"Do you think so now--really?"
"Indeed I do."
"And you wont hate me?"
"Not at all."
"Nor think me fickle?"
"Oh, children are always fickle; but we meet as grown people, now, and there will be no more change. You are content, and so am I."
"In downright arnest?"
"In downright earnest."
"Miss Rose."
"Well."
"If I was not over head and heels in love--well, it"s no use talking; but there aint your match this side creation, except her."
CHAPTER LXXIV.
THE LONELY HOUSE.
That n.o.ble mansion had changed greatly. The beauty of its grounds was all run to waste. The snowy walls of the house were tinged with the damp of many winters, which no careful hand had swept away. Rose thickets had grown into jungles. The honeysuckles and clematis vines had leaped from the windows and clambered rudely up the forest trees. Long gra.s.s waved along the carriage walks and tufted the gravel. That delicate moss, which seems like the first green breath of decay, was creeping over the broad marble steps, and clothing the stone vases with gloomy richness.
It was very lonely and quiet, that dreary mansion, a mournful contrast to its appearance on the night we saw it last, in pristine freshness, blazing with lights, resonant with music, and all aglow with flowers.
Four persons, who stood in the wilderness which had grown around it, felt this desolation with infinite melancholy.
"Was this my mother"s house?" whispered Rose Mason, sadly. "Oh! Paul, where is she now? Not one word from her in all these years."
"Hush, my child," said the minister; "it may have been that trouble has fallen upon her so heavily that, like a poor worried deer, she has crept away to hide her wounds."
"My poor, poor mother," whispered Rose; "but for that man, how happy we might all be now."
"Be patient, my child, be patient."
"How can I be patient, knowing that she lives--at least, feeling the mournful hope--and yet with no certainty? How can I be patient, when my father is away where I cannot see him, wandering from country to country, trying to forget his wrongs--trying, in vain, to forget her?"
The minister looked troubled. This rebellion in his spoiled pet, wounded him like a reproach. He felt how deep were her causes for regret, and left the anguish to exhaust itself.
"There must be some one at the house who will know where she is living.
The mansion is evidently inhabited. Let us go forward and inquire. We are legally authorized to enter," said Paul.
"Yes," rejoined the minister, looking at a strange man who was walking down the carriage street with Jube, "here comes our authority; but let us use it with delicacy; soft words are better than warrants; by them our Rose may gain some knowledge of her mother."
The group moved forward; that is, Paul, the minister, and Rose, leaving the stranger and Jube in the grounds.
The broad steps had a disused look, as if foot-prints were seldom left upon them; the huge knocker was dim, and grated harshly as the minister lifted it. When it fell, the noise struck them with a shock, its reverberations sounded so startling. It was a long time before any one came to the door; but at last it opened, and an ill-dressed, unshaven man looked out with unwelcoming eyes.
"Do you want any thing?" he said, curtly; "n.o.body comes to this door. We never see company."
"But we wish to enter the house, and have business which cannot be put off," said Paul.
"Who is it you want to see?"
"Any one who has authority to admit us to an examination of one of the rooms."
"There is no such person here."
The answer was brusque enough, like that which the keeper of a prison gives to troublesome visitors.
"Let us see your master, if you please," said the minister, blandly.
"I have no master!"
"Nor mistress?"
"No, nor mistress. I am _her_ master!"
Rose started, and looked mournfully at Paul.
"What is the lady"s name?" she inquired.
"She has fifty names. To-day I believe she is the Empress of Russia."
"But she has a name?"
"Not for strangers. If you have any business here but to ask questions let me hear what it is; no one else will get a say in the matter, I can tell you."
Paul beckoned to the man who lingered in the shrubbery. He came up and held a few words of conversation with the servant, who seemed greatly disturbed, and at once attempted to close the door forcibly. The officer opposed him, and, placing a paper in his hands, bade him make way.
He read the paper with a bewildered look, which changed to something like consternation in the end. He flung the door wide open, and, retreating down the entrance-hall, unlocked a door which led to the south wing.
"You will find the office in yonder," he said, pointing through the door. "I don"t know what condition it is in, for no one has entered it, that I know of, for years."
The party pa.s.sed in, all except Rose, who remained to question the man.
But her distress was so great that it took away her voice.
"Well, what is it you want?" he asked, with a tone of kindness, for the agitation in her lovely face impressed even him.
"Tell me her name. The lady of the house, I mean."