"Wilful, silly child! It is not proper for you to wander along that dreary road in the dark. Come with me."
"Not I. Make yourself easy by recollecting that "naught is never in danger." See yonder in the west,--
"Where, lo! above the sandy sunset rose The silver sickle of the green-gowned witch.""
She laughed lightly, derisively, and collected the sheets of music scattered on the bank.
Silently Dr. Grey returned to his ward, who exclaimed, at sight of him,--
"I am glad to see you again, for you stayed so long I was growing frightened. Did you find the singer?"
"Yes."
"What is the matter? You look troubled and solemn."
"I am merely annoyed by circ.u.mstances beyond my control."
"Dr. Grey, who was that sweet singer?"
"Salome Owen."
"How can such a thing be possible, when I have never heard a note from her lips? You told me she had no musical talent."
"I was not aware that she sang at all, until this afternoon, and your surprise does not equal mine."
"Where did you find her?"
"Sitting on a mound of sand, singing to the sea."
"Who is with her?"
"No one. I requested her to come with us, and offered to walk beside my buggy; but she declined. Please be so considerate as to say nothing about this occurrence, when you reach home; because animadversion only hardens that poor girl in her whimsical ways. Now we will dismiss the matter."
Muriel endeavored to render herself an agreeable companion during the remainder of the drive; but her guardian, despite his efforts to become interested in her conversation, was evidently _distrait_, and both felt relieved when they reached Gra.s.smere, where Miss Jane and the governess welcomed their return.
Dr. Grey dismissed his buggy and entered the hall; but pa.s.sed through the house, and, crossing the orchard, followed the road leading seaward.
Only a few summer stars were sprinkling their silvery rays over the gray gloom of twilight, and the shining crescent in the violet west had slipped down behind the silent hills that girded the rough, winding road.
When Salome put her fingers on the gloved hand which, in the surprise of their unexpected meeting, Dr. Grey had involuntarily placed on her shoulder, she had felt that he shrank instantly from her touch, and withdrew his hand hastily, as if displeased with the familiarity of the action. All the turbid elements in her nature boiled up. Could it be possible that he really loved his rosy-faced, bright-eyed, prattling ward? She set this conjecture squarely before her, and forced herself to contemplate it. If he desired to marry Muriel, of course he would do so whenever he chose, and the thought that he might call her his wife, and give her his name, his caresses, wrung a cry of agony from Salome"s lips. She threw herself on the sand-bank, and, resting her chin on her folded arms, gazed vacantly across the yellow strand at the gla.s.sy, leaden sea that stared back mockingly at her.
She was too miserable to feel afraid of anything but Dr. Grey"s marriage; and, moreover, she had so often, during the early years of her life, gone to and fro in the darkness, that she was a stranger to that timidity which girls usually indulge under similar circ.u.mstances.
The fishermen had abandoned the neighboring huts some months before, and "Solitude," one mile distant, was the nearest spot occupied by human beings.
She neither realized nor cared that it was growing darker, and, after awhile, when the sea was no longer visible through the dun haze that brooded over it, she shut her eyes and moaned.
Dr. Grey had walked on, hoping every moment to meet her returning home; and, more than once, he was tempted to retrace his steps, thinking that she might have taken some direct path across the hills, instead of the circuitous one bending around their base. Quickening his pace till it matched his pulse, which an indefinable anxiety accelerated, he finally saw the huts dimly outlined against the starry sky and quiet sea.
Pausing, he took off his hat to listen to
"The water lapping on the crag, And the long ripple washing in the reeds,"
and, while he stood wiping his brow, there came across the beach,--
"A cry that shivered to the tingling stars, And, as it were one voice, an agony Of lamentation, like a wind that shrills All night in a waste land, where no one comes, Or hath come since the making of the world."
In the uncertain light he ran towards the clump of trees where he had left Salome, and strained his eyes to discover some moving thing. He knew that he must be very near the spot, but neither the expected sound nor object greeted him, and, while he stopped and held his breath to listen, the silence was profound and death-like. He was opening his lips to call the girl"s name, when he fancied he saw something move slightly, and simultaneously a human voice smote the oppressive stillness. She was very near him, and he heard her saying to herself, with mournful emphasis,--
"Have I brought Joy, and slain her at his feet?
Have I brought Peace, for his cold kiss to kill?
Have I brought youth, crowned with wild-flowers sweet, With sandals dewy from a morning hill, For his gray, solemn eyes, to fright and chill?
Have I brought Scorn the pale, and Hope the fleet, And First Love, in her lily winding-sheet,-- And is he pitiless still?"
Dr. Grey knew now that she was not crying. Her hard, ringing, bitter tone, forbade all thought of sobs or tears; but his heart ached as he listened, and surmised the application she was making of the melancholy lines.
Unwilling that she should know he had overheard her, he waited a moment, then raised his voice and shouted,--
"Salome! Salome! Where are you?"
There was no answer, and, fearing that she might elude him, he stretched out his arms, and advanced to the spot, which he felt a.s.sured was only a few yards distant.
She had risen, and, standing in the gloom of the coming night, deepened by the interlacing boughs above her, she felt Dr. Grey"s hand on her dress, then on her head, where the moisture hung heavily in her thick hair.
"Salome, why do you not answer me?"
Shame kept her silent.
He pa.s.sed his hand over her hot face, then groped for her fingers, which he grasped firmly in his.
"Come home with your best friend."
He knew that she was in no mood to submit to reprimand, to appreciate argument, or even to listen to entreaty, and that he might as profitably undertake to knead pig-iron as expostulate with her at this juncture.
For a mile they walked on without uttering a word; then he felt the fingers relax, twitch, and twine closely around his own.
"Dr. Grey, where is Muriel? Where is your buggy?"
"Both are at home, where others should have been, long ago."
"You walked back to meet me?"
"I did."
"How did you find me, in the dark?"
"I heard your voice."
"But not the words?"