"YOUR UNCLE NICK."
Mrs. L"Oiseau read this letter with a changing cheek--when she finished it she folded and laid it aside in silence.
Then she called to her side her child--her Jacquelina--her Sans Souci--as for her gay, thoughtless temper she was called. I should here describe the mother and daughter to you. The mother needs little description--a pale, black-haired, black-eyed woman, who should have been blooming and sprightly, but that care had damped her spirits, and cankered the roses in her cheeks.
But Jacquelina--Sans Souci--merits a better portrait. She was small and slight for her years, and, though really near nine, would have been taken for six or seven. She was fair-skinned, blue-eyed and golden-haired. And her countenance, full of spirit, courage and audacity. As she would dart her face upward toward the sun, her round, smooth, highly polished white forehead would seem to laugh in light between its cl.u.s.tering curls of burnished gold, that, together with the little, slightly turned-up nose, and short, slightly protruded upper lip, gave the charm of inexpressible archness to the most mischievous countenance alive. In fact her whole form, features, expression and gestures seemed instinct with mischief--mischief lurked in the kinked tendrils of her bright hair; mischief looked out and laughed in the merry, malicious blue eyes; mischief crept slyly over the bows of her curbed and ruby lips, and mischief played at hide and seek among the rosy dimples of her blooming cheeks.
"Now, Jacquelina," said Mrs. L"Oiseau, "you must cure yourself of these hoydenish tricks of yours before you expose them to your uncle--remember how whimsical and eccentric he is."
"So am I! Just as whimsical! I"ll do him dirt," said the young lady.
"Good heaven! Where did you ever pick up such a phrase, and what upon earth does doing any one "dirt" mean?" asked the very much shocked lady.
"I mean I"ll grind his nose on the ground, I"ll hurry him and worry him, and upset him, and cross him, and make him run his head against the wall, and b.u.t.t his blundering brains out. What did he turn Fair Edith away for? Oh! I"ll pay him off! I"ll settle with him! Fair Edith shan"t be in his debt for her injuries very long."
From her pearly brow and pearly cheeks, "Fair Edith" was the name by which the child had heard her cousin once called, and she had called her thus ever since.
Mrs. L"Oiseau answered gravely.
"Your uncle gave Edith a fair choice between his own love and protection, and the great benefits he had in store for her, and the love of a stranger and foreigner, whom he disapproved and hated. Edith deliberately chose the latter. And your uncle had a perfect right to act upon her unwise decision."
"And for my part, I know he hadn"t--all of my own thoughts. Oh! I"ll do him--"
"Hush! Jacquelina. You shall not use such expressions. So much comes of my letting you have your own way, running down to the beach and watching the boats, and hearing the vulgar talk of the fishermen."
On Sat.u.r.day, at the hour specified, the carriage came to Old Field Cottage, and conveyed Mrs. L"Oiseau and her child to Luckenough. They were very kindly received by the commodore, and affectionately embraced by Henrietta, who conducted them to a pleasant room, where they could lay off their bonnets, and which they were thenceforth to consider as their own apartment. This was not the one which had been occupied by Edith. Edith"s chamber had been left undisturbed and locked up by Mrs.
Waugh, and was kept ever after sacred to her memory.
The sojourn of Mrs. L"Oiseau and Jacquelina at Luckenough was an experiment on the part of the commodore. He did not mean to commit himself hastily, as in the case of his sudden choice of Edith as his heiress. He intended to take a good, long time for what he called "mature deliberation"--often one of the greatest enemies to upright, generous, and disinterested action--to hope, faith, and charity, that I know of, by the way. Commodore Waugh also determined to have his own will in all things, this time at least. He had the vantage ground now, and was resolved to keep it. He had caught Sans Souci young, before she could possibly have formed even a childish predilection for one of the opposite s.e.x, and he was determined to raise and educate a wife for his beloved Grim.
CHAPTER VI.
THE BLIGHTED HEART.
In February the deepest snow storm fell that had fallen during the whole winter. The roads were considered quite impa.s.sable by carriages, and the family at Luckenough were blocked up in their old house. Yet one day, in the midst of this "tremendous state of affairs," as the commodore called it, a messenger from Benedict arrived at Luckenough, the bearer of a letter to Mrs. Waugh, which he refused to intrust to any other hands but that lady"s own. He was, therefore, shown into the presence of the mistress, to whom he presented the note. Mrs. Waugh took it and looked at it with some curiosity--it was superscribed in a slight feminine hand--quite new to Henrietta; and she opened it, and turned immediately to the signature--Marian Mayfield--a strange name to her; she had never seen or heard it before. She lost no more time in perusing the letter, but as she read, her cheek flushed and paled--her agitation became excessive, she was obliged to ring for a gla.s.s of water, and as soon as she had swallowed it she crushed and thrust the letter into her bosom, ordered her mule to be saddled instantly, and her riding pelisse and hood to be brought. In two hours and a half Henrietta reached the village, and alighted at the little hotel. Of the landlord, who came forth respectfully to meet her, she demanded to be shown immediately to the presence of the young lady who had recently arrived from abroad. The host bowed, and inviting the lady to follow him, led the way to the little private parlor, the door of which he opened to let the visitor pa.s.s in, and then bowing again, he closed it and retired.
And Mrs. Waugh found herself in a small, half-darkened room, where, reclining in an easy chair, sat--Edith? Was it Edith? Could it be Edith?
That fair phantom of a girl to whom the black ringlets and black dress alone seemed to give outline and personality? Yes, it was Edith! But, oh! so changed! so wan and transparent, with such blue shadows in the hollows of her eyes and temples and cheeks--with such heavy, heavy eyelids, seemingly dragged down by the weight of their long, sleeping lashes--with such anguish in the gaze of the melting, dark eyes!
"Edith, my love! My dearest Edith!" said Mrs. Waugh, going to her.
She half arose, and sank speechless into the kind arms opened to receive her. Mrs. Waugh held her to her bosom a moment in silence, and then said:
"Edith, my dear, I got a note from your friend, Miss Mayfield, saying that you had returned, and wished to see me. But how is this, my child?
You have evidently been very ill--you are still. Where is your husband, Edith? Edith, where is your husband?"
A shiver that shook her whole frame--a choking, gasping sob, was all the answer she could make.
"Where is he, Edith? Ordered away somewhere, upon some distant service?
That is hard, but never mind! Hope for the best! You will meet him again, dear? But where is he, then?"
She lifted up her poor head, and uttering--"Dead! dead!" dropped it heavily again upon the kind, supporting bosom.
"You do not mean it! My dear, you do not mean it! You do not know what you are saying! Dead! when? how?" asked Mrs. Waugh, in great trouble.
"Shot! shot!" whispered the poor thing, in a tone so hollow, it seemed reverberating through a vault. And then her stricken head sank heavily down--and Henrietta perceived that strength and consciousness had utterly departed. She placed her in the easy chair, and turned around to look for restoratives, when a door leading into an adjoining bedroom opened, and a young girl entered, and came quietly and quickly forward to the side of the sufferer. She greeted Mrs. Waugh politely, and then gave her undivided attention to Edith, whose care she seemed fully competent to undertake.
This young girl was not over fourteen years of age, yet the most beautiful and blooming creature, Mrs. Waugh thought, that she had ever beheld.
Her presence in the room seemed at once to dispel the gloom and shadow.
She took Edith"s hand, and settled her more at ease in the chair--but refused the cologne and the salammoniac that Mrs. Waugh produced, saying, cheerfully:
"She has not fainted, you perceive--she breathes--it is better to leave her to nature for a while--too much attention worries her--she is very weak."
Marian had now settled her comfortably back in the resting chair, and stood by her side, not near enough to incommode her in the least.
"I do not understand all this. She says that her husband is dead, poor child--how came it about? Tell me!" said Mrs. Waugh, in a low voice.
Marian"s clear blue eyes filled with tears, but she dropped their white lids and long black lashes over them, and would not let them fall; and her ripe lips quivered, but she firmly compressed them, and remained silent for a moment. Then she said, in a whisper:
"I will tell you by and by," and she glanced at Edith, to intimate that the story must not be rehea.r.s.ed in her presence, however insensible she might appear to be.
"You are the young lady who wrote to me?"
"Yes, madam."
"You are a friend of my poor girl"s?"
"Something more than that, madam--I will tell you by and by," said Marian, and her kind, dear eyes were again turned upon Edith, and observing the latter slightly move, she said, in her pleasant voice:
"Edith, dear, shall I put you to bed--are you able to walk?"
"Yes, yes," murmured the sufferer, turning her head uneasily from side to side.
Marian gave her hand, and a.s.sisted the poor girl to rise, and tenderly supported her as she walked to the bedroom.
Mrs. Waugh arose to give her a.s.sistance, but Marian shook her head at her, with a kindly look, that seemed to say, "Do not startle her--she is used only to me lately," and bore her out of sight into the bedroom.
Presently she reappeared in the little parlor, opened the blinds, drew back the curtains, and let the sunlight into the dark room. Then she ordered more wood to the fire, and when it was replenished, and the servant had left the room, she invited Mrs. Waugh to draw her chair to the hearth, and then said:
"I am ready now, madam, to tell you anything you wish to know--indeed I had supposed that you were acquainted with everything relating to Edith"s marriage, and its fatal results."
"I know absolutely nothing but what I have learned to-day. We never received a single letter, or message, or news of any kind, or in any shape, from Edith or her husband, from the day they left until now."