The voice was so mournfully sweet that it thrilled every nerve in Salome"s quivering frame.
"Phantom or flesh--which are you?"
"Mrs. Gerome, the owner of "Solitude.""
"Oh, indeed! I beg your pardon, madam, but I took you for a wraith!
You know the place has always been considered unlucky--haunted--and you are such an extraordinary-looking person I was inclined to think I had stumbled on the traditional ghost. I am neither ignorant nor stupidly superst.i.tious; but, madam, you must admit you have an unearthly appearance; and, moreover, I should be glad to know how you rose from the beach below to the top of this cliff? I see no feathers on your shoulders--no balloon under your feet!"
"I was walking on the sands in front of my door, and, hearing some very sweet strains that came floating down from this direction, I followed the sound, and climbed by means of steps cut in the side of this cliff. Since you regarded me as a spectre, I may as well tell you that I was beginning to fancy I was listening to one of the old sea-sirens, until I saw your rosy face and red lips, far too human for a dripping mermaid or a murderous, mocking Aglaiopheme."
"No more a siren, madam, than you are a ghost! I am only Salome Owen, the miller"s child, waiting for that boy yonder, whose sublimest idea of heaven consists in the hope that its blessed sea of gla.s.s is br.i.m.m.i.n.g with golden shrimp. Stanley, run around the cliff, and meet me. It is too late for us to be here. We should have started home an hour ago."
"Who taught you "Traviata"?"
"I am teaching myself, with what small help I can obtain from a vagabond musician, who calls himself Signor Barilli, and claims to have been a tenor singer in an opera troupe at Milan."
"You ought to cultivate your voice as thoroughly as possible."
"Why? Is it really good? Tell me, is it worth anything? No one has heard it except that Italian violinist; and, if he praises it, I sometimes fear it is because he is so horribly dissipated that he confounds my _bravura_ runs with the clicking of his wine-gla.s.ses and the gurgling of his flask. Do you know much about music?"
"I have heard the best living performers, vocal and instrumental, and to a finer voice than yours I never listened; but you need study and practice, for your execution is faulty. You have a splendid instrument; but you do not yet understand its management. Where do you live?"
"At "Gra.s.smere," a farm two miles behind those hills, and in a house hidden under elm and apple trees. Madam, it is very late, and I must bid you good-evening. Before I go, I should like to know, if you will not deem me unwarrantably impertinent, whether you are a very young person with white hair, or whether you are a very old woman with a wonderfully young face?"
For a moment there was no answer; and, supposing that she had offended her, the orphan bowed and was turning away, when Mrs. Gerome"s calm, mournful tones arrested her:
"I am only twenty-three years old."
She walked away, turning her countenance towards the water, where moonlight was burnishing the waves; and, when Salome and Stanley had reached the bend in their path that would shut out the view of the beach, the former looked back and saw the silver-gray figure standing alone on the silent sh.o.r.e, communing with the silver sea, as desolate and as hopeless as Buchanan"s "Penelope,"--
"An alabaster woman, whose fixed eyes Stare seaward, whether it be storm or calm."
CHAPTER IX.
"Doctor Sheldon, do you think she is dangerously ill?"
"I am afraid, Salome, that she will soon become so; for she is threatened with a violent attack of pneumonia, which would certainly be very dangerous to a woman of her age. It is a great misfortune that her brother is absent."
"Dr. Grey reached New York three days ago."
"Indeed! I will telegraph immediately, and hasten his return."
Dr. Sheldon was preparing a blister in the room adjoining the one occupied by Miss Jane, and the orphan stood by his side, twisting her fingers nervously over each other, and looking perplexed and anxious.
He returned to his patient, and when he came out some moments later, and took up his hat, his countenance was by no means rea.s.suring.
"Although I know that you are very much attached to Miss Jane, and would faithfully endeavor to nurse her, you are so young and inexperienced that I do not feel quite willing to leave her entirely to your guardianship; and, therefore, shall send a woman here to-night who will fully understand the case. She is a professional nurse, and Dr. Grey will be relieved to hear that his sister is in her hands, for he has great confidence in her good sense and discretion. I shall stop at the telegraph office, as I go home, and urge him to return at once.
Give me his address. Do not look so dejected. Miss Grey has a better const.i.tution than most persons are disposed to believe, and she may struggle through this attack."
The new year was ushered in by heavy and incessant rains, and, having imprudently insisted upon superintending the drainage of a new sheepfold and the erection of an additional cattle-shed, Miss Jane had taken a severe cold, which resulted in pneumonia.
a.s.siduously and tenderly Salome watched over her, and even after the arrival of Hester Dennison, the nurse, the orphan"s solicitude would not permit her to quit the apartment where her benefactress lay struggling with disease; while Miss Jane shrank from the stranger, and preferred to receive the medicine from the hand of her adopted child.
When Dr. Sheldon stood by the bed early next morning, and noted the effect of his treatment, Salome"s keen eye observed the dissatisfied expression of his face, and she drew sad auguries from his clouded brow. He took a paper from his pocket, and said, cheerfully,--
"Come, Miss Jane, get up a smile to pay me for the good news I bring.
Can you guess what this means?" holding an envelope close to her eyes.
"More blisters and fever mixtures, I suppose. Doctor, my poor side is in a dreadful condition."
As she laid her hand over her left lung, she winced and groaned.
"How much would you give to have your brother"s hand, instead of mine, on your pulse?"
"All that I am worth! But my boy is in Europe, and can"t come back to me now, when I need him most."
"No, he is in New York. You have been dreaming, and forget that he has reached America."
"No, I never knew it. Salome, is there a letter?"
"No letter, but a dispatch announcing his arrival. I told you; but you must have fallen asleep while I was talking to you."
"No such thing! I have not slept a wink for a week."
"That is right, Miss Jane; scold as much as you like; it will do you no harm. But, meantime, let me tell you I have just heard from Dr.
Grey, and he is now on his way home."
Salome was sitting near the pillow, and suddenly her head bowed itself, while her lips whispered, inaudibly,--
"Thank G.o.d!"
The invalid"s face brightened, and, stretching her thin, hot hand towards the orphan, she touched her shoulder, and said:--
"Do you hear that, my child? Ulpian is coming home. When will he be here?"
"Day after to-morrow evening, I hope, if there is no detention and he makes all the railroad connections. I trust you will prove sufficiently generous to bear testimony to my professional skill, by improving so rapidly that when he arrives there will be nothing left to do but compliment my sagacity, and thank me for relieving you so speedily. Is not your cough rather better?"
She did not reply; and, bending down, he saw that she was asleep.
"Doctor, I am afraid she is not much better."
He sighed, shook his head, and beckoned Hester into the hall in order to question her more minutely concerning the patient.
That night and the next she was delirious, and failed to recognize any one; but about noon on the following day she opened her eyes, and, looking intently at Salome, who stood near the foot of the bed, she said, as if much perplexed,--