Run to Earth by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (ready player one ebook TXT) đź“•
Other people were taking very little notice of the singer. The regularpatrons of the 'Jolly Tar' were accustomed to her beauty and hersinging, and thought very little about her. The girl was very quiet,very modest. She came and went under the care of the old blind pianist,whom she called her grandfather, and she seemed to shrink alike fromobservation or admiration.
She began to sing again presently.
She stood by the piano, facing the audience, calm as a statue, with herlarge black eyes looking straight before her. The old man listened toher eagerly, as he played, and nodded fond approval every now and then,as the full, rich
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Before he went, George promised that he would himself await the return
of his father-in-law before he started on a new voyage.
“I can afford to be idle for twelve months, or so,” he said; “and my
dear little wife shall not be left without a protector.”
So the young couple settled down comfortably in the commodious cottage,
which was now all their own.
To Rosamond, her new existence was all unbroken joy. She had loved her
husband with all the romantic devotion of inexperienced girlhood. To
her poetic fancy he seemed the noblest and bravest of created beings;
and she wondered at her own good fortune when she saw him by her side,
fond and devoted, consent to sacrifice all the delights of his free,
roving life for her sake.
“I don’t think such happiness can last, George,” she said to him one
day.
That vague foreboding was soon to be too sadly realized! The sunshine
and the bright summer peace had promised to last for ever; but a dark
cloud arose which in one moment overshadowed all that summer sky, and
Rosamond Jernam’s happiness vanished as if it had been indeed a dream.
CHAPTER XIX.
A FAMILIAR TOKEN.
Joseph Duncombe had been absent from River View Cottage little more
than a month, and the life of its inmates had been smooth and
changeless as the placid surface of a lake. They sought no society but
that of each other. Existence glided by, and the eventless days left
little to remember except the sweet tranquillity of a happy home.
It was on a wet, dull, unsettled July day that Rosamond Jernam found
her life changed all at once, while the cause for that dark change
remained a mystery to her.
After idling away half the morning, Captain Jernam discovered that he
had an important business letter to write to the captain of his trading
ship, the “Pizarro.”
On opening his portfolio, the captain found himself without a single
sheet of foreign letter-paper. He told this difficulty to his wife, as
it was his habit to tell her all his difficulties; and he found her, as
usual, able to give him assistance.
“There is always foreign letter-paper in papa’s desk,” she said; “you
can use that.”
“But, my dear Rosy, I could not think of opening your father’s desk in
his absence.”
“And why not?” cried Rosamond, laughing. “Do you think papa has any
secrets hidden there; or that he keeps some mysterious packet of old
love-letters tied up with a blue ribbon, which he would not like your
prying eyes to discover? You may open the desk, George. I give you my
permission; and if papa should be angry, the blame shall fall upon me
alone.”
The desk was a large old-fashioned piece of furniture, which stood in
the corner of Captain Duncombe’s favourite sitting-room.
“But how am I to open this ponderous piece of machinery?” asked George.
“It seems to be locked.”
“It is locked,” answered his wife. “Luckily I happen to have a key
which precisely fits it. There, sir, is the key; and now I leave you to
devote yourself to business, while I go to see about dinner.”
She held up her pretty rosy lips to be kissed, and then tripped away,
leaving the captain to achieve a duty for which he had no particular
relish.
He unlocked the desk, and found a quire of letter-paper. He dipped a
pen in ink, tried it, and then began to write.
He wrote, “London, July 20th,” and “My Dear Boyd;” and having
written thus much, he came to a stop. The easiest part of the letter
was finished.
Captain Jernam sat with his elbows resting on the table, looking
straight before him, in pure absence of mind. As he did so, his eyes
were caught suddenly by an object lying amongst the pens and pencils in
the tray before him.
That object was a bent gold coin.
His face grew pale as he snatched up the coin, and examined it closely.
It was a small Brazilian coin, bent and worn, and on one side of it was
scratched the initial “G.”
That small battered coin was very familiar to George Jernam’s gaze, and
it was scarcely strange if the warm life-blood ebbed from his cheeks,
and left them ashy pale.
The coin was a keepsake which he had given to his murdered brother,
Valentine, on the eve of their last parting.
And he found it here—here, in Joseph Duncombe’s desk!
For some moments he sat aghast, motionless, powerless even to think. He
could not realize the full weight of this strange discovery. He could
only remember the warm breath of the tropical night on which he and his
brother had bidden each other farewell—the fierce light of the
tropical stars beneath which they had stood when they parted.
Then he began to ask himself how that farewell token, the golden coin,
which he had taken from his pocket in that parting hour, and upon which
he had idly scratched his own initial, had come into the possession of
Joseph Duncombe.
He was not a man of the world, and he was not able to reason calmly and
logically on the subject of his brother’s untimely fate. He shared
Joyce’s rooted idea, that the escape of Valentine’s murderer was only
temporary, and that, sooner or later, accident would disclose the
criminal.
It seemed now as if the eventful moment had come. Here, on this spot,
near the scene of his brother’s disappearance, he came upon this
token—this relic, which told that Valentine had been in some manner
associated with Joseph Duncombe.
And yet Joseph Duncombe and George had talked long and earnestly on the
subject of the murdered sailor’s fate, and in all their talk Captain
Duncombe had never acknowledged any acquaintance with its details.
This was strange.
Still more incomprehensible to George Jernam was the fact that
Valentine should have parted with the farewell token, except with his
life, for his last words to his brother had been—
“I’ll keep the bit of gold, George, to my dying day, in memory of your
fidelity and love.”
There had been something more between these two men than a common
brotherhood: there had been the bond of a joyless childhood spent
together, and their affection for each other was more than the ordinary
love of brothers.
“I don’t believe he would have parted with that piece of gold,” cried
George, “not if he had been without a sixpence in the world.”
“And he was rich. It was the money he carried about him which tempted
his murderer. It was near here that he met his fate—on this very spot,
perhaps. Joyce told me that before my father-in-law built this house,
there was a dilapidated building, which was a meeting-place for the
vilest scoundrels in Ratcliff Highway. But how came that coin in Joseph
Duncombe’s desk?—how, unless Joseph Duncombe was concerned in my
brother’s murder?”
This idea, once aroused in the mind of George Jernam, was not to be
driven away. It seemed too hideous for reality; but it took possession
of his mind, nevertheless, and he sat alone, trying to shut horrible
fancies out of his brain, but trying uselessly.
He remembered Joseph Duncombe’s wealth. Had all that wealth been
honestly won?
He remembered the captain’s restlessness—his feverish desire to run
away from a home in which he possessed so much to render life happy.
Might not that eagerness to return to the sailor’s wild, roving life
have its root in the tortures of a guilty conscience?
“His very kindness to me may be prompted by a vague wish to make some
paltry atonement for a dark wrong done my brother,” thought George.
He remembered Joseph Duncombe’s seeming goodness of heart, and wondered
if such a man could possibly be concerned in the darkest crime of which
mankind can be guilty. But he remembered also that the worst and vilest
of men were often such accomplished hypocrites as to remain unsuspected
of evil until the hour when accident revealed their iniquity.
“It is so, perhaps, with this man,” thought George Jernam. “That air of
truth and goodness may be but a mask. I know what a master-passion the
greed of gain is with some men. It has doubtless been the passion of
this man’s heart. The wretches who lured Valentine Jernam to this house
were tools of Joseph Duncombe’s. How otherwise could this token have
fallen into his hands?”
He tried to find some other answer to this question; but he tried in
vain. That little piece of gold seemed to fasten the dark stigma of
guilt upon the absent owner of the house.
“And I have shaken this man’s hand!” cried George. “I am the husband of
his daughter. I live beneath the shelter of his roof—in this house,
which was bought perhaps with my brother’s blood. Great heavens! it is
too horrible.”
For two long hours George Jernam sat brooding over the strange
discovery which had changed the whole current of his life. Rosamond
came and peeped in at the door.
“Still busy, George?” she asked.
“Yes,” he answered, in a strange, harsh tone, “I am very busy.”
That altered voice alarmed the loving wife. She crept into the room,
and stood behind her husband’s chair.
“George,” she said, “your voice sounded so strange just now; you are
not ill, are you, darling?”
“No, no; I only want to be alone. Go, Rosamond.”
The wife could not fail to be just a little offended by her husband’s
manner. The pretty rosy lips pouted, and then tears came into the
bright blue eyes.
George Jernam’s head was bent upon his clasped hands, and he took no
heed of his wife’s sorrow. She could not leave him without one more
anxious question.
“Is there anything amiss with you, George?” she asked.
“Nothing that you can cure.”
The harshness of his tone, the coldness of his manner, wounded her
heart. She said no more, but went quietly from the room.
Never before had her beloved George spoken unkindly to her—never
before had the smallest cloud obscured the calm horizon of her married
life.
After this, the dark cloud hung black and heavy over that once happy
household; the sun never shone again upon the young wife’s home.
She tried to penetrate the secret of this sudden change, but she could
not do so. She could complain of no unkindness from her husband—he
never spoke harshly to her after that first day. His manner was gentle
and indulgent; but it seemed as if his love had died, leaving in its
place only a pitiful tenderness, strangely blended with sadness and
gloom.
He asked Rosamond several questions about her father’s past life; but
on that subject she could tell him very little. She had never lived
with her father until after the building of River View Cottage, and she
knew nothing of his existence before that time, except that he had only
been in England during brief intervals, and that he had always come to
see her at school when he had an opportunity of doing so.
“He is the best and dearest of fathers,” she said, affectionately.
George Jernam asked if Captain Duncombe had been in England during that
spring in which Valentine met his death.
After a moment’s reflection, Rosamond replied in the affirmative.
“I remember his coming to see me that spring,” she said. “He came early
in March, and again in April, and it was then he began
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