us but love or hate. I have a taste for both. Come, now, say which it shall be."
While he was speaking, Storms had drawn close to the chair on which Ruth sat, still and pa.s.sive. With the last audacious words on his lips, he stooped down, pressed them to hers, and started back, for they had met the coldness of snow.
"Fainting again? I will soon cure her of these tricks," he muttered, looking down into the still, white face he had desecrated with a kiss.
"Well, she knows what to depend on now, and can take her own time for coming to. I only hope Sir Noel will be as easily settled; but he fights hard. I half wish he would say no, that I might pull him down to his knees. It would be rare sport. Only I"d rather take revenge on the young master. That comes with the wife, and the old baronet"s money thrown in."
With these thoughts weaving in and out of his brain, Storms left the house, for he had no hesitation in leaving that poor girl to recover from her dead insensibility alone. It was perhaps the only mercy he could have awarded her.
CHAPTER LXII.
STORMS AND LADY ROSE.
Storms returned home, triumphing in his success over that helpless girl, and confident that Sir Noel would accept his terms at last, haughtily as he had been dismissed from the house. All the next day he remained at home, expecting some message from the baronet, but none came. On the second day anxiety overcame his patience, and he set out for "The Rest," determined to push his object to the utmost, and, instead of vague insinuations, lay his whole proof before the baronet.
With all his audacity and low cunning, this man--a dastard at heart--was thinking how he might evade this interview, and yet obtain its antic.i.p.ated results, as he came slowly through the wilderness. All at once he stopped, and a sudden flash shot across his face.
"The Lady Rose, the woman Sir Noel has chosen for his son"s wife, she has access to him always. Her entreaties will touch his heart, and break down his pride. There she is among the great standard roses.
Proud and dainty lady as she is, I will set her to work for me. By heavens, she comes this way!"
The young man was right. That young lady came out from among her sister roses, and turned toward the wilderness, in whose shadows Storms was lurking. She wanted some tender young ferns to complete a bouquet intended for the little sitting-room that Walton was sure to visit during the morning.
As Lady Rose was moving down the shaded path with that slow, graceful motion which was but the inheritance of her birth, she seemed to be whispering something to the flowers in her hand. Once she paused and kissed them, smiling softly, as their perfume floated across her face like an answering caress. She was stooping to rob a delicate species of fern of its tenderest shoots, when Storms flung his shadow across her path.
The lady arose, with a faint start, and gazed at the man quietly as one waits for an inferior to speak. With all his audacity, the young man hesitated under that look of gentle pride.
"Did you wish to ask something?" she said, at length, remarking his hesitation.
The sound of her voice emboldened him, but he spoke respectfully, taking off his hat.
"No, Lady Rose, I want nothing. But I can tell you that which it is perhaps best that you should know."
"Is it of the wedding? Is it of Ruth you would speak?"
"Of her, and of others, nearer and dearer to you than, she ever was, or can be, Lady Rose."
The soft flush of color, that was natural to that lovely face, deepened to a rich carnation, and then to scarlet.
"I do not understand!"
"I am wanting to speak of Walton Hurst, the heir of "Norston"s Rest.""