Darkness and Daylight by Mary J. Holmes (books to read to be successful TXT) đź“•
"Now don't go to blunderin'," was Rachel's parting injunction, as Edith left the yard and turned in the direction of Collingwood.
It was a mellow September morning, and after leaving the main road and entering the gate of Collingwood, the young girl lingered by the way, admiring the beauty of the grounds, and gazing with feelings of admiration upon the massive building, surrounded by majestic maples, and basking so quietly in the warm sunlight. At the marble fountain she paused for a long, long time, talking to the golden fishes which darted so swiftly past each other, and wishing she could take them in her hand "ju
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Very briefly Edith related to him the particulars of her interviews with the blind man, saying, when she had finished,
“Don’t you believe he likes me?”
“I dare say he does,” returned Arthur, at the same time asking if she would be afraid to stay alone one night in that great hotel, knowing he was gone?”
“Oh, Mr. Arthur, you won’t leave me here?” and in her terror Edith’s arms wound themselves around the young man’s neck as if she would thus keep him there by force.
Unclasping her hand’s, and holding them in his own, Arthur said,
“Listen to me, Edith. I will take the Boston train which leaves here very soon, and return to Shannondale, reaching there some time to-night. I will go to Collingwood, will tell Mr. Harrington what has happened, and ask him to take you, bringing him back here with me, if he will–”
“And if he won’t?” interrupted Edith, joy beaming in every feature. “If he won’t have me, Mr. Arthur, will you? Say, will you have me if he won’t?”
“Yes, yes, I’ll have you,” returned Arthur, laughing to himself, as he thought of the construction which might be put upon this mode of speech.
But a child nine and a half years old could not, he knew, have any designs upon either himself or Richard Harrington, even had she been their equal, which he fancied she was not. She was a poor, neglected orphan, and as such he would care for her, though the caring compelled him to do what scarcely anything else could have done, to wit, to seek an interview with the man who held his cherished secret.
“Are you willing to stay here alone now?” he said again. “I’ll order your meals sent to your room, and to-morrow night I shall return.”
“If I only knew you meant for sure,” said Edith, trembling at the thought of being deserted in a strange city.
Suddenly she started, and looking him earnestly in the face, said to him,
“Do you love that pretty lady in the glass—the one Mrs. Atherton thinks I stole?”
Arthur turned white but answered her at once.
“Yes, I love her very, very much.”
“Is she your sister, Mr. Arthur?” and the searching black eyes seemed compelling him to tell the truth.
“No, not my sister, but a dear friend.”
“Where is she, Mr. Arthur? In New York?”
“No, not in New York.”
“In Albany then?”
“No, not in Albany. She’s in Europe with her father,” and a shade of sadness crept over Arthur’s face, “She was hardly a young lady when this picture was taken, and he drew the locket from its hiding place. She was only thirteen. She’s not quite sixteen now.”
Edith by this time had the picture in her hand, and holding it to the light exclaimed, “Oh, but she’s so jolly, Mr. Arthur. May I kiss her, please?”
“Certainly,” he answered, and Edith’s warm red lips pressed the senseless glass, which seemed to smile upon her.
“Pretty—pretty—pretty N-n-n-Nina!” she whispered, and in an instant Arthur clutched her so tightly that she cried out with pain.
“Who told you her name was Nina?” he asked in tones so stern and startling that Edith’s senses all forsook her, and trembling with fright she stammered,
“I don’t know, sir—unless you did. Of course you did, how else should I know. I never saw the lady.”
Yes, how else should she know, and though he would almost have sworn that name had never passed his lips save in solitude, he concluded be most have dropped it inadvertently in Edith’s hearing, and still holding her by the arm, he said, “Edith, if I supposed yon would repeat the word Nina, either at Collingwood or elsewhere, I certainly should be tempted to leave you here alone.”
“I won’t, I won’t, oh, Mr. Arthur, I surely won’t!” and Edith clung to him in terror. “I’ll never say it—not even to Mr. Harrington. Ill forget it, I can, I know.”
“Not to Mr. Harrington of all others,” thought Arthur, but he would not put himself more in Edith’s power than he already was, and feeling that he must trust her to a certain extent, he continued, “If you stay at Collingwood, I may sometime bring this Nina to see you, but until I do you must never breathe her name to any living being, or say a word of the picture.”
“But Mr. Harrington,” interrupted the far-seeing Edith, “He’ll have to know why Mrs. Atherton sent me away.
“I’ll attend to that,” returned Arthur. “I shall tell him it was a daguerreotype of a lady friend. There’s nothing wrong in that, is there?” he asked, as he noticed the perplexed look of the honest-hearted Edith.
“No,” she answered hesitatingly. “It is a lady friend, but—but— seems as if there was something wrong somewhere. Oh, Mr. Arthur— “and she grasped his hand as firmly as he had held her shoulder. “You ain’t going to hurt pretty Nina, are you? You never will do her any harm?”
“Heaven forbid,” answered Arthur, involuntarily turning away from the truthful eyes of the dark-haired maiden pleading with him not to harm the Nina—who, over the sea, never dreamed of the scene enacted in that room between the elegant Arthur St. Claire and the humble Edith Hastings. “Heaven forbid that I should harm her–”
He said it twice, and then asked the child to swear solemnly never to repeat that name where any one could hear.
“I won’t swear,” she said, “but I’ll promise as true as I live and breathe, and draw the breath of life, and that’s as good as a swear.”
Arthur felt that it was, and with the compact thus sealed between them, he arose to go, reaching out his hand for the picture.
“No,” said Edith, “I want her for company. I shan’t be lonesome looking in her eyes, and I know you will come back if I keep her.”
Arthur understood her meaning, and answered laughingly, “Well, keep her then, as a token that I will surely return,” and pressing a kiss upon the beautiful picture he left the room, while Edith listened with a beating heart, until the sound of his footsteps had died away. Then a sense of dreariness stole over her; the tears gathered in her eyes, and she sought by a one-sided conversation with her picture to drive the loneliness away.
“Pretty Nina! Sweet Nina! Jolly Nina!” she kept repeating, “I guess I used to see you in Heaven, before I came down to the nasty old Asylum. And mother was there, too, with a great long veil of hair, which came below her waist. Where was it?” she asked herself as Nina, her mother and Marie were all mingled confusedly together in her mind; and while seeking to solve the mystery, the darkness deepened in the room, the gas lamps were lighted in the street, and with a fresh shudder of loneliness Edith crept into the bed, and nestling down among her pillows, fell asleep with Nina, pressed lovingly to her bosom.
At a comparatively early hour next morning, the door of her room, which had been left unfastened, was opened, and a chambermaid walked in, starting with surprise at sight of Edith, sitting up in bed, her thick black hair falling over her shoulders, and her large eyes fixed inquiringly upon her.
“An, sure,” she began, “is it a child like you staying here alone the blessed night? Where’s yer folks?”
“I hain’t no folks,” answered Edith, holding fast to the locket, and chewing industriously the bit of gum which Rachel, who knew her taste, had slipped into her pocket at parting.
“Hain’t no folks! How come you here then?” and the girl Lois advanced nearer to the bedside.
“A man brought me,” returned Edith. “He’s gone off now, but will come again to-night.”
“Your father, most likely,” continued the loquacious Lois.
“My father!” and Edith laughed scornfully, “Mr. Arthur ain’t big enough to be anybody’s father—or yes, maybe he’s big enough, for he’s awful tall. But he’s got the teentiest whiskers growing you ever saw,” and Edith’s nose went up contemptuously at Arthur’s darling mustache. “I don’t believe he’s twenty,” she continued, “and little girl’s pa’s must be older than that I guess, and have bigger whiskers.”
“How old are you?” asked Lois, vastly amused at the quaint speeches of the child, who replied, with great dignity,
“Going on TEN, and in three years more I’ll be THIRTEEN!”
“Who are you, any way?” asked Lois, her manner indicating so much real interest that Edith repeated her entire history up to the present time, excepting, indeed, the part pertaining to the locket held so vigilantly in her hand.
She had taken a picture belonging to Mr. Arthur, she said, and as Lois did not ask what picture, she was spared any embarrassment upon that point.
“You’re a mighty queer child,” said Lois, when the narrative was ended; “but I’ll see that you have good care till he comes back;” and it was owing, in a measure, to her influence, that the breakfast and dinner carried up to Edith was of a superior quality, and comprised in quantity far more than she could eat.
Still the day dragged heavily, for Lois could not give her much attention; and even Nina failed to entertain her, as the western sunlight came in at her window, warning her that it was almost night.
“Will Arthur come? or if he does, will Mr. Harrington be with him?” she asked herself repeatedly, until at last, worn out with watching and waiting, she laid her head upon the side of the bed, and fell asleep, resting so quietly that she did not hear the rapid step in the hall, the knock upon the door, the turning of the knob, or the cheery voice which said to her:
“Edith, are you asleep?”
Arthur had come.
CHAPTER VII.
RICHARD AND ARTHUR.
It was not a common occurrence for a visitor to present himself at Collingwood at so early an hour as that in which Arthur St. Claire rung for admittance, and Victor, who heard the bell, hastened in some surprise to answer it,
“Tell Mr. Harrington a stranger wishes to see him,” said Arthur, following the polite valet into the library, where a fire was slowly struggling into life.
“Yes, sir. What name?” and Victor waited for a moment, while Arthur hesitated, and finally stammered out:
“Mr. St. Claire, from Virginia.”
Immediately Victor withdrew, and seeking his master, delivered the message, adding that the gentleman seemed embarrassed, and he wouldn’t wonder if he’d come to borrow money.”
“St Claire—St. Claire,” Richard repeated to himself. “Where have I heard that name before? Somewhere, sure.”
“He called himself a stranger,” returned Victor, adding that a youth by that name was visiting at Brier Hill, and it was probably of him that Mr. Harrington was thinking,
“It may be, though I’ve no remembrance of having heard that fact,” returned Richard; “but, lead on,” and he took the arm of Victor, who lead him to the library floor and then, as was his custom, turned away.
More than once during the rapid journey, Arthur had half resolved to turn back and not run the fearful risk of being recognized by Richard Harrington, but the remembrance of Edith’s mute distress should he return alone, emboldened him to go on and trust to Providence, or,
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