Virgie could scarcely credit her hearing at this generous offer.
She had never dreamed of anything like it, and bright visions of future prosperity for herself and her child, attained through her own efforts, alone, flitted through her mind.
But she did not lose her self-possession or betray her excessive delight at the unexpected proposal.
"What am I to understand by your words, "if it proves a success?"" she asked.
Again the publisher"s eyes twinkled.
He knew that she was a novice in dealing with business men, but he saw that she was shrewd and practical, and, finding her talent valuable, meant to make the most of it.
He meant, however, to do so well by her that she would be satisfied to give her services exclusively to him.
"Well," he replied, "if the sales reach a thousand copies I shall consider the book a success."
He knew well enough, if he could get it out in season, he could easily sell three times that number for it was a wonderfully unique and attractive affair.
"More than that," he continued, "if you are pleased to accept my offer, I should like to engage you to prepare two or three designs of a similar character for the Easter trade."
Virgie was not proof against all this good fortune. Her lips trembled, and she was very near breaking down.
It seemed almost as if heaven had suddenly opened and sent her a kind friend in the midst of her darkness and trouble.
"You are very kind, sir; I feel that you have made me a most liberal offer, and I accept it most gratefully," she said.
Something in her tone--a sort of hopeless cadence mingling with the grat.i.tude, as if with all this good fortune there were a lurking despair in her heart--touched the gentleman deeply.
He was becoming greatly interested in this beautiful woman, who, with that look of heart-broken sadness in her violet eyes, and that grieved droop about her sweet mouth, he believed must have some thrilling history connected with her young life.
"Then, Mrs. Alexander, do your best, and give me something especially nice for Easter," he returned, brightly, and appearing not to notice her emotion.
He arose as he spoke, and took leave of her with a cordial handshake, saying that she would hear from him again soon regarding her other designs, and Virgie went on her homeward way with more of hope and courage than she had known since her great trouble came upon her.
She had nearly reached the street where she lived, when something occurred to give her a fearful start.
In turning a corner she suddenly came face to face with a man who was wrapped in a heavy circular cape, its collar turned up close about his face and concealing the whole lower portion of it. He wore a wide-brimmed hat that was drawn down over his brow, so that, with the collar and hat together, scarcely anything of his countenance was visible save a pair of piercing black eyes, and a long, sharp nose.
As Virgie met those eyes, which were fixed upon her with an eager, questioning look, she had difficulty in repressing a scream of fear and surprise.
The next moment, however, she recovered herself, and pa.s.sed him as if he had been an utter stranger; but, though outwardly calm and indifferent, she was trembling in every limb, while a sense of weakness caused by the shock she had received, made it seem as if she could not go on her way.
But she knew it would not do for her to stop, for a sidelong glance over her shoulder and the sound of a step behind her told her that the m.u.f.fled figure was following her, evidently with the intention of accosting her.
"How dare he come back here? It cannot be that he knows me after all these years," she said to herself as she quickened her pace and sped on toward her home.
Then a sudden thought smote her.
"He must not know where I live, if it is he, and I am sure I cannot be mistaken, for those eyes are like no others in the world. What shall I do?"
She was rapidly nearing her own door, but a sudden purpose impelled her to keep on and go straight by, without even a pause or a look that way.
A block or two beyond she came to a store where she sometimes went to purchase articles that she needed She entered, and going to a counter, called for the first thing she could think of, but kept her eye on the door to see if the man had followed her.
Yes, there could be no doubt that her steps were dogged, for the man pa.s.sed even as she looked.
His keen glance searched her out immediately; then he paused, turned, and walked slowly back.
The store was on a corner, and there were two entrances to it--one on the front, one at the side.
Virgie paid for her purchase, then worked her way around, going from counter to counter, until she reached the side entrance, when she went slyly out, waited until she saw a car approaching, hailed it, and in another moment went rolling down the street, believing that she had eluded the keen eyes that were on the watch for her.
Not so, however; for the man, having heard the car stop, darted around the corner, and espied her in it just as it was about turning into another street.
He could not overtake it, and with a muttered expression of annoyance, he was obliged to wait for the next one. But he saw no more of Virgie that day, for she took a transfer, and when about a mile from her home changed cars and at length reached her own door, confident that she had escaped her pursuer for that time.
A day or two afterward she saw a personal in one of the daily papers that both puzzled and alarmed her.
F.V.A., whom I met on the corner of W. and C. streets, will communicate with M.A., Lock Box 95, she will learn something to her advantage.
This was the advertis.e.m.e.nt, and Virgie knew at once that she had been recognized by that man m.u.f.fled in the cloak.
"That means me," she said, growing deadly white, "and I was not mistaken.
He has come back. How dare he? What can he want of me? But I will never see him. I will have nothing to say to him. I will hide myself from him.
It is evident he has not discovered where I live, else he would have been here before this, and I will take care that he does not find me out."
After that she was very careful about going out, always closely veiling her face, and wearing a long circular to conceal her form, when she was obliged to do so, which was not often, as, with rare exceptions, her business with Mr. Knight could be mostly transacted by correspondence.
Thus several months pa.s.sed without her seeing or hearing anything more of the person who had so disturbed her, until at last she believed he must have left the city, and she gave herself no further concern about him.
Chapter XXIV.
The Tie Is Broken.
There was no lack of employment now for Virgie. She had plenty to occupy heart, and brain, and hands, and of such a congenial nature that she reaped great benefit from it both mentally and physically.
Of course nothing could ever blot out from her memory the terrible trouble and suffering that she had had to endure, but her work brought its own enjoyment so that she no longer spent such wretched days and nights as formerly. Her baby was every day growing interesting and a source of great comfort to her, while her life generally was tending to bring out the latent qualities of her character, the energy and self-reliance, the skill and talent which otherwise might never have developed into activity.
More than a year went by, while every month she was earning a handsome sum, having been permanently engaged by Mr. Knight to keep him supplied with those novelties which she was so skillful in originating.
Her "Gleanings from the Heights" proved a great success, selling faster than the firm could issue them. Besides this she had been awarded the first prize on the other souvenirs, so that, pecuniarily, she had nothing to fear for the future.
And now she set about another undertaking which she had long contemplated; that of obtaining a divorce from her husband.
She did not take this step because she had any desire to break the tie that bound her to him, and she would never have moved in the matter at all but for the fact that others had a.s.sailed her fair name and a.s.sumed that her child was dishonored.